Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
CUSTODIAN OF EVACUEE PROPERTY PUNJAB & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAFRAN BEGUM
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/04/1967
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ)
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1968 AIR 169 1967 SCR (3) 736
CITATOR INFO :
R 1978 SC1217 (2,5,34,35)
R 1980 SC1206 (9,27,28)
F 1983 SC 259 (20)
ACT:
Administration of Evacuee Property Act (31 of 1950), S. 46-
Decision by Custodian that property was evacuee property-
Suit in Civil Court challenging decision-If maintainable.
HEADNOTE:
A person who was in possession of a house in India, migrated
to Pakistan. Notice was issued to his son under s. 7 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, and after
hearing him the Deputy Custodian declared the house to be
evacuee property. The respondent, who was the wife of the
evacuee and on whom the notice under s. 7 of the Act was not
served, started proceedings before the Custodian, claiming
that the owner of the house had executed a will bequeathing
the property to her and so the property could not be
declared evacuee property. When she failed before the
authorities constituted under the Act, she filed a suit in
the civil court basing her case on the will and prayed for a
permanent injunction restraining the authorities under the
Act from evicting her from the house.
On the question whether the suit in the civil court was
maintainable, the High Court held that the question whether
a certain person had or had not become an evacuee was
determinable only by the authorities under the Act, but the
determination of a complicated question of law relating to
title by such authorities, if such a question arose, was not
final and could be reopened in the civil court; that the
suit in the present case did raise such a question and
therefore, the civil court had jurisdiction to entertain it.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : Two questions will arise in every case where the
authority has to declare under s. 7 of the Act whether a
property is evacuee property, namely, (i) whether a
particular person has or has not become an evacuee, and (ii)
whether the property in dispute belongs to him. There is
nothing in the section which shows that the authority under
the Act (being a quasi judicial authority) cannot enter into
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all questions, whether of fact or law, simple or
complicated, in deciding whether certain property belongs to
an evacuee; nor does his jurisdiction depend upon a correct
finding on a collateral fact. The power to decide all these
questions could not be denied on the ground that ’the
authority under s. 7 may not be an experienced judicial
officer, because, his decision is not final and is open to
appeal under s. 24 and to revision under s. 27 by
authorities who are experienced judicial officers. Having
thus provided a complete machinery for adjudication of all
claims with respect to evacuee property, under ss. 7, 24 and
27, the Act, by s. 28, gives finality to the order of the
authorities mentioned therein and lays down that such orders
shall not be called in question in any court by way of
appeal or revision or in any original suit, application or
execution proceeding. The Legislature has gone further and
expressly barred the jurisdiction of the civil and revenue
courts under s. 46 to entertain or adjudicate upon any
question whether any property or any right to or interest in
any property is or is not evacuee property. Further, s.
4(1) of the Act provides that
737
the Act overrides other laws and would thus override s. 9 of
the Civil Procedure Code. In these circumstances, s. 46 is
a complete bar to the jurisdiction of the Civil Court to
entertain the suit or adjudicate upon the question whether
the property in dispute or right to or interest therein is
or is not evacuee property. But ss. 28 and 46 cannot bar
the jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 for, that
is a power conferred by the Constitution. [740 G-E; 742 A,
E, F-G; 743 A-B, D-G, 744 A, B-F]
S. M. Zaki v. The State of Bihar, A.I.R. 1953 Pat. 112 and
Khalil’ Ahmad Khan v. Malka Meher Nigar Begum, A.I.R. All.
362, approved.
Observation at page 934 in Namazi v. Deputy Custodian
Evacuee Property, A.I.R. 1951 Mad. 930, disapproved.
[The question whether the civil courts have jurisdiction to
examine into cases where the provisions of the Act have not
been complied with or the statutory tribunal has not acted
in conformity with the fundamental principles of judicial
procedure, not decided.] [745 D-E]
Abdul Majid Haji Mohmed v. P. R. Nayak, A.I.R. 1950 Bom.
440,. referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 772 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
May 28, 1962 of the Punjab High Court in Regular Second
Appeal No. 1819 of 1959.
K. S. Chawla and R. N. Sachthey, for the appellants.
The respondent did not appear.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Wanchoo, C.J. In this appeal by special leave the only ques-
tion that arises is the interpretation of S. 46 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, No. 31 of 1950,
(hereinafter referred to as the Act). Brief facts necessary
in that connection axe these. The house in dispute is
situate in Malerkotla and belonged to one Muradbux who died
Sometime in 1922. In 1947, the house was in possession of
Muradbux’s son, Mohd. Rafiq and Muradbux’s widow, Jafran
Begum. Sometime after partition. Mohd. Rafiq migrated to
Pakistan. Thereafter notice was issued under S. 7 of the
Act to Dildar son of Mohd. Rafiq to show cause why the
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house be not declared as evacuee property. No notice was
however issued to respondent Jafran Begum. It seems that
Dildar appeared before the Deputy Custodian and admitted
that his father had migrated to Pakistan. So on June 7,
1952, the house was declared to be evacuee property. No
appeal was taken against this order which thus became final.
However, on March 2 1954, the respondent filed an
application before the Custodian claiming that by virtue of
a will made in her favour by Muradbux in 1918 he had
bequeathed the house to her and therefore she was the owner
of the entire property. On July 3, 1954, the Custodian
738
held that under Mohammedan law a person could not will away
more than one-third of his property and as it had not been
proved that the house willed away by Muradbux was one-third
of his entire property or less, the will could not be acted
upon. In consequence the application was dismissed. It
seems that thereafter the respondent made some
representations to the then Government of PEPSU but it is
not known what happened thereto. On September 10, 1956, the
respondent applied for review of the order of the Custodian
dated July 3, 1954. That review application was dismissed
on April 5, 1957 mainly on the ground that it was belated.
The respondent then went in revision to the Deputy Custodian
General but her revision was dismissed on September 27,
1957. Thereafter on December 3, 1958, the Deputy Custodian
General suo motu reviewed the order of September 27, 1957
holding that the respondent as the widow was entitled to
one-eighth share under Mohammedan law. He therefore held
that only seven-eighths share of the house became evacuee
property and one-eighth share of the respondent was not
evacuee property.
In the meantime, the suit out of which the present appeal
has arisen was filed by the respondent on March 3, 1958.
She based her case on the will of Muradbux already referred
to and prayed for a permanent injunction against the
Custodian Evacuee Property Punjab and others barring them
from evicting her from the house in dispute. The suit was
dismissed on December 31, 1958 by the trial court holding
that the civil court had no jurisdiction to decide the
matter in the face of S. 46 of the Act. The trial court
decided the other issues also but we are not concerned with
them as in the present appeal only the question of jurisdic-
tion of civil courts to entertain the suit has been raised.
The respondent then went in appeal to the Additional
District Judge. The Additional District Judge held relying
on certain decisions of the Punjab High Court that civil
courts had no jurisdiction to entertain a suit of this
nature and therefore dismissed the appeal. He also decided
other points but we are not concerned with them.
The respondent then went in second appeal to the High Court.
The learned Single Judge who first heard the appeal referred
it for decision to a larger Bench. The matter then went
before a Division Bench which noticed that there was some
conflict between certain decisions of the Punjab High Court
and therefore referred the matter to a larger Bench. In
consequence a Bench ,of three Judges was constituted to
decide whether civil courts had jurisdiction in such a case.
The learned Judges were of the view that when a question
arose whether any property was or was not ,evacuee property,
two matters had to be decided namely-(i) whether the
particular person had or had not become evacuee and
73 9
(ii)whether the property in dispute belonged to him. On the
first question they were of the view that the matter could
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only be determined by the Custodian and civil courts had
nothing to do with it. On the second. question they were of
the view that it might involve a simple question of fact or
a complicated question of law i.e. a question of title.
They finally decided that the question whether certain
person was or was not evacuee was determinable by the
Custodian, but the determination of the Custodian on a
question of title if such question arose was not final and
the question of title could be reopened in the- civil court
and was to be finally determined by such court. The limited
the above decision by observing that a mere assertion of
claim to any property did not raise a question of title for
such assertion might rest on a simple allegation of fact
which could be finally determined by the Custodian and that
the question whether in a particular case a question of
title did or did not properly arise had to be decided on the
facts of each case and no general rule about it could be
usefully laid down. On this view of the law they held that
in the particular case before them a complicated question of
law arose and therefore the suit was competent and the civil
courts had jurisdiction to entertain it. Thereupon the
appellant obtained special leave from this Court and that is
how the matter has come before us.
There have been a large number of cases in the Punjab High
Court on this question. We do not however propose to go
into them in detail, for it appears to us that the view
taken in some of them conflicts with the view taken in
others. That is the reason why a Bench of three Judges was
constituted to go into the matter and we have already set
out their decision.’ These cases are : F. Sahib Dayal v.
Assistant Custodian of Evacuee Property(2); Firm Pariteshah
Sadashiv v. Assistant Custodian Evacuee Property (2); Duni
Chand v. Ibrahim (s); Kailash Chand v. A ddl. Custodian
General (4) ; Narendra Kumar v. Custodian General(5);
Custodian General v. Harnam Singh (6) ; Ram Gopal v. Banta
Singh(7); Parkash Chand v. Custodian Evacuee Property(8);
Gurparshad v. Asst. Custodian General(9); and Custodian
General in the High Court. A distinction must be made
between jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution and jurisdiction of civil courts about
entertaining civil suits in matters, of, this kind.
Whatever may be the interpretation of s. 46 to which we
shall, address ourselves presently, the jurisdiction. of
the, High Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution is not
and cannot be
(1) (1952) 54 Punj. L.R. 318.
(3) (1954) 56 Punj. L.R. 257.
(5) A.I.R. 1956 Punj. 163.
(7) (1958) 60 Punj L.R. 307.
(9) (1959) 61 Punj. L.R. 137.
(2) (1952) 54 Punj. L. R. 468.
(4) (1955) 57 Punj. L.R. 440.
(6) A.I.R. 1957 Punj. 58.
(8) (1958) 60 Punj. L.R. 592.
(In) (1959) 61 Punj. L.R. 915.
740
affected thereby. Other cases arose out of suits and two
views seem to have prevailed in the High Court, one holding
that suits of this nature were barred while the other view
was that where a question of title arose, jurisdiction of
civil courts was not barred under S. 46 of the Act.
It is necessary to consider the scheme of the Act before we
actually decide the question posed before us. As is well
known the Act had to be passed in order to deal with the
enormous problem which arose on the division of the Punjab
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and large scale migration that took place from one side of
the Punjab as it was before 1947 to the other side. Large
numbers of Muslims migrated to that part of the Punjab which
is now in Pakistan leaving their properties in that part of
the Punjab which is now in India. It was to deal with this
problem that the Act was passed, though we may add that
there were earlier laws dealing with the same matter, which
were all repealed by the Act, wherever it was extended. The
Act defines "an evacuee" and also "evacuee property".
"Evacuee property" is defined as meaning any property of an
evacuee whether held by him as owner or as a trustee or as a
beneficiary or as a tenant or in any other capacity. The
definition also includes certain properties and excludes
certain other properties, but we are not concerned with
that. Section 4 of the Act which is important provides that
"the provisions of this Act and of the rules and orders made
thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for the
time being in force or in any instrument having effect by
virtue of any such law". Sections 5 and 6 provide for
appointment of Custodian-General, Deputy Custodian General,
and Assistant Custodian-General, Custodian, Additional
Custodian, Deputy Custodian and Assistant Custodian whose
duty it is to administer the Act. Se ion 7 empowers the
Custodian to give notice, where he is of opinion that
certain property is evacuee property, to the person
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. It is
clear in view of the definition of "evacuee property" to
which we have already referred, that two questions will
arise in every case where the Custodian has to declare
whether a property is evacuee property. These two questions
are : (i) whether a particular person has or has not become
an evacuee, and (ii) whether the property in dispute belongs
to him. Both these questions have to be decided under s. 7
of the Act by the Custodian. Under S. 8 any property
declared to be evacuee property under s. 7 vests in the
Custodian from certain dates with which we are not concern-
ed. Section 9 gives power to the Custodian to take
possession of evacuee property vested in him. Section 10
provides for powers and duties of the Custodian generally.
Then follow certain sec-
741
tions which give special powers to the Custodian with
respect to the management of the property to which it is
unnecessary to refer. Section 16 provides for restoration
of evacuee property by the Central Government. Section 24
inter alia gives a right to a person aggrieved by an order
made under S. 7 by the Custodian to appeal. Section 27
gives power of revision to the Custodian-General either on
his own motion or on application made to him to call for the
record of, any proceeding in order, to satisfy himself as to
the legality or propriety of any order passed therein and to
pass such order in relation thereto as he thinks fit. Sec-
tion 28 which is also important reads thus :
"Save as otherwise expressly provided in this
Chapter every order made by the Custodian-
General, Custodian, Additional Custodian,
Authorised Deputy Custodian, Deputy Custodian
or Assistant Custodian shall be final and
shall not be called in question in any court
by way of appeal or revision or in any
original suit, application or execution
proceeding."
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Section 28 thus clearly bars the jurisdiction of any court
to entertain an original suit with respect to an order
passed by the authorities mentioned therein.
Section 46 with which we are particularly concerned is in
these terms :
"Save as otherwise expressly provided in this
Act, no civil or revenue court shall have
jurisdiction-
(a) to entertain or adjudicate upon any
question whether any property or any right to
or interest in any property is or is not
evacuee property; or
(c) to question the legality of any action
taken by the Custodian-General or the
Custodian under this Act; or
(d) in respect of any matter which the
Custodian General or the Custodian is
empowered by or under this Act to determined
A bare reading of s. 46 shows how widely it is worded and
how, clearly it bars the jurisdiction of civil and revenue
courts in matters specified ’therein. A perusal of these
provisions in our opinion shows that the Act is a complete
code in itself in the matter of dealing with evacuee
property. As observed by this Court in Ram Gopal Reddy v.
Additional Custodian(1), "the Act thus provides a complete
machinery for a person interested in any property to put
forward his claims before the authorities competent to deal
with the question and to go in appeal and
(1) [1966] 3 S.C.R. 214.
742
in revision if the person interested feels aggrieved.
Having provided this complete machinery for adjudication of
all claims with respect to evacuee property, the Act, by S.
46, bars the jurisdiction of civil or revenue courts to
entertain or adjudicate upon any question whether any
property or any night to or interest in any property is or
is not evacuee property". It is true that the Act is
concerned with the administration of evacuee property and a
large number of its provisions deal with actual ad-
ministration of such property. But before the authorities
under the Act take on the duties of administration of
evacuee property some one has to determine what properties
are evacuee properties of which the authorities provided
under the Act can take over administration. The Act itself
provides a machinery for determining what properties are
evacuee properties. Section 7 is that provision which gives
power to the Custodian to determine what properties are
evacuee properties. The Custodian determines that after
notice to persons interested and after such enquiry as the
circumstances of the case permit. It is thereafter that the
Custodian declares certain property-to be evacuee property
and on such declaration the property vests in the Custodian
under s. 8. Then we have the provision of appeal under s. 24
and revision under S. 27 of the Act so that any person
aggrieved by the order of the Custodian has two forums open
to him to ventilate his grievance. Clearly the Custodian
under S. 7 acts as a quasijudicial authority and so does the
authority hearing appeals under s. 24 and the
Custodian-General hearing revisions under S. 27. Thus all
persons interested get a hearing under S. 7 and all persons
aggrieved have a right of appeal under s. 24 and can go in
revision under s. 27. That is why s. 28 provides that every
order made by the authorities indicated therein shall be
final and shall not to be called in question in any court by
way of appeal, revision or in any original suit, application
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or execution proceeding. The legislature was not however
satisfied merely by giving finality to the orders of the
authorities mentioned in S. 28; it went on to bar
specifically the jurisdiction of civil and revenue courts in
three matters indicated in s. 46. Under cl. (a) of S. 46,
jurisdiction of civil and revenue courts is expressly barred
and they are forbidden to entertain or adjudicate upon any
question whether any property or any right to or interest in
any property is or is not evacuee property.
Under s. 7 the Custodian has to determine whether certain
property is or is not evacuee property. To determine that
he is to find out whether a particular person is or is not
an evacuee. Having found that, he is to find whether the
property in dispute belongs to that person. If he comes to
the conclusion that the property belongs to that person, he
declares the property to be evacuee property. Now there is
nothing in S. 7 which shows that
74 3
the Custodian cannot enter into all questions whether of
fact or of law in deciding whether certain property belongs
to an evacuee. There is no reason to hold that under S. 7
the Custodian cannot decide what are called complicated
questions of law or questions of title. It is difficult to
see how the Custodian can avoid deciding a question of title
if it is raised before him in proceedings under s. 7. Nor do
we find it possible to make a distinction between questions
of fact and questions of law that may arise before the
Custodian under s. 7. If he has the power to decide ques-
tions of fact, which the learned Judges in the order under
appeal seem to concede, we do not see why he should not have
the power of deciding questions of law also. Further if the
learned Judges in ’the order under appeal are correct in.
saying that if a question of title rests on a simple
allegation of fact it can be finally determined by the
Custodian, we cannot see on what reasoning, it can be said
that where a question of title, depends on a question of law
it cannot be finally decided under s. 7 by the Custodian.
His power under s. 7 is to decide whether certain property
is evacuee property or not and there is nothing in s. 7
which restricts that power to deciding only questions of
fact. There can in our opinion be no escape from the
conclusion that under s. 7 when deciding whether certain
property is evacuee property or not, the Custodian has to
decide all questions, whether of fact or law, whether simple
or complicated, which arise therein. That power cannot be
denied on the ground that the Custodian, which term for
these purposes includes the Deputy Custodian or the
Assistant Custodian may not be an experienced judicial
officer and therefore may not be in a position to decide-
questions of title. His decision is not final and is open
to appeal under s. 24 and to revision under s. 27. If he
makes a mistake the two higher authorities who, we are told,
have always been recruited from experienced judicial
officers can correct him. It is after the matter has been
decided under s. 7 and s. 24 if an appeal is filed and under
s. 27 if a revision is filed, that s. 28 gives finality to
orders of the authorities mentioned therein and lays down
that such orders shall not be called in question in any
court by way of appeal or revision or in any original suit,
application or execution proceeding. As we have already
said, the legislature was not satisfied by merely conferring
finality on such orders; it went further and expressly
barred the jurisdiction of civil and revenue courts under s.
46 to entertain or adjudicate upon any question whether any
property or any right to or interest in any property is or
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is not evacuee property. These words are very wide and
clear and bar the courts from entertaining or-adjudicating
upon any such question. Where therefore the question
whether certain properties are evacuee properties has been
decided under s. 7, etc., whether that decision is based on
issues of fact or issues of law, the jurisdiction
L9 Sup. Cl/67-4
744
tion of courts is clearly barred under S. 46 (a). It is
difficult to see how a distinction can be drawn between
decisions under s. 7 based on questions of fact and decis
ions based on questions of law. The decision is made
final whether based on issues of law or of fact by s. 28 and
s. 46 bars the jurisdiction of civil and revenue courts in
matters which are decided under s. 7 whatever may be the
basis of decision, whether issues of fact or of law and
whether simple or complicated.
It may be added that the only question to be decided under
s. 7 is whether the property is evacuee property or not and
the jurisdiction of the Custodian to decide this question
does not depend upon any finding on a collateral fact.
Therefore there is no scope for the application of that line
of cases where it has been held that where the jurisdiction
of a tribunal of limited jurisdiction depends upon first
finding certain state of facts, it cannot give itself
jurisdiction on a wrong finding of that state of fact. Here
under s. 7 the Custodian has to decide whether certain
property is or is not evacuee property and his jurisdiction
does not depend upon any collateral fact being decided as a
condition precedent to his assuming jurisdiction. In these
circumstances, s. 46 is a complete bar to the jurisdiction
of civil or revenue courts in any matter which can be
decided under s. 7. This conclusion is reinforced by the
provision contained in S. 4 (1) of the Act which provides
that the Act overrides other laws and would thus override s.
9 of the Code of Civil Procedure on a combined reading of
ss. 4. 28 and 46. But as we have said already, s. 46 or S.
28 cannot bar the jurisdiction of the High Court under Art.
226 of the Constitution, for that is a power conferred on
the High Court under the Constitution.
It now remains to refer to certain cases of other courts in
this connection. In M. S. Namazi v. Deputy Custodian of E.
P.(1), the Madras High Court was mainly considering the
constitutional validity of the Act. At p. 934, however,
Rajmannar C. J. made the following observations
"There is however one thing about which I am
not quite clear. The Ordinance no doubt
declares the order of the Custodian. declaring
any property to be evacuee property as final.
That might be so in one sense, i.e., if any
property belongs to a person who has been
declared to be an evacuee within the meaning
of the definition in the Ordinance, then the
Custodian’s order would be final. But, does
the finality amount to an I adjudication on
title in case there is any dispute? Take for
instance the case where a property is declared
to be evacuee property on the assumption that
it be.longs to A who is an evacuee. Does it
mean that some
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Mad. 930.
7 4 5
one else cannot say that the property really.
does not belong to the evacuee but, belongs to
himself who is not an evacuee? I am inclined
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to hold that the order. of the Custodian or
the notification under s. 7 of the Ordinance
is not final, in case of disputed title."
These observations themselves show that the learned Chief
Justice was not finally deciding the matter for the question
did not directly arise before him. He does not seem to have
considered the matter in the light of S. 4 and s. 46 of the
Act. In any case in view of what we have said above these
observations cannot be accepted as laying down correct law.
In Abdul Majid Haji Mohmed v. P. R. Nayak,(1) the main
question for consideration was again the constitutional
validity of the Act. That was a case which arose on a writ
petition. As we have already said, S. 46 cannot bar the
jurisdiction of the High Court under Art. 226. But during
the course of the judgment, Chagla C. J. referred to the
decision of the Privy Council in The Secretary of State v.
Mask & Co.(2) and observed that it was well settled that
"even if jurisdiction of courts is excluded, civil courts
have jurisdiction to examine into cases where the provisions
of the Act have not been complied with or the statutory
tribunal has not acted in conformity with the fundamental
principles of judicial procedure". We do not think it
necessary to go into that question in the present appeal,
for no such facts have been alleged in the present suit
which would bring it within the ratio of the decision in
Mask & Co.’s case(1). Normally jurisdiction of civil courts
to entertain or adjudicate upon such question relating to
evacuee property would be barred under s. 46; the question
whether in some extreme circumstances civil courts may have
jurisdiction inspite of S. 46 need not be decided just now.
However we may add that in Firm of Illuri Subbayya Chetty v.
State of Andhra Pradesh(3) this Court observed at p. 763
that the observations in Mask & Co.’s case(2) were in some
respects too widely stated.
The next case to which reference may be made is S. M. Zaki
v. The State of Bihar(4). There the question was whether the
property was evacuee and the court held that the Act had
provided adequate remedies and that s. 46 must be construed
to mean that the jurisdiction of a civil or revenue court
was ousted even if the Custodian had wrongly decided that
any property was an evacuee property. The distinction
between those cases where a collateral fact is to be decided
before a tribunal of limited jurisdiction assumes
jurisdiction and those cases where the tribunal has to
decide the whole matter itself was refered to and
(1) A.I.R. 1951 Bom. 440.
(3) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 752.
(2) A.I.R. 194) P.C. 105.
(4) A.I.R. 1953 Pat. 112.
746
Ramaswami J. (as he then was) rightly held that under S. 7
the whole matter has to be decided by the Custodian and
there was no question of the decision of any collateral fact
as a condition precedent to assumption of jurisdiction by
the Custodian.
The last case to which reference may be made is Khalil
Ahamad Khan v. Malka Mehar Nigar Begum(1). The question
there was somewhat different, namely, whether S. 46 bars the
jurisdiction of the civil court in a pending matter. The
majority of the Judges in that case observed that in a case
where a matter had been adjudicated upon in accordance with
the provisions of the Act it might not be possible for
courts to interfere by reason of the provisions of s. 46 of
the Act. This case therefore to some extent is in line with
the view we have taken.
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On a careful consideration therefore of the authorities
cited before us, we are of opinion that generally speaking
the jurisdiction of the civil or revenue court is barred
under s. 46 and no such court can entertain any suit or
adjudicate upon any question whether a particular property
or right to or interest therein is or is not evacuee
property. We therefore allow the appeal and hold that in
the view we have taken the suit was not maintainable in the
civil court. The matter will now go back to the Single
Judge of the High Court to pass order in conformity with the
view we have expressed. As- the respondent has not appeared
in this Court we pass no order as to costs.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
(1) A.I.R. 1964 All. 362,
747