Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6963-64 of 2001
PETITIONER:
GHULAM QADIR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SPECIAL TRIBUNAL & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/10/2001
BENCH:
M.B. Shah & R.P. Sethi
JUDGMENT:
SETHI,J.
Leave granted.
Partition of India in 1947 resulted in the outbreak of communal
riots which engulfed some parts of the country, particularly the then
united Province of Punjab in Northern India. Human blood flowed in the
rivers of Punjab which were the nerve centre of Province’s economy and
known for being responsible for the progress, prosperity and welfare of
the people. The fire which erupted in Punjab could not be contained by
the chilling snowing waters of rivers Jhelam and Chenab and its flames
lept over Jammu and Kashmir as well. In the name of religions, their
followers and believers let loose the rein of terror, destruction and
death. Thousands of Muslims and Hindus were massacred and millions
forced to flee from their homes for safety of lives. The Hindus and
Sikhs who were forced to leave their birth places on account of tribal
riots followed by regular Pakistani aggression in the State were called
refugees/ displaced persons in the main land of Jammu and Kashmir and
the Muslims who were forced to beco‘me the prey of the communal
holocaust were termed as evacuees.
To protect and provide for the administration of the properties,
left over by the evacuees in the State of Jammu and Kashmir, the then
Maharaja of the State, in exercise of his powers under Section 5 of the
Jammu and Kashmir Constitution Act, 1996, promulgated the Jammu Kashmir
State Evacuees (Administration of Property) Act, 2006 (1949 A.D),
(hereinafter referred to as the "Act").
It is alleged that with the passage of time, some unscrupulous
litigants assisted by dishonest administrators resorted to the
destruction and elimination of the properties statutorily entrusted to
the Custodian for protection and safeguard. The size and the quantum
of the properties is alleged to have been squeezed and reduced leaving
to a bare negligible existence. The present appeal demonstrates the
shocking and alarming situation prevalent in the State of Jammu &
Kashmir so far as the properties of the evacuees are concerned.
The facts giving rise to the filing of the present appeal are:-
one Sardar Begum claiming to be the daughter of an evacuee preferred
her claim on 1.12.1958, in terms of Section 8 of the Act with respect
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to shops and buildings existing thereon situated in Rejinder Bazar,
earlier known as Urdu Bazar in the city of Jammu. Finding that the
applicant was not entitled to the prayer made for restoration of the
property because in the intervening period department had spent a huge
amount on the reconstruction of the shops and buildings, the Custodian
vide his order dated 26th March, 1959 declined her prayer. However, in
the ends of Justice and dictates of humanity, the custodian thought it
appropriate to grant a sum of Rs.60/- per month to the applicant as
maintenance allowance. Not satisfied with the order of the Custodian,
Sardar Begum preferred an appeal which was disposed of by the Custodian
General on 29th July, 1959 remanding the case back to the Custodian for
fresh orders after thorough enquiry on the following points:-
"1. Whether Ghulam Mohd. evacuee continues to be an evacuee
or has died as stated by the appellant and consequently she
the appellant becomes the sole heir.
2. Considering the understanding by the Evacuee Deptt;
with Sardar Begum as stated in the note of the Custodian
dated 30.9.1958 whether the Evacuee Deptt; was justified in
converting the property to its own use and affecting
construction on the said land without a proper and prior
agreement with the appellant.
3. Since part of the land under shop came under shop came
under road widening scheme and compensation therefor was
paid by the P.W.D., it must be ascertained as to whether
the compensation was payable to the appellant as the
rightful heir and claimant of the property.
4. In case her absolute rights are established, it would
be for the Custodian to decide conclusively as to what
amount she would be liable to pay to the department for the
property, as it stands now, before it can be restored to
her. While determining the above, it will naturally become
incumbent upon the Custodian to give her credit for the
incomes received by way of rental as well as compensation
for the period for which the property has continued to be
in the possession of management of the Custodian.
5. It would also be upto the Custodian to decide the mode
of realization of departmental expenditure in case
restoration becomes legally imperative in consistence with
the provisions of the Evacuee Property Act."
After the remand when the matter was pending before the
custodian, the said Sardar Begum executed a ‘Will’ dated 4th January,
1964 registered on 9th January, 1964 in favour of the appellant
describing him as her cousin. He was held entitled to inherit the
property of the executor after her death which was detailed to be
situated in Kucha General Samunder Khan, Mohalla Dalpatian, and the
evacuee’s property in Rajinder Bazar, Jammu. The application of
Sardar Begum pending before the Custodian, after remand, was dismissed
for default of her appearance on 23rd July, 1965. It is reported that
she died on 13.9.1965. The appellant in continuation of the earlier
application, filed by Sardan Begum, preferred another application
claiming his right over the disputed property. The then custodian
(Bakshi Om Prakash) while disposing of the application on 4.12.1970
noticed that the property in dispute belonged to one Sultan Khan who
had no male issue and had only one daughter namely, Hussain Bibi.
Hussain Bibi was stated to be having three issues namely, Sardar Begum,
Shah Begum and Ghulam Mohammed. Shah Begum and Ghulam Mohammed were
stated to have migrated to Pakistan with the result that their property
being evacuee property vested in the Custodian. As there was no
claimant to the property, it was taken over by the Evacuee Property
Department and reconstructed. The appellant was held to be having no
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relation whatsoever with the original owner of the property, namely,
Sultan Khan. Sardar Begum could not Will away the property which had
not devolved upon her and vested in the Custodian under the provisions
of the Act, at the time of the execution of the ‘Will’ and her death.
The Will was held to be not having any effect on the property which
concededly had vested in the Custodian.
It appears that despite the disposal of the application of the
appellant on 4.12.1970, another Custodian (S.A. Qayum) again dealt with
the matter and accepted his claim. The appellant was held entitled
to 1/4th share of Sardar Begum in that property and to its restoration.
He was further appointed as Manager of the remaining 3/4th property of
the evacuees with the direction to render proper accounts. In his
Order dated 25.9.1972 the Custodian specifically stated that he was
dealing with the application of Sardar Begum filed under Section 8 of
the Act. He did not notice the disposal of the application by the
Custodian, after remand, by the then Custodian vide his Order dated
4.12.1970. The Custodian found that Hussain Bibi, the daughter of the
original owner had died before 1947. She was stated to be having one
son namely, Ghulam Mohammed and two daughters, namely, Sardar Begum and
Shah Begum. Ghulam Mohammed was held to have become an evacuee. The
Custodian found that there was nothing to show as to whether Ghulam
Mohammed had died or left any other heir except Sardar Begum. Fate of
Shah Begum also could not be ascertained. Sardar Begum was held
entitled to 1/4th share of the whole property under Mohammadan Law. As
noticed earlier the appellant was held entitled to the property to the
extent of her share. Showing his over-enthusiastic interest in the
property, the then Custodian (S.A. Qayum) addressed a letter to the
Secretary General, Government Department on 14.10.71 (Annexure P-6)
requesting for handing over the possession of Flat No.6 situated in
Rajinder Bazar to the appellant because the Flat was under Government
occupation being retained for the accommodation of State Secretariat
employees who move to Jammu during winter (the occasion popularly known
as Darbar Move) .
Not fully satisfied with the order of the Custodian, the
appellant preferred an appeal before the Custodian General with prayer
for modifying the order directing him to pay the cost of the
construction incurred by the Custodian. The Custodian General vide his
order dated 29.9.1972 again remanded the case back to the Custodian for
fresh enquiry. It appears that after the remand, the then Custodian
(Shri N.G. Dar) dealt with the matter afresh and vide his order dated
18.8.1987 ultimately held the appellant entitled to the whole of the
disputed property. He further directed the deletion of the property
from the register of the properties of the Evacuee Property Department
as a consequence of the acceptance of appellant’s application under
Section 8 of the Act.
Feeling aggrieved by the restoration of the whole of the
property, the tenants, who were put in possession of the property by
the Custodian preferred a revision petition under Section 30 of the Act
before the Custodian General of the State. The then Custodian General
(G.M.Parra) elaborately dealt with various aspects of the disputes and
ultimately set aside the order of the Custodian dated 18.8.1987. The
Custodian General, while going through the record referred to a number
of applications and statements of Sardar Begum made by her before her
death. He found that the property for the return of which the claim
was preferred before the Custodian, was the self-acquired property of
the maternal grand-father of Sardar Begum, who did not have any
dependant. Sardar Begum in her Statement recorded by the Custodian had
mentioned that her grand-father had died when she was a child. She was
brought up by her grand- mother who also died long ago when her
statement was recorded by Commission appointed by the Custodian on
26.8.1965. She claimed that being the only heir of the deceased, her
mother namely, Hussain Bibi remained in possession of the property.
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She further stated:
"In disturbances of 1947 when we were fleeing to Sialkot
we were attacked. In the attack my brother was separated
from me and I was kidnapped and taken to Hira Nagar. From
Hira Nagar I was recovered from the house of Dr. Prithvi
Raj and brought to Jammu. My brother is missing even
since then. Ever since then I have neither heard about him
not has any body told me that he is alive in Pakistan.
Even since disturbances I am in possession of one house.
three shops - property aforesaid, as owner. After that
Custodian built shops and flats and I was promised that
after its constructions and keeping it for recovery of cost
of construction, the property shall be returned to me. But
instead of doing so, the property was included in list of
Evacuees property. I have applied for the return of
possession which is till under consideration. I as sole
owner of the property am entitled to its return to me. My
two shops which were demolished - Sic - were not"
The Custodian General did not believe the statement of the
witnesses produced by the appellant holding that they had no knowledge
about the property or its owner. The will executed by Sardar Begum was
found to be shrouded with doubts. The Custodian General further found
that there was no reliable evidence with regard to the other owners of
the property, namely Ghulam Mohammed and Shah Begum, who were found to
have migrated to Pakistan in the disturbances of 1947. He concluded:-
"I, therefore, find strong grounds for setting aside the
impugned order dated 18.8.1987 of the Custodian and accept
the revision petition filed by the applicants. It may
also be pointed out here that non-applicant Ghulam Qadir
has not compiled with the orders of the Custodian and even
those of the Additional Session Judge who granting the
probate as he has not rendered any accounts so far for
property which had remained in his managership. In view of
the malafide attitude of Ghulam Qadir, I see no reason to
allow continuance of managership with him, which is hereby
cancelled. The file be consigned to records after due
completion".
Being deprived of the whole of the property the appellant
approached the Jammu and Kashmir Special Tribunal under Section 30-A of
the Act. It may be noticed that the Custodian General and the allottee
tenants of the property were arrayed as respondents in the Revision
Petition filed by the appellant. His revision was accepted by setting
aside the order of the Custodian General and by restoration of the
order of the Custodian which was termed to be well reasoned and based
upon evidence led by the appellant.
The Writ Petition filed by the tenant allottees was dismissed on
21.8.1991 by the learned Single Judge(S.S.Kang, C.J) of the High Court
holding that the petitioners had no locus standi to file the writ
petition. Finding that the order of the learned Single Judge was
against law, as earlier settled by the Jammu and Kashmir High Court,
the tenants-allottees filed LPA No.210 of 1991 in the High Court.
Realising that the Custodian being deprived of the valuable property
and that the rights of the evacuees were jeopardised by the order
passed by the Tribunal, the Custodian General and the Custodian of the
evacuees property also filed a Writ Petition No.304 of 1994. Both the
LPA and Writ Petition have been disposed of by the impugned common
judgment. The Division Bench of the High Court held that the appellant
is not entitled to claim the property which shall continue to vest in
the Custodian. The tenants were held entitled to remain in
possession of the property subject to terms and conditions which may be
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fixed by the Custodian General.
Assailing the judgment impugned, Shri P.P. Rao, Senior Advocate,
appearing for the appellant has submitted that the said judgment is not
sustainable and liable to be set aside on the following grounds:-
(i) That neither the Custodian nor the allottee had any locus
standi to challenge the order of Jammu and Kashmir Special Tribunal
passed in exercise of the powers vested in it under Section 30-A of the
Evacuee Property Act;
(ii) Accordingly, the learned Single Judge had rightly dismissed
the writ petition filed by the allottee holding that they had no locus
standi to challenge the order of the authorities under the act;
(iii) That the High Court was not justified to go into the
questions of sufficiency of proof with regard to succession of a
family and with regard to execution of a ‘Will’, or the rights of the
survivor and the successor in interest of its executor;
(iv) The High Court committed a mistake of law in not relying
upon the probate issued by a competent court of Jurisdiction in
accordance with law applicable on the point and that the appellant had
proved the execution of ‘Will’ beyond any shadow of doubt;
(v) That the Custodian General committed an error of
law by going into the questions of fact while exercising revisional
jurisdiction under the Act.
(vi) That the questions of facts based upon rival claims of
the parties could not be adjudicated by the High Court in exercise of
its Writ Jurisdiction. The Act does not supercede the law of
succession by which the parties are governed. If the evacuee died any
time after the commencement of the Act, succession to his property,
though declared as evacuees property, would devolved upon his legal
heirs who are residing and are available in the State of Jammu &
Kashmir. Alternatively, it has been argued that in no case Sardar
Begum could be held not even entitled to at least 1/4th share in the
disputed property.
(vii) That the Custodian, the appropriate authority under the
Act, had on facts rightly held Sardar Begum and the appellant entitled
to the property both under Section 8 as well as Section 14 of the Act.
The principle underlying Section 14 is deemed to be applicable to the
proceedings under Section 8 of the Act as well.
Supporting the judgment of the High Court and the Order of the
Custodian General (G.M. Parra) Mr. E.C. Agrawala, the learned
counsel,who appeared for the allottees in occupation of the property
submitted that: (i) the application filed by Sardar Begum was not
entertainable being barred by limitation; (ii) Sardar Begum failed to
show that she had any interest in the evacuees property as she could
not establish her relation with the evacuee who was the owner of the
property at the time of disturbances and partition of the country in
the year 1947; and (iii) that Sardar Begum had been taking
contradictory stands with respect to her claim over the property. She
had preferred her claim both under Section 8 as well as Section 14 of
the Act which are mutually contradictory as they deal with different
situations. Referring to the prevalent situation in the State, the
learned counsel has submitted that Section 8 is being resorted to by
dishonest and unscrupulous litigants with the object of destroying
evacuees property and thereby taking away the rights of those for whose
benefit the Act was enacted and the Custodian entrusted with the job of
protecting their properties. Such persons’ modus operandi is that they
procure one or two casual/chance witnesses to prove their false claim
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for establishing relationship with the evacuee, without placing any
document on record to show that the evacuee had died issueless and
heirless, while in Pakistan. Sardar Begum and the appellant are
alleged to have procured some orders in their favour by
misrepresentation of facts and by production of hired witnesses. They
are further alleged to have hidden their claim under the veil of
secrecy so that the persons who knew the facts could not resist their
unfounded claim.
Mr. Anis Suhrawardy, who appeared for the Custodian General
vehemently argued that the scheme of the Act clearly shows that the
authorities under the Act were performing dual duties i.e. (i) they
deal with the responsibility of maintaining, managing and protecting
the property left over by the evacuee; and (ii) exercising quasi
judicial powers conferred upon them for achieving the objects for which
the law was enacted. He has conceded that frequent resort to Section
8 of the Act is being availed by persons not really entitled to it.
To appreciate the rival contentions of the parties, it would be
profitable to refer to the scheme and the relevant provisions of the
Act, necessary for the disposal of the controversy in this appeal
As noticed earlier the Act was promulgated by the State under
the then prevalent constitution with the object to provide for the
administration of evacuees property in the State of Jammu & Kashmir by
providing mechanism and procedure for its preservation, protection and
restoration whenever and wherever needed. Section 2 (c) of the Act
defines the Evacuee to mean :-
(c) "evacuee" means any person, -
(i) who, on account of the setting up of the
Dominions of India and Pakistan or on account of civil
disturbances or the fear of such disturbances , leaves or
has, on or after the Ist day of March, 1947, left, any
place in the State for any place outside the territories
now forming part of India, or
(ii) who is resident in any place now forming part of
Pakistan or in any such part of the territory of the Jammu
and Kashmir State as is under the operational control of
the Pakistan armed forces, and who for that reason is
unable to occupy, supervise or manage in person his
property in the State or whose property in the State has
ceased to be occupied, supervised or managed by any person
or is being occupied, supervised or managed by an
unauthorised person, or
(iii) who has, after the 14th day of August, 1947 acquired
by way of allotment or lease or by means of unlawful
occupation or lease or other illegal means, any right to,
interest in or benefit from any property which is treated
as evacuee or abandoned property under any law for the
time being in force in Pakistan or any such part of the
territories of the Jammu and Kashmir State as is under the
operational control of the Pakistan Armed Forces."
Section 2(d) defines the Evacuee Property is as :-
"evacuee property" means any property in which an evacuee
has any right or interest (whether personally or has a
trustee or as a beneficiary or in any other capacity), and
includes any property which has been obtained by any
person from an evacuee after the 14th day of August, 1947,
by any mode of transfer unless such transfer has been
confirmed by the Custodian, but does not include-
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(i) any ornaments, any wearing apparel, cooking vessels or
other household effects in the immediate physical
possession of an evacuee,
(ii) any property belonging to a Joint Stock Company, the
registered office of which was situated before the 15th day
of August, 1947, in any place now forming part of Pakistan
or any such part of the territories of the Jammu and
Kashmir State as is under the operational control of the
Pakistan Armed Forces and continues to be so situated after
the said date;
Section 3 provides that the Act, the Rules and Orders made
thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding anything inconsistent
therewith contained in any other law for the time being in force or in
any instrument having effect by virtue of any such law.
Chapter II deals with the Evacuee Property and vesting thereof in
the Custodian. Section 4 provides that the Government may, by
Notification in the Official Gazette, appoint Custodian General and as
many as Dy. Custodian General, Additional, Deputy or Assistant
Custodians as may be necessary for the purposes of discharging the
duties imposed upon the Custodian General and Deputy Custodian General
by or under the Act.
Section 5 deals with the vesting of the evacuee property in
the Custodian and provides :-
" Subject to the provisions of this Act, all evecuee
property situate in the State shall be deemed to have
vested in the Custodian/-
(a) in the case of the property of an evacuee as defined
in sub-clause (I) of clause (c)of section 2, from the date
on which he leaves or left any place in the State for any
place outside the territories now forming part of India;
(b) in the case of the property of an evacuee as defined
in sub-clause (ii) of clause (c) of section 2, from the 15th
day of August, 1947; and
(c) in the case of any other property, from the date it has
been registered as evacuee property
(2) Where immediately before the commencement of this Act,
any property in the State had vested as evacuee property in
any person exercising the powers of a Custodian under any
corresponding law in force in the State immediately before
such commencement, the property shall, on the commencement
of this Act, be deemed to be evacuee property declared as
such within the meaning of this Act and shall be deemed to
have vested in the Custodian appointed under this Act, and
shall continue to so vest.
(3) Where any property belonging to a joint stock company
had vested in any person exercising the powers of a
Custodian immediately before the commencement of this Act,
then, nothing contained in clause (d) of Section 2 shall
affect the operation of sub-section (2) but the Government
may, by notification in the Government Gazette, direct that
the Custodian shall be divested of any such property in
such manner and after such period, as may be specified in
the notification."
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Section 6 provides that the Custodian may, from time to time,
notify, either by publication in the Jammu & Kashmir Government Gazette
or in such other manner as may be prescribed, Evacuee properties which
have vested in him under the Act.
Section 8, with which we are concerned in the present appeals,
provides:-
"Any person claiming any right to, or interest in, any
property, which has been notified under section 6 as
evacuee property, or in respect of which a demand requiring
surrender of possession has been made by the Custodian, may
prefer a claim to the Custodian on the ground -
(a) the property is not evacuee property; or
(b) his interest in the property has not been affected by
the provision of this Act.
(2) Any claim under sub-section (1) shall be preferred by
an application made within thirty days from the date on
which the notification was issued or the demand requiring
surrender of possession was made by the Custodian:
Provided that the Custodian may, for sufficient reasons to
be recorded, entertain the application even if it is made
after the expiry of the aforesaid period:
(3) On receiving an application under sub-section (2) the
Custodian shall hold a summary inquiry in the prescribed
manner take such evidence as may be produced and pass an
order, stating the reasons therefor, either rejecting the
application or allowing it wholly or in part.
(4) For the purposes of this section Custodian means the
Custodian appointed under Section 4 for any Province of the
State."
Section 9 deals with the powers and duties of the Custodian
General and provides that without prejudice to the generality of the
provisions, the Custodian may, for any of the purposes:-
"(a) carry on the business of the evacuee;
(b) appoint a manager for the property of the evacuee or
for carrying on any business or undertaking of the evacuee
and authorise the manager to exercise any of the powers of
the Custodian under this section;
(c) enter or authorise any other person to enter on any
land or premises to inspect any evacuee property;
(d) take all such measures as may be necessary to keep any
evacuee property in good repair;
(e) complete any building which has vested in him and
which requires to be completed’
(ee) improve with the previous sanction of the Government
any evacuee property;"
Under Section 10 of the Act, the Custodian further has the power
to cancel any allotment or terminate any lease or amend the terms of
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any such lease or of any agreement on which any evacuee property is
held or occupied by any person, whether such allotment, lease or
agreement was granted or entered into before or after the commencement
of the Act. However, no allotment can be cancelled except as provided
for in the Rules framed by the Government in that behalf.
Sub rule 3 of Rule 14 of the Rules framed under the Act
authorises the Custodian to cancel the allotment and evict the
allottee, if he is satisfed that:-
"(i) the allottee has secured the allotment by
misrepresentation or fraud; or
(ii) the allottee is in possession of more than one evacuee
property of the same kind, that is to say, more than one
residential premises, or more than one business premises or
more than one industrial premises; or
(iii) the allottee is in occupation of accommodation
which, in the opinion of the Custodian, is in excess of the
requirement of the allottee either in the State or outside;
or
(iv) the allottee or any person normally residing with him
or dependant on him, has been granted by the Government a
plot of land for constructing a house thereon; or
(v) the allottee or any person normally residing with him
or dependant on him, has built a house or otherwise
acquired residential accommodation; or
(vi) the allottee has sub-let or permitted any other
person to occupy the property allotted or leased out to him
; or
(vii) the allottee has obtained gainful employment in a
place other than the place where the evacuee propertyd
allotted to him is situate; or
(viii) the property is required for any public purpose; or
(ix) the allottee has kept arrears of rent of any three
months unpaid; or
(x) the allottee is using the property for a purpose other
than the one for which it was allotted or leased or keeping
the property in disuse:"
Chapter III of the Act deals with the Consequences of the
property vesting in the Custodian.
Section 25 of the Act provides that no transfer of any right or
interest in any evacuee property, made in any manner whatsoever by or
on behalf of an evacuee shall be effective so as to confer any right or
remedies on the parties to such transfer or on any person claiming
under them unless it is confirmed by the Custodian General. Under
Section 25-A no property to which claim is established under Sections 8
or 14, whether possession thereof has been taken or not by the
claimant, can be sold or disposed of in any manner whatsoever without
the previous permission of the Government.
Section 27 of the Act provides:-
"Where in pursuance of the provisions of this Act the
Custodian has taken possession of any evacuee property,
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such possession shall not be deemed to be wrongful nor
shall anything done in consequence thereof be deemed to be
invalid or affected by reason only that at the material
time the evacuee who had a right or interest in the
property had died or had ceased to be an evacuee"
Section 30 of the Act deals with the rights of appeal, review
and revision. Under this Section, any person aggrieved by an order
made under Section 8, Section 14, Section 25 or Section 29-A may prefer
an appeal to the Custodian, where the original order has been passed by
the Deputy or an Assistant Custodian and to the Custodian General,
where the original or the appellate order has been passed by the
Custodian, an Additional Custodian or an Authorised Deputy Custodian.
An appeal is also provided to
the High Court against the Order of the Custodian General. However, no
appeal is maintainable in the High Court against the concurrent finding
of the Custodian and Custodian General.
Sub-section 4 of Section 30 provides that the Custodian General
or the Custodian may, at any time, either on his own motion or on
application made to him in that behalf, call for the record of any
proceeding under the Act which is pending before, or has been disposed
of, by an officer subordinate to him, for the purposes of satisfying
himself as to the legality or propriety of his Order passed in the said
proceeding and is empowered to pass such order in relation thereto as
he thinks fit. However, no order under this sub-section can be passed
by revising or modifying any order which affects any person without
giving such person a reasonable opportunity of being heard. Section 30-
A empowers the Minister Incharge of the Evacuee’s Property Department
to call for the record of any proceeding in which any Custodian or
Custodian General has passed an order under the Provisions of the Act
for the purposes of satisfying himself as to the legality or propriety
of any such order and is authorised to pass such orders in relation
thereto as he thinks fit. It may be noticed at this stage that the
powers of the Minister Incharge under this Section are presently being
exercised by the Jammu & Kashmir Special Tribunal.
In exercise of the powers conferred by Section 39 of the Act, the
Government has made the Jammu & Kashmir State Evacuee (Administration
of Property) Rules 2008, (hereinafter referred to as "Rules"). Rule 15
deals with the procedure in relation to claims under Section 8 of the
Act and provides:
"Procedure in relation to claims under section 8 _ (1) An
application under section 8 shall contain full particulars
of the property, the nature of the interest or rights which
the claimant has in that property and the facts upon which
the same is based and the names of the persons, if any, who
are interested in the property. The application shall be
accompanied by two copies thereof. It shall be stamped
with a court-fee stamp of three rupees and shall be
verified in the manner prescribed for the verification of
pleadings in rule 15 of Order VI of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1977. The application shall be presented in
person or by a duly authorised agent or pleader to the
Deputy or Assistant Custodian having jurisdiction or any
person authorised by him in writing to receive such
applications:
.................
(2) Notice of the application may be given by the Deputy or
Assistant Custodian to any person who in his opinion is
interested in the proceedings.
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(3) If a party making an application fails to appear on the
date fixed when the case is called for hearing the Deputy
or Assistant Custodian may dismiss the application for
default or proceed to decide the application on the
materials before him in the absence of the party.
(4) Where the application is dismissed under sub-rule (3),
the applicant shall be precluded from making a fresh
application on the same facts with respect to the same
property. But he may apply within 30 days from the date
of the order of dismissal or of the knowledge of such
dismissal for an order to set aside the order of dismissal
and if he satisfies the Deputy or Assistant Custodian that
there was sufficient cause for his non-appearance when the
case was called for hearing the Deputy or Assistant
Custodian shall make an order setting aside the orders of
dismissal upon such terms as he thinks fit and shall
appoint a day for proceeding with the application.
................."
Rule 16 provides the procedure for restoration of property
under Section 14 of the Act. It says:-
"(1) Subject to the provision of this rule, an application
under section 14 for restoration of property and inquiry
into the claim shall be made in accordance with the
provision of rule 15 in so far as they are applicable.
(2) A public notice of such application shall be made in a
local daily newspaper at the expense of the applicant:
........................
(3) The applicant shall before any order for restoration is
made produce a "No Demand Certificate" from the relevant
branches of the office of the Custodian:
(4) A certificate under the proviso to sub-section (1) of
section 14 shall be granted by the Government when it is
satisfied that the evacuee has returned to his original
place of residence for peaceful and permanent
rehabilitation and that he is not engaged in any subversive
activities:"
Rule 27 provides that all appeals under the Act shall, when they
lie to the Custodian, be filed within thirty days of the date of the
order appealed against and when they lie to the Custodian General or
the High Court, within sixty days of such date. Sub-rule 7 of Rule 27
provides that the provisions of Section 4, 5 and 12 of the Jammu and
Kashmir Limitation Act, 1995 shall, so far as they are applicable,
apply in computing the period of limitation provided in this rule.
Rule 29 mandates that all immovable property, taken possession of
by the Custodian, shall be recorded in registers in Form Nos. 9 and 10.
The aforesaid forms specifically provide a column relating to, "Name of
the owner with parentage and previous address"
Cabinet Order No.578 (c) of 1954 deals with Rules relating to
allotment of land to displaced persons, mentioned in the opening part
of this judgment as refugees.
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Regarding locus standi of the respondents to file the writ
petition against the order of the Tribunal, Shri Rao has launched a
two-pronged attack submitting that the respondent-tenants being not
the aggrieved parties had no right to challenge the order passed
against them as they claimed through the custodian and did not have
any independent right in themselves. So far as the authorities under
the Act are concerned, it is submitted that they could not have
preferred a writ petition being a quasi-judicial authority entrusted
with the powers of adjudication of rights of the claimants over the
property vesting in such authorities. In support of his submissions he
has referred to various provisions of the Act and relied upon some
pronouncements of this Court.
There is no dispute regarding the legal proposition that the
rights under Article 226 of the Constitution of India can be enforced
only by an aggrieved person except in the case where the writ prayed is
for habeas corpus or quo warranto. Another exception in the general
rule is the filing of a writ petition in public interest. The
existence of the legal right of the petitioner which is alleged to have
been violated is the foundation for invoking the jurisdiction of the
High Court under the aforesaid Article. The orthodox rule of
interpretation regarding the locus standi of a person to reach the
court has undergone a sea-change with the development of constitutional
law in our country and the constitutional courts have been adopting a
liberal approach in dealing with the cases or dis-lodging the claim of
a litigant merely on hyper-technical grounds. If a person approaching
the court can satisfy that the impugned action is likely to adversely
affect his right which is shown to be having source in some statutory
provision, the petition filed by such a person cannot be rejected on
the ground of his having not the locus standi. In other words, if the
person is found to be not merely a stranger having no right whatsoever
to any post or property, he cannot be non-suited on the ground of his
not having the locus standi.
The allottee of a property, under the Act, cannot be held to be
having no right enforceable under Article 226 of the Constitution of
India. The scheme of the Act and the rules made thereunder, as noticed
hereinabove, would establish that an allottee of an evacuee property in
the State of Jammu & Kashmir is a quasi-permanent allottee who cannot
be evicted from the premises unless the conditions specified under the
Act and the Rules are shown in existence and has a legal right to
remain in possession unless evicted by the custodian under the law.
Any action initiated by a person other than the custodian would give
such allottee a legal right to defend his possession as an allottee by
opposing the claim of the person intending to dispossess him by
obtaining orders under the Act which are likely to adversely affect his
possessery interests in the said property. Such allottees of the
property in the State of Jammu & Kashmir have acquired quasi-permanent
rights and are entitled to protection of the constituted authorities
and the courts. Even though such an allottee does not have a right to
the evacuee property as contemplated under Article 31 of the
Constitution, yet it cannot be disputed that he has a legal right to
remain in possession under the Act. Section 9 of the Act gives
the custodian power to take such measures as he considers necessary or
expedient for the purposes of administering, imposing or preserving and
managing the evacuee property. Section 10 provides that an allotment
made by the custodian or a lease granted by him can be cancelled,
amended or terminated by him subject to the condition that the
custodian shall not cancel any allotment except as provided under the
rules framed by the Government in that behalf. Sub-rule (3) of Rule 14
empowers the custodian to cancel the allotment and evict an allottee
only if he is satisfied that the allottee has secured the allotment by
misrepresentation or fraud or such allottee is in possession of more
than one evacuee property of the same kind or the allottee was in
occupation of accommodation which is in excess of his requirement or
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the allottee or any person normally residing with him or dependent on
him has been granted by the Government a plot of land for constructing
a house thereon or the allottee or any person residing with him has
built a house or the allottee has sub-let the property to some other
person or the allotee has obtained gainful employment in a place other
than the place where the evacuee property is situated or the property
is required for any public purpose or the allottee has kept arrears of
rent of any three months unpaid or the allottee is using the property
for the purposes other than the one for which it was allotted or leased
or is keeping the property in dis-use. Even despite the existence of
any of the grounds justifying the eviction, the allottee has a right to
be served with a notice for a period of not less than six months and
afforded reasonable opportunity to show cause. The allottee of an
evacuee property, therefore, cannot be equated with a contractual
lessee. Having acquired statutory rights, the allottee of the evacuee
property cannot be said to be a stranger having no locus standi to
challenge an order which, if not prevented, is sure to affect his
quashi-permanent rights. The scheme of the Act and the Rules made
thereunder clearly show that if allotment of a lessee under the Act is
cancelled by a statutory authority without complying with the
conditions of the Act or the Rules made thereunder, there is a direct
invasion of his legal rights conferred upon him by the Act entitling
him to approach the High Court for correcting the error of law
committed by any authority under the Act in order to keep it within the
bounds of law. In such a situation, the allottee cannot be held to be
asking the court to enforce any fundamental right but only seeking
protection of his legal rights which are alleged to be violated without
jurisdiction or in direct contravention of statutory provisions of law.
In State of Punjab v. Suraj Prakash Kapur, etc. [AIR 1963 SC 507]
this Court dealt with the cases of the evacuees from Pakistan who were
allotted some land on quasi-permanent tenure. After the allotment, the
State Government issued a notification under Section 14 of the East
Punjab Holdings (Consolidation and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act,
1948 declaring its intention to make a scheme for the consolidation of
the holdings and in 1955 the Consolidation Officer proposed
substitution of some other lands of lesser value for the lands allotted
to the petitioners. Another notification was issued by the Central
Government acquiring all the evacuee properties. Feeling aggrieved,
the allottees filed a petition under Article 226 of the Constitution of
India for the issuance of appropriate writ to quash the scheme of
consolidation and the notification issued under Section 12 of the Act.
The writ petition was resisted by the State on the ground that the
allottees had no legal right to maintain the petition under Article 226
of the Constitution of India. Repelling such a contention this Court
held:
"(4) The existence of a right and the infringement thereof
are the foundation of the exercise of the jurisdiction of
the court under Article 226 of the Constitution. The right
that can be enforced under Art.226 of the Constitution
shall ordinarily be the personal or individual right of the
applicant. It may be first considered whether the
respondents had such a right on the date when they filed
the petition under Art.226 of the Constitution. They filed
the petition on November 9, 1955, i.e., after the Central
Government issued the notification acquiring all the
evacuee properties and before it issued the sanad
conferring proprietary rights on the respondents in respect
of the land allotted to them. The nature of the interest
of a displaced person in the properties allotted to him
under the evacuee law has been authoritatively decided by
this Court in Amar Singh v. Custodian, Evacuee Property,
Punjab 1957 Subhash Chand Rai (A2) 801: [(S) AIR 1957 SC
599]. There, Jagannadhadas, J. speaking for the court
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after an elaborate survey of the law on the subject came to
the conclusion that the interest of a quasi permanent
allottee was not property within the meaning of
Art.19(1)(f) and Art.31(2) of the Constitution. But the
learned Judge made it clear that, notwithstanding the said
conclusion an allottee had a valuable right in the said
interest. The learned Judge stated the legal position in
the following words at p.836: (at p.612 of AIR):
"In holding that quasi-permanent allotment does not
carry with it a fundament right to property under the
Constitution we are not to be supposed as denying or
weakening the scope of the rights of the allottee.
These rights as recognised in the statutory rules are
important and constitute the essential basis of a
satisfactory rehabilitation and settlement of
displaced land-holders. Until such time as these
land-holders obtain sanads to the lands, these rights
are entitled to zealous protection of the constituted
authorities according to administrative rules and
instructions binding on them, and of the courts by
appropriate proceedings where there is usurpation of
jurisdiction or abuse of exercise of statutory
powers."
It may be mentioned that the learned Judge in coming to the
conclusion noticed all the relevant Acts on the subject,
including the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act, 1954 (44 of 1954) and particularly
S.12 thereof. The observations of this Court indicate that
notwithstanding such notification an evacuee has a valuable
right in the property allotted to him, and that the said
right is entitled to the protection of the constituted
authorities and the courts. A perusal of the relevant
provisions of Act 44 of 1954 demonstrates the correctness
of the said observations.
(5) Section 10. Where an immovable property has been
leased or allotted to a displaced person by the Custodian
under the conditions published --
(a) by the notification of the Government of Punjab in
the Department of Rehabilitation No.4891-S or 4892-S,
under the 8th July, 1949; or
(b) by the notification of the Government of Patiala and
East Punjab States Union in the Department of
Rehabilitation No.8R or 9R, dated the 23rd July,
1949, and published in the Official Gazette of that
State, dated the 7th August, 1949, and such property
is acquired under the provisions of this Act and
forms part of the compensation pool, the displaced
persons shall, so long as the property remains vested
in the Central Government, continue in possession of
such property on the same conditions on which he held
the property immediately before the date of the
acquisition, and the Central Government may, for the
purpose of payment of compensation to such displaced
person, transfer to him such property on such terms
and conditions as may be prescribed.
Section 12(1) If the Central Government is of opinion
that it is necessary to acquire any evacuee property
for a public purpose, beinga purpose connected with
the relief and rehabilitation of displaced persons,
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including payment of compensation to such persons,
the Central Government may at any time acquire such
evacuee property by publishing in the Official
Gazette a notification to the effect that the Central
Government has decided to acquire such evacuee
property in pursuance of this section.
A reference to R.14(6) of the rules made under the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, will
also be useful in this context. Under that rule the
cusodian has no power to make any order after July
22, 1952 cancelling or varying the allotments made,
subject to certain exceptions with which we are not
concerned here. The result of these provisions is
that under the Administration of Evacuee Property
Act, the respondents became quasi-permanent allottees
in respect of land allotted to them in 1950. After
July 22, 1952, the Custodian ceased to have any
authority to cancel or modify the said allotment.
After the notification issued by the Government under
S.12 of the Act, so long as the property remained
vested in the Central Government, the respondents
continued to be in possession of the property on the
same conditions on which they held the property
immediately before the date of acquisition, that is,
under a quasi-permanent tenure. The contention that
on the issue of the said notification, the
respondents ceased to have any interest in the said
land is without any foundation. It is, therefore,
clear that on the date when the respondents filed the
petition in the High Court they had a very valuable
right in the properties allotted to them which
entitled them to ask the High Court to give them
relief under Art.226 of the Constitution.
(6) That apart, on February 23, 1956, the Central
Government issued a sanad to the respondents conferring an
absolute right on them in respect of the said properties.
Though the sanad was issued subsequent to the filing of the
petition, it was before the petition came to be disposed of
by the High Court. At the time the High Court disposed of
the petition, the limited right of the respondents had
blossomed into a full-fledged property right. In the
circumstances of the case, the High Court was fully
justified in taking note of that fact. From whatever
perspective this case is looked at, it is obvious that the
respondents have sufficient interest in the property to
sustain their petition under Art.226 of the Constitution."
It may further be noticed in the instant case, that aggrieved by
the order of the custodian deleting the property in favour of the
appellant herein, the allottees had filed a revision petition before
the Custodian General in which the appellant and the Custodian, Evacuee
Property had been arrayed as party-respondents which was accepted vide
orders of the Custodian General dated 11.2.1989 (Annexure P-11).
Before the Custodian General, the appellant herein had raised an
objection regarding the locus standi of the allottee. The objection
was over-ruled by the Revisional Authority vide its order dated
9.4.1988. The Custodian General further invoked suo moto jurisdiction
vesting in him under Section 30 of the Act and allowed the allottees an
opportunity to argue the case. The counsel of the allottees was
further directed to assist the authority for proper adjudication of the
claim preferred by the appellant keeping in view the interests of the
evacuees. After the revision petition was allowed, the appellant
herein preferred a further revision before the Jammu & Kashmir Special
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Tribunal wherein besides Custodian General, all the tenants were
impleaded as party-respondents. In his revision petition, the
appellant never objected to the right of the allottees to invoke the
revisional jurisdiction of the Custodian General. When, ultimately,
the order of the Custodian General, passed in favour of the allottee
was set aside by the Tribunal, the allottees filed the writ petition in
the High Court which was dismissed by the learned Single Judge holding
that the allottees had no locus standi to file such a petition. It
appears that the learned Single Judge ignored earlier judgments of the
same High Court in Tej Ram Vs. Custodian General and Ors. [AIR 1967 J &
K 8) and Matwal Singh & Ors. v. Hon’ble Minister Incharge Evacuee
Property Deptt. & Ors. [1990 J&K Law Reporter 303]. Rejecting such an
objection, the High Court in Matwal Singh’s case (Supra) dealt with the
scheme of the Act and Rules made thereunder and had held:
"The Act was enacted to provide for the administration of
the evacuees’ property in the State and to protect it from
being wasted or destroy. Chapter II of the Act deals with
the appointment of the authorities under the Act, the
evacuees property and vesting thereof in the custodian.
Sec.8 provides that any person claiming any right to, or
interest in, any property which has become notified under
Sec.6 as evacuee property, or in respect of which a demand
requiring surrender of possession has been made, may prefer
a claim to the Custodian on the ground that the property
was not the evacuee property or that his interest in the
property has not been affected by the provisions of the
Act. Under sub-sec.(2) of Sec.8 of the Act, the
application has to be preferred within 30 days from the
date on which the notification was issued or the demand
requiring surrender of possession was made by the
Custodian. On receiving the application under sub-sec.(2),
the Custodian is required to hold an enquiry to take such
evidence as may be produced and pass an order stating the
reasons therein either rejecting the application or
allowing it wholly or in part. The rules have been framed
under the Act regulating the procedure for restoration or
deletion of the property under Sec.14 and Sec.8 of the Act
besides the issuance of guidelines by the appropriate
authority in that behalf. According to the procedure,
admittedly prevalent, a notification is issued to the
general public for filing objections to the claim made with
respect to the evacuee property within the time specified.
the objection, as and when raised, is required to be
decided by the Custodian after holding enquiry in terms of
sub-sec.(2) of Sec.8 of the Act. The issuance of the
notice to the general public for raising objections and
resisting the claims is intended mainly to protect the
evacuee property from being wasted, destroyed or wrongfully
taken away on false pretext, pleas and concocted evidence.
The nature of the proceedings intended to be held while
disposing of the claim petition are basically of quasi
judicial nature requiring proper determination on the basis
of the objections raised by any person. The authorities
under the Act must be happy and satisfied if some prudent
citizens comes forward to resist the false pleas and claims
preferred. The property of the evacuee has to be protected
till the Act remains in force and the normalcy restored in
the State. The person in possession of the property,
therefore, has a right to resist the claim with respect to
the property in his occupation preferred by any other
person either under Sec.8 or Sec.14 of the Act. Once the
person in occupation is held to be having a right to oppose
the proposed action resulting in his eviction, it cannot be
said that he has no locus standi to file the petitioner in
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this Court, if ultimately the order is passed against him
by the authorities under the Act. In this case also it is
not disputed that the advertisement notice was issued in
the DAILY UJALA inviting objections from all and not
debarring the petitioners herein from raising such
objections. When the authorities under the Act themselves
gave the option to all persons including the petitioners to
raise objections it does not lie in their mouth
subsequently to say that the petitioners have no locus
standi to challenge the order passed to their prejudice.
The petitioner in the absence of the order of restoration
or deletion have a statutory right to remain in occupation
of the leased property and cannot be evicted unless the
existence of any of the grounds specified under rule 14
framed under the Act, is proved. It may further be pointed
out that despite restoration of the property, an evacuee is
not entitled to possession in all cases, sec.14-A being one
of the exceptions. The judgment of the Division Bench
reported in 1984 KLJ 107 was, therefore, passed without
reference to the judgment of the Supreme Court and the
earlier judgment of this Court and cannot be held to be a
good law. The said judgment being in conflict with the
judgment of the Supreme Court, is non-existent and has no
effect on the present petition. The petitioners are,
therefore, held entitled to file the present petition being
lessees in possession of the evacuee property. The
authorities under the Act are held under an obligation to
issue notices to the lessees-in-possession of the evacuee
property, of the applications filed either under Sec.8 or
Sec.14 of the Act."
This Court has, in Udit Narain Singh Malpaharia v.Additional
Member Board of Revenue, Bihar & Anr. [AIR 1963 SC 786] held that in
the absence of a necessary party the writ petition itself is
incompetent. It further held that a necessary party is one without
whom no order can be made effectively and a proper party is one in
whose absence an effective order can be made but whose presence is
necessary for complete and final decision on the question involved in
the proceedings. On the basis of various judicial pronouncements, the
Court concluded that in a writ of certiorari not only the Tribunal or
authority whose order is sought to be quashed but also parties in whose
favour the said order is issued, are necessary parties.
Relying upon the judgment of this Court in Udit Narain’s case
(supra), the Division Bench of the High Court, vide the judgment
impugned, rightly held the allottees being aggrieved persons by the
order of the Tribunal were entitled to maintain the writ petition. The
order of the learned Single Judge which was bereft of any legal basis
was correctly held to be not sustainable.
We also find no substance in the submission of the counsel for
the appellant that the Custodian General had no authority to challenge
the order of the Tribunal by filing a writ petition against the order
of the Tribunal merely on the ground that it was also exercising the
judicial powers under the Act. In support of his contention he has
relied upon a judgment of this Court in Md.Sharfuddin v. R.P. Singh
& Ors. [1962 (1) SCR 239]wherein it was held that the Custodian under
the Central Act No.31 of 1950 was not a person aggrieved. Looking at
the schemes of the Central Act and the State Act we find that the
reliance of the learned counsel on Md.Sharfuddin’s case (supra) is
misplaced. In that case an Assistant Custodian had passed an order
holding that the properties of the appellant were not evacuee
properties. The Custodian, exercising his powers under Section 26(1)
of the Central Act No.31 of 1950, called for the records of the case
and after hearing the appellant dropped the proceedings. Subsequently,
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the Assistant Custodian (Headquarters) filed an appeal before the
Custodian under Section 24(1)(a)of the said Act against the order of
the Assistant Custodian. In appeal, the Custodian declared share of
the brothers of the appellant in the property to be evacuee property
and referred the matter for separation of their shares. In the
circumstances of the case, the Court held:
"Though for the purpose of convenience of management or
judicial determination of disputes the Act provides
different categories of Custodians, all of them fall within
the definition of "Custodian" in the Act. The Act further
provides a hierarchy of tribunals under the superintendence
and control of the Custodian-General. It would be
anomalous were it to be held that a Custodian would prefer
an appeal against the order of a Custodian. The Act does
not contemplate one officer preferring appeals against the
orders of another officer. If an Assistant Custodian or a
Custodian went wrong in the matter of declaring a property
to be an evacuee property, the Act provides that the
Custodian or the Custodian-General, as the case may be,
before 1956, and the Custodian-General thereafter, may set
right the wrong. In the premises the words "any person
aggrieved" in S.24 of the Act can only mean a person whose
properties have been declared to be evacuee properties by
the Custodian, or a person who moved the Custodian to get
the properties so declared or any other such aggrieved
person. The words "any person aggrieved" in the context of
the Act cannot include any Custodian as defined in the
Act."
The position under the Act is totally different as is evident
from its scheme. The Special Tribunal is the creation of a statute and
thus is an independent statutory authority. Orders passed by the
Special Tribunal, though affecting the evacuee property or the powers
of the custodian under the Act, cannot be rectified or corrected by any
authority under the Act. Finality attached to the orders passed by the
Special Tribunal thus directly affects the evacuee property and the
powers of the authorities under
the Act. If any order passed by the Special Tribunal is, on the face
of it, illegal, erroneous, contrary to the provisions of the Act or the
Rules made thereunder and adversely affects the interests of the
evacuee, the custodian has statutory obligation and legal right to
challenge such order before the appropriate forum.
As already noticed, the scheme of the State Act and the Rules
made thereunder confer upon the Custodian, the right to hold and manage
the property of the evacuee in accordance with the provisions of law.
Any order passed by an authority, though under the Act, can be
challenged by the Custodian before an appropriate authority for
protection of the rights and interests of the evacuee of which he is
the protector and custodian, till the property is restored to the
evacuee under the Act. The custodian under the Act does not perform
only judicial or quasi-judicial powers but is also entrusted with the
administration of the property having the rights to deal with it as
authorised by Sections 9, 9A and 10 of the Act besides the rules
regulating the exercise of such powers. Similarly, we feel that the
reliance of the appellant in the case of Syed Yakoob v. K.S.
Radhakrishnan & Ors. [1964 (5) SCR 64] is of no help to him. In that
case this Court held that a writ of certiorari can be issued for
correcting errors of jurisdiction committed by the inferior courts or
tribunals where the orders are passed without jurisdiction or in excess
of it or as a result of failure of jurisdiction. A writ can also be
issued where in exercise of the powers, conferred upon it, the court or
tribunal acts illegally or improperly. The jurisdiction to issue a
writ of certiorari is a supervisory jurisdiction and the findings of
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fact reached by the inferior court or tribunal as a result of the
appreciation of evidence should not be reopened or questioned in writ
proceedings. An error of law which is apparent on the face of the
record can be corrected by a writ but not an error of fact however
grave it may appear to be. The court further held that it was not easy
to define or adequately describe what an error of law, apparent on the
face of the record meant. Where it is manifest or clear that the
conclusions of law recorded by an inferior court or tribunal are based
on an obvious misrepresentation of relevant statutory provisions or
sometimes in ignorance of it or may be even in disregard of it or is
expressly founded on reasons which are wrong in law, the said
conclusions can be corrected by a writ of certiorari. It was further
held that whether or not an impugned order is an error of law which is
apparent on the face of the record, must always depend upon the facts
and circumstances of each case and upon the nature and scope of the
legal provision which is alleged to have been misconstrued or
contravened.
Looking at the scheme of the Act, the Rules made thereunder and
the powers conferred upon the custodian and the fact that Custodian-
General was impleaded as a party-respondent before the Tribunal, we
have come to the conclusion that the Custodian General had a right to
challenge the order of the Tribunal by way of a writ petition as he was
administrator of the properties and is required to protect the same
particularly when various comments were made about the Custodian
General and its powers curtailed by the order passed by the Tribunal.
No fault, therefore, can be found with the impugned judgment of
the Division Bench holding that the writ petition filed both by the
allottees and the Custodians were maintainable and none of the writ
petitioners could be held to have no locus standi to challenge the
order of the Tribunal, adversely affecting their rights and interests.
At this stage we deem it appropriate to deal with the objection
of Shri E.C. Agarwala regarding the application of Sardar Begum being
barred by time.
During the arguments, the learned counsel appearing for the
parties conceded that Section 8 of the Act has, at present, out-lived
its utility and has become redundant. However, Mr.Rao, learned Senior
Advocate submitted that as the plea of limitation was not raised
earlier, his client cannot be non-suited on that ground at this belated
stage.
Let us examine the legal aspect of the matter and thereafter its
effect on the claim preferred by Sardar Begum. It is not disputed that
the Act was enacted to provide for the administration of evacuee
properties left over by the evacuees who, on account of outburst of
communal riots, were forced to migrate either to Pakistan or to
Pakistan Occupied area of the Jammu & Kashmir. The Act envisaged that
because of disturbances and holocaust of communal riots some properties
may have wrongly been declared as evacuee properties under the Act.
Realising such a situation, Section 8 was incorporated entitling
persons claiming any right to or interest in any notified evacuee
property to prefer claim to the Custodian on the ground that property
was not an evacuee property or the applicant’s interested in property
had not been affected by the provisions of the Act. Under sub-section
(2) of Section 8 of the Act such a claim was required to be preferred
by an application within 30 days from the date on which the
notification was issued or demand requiring surrender of possession was
made by the custodian. The words "claim shall be preferred by an
application within 30 days" unequivocally indicate that the provision
was mandatory so far as the period of limitation for preferring the
claim was concerned. However, the proviso to the aforesaid sub-section
authorised the custodian to entertain the application after the expiry
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of the period but only for sufficient reasons required to be recorded
(Emphasis supplied). In the instant case such an application was filed
by Sardar Begum only in the month of December, 1958, admittedly, after
about 9 years of the promulgation of the Act. It does not appear as to
whether Sardar Begum had also filed an application for condoning the
delay or the custodian had recorded sufficient reasons thereof as
mandated by the first proviso to Section 8(2) of the Act. Otherwise
also the power to condone the delay contemplated under the proviso to
sub-section (2) of Section 8 cannot he held to mean to condone any
delay at any time without recording sufficient reasons. The extended
period for entertainment of an application under the Section would be a
reasonable period depending upon the facts and circumstances of each
case. In no case such a period can be extended beyond 12 years, the
time provided under Section 28 of the Limitation Act totally
extinguishing the rights of the owner in the property and debarring him
from seeking a relief with respect to that property including its
possession in view of Article 142 of the Schedule of Jammu & Kashmir
Limitation Act totally forbidding the enforcement of claim and the
remedy, if any.
Learned counsel appearing for the respondents have submitted,
which we have noticed with distress, that vested interests and
unscrupulous litigants are usurping the evacuee properties in the State
by filing frivolous and belated applications preferring stale claims
under Section 8 of the Act, which are entertained by the authorities
without reference to any period of limitation. We hold that there is
no justification for entertaining any application from a person in the
State of Jammu & Kashmir under Section 8 of the Act after the lapse of
12 years from the date when the property was declared as evacuee
property and vested in the custodian. We further hold that Section 8
of the Act has out-lived its utility and is presently a redundant piece
of legislation, still existing on the statute book. The authorities
under the Act are directed not to entertain any application under
Section 8 of the Act hereafter as it cannot be conceived that a person
whose property was allegedly wrongly declared or vested in the
custodian would keep silent for a period spread over five decades. Any
such claim preferred hereafter should be deemed to be fictitious,
concocted and malafide, intended to destroy and eliminate the evacuee
property to the detriment of the evacuee who may ultimately be restored
such property if and when he returns to the State under a valid law in
existence, enacted for the purposes. We further hold that the
applications under Section 8 which were entertained by the custodian
after the period of 12 years and are still pending shall be liable to
be dismissed on the ground of limitation. We may, however, clarify
that any right or claim preferred and settled under Section 8, though
on application filed after 12 years, shall not be re-opened on the
basis of this judgment. This judgment shall only be applicable to the
pending claims of the claimants and not finally adjudicated by the
authorities under the Act.
As Sardar Begum is shown to have filed her claim under Section 8
of the Act within the outer limit of 12 years and no objection
regarding the maintainability of her claim on the ground of limitation
was raised,. despite laying down the law, we decline to non-suit her
and the appellant on the ground of limitation.
The arguments of Mr.Rao that the Custodian General committed an
error of law by going into the questions of fact while exercising the
revisional jurisdiction can be examined and decided in the light of the
provisions of the Act conferring the revisional power upon the
custodian and its extent.
The revisional powers under the Act cannot be equated with the
revisional power of the High Court under Section 115 of the Code of
Civil Procedure. A perusal of sub-section (4) of Section 30 of the Act
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would show that the Custodian General has the power either on his own
motion or application made to him in that behalf to call for the record
of the proceedings under the Act, for the purposes of satisfying
himself as to the legality and propriety of any order passed in the
said proceedings and may pass such order in relation thereto as he
thinks fit. Sub-section (4) of Section 30 of the Act, therefore,
confers a wider power of revision on the Custodian General. The power
is not hedged or circumscribed. Such power of revision appears to be
of wide plenitude to set right any illegal, unfair, unjust or untenable
order passed in any proceedings under the Act.
In Rajbir Kaur & Anr. v. M/s.S.Chokesiri & Co. [1989 (1) SCC 19]
this Court held that the scope of revisional jurisdiction depends on
the language of statute conferring revisional powers. Revisional
jurisdiction is only a part of the appellate jurisdiction though cannot
be equated with that of a full-fledged appeal. Having regard to the
language of Section 15(5) of the East Punjab Urban Rent Restriction
Act, 1949, it was held that the revisional power under the said Act
conferred powers which included the examination of the legality and
propriety of the order under revision, and for that the High Court can,
in appropriate cases, re-appreciate the evidence and interfere with the
findings of fact.
Dealing with another case under the Karnataka Rent Control Act,
1961, where the power of revision under Section 50 of the Act was pari
materia the same as in Section 30 of the Act, this Court in Bhoolchand
& Anr. v. Kay Pee Cee Investments & Anr. [1991 (1) SCC 343] held:
"....The power of revision is not narrow as in section 115
CPC but wider requiring the High Court to examine the
impugned order ’for the purpose of satisfying itself as to
the legality or correctness of such order or proceeding’
which enables the High Court ’to pass such order in
reference thereto as it thinks fit’. It is clear that the
High Court in a revision under Section 50 of the Act is
required to satisfy itself not only as to the legality of
the impugned order or proceeding but also of its
correctness. The power of the High Court, therefore,
extends to correcting not merely errors of law but also
errors of fact. In other words, the High Court in a
revision under Section 50 of the Act is required to examine
the correctness of not only findings on questions of law
but also on questions of fact."
However, the court observed that the revisional powers, even
though wide under the Act, must fall short of the appellate court’s
power of interference. In that case the credibility of the oral
evidence was assessed in the background of undisputed facts and
circumstances and the conclusions of the High Court, clear on facts,
was held to be within the revisional scope under the Karnataka Act.
To the same effect are the judgments of this Court in Ram Dass v.
Ishwar Chander & Ors. [AIR 1988 SC 1422], Shiv Sarup Gupta v. Mahesh
Chand Gupta [AIR 1999 SC 2507] and Mammu v. Hari Mohan & Anr. [2000 (2)
SCC 32].
Dealing with a case under the Delhi Control Act this Court in Ram
Narain Arora v. Asha Rani & Ors. [1999 (1) SCC 141] approved the
proposition for power of revision in correction of errors of law which
on occasions would include interference of findings of fact where the
right of a party is involved and is intended to be taken away by
suppression of certain facts or by misrepresentation of facts. The
Court observed:
"It is no doubt true that the scope of a revision petition
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under Section 25-B(8) proviso of the Delhi Rent Control Act
is a very limited one, but even so in examining the
legality or propriety of the proceedings before the Rent
Controller, the High Court could examine the facts
available in order to find out whether he had correctly or
on a firm legal basis approached the matters on record to
decide the case. Pure findings of fact may not be open to
be interfered with, but (sic if) in a given case, the
finding of fact is given on a wrong premise of law,
certainly it would be open to the revisional court to
interfere with such a matter. In this case, the Rent
Controller proceeded to analyse the matter that non-
disclosure of a particular information was fatal and,
therefore, dismissed the claim made by the landlord. It is
in these circumstances that it became necessary for the
High Court to re-examine the matter and then decide the
entire question. We do not think that any of the decisions
referred to by the learned counsel decides the question of
the same nature with which we are concerned. Therefore,
detailed reference to them is not required."
Accepting the narrow interpretation sought to be placed on Section
30(4) of the Act would deprive the revisional authority to give the
intended effect of the provisions of the Act. No interpretation can be
accepted which defeats the object sought to be achieved by the statute
and no litigant can be permitted to take the advantage of a wrong order
obtained even on facts by misrepresentation or by suppression of
material facts. The revisional powers conferred upon the Custodian
General and the custodian under the Act are of wider amplitude which
cannot be restricted debarring the revisional authorities from
satisfying themselves as to the legality or propriety of the orders
passed by a subordinate authority in complete disregard to the
provisions of the Act and the relevant facts. Any conclusion arrived
without reference to reliable, cogent and admissible evidence, cannot
be termed to be a decision arrived on facts. Permitting the revisional
authority to "pass such order in relation thereto as he thinks fit"
clearly indicates the extent of the power conferred upon it which
cannot be limited or circumscribed as urged on behalf of the appellant.
Learned counsel appearing for the appellant referred to the
judgments of this Court reported in Smt.Rukmani Devi & Ors. vs.
Narendra Lal Gupta [1985 (1) SCC 144] and Chiranjilal Shrilal Goenka v.
Jasjit Singh & Ors. [1993 (2) SCC 507] to urge that the probate granted
in favour of the appellant by a competent court of jurisdiction is
conclusive of the validity of the Will unless it is revoked and no
evidence can be admitted to impeach it except in proceedings taken for
revoking the probate. There cannot be any dispute to the legal
proposition that the grant of probate establishes conclusively as to
the appointment of the executor and the valid execution of the Will.
However,it does not establish more than the factum of the Will as
probate court does not decide question of title or of the existence of
the property mentioned therein. If despite admitting the execution of
the Will and issuance of the probate, a question arises as to its
effect on the property of another person which is likely to be
affected, nothing prevents the authorities under the Act to examine the
Will or the probate to that extent. It is established in this case
that on 4th or 9th January when the Will was executed and registered
respectively, the executant, namely, Sardar Begum had not become the
owner of the disputed property. The disputed property at the time of
execution of the Will, admittedly, was vesting in the custodian under
the provisions of the Act. Her application filed under Section 8 of
the Act had been dismissed on 19th March, 1959 and her appeal was
allowed by the Custodian General on 29th July, 1959 by remanding the
case back to the custodian for inquiry and order on points formulated
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in the remand order. Before the custodian could pass any order, Sardar
Begum executed the Will on 4.1.9164 and died on 13.9.1965. It is worth
mentioning here that before the death of Sardar Begum, her application
which was remanded to the custodian had been dismissed for default of
appearance on 23rd July, 1965. In this view of the matter, the
executant of the Will had no right or authority to bequeath a property
which did not belong to her. It may further be noticed that in her
Will she had nowhere stated that the executor, the appellant, would be
entitled to any interest in the disputed property which was vesting in
the custodian at that particular time. The execution of the Will,
therefore, neither affected the evacuee property vesting in the
custodian nor it conferred any right upon the appellant to pray for its
deletion or restoration. The properties bestowed by the Will upon its
beneficiary included a house situated in Kucha General Samundar Khan, a
single storey pacca house situated at Mohalla Dalpatian, five pacca
shops situated in Rajinder Bazar, and two double storey shops and one
pacca shop situated in Kanak Mandi, Jammu. The disputed property which
vested in the Custodian, at the relevant time, comprised of four shops
with two flats thereon situated in Rajinder Bazar, Jammu. No specific
mention is made of such a property. She has referred only to "five
pucca shops situated in Rajinder Bazar, Jammu". Double storey shops
mentioned by her in the Will are stated to be in Kanak Mandi, Jammu,
admittedly, a different area, though adjacent to Rajinder Bazar.
Accepting the plea of the appellant would amount to authorising a
person to execute a Will with respect to any property in which the
executant had no right or interest including the Government property
like Secretariat or official bungalows in favour of another person who
in turn would rush to the courts for the establishment of his title in
the property, on the basis of conferment of title upon him by way of
Will. Such a course is neither permissible nor legal and in fact is
against the public policy. After perusing the Will, allegedly proved
to have been executed by Sardar Begam and the probate issued by the
Additional District Judge, Jammu, we are of the opinion that neither
the Will nor probate conferred any right upon the appellant which he
could enforce in a court of law or quasi-judicial authority, such as
the custodian.
In view of such facts it cannot be said that the Custodian
General or the Division Bench of the High Court committed any mistake
of law while dealing with the Will and the Probate, as we have found
that by the said Will and the probate, no right was conferred upon the
appellant to pray for the deletion of the disputed property from the
record of the custodian in terms of Section 8 of the Act. The
application filed by the appellant on 6.10.1965 cannot be held to be an
application in continuation of the application filed by Sardar Begum
which was, admittedly, dismissed on 23rd July, 1965, obviously, in terms
of Sub-rule (3) of Rule 15 of the Rules. For the person aggrieved by
such an order, the appropriate remedy is specified under sub-rule (4)
of Rule 15 of the said Rules which unmistakably provides that where the
application is dismissed under Sub-rule (3), the applicant is precluded
from making a fresh application on the same facts with respect to the
same property. He has, however, a right to apply within 30 days from
the date of order of dismissal or of the knowledge of such dismissal
for an order to set aside the order of dismissal. As no application in
terms of Sub-rule (4) of Rule 15 was filed, the Custodian did not get
the jurisdiction to deal with the matter on the application filed by
the appellant. Despite there being a bar for entertaining the
application, the custodian is shown to have entertained the application
of the appellant on 6.10.1965, dealt with it for over a period of more
than 5 years and ultimately dimissed the same holding that after the
death of Sardar Begum the appellant did not acquire any right as
Sardar Begum was not the only heir of the property in dispute because
the other evacuees who were co-sharers were alive and living in
Pakistan.
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It is true that the Act neither supersedes the law of succession
applicable to the evacuee nor does it confer powers upon the
authorities under the Act to adjudicate the right to succession of the
claimant. If the claim of a person approaching the custodian is
undisputed on admitted facts, such a claim may be adjudicated by the
authorities in accordance with the provisions of the Act and the
procedure prescribed under the rules which envisages the service of a
notice to all concerned. We have no doubt in our mind that the tenants
of the property are definitely such persons who have interest in the
property and thus being necessary parties are required to be served a
notice before adjudicating the claim of the person approaching the
custodian for the relief in terms of Section 8 or Section 14 of the
Act. It is evident from the record that when the appellant preferred
his claim to the property after the death of Sardar Begum, the then
custodian rightly directed him to establish his title in the civil
court. Such a direction of the custodian was upheld by the Custodian
General later vide his order dated 24.5.1977. Despite the orders of
the custodian and Custodian General which had become final, the
appellant did not get his title establish in any civil court and
instead he preferred claim on the basis of a probate. The probate
proceedings cannot be equated with the adjudication of the right to
succession by the civil court. In the absence of declaration of his
right to succession by a civil court, the appellant was rightly held
not entitled to any right to the property (vide order of the Custodian
General dated 11.2.1989 - Annexure R-11). After the death of Sardar
Begum, under the circumstances of the case, the appellant was not
entitled to prefer any claim in respect of a right or interest in the
property which had been declined during her life time. The Special
Tribunal, therefore, fell in error in allowing the claim filed by the
appellant who, on the relevant date, is proved to have no right or
interest in the property. We further hold that even if Sardar Beghum
had any interest in the property which could be established, the same
cannot devolve upon the appellant for the reasons already noticed
hereinabove.
We do not agree with the submission of the learned counsel
appearing for the appellant that the custodian on facts had rightly
held Sardar Begum and the appellant entitled to the property both under
Section 8 as well as Section 14 of the Act. We also do not agree that
principle underlying Section 14 is also applicable to the proceedings
under Section 8 of the Act as well. Section 8 and Section 14 deal with
different situations under distinct contingencies. Whereas, under
Section 8 the claimant to the property has to show that the property
declared and vested in the custodian, was in fact, not an evacuee
property or his interest in such property had not been affected by the
provisions of the Act, the person claiming under Section 14 is such
person who became an evacuee within the meaning of Section 2(c) of the
Act or was a person claiming to be the heir of the evacuee praying for
restoration of the property in his favour. Before applying, such
person has to obtain a certificate from the Government or from any
person authorised by the Government in that behalf to the effect that
the evacuee property may be restored to him if he is otherwise entitled
thereto. Further he has to submit an affidavit to the effect that the
property claimed is not subjudice before any court of law. He has also
to produce a certificate granted by the Government to the effect that
the evacuee has returned to his original place of residence for
peaceful and permanent rehabilitation and is not engaged in any
subversive activities. In other words whereas heirs of the evacuee
have a right to pray for restoration under Section 14 of the Act, no
such right is conferred upon the heirs of a claimant under Section 8 of
the Act. Reasons are obvious, because Section 8 contemplates the
preferring of claim within 30 days of the date of the vesting of the
evacuee property in the custodian which does not envisage the claim by
a legal heir whereas application under Section 14 can be preferred at
any time when the evacuee returns back to the State of Jammu & Kashmir.
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It may further be noticed that the legal heirs contemplated under Rule
14 are such heirs which an evacuee has, meaning thereby the heirs who
had also become the evacuee or became his heir outside the State of
Jammu & Kashmir, having interest in the property by operation of law.
To simplify the position it can be said that any person who himself did
not become an evacuee within the meaning of Section 2(c) cannot prefer
a claim on behalf of an evacuee on the ground of becoming his heir with
the lapse of time. Conferment of rights upon the persons living in the
State of Jammu & Kashmir with respect to the property of an evacuee
would defeat the very purpose of the Act, particularly the one intended
to be achieved by Section 14. The aforesaid section was enacted to
encourage such persons who were forced to leave their homes, to come
back and settle and become the part of the mainstream of the political
life in the State of Jammu & Kashmir. It may not be out of place to
mention that the Constitution of Jammu & Kashmir itself has made
provision for such people reserving almost one fourth of the
Legislative Assembly seats for them which can be filled up only when
they become a part of the mainstream of the socio-political-economic
life of the people of the said State.
In view of our findings that the allottees/lessees of the evacuee
property are necessary parties to the proceedings initiated either
under Section 8 or Section 14 and the custodian under the Act performs
dual duties of administering the property and adjudicating the claims
over the evacuee properties under the Act, we find no fault with the
judgment impugned holding that both the allottees as well as the
Custodian General had locus to challenge the order of the Special
Tribunal. The scope of revisional power under the Act is wider than
the powers exercisable in revision petitions filed under the Code of
Civil Procedure or the Code of Criminal Procedure and in appropriate
cases the revisional authority can go into the questions of fact to
decide the legality and propriety of the action taken and for the
purposes of giving appropriate directions. While exercising the
revisional jurisdiction, in the present case, the Custodian General
had not committed any error of law by lookiing into the facts for the
purposes of ascertaining as to whether appellant had acquired any
interest on the basis of the Will executed by Sardar Begum or the
probate issued in his favour. The questions of title with respect to
the evacuee property cannot be adjudicated under the Act for which
appropriate proceedings are required to be instituted in the civil
court. It is further held that with the passage of time Section 8 of
the Act has out-lived its utility and has become redundant. No further
application under the said section can be entertained and the plea of
limitation with respect to the pending disputes has to be decided as
per our directions in this judgment. It is hoped that the State
Government and the authorities under the Act shall take effective steps
to safeguard and protect the properties of the evacuee for whose
benefit the Act has been enacted. The judgment of the learned Single
Judge 21.8.1991 does not lay good law and the order of the Special
Tribunal is not sustainable.
There is no merit in these appeals which are accordingly
dismissed but under the circumstances without any order as to costs.
......................J.
(M.B. SHAH)
......................J.
(R.P. SETHI)
OCTOBER 3, 2001
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