Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AZIMUNISSA AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE DEPUTY CUSTODIAN, EVACUEE PROPERTIES, DISTRICT DEORIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/10/1960
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SUBBARAO, K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 365 1961 SCR (2) 91
CITATOR INFO :
F 1967 SC1244 (7)
RF 1970 SC 413 (6)
F 1983 SC 259 (18)
ACT:
Evacuee Property-Automatic vesting under invalid Ordinance Continuance
of vesting under subsequent enactments-
Validation of--Separation of evacuee interest-Composite
Property-Sale of non-evacuee interest-Whether violates
fundamental rights--U. P. Administration of Evacuee
Property Ordinance, 1949 (U. P. Ordinance 1 of 1949), ss.
2(c) and 5-Administration of Evacuee Property (Chief
Commissioner’s Provinces) Ordinance 1949 (Ordinance XII of
1949), s. 5-Administration of Evacuee Property (Chief
Commissioner’s Provinces) Amendment Ordinance 1949
(Ordinance XX of 1949), s. 8-Administration of Evacuee
Property Ordinance 1949 (Ordinance XXVII of 1949), ss. 7 and
8-Administration of Evacuee Property (Amendment) Ordinance
1950 (Ordinance IV of 1950, S. 4--Administration of Evacuee
Property Act, 1950 (XXXI of 19.50) ss. 7 and 8-
Administration of Evacuee Property (Amendment) Act, 1960 (1
of 1960), s. 2-Evacuee Interest (Separation) Act, 1951 (LXIV
of 1951), S. 10--Constitution of India, Arts. 19(1)(f) and
31.
HEADNOTE:
One K who had a 0-2-3 share in certain properties in Uttar
Pradesh went to Pakistan in 1947. The competent Officer
took proceedings under the Evacuee Interest (Separation)
Act, 1951, to separate the share of K in the property and as
the. claimants were not prepared to purchase the share of K,
he auctioned the entire property under s.10 of the Act. The
petitioners contended that K was not an evacuee, that the
property was not composite property, that the proceedings
under the Act were void and that s. 10 of the Act was void
as it contravened Arts. 31 and 19(i)(f) of the Constitution.
The respondents urged that the interest of K in the property
had automatically vested in the Custodian under U. P.
Ordinance 1 of 1649 and this vesting was continued by
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Central Ordinance XII of 1949, by Central Ordinance XXVII of
1949 and Central Act XXXI of 1950 and any legal defect in
the vesting was cured by Central Act 1 of 1960, that the
property was accordingly composite property and was properly
auctioned under the Separation Act. The Petitioners replied
that U. P. Ordinance 1 of 1949 and Central
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Ordinance XII of 1949, were void for want of legislative
competence and there could be no vesting in law under their
provisions which could be continued by subsequent Ordinances
and Acts.
Held, that the property was composite property and was
properly auctioned under the Separation Act. As K was an
evacuee under S. 2(C) of the U. P. Ordinance, her property
automatically vested in the Custodian under s. 5 and it was
continued under the Central Ordinance XII of 1949. Even if
these two Ordinances were bad for legislative incompetence
the purported vesting thereunder was continued under Central
Ordinance XXVII of 1949 and thereafter under Central Act
XXXI of 195o and any legal defect in such vesting was cured
by Central Act 1 of 1960.
Held, further that s. 10(a) of the Separation Act did not
contravene Arts. 31 and 19(i)(f) of the Constitution and was
not void. As the petitioners were not prepared to purchase
the share of K, the Competent Officer acted properly in
selling the property by public auction.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION :Petition No. 56 of 1958.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental rights.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and G. C. Mathur, for the
petitioners.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, R. B. Nanak
Chand and R. H. Dhebar, for respondents Nos. 1 to 3.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, Harnam Singh
and AT. Shroff, for the respondent No. 4.
J. P. Goyal, for respondents Nos. 5 to 10.
1960. October 26. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR. J.-This is a petition by six persons under article
32 of the Constitution praying for a writ of certiorari for
calling the records in which certain orders were passed and
for the issue of a mandamus directing the respondents to
restore the property in dispute. The following pedigree
table will assist in understanding the case:-
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Hingan Mian
Moharram Main Shukrullah(d.1945)
Abul Bashir Nasir Nazir Majid
Razzaq Ahamad Ahamad Ahamad
Khuda Bux
Noori Mian=Rehmat
Bibi (d.1953)
Azimunnisa Khatoon Bibi Taghma Bibi (d)
= Maqbool Ahamad =Abdul Barkat
Shamsun Nisa Khudaija Bibi
Lutf Md. Ahamad Aiysha Qamar-un-Nisa Tehzib-un-Nisa
Ahamad Khatoon
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The petitioners alleged that the properties in dispute were
acquired by Noon Mian and after his death there was some
litigation but as a result of a compromise between the
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members of the family the shares of the contestants were
fixed as follows:-
(a) Rehmat Bibi, Widow..0-1-6
(b) Taghma Bibi....0-1-5
(c) Khatoon Bibi...0-1-9
(d) Azimunnissa....0-1-9
(e) Shukrullah.....O-5-4
(f) Khuda Baksh....0-4-3
On August 28, 1942, Shakru-ullah created a waqf-alal-aulad
in favour of his sons and nominated Abdul Razzaq as Mutwali
(Trustee). Shakr-ullah died in 1945. In the year 1947,
Khatoon Bibi, one of the petitioners, went away to Karachi
and the ostensible reason stated by her :Is that she went to
look after the ailing sister of her husband who was in
Karachi.
On November 22, 1949, a notice was issued to Khatoon Bibi,
her manager and servants declaring her to be an evacuee and
calling upon her to surrender possession of her property
which was described as " Bhatni Noori (Chini Mills,
zamindari and kashtkari land ". Her husband Abdul Barkat
filed objections but it does not appear that any order was
passed on those objections. On April 17. 1950, the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950 (XXXI of 1950),
hereinafter referred to as the Act, came into force.
Another notice was issued to Khatoon Bibi by the Deputy
Custodian of Evacuee Property, Deoria, on July 5, 1950, to
show cause why she should not be declared an evacuee and why
all her property be not declared evacuee property. It is
alleged that the notice did not contain any description of
the property and was therefore ineffective. This fact is
denied by the respondents. In their affidavit it was stated
that the property was fully specified and identified and
that the notice of July 5, 1950, was by way of abundant
caution; the property of Khatoon Bibi had become evacuee
property and had automatically vested in the year 1949.
Against this notice also Abdul
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1951, these objections were dismissed. The order was as
follows:-
"I Objection dismissed. Admittedly Bibi Khatoon is an
evacuee. The notice is hereby confirmed and the property
(sufficiently although not thoroughly) described in the
notice is hereby declared to be evacuee property
No appeal or revision was taken against this order. On
January 8, 1953, a notice under s. 7 of the Act was issued
against Bashir Ahmad and Nasir Ahmad and by an order dated
December 14, 1955, both of them were declared evacuees and
their interests in the properties were declared evacuee
property. This order by the Assistant Custodian (Judicial)
shows that in the notice the properties were described and
it was held that both Bashir Ahmad and Nasir Ahmad were
evacuees and their interest in the property was evacuee
property but as it was composite property the exact shares
were left to be determined by the Competent Officer. An
appeal was taken by these two evacuees to the Custodian of
Evacuee Property, U. P., but it has not yet been decided.
Proceedings were then taken by the Competent Officer under
Evacuee Interest (Separation) Act (64 of 1951), hereinafter
called the Separation Act. Notices were issued under s. 6
of the Separation Act on February 15, 1954, and the persons
to whom notices were issued filed separate claims claiming
various shares in the property. The Competent Officer by
his order of March 20, 1956, declared the shares of the
various evacuees and non-evacuees and also held that as the
claimants were not prepared to purchase the shares of the
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evacuees in the property in dispute the only mode available
for partition was by a public auction. He gave directions
as to how the property which was the subject matter of waqf-
alal-aulad was to be separated. As regards the valuation of
the property he referred to the valuation made by the Assis-
tant Valuation Officer and Superintendent, Valuation Office,
Khan Market, New Delhi, the former at Rs. 7,41,300 for the
construction and lands and the latter at Rs. 14,15,000
inclusive of machinery, lands
96
and buildings and then tentatively fixed the valuation at
Rs. 14,15,000 and again referred the matter to the
Superintendent, Valuation Office for final valuation. He
held Khatoon Bibi’s share to be 0-2-3 and also determined
the interest of Bashir Ahmad and Nasir Ahmad and ordered the
entire property to be sold by auction. Against this order
an appeal was taken to the Appellate Officer. On August 13,
1956, the property in dispute was sold to respondent No. 3
for Rs. 16,05,000. Against this objections were filed by
the petitioner Azimunnissa and Abdul Wahid but they were
dismissed by the Competent Officer on October 1, 1956.
Against this order a revision was taken to the Appellate
Officer but both of them were dismissed on October 24, 1957.
in the meanwhile the petitioners, on September 27, 1956,
filed a petition under Art. 226 in the High Court of
Allahabad in which they attacked the validity of the
proceedings taken under the Act and also the order of the
Competent Officer ordering sale. Some of the points raised
by the petitioners were decided in their favour but the
petition was dismissed because the petitioners had been
guilty of laches as they had slept over their rights for
five years and had applied to the High Court when no further
notices could be issued under the Act and as no proper
action was taken by the petitioners as regards the various
orders passed. against this judgment of the Allahabad High
Court in Azimunnissa & Ors. v. Assistant Custodian (1) and
against the order of the Appellate Officer, the petitioners
applied for special leave to this court but both these
petitions were dismissed on February 10, 1958.
The petitioners have now come to this court under Art. 32
for a writ of certiorari (1) to quash the order of the
Assistant Custodian, Deoria, dismissing the objections of
the petitioner Khatoon Bibi on March 7, 1951; (2) to quash
the order of the Competent Officer dated March 20, 1956 and
of the Appellate Officer dated October 24, 1957 and (3) for
quashing the sale proceedings ending in the sale of the
property dated March 13, 1956 and (4) for a mandamus
directing the respondents to restore the property to the
petitioners.
97
Three questions were raised on behalf of the petitioners:
(1) that the property was not composite property within the
Separation Act; (2) the shares of Khatoon Bibi and of Bashir
Ahmad and Nasir Ahmad were not validly declared to be
evacuee interest under the various provisions of law and
therefore the provisions of the Separation Act did not apply
; (3) section 10(a)(iii) of the Separation Act in so far as
it directed the sale of non-evacuee property contravenes
arts. 19(1)(f) and 31 of the. Constitution and was
therefore unconstitutional.
The decision of the case mainly depends upon the decision as
to whether the property in dispute was composite property.
Under s. 2(d) of the Separation Act composite property has
been defined:
S. 2(d) " 66 composite property " means any property which
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or any property in which an interest has been declared to be
evacuee property or has vested in the Custodian under the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act 1950 (XXXI of 1950)
and-
(i) in which the interest of the evacuee consists of an
undivided share in the property held by him as a co-sharer
or partner of any other person, not being an evacuee."
S. 2(e) " " evacuee interest " in relation to a composite
property, means the right, title and interest of ail evacuee
in that property."
Therefore if it is established that any interest in the
property has been declared to be evacuee property or has
vested in the Custodian under the Act then the whole will be
composite property. For the determination of the question
whether any portion of the property in dispute was evacuee
property it becomes necessary to refer to the provisions of
the various laws which were passed in regard to evacuee
property. The property in dispute is situate in what was
the United Provinces and the first legislation in that
province as it then was, was the United Provinces
Administration of Evacuee Property Ordinance, 1949 (U. P.
Ordinance No. 1 of 1949), which
98
was promulgated on June 24, 1949. In this Ordinance evacuee
and evacuee property had the definition which has been
continued in the later Ordinances and Acts. By s. 5 of that
Ordinance all evacuee property situate in the United
Provinces automatically vested in the Custodian and any
person in possession of such property was deemed to be
holding on behalf of the Custodian (s. 6(2)). As Khatoon
Bibi was an evacuee under s. 2(c) of the U. P. Ordinance her
property automatically vested in the Custodian under s. 5.
But the validity of this Ordinance was successfully
challenged by the petitioners in the Allahabad High Court in
Azimunissa v. Assistant Custodian (1). The ground for the
challenge was that there was no entry in the lists in the
Seventh Schedule of the Constitution Act, 1935, dealing with
evacuee property and there was no public notification by the
Governor General as required by s. 104 of the Constitution
Act, 1935. This Ordinance, i.e., U. P. Ordinance 1 of 1949
expired on August 23, 1949.
On June 13, 1949, the Governor General promulgated the
Administration of Evacuee Property (Chief Commissioners’
Provinces) Ordinance XII of 1949 and it was extended to U.
P. on August 23, 1949, by Ordinance XX of 1949 after a
resolution was passed by the U. P. Legislature under s. 103
of the Constitution Act. Section 5 of the former provides
for the vesting of property in the Custodian as follows:-
S. 5(1) " Subject to the provisions of this Ordinance all
evacuee property situate in a Province shall vest in the
Custodian for that Province.
(2) Where, immediately before the commencement of this
Ordinance any evacuee property. in a Province had vested in
any person exercising the powers of a Custodian under any
corresponding law in force in that Province immediately
before such commencement, the evacuee property shall, on the
commencement of this Ordinance, be deemed to have vested in
the Custodian appointed for the Province under this
Ordinance ".
Section 8 of Ordinance XX added s. 41 to Ordinance
(1) A. I. R. 1957 All 561.
99
Thus under s. 5 in spite of the expiry of the U. P.
Ordinance the property of Khatoon Bibi was deemed to have
vested in the Custodian under the provisions of Ordinance
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XII of 1949. But this Ordinance (XII of 1949 as amended by
Ordinance XX of 1949) suffered from the same constitutional
defect as the U. P. Ordinance 1 of 1949. On August 25,
1949, item 31-B relating to " evacuees " was added to the
concurrent list by the Government of India Act (Third Amend-
ment) Act of 1949 and thus this constitutional vacuum was
filled up. On October 18, 1949, the Governor General
promulgated the Administration of Evacuee Property Ordinance
(XXVII of 1949). It repealed Ordinance XII of 1949.
Section 7 of this Ordinance provided for declaration of
evacuee property and s. 8 for vesting of evacuee property in
the Custodian. The relevant portions of s. 7 are :-
S.7 "Where the Custodian is of opinion that any property is
evacuee property within the meaning of this Ordinance, he
may, after causing notice thereof to be given in such manner
as may be prescribed to the persons interested, and after
holding such inquiry into the matter as the circumstances of
the case permit, pass an order declaring any such property
to be evacuee property"
S. 8 " Any property declared to be evacuee property under
section 7 shall vest in the Custodian.
(2) Where immediately before the commencement of this
Ordinance any evacuee property in a Province had vested in
any person exercising the powers of a Custodian under any
law repealed hereby, the evacuee property shall, on the
commencement of the Ordinance, be deemed to have vested in
the Custodian appointed or deemed to have been appointed for
the Province under this Ordinance, and shall continue to so
vest ".
These provisions were materially different from that in the
previous Ordinances as there was no automatic vesting in the
Custodian.
Thus any vesting under Ordinance XII of 1949 was deemed to
be under Ordinance XXVII of 1949 as if the latter had been
in force on the date of the vesting. By s.4 of the
Administration of Evacuee
100
Property (Amendment) Ordinance IV of 1950, s. 8 of Ordinance
XXVII of 1949 was substituted by a revised section s. 8. The
relevant portion of this section provided:-
S. 8(2) "Where immediately before the commencement of this
Ordinance, any property in a province bad vested as evacuee
property in any person exercising the powers of a Custodian
under any law repealed hereby, the property shall, on the
commencement of this Ordinance be deemed to be evacuee
property declared as such within the meaning of this
Ordinance and shall be deemed to have vested in the
Custodian appointed or deemed to have been appointed for the
Province under this Ordinance, and shall continue to so
vest.
Provided that where, at the commencement of this Ordinance,
there is pending before the Custodian for any province any
claim preferred to him in respect of any property under
section 8 of the Administration of Evacuee Property
Ordinance, 1949 (XII of 1949), or under any other
corresponding law repealed hereby, then, notwithstanding
anything contained in this Ordinance or in any other law for
the time being in force such claim shall be disposed of as
if the definitions of I evacuee property ’ and I evacuee ’
contained in section 2 of this Ordinance had become
applicable thereto."
Under this provision of the Ordinance the effect as to
vesting was that it was deemed to be under this Ordinance.
On April 18, 1950, the Administration of Evacuee Property
Act, 1950 (XXXI of 1950), which has been referred to as the
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Act was passed by Parliament. It repealed Ordinance XXVII
of 1949. The definitions of evacuee and evacuee property
are the same as in Ordinance XXVII. Section 7 of the Act
and s. 8 also are in the same terms. The provisions
regarding vesting of evacuee property in the Custodian were
also same as in the amended s. 8 of Ordinance XXVII.
Section 58 deals with repeals and savings.
Therefore the consequence of s. 8(2) was that property
vested under Ordinance XXVII was deemed to
101
be vested under the corresponding provision of the Act.
On February 27, 1960, the Act was amended by the
Administration of Evacuee Property (Amendment) Act 1 of
1960. Sub-section (2-A) was added to s. which was in the
following terms:-
(2-A) "Without prejudice to the generality of the provisions
contained in sub-section (2) all property which under any
law repealed hereby purports to have vested as evacuee
property in any person exercising the powers of Custodian in
any State shall, notwithstanding any defect in or the
invalidity of, such law or any judgment, decree, order of
any Court, be deemed for all purposes to have validly vested
in that person, as if the provisions of such law had been
enacted by Parliament and such property, shall, on the
commencement of this Act, be deemed to have been evacuee
property declared as such within the meaning of this Act and
accordingly, any order made or other action taken by the
Custodian or any other authority in relation to such
property shall be deemed to have been validly and lawfully
made or taken ".
The argument raised on behalf of the petitioner was that U.
P. Ordinance 1 of 1949, Central Ordinance XII of 1949 and
Central Ordinance XX of 1949 were invalid as the legislative
competence of the Governor and of the Governor-General in
regard to evacuee and evacuee property matters was wanting ;
and all that sub-s. (2-A) of s. 8 added by Act 1 of 1960 did
was to save any vesting which purported to have taken place
under Ordinance XXVII but it did not purport to cure any
invalidity due to constitutional incompetence and that the
law made without constitutional authority could not be
validated. Reference was made to Saghir Ahmad v. The State
of U. P. (1) where at page 728 the following statement from
Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, Vol , page 384
(note) :-
" A statute void for unconstitutionality is dead and cannot
be vitalised by a subsequent amendment
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707, 728.
102
of the Constitution removing the constitutional objection
but must be reenacted "
was held to be sound law.
Reference was also made to M.P. V. Sundararamier & Co. v.
The State of Andhra Pradesh(1) where a distinction was
drawn between the unconstitutionality due to incompetency of
the Legislature and disregard of constitutional
prohibitions.
The respondents in reply contended that there was no defect
in the notice issued to Khatoon Bibi and her property was
properly and sufficiently described therein and that Act 1
of 1960 validated the vesting and removed all defects and
invalidity, if any, arising as a result of the deficiencies
in the various laws operating on her case.
The first notice to Khatoon Bibi was under Ordinance XXVII
dated November 22, 1949, against which her husband Abdul
Barkat filed objections. but evidently no order was passed
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on it. The second notice which was given on July 5, 1950,
sufficiently specified the property. Against this notice
objections were again raised by Abdul Barkat but were
dismissed by the order dated March 7, 1951, and no further
appeal or revision or any other proceeding was taken against
that order and any defects and deficiencies whether of law
or otherwise cannot now be raised. It was specifically
stated in that order that the property was sufficiently,
though not thoroughly, described and that property was
declared to be evacuee property. The appellants contested
the correctness of the fact that the property was properly
described and referred to the judgment of the Allahabad High
Court in Azimunnissa v. Assistant Custodian(2) (p. 568, para
10) which indicates that there was no description of the
property. In the view that we are taking this controversy
loses its vitality.
The second plea taken by the respondents was that by the
insertion of s. 8(2A) in the Act by Act 1 of 1960
retroactive effect was given to the provisions of the Act
and the vesting of any evacuee property which purported to
have been vested as evacuee property in
(1) [1958] S.C.R. 1422, 1469.
(2) A.I.R. 1957 All. 561.
103
the Custodian was validated notwithstanding any defect in or
invalidity of such law and on the commencement of that Act
(Act 1 of 1960) the property which purported to have vested
in the Custodian was deemed to have been evacuee property
declared as, such within the meaning of the Act and any
order made or action taken by the Custodian must be deemed
to have been validly made or taken.
The word " purport " has many shades of meaning. It means
fictitious, what appears on the face of the instrument; the
apparent and not the legal import and therefore any act
which purports to be done in exercise of a power is to be
deemed to be done within that power notwithstanding that the
power is not exercisable; Dicker v. Angerstein (1).
Purporting is therefore indicative of what appears on the
face of it or, is apparent even though in law it may not be
so. This means that at the time when the Act purported to
vest the property in dispute in the Custodian even though
the power was not exercisable, s. 8(2-A) by giving a
retrospective effect to s. 8(2) of the Act makes the vesting
as if it was vesting under s. 8(2) of the Act and therefore
the attack on the ground of invalidity cannot be sustained.
By s. 5 of U. P. Ordinance 1 of 1949 the property of Khatoon
Bibi who became an evacuee’ under s. 2(c) and her property
’ evacuee property’ under s. 2(d) was vested in the
Custodian of Evacuee Property of the province of U. P. That
Ordinance was allowed to lapse. By Central Ordinance XII of
1949 as subsequently amended the vesting of evacuee property
was deemed to be under that Ordinance, which in its turn was
repealed under s. 55 of Ordinance XXVII of 1949 which was a
valid piece of legislation. By s. 8(2) of that Ordinance
the vesting under the previous Ordinance was deemed to be
under that Ordinance as if it was in force on the date of
the vesting. Ordinance XXVII of 1949 was repealed by the
Act which contained provisions as to vesting in s. 8(2),
which was similarly worded as the corresponding provision of
the Ordinance and therefore by a fiction of law the original
vesting was to be treated as
(1) (1876) 3 Ch. D. 600, 603.
104
if the Act was in force when the first vesting took place.
The High Court of Allahabad in Azimunnissa’s
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case (1) held the vesting to be invalid because upto the
time of Ordinance XII of 1949 and even Ordinance XX of 1949
legislative competence was lacking, and even by the deeming
provisions in s. 8(2) of Ordinance XXVII of 1949 or Act XXXI
of 1950 there was no valid vesting, because the original
vesting was bad. We think it unnecessary to decide as to
whether the deeming provision of s. 8(2) of the Act or of
Ordinance XXVII of 1949 was sufficient to give validity to
the vesting. Section 8(2-A) as introduced into the Act, in
our opinion, makes the vesting valid, because it gives
validity to the vesting which purported to have taken place
as a result of Ordinance XXVII of 1949 even though it was
only apparently so and was not so in law, because that is
what I purport’ implies.
The effect of s. 8(2-A) is that what purported to have
vested under s. 8(2) of Ordinance XXVII of 1949 and which is
to be deemed to be vested under s. 8 of the Act which
repealed that Ordinance, notwithstanding any invalidity in
the original vesting or any decree or order of the Court
shall be deemed to be evacuee property validly vested in the
Custodian and any order made by the Custodian in relation to
the property shall be deemed to be valid. Thus retrospec-
tive effect is given to the Act to validate (1) what
purports to be vested; (2) removes all defects or invalidity
in the vesting or fictional vesting under s. 8(2) of
Ordinance XXVII of 1949 or s. 8(2) of the Act which
repealed the Ordinance; (3) makes the decrees and judgments
to the contrary of any court in regard to the vesting
ineffective; (4) makes the property evacuee property by its
deeming effect; and (5) validates all orders passed by the
Custodian in regard to the property. Because of the
retrospective effect given to the Act and the validating
effect of Act 1 of 1960 Saghir Ahmad’s case (2) would have
no application. In the view we have taken the other
question does not survive and the share of Khatoon Bibi must
be held to be evacuee property validly
(1) A.I.R. 1951 All. 561
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 707.
105
vested in the Custodian. Therefore the property in dispute
does fall within the definition of composite property as
given in s. 2(d) and cannot be held to be invalid.
It was then argued that by the sale of the property non-
evacuees had been illegally deprived of their property and
therefore s. 10, cl. (a) contravenes the provisions of Arts.
31 and 19(1)(f). This contention is equally unsubstantial.
The relevant provision of s. 10 is as follows:--
"Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any law or
contract or any decree or order of a Civil Court or other
authority, the competent officer may, subject to any rules
that may be made in this behalf, take all such measures as
he may consider necessary for the purpose of separating the
interests of the evacuees from those of the claimants in any
composite property, and in particular may,-
(a) in the case of any claim of a co-sharer or partner,-
(i) direct the Custodian to pay to the claimant the amount
of money assessed in respect of his share in the composite
property or deposit the same in a Civil Court having
jurisdiction over such property and deliver possession of
the property to the Custodian and the claimant may withdraw
the amount in deposit in the Civil Court; or
(ii) transfer the property to the claimant on payment by him
of the amount of money assessed in respect of the share of
the evacuee in the property ; or
(iii) sell the property and distribute the sale proceeds
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thereof between the Custodian and the claimant in proportion
to the share of the evacuee and of the claimant in the
property ; or
(iv) partition the property according to shares of the
evacuee and the claimant and deliver possession of the
shares allotted to the evacuee and the claimant to the
Custodian and the claimant respectively."
Thus the alternatives open to the Competent Officer were
four: of these (1) the payment by the Custodian of the money
value of the share of the non-evacuees
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to the non-evacuees; and (2) the payment to the Custodian by
the non-evacuees of the money value of the share of the
evacuees were not available to him. The former in this case
was neither claimed nor could the Custodian be expected to
pay such a large sum of money to the non-evacuees. The
order of the Competent Officer of March 20, 1956, shows that
the nonevacuee co-sharers were not prepared to pay to the
Custodian the money value of the shares of the evacuees. of
the remaining alternatives the third alternative was the
partitioning of the property but that also was not possible
in the present case because of the nature of the composite
property which comprised of a sugar mill which in the very
nature of things could not be partitioned. Consequently the
only available mode of separation was the one adopted by the
Custodian’. i.e., by sale of the property and division of
the sale proceeds. In the circumstances the action of the
Competent Officer could not be termed unreasonable or
violative of Art. 19(1)(f) nor does it violate Art. 31
because it cannot be said to be deprivation of the non-
evacuees of their property without the authority of law.
In the result this petition fails and is dismissed with
costs.
Petition dismissed.