209 
OTHER CONDITIONS. 
A —In Titles for Country Lands not exceeding 100 Acres 
(Land Enactment. Part III). 
Lands not exceeding 100 acres in area, and not included 
in any township or village, may be held either under grant 
or by entry in the mukim register. Mukim ’ ’ is the name 
given to a sub-division of a district, and the register of each 
mukim contains particulars of all alienated lands in that 
mukim other than land held under grant or certificate ol 
title [Land Enactment, Section 31 (i)]. The entry m the 
mukim register gives to the person recorded as owner a 
permanent transmissible and transferable right, interest 
and occupancy in bis land (Land Enactment, Section 66). 
Such right, however, is subject to review by the Collector 
on the complaint of any person who claims to be entitled to 
be registered as the owner. (Section 35.) 
Land held under Part III of the Enactment whether 
by grant or entry, is subject to the implied condition that 
it is liable to forfeiture if it is abandoned for thiee con- 
secutive years. (Section 34.*) 
Bv “abandonment” is meant “the failure. . . . . .to use 
the land for the purpose for which it was alienated; m the 
absence of any special condition denoting the purpose, land 
will be deemed to have been alienated for cultivation, and 
be regarded as abandoned if it is not kept under cultivation 
to the extent of one-fourth of its area. 
B. — Lands exceeding 100 Acres in Area. 
These lands must all he held under grant, and are sub- 
ject to the same implied conditions and obligations as have 
been mentioned before (p. 11). 
In the case of lands not exceeding 640 acres in extent, 
the following additional conditions are implied: that (i) a 
bona fide commencement of cultivation will be made with m 
twelve months from the date of the grant, and (n) one- 
fourth of the land will be cultivated within five years from 
such date. The penalty for failure to observe these con- 
ditions is re-entry on the land by Government and the re- 
sumption of the portions not then cultivated: the grantee 
may he allowed to retain such belts of jungle or plots ol 
land as may be necessary to protect existing cultivation, 
and may also retain two acres in respect of each acre then 
under cultivation. Where a grantee has duly fulfilled the 
condition of cultivating one-fourth of the area, he is en- 
titled to an endorsement on his grant to the effect that the 
