| Property Law

Course Information

  • 2025-26
  • 3-Year LL.B. (Hons.)
  • I
  • Nov 2025
  • Core Course

This course provides a comprehensive examination of real property and the legal framework governing its transfer through specific modes, including sale, mortgage, lease, exchange, and gifts. Given the increasing significance of property law—from the colonial period to post-independence India, which has undergone a substantial transformation from an agrarian economy to one centered on industry and services—its study assumes particular importance.

To foster a holistic understanding of property law and its contemporary relevance, the course begins with a theoretical exploration of the concept of property. It further acquaints students with property rights and their interrelation with various conceptions of justice, as articulated by select political theorists. The course subsequently examines the historical context of land distribution in pre-independence India and critically engages with constitutional debates surrounding the balance between private property rights and public interest.

Within this framework, the course transitions to its principal area of focus—the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (TP Act)—along with its subsequent amendments and key judicial precedents governing property transfers in India. In addition to this core statute, the course introduces students to legal concepts ancillary to property law, specifically easements and trusts by examining pertinent provisions of the Indian Easements Act, 1882 and the Indian Trusts Act, 1882 and relevant case law.

Finally, with a view toward the practical implications of property transactions, the course concludes by addressing the impact of digitization on land titling, with a particular focus on the digitization of land records in Karnataka.

Faculty

Mahima Balaji 

Assistant Professor of Law

Dr. Betsy Rajasingh

Assistant Professor of Law