Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF U.P.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SAYED ABDUL JALIL
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/02/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 1290 1972 SCR (3) 342
ACT:
Mahommedan law-order of Muslim ruler of Princely State
allotting house-If would amount to a gift of the corpus-
Whether operates as a grant of life estate or a revocable
licences Evidence Act (1 of 1872), s. 92 proviso (6)-
Admissibility of other evidence.
HEADNOTE:
Pursuant to an order by a Muslim ruler of an erstwhile
princely-State, the respondent was allotted a house and he
was living in it. After the merger of the princely-State
with the appellant-State, rent was demanded from the
respondent and he filed a suit for a declaration that be was
the owner in possession of the house; and in the
alternative, that he was a licensee entitled to remain in
possession for life without payment of any rent.
The High Court, in second appeal, held that the use of the
Urdu words ’inteqal’ and ’atta’ showed that the Ruler
intended the order to be a valid declaration of gift under
Mohammedan Law and that when the respondent took possession
of the house, he became its owner. The High Court also held
that no other evidence was admissible for deciding on the
Ruler’s intention.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) There being no mention in the order either of
rights of ownership or those of a life-estate holder, the
mere use of the two words, did not determine what was meant
to be granted. The word ’inteqal’ is used in connection
with a transfer of property, but in the context of its use
here, it could only indicate that the respondent was to have
change or transfer his residence in the physical sense. The
word ’atta’ is used to denote all kinds of grants including
a mere permission to live in a house. Therefore, assuming
that the order reduced the terms of a grant to writing, oral
and other evidence was both necessary and admissible under
s. 92, proviso (6), Evidence Act, to resolve the latent
ambiguity. The evidence adduced in the case, however, is
more consistent with the view that the Ruler meant to
resolve the immediate financial difficulty of the respondent
by giving him free residential accommodation than with a
conferment of the ownership of or a life interest in the
house. [346 B-H]
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(2) There was no declaration of any gift either of the
corpus or the usufruct and the admissible evidence relating
to the nature of the transaction, which the High Court
should have considered, showed, that the transaction
amounted to nothing more than a grant of a licence
revocable at the grantor’s option. From the mere
expenditure by the respondent of money over some necessary
repairs, an inference of a larger grant cannot be drawn.
[347 C.-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 279 of 1967.
343
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
September 15, 1966 of the Allahabad High Court in Second
Appeal No. 222 of 1960.
G. N. Dikshit and O. P. Rana, for the appellants.
E. C. Agrawala, for respondents Nos. 1, 2, 4 and 5.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Beg, J. There are two appeals by Special Leave before us,
Leave, against the Judgment and decree of a learned Judge of
the Allahabad High Court allowing a plaintiff’s second
appeal
The plaintiff’s case was that the Government of Rampur had
given him a house "under the orders of His Highness the
Nawab of Ramur, passed on 23rd June, 1945". It appears
that, after the merger of Rampur State in Uttar Pradesh in
1949, when Rampur became a district of Uttar Pradesh, this
house was given by the Government of Uttar Pradesh to the
Municipal Board of Rampur, Defendant-Appellant, which
demanded rent from the plaintiff by notice. On the
plaintiff’s refusal to pay, the house was attached on 23rd
February, 1955. The plaintiff deposited a sum of Rs. 100-
under protest. He then filed his suit, on 26-10-56, for a
declaration that he is the owner in possession of the house,
and, in the alternative, that he is a "licensee" entitled to
remain in possession of the house for life without payment
of rent
The defendants, the State of Uttar Pradesh, the Municipal
Board of Rampur, and the Public Work.$ Department at Rampur,
denied the alleged gift of either the ownership or of a
life-interest in the house to the plaintiff. They also
pleaded that there was no relationship of landlord and
tenant between the plaintiff and the defendants. Their case
was that, if any permission to reside in the house was
given to the plaintiff by the ruler of the State of Rampur
before the merger of Rampur with Uttar Pradesh, it was valid
and effective only so long as the plaintiff was in the
service of the former ruler of Rampur. They set up a claim
to "damages for use and occupation in the form of rent from
the plaintiff at Rs. 10/- per month from 1-4-1953 to 30-1-
1954". According to them, the plaintiff’s licence, if any,
automatically terminated when the State of Rampur merged
with the State of Uttar Pradesh. The defendants had also
pleaded that the alleged gift, which was not governed by
Mahomedan law, could not be upheld because no registered
deed of gift was executed to transfer a house the value of
which was far in excess of Rs. 100/-.
The Trial court as well as the first Appellate Court bad
found, after ,in examination of all the evidence, including
the alleged
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order dated 23rd June 1945, of His Highness the Nawab of
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Rampur (Exhibit 1), a letter dated 30th June 1949 ’,Exhibit
A-10) from a Minister of Rampur State to "the Secretary
(Buildings), fixing rent for the house and the oral evidence
that the plaintiff had not proved either of the two
alternative claims set. up by him. A learned Judge of the
Allahabad High Court had, upon the plaintiff’s second
appeal, reversed the concurrent findings of fact recorded by
the Courts below because the learned Judge thought that "the
order of the Nawab of Rampur dated 23rd June 1945",
constituting a valid declaration of a gift, by the owner of
the house, followed by the plaintiff’s admitted actual
possession of the house conferred ownership of the house
upon the plaintiff-respondent according to Mahomedan law.
The learned Judge also held that nothing beyond this order
of the Nawab could be looked into for deciding what was
intended by the Nawab and that the use of the words
"inteqal" and "atta" in the following extract from the order
in Urdu determined the intent of the Nawab conclusively.
"Ap ki sakunat ke waste Abdul Karim Sabib wala makan atta
farmaya gaya hai. Ap aj hi us me muntaquil ho jayen......
Ap un se mil kar inteqal niaka.1 ki karrawai kariye".
The questions arising before us for decision are : firstly,
whether the alleged gift is governed by Mahomedan Law;
secondly, whether the requirements of Mahomedan law for
establishing a gift of the house or of its usufruct for life
to the plaintiff could be held to have been satisfied in
this case; and, thirdly, whether nothing beyond the order of
23-6-1945 could be looked into to determine the Nawab’s
intention.
One could legitimately presume that a gift by the Nawab of
Ranipur, a Muslim, would be governed by the rules of Mahome-
dan law if the Nawab was dealing with his own private
property. In the case before us, we find that the plaintiff
himself has pleaded that he acquired his right and title to
the house in dispute from the Government of Rampur State,
although the action of the Government was said to be "under
the orders dated June 23, 1945, of His Highness the Nawab of
Rampur". Upon an examination of the alleged order, which
has been treated by the learned Judge of the Allahabad High
Court as a valid declaration of a gift of the house by its
owner, governed by Mahomedan law, we find that it is only a
piece of information sent. to the plaintiff who is described
as "Nigran Shikar Mahi" or "Supervisor of Fishing." The
communication, translated in English in the paper book of
this Court, reads as follows :
"His Highness has passed orders that you
should immediately vacate the house in which
you reside and
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pay up to the landlord all his dues. Abdul
Karim wala house has been given to you for
your residential purpose. You should shift to
that house this very day. The Executive
Engineer (Buildings) has been intimatto allot
the said house to you immediately. Please
contact him and take steps to va
cate the
house".
The plaintiff himself had produced Agha Khan, the Assistant
Military Secretary of the Nawab of Rampur, who had signed
and sent the communication, set out above, to the plaintiff.
His evidence shows that the Nawab of Rampur had probably
given some oral order to get the private house in which the
plaintiff was living vacated, and "to give" another House to
him for residence. Under cross-examination, the witness
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stated that, by using the word "inteqal" in the writing, he
meant to convey that "the plaintiff should leave that house
and live in the house in dispute." This witness, who was not
owner of the house, could not gift the house in dispute to
the plaintiff. He could only "give" the house to the
plaintiff in the sense that he could, under the Nawab’s
orders, obtain its allotment for the plaintiff. He said
that its previous occupant, a mechanic, was also occupying
it, without payment of any rent, with the Nawab’s
permission. The implication of such a statement could only
be that the plaintiff had a similar permission. He did not
depose that the Nawab had asked him to inform the plaintiff
that the Nawab was making a gift of the house to the
plaintiff. The witness stated that the house belonged to
the Government of Rampur. All this evidence is consistent
with the view that the Nawab meant to do nothing more than
to resolve the immediate difficulty of the plaintiff, by
giving him some free residential accommodation in a house
owned by the Government so that the plaintiff could clear up
his dues to his landlord, rather than with the conclusion
that the Nawab intended to confer the ownership of the house
on the plaintiff.
It is well established that a document must be read as a
whole. In a document meant for a transfer of ownership, the
purpose is generally stated clearly to be that the property
given will be owned and possessed henceforth by the donee in
such a way that he could use it or deal with it as he liked.
The only ’karawai’ or proceeding, to which a reference is
made in the document, seemed to be "allotment" of
accommodation or transfer of plaintiff’s residence into
another house, owned by the State, for which appropriate
steps were to be taken by a Government official. The
communication savs, as translated, that the Executive
Engineer (Buildings) had been informed that the house in
question was to be "allotted" to the plaintiff. If the
plaintiff was to become its owner, that would have been
communicated to the
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Executive Engineer. A transfer of ownership would, in the
ordinary course, be expected to be evidenced by much more
clear and unequivocal language. The appropriate proceeding
after a gift is that of mutation in Municipal records. No
evidence was given of any mutation in a Municipal record
showing transfer of ownership of the ’corpus’ for which the
term ’milkiyat’ is used.
It is true that, as the learned Judge observed, the word
’Inteqal’ is used ill connection with a transfer of
property. This is so when it occurs in juxtaposition with
’Jaidad’. In (the document before us, the following words
indicate that transfer which the Nawab had in mind was that
of the plaintiff himself to another residence in the
physical sense : "Ap aj hi us me muntaqil ho jayen." This
meaning is further emphasised by the use of the words
"sakunat ke waste" (for residential purpose) which was the
only stated object of the "inteqal." Again, the word "atta"
is used to denote all kinds of grants. The grant may be of
a license or of ownership of property. The word "atta"
could be used by a courtier, as a matter of form, to
indicate anything granted by the Nawab whether it be mere
permission to live in a house or something more.
If the intention of the Nawab was to grant ownership, the
language used to communicate it would not have left it in
doubt. It is significant that the plaintiff, who stated in
his evidence that the gift was meant to have been made "in
lieu of old services", had not mentioned this object of the
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alleged donation in his plaint. It is also evident that he
was not sure of his own rights or position because he took
up an alternative case of a gift of the right to live in
the, house for life. We do not find the word ’hibba’ or
gift used at all in this document. Nor is the word "amree"
or any other similar word, which could connote a life
estate, used in the document. There being no mention either
of rights of ownership or those of a life-estate holder, the
mere use of the words "inteqal" and "atta" does not
determine, as the learned Judge assumed, what was really
meant to be granted or transferred. We think that oral and
other evidence, besides the document under consideration,
was both necessary and admissible under Proviso (6) to Sec.
92 of the Indian Evidence Act to resolve a latent ambiguity
caused by the two vague words used in it and to show how its
language was related to the existing facts even if one were
to assume that the information contained in it was meant to
reduce the terms of a grant to the form of writing.
Upon the view we are taking of the facts of this case, it is
not necessary for us to embark on any detailed discussion of
essentials
347
of a gift under the, Mahomedan law. It is enough to point
out that even if the rules of Mahomedan law were to be
applied to the transaction before us the very first of the
three conditions of a valid gift, given in Mulla’s
’Principles of Mahomedan Law" (16th Edn. p. 141) that of "a
declaration of gift by the donor" is lacking here. Such a
declaration must indicate, with reasonable clarity, what is
really gifted. It is also not necessary for us to deal with
the distinction between separable gifts of the ’corpus’ and
the ’usufruct’, recognised by Mahomedan law, which
references to Amjad Khan v. Ashraf Khan(’) and Nawazish Ali
Khan v. Ali Raza Khan(2) would disclose. After an
examination of all the admissible evidence, relating to the
nature of the transaction set up by the plaintiff, which
should have been considered, we are satisfied that the
plaintiff failed to, prove either a grant of the ’corpus’ or
of the ’usufruct’ of the house to him for his life by its
owner. The transaction before us would amount to nothing
more than the grant of a license, revocable at the Grantor’s
option to reside in the house so long as the grantor allowed
the licensee to do so. Such a grant is known as "areeat" in
Mahomedan law (See: Mulla’s Principles of Mahomedan Law,
Sixteenth Edition, page 166). The terms of the alleged
grant, even if they are to be found only in the
communication sent to the plaintiff, are not, read in the
context in which they occur, capable of raising an inference
of a larger grant. The mere expenditure of small sums of
money over necessary repairs, alleged by the plaintiff,
could not convert it into an irrevocable license.
Consequently, we allow this appeal and set aside the judg-
ment and decree of the High Court. We do not think that
this is a fit case in which the appellant should get the
costs of this litigation as the plaintiff had some grounds
to be misled by the communication received by him. The
parties will, therefore, bear their own costs throughout.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
(1) A. I. R. 1929 P.C. P. 149. (2) A.I.R. 1948 P.C. p. 134.
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