Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SIKANDER JEHAN BEGUM AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
(ANDHRA PRADESH STATE GOVERNMENT)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/12/1961
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 996 1962 SCR Supl. (2) 226
ACT:
Succession-Jagir-Enactment providing for
finality of order-Denial of jurisdiction to civil
court-Constitutional validity-Hyderabad Atiyat
Enquiries Act, 1952 (10 of 1952) s. 13(2)-
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 19(1)(f).
HEADNOTE:
This writ petition on also the appeal raised
the common question as to the constitutional
validity of s. 13(2) of the Hyderabad Atiyat
Enquiries Act, 1952. The petitioners who were also
the appellants claimed succession to the
properties, including Atiyat jagirs of their
brother, a Nawab of Hydrabad, who died in 1944. By
a Firman of the Nizam his estate was taken over by
the Government into its supervision till his
successors could be declared. In 1948, after the
Police action had taken place, the Nizam on the
advice of the Military Governor issued a Firman
appointing a tribunal to enquire into the question
of succession. The Tribunal reported naming the
successors, but the petitioners were not amongst
them. Thereafter the Nizam delegated all his
authority to the Military Governor and in due
course the Chief Minister took the place of the
Military Governor and in 1950 the Constitution
came into force. The Chief Minister confirmed the
report of the Tribunal on April 3, 1950. Two of
the widows of the Nawab challenged the validity of
the Chief Minister’s order by a writ petition in
the High Court but to no effect. In the meantime
the impugned Act had come into force on March 14
1952 and s. 13(2) provided as follows,-
(2) The orders passed in cases relating
to Atiyat Grants including Jagirs on or after
the 19th September, 1948 and before the
commencement of this Act by the Military
Governor, the Chief Civil Administrator or
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the Chief Minister of Hyderabad or by the
Revenue Minister by virtue of powers given or
purporting to be given to him by the Chief
Minister shall be deemed to be the final
orders validly passed by a competent
authority under the law in force at the time
when the order was passed and shall not be
questioned in any court of law."
The petitioners moved this court under Art.
32 of the Constitution and also preferred an
appeal by special leave
227
against the order of the High Court. Reliance was
placed on the decision of this Court in
Ammeerunnissa Begum v. Mahboob Begum, [1953] S. C.
R. 404, and it was urged on their behalf that the
impugned provision denied the petitioners the
right to convass questions relating to succession
in a civil court and thus infringed Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
^
Held, that the contention must be negatived.
The object of the Legislature in enacting the
impugned provision clearly was to validate orders
passed between the commencement of the Police
action and the date when the Act came into force
and forbid their reopening either before the
Atiyat courts or the Civil courts. During that
period historical events took place in the State
of Hyderabad and if the Legislature treated the
orders passed during that period as constituting a
class by themselves; no objection could be taken
under Art. 14 of the Constitution on the ground of
discrimination, and the decision relied on could
not apply.
Further, s. 13(2) did not validate merely the
orders passed in the present case, but validated
all orders passed during that specified period and
applied only to Atiyat Jagir property to which the
personal law of the parties could have no
application.
There could be no doubt that in Hyderabad a
Jagir was not heritable on the death of the
jagirdar and in theory its devolution was always a
case of resumption and re-grant by the Government
and consequently, no person claiming succession to
a jagir had the right to sue in a civil court and
whoever got the estate as a result of the decision
of the Chief Minister got it by way of re-grant
made by the state.
Ammerrunnissa Begum v. Mahboob, Begum-(1953)
S. C. R. 404. distinguished and held inapplicable.
Regard being had to the special character of
the property in question it could not also be said
that the impugned provision contravened Art.
19(1)(f) of the Constitution.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 279 of 1960.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated the June 30, 1952, of the former
Hyderabad High Court in Writ Application No. 13 of
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1950.
WITH
PETITION NO. 197 of 1956.
228
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of
India for enforcement of fundamental rights.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India, J.
B. Dadachanji, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath and P.
L. Vohra for the appellants and petitioners.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, T. V. R. Tatachari
and T. M. Sen, for respondents Nos. 1 to 4.
Daniel A. Latifi and Sardar Babadur, for
respondents Nos. 8 to 13 (in the appeal) and 6 to
11 (in the petition).
1961. December. 20-The Judgment of the Court
was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-Writ Petition No. 197 of
1956 and Civil Appeal by Special Leave No. 279 of
1960 arise between the same parties and they raise
a short question about the validity of section 13,
sub-section 2 of the Hyderabad Atiyat Enquiries
Act, 1952 (No. X of 1952) (hereinafter called the
Act). The decision of this question lies within a
narrow compass but the facts leading up to the
Civil Appeal and the Writ Petition are somewhat
complicated and they must be stated at the outset
in order that the background of the dispute may be
properly appreciated.
Sikander Jehan Begum and Khurshid Jehan
Teleyawar Begum are the petitioners in the Writ
Petition and the appellants in the Civil Appeal
they are the legitimate sisters of Nawab Kamal Yar
Jung who died on January 26, 1944. According to
the petition, the said Nawab left behind him three
legitimate wives and two legitimate sisters but no
legitimate children. He had, however, a number of
Khawases (concubines) and three illegitimate sons
and an illegitimate daughter. These are
respondents Nos. 6-9 in the Writ Petition. The
said illegitimate children were the issues of
respondent Nos. 10 & 11 who were the concubines of
the Nawab. Respondent Nos. 6-11, however, claimed
229
to be the legitimate heirs of the said Nawab
because according to them, respondent Nos. 10 & 11
were the legitimate wives of the Nawab. A dispute
as to succession to the estate of the said Nawab
has given rise to the present controversy.
The said Nawab belonged to a leading family
of Nobles in the Hyderabad State and was possessed
of large Jagir and non-Jagir properties. Soon
after his death, the Nizam appointed a Commission
of Enquiry to hold a regular enquiry into the
Virasat of the late Nawab Kamal Yar Jung on
February 8, 1944. By the Firman issued by the
Nizam in that behalf a direction was given that
the Government should take the estate of the late
Nawab under its supervision so that after the
declaration of the successor, arrangements may be
made about its delivery to the proper person. It
appears that the Government accordingly took
possession of the properties of the Nawab and
continued in possession thereafter.
On September 17, 1948, Police action
commenced and it ended on the 26th September on
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which date the Military Governor took charge of
the administration of the Hyderabad State. On
November 9, 1948, the Commission of Enquiry which
had been appointed by the Nizam made its report.
The report showed that according to the
Commission, Husain Khan, Tahawar Husain Khan,
Sadiq Husain, Khatija Begum were the legitimate
and lawful sons and daughter of the late Nawab,
with the result that except for Riyasatunnisa
Begum, Lal Bee and Azizunnisa Begum who were the
wives of the late Nawab, none else could be held
entitled to succeed to his estate. It appears that
the report thus submitted by the Enquiry
Commission did not receive the sanction or
approval of the Nizam.
Subsequently, on November 22, 1948, the Nizam
issued a Firman whereby a new special Tribunal
230
was constituted according to the opinion of the
Military Governor and it was asked to hear the
Virasat enquiry of the late Nawab. The Tribunal
was given authority to record fresh evidence, if
necessary. This Tribunal made its report on April
3, 1949. The majority of this Tribunal took the
view that the three widows of the late Nawab were
his legitimate wives and ought to get together
As.-/12/- share. They also expressed the opinion
that Sheerin Bua and Parichehra Bua were the Mutha
wives and their sons Syed Mohd., Hussain Khan Syed
Tahawar Hussain Khan and Syed Sadiq Hussain Khan
were the legitimate sons of the late Nawab and so
they should all together get As.-/12/- share. The
remaining As.-/2/- share should go to Khedja Begum
who, in the opinion of the majority, was the
legitimate daughter of the late Nawab.
It appears that after the Military Governor
was put in charge of the administration of the
State of Hyderabad, the Nizam issued a Firman on
September 19, 1948, delegating to the Military
Governor all the authority for the administration
of the State. Subsequently, by another Firman he
made it clear that the authority delegated to the
Military Governor included and shall always be
deemed to have included authority to make
Regulations. This latter Firman was issued on
August 7, 1949. In due course, the Chief Minister
took the place of the Military Governor and the
Nizam issued a Firman on December 1, 1949, whereby
all the powers of administration delegated by him
to the Military Governor were as from the date of
the notification terminated and the said powers
were delegated to the Chief Minister. That is how
the Chief Minister was vested with all the powers
of administration which the Nizam possessed.
When the Military Governor was in charge of
the administration of Hyderabad State, he
exercised his delegated powers of legislation and
231
promulgated several Regulations. One of these was
the Hyderabad ( Abolition of Jagirs ) Regulation,
1358 F. This Regulation came into force on August
15, 1949. Broadly stated, the effect of this
Regulation was that all Jagir lands were
incorporated into State lands as from the
appointed day and their administration stood
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transferred to the Jagir Administrator who was to
be appointed by the Government. The Regulation
made necessary provisions for making cash payments
out of the net income of the Jagirs to the
Jagirdar or Hissedars or maintenance holders. This
arrangement was intended to serve as an interim
arrangement pending the final disposal of the
question about the commutation to be paid for the
Jagirs. This Regulation was followed a few months
later by the Hyderabad Jagirs (Commutation)
Regulation, 1359 F which came into force on
January 25, 1950. By this Regulation, provision
was made for the payment of compensation by way of
the commuted value of the Jagir which had to be
determined by the Jagir Administrator in
accordance with the relevant provisions of the
Regulation.
On January 26, 1950, the Constitution came
into force and on April 3, 1950, the report
submitted by the second Commission was confirmed
by the Chief Minister. As a result of this
confirmation, the shares of three sons and
daughter as well as the three widows of the late
Nawab were declared. Each son was recognised to be
entitled to As. -/4/- share, the daughter to As. -
/2/- share and the three widows between them to
As. -/2/- share. It was also declared that
Sheereen Bua, Parichehra Bua as the Mamtua wives
of the late Nawab were entitled to Guzara
(maintenance) only. In substance, it is the order
thus passed by the Chief Minister which has given
rise to the present litigation between the
parties.
The widows of the late Nawab-Ahmedunnisa
Begum and Azizunnisa Begum-challenged the
232
validity of the Government decision recorded in
the confirmatory order passed by the Chief
Minister by a Writ Petition before the High Court
of Judicature at Hyderabad on June 20, 1950. It
was urged by them that the impugned decision of
the Government was ultra vires and null and void
and they claimed a writ of Certiorari quashing the
said decision. As a consequential relief, they
claimed appropriate orders against the parties who
were held entitled to shares in the property of
the late Nawab. The Writ Petition was first heard
by a Division Bench of the Hyderabad High Court.
The Bench found that the petition raised several
questions of constitutional importance and so on
August 24, 1950, it referred the petition for
disposal before a Full Bench. Accordingly, a Full
Bench consisting of three Learned Judges of the
High Court heard it on March 20, 1951. They held
that the questions raised were of such a vital
importance that it would be appropriate that a
larger Full Bench should deal with them. That is
how the questions formulated were referred to a
larger Full Bench of five learned Judges of the
High Court. After these questions were answered by
the larger Full Bench, the matter was remitted to
a Full Bench of three learned Judges and in
accordance with the answers given, the Writ
Petition was finally dismissed on June 30, 1952.
Meanwhile, on March 14, 1952, the Act had come
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into force.
The two widows of the late Nawab then applied
for and obtained a certificate from the High Court
to prefer an appeal to this Court. On December 27,
1955, however, the said widows purported to
compromise their dispute with the opponents and
expressed a desire not to prosecute the appal
before the Supreme Court any further. When the
petitioners Sikander Jehan Begum and Khurshid
Jehan Begum came to know about these developments,
they immediately sent an application to this Court
praying that their names should be
233
transposed as appellants in the appeal pending
before this Court, at the instance of the said two
widows; in this application, they undertook to
deposit the necessary security for costs as well
as the printing charges. This application was,
however, returned to the petitioners on the ground
that it did not lie to this Court as the record
had not been formally transmitted to it.
Thereupon, the petitioners made a similar
application before the High Court and the widows
applied for permission to withdraw their appeal.
Both the applications came on for hearing before
the High Court on August 16, 1955. The High Court
rejected the petitioners’ application for
transposition and allowed the widows’ application
granting them leave to withdraw their appeal. On
August 8, 1955, the petitioners had made an
independent application to the High Court for
leave to appeal to the Supreme Court against its
judgment in the Writ Petition. This application
was dismissed by the High Court on March 20, 1956.
Petitioners then applied for special leave and
special leave was granted to them. That is how
Civil Appeal No. 279 of 1960 has come to this
Court by special leave. Long before this appeal
came here, the petitioners had filed a writ
petition No. 197 of 1956. That in brief is the
background of the dispute between the parties
before us. It is common ground that our decision
in the Writ Petition will govern the decision in
the Civil Appeal. Indeed, as we have already
indicated both the proceedings raise the same
point of law.
Before dealing with the said question,
however, it is necessary to examine briefly the
broad features of the Act. The Act was passed to
amend and consolidate the law regarding Atiyat
grants in respect of Atiyat enquiries, enquiries
as to claims to succession to, or any right, title
or interest in Atiyat grants and matters ancillary
thereto. As s. 15 of the Act shows, it repealed
all previous circulars
234
relating to this matter except as provided by cls.
(a) and (b) of the said section. Sections 3 to 7
contain general provisions as to Atiyat grants.
Under section 3, all Atiyat grants held
immediately before the commencement of the Act
shall continue to be held by the holders thereof
and by their successors, subject to the conditions
therein specified. Section 4 deals with the
inquiries as to Atiyat grants in Jagirs. Section 5
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prescribes the consequences of the breach of
conditions of Muntakhab or Vasiqa. By s. 6
alienations of the Atiyat grants are prohibited
and exemption from attachment by a Court is
granted in respect from them. This latter
provision is, however, subject to the proviso that
half the income of the Atiyat grant shall be
attachable in execution of a decree through the
Revenue Department. Section 7 provides that
succession to Atiyat grants shall in future be
regulated by the personal law applicable to the
last holder. Sections 8 to 11 deal with the
constitution of Atiyat Courts their jurisdiction
and procedure. Section 8 provides for hierarchy of
four categories of Courts on whom powers could be
conferred by Government by means of a notification
issued under s. 9. Section 10 provides that the
jurisdiction and procedure of the Atiyat Courts
shall be regulated in the manner specified in the
schedule and it adds that the time within which
and the manner in which appeals may be filed
against the decisions of the said Courts shall be
such as may be prescribed. Section 11 deals with
appeals. As a result of the provisions of s. 11,
the decision of the Board of Revenue shall be
final. Then we have a group of five sections
dealing with miscellaneous matters. Section 14
confers on the Government the power to make rules,
s. 15 is the repealing section, and s. 16 provides
that the Act will cease to be applicable to any
Inam to which at any time the Hyderabad
Enfranchised Inams Act, 1952 is made applicable.
That leave ss. 12 and 13 which requires careful
consideration.
235
Section 12 provides that the final decision
of a Civil Court on questions of succession,
legitimacy divorce or other questions of personal
law shall be given effect to by the Atiyat Court
on the said decision being brought to its notice
by the party concerned or otherwise irrespective
of whether the decision of the Atiyat Court was
given before or after the decision of the Civil
Court. It is thus clear that though the Act has
established a hierarchy of Atiyat Courts for
dealing with the question about the succession to
Atiyat estates, s. 12 provided that the final
decision of the Civil Court on matters therein
specified binds the parties and has to be given
effect to by the Atiyat Courts. Under this
section, the final decision of the Civil Court
will have to be given effect to even if it was
pronounced after an Atiyat Court had decided the
matter. That means the earlier decision of the
Atiyat Court, if it is inconsistent with the
subsequent decision of the Civil Court, will have
to yield to the latter and the question of
succession shall be governed in the light of Civil
Court’s decision.
That takes us to s. 13. This section reads as
follows :-
"13. (1) Except as provided in this Act,
the decision of an Atiyat Court shall be
final and shall not be questioned in any
Court of Law.
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(2) The orders passed in cases relating
to Atiyat Grants including Jagirs on after
the 18th September, 1948 and before the
commencement of this Act by the Military
Governor, the Chief Civil Administrator or
the Chief Minister of Hyderabad or by the
Revenue Minister by virtue of powers given or
purporting to be given to him by the Chief
Minister shall be deemed to be the final
orders validly passed by a competent
authority under the law in force at the time
when the order
236
was passed and shall not be questioned in any
court of law."
It will be noticed that the result of s. 13 (2) is
to validate the orders of the authorities therein
specified which have been passed between September
18, 1948, and March 14, 1952. The first date
refers to the commencement of the Police action
and the latter to the commencement of the
operation of the Act. The object of the
Legislature clearly is to validate orders passed
between the said two dates so that the questions
determined by the relevant orders should not be
reopened for enquiry either before the Atiyat
Courts or before the Civil Courts. It is not
disputed that between the commencement of the
police action and the passing of the Act events of
historical importance took place in the State of
Hyderabad and so treating that period as of
unusual significance is not open to any criticism.
Therefore, if the Legislature chose to deal with
the orders passed during this period as
constituting a class by themselves, that itself
cannot be said to contravene Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
It is however, urged that the result of the
impugned provision is to deny the petitioners
their right to have questions of succession
adjudicated upon by a Civil Court and that itself
constitutes discrimination which contravenes Art.
14. In support of this argument, reliance has been
placed on the decision of this Court in
Ammeerunnissa Begum v. Mahboob Begum(1). We are
not impressed by this argument. In the case of
Ammeerunnissa Begum it was obvious that the
Legislature had singled out two groups of persons
consisting of two ladies and their children out of
those who claimed to be related to the deceased
Nawab Waliudowla and preventing them from
establishing their rights under the personal law
which governed the community, in Courts of law.
Unconstitutional discrimination
237
was thus writ large on the face of the Act
impugned in that case. The position in the present
case is very much different. Section 13 (2) does
not validate the orders passed in the enquiry
relating to the present case alone. It purports to
validate the orders passed between the two
specified dates in respect of all the enquiries
which were then pending. That is one important
point of distinction. Besides, as we will point
out later, the nature of the property in respect
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of which the petitioners make a claim is
fundamentally different from that in the case of
Ammeerunnissa Begum. The property in the latter
case was heritable property succession to which
had to be determined under the principles of the
personal law applicable to the parties, while in
the present case, the succession to Atiyat
property does not come as a matter of right to the
heirs of the last holder. Therefore, in our
opinion, the argument based upon the decision of
the case Ammeerunnissa Begum cannot succeed.
The challenge to the validity of s. 13 (2)
has taken another form before us. It was argued
that during the prescribed period, a large number
of case were pending orders by the authorities
concerned. By chance or accident, orders by the
relevant authorities were passed in the present
case and may have been passed in some others. But
there may be other cases of a similar type on
which orders may not have been passed by the
relevant authorities during the prescribed period
and in singling out cases in which orders have
been passed the impugned provision has made a
classification which is irrational and offends
against Art. 14. The accident that orders were
passed in some cases and were not passed in some
others cannot afford a rational basis for
classifying the two sets of cases. During the
course of arguments, however, it turned out that
no factual basis had
238
been made out in the petition on which this
argument could be based. It is not alleged that
there are any cases in which orders have not been
passed and which would, therefore, fall outside s.
13 (2). When this fact was put to the learned
Attorney-General who argued for the petitioners,
he fairly conceded that in the absence of the
relevant material, the argument could not be
sustained. Therefore, we do not think it is
necessary to examine the merits of this argument,
though we may add that, prima facie,
classification made between cases decided and
those not decided may not be irrational or
unreasonable.
The learned Attorney-General then contended
that in validating the orders passed by executive
authority on the question of succession, s. 13 (2)
violates Art. 14 because it is the right of every
citizen to have questions of succession tried by a
Civil Court. He argues that if the petitioners
wish to make a claim in regard to the succession
to the estate in question, they have a right to
enforce their claim in a Court of Law and in so
far as the impugned provision denies them that
right, that amounts to discrimination against the
petitioners which is violative of Art. 14. It
would be noticed that this argument is, in
substance, similar to the contention raised by the
learned Attorney-General on the strength of the
decision in the case of Ammeerunnissa Begum. In
examining the validity of this argument, it is
necessary to consider the nature of the property
in respect of which the petitioners seek to make a
claim by way of succession.
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The legal nature of the jagir estate has been
considered by the High Court in dealing with the
Writ Petition filed by the widows of the late
Nawab. Several Firmans to which reference has been
made by the High Court indicate that on the death
of the holder of the jagir, the estate devolved
upon the State and though it was usually re-
granted to the person who was found to be the
successor on
239
enquiry, in theory, jagirs were resumed on the
death of the holder of the jagir and their heirs
did not automatically succeed to them. It is also
clear that in their lifetime the Jagirdars were
not permitted to alienate the property and that it
was not necessary that on the death of the
Jagirdar the estate should be granted to all his
heirs either. It also appears that no suit
relating to jagir could be instituted in the Civil
Court without the prior special permission of the
Nizam. The Firman issued on December 16, 1901, to
which the Judgment refers, shows that the heirs of
the deceased holders of Jagirs could not insist
upon their right to succeed to the estate because
no Atiyat grant was heritable. Another Firman
issued on September 28, 1928, showed that the
powers of the grantor of the Jagir could not be
curtailed by the rules framed for the guidance of
the Atiyat Courts and that the grantor had an
absolute right either to re-grant the state to the
successor or not. There fore, the position appears
to be that "the jagir tenure consisted of no more
than usufructuary rights in land to which the
revenue law of the State did not apply; that the
Jagirs were inalienable and terminable on the
death of the grantee, each Jagirdar, though an
heir of the deceased holder, was deemed a fresh
grantee of the estate, the right to confer such an
estate being uncontrolled, absolute and beyond the
jurisdiction of the Civil Courts.
It is true that on the death of a Jagirdar an
enquiry was held about the succession to the said
Jagir either by the Atiyat Courts or by a
commission or Tribunal specially appointed in that
behalf; and it is also true that generally the
property of the deceased Jagirdar was granted to
the person who was held by the Nizam to be the
successor of the deceased Jagirdar. But that does
not affect the true legal character of the Jagir.
240
This position is borne out by the previous Firmans
issued by the Nizam in regard to the enquiry of
the Atiyat estates. Circular No. 34 of 1341F
prescribed rules for conducting enquiries and
passing decisions in cases of Inam. This circular
was subsequently superseded and in its place
Circular No. 10 of 1338F was issued. The date of
this latter circular is June 13, 1929. Several
rules are prescribed in the from of sections for
holding enquiries and passing decisions in Inam
cases. It is not necessary to refer to the
sections of this Circular in detail. It may be
enough to state that three classes of officer are
contemplated by the Circular for holding the
enquiry. They are given powers to hold the
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enquiry. The enquiries are intended to be held
generally in accordance with the procedure
prescribed in the Civil Procedure Code. Appeals
are provided against the decision of one officer
to the officer higher in rank, but the ultimate
position appears to be clear; when the Nizam-e-
Atiyat expresses his opinion and submits it to the
Hon’ble the Revenue Member, the Revenue Member
thereupon expresses his own opinion, and on
considering all the opinion expressed in the
enquiry, "the Nizam is graciously pleased to issue
his Firman and the Firman thus issued will be
binding on the parties." Thus it appears that
though formal provisions were made in regard to
the holding of the enquiry, the nature of the
enquiry was essentially consultative and the Nizam
was not bound by the decisions reached by the
several officers authorised to hold the enquiry.
The fact that the Nizam usually accepted the
decision of the enquiry does not alter the legal
position that the Nizam might well have refused to
accept the opinion and might even have refused to
make a grant of the estate to anyone among the
several claimants. Therefore, even under the
Circulars issued by the Nizam for holding
enquiries into the questions of succession to
Jagirs, the position appears to be
241
clear that jagirs were not heritable and on the
death of the Jagirdar, on principle and in theory,
it was always a case of resumption and re-grant.
If that be so, any person who claimed to be
the successor of the deceased Jagirdar had no
right to come be a Civil court for establishing
that claim. In fact, there is no claim to
succession at all, the question of re-grant being
always in the absolute discretion of the Nizam.
After the Rule of the Nizam came to an end, the
only change that occurred was that on the death of
the Jagirdar, the property vested in the State and
could be re-granted to a successor in the
discretion of the State. Therefore, in our
opinion, the argument that by denying the
petitioners the right to establish a claim in the
Civil Court, the impugned provision of s. 13 (2)
offends against Art. 14 of the constitution,
cannot be sustained. The property in respect of
which the claim is sought to be made is not like
the property in the case of Ameerunnissa at all.
In that case, the property was heritable and
succession to it was governed by the rules of
personal law. In the present case, there is no
right to succession as such-whoever gets the
estate as a result of the decision of the Chief
Minister gets it by way of re-grant made by the
State. That is why we are satisfied that the
challenge to the validity of s. 13 (2) on the
ground that it contravenes Art. 14 cannot be
sustained.
In view of the special character of the
property in question, it is obvious that the
petitioners cannot challenge the validity of s. 13
(2) on the ground that it contravenes Art. 19 (1)
(f).
There is one more point which needs to be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 12
considered and that relates to the non-Atiyat
estate left by the estate deceased Nawab Kamal Yar
Jung. It appears that the Firman by which the
Nizam appointed the first commission of Enquiry
refers to the
242
estate of the deceased Nawab in general and is not
apparently confined to his Atiyat estate.
similarly, the order passed by the Nizam that the
Government should take possession of the deceased
Nawab’s property appears to have been implemented
in regard to both Atiyat and non-Atiyat estates
left by the Nawab. The Chief Minister’s order
confirming the report of the special tribunal
subsequently appointed is likewise vague and may
seem to cover both the Atiyat and non-Atiyat
estates. The petitioners contend that whatever may
be the position in regard to the Atiyat estate,
the chief Minister had no right to make an order
in respect of non-Atiyat estate; indeed the Nizam
himself could not have appointed an Enquiry
commission in respect of non-Atiyat estate and so
the dispute in regard to the succession to the
said estate must be left to be decided according
to the personal law of the parties and it must be
tried by the ordinary Civil Courts. This position
is not disputed either by Mr. Viswanatha Sastri
who appeared for the State or by Mr. Latifi who
appeared for the respondents before us.
Incidentally, we may add that it appears that
litigation is pending in respect of this property
between some of the parties in Civil Suit No. 139
of 1355F. Since it is common ground before us that
the non-Atiyat estate is not covered by the order
passed by the chief Minister, all that we wish to
do in the present Writ Petition is to make it
clear that the that order does not relate to non-
Atiyat estate and that questions of title in
respect of it will have to be tried in the Civil
courts.
In the result, both the Writ Petition and the
Appeal fail and are dismissed with costs. One set
of hearing costs.
Petition and Appeal dismissed.
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