Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6975 of 2004
PETITIONER:
M.P. Wakf Board
RESPONDENT:
Subhan Shah (D) By LRs. & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/10/2006
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Dalveer Bhandari
JUDGMENT:
J U D G E M E N T
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 6976 OF 2004
S.B. SINHA, J.
These two appeals involving common questions of law and fact were
taken up for hearing together and are being disposed of by this common
judgment.
One Hazrat Sha Walli was a Peer. He was called Shan Shah-E-
Malwa. On his death, a Dargah was established in his memory. Erstwhile
Maharaja Holkar Darbar, a Hindu king granted Mafi Inayat Land to the
Dargah. Allegedly, the land in question was held to be not forming a part of
Wakf in terms of the provisions of the Wakf Act, 1954 (for short "the 1954
Act"). One Munna Bai filed an application for getting her name mutated in
respect of the property in question. It was dismissed on 4.2.1967. She
thereafter filed an application under Section 25 of the 1954 Act for
registering the Dargah as a Wakf. A notice was issued to Subhan Shah and
others who were the heirs of the said Hazrat Sha Walli (hereinafter referred
to as "the private parties"). They filed their show cause denying and
disputing that the property in question was a Wakf property. It was
contended that Munna Bai filed the aforementioned application as she was
denied her claim to occupy the post of a Mujjawarship. It was further
contended:
"That there has been 50 Bighas land under the
Sanad but when we were minors and Mahboobsha
the husband of the lady was the person in charge of
the office of Mujjawarship, the Jahagirdar has
snatched away about 40 Bighas, but since ours
taking charge of it we are most aptly managing the
property and property looking after the Dargah. It
is wrong to say that there is a managing committee
for this Dargah."
On or about 18.3.1968, the properties were declared as Wakf property
and the Dargah was registered as Wakf by an order dated 18.3.1968. The
private parties’ application for recall of the said order was rejected by the
Madhya Pradesh Wakf Board (for short "the Board") by an order dated
24.6.1968 stating that registration of the Dargah as Wakf was legal. A
committee was thereafter constituted by the Board for managing the affairs
of the Dargah. Possession of the private parties was allegedly forcibly taken
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over.
A suit thereafter was filed in Civil Court for a declaration that the
orders passed by the Board are null and void and for recovery of possession
of the suit property inter alia contending that the order registering the
Dargah as Wakf was vitiated in law. It was also contended that the
application filed by the said Munna Bai under Section 25 of the 1954 Act
was barred by limitation.
The Parliament enacted the Wakf Act, 1995 (for short "the 1995
Act"). The 1954 Act was amended by the State of Madhya Pradesh. The
State of Madhya Pradesh constituted the M.P. Wakf Tribunal (for short "the
Tribunal"). It also amended the provision of the said Act in terms whereof
all civil suits stood transferred to the Tribunal. The suit filed by private
parties was also transferred.
Before the Tribunal, the Board did not adduce any evidence. It,
however, allegedly filed a gazette of the year 1984. The Tribunal passed an
order framing a scheme for managing the affairs of the said Dargah. Both
the Board and the private parties aggrieved thereby filed revision
applications before the High Court. By reason of the impugned judgment,
the High Court dismissed both the applications holding:
(i) In view of the admission made before the Tribunal that they are not
averse to the property being declared Wakf, if they are declared to be
the Mujawar thereof.
(ii) The Tribunal had the requisite jurisdiction to frame a scheme.
Both the Board and the private parties are, thus, before us:
Contention of Mr. Shakil Ahmed Syed, learned counsel appearing on
behalf of the Board is that power to frame a scheme vests in the Board and
not in the Tribunal and, thus, the High Court committed an illegality in
passing the impugned order.
Mr. Syed Ali Ahmad, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
private parties, on the other hand, submitted that the High Court proceeded
on a wrong premise that the private parties admitted that the property in
question was a Wakf property.
"Wakf" has been defined in Section 3(l) of the 1954 Act to mean "the
permanent dedication by a person professing Islam or any other person of
any movable or immovable property for any purpose recognized by the
Muslam law as pious, religious or charitable\005". Section 4 provides for
survey of Wakfs. According to the private parties, upon survey the Dargah
was not found to be a Wakf property. Only when a property is found to be a
Wakf property, a registration thereof can be made. Section 5 of the 1954
Act, reads, thus:
"5. Publication of list of wakfs \026 (1) On receipt
of a report under sub-section (3) of Section 4, the
State Government shall forward a copy of the same
to the Board.
(2) The Board shall examine the report
forwarded to it under sub-section (1) and publish,
in the Official Gazette, a list of wakfs in the State,
or as the case may be, the part of the State,
whether in existence at the commencement of this
Act or coming into existence thereafter to which
the report relates, and containing such particulars
as may be prescribed."
Under Section 5 of the 1954 Act, a civil suit in regard to the dispute as
to whether a particular property specified as Wakf property in the list of
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Wakfs maintained under Section (2) thereof is a Wakf property or not, a
civil suit will be maintainable. Section 6-A of the 1954 Act provides for
power of Tribunal to determine disputes regarding wakfs.
Maintainability of the suit, therefore, is not in question. The property
was dedicated to the Dargah, if any, a long time back. An application for
registration of the said property as a Wakf property in terms of Section 25 of
the 1954 Act, therefore, could have been filed only within the period
specified thereunder, viz., nine months from the date of coming into force of
the said Act. Registration of Wakfs whether created before or after the
commencement of the said Act is governed by Section 25. A copy of the
Wakf deed was also required to be enclosed with such an application. Sub-
section (7) of Section 25 of the 1954 Act provides for making of an inquiry
into the correctness or otherwise of the contents of the said application.
We may notice that Section 104 of the 1995 Act is in pari materia
with Section 66-C of the 1954 Act, which reads as under:
"104. Application of Act to properties given or
donated by persons not professing Islam for
support of certain wakf.\027Notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act where any movable
or immovable property has been given or donated
by any person not professing Islam for the support
of a wakf being\027
(a) a mosque, idgah, imambara, dargah, khangah
or a maqbara;
(b) a Muslim graveyard;
(c) a choultry or musafirkhana,
then such property shall be deemed to be
comprised in that wakf and be dealt in the same
manner as the wakf in which it is so comprised."
Section 83 of the 1995 Act provides for constitution of the Tribunal.
The jurisdiction of the Tribunal as contained in sub-section (5) of Section 7
of the 1995 Act reads as under:
"(5) The Tribunal shall not have jurisdiction to
determine any matter which is the subject-matter
of any suit or proceeding instituted or commenced
in a civil court under sub-section (1) of section 6,
before the commencement of this Act or which is
the subject-matter of any appeal from the decree
passed before such commencement in any such
suit or proceeding or of any application for
revision or review arising out of such suit,
proceeding or appeal, as the case may be."
The Tribunal noticed the sources of title of the private parties in the
suit property. In determining the respective contentions of the parties to the
suit, the Tribunal framed the following issues:
"1. Whether Mazar Nahar Shah Ali Baba is the
property of plaintiffs of Siranam and the order of
defendant No. 1 of dated 24.4.68 and 13.4.68 are
illegal and of no consequences?
2. Whether plaintiffs are entitled to regain the
business on the disputed Mazar."
The issues framed were not wholly apposite to the rival contentions of
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the parties. They do not reflect the requisite issues before the parties in the
light of their pleadings. The Tribunal moreover did not analyse the
evidences adduced by the parties before it. Applicability or otherwise of the
notification issued in the year 1984 was also not considered. It declared the
property to be a Wakf property stating:
"\005Defendant No. 1 Wakf Board led no evidence
in its favour, but Madhya Pradesh Wakf Board has
produced the copy of Madhya Pradesh Gazette and
Register of Registration of Wakf in which disputed
Majar has been depicted as the property of Wakf
and year of (billing) cultivation. The plaintiffs
have not objected to this. The most important this
is that the plaintiffs have admitted in evidence that
Majawar in question is their inherited property and
their forefathers had been working as Mujawar in
the Dargah. Therefore, the opportunity may be
given to them to serve as Mujawar at Dargah."
It purported to have taken into consideration the admission of the
private parties that Majawar in question is their inherited property and their
forefathers have been working as Mujawar in the Dargah. On the basis of
the said purported admission on the part of the private parties, the Tribunal
opined that there exists no dispute that there existed a Wakf which was
situated in village Nozarana Indore of Hazrat Nahar Ali Shah which has
been legally registered by the Board.
Title to a property has a definite connotation. It is not the same as
user. The Tribunal failed to deal with the question as to whether the Board
had the requisite jurisdiction to entertain the application filed by Munna Bai
being barred by limitation, insofar as whereas period of limitation provided
for under sub-section (8) of Section 25 is merely three months, Munna Bai
filed an application after 12 years after coming into force of the 1954 Act.
We are not unmindful of the fact that the Board itself could have
initiated proceedings in terms of Section 27 of the 1954 Act but then no suo
motu proceeding was initiated by it. No notice in this behalf has been
issued.
In M/s. D.N. Roy and S.K. Bannerjee and Others v. State of Bihar and
Others [(1970) 3 SCC 119], the law is stated in the following terms:
"It is true that the order in question also refers to
"all other powers enabling in this behalf". But in
its return to the writ petition the Central
Government did not plead that the impugned order
was passed in exercise of its suo moto powers. We
agree that if the exercise of a power can be traced
to an existing power even though that power was
not purported to have been exercised, under certain
circumstances, the exercise of the power can be
upheld on the strength of an undisclosed but
undoubted power. But in this case the difficulty is
that at no stage the Central Government intimated
to the appellant that it was exercising its suo moto
power. At all stages it purported to act under Rules
54 and 55 of the Mineral Concession Rules, 1960.
If the Central Government wanted to exercise its
suo moto power it should have intimated that fact
as well as the grounds on which it proposed to
exercise that power to the appellant and given him
an opportunity to show cause against the exercise
of suo moto power as well as against the grounds
on which it wanted to exercise its power. Quite
clearly the Central Government had not given him
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that opportunity. The High Court thought that as
the Central Government had not only intimated to
the appellant the grounds mentioned in the
application made by the 5th respondent but also
the comments of the State Government, the
appellant had adequate opportunity to put forward
his case. This conclusion in our judgment is
untenable. At no stage the appellant was informed
that the Central Government proposed to exercise
its suo moto power and asked him to show cause
against the exercise of such a power. Failure of the
Central Government to do so, in our opinion,
vitiates the impugned order."
If the proceeding was initiated by the Board for which it had no
jurisdiction whatsoever, its order would be ’coram non judice’. [See Kiran
Singh v. Chaman Paswan, AIR 1954 SC 340 and MD, Army Welfare
Housing Organisation v. Sumangal Services (P) Ltd., (2004) 9 SCC 619]
Unfortunately, the attention of the Tribunal or the High Court was not drawn
to this aspect of the matter.
It is also not in dispute that the purported admission on the part of the
private parties was a conditional one; by reason whereof, the nature of the
property being Wakf had not been admitted. An admission of a party must
be clear and explicit in a case where an inference is required to be drawn in
regard to the fact that thereby he had admitted the title of the other.
Generally speaking, even no title can be created by admission. [See Thayyil
Mammo and Another v. Kottiath Ramunni and Others, AIR 1966 SC 337]
If the nature of dedication of the property does not constitute a Wakf
within the meaning of the provisions of the Act, it must be proved that it
became a Wakf by reason of long user. No such finding has been arrived at.
We may notice, although no final verdict has been pronounced, it has
been contended before us that a purported dedication of a property by a
Hindu for constitution of Wakf is legally impermissible. Our attention has
been drawn to Motishah and others v. Abdul Gaffar Khan [AIR 1956
Nagpur 38] wherein the law has been declared in the following terms:
"A wakf may be defined to mean the detention of
the ’corpus’ in the ownership of God in such a
manner that its profits may be applied for the
benefit of His servants. As a general rule it may be
stated that all persons who are competent to make
a valid gift are also competent to constitute a valid
wakf. Islam is not a necessary condition for the
constitution of a wakf.
Any person of whatever creed may create a
wakf but the law requires that the object for which
dedication is to be made should be lawful
according to the creed of the dedicator as well as
the Islamic doctrines. A cemetery or graveyard is
a consecrated ground and is not a private property.
Whether a place is a ’makbara’ (burial ground) or
not depends on the number of persons buried there
or evidence of dedication derived from the
testimony of witnesses of reputation\005"
However, yet again, in Arur Singh and others v. Badar Din and others
[AIR 1940 Lahore 119], the law is stated in the following terms:
"\005Secondly, there seems to be no clear authority
to show that dedication of land by a Hindu for the
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purpose of a Muslim graveyard would be invalid
either according to Hindu or Muslim law..."
If the property in question was not a Wakf property and the order
registering the property as a Wakf property was invalid in law, the matter
might have ended there. But, the Tribunal has gone a step further and
directed framing of scheme.
The Wakf Act is a self-contained code. Section 32 of the 1995 Act
provides for powers and functions of the Board. Sub-section (2) of Section
32 of the 1995 Act enumerates the functions of the Board without prejudice
to the generality of the power contained in Sub-section (1) thereof. Clauses
(d) and (e) of sub-section (2) of Section 32 of the 1995 Act reads as under:
"(d) to settle schemes of management for a wakf:
Provided that no such settlement shall be made
without giving the parties affected an opportunity
of being heard;
(e) to direct\027
(i) the utilisation of the surplus income of a
wakf consistent with the objects of a wakf;
(ii) in what manner the income of a wakf, the
object of which are not evident from any written
instrument, shall be utilized;
(iii) in any case where any object of wakf has
ceased to exist or has become incapable of
achievement, that so much of the income of the
wakf as was previously applied to that object shall
be applied to any other object, which shall be
similar, or nearly similar or to the original object
or for the benefit of the poor or for the purpose of
promotion of knowledge and learning in the
Muslim community:
Provided that no direction shall be given under this
clause without giving the parties affected an
opportunity of being heard.
Explanation.\027For the purposes of this clause, the
powers of the Board shall be exercised\027
(i) in the case of a Sunni wakf, by the Sunni
members of the Board only; and
(ii) in the case of a Shia wakf, by the Shia
members of the Board only:
Provided that where having regard to the number
of the Sunni or Shia members in the Board and
other circumstances, it appears to the Board that
the power should not be exercised by such
members only, it may co-opt such other Muslims
being Sunnis or Shias, as the case may be, as it
thinks fit, to be temporary members of the Board
for exercising its powers under this clause;"
The Tribunal had been constituted for the purposes mentioned in
Section 83 of the 1995 Act. It is an adjudicatory body. Its decision is final
and binding but then it could not usurp the jurisdiction of the Board. Our
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attention has not been drawn to any provision which empowers the Tribunal
to frame a scheme. In absence of any power vested in the Tribunal, the
Tribunal ought to have left the said function to the Board which is statutorily
empowered therefor. Where a statute creates different authorities to exercise
their respective functions thereunder, each of such authority must exercise
the functions within the four corners of the statute.
It is trite that when a procedure has been laid down the authority must
act strictly in terms thereof. [See Taylor v. Taylor, (1875) 1 Ch D 426]
We, therefore, are of the opinion that the matter requires fresh
consideration at the hands of the Tribunal. We direct accordingly. Orders of
the Tribunal and the High Court are set aside. The appeals are disposed of
with the aforementioned directions. The Tribunal is directed to consider the
matter afresh as expeditiously as possible preferably within a period of three
months from date. Having regard to the facts and circumstances of the case,
the parties shall pay and bear their own costs.