Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAHIBZADA SAIYED MUHAMMEDAMIRABBAS ABBASSI & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF MADHYA BHARAT& OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
26/02/1960
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SARKAR, A.K.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 768 1960 SCR (3) 138
CITATOR INFO :
APL 1962 SC1616 (4,6)
RF 1981 SC2189 (21)
ACT:
Personal Law-Right to Guardianship-If can be enforced by way
of constitutional remedy-Constitution of India, Art. 32.
HEADNOTE:
The first petitioner, who had migrated to West Pakistan,
applied to the High Court of Madhya Bharat for a writ of
abeas corpus for directions to produce petitioners 2 and 3,
his minor children, before the Court on the allegation that
they were wrongfully confined and, upon the dismissal of the
said application, applied to the District Judge of Ratlam
under the Guardian and Wards Act for his appointment as
guardian of the person and property of the said minors. The
District judge rejected he application and appointed the
second respondent as such Guardian. The first petitioner
appealed to the High Court against the said order of the
District judge but that appeal was Dismissed. He applied
for special leave to appeal to this Court but that
application was also rejected. Thereafter the first
Petitioner, as natural guardian of petitioners 2 and 3,
filed the present petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution. His casee in substance was that the interest
of the second respondent was adverse to that of the minors,
that he had misappropriated their property and that the
first respondent, the State of Madhya Bharat, was bound to
take steps to protect the property of the minors which it
had failed to do and had thus rendered itself liable to make
good the loss sustained by the minors in consequence.
Held, that the petition was wholly misconceived, and must be
dismissed.
The Court can exercise jurisdiction under Art. 32 of the
Constitution only in enforcement of the fundamental rights
guaranteed by Part III of the Constitution. Where on
account of the decision of a court of competent
jurisdiction, the right alleged by the petitioner does not
exist and therefore its infringement cannot arise, this
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Court cannot entertain a petition under that Article for
protection of the alleged right.
A claim as to denial of equality before the law or the equal
protection of the laws can be made against executive action
or against legislative process but not against the decision
of a court of competent jurisdiction.
Nor can an order of this Court rejecting an application for
special leave under Art. 136 of the Constitution be
circumvented by an application for a writ under Art. 32.
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JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 217 of 1956.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for
enforcement of Fundamental rights.
Pandit Nanak Chand, for the petitioners.
I. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 1.
1960 February, 26. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
SHAH, J.-This -is a petition filed by Sahibzada Saiyed
Muhammed Amirabbas Abbasi, who will hereinafter be referred
to as the first petitioner on behalf of himself and as the
natural guardian of his two minor children, Kamal Abbas and
Jehanzeb Bano, petitioners Nos. 2 and 3 against the State of
Madhya Bharat (now the State of Madhya Pradesh) and three
other respondents for an appropriate writ or writs of Habeas
Corpus, Mandamus, Certiorari, Prohibition and any other
writ, direction or order directing the State of Madhya
Bharat immediately to assume charge of the properties of the
minor petitioners 2 and 3 and determining the amount of loss
sustained by the minors and calling upon the State of Madhya
Bharat and the other respondents to compensate the minors
for the full value of the property lost due to their
negligence in the discharge of their respective duties in
failing to protect the minors’ properties, and calling upon
the 4th respondent to produce the minors before this court
and directing that the minors be handed over to the custody
of some relation who is competent under the Personal Law to
have their custody, and calling upon the Chief Secretary of
the State of Madhya Bharat to furnish full particulars of
the trust property released in favour of the 2nd respondent
and directing the 1st respondent to produce in this court
the box of jewellery entrusted to it with full particulars
regarding its custody from March 29, 1948, and ascertaining
whether the contents have ’been misappropriated and further
ascertaining the loss, if any, occasioned to the minor
petitioners and its quantum and declaring liability of the
respondents in that behalf and for further relief which the
court may award in the circumstances of the case, as just
and proper.
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Prima facie, the reliefs claimed ate not within the scope of
a petition for a writ under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
This court has power under that Article to issue directions,
orders or writs, including writs in the nature of habeas
corpus, mandamus, prohibition, quo warranto and certiorari
whichever may be appropriate for the enforcement of any of
the fundamental rights; but by this petition, the first
petitioner claims on the plea that the respodents have
misappropriated or misapplied the property of petitioners 2
and 3, a writ or writs directing that loss sustained by the
minors be ascertained and made good and also asks this court
to provide for the custody of the minors according to their
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Personal Law.
The facts which give rise to the petition are these:
The first petitioner married in 1940 one Naiyar Jahan Begam
and by her he had two children petitioners 2 and 3. Naiyar
Jahan Begam died in the year 1943 and petitioners 2 and 3
were thereafter looked after by Musharraf Jahan Begam,
mother of Naiyar Jahan Begam. From her father Naiyar Jahan
Begam had inherited certain valuable property and from her
mother, Musharraf Jahan Begam, she had received a dowry of
substantial value at the time of her marriage. Before she
died on March 6, 1949, Musharraf Jehan Begam had made a
trust in respect of certain property of the benefit of
petitioners 2 and 3. The first petitioner had after the
death of Naiyar Jehan Begam contracted a second marriage and
of that marriage there were three children. During the life
of Musharraf Jehan Begam the first petitioner took no
interest in petitioners 2 and 3 and at sometime in the year
1948, he migrated to West Pakistan and took up residence in
Rawalpindi. After the death of Musharraf Jehan Begam, the
first petitioner applied to the Madhya Bharat High Court for
a writ in the nature of habeas corpus for a direction to
produce petitioners 2 and 3 before the court on the
allegation that the latter were wrong fully detained The
High Court refused to give the direction and ordered that
the first petitioner -might, if so advised, apply under the
Guardian and Wards Act for appropriate relief. The first
petitioner then applied to the
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court of the District Judge at Ratlam for an order that he
be appointed a guardian of the person and property of
petitioners 2 and 3. On November 23, 1949, the second
respondent, Sultan Hamid Khan, cousin of Musharraf Jehan
Begam applied that he be appointed guardian of the person
and property of petitioners 2 and 3 and by order dated
December 5, 1949, the District Court appointed him guardian
and rejected the application filed by the first petitioner.
Against the order passed by the District Court, Ratlam,
Appeal No. 20 of 1950 was filed in the High Court of Madhya
Bharat. This appeal was dismissed on March 29, 1954. An
application for special leave to appeal to this court under
Act. 136 against that order of the High Court was rejected
on November 12, 1956.
The first petitioner had, in the meantime, applied to this
court under Art. 32 of the Constitution for the reliefs
which have already been set out. To this petition,
petitioners 2 and 3 were impleaded as party petitioners, the
first petitioner alleging that he was their natural guardian
and next friend. Evidently, the first petitioner could not
claim to be the next friend of the minor petitioners 2 and
3, a guardian of their person and property having been
appointed by the District Court, Ratlam, unless this court
for reasons to be recorded deemed it to be for the welfare
of the minors that the first petitioner be permitted to act
or be appointed as the case may be (vide 0. 32, r. 4 of the
Code of Civil Procedure). The first petitioner did not
obtain any order of this court permitting him to act as the
next friend of petitioners 2 and 3 notwithstanding the order
passed by the District Court appointing respondent No. 2 as
their guardian.
The petition filed by the first petitioner is a somewhat
prolix document. The first petitioner claimed that the
interest of the second respondent who was appointed a
guardian by the District Court was adverse to the interests
of the minors, and that the latter was, in any event, unfit
to be appointed a guardian of the minors, that the second
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respondent had misappropriated the property of the minors
and that he was not looking after the minors and was
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acting contrary to their interest and that proceedings in
the District Court were - vitiated on account of partiality
and collusion’ and by reason of deliberate violation of the
order passed by the High Court. The petitioner also claimed
that the State of Madhya Bharat was bound to take steps to
protect the entire property of the minor petitioners 2 and
3, but the first respondent had neglected to do so and had
thereby rendered itself liable to make good the loss.
On these allegations, the first petitioner submitted that
the minor petitioners were deprived of the equal protection
of the laws in force including the Personal Law and were
accordingly discriminated against and their property was, by
reason of such discrimination in serious danger of being
wasted or mis-appropriated. He also submitted that he could
not be denied his rights under the Personal Law governing
the minors as their natural guardian, merely because he had
acquired a foreign domicile.
Exercising jurisdiction under Art. 32 of the Constitution,
this court may grant relief for enforcement, only of the
rights conferred by Part III of the Constitution. The
alleged right of the first petitioner to guardianship of his
minor children under the Personal Law is not one of the
fundamental rights guaranteed to him by the Constitution;
’nor by appointing respondent No. 2 as the guardian of the
minors under the Guardian and Wards Act is discrimination
practised against the minors. The second respondent was
appointed guardian of the minors by order of a competent
court. and denial of equality before the law or the equal
protection of the laws can be claimed against executive
action or legislative process but not against the decision
of a competent tribunal. The remedy of a person aggrieved
by the decision of a competent judicial tribunal is to
approach for redress a superior tribunal if there be one.
In the present case, against the order of the District Court
appointing the second respondent the guardian of the person
and property of the minors, an appeal was preferred to the
High Court and that appeal was dismissed. Even an
application for special leave to appeal to this court was
rejected, and the order of the District Court
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became final. If, since the date on which the order
appointing the guardian of the minors, events have
transpired which necessitate a modification of that order,
the proper remedy of the first petitioner is to apply to the
District Court for relief in that behalf and not to approach
this court for a writ under Art. 32 of the Constitution.
This court has rejected the application for special leave to
appeal under Art. 136; and that order cannot be circumvented
by resorting to an application for a writ under Art. 32.
Relief under Art. 32 for enforcement of a right conferred by
ch. III can be granted only on proof of that right and in-
fringement thereof, and if, by the adjudication by a court
of competent jurisdiction the right claimed has been
negatived, a petition to this court under Art. 32 of the
Constitution for enforcement of that right, notwithstanding
the adjudication of the civil court, cannot be entertained.
The relief claimed by the first petitioner for assessing the
liability of the respondents on the plea that they have
either misappropriated the estate or by negligence caused
loss to the estate of the minors, may be obtained in a
properly constituted suit and not in a petition under Art.
32 of the Constitution. The property to which the minors
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are or may be entitled may be ascertained in a proceeding
under the Guardian and Wards Act or in a suit in the civil
court and not in a petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution.
In our judgment, the petition is wholly misconceived and
must be dismissed with costs payable by the first petitioner
personally.
Petition dismissed.
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