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More than 200 poplar trees were removed The villagers' cultivated land finally saw the light

"My wife has been hospitalized because my family's harvest has not been good for a long time, and she is about to plant wheat, and I am on the fire to the throat." After the tree was cut down today, the ground lit up, and my heart lit up. Applicant Zhou said.

On September 24, the Executive Bureau of the Tongzhou District People's Court of Beijing Municipality, in response to Zhou's application for enforcement of Liu's exclusion of a nuisance dispute, forcibly removed the poplar trees on the contracted land contracted by the judgment debtor Liu, and the land that had been blocked for five years finally saw the sunshine again.

More than 200 poplar trees were removed The villagers' cultivated land finally saw the light

More than 200 poplar trees blocked the light, and the villagers sued the court for forced removal of poplar trees

It is understood that the applicant, Zhou Mou, is a villager in Xiji Town, Tongzhou District, Beijing, and he contracted 7.46 mu of land in the village for the cultivation of wheat, corn and other traditional grain crops. The land contracted by the executor Liu X is located in a village in Xiji Town, Tongzhou District, Beijing, with an area of about 200 mu.

The land contracted by Liu is adjacent to the land contracted by Zhou, and the road is separated by about four meters. Liu's contracted land is close to the side of Zhou's family land, planted with a row of more than 200 poplar trees. As poplar trees grow to a height of more than 20 meters year by year, the serious obstruction of lighting leads to a reduction in crop yields on Zhou's land. Zhou repeatedly asked for help from the village committee, town government and other departments, but the problem was not properly resolved.

More than 200 poplar trees were removed The villagers' cultivated land finally saw the light

Zhou had no choice but to sue to the Tongzhou court. After trial, the Tongzhou court ruled that defendant Liu removed all the poplar trees in the contracted land in a village in Xiji Town, Tongzhou District, Beijing, and compensated the plaintiff Zhou for the loss of crop yield reduction of 1800 yuan.

After the judgment took effect, Liu did not take the initiative to perform the obligation of removal and monetary payment, and Zhou applied to the court for compulsory enforcement.

After the case entered the enforcement stage, the undertaker's on-site investigation found that there were about 200 poplar trees in Liu's contracted land, which seriously blocked the lighting of Zhou's crops and affected crop growth.

The undertaker first tried to contact the person subject to enforcement and urged him to take the initiative to fulfill his legal obligations, but was unsuccessful. In the process of implementation, the undertaker drove to the site of the land involved in the case many times, conducted on-site investigation of the trees involved in the case, sought a safe and effective felling plan, and repeatedly communicated and coordinated with the village committee, the forestry station of the town government, and the landscaping bureau, trying to solve the problem of forest logging from the source through multiple channels, but did not achieve the desired effect.

Seeing that it was about to be the season of planting wheat, Zhou was in a hurry to catch fire and lose his voice, and the undertaker actively explained the law and reasoning to the applicant in order to protect the farmers and promote farming, explaining that in the case of conduct enforcement, if the person subject to enforcement did not take the initiative to perform, the applicant could perform on behalf of the person, and the cost of performance on behalf of the person subject to enforcement was borne by the person subject to enforcement. After soliciting the opinions of the applicant on behalf of the applicant, Zhou took the initiative to apply to the court to perform the legal obligation to remove the poplar tree on behalf of the judgment debtor Liu, and bear the corresponding costs.

The court braved the rain to cut down trees The person in charge of the village committee expressed positive cooperation

At 9:40 a.m. on September 24, the weather was overcast and raining. More than 20 cadres and policemen of the Tongzhou Court Executive Bureau, led by Zhu Changjun, member of the party group and vice president of the tongzhou court, and Chen Handong, director of the bureau, went to the land involved in the case to carry out enforcement work in the rain. The applicant, Zhou Mou, also arrived at the scene early.

Beiqing-Beijing headline reporters saw at the scene that the more than 200 poplar trees involved in the case grew very luxuriantly. Corn is being planted in the field of zhou, but the corn plant is short and the corn fruit is relatively small.

"It's been 8 years since this incident, from the lawsuit to now another year, the loss of at least 8,000 yuan per year." Executive applicant Zhou Mou spoke in a hoarse voice.

Because there is a green net outside the poplar tree, it is necessary to pass through an iron mesh gate to enter the inside. At about 9:45 a.m., the bailiff used pliers to break the wire and chains wrapped around the gate and opened it.

At about 10:13 a.m., a lumberjack, armed with a lumberjack, began cutting poplars. With the roar of the lumberjack, within 52 seconds, two poplar trees fell one after another. Subsequently, the lumberjacks braved the rain to continue their work...

"The original arrangement was to remove all poplar trees, combined with today's rainy weather conditions and the situation of the cutting equipment, it can only be done as much as possible." Zhu Changjun, vice president of the Tongzhou Court, said.

In the process of enforcement, the person in charge of the village committee of the village where the poplar land involved in the case was located was present. The judge informed the villagers' committee that it should actively perform its legal obligation to assist in enforcement, and explained to it the legal consequences of refusing to assist in enforcement, and the person in charge of the villagers' committee expressed his attitude on the spot to actively cooperate with the court's enforcement. "The respondent, Mr. Zhou, has signed an agreement with the villagers' committee to transfer the relevant rights and obligations to the villagers' committee. At present, the trees are owned by the village committee. Zhu Changjun told reporters.

Intern Chu Yifan

Text/Beijing Youth Daily reporter Ye Wan

Edit/White Dragon

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