You bought a plot that has no road touching it, or the neighbour who always let you cross his land has suddenly built a wall across the only path to your gate. In India the law does not leave you stranded. A right of way over a neighbour's land is a recognised legal interest called an easement, and you can claim and enforce it in a civil court.
A right of way over your neighbour's land is an easement under the Indian Easements Act, 1882. If your plot is landlocked, claim an easement of necessity (s.13); if you used the path openly as of right for 20 years, claim it by prescription (s.15). When access is blocked, sue for declaration and a permanent injunction (s.35).
An easement of right of way is the legal right of the owner of one plot (the dominant heritage) to pass over a neighbour's plot (the servient heritage) for the beneficial enjoyment of his own land. Section 4 of the Easements Act, 1882 defines this right. It attaches to the land, not the person, so it passes to future owners.
The whole subject is governed by the Indian Easements Act, 1882.
Definition (Section 4). An easement is a right which the owner or occupier of certain land has, as such, for the beneficial enjoyment of that land, to do something in or upon other land not his own. The benefited plot is the dominant heritage and its owner the dominant owner; the burdened plot is the servient heritage and its owner the servient owner.
Easement of necessity (Section 13). When a single property is split (by sale, bequest or partition) and one part cannot be used at all without passing over the other, the law grants an easement of necessity. Section 13 says the easements in its clauses (a), © and (e) are called easements of necessity. Classic case: a field sold to you is completely cut off from any road except by crossing the seller's retained land. You are entitled to a way of necessity over that land. Necessity means absolute necessity, not mere convenience: if any other access exists, even a longer or harder one, an easement of necessity will usually fail.
Acquisition by prescription (Section 15). Where a right of way has been peaceably and openly enjoyed by a person claiming title to it, as an easement, and as of right, without interruption, for twenty years, the right becomes absolute. This is a prescriptive right. Section 15 also says each 20-year period must be one ending within two years before the suit in which the right is contested. So you cannot rely on old, abandoned use; the enjoyment must continue up to near the date you sue.
Easement by grant. A servient owner can simply give you the right in writing. A grant of a right of way is the interest in immovable property; if granted for value or permanently it should be in a registered deed to be safe and enforceable.
Remedy when access is disturbed (Sections 33 and 35). Section 33 lets the dominant owner sue for compensation where the disturbance has caused substantial damage. Section 35 lets the court grant an injunction to restrain the disturbance of an easement, subject to sections 52 to 57 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963. In a blocked-access case the practical relief you want is a permanent injunction directing the neighbour to remove the obstruction and not to block the path again.
Case law. In Bachhaj Nahar v. Nilima Mandal, (2009) 17 SCC 491 (decided 23 September 2008), the Supreme Court held that an easementary right cannot be inferred by a court on its own. To claim an easement of necessity you must plead and prove that both plots were once a single property in one ownership, that ownership was severed, and that without the way claimed the dominant plot cannot be used. A right of way must be pleaded with its nature, the manner it was acquired, and how it was obstructed; vague pleadings fail.
Real-life example. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak owned a residential plot in Gorakhpur district, Uttar Pradesh, that he had bought in 2009 out of a larger family holding. The only access to his gate was a 4-foot strip running across the adjoining plot retained by the seller. In March 2024 the adjoining owner built a brick wall sealing the strip, leaving the plot landlocked. Dr. Pathak sent a legal notice on 2 April 2024 demanding removal within 15 days. When it was ignored, on 6 May 2024 he filed a suit for declaration of an easement of necessity and a permanent injunction in the court of the Civil Judge, Gorakhpur, paying an ad valorem court fee of about ₹4,200, plus roughly ₹600 in process and miscellaneous charges. He produced the 2009 sale deed, the parent deed showing both plots were once one holding, and the village map marking the strip. The court granted a temporary injunction restraining further construction, and the case proceeded on the basis that the plot could not be used at all without the strip.
It is your legal right to pass over a neighbour's land to reach or use your own plot. Under section 4 of the Easements Act, 1882 it attaches to your land and passes to whoever owns the plot after you.
Yes, you can claim an easement of necessity under section 13 if your plot cannot be used at all without crossing his land and both plots were once a single property that was later split. The necessity must be absolute, not just convenient.
If you enjoyed it openly, peaceably, without interruption and as of right (not merely by permission) for 20 years, you can claim a prescriptive easement under section 15. The use must continue up to within two years before you sue.
No. Use that is by the neighbour's permission is not “as of right”, so it does not build a prescriptive easement. Section 15 protects only enjoyment claimed as of right.
File a civil suit seeking a declaration of your easement and a permanent injunction under section 35 of the Easements Act, 1963 read with sections 52 to 57 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, plus an interim injunction under Order 39 CPC.
No. Removing it yourself is illegal self-help and can lead to criminal and civil action against you. Obtain a court order and have it enforced through the court.
Not for necessity or prescription, which arise by operation of law and long use. For an easement by grant, a registered deed is the safest way to make the right clear and enforceable.
It varies by state and court load. Court fees are usually a small ad valorem amount on the relief value plus process charges; the main costs are advocate's fees and the time taken to lead evidence, which can run from many months to a few years.