Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
EBRAHIM ABOOBAKAR AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CUSTODIAN GENERAL OFEVACUEE PROPERTY.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/05/1952
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
BENCH:
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1952 AIR 319 1952 SCR 696
CITATOR INFO :
F 1953 SC 298 (5)
R 1955 SC 233 (21)
F 1957 SC 264 (18)
R 1958 SC 398 (13,19)
D 1961 SC1312 (7)
A 1970 SC1727 (5)
R 1973 SC 883 (18)
RF 1973 SC2720 (9)
RF 1989 SC 49 (20)
ACT:
Bombay Evacuees (Administration of Property) Act, 1949
Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949, ss. 7, 24--Order refusing to
declare person evacuee--Whether appealable--Informant,
whether "person aggrieved"--Right to appeal--Courts with
limited jurisdiction--Power to decide facts upon which
jurisdiction depends--Powers of an appellate court--Grant of
writ of certiorari--Guiding principles.
HEADNOTE:
A writ of certiorari cannot be granted to quash the
decision of an inferior court within its jurisdiction on the
ground that the decision is wrong. It must be shown before
such a writ is issued that the authority which passed the
order acted without jurisdiction or in excess of it, or in
violation of the principles of natural justice. Want of
jurisdiction may arise from the nature of the subject-mat-
ter, so that the inferior court might not have authority to
enter on the inquiry or upon some part 0
697
it. It may also arise from the absence of some essential
preliminary or upon the existence of some particular facts
collateral to the actual matter which the court has to try
and which are conditions precedent to the assumption of
jurisdiction by it. But once it is held that the court has
jurisdiction but while exercising it, it made a mistake, the
wronged party can only take the course prescribed by law for
setting matters right inasmuch as a court has jurisdiction
to decide rightly as well as wrongly.
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When an inferior court or tribunal which has the power
of deciding facts is established by the legislature. it may
in effect say that, if a certain state of facts exists and
is shown to such tribunal or body before it proceeds to do
certain things, it shall have jurisdiction to do such things
but not otherwise. There, it is not for them conclusively
to decide whether that state of facts exists, and, if they
exercise the jurisdiction without its existence, what they
do may be questioned, and it will be held that they have
acted without jurisdiction. But the legislature may entrust
the court or tribunal itself with a jurisdiction which
includes the jurisdiction to determine whether the prelimi-
nary state of facts exists and on finding that it does
exist, to proceed further or do something more. In the
second case the rule that a tribunal cannot give itself
jurisdiction by wrongly deciding certain facts to exist does
not apply.
Ordinarily, a court of appeal has not only jurisdiction
to determine the soundness of the decision of the inferior
court as a court of error, but by the very nature of things
it has also jurisdiction to determine any points raised
before it in the nature of preliminary issues by the par-
ties. Such jurisdiction is inherent in its very constitu-
tion as a court of appeal. Whether an appeal is competent,
whether a party has locus standi to prefer it, whether the
appeal in substance is from one or another order and whether
it has been preferred in proper form and within the time
prescribed, are all matters for the decision of the appel-
late court so constituted.
An order by an Additional Custodian in a proceeding
under Ordinance No. XXVII of 1949 refusing to declare a
person an evacuee and his property evacuee property is an
order under s. 7 of of the Ordinance and is appealable under
s. 24.
A person claiming to be interested in an enquiry as to
whether a person is an evacuee and his property evacuee
property, who has filed a written statement and adduced
evidence, is a "person aggrieved" by an order that the
latter is not an evacuee and has a locus standi to prefer an
appeal from the order.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4 of
1952. Appeal from the judgment and order of the High Court
of Judicature for the Punjab at
698
Simla dated 24th May, 1951, in Civil Writ No. 15 of 1951.
M.L. Manekshaw (P. N. Bhagwati, with him) for the
appellant.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorny-General for India (G. N. Joshi,
with him) for the respondent.
1952. May 26. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MAHAJAN J.--This is an appeal from the judgment of the
High Court of Judicature of the State of Punjab dated the
24th May, 1951, dismissing the petition filed by the appel-
lants for writs of certiorari, prohibition and mandamus
against the respondent.
Aboobaker Abdul Rahman, the father of the appellants, was
,possessed of considerable movable as well as immovable
properties including a. cinema theatre, known as the Imperi-
al Cinema. situateat Bombay. Soon after the partition of
India, he went to Pakistan and was in Karachi in the month
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of September, 1947, where he purchased certain properties in
that month. On information supplied by one Tek Chand Dolwani
to the Additional Custodian of Evacuee Property, the Addi-
tional Custodian started proceedings under the Bombay Evacu-
ees (Administration of Property) Act, 1949, against Aboobak-
er in or about the month of July, 1949. During the pendency
of the said proceedings, the Government of India Ordinance
XXVII of 1949 came into force. Thereupon, on the 16th Decem-
ber, 1949, the Additional Custodian issued a notice to the
said Aboobaker under section 7 of the Ordinance and a fur-
ther notice on the 11th January, 1950, to show cause why his
property should not be declared to be evacuee property.
Pursuant to the said notices an enquiry was held by the
Additional Custodian of Evacuee Property who after recording
the statement of the said Aboobaker and examining some other
evidence produced by the said Tekchand Dolwani and taking
into consideration the written statement filed by him,
adjudicated on the 8th February, 1950, that
699
the said Aboobaker was not an evacuee. He, however, issued
another notice to Aboobaker on the same day calling upon him
to show cause why he should not be declared an intending
evacuee under section 19 of the said Ordinance. On the 9th
February, 1950, he adjudicated him as an intending evacuee.
On the 31st March, 1950, Tekchand Dolwani being the
informant and interested in the adjudication of the said
Aboobaker as an evacuee, filed an appeal against the order
of the 9th February to the respondent (The Custodian General
of India) praying for an order declaring the said Aboobaker
an evacuee and that he being the first informant should be
allotted the said cinema. On the 18th April. 1950, the
Ordinance was replaced by Act XXXI of 1950.
The appeal was heard by the respondent in New Delhi on
the 13th May. 1950. At the hearing it was urged on behalf of
Aboobaker that he having been declared an intending evacuee
and he having accepted that order, no appeal lay therefrom
and that the said Tekchand Dolwani was not a person ag-
grieved by any order passed by the Additional Custodian and
therefore had no locus standi to appeal under the provisions
of section 24 of Ordinance XXVII of 1949.
The hearing of the appeal was concluded on the lath May,
1951 and it is alleged in the written statement of the
respondent that the order was dictated by him on the same
day after the conclusion of the hearing and was also signed
by him and it bore that date. Aboobaker suddenly died on
the 14th May, 1950, which was a Sunday and the respondent
pronounced the order written on the 13th to the counsel of
Aboobaker on the 15th May, 1950. By this order the respond-
ent held that the appeal purporting to be from the order
passed by the Additional Custodian on the 9th February,
1950, declaring the said Aboobaker an intending evacuee in
effect and in substance was directed against the order made
on the 8th February in the proceedings started under section
7 of the Ordinance declining to declare the said Aboobaker’s
property as evacuee property.
700
He further held that the said Tekchand Dolwani was interest-
ed in the appeal and had locus standi to prefer it. Having
overruled the preliminary objections raised by the appel-
lants, the hearing of the appeal was adjourned and further
inquiry was directed to be made in the matter. Notices of
the adjourned hearing
of the appeal were given from time to time to the two
appellants. On the 30th February, 1951, they were informed
that the appeal would be heard on the 7th March, 1951. The
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two appellants allege that they are some of the heirs enti-
tled to the estate of the said Aboobaker. Two of his sons
migrated to Pakistan and one of the appellants is his third
son and the other appellant is his only daughter.
Being aggrieved by the order of the respondent dated the
lath May, 1950, the appellants filed a petition in the High
Court of the State of Punjab at Simla on the 26th February,
1951, under article 226 of the Constitution, praying for a
writ of certiorari for quashing and setting aside that order
and for a writ of prohibition or mandamus directing the said
respondent to forbear from proceeding with the hearing of
the said appeal on the 7th March, 1951, or on any other date
or dates.
The appellants raised the following contentions in the
petition:
1. That the appeal preferred by Tekchand Dolwani
before the respondent was in terms an appeal against the
order of the 9th February, 1950, and not an appeal against
the conclusion reached on the 8th February, 1950, and inas-
much as the said order was made against Aboobaker and not in
his favour, Tekchand had no right of appeal against the same
and the respondent had no jurisdiction to entertain it or
make any order therein.
2. That Tekchand was not a person aggrieved by the
order dated the 8th February, 1950, within the meaning of
section 24 of the Ordinance and was not entitled to appeal
against the said order and inasmuch as no appeal lay at his
instance, the respondent had no jurisdiction to entertain it
or make any order therein.
701
3. That after the death of Aboobaker on the 14th May,
1950, the respondent ceased to have jurisdiction to proceed
with the hearing of the appeal or make any order therein.
The High Court held that the order of the respondent
pronounced on the 15th May, 1950, was not a nullity and the
appeal preferred by Tekehand was in effect and in substance
an appeal from the order passed by the Additional Custodian
on the 8th February, 1950, and that Tekchand was a person
aggrieved within the meaning of section 24 of the Ordi-
nance. It accordingly dismissed the petition with costs but
on the 27th June, 1950, granted him leave to appeal to this
Court under article 133 of the Constitution. On the 30th
July, 1951, during the pendency of the appeal in this Court,
the respondent finally pronounced orders on the appeal of
Tekchand and held that Aboobaker was an evacuee and his
property was declared evacuee property. A petition under
article 226 for quashing. this order is pending in the High
Court of the State of Bombay.
The learned counsel for the appellants canvassed the
following points before us:
1. That the appeal to the respondent was against the
order of the 9th and not against the order of the 8th, and
as no appeal lay against the order of the 9th the respondent
had no jurisdiction to hear it.
2. That assuming that the appeal was preferred against
the order of the 8th, that order was not an appealable order
inasmuch as section 24 allows an appeal against an order
declaring properties evacuee properties and not against any
conclusion that a certain person is or is not an evacuee,
and thus no appeal was Competent at all which could be heard
by the respondent.
3. That Tekchand was not a person aggrieved within the
meaning of section 24 of the Ordinance and had no locus
standi to prefer the appeal and the respondent had no juris-
diction to entertain it at his instance.
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702
4. That the order pronounced on the 15th after the death of
Aboobaker was a nullity.
It is mentioned in the judgment of the High Court that
Shri M.L. Manekshah conceded that the death of Aboobaker
does ’not in any way affect the validity of the order pro-
nounced by the Custodian General on the 15th May, 1950. The
learned counsel adopted practically the same attitude before
us in view of the affidavit of the respondent in which it
was affirmed that the order in question was dictated on the
13th May, 1950, and was signed on the same date. the High
Court on the principle of Order XXII, Rule 6, Code of Civil
Procedure, held that an order written but not pronounced
could be pronounced even after the death of the party af-
fected.
In these circumstances the last contention of the
learned counsel does not require any further consideration
and is rejected.
The larger question that has been raised in the petition
pending before the High Court of the State of Bombay that
the properties of Aboobaker could not be declared evacuee
properties after his death as they had devolved on his heirs
was not raised in these proceedings and we have not been
invited to decide it. That being so, the question is left
open.
The remaining three questions canvassed before us,
unless they are of such a nature as would make the decision
of the respondent dated the 13th May, 1950, a nullity,
cannot be the subject-matter of a writ of certiorari. It is
plain that such a writ cannot be granted to quash the deci-
sion of an inferior court within its jurisdiction on the
ground that the decision is wrong. Indeed, it must be shown
before such a writ is issued that the authority which passed
the order acted without jurisdiction or in excess of it or
in violation of the principles of natural justice. Want of
jurisdiction may arise from the nature of the subjectmatter,
so that the inferior court might not have authority to enter
on the inquiry or upon some part of it. It may also arise
from the absence of some essential preliminary or upon the
existence of some
703
particular facts collateral to the actual matter which the
court has to try and which are conditions precedent to the
assumption of jurisdiction by it. But once it is held that
the court has jurisdiction but while exercising it, it made
a mistake, the wronged party can only take the course pre-
scribed by law for setting matters right inasmuch as a court
has jurisdiction to decide rightly as well as wrongly. The
three questions agitated before us do not seem to be ques-
tions which bear upon the jurisdiction of the court of
appeal, or its authority to entertain them.
It was contended that no court of limited jurisdiction
can give itself jurisdiction by a wrong decision a point
collateral to the merits of the case upon which the limit of
its jurisdiction depends and that the questions involved in
the appeal before the respondent were collateral to the
merits of the case. As pointed out by Lord Esher, M.R., in
Reg. v. Commissioner Income Tax(1),, the formula enunciated
above is quite plain but its application is often mislead-
ing. The learned Master of the Rolls classified the cases
under two categories thus:
"When an inferior court or tribunal or body which has to
exercise the power of deciding facts, first established by
Act of Parliament, the legislature has to consider what
powers it will give that tribunal or body. It may in effect
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say that, if a certain stab of facts exists and is shown to
such tribunal or body before it proceeds to do certain
things, it shall have jurisdiction to do such things but not
otherwise. There it is not for them conclusively to decide
whether that state of facts exists, and, if they exercise
the jurisdiction without its existence, what they do may be
questioned, and it will be held that they have acted without
jurisdiction. But there is another state of things which
may exist. The legislature may entrust the tribunal on body
with a jurisdiction which includes the jurisdiction, to
determine whether the preliminary state of facts exists as
well as the jurisdiction, and on finding that it doe: exist,
to proceed further or do something more. Wher
(1) 21 Q .B DD. 313.
704
the legislature are establishing such a tribunal or body
with limited jurisdiction, they also have to consider what-
ever jurisdiction they give them, whether there shall be any
appeal from their decision, for otherwise there will be
none. In the second of the two cases I have mentioned it is
erroneous application of the formula to say that the tribu-
nal cannot give themselves jurisdiction by wrongly deciding
certain facts to exist, because the legislature gave them
jurisdiction to determine all the facts. including the
existence of the preliminary facts on which the further
exercise of their jurisdiction depends; and if they were
given jurisdiction so to decide, without any appeal being
given, there is no appeal from such exercise of their juris-
diction." The tribunal constituted to hear appeals under
section 24 has been constituted in these terms:
"Any person aggrieved by an order made under section 7,
section 16, section 19 or section 38 may prefer an appeal in
such manner and within such time as may be prescribed--
(a) to the Custodian, where the original order has
been passed by a Deputy or Assistant Custodian;
(b) to the Custodian-General, where the original order
has been passed by the Custodian, an Additional Custodian or
an Authorized Deputy Custodian."
Like all courts of appeal exercising general jurisdic-
tion in civil cases, the respondent has been constituted an
appellate court in words of the widest amplitude and the
legislature has not limited his jurisdiction by providing
that such exercise will depend on the existence of any
particular state of facts. Ordinarily, a court of appeal has
not only jurisdiction to determine the soundness of the
decision of the inferior court as a court of error, but by
the very nature of things it has also jurisdiction to deter-
mine any points raised before it in the nature of prelimi-
nary issues by the parties. Such jurisdiction is inherent in
its very constitution as a court of appeal. Whether an
appeal is competent, whether a party has locus standi to
prefer it, whether the appeal in substance is from one or
another order
705
and whether it has been preferred in proper form and within
the time prescribed, are all matters for the decision of the
appellate court so constituted. Such a tribunal falls
within class 2 of the classification of the Master of the
Rolls. In these circumstances it seems to us that the order
of the High Court of Punjab that a writ of certiorari could
not issue to the respondent quashing the order of the 13th
May, 1950, was right. We are further of the opinion that
none of the contentions raised has any merit whatsoever.
For a proper appraisal of the contention that Tekchand
Dolwani is not a "person aggrieved" within the meaning of
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those words in section 24 of the Ordinance, it is necessary
to refer to the rules made under the Ordinance. It is
provided in rule S (5), that any person or persons claiming
to be interested in the enquiry or in the property being
declared as evacuee property, may file a written statement
in reply to the written statement filed by the persons
interested in the property claiming that the property should
not be declared evacuee property; the Custodian shall then
either on the same day or on any subsequent day to which the
hearing may be adjourned, proceed to hear the evidence, if
any, which the party appearing to show cause may produce and
also evidence which the party claiming to be interested as
mentioned above may adduce. In the proceedings before the
Additional Custodian, Tekchand Dolwani filed a reply to the
written statement of Aboobaker and adduced evidence in
support of the stand taken by him that the property of
Aboobaker was evacuee property. Further Tekchand Dolwani
was the first informant who brought to the notice of the
Custodian concerned that the property of Aboobaker was
evacuee property and in view of the order of the Ministry of
Rehabilitation he was, as a first informant, entitled to
first consideration in the allotment of this property,
the Additional Custodian was bound to hear him on the truth
and validity of the information given by him. When a person
is given a right to raise a contest in a certain matter and
his contention is negatived, then
706
to say that he is not a person aggrieved by the order does
not seem to us to be at all right or proper. He is certain-
ly aggrieved by the order disallowing his contention. Sec-
tion 24 allows a right of appeal to any person aggrieved by
an order made under section 7. The conclusion reached by the
Additional Custodian on the 8th February, 1950, that Aboo-
baker was not an evacuee amounted to an order under section
7 and Tekchand therefore was a person aggrieved by that
order. Section 43 bars the jurisdiction of the civil court
in matters which fall within the jurisdiction of the Custo-
dian. In clause 1 (a) it provides as follows:-
"no civil court shall have jurisdiction to entertain or
adjudicate upon any question whether any property is or is
not evacuee property or whether an evacuee has or has not
any right or interest in any evacuee property ."
It is clear therefore that the Additional Custodian has
to find and adjudicate on the question whether a certain
property is or is not evacuee property and whether a certain
person is or is not an evacuee and such an adjudication
falls within the ambit of section 7 of the Ordinance.
Lord Esher M.R. in In re Lamb, Ex parte Board of
Trade(1) observed as follows :-
"The meaning of the term ’person aggrieved’ was ex-
plained by this Court in Ex parte Official Receiver U). It
was there determined that any person who makes an applica-
tion to a Court for a decision, or any person who. is
brought before a Court to submit to a decision, is, if the
decision goes against him, thereby a ’person aggrieved’ by
that decision."
Lord Justice Kay in the same judgment made the following
observations:--
"The preliminary objection to the appeal is two/old:
(1) It is said that the Board of ’trade are not ’persons
aggrieved’. They are persons whom the court was bound to
hear, If they wished to be heard, on the validity of this
objection, and the decision has
(1) [1894] 2 Q.B.D. 805. (2) 19 Q.B.D. 174.
707
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been against them. How it can be said that they are not
’persons aggrieved’, by the decision, passes my understand-
ing. When two persons are in the position of litigants
before the High Court, and the decision of the Court goes
against one of them, how it can be said that he is not a
’person aggrieved’ by the decision, I cannot understand. I
am clearly of opinion that the Board were ’persons ag-
grieved’ by this decision. Then (2) it is said that the
decision is not an ’order’. When the High Court makes a
declaration of right, and further orders the costs of the
application to be paid (which is the common form here used),
and that is drawn up and sealed with the seal of the Court,
and, I suppose placed on record, as all orders of the High
Court are, it seems to me that it is clearly an order of the
Court."
In our opinion, Tekchand Dolwani is a person aggrieved
within the rule stated in the decision mentioned above and
the respondent rightly held that he had locus standi to
prefer the appeal.
The next point urged was that the appeal had been pre-
ferred against the order of the 9th February and not against
the order of the 8th and that the respondent had no juris-
diction to hear it. Whether the appeal in substance had
been preferred against the order of the 8th or the order of
the 9th was a matter which was certainly within the compe-
tence of the respondent to decide and does not involve any
question of jurisdiction whatsoever. Be that as it may. we
have examined the memorandum of appeal presented by Tekchand
Dolwani to the respondent and it appears to us that the High
Court was right when it held that the appeal was in effect
and in substance an appeal from the order passed by the
Additional Custodian on the 8th February. The relief
claimed in appeal concerns the order of the 8th and the
grounds of appeal only relate to this matter. The only
defect pointed out was in the description of the order
attacked in appeal. It is well settled that such errors of
description cannot be allowed to prejudice the right of a
party. The two
708
orders of the 8th and 9th made on consecutive days, though
under different provisions of the Ordinance, were inter-
linked and the latter order was merely consequential on the
conclusion reached on the 8th and the description in the
memorandum of appeal that the appeal was against the order
of the 9th cannot be considered as really an error of a kind
of which serious notice could be taken.
The last point raised before us was not taken in the
High Court and therefore we have not the benefit of that
court’s decision on the point. It was contended that no
appeal lay against the order of the Additional Custodian
dated the 8th February declining to declare Aboobaker an
evacuee, that the only order that the Custodian is entitled
to pass under section 7 is an order declaring any property
to be evacuee property and that it is this order and this
order alone which is appealable under section 24. In our
opinion, this contention is without force. Section 24 con-
fers a right of appeal against all orders made under section
7 and does not specify the nature of the orders made appeal-
able. In an enquiry under section 7 the first point for
adjudication is whether a certain person falls within the
definition of the word "evacuee" given in the Ordinance. Ii
he comes within the ambit of the definition, then any
property heldby him becomes evacuee property. The civil
court is barred from entertaining or adjudicating upon the
questions whether the property is or is not evacuee proper-
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ty, or whether an evacuee has any right or interest in any
evacuee property. The decision of the Custodian whether in
the affirmative or in the negative amounts to an adjudica-
tion under section 7 and is as such appealable.
It was contended that when the Custodian reached the
conclusion that a certain person is not an evacuee, then he
is not entitled to make any order -whatsoever but has just
to file the proceedings. This contention is unsound. When a
certain person claiming to be interested in getting a
property declared evacuee property is allowed to put in a
written statement and lead
709
evidence, then the decision of the court whether favourable
or unfavourable to him has to take the form of an adjudica-
tion and necessarily amounts to an order. Reference in this
connection may be made to the decision of the Federal Court
in Rayarappan Nayanar v. Madhavi Amma(1) on an
analogous,provision of the Code of Civil Procedure contained
in Orders XL, Rule 1, and XLIII, Rule 1 (s). Order XLIII,
Rule 1 (s) makes any order made under Order XL, Rule 1,
appealable, while Order XL, Rule 1, only empowers the court
to appoint a receiver. It was held that the order removing
a receiver was appealable under Order XLIII, Rule 1, inas-
much as such an order fell within the ambit of Order XL,
Rule 1, and the power of appointing a receiver included the
power of removing or dismissing him. The present case
stands on a higher footing. The power of granting a certain
relief includes obviously the power of refusing that relief.
In our opinion, therefore, the order made by the Additional
Custodian refusing to declare Aboobaker an evacuee and his
property evacuee property was an order made under section 7
of the Ordinance and was therefore appealable under section,
24.
The result is that this appeal fails and is dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellants: Rajindar Narain.
Agent for the respondent: P, A. Mehta.
(1) [1949] F.C.R. 667.
710