If someone has forged your signature on a sale deed, or registered a sale of your property using fake documents, you can ask a civil court to cancel that deed under Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act 1963, and you should also file a police complaint for the forgery. This page explains both steps in plain language.
This is general legal information, not legal advice. Property fraud cases turn on their own facts, so consult a local advocate before you act.
A forged sale deed gives the wrongdoer no real ownership, because a forged document is treated in law as void from the very beginning. But the deed still sits in the registration records and can be used to harass you, take loans, or sell your property again. To clear it, you file a civil suit for cancellation of the instrument under Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act in the civil court that has jurisdiction over the property. In parallel, you lodge an FIR for forgery and cheating, and you inform the Sub-Registrar. The two tracks run side by side.
Section 31(1) of the Specific Relief Act 1963 says: “Any person against whom a written instrument is void or voidable, and who has reasonable apprehension that such instrument, if left outstanding may cause him serious injury, may sue to have it adjudged void or voidable; and the court may, in its discretion, so adjudge it and order it to be delivered up and cancelled.”
So the true owner whose signature was forged is exactly the person Section 31 is meant for. The deed is void as against you, and leaving it outstanding can cause you serious injury, which is the legal test.
Section 31(2) is important for registered deeds. It says that if the instrument was registered under the Registration Act 1908, the court “shall also send a copy of its decree to the officer in whose office the instrument has been so registered,” and that officer must note the fact of cancellation on the registered copy. This is how a winning judgment actually cleans the record at the Sub-Registrar office.
Why registration matters: under Section 17(1)(b) of the Registration Act 1908, a sale of immovable property worth one hundred rupees and upwards must be registered. Almost every property sale falls here, which is why the forged deed went through registration in the first place, and why Section 31(2) is the part that fixes the record.
Cancelling the deed in civil court restores your title. Punishing the forger is a separate, criminal process. Since 1 July 2024, India follows the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita 2023 in place of the old Indian Penal Code, so you cite the new sections.
Go to the police station with jurisdiction and ask for an FIR. If the police refuse, you can approach the Superintendent of Police in writing, and if still ignored, file a complaint before the Magistrate. Keep copies of everything.
A suit to cancel an instrument is governed by Article 59 of the Limitation Act 1963. The period is three years, counted from when the facts entitling you to have the instrument cancelled first become known to you. So the clock generally starts on the date you discovered the fraud, not the date of the deed.
One caution: courts have differed on whether this three year limit applies at all to a wholly forged deed that is void from the start, since a void document is treated as never having existed. Do not rely on that argument. Treat three years from your date of knowledge as your deadline and act promptly. Delay also weakens your injunction request.
Get the certified copy of the disputed deed and a fresh encumbrance certificate, write down exactly when you discovered the fraud, and meet a civil advocate this week. File the cancellation suit and the FIR together, and ask the court for an injunction at the first hearing.
For a deeper understanding of your rights and how to use public records to build your case, read The RTI Playbook.
You need a civil court. Only a court can adjudge the deed void and order it cancelled under Section 31 of the Specific Relief Act, and only a court decree triggers the Sub-Registrar to mark the record cancelled.
In law a forged deed passes no title and is void from the start, so it never made the forger an owner. But it remains in the records and can cause real harm until a court formally cancels it, which is why you must still sue.
Under Article 59 of the Limitation Act 1963 the period is generally three years from when you first came to know the facts entitling you to cancellation. Act promptly, because delay invites a limitation objection and weakens your request for a stay.
Yes. The civil suit restores your title, while the FIR for forgery and cheating under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita seeks to punish the wrongdoer. They are separate tracks and you should pursue both, and also inform the Sub-Registrar.
You file in the civil court that has territorial jurisdiction over the property, since the suit concerns immovable property and its registered instrument.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak