Vacancy Circular No: -
District Court Patiala. Peon Recruitment 2024 Advertisement for the post of Peon in District Court Patiala. Candidates are advised to read the details, and eligibility criteria mentioned below for this vacancy. Candidates must check their eligibility i.e. educational qualification, age limit, experience and etc. The eligible candidates can submit their application directly before 21st December 2024. Candidates can check the latest District Court Patiala. Recruitment 2024 Peon Vacancy 2024 details and apply online at the patiala.dcourts.gov.in recruitment 2024 page.
District Court Patiala Recruitment Notification & Recruitment application form is available @ patiala.dcourts.gov.in. District Court Patiala. selection will be done on the basis of test/interview and shortlisted candidates will be appointed at Punjab. More details of patiala.dcourts.gov.in recruitment, new vacancy, upcoming notices, syllabus, answer key, merit list, selection list, admit card, result, upcoming notifications and etc. will be uploaded on official website .
Number of Vacancy: 33 Posts
Educational Qualification: Should have knowledge of Punjabi language upto middle standard.
Pay Scale:
INR
18000/- Per Month
Age Limit: Maximum 35 Years.
Selection Procedure: please refer to official notification.
Application Fee: please refer to official notification.
Applications, on prescribed proforma enclosed herewith alongwith attested copies of relevant testimonials i.e. proof of qualification, date of birth, category belongs and one passport size photograph are invited till 21.12.2024 by 05:00 PM.
Published on: 10th December 2024
For more details, please refer to official notification at Download Official Notification
Before the time of His Highness Maharaja Karm Singh, the administrative and judicial work of the State was in the hands of the thanadars( faujdars of the Ain-i-Akbari), the collectors of revenue (ugraha) being under them. There was no treasury and no court. In each pargana there was a thanadar, and in Sunam and Patiala proper there were kotwals. Their decisions in civil and criminal cases were final. Claims and offences, of whatever nature, were disposed of after verbal enquiry. No record of evidence was made and no judgement prepared. Final orders were given by word of mouth. The people acquisced in the decisions and seldom appealed to the Diwan or Wazir. There was no regular law in force; the customs and usages of the country were followed in deciding cases and had the force of law. The panchayat system was generally in vogue, and boundary disputes specially were referred to arbitration. The administering of oaths (nem) to the litigants was a great factor in bringing cases to an amicable settlement. The offenders were generally fined, but habitual and grave offenders were imprisoned without and fixed term of years and were released at the pleasure of the presiding officer. In murder cases the offender's relations were ordered to pay the price of blood to the heirs of the deceased by offering either a nata (female relative in marriage) or some culturable land or some cash, and thus to bring about an amicable settlement of the case; otherwise the perpetrator was hanged, generally on a kikkar tree, in some conspicuous place where the corpse was left hanging for many days. Barbarous punishments, such as maiming and mutilation, were in force to some extent. Sometimes the face, hands and feet, of an offender were blackened and he was proclaimed by best of drum, mounted on a donkey through the streets of the city. (for detailed account vide 'History of Patiala', by Khalifa Sayyid Muhammad Hasan, Prime Minister, Patiala State.)