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“The whole area of a Tamil village is divided into (1)
warapat, (2) tirwapat, (3) tarisu, and (4) poramboke. Warapat
are the cultivable lands which give waram or share of the
produce, generally nanja or wet lands; tirwapat, lands which
pay a tirwa or money tax, generally punjas or cultivated
wastes, and gardens; tarisu, waste divided into two classes,
sheykal carambo i.e., cultivable waste and anadi carambo i.e.
immemorial waste; and poramboke, lands incapable of
cultivation consisting of rocks, public roads, beds of rivers,
tanks and watercourses, burning grounds, the paracheri or
suburbs of the village occupied by the huts of pariahs and
other outcastes, the lands on which the different temples stand
and the site of the village itself called nuttum.”
A learned Judge of this Court in the judgment reported in (2006) 3 MLJ
216 (Muthammal v. State of Tamil Nadu) had noted that patta was
issued only for assessed lands and that is why, even Natham was called as
'poramboke'. “Puram” means “outside”. “Poke” means “revenue record”.