Supreme Court of India, centers on multiple Special Leave Petitions (SLPs) concerning land disputes in Punjab. The core issue across these cases is the status of land recorded as “Shamlat deh” and whether it was legally transferred or allotted in a manner that excludes it from being considered common village land under the Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1961. Specifically, the court examines if leases or temporary grants of such land, often to landless individuals, qualify as protected transfers or quasi-permanent allotments to displaced persons under a 1995 amendment to the Act. The judgments ultimately uphold the High Court’s findings in various related cases, confirming that leases do not constitute ownership or protected transfer and that the land in dispute often rightfully vests with the Gram Panchayat.
(A) Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1961, Section 2(g)(ii-a) (a amended by Punjab Act No.8 of 1995 with effect from 09.07.1985), Section 7 – Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Section 105 – Village Common Lands – Shamlat deh – Words ‘displaced person’ Expression ‘quasi-permanent basis’ – Amended Section 2(g)(ii-a) of the Act would reveal that the inclusive definition of Shamlat deh in the Act is actually amended by inserting a non- inclusive clause – In terms of the same, Shamlat deh, if allotted, on quasi-permanent basis to a displaced person or has been otherwise transferred to any person by sale or by way of any other manner, whatsoever, after the commencement of that Act on or before 9th day of July, 1985, it would fall out of the inclusion of the definition of Shamlat deh under Section 2 (g) of the Act – In other words, such allottee/transferee by sale or by any other manner would get the protection statutorily available as relates such land(s) – Contention of the petitioner is that the subject land was allotted to his father by the Government as he was a landless person belonging to Harijan – Held that a scanning of the contentions of the petitioner would reveal that he got no case that the subject land was transferred to his father by sale – Also took note of his contention that it was an evacuee property – The petitioner got no case that it was allotted to his father on a quasi-permanent basis for being a displaced person or that it was transferred by sale to his father – The case of the petitioner is that the subject land came to his father’s possession by allotment/transfer otherwise than by way of lease – His eviction was ordered, finding that even after the expiry of lease period, he is continuing to be there, without even paying the rent and therefore has been in unauthorised possession of the subject land – Do not find any reason to disagree with the findings of the High Court in the impugned judgment dated 18.10.2011 that after the expiry of the lease period, the petitioner herein who stepped into the shoes of his father as lessee has been continuing there as an unauthorised occupant – Petitioner not entitled to get the protection of the Amendment Act and that the period of lease had expired long back in 1971 and further that at any point of time before any forum, the petitioner had not challenged the recorded status of his father as lessee and further that he had only stepped into the shoes of his father, find no reason to interfere with the direction to evict the petitioner from the subject land in the application filed under Section 7 as he being an unauthorised occupant as held by the authorities, which was confirmed under the impugned judgment dated 18.10.2011 – Petition liable to be dismissed.
(Par 9 and 14)
(B) Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1961, Section 2(g)(ii-a) (as amended by Punjab Act No.8 of 1995 with effect from 09.07.1985) – Words and phrases –Words ‘displaced person’ – Expression ‘quasi-permanent basis’ – Meaning of the aforesaid words explained.
(Para 5 and 6)
(C) Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1961, Section 11 – Res judicata – Decision of claims of right, title or interest in shamilat deh – Held that the sine qua non for filing a petition under Section 11, claiming right, title or interest is that the land in question, over which such right, title or interest is claimed should be one vested or deemed to have been vested in the Panchayat concerned – In such circumstances, when the categoric case of the petitioner is that he approached the Collector through a petition under Section 11 itself would be sufficient to treat that the land in question was vested or deemed to have been vested with the respondent Panchayat – That apart, it is his own case that it was leased out to him on 22.05.1990 by the Panchayat – When that be the case of the petitioner, the petitioner cannot be heard to challenge the vesting or deemed vesting of the land(s) in question with the respondent-Panchayat – Held that the High Court was perfectly correct in holding that the unsuccessful attempt on the part of the respondent-Panchayat in the proceeding under Section 7 of the Act cannot be a reason for holding that they would or should act as res judicata to challenge an adverse order against them under Section 11 of the Act.
(Para 38 to 40)
Dalip Ram V. State Of Punjab
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 12: (DoJ 02-01-2025)




