(1.) The petitioners impugn the appellate order of the Collector dated January 10, 1978 (Annexure P.2) whereby he has upset the order of the Assistant Collector dated December 7, 1973 (Annexure P.1) passed under section 7 of the Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1961 (for short, the Act) upholding the possession of the petitioners on the suit land. The following facts furnish the background of the case.
(2.) On January 19, 1973, the respondent-Panchayat filed an application under section 7 of the Act for the ejectment of the petitioners. This, however, was dismissed by the Assistant Collector vide his order dated December 7, 1973 (Annexure P.1) with the conclusion that the petitioners were in possession of that land prior to the year 1953 and it was not in excess of their share in the Shamilat land. After about four years of the passing of this order Durga Parshad and others (now respondents 4 to 9), preferred an appeal against the same before the Collector with the plea that subsequent to the passing of the above-noted order by the Assistant Collector, they had got the suit land from the Panchayat in exchange for some other land of theirs and that exchange had been approved by the Government vide its memo No. SI(DP-76/152296, dated December 22, 1976. The Collector, brushing aside the objection of the petitioners to the effect that neither the appeal before him was within time nor Durga Parshad and others had any locus standi to prefer the appeal, concluded the matter against them in the following manner:-
(3.) After hearing the learned counsel for the parties I find that the impugned order, Annexure P. 2 is nothing but a perverse order. Under the Act, the Collector has no jurisdiction to put a particular individual - Durga Parshad and others in the instant case - in possession of any land on the basis of his title. It is patent that the Panchayat who admittedly had claimed some interest in the suit land neither made any grouse against the order of the Assistant Collector (Annexure P.1) nor preferred any appeal against the same. It rather having failed to secure the possession of the land in question before the Assistant Collector, transferred this land by way of exchange to Durga Parshad and others though with the approval of the Government as required by the relevant rules. This, however, did not mean that either Durga Parshad and others were not successors-in-interest of the Panchayat so far as this land was concerned or were not bound by the order, Annexure P.1. The observations made by the Collector that " the Gram Panchayat was not afforded any opportunity to lead evidence" and copies of the revenue record on the file of the case were not produced before the Assistant Collector, are patently baseless and against the record. As already pointed out, the Gram Panchayat at no stage made any grouse of the fact that it had been afforded no opportunity to lead any evidence. Further, it is amply clear from the contents of order Annexure p.1 that the petitioners produced copies of the Khasra Girdawaris relating to the period 1994 Bk. to 1973 AD besides Khatauni Istemal and other records of the consolidation proceedings before him in support of their case and it was on the basis of that material on record that he non-suited the gram Panchayat. Thus order Annexure P.2 clearly suffers from non-applicability of mind and is totally without jurisdiction.