Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL Nos. 7086-7087 OF 2009
SABIR ALI KHAN …APPELLANT(S)
VERSUS
SYED MOHD. AHMAD ALI KHAN
AND OTHERS …RESPONDENT(S)
J U D G M E N T
K.M. JOSEPH, J.
1. The Appeals are lodged against the Order passed by
the High Court of Allahabad in Civil Revision Nos. 595
and 596 of 2003. The Revisions, in turn, were directed
against the Order passed by the Waqf Tribunal on an
Appeal filed by the first respondent before us. The
first respondent again, in turn, put in issue the Order
passed by the Collector, Bulandshahar. The Order passed
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Jagdish Kumar
Date: 2023.04.13
14:48:53 IST
Reason:
by the Collector was passed under Section 52(2) of the
Waqf Act, 1995 (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Act’).
1
Finally, we must point out at this stage that the
Collector was acting on the basis of a requisition
given by the Controller of Waqf Board to obtain and
deliver possession of the land in dispute to the Waqf
Board. The requisition was made under Section 52(1) of
the Act.
By the Order passed by the Tribunal, it had set
2.
aside the Order passed by the Collector on various
grounds. By the impugned Order passed by the High Court
in the Revisions filed against the aforesaid Order by
the appellants, the High Court has affirmed the Order
passed by the Tribunal, however, on the ground that the
first respondent, in the Appeals, had perfected title
by adverse possession.
We have heard Shri Salman Khurshid, learned Senior
3.
Counsel on behalf of the Appellant and Shri P.S.
Patwalia, learned Senior Advocate on behalf of the
first respondent and Shri S.R. Singh, learned Senior
Advocate on behalf of the second respondent-the
Assistant Survey Commissioner, Waqk, Bulandshehar and
the fourth respondent-the Collector, Wakf,
Bulandshehar.
2
FACTS
4. We begin by setting out the following genealogical
chart:
Syed Mohd Akbar Ali Khan
Qasim Ali Khan Syed Qasim Ali Khan Syed Raza Ali Khan
Sayeed Shujat Ali Khan Sajjad Ali Khan Syed Mohd. Ali Khan Mohd Ahmed Ali Khan
(Respondent No.1) (Respondent No.1)
5. Parties are Shia Muslims. Mohd. Akbar Ali khan
purported to create a waqf-alal-aulad by a deed dated
26.07.1934. He appointed himself as a first Mutawalli.
However, he purported to execute a sale deed in the
year 1948 in respect of a tube well and some adjoining
land. Qasim Ali Khan, one of the sons of Akbar Ali
Khan, filed OS No. 1 of 1950 impugning the sale deed.
The trial court decreed the said suit and the decree
was affirmed by the High Court by its judgment rendered
on 11.07.1962. The High Court in the course of its
3
Judgement did hold that, Akbar Ali Khan had created a
valid and effective waqf as required of a Shia Muslim
which he was. On 16.12.1958, Akbar Ali Khan passed
away. He left behind him three sons, Qasim Ali khan,
Kazim Ali Khan and Raza Ali Khan. It appears that Qasim
Ali Khan took over as the Mutawalli. His name was
entered in the register of waqf. However, his younger
brothers, i.e., Kazim Ali Khan and Raza Ali Khan got
their names mutated in the Revenue Records as Bhumidhar
in regard to the property. This led to the second suit
again by Qasim Ali Khan, i.e., OS No. 421 of 1959. He
sought a declaration that the plaint schedule property
was a waqf property. He further sought the relief of
expunging the names of his two brothers. The said suit
was decreed in favour of the plaintiff on 21.05.1962.
Mohd. Kazim Ali Khan on 14.10.1960 during the pendency
of the suit transferred his alleged one-third share to
Mohd. Ahmad Ali Khan who was his nephew being the son
of Raza Ali Khan. This shall be referred to as the
first sale.
After a remand in an Appeal, when the Suit was
6.
pending, consolidation proceedings began in the
4
village. Under the law, the Suit was to stand abated.
The Suit stood abated. Shri Qasim Ali Khan filed
objection seeking expunging of the names of the other
sons, viz ., his brothers. This was done on the basis
that the properties were waqf properties. The
Consolidation Officer accepted the objection. He
directed that the entry of waqf be made in the Revenue
record. It was his reasoning that upon the creation of
the waqf, properties stood vested in the Almighty and
the first sale was infirm. The Appeal filed by Shri
Kasim Ali Khan and Shri Raza Ali Khan came to be
dismissed by the Settlement Officer. The Revision filed
by them also came to be dismissed by Order dated
29.01.1969. However, it would appear that an
application, seeking restoration, was filed in regard
to the Order of the Deputy Director, Consolidation. The
same stood dismissed on 02.03.1972. Another Application
for Restoration, however, came to be filed. It is in
the said Restoration Application, a compromise was
entered into on 13.02.1974 between the three brothers,
viz ., Qasim Ali Khan, Kasim Ali Khan and Raza Ali Khan.
The compromise proceeded on the footing that the waqf
5
was a paper transaction. It was the further basis that
the waqf was never acted upon and further that the
Bhumidars of the plots were Qasim Ali Khan, Raza Ali
Khan and Mohammad Ahmad Ali Khan (the last being the
alienee), who were entitled to one-third share each.
The Deputy Collector, Consolidation accepted the
compromise, set aside the Order dated 29.01.1969, an
Order passed on merit, and, disposed of the Revision
on the basis of the compromise. No sanction was
obtained from the Waqf Board within the meaning of
Section 49A of the Uttar Pradesh Muslim Waqf Act, 1960
(hereinafter referred to as, ‘the 1960 Act’, for
short). The Shia Waqf Board was not a party. We also
notice that the Order dated 02.03.1972 was set aside.
A sale deed came to be executed based on the compromise
on 26.09.1974 by Shri Qasim Ali Khan, purporting to
convey his one-third share in favour of his nephew,
viz., Shri Syed Mohammad Ali Khan, who was another son
of Shri Raza Ali Khan hereinafter referred to as the
second sale. Shri Syed Shujat Ali Khan, who was the son
of Qasim Ali Khan, filed Writ Petition (C) No. 5874 of
1974 challenging Order dated 12.09.1974 passed by the
6
Deputy Director, Consolidation. On 01.05.1988, it would
appear that Shri Qasim Ali Khan resigned as Mutawalli.
It is the case of the appellant that Shri Sujat Ali
Khan became the Mutawalli. The Writ Petition filed by
Shri Sujat Ali Khan came to be withdrawn. Thereafter,
Shri Sajjad Ali Khan, who was another son of Shri Qasim
Ali Khan and who claimed as a beneficiary of the Wakf,
filed a complaint before the U.P. Shia Waqf Board. He
called in question the transfer made of waqf property,
both by Shri Qasim Ali Khan, his father, and his uncle,
viz., Shri Kasim Ali Khan. He also sought to bring
under a cloud the compromise entered into by them
before the Deputy Director, Consolidation besides the
withdrawal of Writ Petition (C) No. 5874 of 1974. The
Controller of the Waqf Board passed Order dated
16.07.1997. By the said Order, he invoked Section 52(1)
of the Act and directed the Collector to recover and
deliver possession of the disputed land from the
unauthorised occupants, viz ., Shri Syed Mohamad Ahmad
Ali Khan and Shri Mohamad Ali Khan, who were the sons
of Shri Raza Ali Khan. They are the first respondents
in the Appeals and referred to as such. It is thereupon
7
that the Collector passed Order dated 31.12.1997,
directing the respondents to deliver possession of the
property to the Board within thirty days. This Order
came to be challenged by the first respondents in the
Appeals, viz., the alleged unauthorised occupants
before the Additional District Judge, Bulandshahar. The
said Appeals were allowed by the Additional District
Judge. The appellant filed Writ Petition (C) No. 23414
of 1998, contending that it was the Waqf Tribunal which
had the jurisdiction and not the Additional District
Judge. This contention found favour with the High Court
and it was found that the Additional District Judge did
not possess jurisdiction. The Order of the Additional
District Judge came to be set aside. Thereafter, the
first respondent filed Appeal No. 2 of 2002 and Appeal
No. 3 of 2002 before the Waqf Tribunal. By Order dated
28.03.2003, the Waqf Tribunal allowed the Appeals and
the Order of the Collector was set aside. It is the
said Order, which has been confirmed by the High Court
by passing the impugned Order, by which, the Revision
Petitions filed by the appellant, came to be dismissed.
8
FINDINGS OF THE WAQF TRIBUNAL
7.
i. Under Section 52(1) of the Act, the Board was to
first satisfy in such manner as was prescribed,
after making inquiry that the property is recorded
in the Waqf Register and further that the property
was alienated without any prior permission of the
Board. Thereafter, the matter is to be sent to the
Collector for recovering possession.
ii. After perusing the record and a true copy filed by
the appellant (the papers Nos. 42C and 53C2), it
was found that it was not mentioned in the Order
that the Board had done any inquiry.
iii. The Board had not satisfied itself, after making
inquiry. This finding was entered on the basis of
there being no evidence in the record requisitioned
from the Board.
iv. A Report of a Senior Waqf Inspector found included
in the record, was considered and it was found that
Senior Waqf Inspector had not actually seen whether
the property was recorded in the Waqf Register.
9
The Controller had not satisfied itself as per the
prescribed procedure laid down in Section 52(1) of
the Act.
v. The procedure adopted was illegal. There was no
Officer known as Controller under the Act. The
power under Section 52(1) could be exercised by
the Board. No Notification was produced to
establish that the Board transferred its power to
any Officer known as Controller. The Order passed
by the Controller was without jurisdiction.
vi. A period of seven days alone was given, which is
illegal.
vii. The possession of the respondents was clearly
admitted in the petition filed by the appellant
before the Waqf Board. It was further admitted that
the respondents were using the property for their
own interest and as their own personal property.
The respondents were found to have become owners
by way of adverse possession. There were exceptions
to Section 49A of the U.P. Act and Section 51 of
the Act. Both Acts were special Acts on the subject
of Waqf. There was no absolute Rule that a property
10
could not be transferred as new rights could accrue
to any person on the basis of adverse possession.
FINDINGS OF THE HIGH COURT
8.
i. There is merit in the contention of the appellant
that the compromise entered into before the Deputy
Director, Consolidation, being a collusive one,
could not defeat the Waqf. Once a Waqf, always a
Waqf.
ii. In the absence of the Waqf Board, the Order passed
by the Deputy Director, Consolidation acting on
the compromise was invalid in view of Section 69
of the 1960 U.P. Act.
iii. The sale executed by Shri Qasim Ali Khan on
29.06.1974 (the second sale) was invalid for the
reason also that no permission of the Waqf Board
was obtained under Section 49A of the 1960 U.P.
Act. Equally, the sale executed by Shri Kasim Ali
Khan in the year 1960 (the first sale), who was a
11
beneficiary, who had no right to sell Waqf
Property, was void.
iv. Shri Syed Mohammad Ahmad Ali Khan and Shri Syed
Mohammad Ali Khan were beneficiaries in the waqf-
al-al-aulad. Rejecting the contention of the
appellant that a beneficiary could not acquire
title by adverse possession over waqf property, it
was found that title by adverse possession could
be acquired.
v. Relying upon Shri Mohammad Ismail Faruqui v. Union
1
of India and others and also The Mosque Known as
Masjid Shahid Ganj, and others v. Shiromani
Gurdwaba Prabandhak Committee, Amritsar, and
2
another , it was found that title by adverse
possession could be acquired over waqf property.
vi. A person in a fiduciary relationship or one, in
whom the property was vested in trust, could not
claim title by adverse possession over trust
property. A Mutawalli, accordingly, on the said
principle, could not claim title by adverse
1
AIR 1995 SC 605
2
AIR 1940 PC 116
12
possession over waqf property [See Faqir Mohd. Shah
3
v. Qazi Fasihuddin Ansari and others ]. That a Co-
owner also cannot acquire title by adverse
possession over trust property, is found to be
well-recognised in law.
vii. A beneficiary is not a co-owner and, therefore,
the principle that a co-owner cannot acquire a
right by adverse possession over the share of
another co-owner, was not applicable to a
beneficiary. A beneficiary did not hold the
property in trust.
viii. “In every case of Waqf, whether public or private,
the property vests in God Almighty or in the Waqf
itself as an institution or a foundation economic,
for the time being in force”. The High Court drew
support from the aforesaid view expressed by a Full
Bench in the decision reported in Moattar Raza and
others v. Joint Director of Consolidation, U.P.
4
Camp at Bareilly and others .
3
AIR 1956 SC 713
4
AIR 1970 Allahabad 509
13
ix. Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963, provides
for a period of twelve years for a Suit by a Manager
of a Muslim Religious or Charitable Endowment,
inter alia, to recover possession transferred by a
previous Manager for valuable consideration. The
sale executed by Shri Kasim Ali Khan (the first
sale) would not come under its purview as he was
not the Mutawalli/Manager.
x. In regard to the sale deed executed in 1974 by Shri
Qasim Ali Khan, who was noted as the Mutawalli,
the Court went into the interplay of Articles 65
and 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963. It was found
that Article 96 would not apply in the case of a
void transfer. In the case of a transfer being void
on account of breach of a statutory requirement,
adverse possession of the transferee would
commence from the date of the transfer. If the Suit
for Recovery of Possession was not instituted
within the period of twelve years under Article
65, the rights of the Manager to recover the
endowed property would stand extinguished under
Section 27 of the Limitation Act.
14
xi. The correct interpretation to be placed on Article
96 is to confine its ambit to suits to recover
possession where the right to recover possession
was not lost under Section 27 of the Limitation
Act. In other words, it is found that Article 96
would be of avail only in regard to voidable
transfers.
xii. The finding of the Tribunal that the respondents
had acquired title by adverse possession, was found
correct. The contention based on Section 66G of
the Waqf Act, 1954, was repelled, though it
provided for a period of thirty years. This was on
the basis that the said enactment was never made
applicable to Uttar Pradesh.
xiii. Section 107 of the Act, which excludes the
Limitation Act, was found to be of little avail to
the appellant. A person in adverse possession does
not claim through the Mutawalli. The right of the
respondents having ripened by adverse possession,
it could not be defeated by invoking Section 107
of the Act.
15
xiv. The view expressed by the Tribunal that the Waqf
Board was duty-bound to hold an inquiry and that
such an inquiry was not held, was found to be
erroneous. The contention of the appellant that
the Waqf was registered, had not been disputed,
and it was also not disputed that there was no
previous sanction for the sale, was found to be
with merit.
xv. It was noted that in the Report of the Inspector,
it is stated that Waqf was registered as Waqf No.
1456, which recital was not established as
incorrect. It was further found that the
respondents had not set up any case that the Waqf
was not registered in the Register of Waqfs. The
Order of the Controller, therefore, was not
required, it is found, to be quashed on the ground
of no inquiry being held under Section 52. It was
also found that it could not be so quashed on the
ground that there was no application of mind.
16
xvi. The effect of the decision reported in Khilli Ram
5
v. State of Rajasthan , was found to be that the
entry in the Waqf Register would not be open to
question in an Appeal against the Order passed by
the Collector. The Appeal against the Order of the
Collector lies before the Tribunal under the Act.
The Tribunal has wide powers and it can go into
the question. The Tribunal could go into the
validity of the Requisition Order issued by the
Board. These are views expressed in the Judgment
of a learned Single Judge in the decision reported
in (Smt.) Amina Khatoon v. Third Addl. D.J.
6
Farukhabad and others . The High Court agreed with
the said view.
xvii. The Tribunal erred in finding the notice being
defective on the ground that thirty days’ notice
was not given. High Court notes the same to be a
mistake and that no prejudice had been caused as
no steps were taken for their eviction before the
expiry of thirty days.
5
(1985) 1 SCC 28
6
1987 All LJ 1282
17
xviii. The contention of the respondents that the
Report given by the Senior Inspector of the Waqf
was an ex parte Report and they had not been given
any opportunity, was found to be factually correct.
However, it is found that the Controller had found
the property in question was waqf property, the
Waqf was registered and, lastly, the transfer was
invalid for want of permission. It is specifically
found that ‘there appears no dispute on facts upon
the point’. No prejudice, it is found further to
the respondents, especially in view of the full
opportunity given by the Tribunal, especially when
it was not contended that the Waqf was not
registered or that the property was not waqf
property or that permission was taken before the
transfer.
xix. It was, however, found that in view of the finding
that the respondents had acquired title by adverse
possession, there was no merit in the Revision
Petitions and, accordingly, they were dismissed.
18
CONTENTIONS OF THE APPELLANT
9.
i. The learned Senior Counsel for the appellant,
Shri Salman Khurshid, contended that Article 96 of
the Limitation Act did apply. The period of
limitation would commence from 1996 or from the
date, when the appellant Shri Sajjad Ali Khan was
appointed Mutawalli, as twelve years had not run
out from 01.05.1988, when Shri Qasim Ali Khan
resigned or from the date of appointment of the
present Mutawalli Shri Sajjad Ali Khan. Therefore,
Shri Sayed Mohammad Ahmad Ali Khan could not
acquire title by adverse possession.
ii. Article 65 of the Limitation Act did not apply.
The claim of Shri Sayed Ahmad Ali Khan was based
on the compromise dated 13.02.1974. It was not
founded on the sale deed dated 14.10.1960. The
right under the said sale deed, if any, got
extinguished in view of there being no objection
by him during the consolidation proceedings and
19
also the decisions of the three Consolidation
Courts.
iii. As regards the claim of adverse possession of Shri
Syed Mohammad Ali Khan, it is contended that
Article 65 was a general Article and it is Article
96, which would apply. Appellant was appointed
Mutawalli. The period would start running, when he
was so appointed or from the date of the complaint
filed by him in 1996.
iv. The High Court erred in finding that the right of
the Waqf stood extinguished by virtue of Section
27 of the Limitation Act. As the Suit for
Possession was against the transferee from the
earlier Mutawalli, the possession would become
adverse from the date of death or the resignation
of the earlier Mutawalli under Article 134B of the
earlier Limitation Act and upon the expiry of
twelve years, as provided in Article 96, and not
from the date of the sale deed.
v. Appellant would further contend that respondents
being beneficiaries, could not acquire title, by
adverse possession, of the waqf property.
20
vi. Reliance was placed on the following Judgments:
a. Chhedi Lal Misra (Dead) Through Lrs. v. Civil
7
Judge, Lucknow and others ;
b. K.S. Viswam Iyer (Dead) Through Lrs. v. State
8
Wakf Board, Madras ; and
c. Wali Mohammed (Dead) by Lrs. v. Rahmat Bee (Smt)
9
and others .
10. Shri P.S. Patwalia, learned Senior Counsel,
appearing on behalf of Respondent No.1 in the appeals
makes the following submissions:
There is no valid waqf created as the waqif
never acted upon it. He never divested himself of
the property as required under Mohammedan law
pertaining to Shi a Muslims. Under the law, it is
mandatory that there must be a change in the
character of possession of property. No change in
mutation records was made by the waqif. The
property remained in the person’s name till his
7
(2007) 4 SCC 632
8
1994 Suppl. (2) SCC 109
9
AIR 1999 SC 1136
21
demise on 16.12.1958. Thereafter the property was
mutated into the names of his three sons. Reliance
is placed on the object of the waqf dated
26.07.1934. There in it is indicated:
“The object of the Waqf reads inter alia”
With a view of perpetuating the
name of my ancestors and with the
object of benefiting my offspring and
their offspring and relatives
belonging to the family and their
offspring, and, in their absence, the
Shia Poor, the indigent, the
miserable and Syeds-for this purpose
under Mohammedan law, in accordance
with Act 6 of 1913, I have by a formal
statement (sigha) in accordance with
the Sharia put into Waqf (trust) the
following property, thereby,
excluding it from own estate, and
having put into writing this deed of
Waqfu’l aulad (Trust for
offspring)….”
Clause E of Waqf Deed provides inter alia:
“E. In case, God forbid my
generation exterminates altogether and
none survives there and nor my wife
Pakeeza Begum or any other wife remains
alive, then in such case the income from
the endowed property which will be manage
by the members of the committee will be
spent for the charitable matters in TAB
A of the Convenience Compilation.”
22
It is further contended that all the property
11.
except a small parcel admeasuring hundred bighas, which
is the subject matter of the present case has been
sold. In fact, the waqif himself sold a portion to one
Mr. Manzoor Hasan. Almost 4272 bighas have been sold
by the sons of Akbar Ali Khan. Neither the appellant
nor the Waqf Board objected. The Waqf Deed contemplated
proceeds of the Waqf Property being used to repay
outstanding debts. It was, therefore, not a valid waqf.
The Waqf was created on 24.07.1934, at which time, the
Mussalman Waqf Validating Act, 1913 was in force. The
Act did not provide for registration of the Waqf. It
was, thereafter, that the Mussalman Waqf Act, 1923 was
enacted. Thereunder, by virtue of Section 2(e), waqf-
alal-aulad was excluded from the operation of the 1923
Act. Still further in the year 1930, the Mussalman Waqf
Validating Act, 1930 was enacted, which declared only
that the 1913 Act applied to Waqfs created before the
commencement of the 1913 Act. It is thereafter that the
U.P. Muslim Waqfs Act, 1936 (hereinafter referred to
as, ‘the 1936 Act’) and the 1960 Act were enacted.
Neither the 1936 nor the 1960 Acts applied to the facts.
23
Therefore, it is contended that the appellant cannot
have a case that the alleged Waqf was registered either
under the 1936 Act or the 1960 Act. The object of the
Waqf relied upon is to benefit the offspring and their
offspring and in their absence to the Shia poor. The
1936 Act did not apply and Waqf could not have been
registered under the 1936 Act. There is no religious
or charitable purpose to the Waqf Deed dated
26.07.1934. Reliance is placed on the decision of this
Court in Fazlul Rabbi Pradhan v. State of West Bengal
10
and others . The waqf not being registered, the summary
procedure under the Act was not applicable. It is
further complained that the appellants have different
versions in regard to the alleged registration. On the
one hand, it is contended that registration was
actually done in 1934, at which time, the 1923 Act was
in force. The said Act, apart from specifically
excluding waqf-alal-aulad from its ambit did not
provide for any provisions relating to registration.
It is further pointed out that during the hearing, a
case is set up that registration was done under the
10
1965 3 SCR 307 / AIR 1965 SC 1722
24
1936 Act. In view of the specific exclusion, by way of
Section 2(2)(i), it does not apply as the entire income
was going for the benefit of the members of the family.
There is a procedure at any rate prescribed under the
1936 Act, in Section 38. The same has not been followed.
The third version, it is pointed out, was that the waqf
was registered under the 1960 Act. A Report of the
Controller, which was for the first time relied upon
in this Court and which was disbelieved by the
Tribunal, cannot be the basis. Still further, as the
entire income was dedicated to the descendants of the
waqif stood excluded from the ambit of the 1960 Act,
the claim was without basis. Here again, Section 29
provided the procedure for registration. The same,
having not been conformed with, it could not be said
that the waqf was registered under the 1960 Act. In
view of the 1960 Act not being applicable, the bar to
the compromise of the suit or proceeding relating to
waqfs, enacted in Section 69, was inapplicable. The
summary procedure for recovery of Waqf Properties
mentioned in Section 45B was not available. No reliance
could be placed on the extract of the Register of the
25
Waqf purporting to establish the registration of the
waqf and which was produced by Respondent No.4-
Collector for the first time in Rejoinder submissions
before this Court. The date of the Registration
Certification is 08.07.2008, which was after the
passing of the Order by the High Court. Here again, the
procedure under Section 36 of the Act was not followed.
The particulars, which are to be mandatorily specified
were missing. In the absence of a valid registration,
the summary procedure provided in Section 52 of the Act
was not available to the appellants. The appellants are
estopped from challenging the compromise of 1974, after
a period of 22 years. The parties to the compromise
acted upon the same. The second sale took place.
Appellant being the son of the transferor stood
estopped. The dismissal of the writ petition filed by
Sujad Ali Khan as not pressed, has led to Order dated
12.09.1974, becoming final. Respondents have been in
continuous and uninterrupted possession. The
Limitation Act was applicable to the Waqf properties
under Mohammedan Law till the Act came into force,
whereunder, Section 107 specifically barred the
26
application of the Limitation Act, 1963. Reliance is
placed on the Judgment of the Privy Council in 1940 XXI
ILR 493. Also, support is drawn from the Judgment of
| Dr. | M. Ismail Faruqui and others v. Union |
|---|
11
of India . Section 107 of the Limitation Act, 1963 was
prospective in its application. Our attention is drawn
to the Judgment of this Court in T. Kaliamurthi
(supra) . The respondents have been in possession of
two-thirds of the suit property since the first sale
deed and the remaining one-third came by their
possession in 1974. Documentary evidence establishing
such possession include the following:
i. Order dated 16.07.1997 by the Controller, Waqf
Board;
ii. Sale deed dated 26.09.1974;
iii. The averments in the appeal (No.4 of 1998) filed
by the respondent before the District and
Sessions Judge, Bulandshehar;
iv. Order dated 30.05.1998 passed by the District
Judge;
v. The Waqf Appeal No. 3 of 2002;
11
(1994) 6 SCC 360
27
vi. The findings of the Order of the Tribunal;
vii. The admission of the possession of the
respondents by the appellant in the impugned
Judgment and, lastly,
viii. Reliance is placed on the very List of Dates
submitted by the appellant, which indicates that
the Order of the Collector was for recovery of
possession.
12. Thus, it is contended that the respondents have
been in possession of two-thirds since 1960 and
remaining one-third since 1974 and the rights of the
respondents emerged before the Act came into force.
Even counting from 1974 the respondents have perfected
title in the year 1986, i.e., 12 years from 1974. Thus,
the Limitation Act, 1963 would indeed apply as hostile
possession had led to the ripening of the title before
Section 107 of the Act came into force.
13. It is next pointed out that the appointment of
Mutawalli did not lead to a fresh starting point of
limitation. Decision of this Court in Syed Yousuf Yar
28
12
Khan and others v. Syed Mohammed Yar Khan and others
is set up to counter the said case. The High Court had
rightly applied Article 65 of the Limitation Act, 1963
in the present case. The first respondent in the
Appeals are not beneficiaries, it is next pointed out
as no valid waqf has been established. There is no
evidence to suggest that the alleged waqf was
generating any income which was being distributed
amongst the beneficiaries. This meant that the three
sons of the original Wakif were not beneficiaries and
were not so treated. It is also pointed out that there
is no bar in law preventing the beneficiary of waqf
from claiming adverse possession. The bar applies only
to a Mutawalli. This is for the reason that the
Mutawalli holds a fiduciary duty towards the Waqf. It
is open to the first respondent, it is lastly pointed
out, to plead both title and adverse possession
simultaneously. Reliance was placed on M. Siddiq
(Dead)Through Legal Representatives (Ram Janmabhumi
12
(1967) 2 SCR 318
29
13
Temple Case) v. Mahant Suresh Das and others and
14
Karnataka Board of Wakf v. Govt. of India and others .
SUBMISSIONS OF RESPONDENT NOS. 2 AND 4
Respondent Nos. 2 and 4 are Assistant Survey
14.
Commissioner Waqf, Bulandshehar and the Collector,
Waqf, Bulandshehar, U.P., respectively. The learned
Senior Counsel, Shri S.R. Singh would submit that the
compromise application by the three sons of Akbar Ali
Khan without prior approval of the Board, as
contemplated in the Act of 1960, was not maintainable
in view of the requirement of Section 69 of the 1960
Act. The Order of the Deputy Director of Consolidation
setting aside the Order dated 29.01.1969 and also the
Order dated 02.03.1972 was illegal. The Controller of
the Waqf Board held inquiry on the complaint before the
Waqf Board. He found that the disputed property was
Waqf property which was registered as such in the
Register of Waqfs. It was further found that the
property was illegally sold without obtaining the
13
(2020) 1 SCC 1
14
(2004) 10 SCC 779
30
sanction of the Board. Thereupon, the Controller issued
the requisition to the Collector to obtain possession.
The High Court placed reliance on Judgment of this
15
Court in Thakur Mohd. Ismail v. Thakur Sabir Ali , that
in a waqf-alal-aulad, the property stood transferred
to the Almighty but still dismissed the Revisions
without considering whether title could be acquired by
adverse possession. He points out that the High Court
did not consider the question whether Articles 65 and
96 of the Limitation Act could be invoked against the
God/Almighty. The Order passed by the Deputy Director,
Consolidation was a nullity, being bereft of sanction
under Section 69 of the 1960 Act. The result was the
earlier decisions of the Consolidation Authorities
stood restored wherein it was held that the Waqf in
question was a valid Waqf. Section 49 of the U.P.
Consolidation of Holding Act, 1953 bars the same issue
being considered by the Tribunal which had the
trappings of the Civil Court. The two sales were void
ab initio under Section 51(1) and Section 51(A) of the
Act. Again, support is drawn from the Judgment in
15
AIR 1962 SC 1722
31
Thakur Mohd. Ismail (supra) as also Ahmed G.H. Ariff
16
and others v. Commissioner of Wealth Tax, Calcutta . A
beneficiary/Mutawalli had no right to transfer the waqf
property. Article 65 of the Limitation Act did not
apply to the proceedings of the Act in view of Section
107 of the Limitation Act. It is further contended that
Article 65 applied to suits. It did not apply to
proceedings. Therefore, Section 27 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 did not apply to the waqf property which
stood vested in Almighty. Reliance is placed on
Judgment of this Court in Chhedi Lal Misra (Dead)
| Through Lrs. v. Civil Judge, Lucknow | and others |
|---|
Paragraph-34A of the Waqf Deed, which contemplates
spending of Rs.500/- on charitable purposes and
paragraph-34E, which contemplates that in case all the
descendants of the Waqif die, then, the waqf shall be
used for charitable purposes, brought the waqf under
the definition of ‘waqf’. A void document, as is the
case with the sale deed and the compromise, would be
ignored without the need to set aside the same. The
16
AIR 1971 SC 1691
17
(2007) 4 SCC 632
32
respondent no.1 in both the Appeals could not be said
to have perfected their title by adverse possession
against the State for which the period is 30 years. The
litigation started in 1997, i.e., 23 years from the
date of the collusive compromise and the void sale
deed. This argument is based on the fact that the waqf
property is managed on behalf of God by the Waqf Board
which comes under the superintendence of the Government
under the law.
ANALYSIS
15. Going by the contentions raised and, in the facts,
the following points are noted:
1. Whether there was a valid Shia Waqf and whether it
was registered?
2. Whether the compromise dated 13.02.1974 and the
Order dated 12.09.1974. are valid or are they void?
3. Whether the two sales, one on 14.10.1960 and the
second on 26.09.1974, in favour of the first
respondent in the two Appeals before us, are void?
4. Whether the action is barred by limitation?
33
5. Whether the High Court was correct in finding that
the action was barred as it is not Article 96 of the
Limitation Act, which applied but Article 65?
What is the interplay between the said Articles in
the facts?
6. What is the impact of Section 27 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 in the facts?
7. Whether Section 107 of the Act removes the bar of
limitation at any rate?
16. The High Court in the impugned order has confirmed
the findings of the Tribunal that Respondent No.1 in
both the cases have acquired title by adverse
possession. This is on the basis that the first sale
was effected in the year 1960 and the second sale was
effected in the year 1974. The Act came into force with
effect from 1.1.1996. It is further found that the
period began to run from the dates of the two sale
deeds as the sales were void. The further finding is
that Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963 did not
apply to the first sale of the year 1960. The said sale
was effected at a time when Qasim the eldest brother
34
was the Mutawalli. The sale was effected by a person
who in other words was not the Mutawalli. Therefore,
Article 96 did not apply. As far as the second sale is
concerned, it was effected by Qasim Ali Khan on
26.09.1974 purporting to convey his one-third right to
his nephew who is the first respondent in the other
appeal. The further reasoning of the High Court is that
the second sale deed was executed by the Mutawalli.
The court thereafter demarcated the field covered by
Articles 65 and 96. The court then also took into
consideration Section 27 of the Limitation Act, 1963.
The Court found the proper interpretation was that
Article 96 was to be confined to suits to recover
possession where the right to recover possession had
already not been lost under Section 27 of the
Limitation Act, 1963. Article 96, in other words, it
was found, applied to voidable transfers. On the said
basis, finding that the second sale represented a case
of void transfer, it was found that Article 96 did not
assist the appellant. It was also found that there is
no obstacle in a beneficiary of a Wakf perfecting title
by adverse possession. Such an obstacle, undoubtedly,
35
existed in the case of a Mutawalli, a trustee or a co-
owner. A beneficiary was none of the above. Thus,
proceeding on the basis that the first respondent in
both the appeals were beneficiaries of the Wakf and as
the sales under which they claimed were found to be
void, the period of limitation contemplated under
Article 65 of the Limitation Act began to run from the
date of the sale. This meant that when the Act was born
on 01.01.1996, the title stood vested with the first
respondent by adverse possession. It is further found
that Section 107 of the Act under which the Limitation
Act was not applicable to the Act could not rescue the
case of the appellant.
It is apposite that we advert to the relevant
17.
provisions of the Limitation Act. Section 27 of the
Limitation Act provides that at the determination of
the period limited to any person for instituting a suit
for possession of any property, ‘his right’ to such
property would stand extinguished. Article 65 of the
Limitation Act, 1963 reads as follows:
“
36
| Description of suit | Period of limitation | Time from which period begins to | |
|---|---|---|---|
| run | |||
| 65. For possession of immovable property or any interest | Twelve | When the possession | |
| therein based on title. | years1 | of the defendant | |
| becomes adverse to | |||
| the plaintiff. | |||
| Explanation.—For the purposes of this article— | |||
| (a) where the suit is by a remainderman, a reversioner | |||
| (other than a landlord) or a devisee, the possession of the | |||
| defendant shall be deemed to become adverse only when | |||
| the estate of the remainderman, reversioner or devisee, | |||
| as the case may be, falls into possession; | |||
| (b) where the suit is by a Hindu or Muslim entitled to the | |||
| possession of immovable property on the death of a Hindu | |||
| or Muslim female, the possession of the defendant shall be | |||
| deemed to become adverse only when the female dies; | |||
| (c) where the suit is by a purchaser at a sale in execution | |||
| of a decree when the judgment-debtor was out of | |||
| possession at the date of the sale, the purchaser shall be | |||
| deemed to be a representative of the judgment-debtor who | |||
| was out of possession. |
”
18. Article 134B of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908
was the predecessor provision holding the field till
Article 96 supplanted it in the year 1963. The
following table sets out Article 134B of the Limitation
Act, 1908 and Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963:
“
| Article 134-B of the Limitation Act, 1908 |
|---|
“ Description of suit Period of
limitation
Time from which
period begins to
run
37
134-
B.
By the manager of a Hindu, Muhammadan or
Buddhist religious or charitable endowment to
recover possession of immovable property
comprised in the endowment which has been
transferred by a previous manager for a valuable
consideration.
Twelve
years
The death,
resignation or
removal of the
transferor.”
| Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963 |
“ Description of suit Period of
limitation
Time from which period
begins to run
96. By the manager of a Hindu, Muslim or
Twelve
years
The date of death,
resignation or removal of
the transferor or the date of
appointment of the plaintiff
as manager of the
endowment, whichever is
later.”
Buddhist religious or charitable
endowment to recover possession of
movable or immovable property
comprised in the endowment which has
been transferred by a previous manager
for a valuable consideration.
”
19. The distinction between the two Articles have been
noted by the judgment of this Court in T. Kaliamurthi
18
and another v. Five Gori Thaikkal Wakf and others .
It reads as under:
“35. ……We have carefully noted two
Articles viz., Article 96 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 and Article 134B of the
Limitation Act, 1908 and we find that they
are different from each other insofar as
while under the 1908 Act 12 years was to
run from the death, resignation or removal
of the transferor, under the 1963 Act the
said period of 12 years was to run from the
date of death, resignation or removal of
the transferor, or the date of appointment
of the plaintiff as Manager of the
endowment, whichever was later.”
18
(2008) 9 SCC 306
38
As far as the first sale is concerned, the sale
20.
was not effected by the Mutawalli or the Manager of the
Waqf. The sale was effected by the brother of the
Mutawalli. Therefore, the High Court is correct in
finding that Article 96 will not come to the aid of the
appellant.
As far as the second sale is concerned, it was no
21.
doubt, executed by the Mutawalli by sale deed
26.09.1974. This is a sale executed by him on the
strength of the compromise which was entered into
between the three brothers on 13.02.1974. As we have
noticed, the compromise led to order dated 12.09.1974
being passed by the Deputy Director (Consolidation)
setting aside the dismissal of the revision by order
dated 20.09.1969 as also the dismissal of the first
restoration application dated 02.03.1972. If the said
sale is found to be valid, then obviously, the
appellant would fail. If on the other hand, the sale
is void, the question would be whether the proceeding
initiated beyond 12 years from the date of the sale
would be within time. If by seeking shelter under
Article 96 of the Limitation Act, 1963, the period of
39
limitation is to commence from the date of resignation
of the Mutawalli then would not the period of 12 years
commence from 01.05.1988 when Qasim Ali Khan, the
Mutawalli resigned? Then, the period of 12 years would
expire only in the year 2000. Could it not be said that
the action was not barred? It is here that the High
Court reasons that Article 96 is not meant to apply to
a void sale. Instead, it applies to a voidable sale.
22. There cannot be any doubt that Waqf property can
be the subject matter of acquisition of title by
adverse possession (see AIR 1940 PC 116). That a
Mutawalli however cannot acquire rights over waqf
property by adverse possession is not open to question.
(See AIR 1956 SC 713).
The High Court finds that Article 96 will not apply
23.
as it is a case of a void sale and not voidable sale.
The reasoning is based on the rationale furnished in
the Judgment of the High Court of Orissa in Chintamani
Sahoo (deceased by LR.) and others v. Commissioner of
19
Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments, Orissa and others .
19
AIR 1983 Orissa 205
40
In the said case, the Division Bench of the High Court
was dealing with the following facts:
The Mahant of a math executed certain permanent
leases. It was without sanction of the Commissioner
as contemplated in Section 58 of the Orissa Hindu
Endowments Act, 1939. Such leases were contrary to
the aforesaid provision. The Mahant came to be
later dismissed. The Executive Officer of the math
appointed by the Commissioner instituted
proceeding under Section 68 of the said Act for
recovery of possession, which was allowed. He also
instituted proceedings for recovery of possession
under Section 25 of the Act. The Commissioner
allowed the proceeding under Section 25 and
directed issue of a requisition to the Collector
for evicting the appellant who thereupon brought a
suit for declaration contending that he had
acquired an indefeasible right of tenancy by
uninterrupted possession and sought an injunction.
We may notice the following finding:
“8. The main question in controversy is as
regards limitation and adverse possession.
The finding of fact is that the plaintiff was
41
in possession of the lands from the
respective dates of the leases, namely, 26-
7-1943, 8-1-1944 and 15-7-1944. The
proceeding under Section 25 of the Orissa
Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1951 was
allowed on 30-10-69 and direction was issued
to the Collector for delivery of possession.
The right to evict the plaintiff would be
barred by limitation after expiry of 12 years
which comes to 1956 if the starting point
would be the dates of the respective leases.
If, however, it is held that adverse
possession of the plaintiff would start only
after the dismissal of the Mahant, the right
to recover in 1969 would be in time. It is
contended on behalf of the respondents that
the correct Article to apply is Article 96
of the new Limitation Act. On the other hand,
it is contended on behalf of the appellant
that Article 65 of the new Limitation Act is
the governing Article. The applicability of
either Art. 65 or Art. 96 would depend on
whether the transfer was void ab initio or
only voidable.
xxx xxx xxx
10. An alienation made in contravention of a
statutory provision which is enacted in
public interest is void. Admittedly the
permanent leases were granted in violation
of Section 58(1) which prohibits grant of
lease for more than five years without prior
sanction. The transfer by permanent leases
is, therefore, void. We are fortified in this
view by the earlier decisions of this Court.
In the case of Naba Kishore
Panda v. Bulendra , (1974-40 Cut LT 1152),
42
referred to above, Hon'ble S.K. Ray, J. (as
he then was) held that a permanent lease
created in express breach of the mandatory
provisions of S. 58(1) is void. In a
subsequent Single Bench decision in the case
of Arjuna Jena v. Chaitanya Thakur (1978) 45
Cut LT 461, Hon'ble B.K. Ray, J. also held
that a lease created in violation of the
provisions of Section 58(1) of the old Act
is a void one. For this proposition, his
Lordship relied on an earlier Division Bench
decision of this Court in the case of Shri
Chiranjilal Patwari v. Commr., Hindu
Religious Endowments, Orissa,
Bhubaneswar (1974) 40 Cut LT 41. In another
Single Bench decision of this Court in the
case of Gulam Ali Saha v. Sultan Khan , (1966)
32 Cut LT 510 : (AIR 1967 Orissa 55), decided
by Hon'ble G.K. Misra, J. (as he then was)
the question of validity of an alienation of
wakf property without permission of the Court
came up for consideration and it was held
that the alienation, even though for
consideration, was void ab initio. It was
further held, relying on the principles laid
down by the Privy Council in Masjid Shahid
Ganj v. S.G.P. Committee, Amritsar , AIR 1940
PC 116, that Article 144 of the old
Limitation Act applies to such a case for
acquisition of title by adverse possession.
In an unreported decision of this Court in
Second Appeal No. 361 of 1966 disposed of on
3rd August, 1970 ( Sambari Bewa v. Orissa
Board of Wakfs ) Hon'ble R.N. Misra, J. (as
he then was) considered the validity of an
alienation made by a Mutwalli in violation
of the provisions of Section 36-A of the Wakf
Act and came to hold that a permanent lease
43
| granted in violation of the provisions of the | |
|---|---|
| Wakf Act is ab initio void (vide para. 8).” |
whether it was Article 65 or Article 96, which applied.
The Court thereupon held:
“12. This Article refers to a transfer for
valuable consideration. A transfer which is
void ab initio is in the eye of law no
transfer at all and hence will not come within
the scope of this Article. This Article
obviously applies to cases where the transfer
can be avoided or is voidable. But if the
transfer is void ab initio then Art. 65 of
the new Limitation Act would apply. The
transferee's possession since the date of the
transfer becomes adverse from the date of the
transfer inasmuch as the transferee had no
right in respect of the property at all and
he was a mere trespasser.
xxx xxx xxx
14. In AIR 1966 SC 859 ( Srinivasa
Reddiar v. N. Ramaswamy Reddiar ), the
question for decision before their Lordships
was “Does Art. 134-B permit any distinction
to be made between transfers effected by a
previous manager on the basis that the
property transferred belongs to the religious
endowment and those made by him on the basis
that the said property is his own private
property?” Their Lordships held that Article
134-B does not permit any such distinction.
44
It was held that the character of the
representations made by the previous manager
in regard to his relation with the property
which is the subject-matter of transfer is
irrelevant for the purpose of Art. 134-B. The
question whether this Article applies to void
or voidable transaction did not arise for
consideration in that case.”
(Emphasis supplied)
25. Since reference was made to AIR 1966 SC 859 and
the same was distinguished, we may advert to the said
Judgment. The contention, which was taken before this
Court was that when a transfer is made by a Manager not
as Manager but as an individual, such transfer being
void ab initio, the possession of the transferee was
adverse from the date of the transfer and therefore,
in such a situation, Article 134B of the Limitation
Act, 1908, the predecessor Article of Article 96 of the
present Limitation Act, with the difference we have
noted in the third column, would not apply. This Court,
in fact, noted that two Judgments of the Privy Council,
viz., 1900 27 Indian Appeals 69 (EC) and 37 Indian
Appeals 147 EC, supported the said contention. In
regard to the first of the cases (27 Indian Appeals 69
EC, it is found that the Privy Council held that where
45
hereditary Trustees of a religious endowment sold their
hereditary right of management and transferred the
endowed property, the sales were null and void, if
there was no custom providing otherwise. It was further
noted that the Privy Council was dealing with the case
of Article 124 of the Limitation Act, 1908. It was
further found that what was sold was the hereditary
office as also the property, though, immovable
properties of the temple were also sold. The further
reasoning was that it was Article 144 of the old Act
which operated to bar the suit after 12 years of adverse
possession. The Court noted certain divergence of
opinions in the Calcutta High Court. It further went
on to doubt whether the first of the Judgment 27 Indian
Appeals 69 (EC) could lead to the inference that if a
part of the property was transferred by the Manager of
a religious endowment, on the basis that it belonged
to him, the right of the succeeding Manager could be
lost. Thereafter, the Court went on to find that the
matter must be viewed in the context of Article 134B
of the Limitation Act, 1908. This Court found that it
did not make any difference to the application of
46
Article 134B, if the transfer is made on the basis that
the property belonged not to the endowment but to the
Manager. All that was necessary for the successor
Manager to prove were found to be the following facts:
“(1) that the property belongs to the religious
endowment; (2) that it was transferred by a
previous manager; and (3) that the transfer was
for a valuable consideration. The character of
the representations made by the previous manger
in regard to his relation with the property
which is the subject matter of transfer, is
irrelevant for the purpose of Art. 134-B.”
26. The High Court of Orissa in Chintamani Sahoo
(Deceased by LR.) (supra), distinguishes the aforesaid
Judgment on the basis that this Court was not
considering the question whether Article 134B applied
to void or voidable transactions as it did not arise.
27. The appellants have placed reliance on certain
Judgments of other High Courts contending that they lay
down a different principle. In Chinna Jeeyangar Mutt,
20
Tirupath v. C.V. Purushotham and others , a learned
Single Judge traced the history of Articles 134A,
Article 134B, Article 134C also with reference to the
20
AIR 1974 AP 175
47
Third Report of the Law Commission of India. The said
portion reads as follows:
| “12. The Law Commission observed in its 3rd | |
|---|---|
| report relating to Limitation Act, 1908 in | |
| paragraph 123 as follows: | |
| “The starting point of limitation for suits | |
| covered by Article 134-B is the date of death, | |
| resignation or removal of the transferor. This | |
| has given rise to some difficulties in certain | |
| cases. Thus, an Endowment Commissioner may find | |
| it necessary to challenge an alienation by one | |
| of the previous managers, after decades; or, | |
| there may be a gap of more than 12 years between | |
| the death, resignation or removal of one | |
| manager and the appointment of his successor. | |
| In such cases, it would be more equitable to | |
| make the date of the plaintiff's appointment | |
| as Manager the starting point for limitation. | |
| But there may be cases and circumstances where | |
| the existing provision may be more favourable | |
| to the institution. To provide for both | |
| contingencies, the later of the two dates | |
| should be taken as the starting point of | |
| limitation.” |
The Court also relied on the Statement of Objects
28.
and Reasons. It also referred to Srinivasa (supra).
Still further, the Court set down the position at law
prior to amendment, as follows:
| “ | 23. From the above discussion the following |
|---|---|
| position of law emerges. A Mahant of a mutt is | |
| incompetent to create any interest in respect | |
| of muth property to enure beyond his lifetime. |
48
| He can alienate the property permanently only | |
|---|---|
| for legal necessity or benefit to the estate. | |
| In the case of an alienation made by him, which | |
| was not for legal necessity or benefit the said | |
| alienation becomes voidable at the instance of | |
| his successor. The right to question the | |
| alienation accrues to the successor only on the | |
| alienor's death. The adverse possession of the | |
| alienee also begins to run only from the date | |
| of his death and not until then. A permanent | |
| lease of temple lands is also an alienation of | |
| this nature. If it was not for legal necessity | |
| or benefit it is not binding on the mutt. The | |
| cause of action which once accrues continues. | |
| The right of the mutt would be extinguished in | |
| regard to that property at the end of the | |
| period prescribed by the law of limitation. | |
| Each succeeding mahant does not get a revival | |
| of the cause of action in his favour. The | |
| appointment of successor was never considered | |
| to give a fresh start of limitation, under the | |
| law as it stood prior to 1963. Whether it was | |
| an alienation made for legal necessity or not | |
| was a question depending upon the facts and | |
| circumstances of each case.” |
the true purport of Article 134B:
| “ | 24. Such was the state of law when the |
|---|---|
| Limitation Act was amended in 1963. The | |
| legislature must be presumed to know the | |
| existing law and the interpretation given by | |
| the courts to the law then in force. If the | |
| right to question a voidable alienation in | |
| respect of a Hindu or Muhammadan religious or | |
| charitable endowment is denied to a mutt or | |
| religious institution, such an institution | |
| looses the properties once for all. As the | |
| State was interested in protecting and |
49
safeguarding the properties of such
institutions, it brought about an amendment to
achieve that purpose in 1963. The Law
Commission, which was appointed to go into that
question suggested that in the case of Hindu,
Muslim and Buddhist religious or charitable
endowments, a fresh start or a terminus quo
should be given for actions brought by the
succeeding Mahant to set aside such
alienations, which were not made for legal
necessity or benefit of the institution. The
Legislature also accepted that view and
inserted in column 3 to Article 96, which
previously had only the following words: “the
death, resignation or removal of the
transferor” the following words: “or the date
of appointment of the plaintiff as manager of
the endowment, whichever is later”. It is
obvious from the plain words of the amendment
that the legislature had in view such
alienations about which a right to institute
suits has already become barred and therefore
it wanted to provide a fresh period of
limitation in regard to them. The Legislature
was also aware of the fact that according to
the law as laid down by decisions prior to
1963, the date of appointment of the plaintiff
as manager by an endowment did not give him
fresh start of limitation for that purpose. It
was only to remedy the obvious difficulties
felt in the interpretation of such law that
this amendment has been brought about. By
virtue of this amendment, if the plaintiff had
been appointed within 12 years from the date
of the filing of the suit, he can question any
alienation, which was not made for legal
necessity or benefit to a mutt by a previous
manager. The fact that 12 years have elapsed
from the date of death, resignation or removal
of the transferor manager would not stand in
the way of the plaintiff in such a suit from
recovering the property. That is clear from the
last three words in the amendment ‘whichever
is later’, purposely introduced by the
50
| Legislature. In view of this amendment the | |
|---|---|
| courts have got to apply the plain words of | |
| the Statute to any action brought by any | |
| manager of a Hindu, Muslim or Buddhist | |
| religious or charitable endowment, to recover | |
| possession of the movable or immovable property | |
| of an endowment which was the subject of an | |
| alienation by a previous manager for valuable | |
| consideration. It is also clear that the | |
| transferor manager need not be the immediate | |
| predecessor of the plaintiff, that files such | |
| a suit. From a reading of Article 96, such a | |
| conclusion cannot be arrived at. It is enough | |
| if the alienation was made by a previous | |
| manager. The first column does not say that it | |
| should be by the previous manager.” |
Government of Tamil Nadu in G.O.Ms. No. 2031, dated
20th November, 1961 and appointed by G.O.Ms. No. 2264,
dated 30th December, 1967, The Special Officer for
21
Wakfs Madras v. Subramanyam and others , the learned
Judge was, inter alia , dealing with the following
facts:
The suits were filed for recovery of
properties alleged to belong to the waqf, which
were dismissed on the ground of limitation. The
Court drew upon the later part of the third column
21
AIR 1977 Madras 79
51
of Article 96 and found that the suit was within
time. In the said case, in fact, the Waqf Board
was the plaintiff. The Single Judge found that the
Waqf Board was constituted only in the year 1953.
The suits were instituted in 1967. In assigning
the role of the Manager to the Board within the
meaning of ‘manager appointed’ in the third column
of Article 96, also, the Court drew support from
the Judgment of learned Single Judge in Chinna
Jeeyangar Mutt (supra). We may notice the following
reasoning:
“6. The argument of the learned counsel now
is that only when the Wakf Board assumes
direct management of the wakf, it can be
said to be a manager as contemplated by the
third column in Art. 96 of the new Act and
that so long as there is no assumption of
direct management, the Wakf Board cannot be
said to be a manager. I am unable to accept
this argument, from one point of view.
Neither S. 42 nor S. 43-A of the Wakfs Act
on which reliance has been placed uses the
word, “Manager”. The word, “Manager” in
relation to a religious or charitable
endowment is not a term of art. The said
word denotes the person who is in charge of
the administration of the endowment or
manages the property or supervises the
performance of the charity and the word is
one of very wide and general import. As a
matter of fact, the judgment of Natarajan
J., has referred to the provisions
52
| contained in S. 15(2) of the Wakfs Act. S. | |
|---|---|
| 15(1) of the Wakfs Act provides that | |
| subject to any rules that may be made under | |
| the said Act, the general superintendence | |
| of all Wakfs in a State shall vest in the | |
| Board established for the State; and it | |
| shall be the duty of the Board so to | |
| exercise its powers under the Act as to | |
| ensure that the Wakfs under its | |
| superintendence are properly maintained, | |
| controlled and administered and the income | |
| thereof is duly applied to the objects and | |
| for the purposes for which such Wakfs were | |
| created or intended. Sub-S. (2) or S. 15, | |
| without prejudice to the generality of the | |
| powers conferred by Sub-S (1) by way of | |
| illustration, enumerates certain specified | |
| power also. One such specified power so | |
| enumerated is contained in S. 15(2)(h), | |
| which enables the Wakf Board to take | |
| measures for the recovery of lost | |
| properties of any Wakf. S. 15(2)(i) also | |
| enables the Wakf Board to institute and | |
| defend suits and proceedings in a court of | |
| law relating to Wakfs The combined effect | |
| of S. 15(1) and 15(2) of the Wakfs Act will | |
| certainly be sufficient to designate the | |
| Wakf Board as a manager for the purpose of | |
| recovery of possession of Wakf property and | |
| consequently it can certainly be termed as | |
| “Manager” contemplated by the third column | |
| to Art. 96 of the new Limitation Act and if | |
| so construed, the constitution of the Wakf | |
| Board under the statute can certainly be | |
| construed to be the appointment of the Wakf | |
| Board as Manager of the Wakf in question, | |
| because even the word, “appointment” just | |
| like the word, “Manager” is not a term of | |
| art and therefore has to receive its | |
| ordinary, natural and normal meaning.” |
53
Before we finally pronounce on the question as to
31.
whether Article 96 would apply in respect of a void
transaction, we deem it appropriate to deal with
certain other aspects. The waqf in question is the
creation of Akbar Ali Khan on 26.07.1934. It is the
case of the appellant that it was registered as waqf
al aulad at No. 1476. The transferor of the second sale
deed, viz., Qasim Ali Khan took over as the Mutawalli
when Akbar Ali Khan, his father, died on 16.02.1958.
It is not in dispute that Qasim Ali Khan instituted OS
1 of 1950 wherein he impleaded his father Akbar Ali
Khan and the transferee of a part of the waqf property
which was effected by his father. The Decree of the
Trial Court in favour of the plaintiff was affirmed by
the High Court by Judgment dated 11.07.1962. The
Judgment affirmed the view of the Trial Court that
there was a valid waqf. It is categorically found by
the High Court that all the legal requirements in
respect of the creation of the waqf by a Shia under the
Mohammedan law had been made out. It was held that
Akbar Ali Khan did create a waqf-alal-aulad on
26.07.1934 which was effective in law. Therefore, as
54
between the waqif who was the first Mutawalli also, and
between his son, Qasim Ali Khan, the findings in the
Judgment of the High Court clearly holds that there was
a valid waqf. After the death of Akbar Ali Khan, his
son Qasim Ali Khan took over as Mutawalli. He
instituted OS 421 of 1959. Therein, his brothers were
the defendants, viz., Kasim Ali Khan and Raza Ali Khan.
It was the act of the defendants getting their names
mutated in the Revenue Records, which occasioned the
said suit. It is during the pendency of the suit, i.e.,
on 14.10.1960, one of the defendants Kazim Ali Khan
transferred his alleged, one-third right in favour of
the first respondent in one of the Appeals before us.
The suit was decreed. The High Court in the Appeal
filed by the defendants, remanded the matter back by
Order dated 25.09.1963. However, while it was so,
consolidation proceedings commenced under the U.P.
Consolidation of Proceedings Act, 1953. Under the
provisions of the said Act, the proceedings in the suit
would abate when consolidation commences. Thereafter,
it is the Consolidation Officer, whose decision is
appealable to the Settlement Officer and which latter
55
Authority’s decision can be revised in a Revision by
the Deputy Director, who hold sway. The plaintiff in
the suit, viz., Qasim Ali Khan, accordingly, placed his
objections against the name of his brothers being
entered. The objections of Qasim Ali Khan were found
to be with merit. Resultantly, the names of the
brothers were directed to be removed and their place,
the name of the waqf was directed to be entered. The
brothers of Qasim Ali Khan unsuccessfully appealed
before the Settlement Officer. A Revision carried by
them before the Deputy Director proved equally
unsuccessful as it was dismissed by Order dated
29.01.1969. The Order was passed on merit. It reads,
inter alia:
“3. That I find that Wakf is admitted between the
parties. The disputed land was sir. It after the
execution of wakf, the sir should have been
converted into ex-proprieto tenancy. It could have
been inferred that the rights of ex-proprieto
tenancy which ultimately converted at sirdari
right after the date of vesting, did not belong
to the wakf and then there was justification for
continuances of the applicants a successors of
their father. But, the position is otherwise, when
the father of the parties created at wakf, the
disputed land which was sir, was not converted
into expropriatory tenancy and was recorded
bhundhary after the date of vesting. It has
therefore, to be concluded that absolute rights
56
in the land were transferred to the almighty and
the proper course, therefore, was to record the
opp. Party as Mutwalli and expunge the names of
the applicants. In the litigation in regular
courts, the civil court had also held the same
view but the matter could not become final in
these courts. On account of advent of
consolidation. In these circumstances, I come to
conclusion that the orders of the Lower Courts are
sound and deserves no interference.”
32. The defendants, viz., Kasim Ali Khan and Raza Ali
Khan filed a Restoration Application which came to be
dismissed by Order dated 02.03.1972. Yet another
Restoration Application was filed. It is in the same
that a compromise was entered into between Qasim Ali
Khan, Kasim Ali Khan and Raza Ali Khan, all the three
brothers, on 13.02.1974. They purported to disown the
waqf. They proclaimed that it had not taken effect. It
was based on this compromise that the second
Restoration Application was allowed. The earlier orders
rejecting the Revision and the Restoration being
dismissed, were set aside by the Deputy Director. The
compromise dated 13.02.1974 formed the basis for the
same. It is acting on the said compromise and the Order
passed thereon that Qasim Ali Khan purported to convey
57
his one-third share to his nephew by sale deed dated
12.09.1974.
33. The 1960 Act was in force. Section 69 of the Act
provided as follows:
“69. Bar to compromise of suits by or against
mutawallis. –
No suit or proceeding pending in any court
by or against the mutawalli of a wakf
relating to title to wakf property or the
rights of the mutawallis shall be compromised
without the sanction of the Board.”
34. Also, Sections 49A and 49B of the said Act read as
follows:
“49A Transfer of immovable property of waqf-
Notwithstanding anything contained in the deed
or instrument, if any, by which the waqf has
been created, no transfer by way of-
(i) sale, gift, mortgage or exchange; or
(ii) lease for a period exceeding three years
in the case of agricultural land, or for a
period exceeding one year in the case of non-
agricultural and or building of any immovable
property of the waqf shall be valid without the
previous sanction of the Board.”
49-B. Recovery of waqf property transferred
in contravention of Section 49-A.—(1) If the
Board is satisfied after making an inquiry in
such manner as may be prescribed that any
immovable property entered as property of a
waqf in the register of waqfs maintained
under Section 30, has been transferred
without the previous sanction of
the Board in contravention of the
provisions of Section 49-A, it may send a
58
requisition to the Collector within whose
jurisdiction the property is situate to
obtain and deliver possession of the property
to it.
(2) On receipt of a requisition under sub-
section (1), the Collector shall pass an
order directing the person in possession of
the property to deliver the property to the
Board Within a period of thirty days from the
date of the service of the order.
(3) Every order passed under sub-section (2)
shall be served—
( a ) by giving or tendering it or by sending
it by post to the person for whom it is
intended; or
( b ) if such person cannot be found, by
affixing it on some conspicuous part of his
last known place of “bode or business, or by
giving or tendering it to some adult male
member or servant of his family or by causing
it to be affixed on some conspicuous Part of
the property to which it relates:
Provided that where the person on whom the
order is to be served is a minor, service
upon his guardian or upon any adult member
or servant of his family shall be deemed to
be service upon the minor.
(4) Any person aggrieved by an order of the
Collector under sub-section (2) may, within
a period of thirty days from the date of the
service of the order, prefer an appeal to the
Court of the District Judge within whose
jurisdiction the property is situate.
(5) The District Judge may either dispose of
the appeal himself or may transfer it to the
Court of any Additional District Judge or
Civil Judge under his administrative control
and may also withdraw any such appeal and
either dispose of the same or transfer it to
any other Court of Additional District Judge
59
or Civil Judge under his administrative
control, and in every case the decision of
the court shall be final.
(6) Where an order passed under sub-section
(2) has not been complied with and the time
for appealing against such order has expired
without any appeal having been preferred or
the appeal, if any, preferred within that
time has been dismissed, the Collector shall
obtain possession of the property in respect
of which the order has been made, using such
force as may be necessary, for the purpose,
and then deliver it to the Board.
(7) In exercising his functions under this
section the Collector shall be guided by such
rules as may be made in that behalf by the
State Government.”
35. Sections 49A and 49B were inserted in the 1960 Act
by way of U.P. Act 28 of 1971. Therefore, the sale deed
dated 26.09.1974 by Qasim Ali Khan in favour of his
nephew, being in the teeth of the prohibition against
a sale without the previous sanction of the Board, was
illegal. It is this narrative which gives rise to the
question as to whether the sale is void as it was in
transgression of a statutory mandate. If it is void for
such a reason, would it pave the way for the beginning
and the running of the period of adverse possession by
the transferee. Would it not open the doors for
60
applying Article 65 of the Limitation Act? Would it not
then, equally, invite Section 27 of the Limitation Act
to its doorstep? Resultantly, on the expiry of 12 years
from 13.09.1974, would the title set up by the
appellant, be extinguished? If that is so, would not
the complaint filed in the year 1997, after the Act
came into force on 01.01.1996, leading to invoking the
power under Section 52 of the Act, be impermissible?
36. Section 52 of the Act, which is the fountainhead
of the action by the Controller of the Waqf Board and
the Collector, is a sequel to Section 51. Section
51(1), inter alia , before its substitution by Act 27
of 2013, read as follows:
“51(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
the wakf deed, any gift, sale, exchange or
mortgage of any immovable property which is
waqf property, shall be void, unless such gift,
sale, exchange or mortgage is effected with the
prior sanction of the Board:
Provided that no mosque, dargah or khangah
shall be gifted, sold, exchanged or mortgaged
except in accordance with any law for the time
being in force.”
37. We may only notice that Section 51(1)(a) as
substituted by Act 27 of 2013, subject to the provisos
declares a sale, gift, exchange or mortgage or transfer
61
of waqf property to be ab initio void. Section 52 of
the Act provides that if the Board is satisfied, after
making any inquiry, as may be prescribed, that any
immovable property of a waqf entered as such in the
Register of Waqfs maintained under Section 36, has been
transferred without previous sanction of the Board in
contravention of Sections 51 or 56 of the Act, it may
send a requisition to the Collector of the place within
which the property is situated to obtain and deliver
possession. The Collector is bound to pass an order
directing the person in possession to deliver the
property to the Board within 30 days from the receipt
of the Order. It is under this provision that the
impugned Orders came to be passed.
It will be noticed that the Act came into effect
38.
on 01.01.1996. Section 52 empowers the Board to send a
requisition to the Collector, if property has been
transferred without the previous sanction of the Board
in contravention of Section 51, inter alia. We have
noticed that Section 51 has provided that any sale of
property, which is waqf property, without the previous
sanction of the Board, would be void. The two sales in
62
this case took place prior to 01.01.1996. The first
sale is dated 14.10.1960 whereas the second sale is
dated 13.09.1974.
39. Section 112 of the Act provides for repeal and
sales. It reads as follows:
| (2) Notwithstanding such repeal, anything done | |
|---|---|
| or any action taken under the said Acts shall | |
| be deemed to have been done or taken under the | |
| corresponding provisions of this Act. | |
| (3) If, immediately before the commencement of | |
| this Act, in any State, there is in force in | |
| that State, any law which corresponds to this | |
| Act that corresponding law shall stand | |
| repealed: | |
| Provided that such repeal shall not affect the | |
| previous operation of that corresponding law, | |
| and subject thereto, anything done or any | |
| action taken in the exercise of any power | |
| conferred by or under the corresponding law | |
| shall be deemed to have been done or taken in | |
| the exercise of the powers conferred by or | |
| under this Act as if this Act was in force on | |
| the day on which such things were done or | |
| action was taken.” | |
Section 52 of the Act. In other words, it provided that
the Board may, if a transfer is made contravening
63
Section 49A of the 1960 Act, send requisition to the
Collector for recovery of possession. Section 49A of
the 1960 Act also provided on similar terms as provided
in Section 51(1) of the Act that for a sale of property
comprised in a waqf, previous sanction of the Board was
necessary. As far as Sections 49A and 49B came to be
inserted by Act 28 of 1971 and the second sale took
place in 1974, which is after the insertion of Sections
49A and 49B in the 1960 Act, therefore, the power,
indeed, vested with the Board to take action for
recovery of possession under Section 49B. Under Section
112(3) of the Act, we proceed on the basis that the
1960 Act would stand repealed. However, the proviso
declares that the repeal would not affect the previous
operation of the corresponding law. The corresponding
law, in this case is Section 49A read with Section 49B.
Action taken in the exercise of the power thereunder,
is to be deemed as taken in the exercise of powers
under the Act. The powers under the Act must be treated
as flowing from Section 52 of the Act. For the said
purpose, the proviso to Section 112(3) provides that
the provisions in the Act, which in this case would be
64
Section 52, must be treated as being on the Statute
Book.
41. But then could it be said that no action has been
taken under Section 49B of the 1960 Act with regard to
the transfers in question and, therefore, Section
112(3) of the Act, may have no application? We proceed
on the basis that, the power exists as for reasons to
follow, the appellants will fail on surer foundation.
42. A contention has been raised that the waqf-alal-
aulad in question cannot be treated as a waqf under the
Act. It is the case of the first respondent that the
Mussalman Waqf Validating Act, 1913 did not provide for
registration of the waqf. Though the Mussalman Waqf
Act, 1923 was enacted, waqf-alal-aulad was excluded
from its operation. Neither the 1936 Act nor the 1960
Act applies and the appellant cannot claim that the
waqf was registered under either enactment. There is
no religious or charitable purpose. In view of the
specific exclusion in the 1936 Act, it is contended
that the Act did not apply to the waqf as the entire
income was to go for the benefit of the members of the
family of the waqif.
65
The waqf in question is created by Akbar Ali Khan
43.
by deed dated 26.07.1934. It is, no doubt, a waqf-alal-
aulad. A waqf-alal-aulad is a waqf under Mohammaden
Law. It was the Privy Council which in the case of
22
Abdul Fatah Mohammad Ishak v. Russomy Dhar Chaoudhary
held that if the charity is illusory or so small, it
could not be treated as a waqf. This Judgment led to
the passing of the Mussalman Waqf Validating Act, 1913.
Sections 3 and 4 of the said enactment reads as follows:
“3. It shall be lawful for any person
professing the Musalman faith to create Wakf
which in all other respects is in according
with the provisions of Musalman Law, for the
following among other purposes: -
(a) For the maintenance and support wholly or
partially of his family, children or
descendants and
(b) where the person creating a Wakf is a
Hanafi Musalman, also for his own maintenance
and support during his life-time or for the
payment of his debts out of the rents and
profits of the property dedicated.
Provided that the ultimate benefit is
in such cases expressly or impliedly reserved
for the poor or for any other purpose
recognized by the Musalman Law as a religion,
pious or charitable purpose of a permanent
character.
4. No such Wakf shall be deemed to be
invalid merely because the benefit reserved
therein for the poor or other religious, pious
22
22 Indian Appeals 76
66
or charitable purposes of a permanent nature
is postponed until after the extinction of the
family, children or descendants of the person
creating the Wakf.”
44. Thereafter, the Mussalman Wakf Act, 1923 came to
be passed. It applied to the whole of British India.
The definition of Wakf contained in Section 2(e) was
as follows:
“2(e) ‘Wakf’ means the permanent dedication by
a person professing the Musalman faith of any
property for any purpose recognized by the
Musalman Law as religious, pious or charitable,
but does not include any Wakf, such as is
described in S.3 of the Musalman Wakf
Validation Act, 1913, under which any benefit
is for the time being claimable for himself by
the person by whom the Wakf was created or by
any of his family or descendants.”
(Emphasis Supplied)
45. Section 3 of the 1923 Act obliged the Mutawalli to
furnish statement containing certain particulars to the
competent Court. Notice of the Statement was to be
published under Section 4. The 1923 Act provided for
audit of accounts and the provision for expense which
could be incurred by the Mutawalli came to be inserted.
Section 10 provided for penalty. Certain waqfs were
excluded from its purview under Section 12. In the
67
United Provinces, which meant the United Provinces of
Agra and Awadh, the 1936 Act, came to be enacted.
Section 2 thereof read as follows:
“2(1) Save as herein otherwise specifically
stated, this Act shall apply to all Wakfs,
whether created before or after this Act comes
into force, any part of the property of which
is situate in the United Provinces.
(2) This Act shall not apply to:-
(i) a Wakf created by a deed, if any, under
the terms of which not less than 75 per cent
of the total income after deduction of land
revenue and cesses payable to Government of the
property covered by the deed of Wakf, if any,
is for the time being payable for the benefit
of the Wakif or his descendants or any member
of his family:
(ii) a Wakf created solely for either of the
following purposes:
(a) The maintenance and support of any person
other than the Wakf or his descendants or any
member of his family,
(b) The celebration of religious ceremonies
connected with the death anniversaries of the
Wakif or of any member of his family or any of
his anscestors;
(c) The maintenance of private imambaras,
tombs, and grave-yards, or
(d) The maintenance and support of the Wakif or
for payment of his debts, when the Wakif is a
Hanafi Musalman; and
(iii) the Wakfs mentioned in the schedule.
Provided that if the Mutawalli of a Wakf to
which this Act does not apply wrongfully sells
or mortgages, or suffers to be sold in
execution of a decree against himself, or
68
otherwise destroys the whole or any part of the
Wakf property, the Central Board may apply all
or any of the provisions of this Act to such
Wakf for such time as it may think necessary.
Explanation-A Wakf which is originally exempt
from the operation of this Act may, for any
reason subsequently, become subject to such
operation, for example, by reason of a higher
percentage of its income becoming available
under the terms of the deed for public
charities.”
(Emphasis supplied)
Section 3(1) of the 1936 Act, defined ‘Wakf’ as
46.
follows:
“3(1) ‘Wakf’ means the permanent dedication or
grant of any property for any purposes
recognized by the Musalman law or usage as
religious, pious or charitable and, where no
deed of Wakf is traceable, includes Wakf by
user, and a Wakif means any person who makes
such dedication or grant.”
Section 38 (1) of the 1936 Act, read as follows:
47.
“38(1) Every Wakf whether subject to this Act
or not and whether created before or after the
commencement of this Act shall be registered
at the office of the Central Board of the sect
to which the Wakf belongs.
(Emphasis Supplied)
48. It is, no doubt, true that in Fazlul Rabbi Pradhan
(supra), in the context of the question whether the
waqfs were affected by the passing of the West Bengal
Estates Acquisition Act, 1953, and, in that, the waqf
69
in question fell within the definition of the words
‘charitable purpose’ and ‘religious purpose’, the Court
held, inter alia, as follows:
“13. These cases led to agitation in India
and the Mussalman Wakf Validating Act 1913 (6
of 1913) was passed. It declared the rights
of Mussulmans to make settlements of property
by way of wakf in favour of their families,
children and descendants. For the purposes of
the Validating Act the term “wakf” was
defined to mean “the permanent dedication by
a person professing the Mussalman faith of
any property for any purpose recognized by
the Mussalman law as religious, pious or
charitable”. This gave a wider meaning to the
word wakf but only for the purpose of taking
them out of the invalidity which would have
otherwise existed and which was already
authoritatively stated to have so existed.
14. After the passage of these two Acts
wakfs, in which the object was the
aggrandisement of families of wakifs without
a pretence of charity in the ordinary sense,
became valid and operative. But the intention
of the Validating Act was not to give a new
meaning to the word “charity” which in common
parlance is a word denoting a giving to
someone in necessitous circumstances and in
law a giving for public good. A private gift
to one's own self or kith and kin may be
meritorious and pious but is not a charity in
the legal sense and the courts in India have
never regarded such gifts as for religious or
charitable purposes even under the Mahomedan
70
law. It was ruled in Syed Mohiuddin
Ahmed v. Sofia Khatun [44 CWN 974] that
neither the Wakf Validating Act 1913 nor
the Shariat Act 1937 had the effect of
abrogating the Privy Council decisions on the
meaning of “charitable purpose” as such.”
49. No doubt, the Court was dealing with a case of a
waqf-alal-aulad. The Judgment must essentially be
viewed in the context of the definition of ‘religious
and charitable purpose’ provided in the Act in
question.
The Wakf in question is dated 26.07.1934. The 1936
50.
Act applied to Wakfs created before or after the
commencement of the Act. However, Section 2(2) declares
that the Act shall not apply to certain waqfs. They
included a waqf whereunder not less than 75 per cent
of the total income, after deduction of certain sums,
was for the time being payable for the benefit of the
waqif or his descendants. However, Section 38(1) of the
1936 Act made it clear that every waqf, whether subject
to the Act or not and whether created or after the
commencement of the 1936 Act, shall be registered.
Proceeding on the basis that the waqf dated 16.07.1934
71
was waqf-alal-aulad and which, in terms of Section
2(2)(i), was not subject to the provisions of the 1936
Act, it was compulsorily registerable in view of
Section 38(1). Any waqf which is registered under the
1936 Act would also be deemed to be registered under
the 1960 Act. That is, though the 1936 Act did not
apply to certain wakfs, but when it comes to
registration under Section 38, it was mandatory for
every wakf to be registered (i) whether subject to the
Act and ii) whether created before the Act or not.
Thus, the registration of the Wakf dated 16.07.1934,
was in fact compulsory under Section 38 of the 1936
Act.
It has been contended by Shri P.S. Patwalia,
51.
learned Senior Counsel that there was really no waqf
as known in law and the waqf in question contemplated
only disbursement of the entire income for the benefit
of the descendants of the waqif. Quite apart from the
fact that the question engaged the attention of the
Civil Court, including the High Court, in the first
round of litigation, wherein, it was found that there
was a valid waqf from the standpoint of the Shia law
72
and the Consolidation Authorities also found that there
was a waqf till the Deputy Director, Consolidation
revisited the matter only on the basis of the
compromise between the brothers, the terms of the waqf
did contemplate a certain sum being set apart for
charitable purposes as correctly pointed out by Shri
S.R. Singh, learned Senior Counsel for respondents 2
and 4. In this regard, we notice the stipulation in the
deed that a sum of Rs. 500/- will be spent on charitable
purpose such as Muazzin and lighting in the mosque and
emambara, majlallse ashra of the sacred month of
Moharram. No doubt, there is the residuary clause,
which reveals that the wakif has provided that if
descendants cease to exist, the income from the endowed
property will be managed by a Committee to be spent for
charitable purposes.
52. A Division Bench of the High Court of Allahabad in
the case of U.P. Sunni Central Board of Waqf and Another
23
v. Hasan Jehan Begum and Another had to deal with an
argument that in a case of waqf-alal-aulad, having
23
AIR 1977 All 18
73
regard to the definition of the word ‘waqf’ in Section
3(11) of the 1960 Act, whether the entire properties
were dedicated for religious, pious or charitable
purpose, as contemplated in Section 3(11), defining the
word ‘waqf’ or only to the limited extent, i.e., to the
extent of the income which was earmarked for such
purposes. We may note in this regard, the following
discussion:
“5… With great respect, we are unable to
find ourselves in agreement with the view
taken by the learned single Judge as to us
it appears that the extent of property
cannot be determined on the basis of the
income. It is the dedication which has to
be seen, if the entire property is
dedicated for two purposes, namely, for
secular purposes and for religious, pious
or charitable purposes, then the entire
property will be deemed to be dedicated for
both purposes. Unless it is possible to
determine the extent to which the property
has been dedicated for religious, pious and
charitable purposes, the entire property
will have to be deemed to be dedicated to
God and subject-matter of the Waqf. For
excluding the property it should either be
known or be determinable from the deed of
waqf that a particular property or part
thereof is not dedicated. Learned counsel
for the petitioners-respondents contended
that it is the income that is the criterion
for determining the extent of dedication.
But, we find that it is not the income which
is contemplated by the definition of waqf
but the property. The relevant words are
‘to the extent to which the property is
74
dedicated’. The income arises out of
property and it can vary from time to time.
It may be larger than the amount fixed for
the religious, pious or charitable purposes
or may be less than that. It is also not
possible to allocate property relative to
the amount or to say that this amount of
money must come from a particular portion
or property out of the lot or from a
particular proportion of that property. The
entire property, which is the subject-
matter of the waqf, is liable for meeting
the purposes religious, pious or
charitable. If the entire property, which
is the subject-matter of the waqf, is
liable for meeting the expenses, it cannot
be said that the waqf or dedication is only
to the extent of some undeterminable and
unascertainable property out of the total
property, which is the subject-matter of
the Waqf. In our opinion, unless it is
possible to determine the extent of the
property out of the property which is the
subject-matter of the waqf-alal-aulad meant
for religious, pious or charitable
purposes, the entire property will be the
subject-matter of the waqf within the
meaning of the Waqfs Act. The question of
determining the extent can practically
arise only in a case in which there are a
number of properties and some of them are
earmarked for purposes recognised as
religious, pious or charitable and others
earmarked for the benefit of the waqif or
his descendants. It may also arise in a
case where a share in a property or a part
of a property has been earmarked for the
two purposes. In the present case neither
of the two waqfs contain such a direction.
The entire property has been dedicated for
the purposes recognised as religious, pious
and charitable. It may also be possible to
say that the property, which has been
dedicated for purposes religious, pious or
75
| charitable, is the entire extent of the | |
|---|---|
| property. The entire properties under the | |
| deeds will, therefore, be deemed to be waqf | |
| within the meaning of Section 3(11) of the | |
| Waqfs Act.” |
53. We would think that the aforesaid view represents
the correct approach and the extent of the income,
which is set apart for the purpose, be it religious,
pious or charitable, in the facts, cannot detract from
the dedication of the whole property.
54. Another contention taken is that vast extents of
wakf property had been alienated by the sons of the
original wakif and only about 100 bighas which
constitute the subject matter of the appeals before us
remained. We are of the view that the argument is beside
the point. The fact that the property of the waqf has
been dealt with in a manner, which is illegal, or that
it was not questioned, cannot deflect us from either
finding that there was a valid waqf or that the property
which remained of the waqf, must be dealt with in
accordance with law. The compromise before the Deputy
Director (Consolidation) and the order based on the
same are in the teeth of Section 69 of the 1960 Act,
76
therefore, the orders passed by the Consolidated
Officer and Settlement Officer about the Waqf would
revive.
55. Two questions remain. The first question, which we
must consider is, whether a beneficiary of a waqf can
succeed on the strength of the plea of adverse
possession in regard to the property of the waqf. The
High Court has proceeded on the basis that a Mutawalli
may not be able to acquire title by adverse possession.
Equally, a trustee and a co-owner stand precluded in
this regard, it is noted. A beneficiary of a waqf,
however, being neither a trustee nor a co-owner of waqf
property, can acquire title through adverse possession
even if it is the property of the waqf it is found.
A beneficiary of a waqf cannot be described as a
56.
stranger to the waqf. No doubt, a beneficiary is not
to be conflated in his position with a Mutawalli. The
Mutawalli is a manager of the waqf. The property of the
waqf, we must remind ourselves, in law vests in the
Almighty. The Mutawalli acts merely as the manager. For
the purposes of Section 10 of the Limitation Act, no
doubt, he is treated as a trustee. A plea of adverse
77
possession undoubtedly requires the requisite
intention, viz., animus possidendi . This is besides
actual possession for the required period. Does the
beneficiary occupy a fiduciary capacity qua the waqf
property, which would prevent him from advancing a
claim of adverse possession? What in the context do the
words ‘fiduciary capacity’ convey? A beneficiary would
be entitled to receive benefits in terms of the waqf
deed. Does he have any obligation in regard to the waqf
property? Is there a duty in other words which he must
perform by virtue of the fact that he is constituted a
beneficiary under the waqf? Is the assertion of hostile
title, an indispensable requirement to constitute
adverse possession irreconcilable and incompatible
with the position of the beneficiary? In the case of
adverse possession, since a requirement is that the
possession must be hostile to the real owner and since
the real owner is the Almighty, the requirement would
be that such a person must has the necessary animus to
hold contrary to the title of God. In the case of a co-
owner while mere assertion of title in himself may
hardly suffice as the possession of a co-owner is taken
78
to be possession on behalf of all co-owners a case of
ouster being successfully established would entitle the
co-owner to succeed.
57. We may notice the following statement from Mulla
nd
on “Principles of Mohammadan Law” (22 Edition):
“207. Power of mutawalli to sell or mortgage.
A mutawalli has no power, without the
permission of the Court, to mortgage, sell
or exchange waqf property or any part
thereof, unless he is expressly empowered by
the deed of waqf to do so.”
58. The learned Author thereafter refers to Section
51(1) of the Act under which a sale could no doubt be
effected after obtaining prior sanction of the Board.
The change brought about by the Amending Act of 2013
by the insertion of sub-section (1A) in Section 51 of
the Act by which a sale inter alia has been declared
void is also noticed. The embargo against sale unless
it is expressly authorised by the waqf deed is dealt
with under the caption “Unauthorised alienation and
limitation” and it reads as follows:
“the law as regards the period of limitation
for a suit to follow waqf property in the
hands of a mutawalli and to set aside
unauthorized transfers of such property, and
79
to recover possession thereof from the
transferee, was amended and altered by Act 1
of 1929. The amendments consist of an
addition of para 2 to s. 10 of the original
Act (Limitation Act, 1908), and of the
insertion of new articles, being Arts. 48B,
134A, 134B and 134C.”
We have already noticed the purport of Article 134B
59.
of the Limitation Act, 1908 and the change brought
about in the successor provision, namely, Article 96
of the Limitation Act, 1963.
24
60. In Anisur Rahman and others v. Sheikh Abul Hayat ,
a Division Bench of the High Court had occasion to deal
with the very question which we are confronted with.
The Court went on to hold as follows:
| “7. In Mukherjea's well known book on Hindu | |
|---|---|
| Law of Religious and Charitable Trust, 2nd | |
| edition, at page 274, the said Calcutta | |
| decision was referred to and it was further | |
| pointed out at page 282 that limitation in | |
| case of an unauthorised alienation would | |
| start as soon as possession vested with | |
| regard to any property. To quote his own | |
| words at page 282: | |
| “The correct principle deducible from | |
| these cases is that the possession of | |
| the alienee would become adverse as soon | |
| as he is without any title to the | |
| property. If the transfer is void ab | |
| initio, the possession of the transferee |
24
AIR 1965 Patna 390
80
| is adverse from the date of the transfer. | |
|---|---|
| If, on the other hand, it is not void, | |
| but voidable merely at the instance of | |
| the succeeding manager, the possession | |
| cannot be adverse until the office of | |
| the transferring manager ceases.” | |
| 8. In other words, the applicability of | |
| either Article 144 or Article 134B of the | |
| Limitation Act would depend on whether the | |
| transfer was void ab initio or only voidable | |
| at the instance of the succeeding manager. | |
| 9. A transfer which is void ab initio is in | |
| the eye of law no transfer at all and hence | |
| will not come within the scope of Article | |
| 134B. Moreover, that Article refers to | |
| transfer made by a manager of an endowment. | |
| If a person transfers property treating it | |
| as his own private property, it is difficult | |
| to hold that merely because he happens to be | |
| the manager of the endowment on the date of | |
| the transfer and the property is the properly | |
| of the endowment such transfer should come | |
| within the scope of that Article. Mr. Hussain | |
| for the appellants could not cite any | |
| decision after AIR 1946 Cal 473 in support | |
| of his extreme contention to the effect that | |
| the principle laid down in that decision his | |
| no application in respect of void transfers | |
| made after the coming into force of the | |
| amendment of 1929. On the other hand, a | |
| Division Bench of the Orissa High Court | |
| in Govinda Jiew Thakur v. Surendra Jena, AIR | |
| 1961 Orissa 102 applied the principle; of | |
| that decision and held that transfers void | |
| ab initio are outside the scope of Article | |
| 134B; a transferee in such a case is a mere | |
| trespasser and his title will be perfected | |
| by the twelve years adverse possession. With | |
| respect I am inclined to agree with this | |
| view. There is also a Madras decision in V. |
81
Rajaram v. Ramanujam Iyengar , AIR 1963 Mad
213 paragraphs 4 and 5 to the same effect.”
61. Therefore, the principle, which emerges, is this.
In order that a suit may fall under Article 96, there
must be a transfer by a Manager which would include a
Mutawalli of a waqf. It must be for valuable
consideration. In order that there is a transfer, it
must not be still born. It should not be a void
transaction. This is for the reason that a void
transaction would not amount to a transfer. An
unauthorized alienation as understood in Mulla (supra),
which we have referred to, viz., a transfer, which was
made by a Mutawalli, for which, there was no authority
in the waqf deed, would constitute a transfer to which
Article 134B and Article 96 would have applied. With
the advent of the laws relating to Waqfs which included
the 1960 Act in Uttar Pradesh, the Mutawalli was
obliged to obtain the previous sanction of the
concerned Board. In cases where a transfer is made
under the 1960 Act without previous sanction of the
Board, the transfer would be void. This is for the
reason that the requirement of previous sanction is a
82
statutory command conceived with a definite and sublime
purpose and the transgression of which can only result
in a void transaction. There is no provision which
enables the validating of such a sale. In fact, the
stand of respondents 2 and 4 is that, the transfers
were void. Therefore, the authorities have also
proceeded on the basis that the transaction was void
and we can therefore proceed on the said foundation.
62. Proceeding on the basis that the sale executed in
1974 was a void transaction we are inclined to approve
of the view taken by Chintamani Sahoo (Deceased by LR.)
(supra) and Anisur Rahman (supra), which we have
referred to and hold that Article 96 of the Limitation
Act, 1963 cannot be invoked in the case of a void
transaction. The impugned Order, proceeding on the said
premise, cannot be said to be flawed.
63. We are of the view that there cannot be any embargo
against a beneficiary of a waqf claiming acquisition
of title by adverse possession. Section 2(k) of the
Waqf Act, 1955, reads as under:
“2(k) “person interested in a waqf means any
person who is entitled to receive any
83
pecuniary or other benefits from the waqf and
includes-
(i) Any person who has a right to offer
prayer or to perform any religious
rite in a mosque, idgah, imambara,
dargah, khanqah, peerkhana and
karbala, maqbara, graveyard or any
other religious institution connected
with the waqf or to participate in any
religious or charitable institution
under the waqf;
(ii) The waqf and any descendant of the waqf
and the mutawalli;
64. While he may be a person who can be treated as
“interested” in a waqf within the meaning of Section
2(k) both by reason of the fact that he is a recipient
of pecuniary or other benefit and also he may be a
descendant of the wakif, it is a far cry from describing
him as a Trustee. The beneficiary may have benefits
coming his way in terms of the waqf deed. He may be
clothed with rights in this regard.
65. Can it be said that a beneficiary of a waqf is a
fiduciary or that there is a fiduciary relationship
and, therefore, he cannot acquire title to the property
of the waqf by adverse possession? The term
‘fiduciary’, as such, has not been defined, so is the
84
case with the ‘fiduciary relationship’. In fact,
Section 88 of the Indian Trusts Act, 1882, inter alia ,
provides that a person standing in a fiduciary
character and bound to protect the interest of another,
cannot by using such character, obtain an advantage and
resist making over the benefit to the person, whose
interest he was bound to protect. In Central Board of
Secondary Education and another v. Aditya Bandopadhyay
25
and others , though in the context of Right to
Information Act, 2005, the question arose whether an
Examining Body holds the evaluated answer books in a
fiduciary relationship within the meaning of Section
8(1)(e) of the Right to Information Act, 2005. In the
course of the Judgment, this Court, inter alia, held
as follows:
“38. The terms “fiduciary” and “fiduciary
relationship” refer to different capacities
and relationship, involving a common duty or
obligation.
38.1. Black's Law Dictionary (7th Edn., p.
640) defines “fiduciary relationship” thus:
“ Fiduciary relationship .—A relationship
in which one person is under a duty to act
for the benefit of the other on matters
25
(2011) 8 SCC 497
85
| within the scope of the relationship. | |
|---|---|
| Fiduciary relationships—such as trustee- | |
| beneficiary, guardian-ward, agent- | |
| principal, and attorney-client—require the | |
| highest duty of care. Fiduciary | |
| relationships usually arise in one of four | |
| situations: (1) when one person places | |
| trust in the faithful integrity of another, | |
| who as a result gains superiority or | |
| influence over the first, (2) when one | |
| person assumes control and responsibility | |
| over another, (3) when one person has a | |
| duty to act for or give advice to another | |
| on matters falling within the scope of the | |
| relationship, or (4) when there is a | |
| specific relationship that has | |
| traditionally been recognised as involving | |
| fiduciary duties, as with a lawyer and a | |
| client or a stockbroker and a customer.” | |
| xxx xxx xxx | |
| 39. The term “fiduciary” refers to a person | |
| having a duty to act for the benefit of | |
| another, showing good faith and candour, | |
| where such other person reposes trust and | |
| special confidence in the person owing or | |
| discharging the duty. The term “fiduciary | |
| relationship” is used to describe a situation | |
| or transaction where one person (beneficiary) | |
| places complete confidence in another person | |
| (fiduciary) in regard to his affairs, | |
| business or transaction(s). The term also | |
| refers to a person who holds a thing in trust | |
| for another (beneficiary). The fiduciary is | |
| expected to act in confidence and for the | |
| benefit and advantage of the beneficiary, and | |
| use good faith and fairness in dealing with | |
| the beneficiary or the things belonging to |
86
the beneficiary. If the beneficiary has
entrusted anything to the fiduciary, to hold
the thing in trust or to execute certain acts
in regard to or with reference to the
entrusted thing, the fiduciary has to act in
confidence and is expected not to disclose
the thing or information to any third party.
40. There are also certain relationships
where both the parties have to act in a
fiduciary capacity treating the other as the
beneficiary. Examples of these are: a partner
vis-à-vis another partner and an employer
vis-à-vis employee. An employee who comes
into possession of business or trade secrets
or confidential information relating to the
employer in the course of his employment, is
expected to act as a fiduciary and cannot
disclose it to others. Similarly, if on the
request of the employer or official superior
or the head of a department, an employee
furnishes his personal details and
information, to be retained in confidence,
the employer, the official superior or
departmental head is expected to hold such
personal information in confidence as a
fiduciary, to be made use of or disclosed only
if the employee's conduct or acts are found
to be prejudicial to the employer.”
66. A fiduciary can, therefore, be taken to be a person
who becomes charged with the duty to protect the
interest of another. Fiduciary relationship is founded
upon the reposing of confidence by one in another. The
87
beneficiary of a waqf is endowed with rights in terms
of the waqf deed. We are unable to cull out any duty,
as such, to protect the interest of another. No doubt,
it could be said that as the property in a waqf, vests
in the Almighty, there must be a concern and,
undoubtedly, a moral duty to act in a manner that the
object of the wakf is fostered. But a beneficiary is
not like a Trustee, who assumes possession in his
character as a Trustee, coming under the restraint of
discarding his character as Trustee and donning the
robes of an encroacher or a person asserting hostile
title. Section 14 of the Indian Trusts Act, reads as
follows:
“14. Trustee not set up title adverse to
beneficiary-The trustee must not for
himself or another set up or aid any title
to the trust property adverse to the
interest of the beneficiary.”
67. It is not, as if, the beneficiary was in possession
of the property in any capacity prior to the sale.
In fact, in this case, we may notice that in the
68.
second sale, the former Mutawalli, viz., Qasim Ali
88
Khan, entered into the sale deed on the strength of a
compromise and the order of the Deputy Director,
Consolidation, under which, he purported to act as one
possessed of one-third right in his own right. We bear
in mind that no doubt it would have mattered little to
the applicability of Article 96 that the transferor
purported to transfer waqf property professing it to
be his property having regard to what this Court has
laid down in Srinivasa (supra). But this is a case
where the voidness arises on account of the fact that
what is found to be waqf property has been purported
to be alienated contrary to the peremptory statutory
mandate. We have also noticed Section 69 of the 1960
Act and its impact.
69. The argument that Section 107 of the Act will
assist the appellant in tiding over the bar of
limitation does not appeal to us. Section 107 of the
Act, no doubt, proclaims that nothing in the Limitation
Act,1963 shall apply to any suit for possession of the
immovable property comprised in any waqf or for
possession of any interest in such property.
89
The Act came into force on 01.01.1996. The first
70.
sale was effected on 14.10.1960. The second sale was
effected on 26.09.1974. As far as the first sale is
concerned, we have already found that Article 96 cannot
be pressed into service as the transfer was not
purported to be made by the Mutawalli. The doors stood
open for the application of Article 65. As far as the
second sale is concerned which was effected in the year
1974 in view of our finding that Article 96 was not
applicable, the only other competing Article vying for
acceptance, appears to be Article 65. Applying Article
65 and as the adverse possession would kick in from the
date of the transfer, on the expiry of twelve years,
i.e., in 1986 applying Section 27 of the Limitation Act
whatever title remained within the meaning of Section
65 would stand extinguished. The Act was brought into
force only with effect from 01.01.1996. We cannot
understand the purport of Section 107 to be that it
would revive an extinguished title as nothing stood in
the way of running of time from the date of the second
sale under the law as it stood.
90
No doubt, the law of limitation is what prevails
71.
as on the date of the suit (see C. Beepathumma and
others v. Velasari Shankaranarayana Kadambolithaya and
26
others ). Taking 1997 as the date, on which a suit is
filed, and applying the Act, which enables the
plaintiff to disregard the bar of law of limitation,
it cannot mean that what stood extinguished under the
earlier law would revive. In this regard, we notice the
Judgment of this Court in T. Kaliamurthi(supra) :
“40. In this background, let us now see
whether this section has any retrospective
effect. It is well settled that no statute
shall be construed to have a retrospective
operation until its language is such that
would require such conclusion. The
exception to this rule is enactments
dealing with procedure. This would mean
that the law of limitation, being a
procedural law, is retrospective in
operation in the sense that it will also
apply to proceedings pending at the time of
the enactment as also to proceedings
commenced thereafter, notwithstanding that
the cause of action may have arisen before
the new provisions came into force.
However, it must be noted that there is an
important exception to this rule also.
Where the right of suit is barred under the
law of limitation in force before the new
provision came into operation and a vested
right has accrued to another, the new
26
AIR 1965 SC 241
91
provision cannot revive the barred right or
take away the accrued vested right.”
72. A contention is taken that the Court is not dealing
with a suit and the matter arises from a proceeding
under Section 52 of the Act. It is contended that in
regard to Section 52 the bar of limitation for a suit
is inapplicable. We have noticed that the debate in
the High Court essentially centered around the question
whether Article 96 would apply and applying the same,
the appellant could get around the impact of Article
65 read with Section 27 of the Act. We have found that
Article 96 has no application. Even in regard to a
proceeding under the Act be it Section 52 if as on the
date the action is taken, the title in the property
stood vested with the person in possession by virtue
of Section 27 of the Limitation Act then it may not be
permissible to ignore the right which had been
acquired. The decision in T. Kaliamurthi (supra) would
apply in the facts and the action is barred.
92
The upshot of the above discussion is that the
73.
Appeals are to be found without merit and will stand
dismissed. Parties to bear their respective costs.
………………………………….J.
[K.M. JOSEPH]
……………………………………J.
[HRISHIKESH ROY]
NEW DELHI;
DATED: APRIL 13, 2023.
93