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Easementary rights under section 25 can be acquired by

A. Tenant

B. A co-owner

C. Both a tenant and a co-owner

D. Neither a tenant nor a co-owner

Answer: Option D

Solution (By Examveda Team)

Understanding Easementary Rights Under Section 25
Let's break down who can acquire easementary rights, especially for beginners.

What are Easementary Rights?
Think of easementary rights as a special permission to use someone else's land for a specific purpose.
For example, it could be a right of way to cross their property to reach your own.

Section 25 of the Limitation Act
This section tells us how someone can *acquire* these easementary rights through continuous and uninterrupted use of the land for a certain period (usually 20 years).

Why Tenants and Co-owners Matter
Tenant: A tenant is someone who rents property.
They're not the *owner* of the land; they just have a lease.
Because they don't own the property, it's unlikely they can claim permanent easement rights over it.
Co-owner: A co-owner *is* part-owner of the land.
Co-owners typically already have rights to access and use the jointly owned property.
They don't need to acquire new easement rights from themselves or the other co-owners in the same way as someone using entirely separate land.
The Correct Answer
Given these reasons, the correct answer is (D) Neither a tenant nor a co-owner.
A tenant doesn't have the ownership needed, and a co-owner usually has sufficient rights already through their ownership.

This Question Belongs to Law >> Limitation Act

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Comments (2)

  1. Sruthi Velivela
    Sruthi Velivela:
    12 months ago

    Explanation for the answer please

  2. Sruthi Velivela
    Sruthi Velivela:
    12 months ago

    Explanation for the answer please

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