Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
INAYAT ULLAH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CUSTODIAN,EVACUEE PROPERTY
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/10/1957
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 160 1958 SCR 816
ACT:
Evacuee property, Notification of-Issue of notice by
Custodian on person interested-Propriety, if can be
determined by Court-Refusal of copies of materials by
Custodian-Legality-Administration of Evacuee property Act,
1950 (XXXI of 1950), s. 7.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant and his brother owned certain properties
inherited from their father. The brother died and the
appellant claimed to have become the sole heir. The
respondent issued a notice under S. 7 of the Administration
of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, in respect of the share of
the brother on the ground that the brother had left a widow
and a son who had migrated to Pakistan. The appellant,
desiring to know on what materials the notice was issued,
applied for copies of the materials on the basis of which he
respondent had formed his opinion. The application was
rejected by the respondent. The appellant filed a petition
under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the High Court which
was also dismissed. The appellant obtained special leave
and contended that the notice was issued without
jurisdiction as there was no material before the respondent
to justify his issuing of the notice and that the
application for the copies had been improperly -ejected by
the respondent.
Held, that it was for the Custodian to form his opinion on
such material as was before him and on such information
which he possessed. It is not for any Court to determine
whether the information in the possession of the Custodian
was adequate to justify the issue of a notice under S. 7 of
the Act:
Held further, that the application for copies had been
rightly rejected. There are two stages in the process
whereby any property can be declared to be evacuee property
under the Act. One is the issuing of the notice to persons
interested and the other is the inquiry under S. 7. The
proceedings commence after issue of the notice and not prior
to it. A party to the proceedings will be entitled to
copies of the record and evidence from the stage of
817
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
the issuing of the notice until the conclusion of the
enquiry but not previous to the issue of the notice.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 144 of 1956.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
the 9th July, 1955, of the former Madhya Bharat High Court
in Civil Misc. Case No. 27 of 1954.
M. A. Khan and Ratanaparkhi, for the appellant.
S. N. Bindra and R. H. Dhebar, for the respondent.
1957. October 30. The following Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
IMAM J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the order
of the Madhya Bharat High Court dated July 9, 1955,
rejecting an application filed by the appellant under Art.
226 of the Constitution.
According to the appellant, his father Habibullah died more
than twenty years ago leaving behind the appellant and his
brother Bashirullah as his sole heirs. Habibullah, on his
death, left immovable properties in the city of Indore.
Bashirullah, who was unmarried, went mad in 1942 and died in
1950 without any issue. On his death, the appellant became
the sole owner of all the properties left by his father
Habibullah. On September 21, 1954, the respondent purported
to serve on the appellant a notice tinder s. 7 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950 (XXXI of 1950),
hereinafter referred to as the Act. This notice was not
served on him and was never pasted on the property
concerned. Service of the notice was, according to the
appellant, not proper and therefore illegal.
The appellant desiring to know on what material the notice
under s. 7 of the Act was issued against him applied on
October 1, 1954, for copies of the record and the evidence
in the possession of the respondent on the basis of which he
formed the opinion that Bashirullah, at his death, had left
behind a son Iqbal and a wife Kamrunnissa who had migrated
to Pakistan in consequence of which the estate inherited by
them from Bashirullah became evacuee property. The
application was rejected by the respondent.
818
The appellant filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution in the Madhya Bharat High Court, which was
dismissed by that Court. The High Court was of the opinion
that two questions fell to be decided in the proceedings
before it-(I) was the notice dated September 21, 1954,
issued by the respondent under s. 7 of the Act, illegal and
(2) was the refusal of the respondent to supply to the
appellant copies of the record and the evidence in
possession of the respondent prior to the issue of notice
under s. 7 of the Act unlawful? Both these questions were
decided against the appellant.
The notice dated September 21, 1954, was issued under s. 7
of the Act in accordance with the Rules framed under s. 56
of the Act. Under s. 7 of the Act the notice has to be
given to persons interested in the prescribed manner. Rule
6 of the Rules framed under the Act requires the notice to
be in Form I to be served on persons interested in the
property proposed to be declared evacuee property. We have
compared the notice issued in the present case with Form I
of the Rules and can find no difference between them in
essential particulars. It was said that the notice in the
present case does not state the grounds upon which the
property concerned was proposed to be declared evacuee
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
property and Iqbal and Kamrunnissa evacuees. This
contention is without foundation because the notice in
question definitely states under the heading "Grounds" that
Iqbal and Kamrunnissa migrated to Pakistan after March 1,
1947, on account of the creation of the Dominions. The
notice specifies with sufficient clarity the particulars of
the property proposed to be declared evacuee property.
There was no reliable material to prove the assertion of the
appellant that the notice was not properly served. We are,
accordingly, of the opinion that the notice in question has
not been proved to be illegal on account of contravention of
any of the provisions of the Act or the Rules made
thereunder.
It was next contended that there was no material before the
respondent to justify his issuing the notice and, therefore,
the notice was issued without
819
jurisdiction. Section 7 of the Act provides that where the
Custodian is of the opinion that any property is an evacuee
property within the meaning of the Act he may, after causing
notice thereof to be given in the prescribed manner to the
persons interested and after holding such enquiry in the
matter, as the circumstances of the case permitted, pass an
order declaring any such property to be evacuee property.
It is for the Custodian to form his opinion on such
material, as was before him, and on such information which
he possessed. The notice which he issued was in Form I of
the Rules framed under the Act and it stated clearly that
there was credible information in possession of the
respondent that lqbal and Kamrunnissa were evacuees and that
the property specified in the notice was evacuee property.
It was for the respondent to decide . whether, on the
information in his possession, he should issue a notice
under s. 7 of the Act. It is not for this Court or any
other Court to determine whether the information in
possession of the respondent was adequate to justify the
issuing of the notice. The contention on behalf of the
appellant in this respect cannot be supported on any valid
ground.
It was next contended on behalf of the appellant that when
bona fides of the respondent bad been challenged in the High
Court, that Court should have sent for the record and seen
for itself as to whether there was any justification for the
issue of the notice under s. 7 of the Act. In our opinion,
this contention cannot prevail as there is no material on
the record to justify the accusation that the respondent
acted with malafides in issuing the notice. The respondent
was free to believe or not to believe the information in his
possession. The mere issue of a notice would not make the
persons named therein evacuees or the property mentioned
therein evacuee property. That stage could only be reached
after the notice had been issued and after the holding of
such enquiry, as the circumstances of the case permitted,
when an order declaring the property to be evacuee property
could be made in respect of a person who was an evacuee, as
defined in
104
820
the Act. In our opinion, it was unnecessary for, the High
Court to have called for the record and to have examined it
for itself in order to ascertain whether the respondent was
justified in issuing the notice.
We have now to consider whether the application for copies
filed by the appellant was improperly rejected. On his
behalf, it was contended that the application for copies
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
should have been allowed as s. 7 of the Act contemplates
only one proceeding, from the commencement to the end,
including the stage prior to the issue of notice, regarding
the declaration of any property as evacuee property and that
that proceeding is a judicial proceeding. Since the appel-
lant was a party to the proceedings under s. 7 of the Act,
he was entitled to have copies of the record including the
evidence which constituted the proceedings. Reliance was
placed on s. 49 of the Act, which states that all records
prepared or registers maintained under the Act shall be
deemed to be public documents within the meaning of the
Indian Evidence Act and shall be presumed to be genuine
until the contrary is proved. Reference was also made to s.
45 of the Act which states that for the purpose of holding
an enquiry under the Act, the Custodian shall have the same
powers as are vested in a civil court under the Code of
Civil Procedure when trying a suit, in respect of the
following matters:
(a) enforcing the attendance of any person and examining
him on oath;
(b) compelling the discovery and production of documents;
(c) any prescribed matter;
and the enquiry by the Custodian shall be deemed to be a
judicial proceeding within the meaning of ss. 193 and 228 of
the Indian Penal Code and the Custodian shall be deemed to
be a court within the meaning of ss. 480 and 482 of the Code
of Criminal Procedure. There can be little doubt that the
Custodian, while holding an enquiry under s. 7 of the Act is
acting in a judicial capacity and that, by virtue of Rule 35
of the Rules, any party to the enquiry would be entitled to
copies of any application,
821
objection, petition, affidavit, or statement made by a party
or a witness and any other document. He would also be
entitled to copies of the final original order passed by the
Custodian or an order passed in appeal, revision or review.
The position, however, is quite different with respect to
the material in possession of the Custodian on which he
formed his opinion and on which he issued notice under s. 7,
because at that stage he was not holding an enquiry and was,
therefore, not acting in a judicial capacity. It is a
misconception of the entire scheme of the Act to suppose
that an enquiry under s. 7 of the Act and the issuing of a
notice previous to the holding of that enquiry is a single
proceeding. When issuing a, notice under s. 7 the Custodian
merely has some credible information which, in his opinion,
justifies him in issuing it and thereafter to enquire into
the matter before making a declaration that the property is
evacuee property. That information may, after the enquiry
has been concluded, turn out to be entirely insufficient for
making the required declaration. In our opinion, there are
two stages in the process whereby any property can be
declared to be evacuee property under the Act. One is the
issuing of the notice to persons interested and the other an
enquiry under s. 7 of the Act. The proceedings commence
after the issue of a notice and not previous to it. At the
second stage, a party to the proceedings would be entitled
to copies of the record and the evidence from the stage of
the issuing of the notice until the conclusion of the
enquiry but not previous to the issue of the notice. In our
opinion, the appellant would have been well advised to have
responded to the notice issued to him and assisted the
respondent in holding the enquiry. The respondent would
have had to consider all the material before him at the
enquiry before he declared the property in question evacuee
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
property. If the material in the enquiry was insufficient
to justify such a declaration, the appellant had the right
of appeal against the order of the respondent. In our
opinion, the application of the respondent for copies was
rightly rejected by the respondent as he was not,
822
entitled to copies of the material before the respondent
previous to the issuing of the notice under s. 7 of the Act.
The appeal, accordingly, fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.