Municipalities must compensate owners for shamlat land, rules HC
HARYANA VERDICT ‘HUGE FOR FARMERS’; TO HAVE RAMIFICATIONS IN PUNJAB AS WELL
CHANDIGARH: The Punjab and Haryana high court has held that village merger in a municipality does not divest the identifiable villagers of ownership of common land (shamlat land) and civic bodies will have to compensate owners to use such land. The order will have ramifications in Punjab too even as the verdict was on 100 odd petitions by residents of Haryana.
The judgment from a fivejudge bench presided over by justice SS Saron came on bunch of petitions, challenging provisions of Haryana Panchayati Raj Act, 1994, and Haryana Municipal Act, 1973, which provided that if a gram panchayat is included in a municipality, it shall cease to exist and its assets and liabilities shall vest in the municipality.
The petitioners had argued that without paying compensation for the village common land (shamlat), it could not be transferred to municipalities. Detailed judgment is awaited.
“It is a landmark victory for farmers. Their rights on village common land, which illegally were usurped by the state, have been resurrected by the high court,” senior advocate Puneet Bali and advocate Vibhav Jain, who appeared on behalf of some petitioners, said.
The high court also ruled that the Jumla Mushtarka Malkan land of villages merged into the civic bodies also belong to its proprietors and municipalities would have to pay compensation for its acquisition. Jumla Mushtarka Malkan is a variety of common land created during consolidation after applying a pro-rata cut on the holdings of proprietors under the Consolidation Act.
The management and control of such land vests in a gram