Adverse Possession: Its Legal Consequences

Adverse possession is a peculiar kind of possession of land where a person not having legal title to the land enters and occupies the land for long period with no continuing permission of the legal owner and the true owner subsequently loses his ownership rights after a legally permissible period of his inaction in recovering the possession from the possessor. The owner might have initially permitted the possessor in entering the land on the basis of a lease or licence.

Difference between Attachment & Charge

Attachment creates no charge or lien upon the attached property. It merely prevents and avoids private alienations. It does not confer any title on the attaching creditors. There is nothing in any law which makes the attaching creditor a secured creditor or creates any charge in his favour over the property attached. A charge on the other hand creates no interest in or over a specific immovable property, but is only a security for the payment of money.