(1.) MOLAR was a big landowner, a part of whose land was declared surplus. Respondents 5 and 6 were allotted a part of that land in 1966, and according to the Respondents, they were given physical possession of that land. They were, however, dispossessed by Petitioners 1 and 2, who, claimed to be the tenants on the land under Molar, the original landowner. On a complaint filed by Respondents 5 and 6 in the years 1969 and 70, the Collector, under Section 19 -C of the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, 1953 (hereinafter called the Act), delivered possession of the land to Respondents 5 and 6. They have again been dispossessed and again an order has been passed by the Collector under Section 19 -C of the Act for restoring possession of the land to Respondents 5 and 6. That order has been upheld by the Commissioner, Ambala Division. The Petitioners have filed this petition for the quashing of this order on the ground that the Collector and the Commissioner have no jurisdiction to restore possession of the land to Respondents 3 and 6 after they are alleged to have been forcibly dispossessed. I find substance in the submission made on behalf of the Petitioners. Section 19 -C, on which reliance has been placed by the Respondents, reads as under:
(2.) IT is submitted by the learned Counsel for the Respondents that the words "from time to time" indicate that the Collector has the jurisdiction to restore possession to the resettled tenant any number of times. I regret my inability to agree to this submission. What the section really means is that the Collector can direct the landowner of the tenant, whose land has been declared surplus, to deliver possession to the resettled tenant whenever an allotment is made in his favour. Once the resettled tenant gets possession of the land allotted to him, the jurisdiction of the Collector to deliver the possession of that land to him comes to an end. That jurisdiction is not revived when the resettled tenant is forcibly dispossessed from his land by any person - -even by the original landowner or the tenant whose land had been declared surplus. In that eventuality, the resettled tenant has to follow the ordinary remedies like the other citizens of the country. The Legislature has not given him a right to go to the Collector under Section 19 -C of the Ac$ for restoration of possession to him on the ground that he has been dispossessed by someone.
(3.) THIS dictum of their Lordships has been approved by the Supreme Court and the same dictum applies with regard to the jurisprudence of this country. Every Government officer must justify his action before a Court of justice on the basis of some law giving him the authority to take that action. It is frankly admitted by the learned Counsel for the Respondents that there is no other provision excepting Section 19 -C ibid to confer that power on the Collector. As I have held above, Section 19 -C does not clothe the Collector with the power to restore possession to a forcibly ejected resettled tenant. He has to follow the ordinary remedies like any other citizen.