Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Municipali­ties must compensate owners for shamlat land, rules HC

- Surender Sharma surender.sharma@hindustant­imes.com

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

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