07 February 1991
Supreme Court
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ANAYATULLAH AND ORS. Vs COMMISSIONER OF MUSLIM WAKF OF JAMMU

Bench: KULDIP SINGH (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1484 of 1974


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PETITIONER: ANAYATULLAH AND ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COMMISSIONER OF MUSLIM WAKF OF JAMMU

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/02/1991

BENCH: KULDIP SINGH (J) BENCH: KULDIP SINGH (J) RAMASWAMY, K.

CITATION:  1991 SCR  (1) 253        1991 SCC  Supl.  (1) 396  JT 1991 (1)   326        1991 SCALE  (1)152

ACT:      Jammu    and   Kashmir   Wakf   Act,    1959:    Ziarat Shareef    of   Hazrat Baba    Ibrahim     Wakf-Grant     of lands-Government     orders     dated September   22,   1955 and    November    29,    1958-Interpretation    of  Whether in   favor   of   Ziarat   or   the   Manager    personally- Manager/Trustee   of  religious  shrine  in  possession   of trust  property-Whether  can  assert adverse title.     Civil    Procedure    Code,    1908:    Section     100- Interference    by    High Court  in  second  appeal-Whether justified.

HEADNOTE:       The   Ziarat  Shareef  of  Hazrat  Baba   Ibrahim,   a holy   place   of worship, in the Rakhbahu  area  of   Jammu City   was   granted   certain  land to the  Ziarat  by  the State   Government  vide  two  orders  dated  September  22, 1955  and  November   29,  1958.  The   Ziarat   was   being managed   by  the 1st appellant and his brothers, since  the death   of   their   father  in  1963.  The   Committee   of Muslim   Wakf,    incorporated   under   the    Jammu    and Kashmir  Muslim  Wakf  Act,  which  came   into   force   in 1959,   file  a  suit for restraining them from  alienating, raising  construction  or  recovering the rent from the Wakf land   in   dispute   vested   in   the   Ziarat,   on   the allegation    that    the    appellants-defendants      were treating    the    lands granted to the Ziarat,   as   their personal   property  and  mismanaging  and  also  alienating the same.      Resisting   the   suit,  the   appellants,   defendants contended,   inter alia, that notwithstanding  the  use   of the   word   "Ziarat"  in  the  two Government  orders   the transfer   of   the   land   in   dispute   was   in   their father’s  favour in his personal capacity, in lieu  of   his possessory   right over about 400/500 kanals of land   which was   taken  over  by  the  Government, and not in the  form of  any  dedication,  and  as  such  the  land  was not  the property  of  the  Ziarat  but  their   father’s    absolute property,   and  had devolved upon them by  succession  and, therefore,  they  had  the  right to deal with the  property in any manner they liked.      The  trial court dismissed  the  suit,   holding   that

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the    two   grants  were  in  fact  made  in   favour    of defendants’  father  and  not  the  Ziarat.                                                        254      The  first  appellate court upheld  the  trial  court’s findings.      However,  in  second appeal, the High Court  held  that from  the  recitals of the two orders of the  Government  of 1955  and  1958  it was clear that the two  grants  were  in favour  of  the Ziarat.   Hence,  the  appellants-defendants filed  the  appeal,  by  special  leave  before  this  Court contending  that the High Court had erred in  upsetting  the findings  of the courts below, based on appreciation of  the evidence that, as a fact, the appellants-defendants were the owners of the property, the subject matter of the Government grants.      Dismissing the appeal, the Court,      HELD:  1.1  The  two orders  of  the  Government  dated September   22,   1955   and   November   29,    1958    are absolutely   clear   and  unambiguous and  can   admit   one and   only   one  interpretation   that    the    Government intended to grant the land to the Ziarat alone and  not   to the   appellants defendants in their personal capacity.   In fact  the  names  of  the  appellants  -defendants or  their ancestors   are  not  even  mentioned  in  the  two  orders. The   order   of  1955  specifically   stated    that    the lands   in Rakhbahu  surrounding  the  Ziarat  Shareef    of Baba    Ibrahim    Shah   be granted to  the   said   Ziarat permanently.   The   later  order  of  1958  also  says  the same  thing.   It is nowhere mentioned in   any   of   those orders  that the land was given not to the Ziarat but to the father   of  the  appellants defendants,  who  was   Majawar of  the  Ziarat,  either  in   his   personal capacity or in lieu  of  compensation  for  his  personal  lands   acquired by the Government. [259A, B-C]      1.2  A manager  or  a  trustee  in  possession   of   a religious   shrine  cannot be allowed to  assert  a  hostile title   unless  he  formally  surrenders possession  to  the lawful authority. [260B]      In the instant case, there was no justification for the appellants-defendants  to  cast their covetous eyes  on  the property of the Ziarat, taking advantage of their possession over the same, which was as managers or trustees and  assert a  hostile title to it.  Even if they were in possession  of the  lands, it would have to be referable to a lawful  title and cannot be treated to be adverse to the Ziarat.  In other words,  the  possession  would be for. the  benefit  of  the Ziarat. [259H, 260A, E]      1.3  In the face of clear and unambiguous terms of  the Government   orders,   it  was  not  permissible   for   the appellants-defendants  to adduce evidence to show  that  the grant was made to them and not to the                                                         255 Ziarat. The question was of interpretation of two Government orders, which was essentially a question of law. [260G]      In  the  circumstances,  the High Court  was   not   in error   in   upsetting  the findings of  the  courts  below. [260F]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1484  of 1974.      From  the  Judgment and Decree dated 26.4.1974  of  the Jammu  & Kashmir High Court in Civil Second Appeal No. 4  of

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1973.      A.K.   Sen,   E.C.   Agrawala,   Ms.   Purnima    Bhat, Atul   Sharma   and  A.   V. Palli for the Appellant.      S.K. Bhattacharya (NP) for the Respondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      KULDIP  SINGH,  J.  Hazrat  Baba   Ibrahim,  a   Saint, lived   in    the area called  Rakhbahu  in  the   city   of Jammu.   After   his  demise  in  the year  1872  his  grave became a place  of  worship  for  those  who  had  faith  in him.  The  place  was  called  Ziarat  Hazrat  Baba  Ibrahim (hereinafter  called   "the  Ziarat").   The   Ziarat    was managed    by   Sain   Ladha,   a nephew  of   Baba   Hazrat Ibrahim    After   Sain   Ladha’s   death   his    son  Mian Lal   Din   succeeded  him.  At  present   the   Ziarat   is being   managed by the sons of Mian Lal Din who died in  the year 1963.      The   Jammu  &  Kashmir  Muslim  Wakf  Act  came   into force    in    the  year 1959   (hereinafter   called   "the Act")    whereunder    a    committee    of   muslim    Wakf (hereinafter   called    "the    Committee")    has     been incorporated.      The     Committee     filed     a     suit      against Anayatullah    and    eight others (sons of Mian  Lal   Din) restraining   them  from  alienating,  raising  construction or   recovering   the   rent  from   the   Wakf   land    in dispute  vested   in   the   Ziarat.   According   to    the plaintiff,  the  Government  of Jammu  &  Kashmir  vide  two orders    dated    September,   22,   1955    and  November, 29,   1958   granted   land  measuring  3   acres   and    6 acres    2 kanals 6  Marlas  respectively  to  the   Ziarat. It  was  alleged  that  the defendants  were  treating   the property   to   be  their  personal   property.  They   were mismanaging    and   also   alienating   the   same.     The defendants in their written statement resisted the suit   on a  number  of  grounds  and                                                        256 stated  that  the  land in dispute was  transferred  by  the Government  in  favour  of  their  father  in  lieu  of  his possessory right over about 400/500 Kanals of land which was taken  over by the Government.  It was further claimed  that the  land was the absolute property of their father and  the same has devolved upon the defendants by succession.  It was further  claimed that notwithstanding the word  "Ziarat"  in the  Government  Orders  the grants were in  favour  of  the defendants father in his personal capacity.  The transfer of the land was not in the form of any dedication and   as such was  not a property of the Ziarat.  The  defendants  claimed the right to deal with the property in any manner they liked on the ground that the same belonged to them.      The  Trial Court by its Judgment dated August  6,  1970 came  to  the conclusion that the two grants  by  the  State Government were in fact made in favour of Mian Lal Din   and not  in favour of the Ziarat. The suit of the committee  was dismissed  with  costs.  The District Judge,  Jammu  by  his Judgment dated February 28, 1973 upheld the findings of  the Trial  Court and dismissed the appeal of the committee.  The committee   went-up  in  second  appeal  before  the   Jammu &   Kashmir High Court. Murtaza  Fazal  Ali,  C.J.  (as  the learned   Judge  then was) by his judgment dated  April  26, 1974  set  aside  the  judgments  of the  courts  below  and allowed   the  appeal  of   the   committee.    The  Learned Chief   Justice   decreed   the   plaintiff’s    suit    for injunction   as  prayed for. This appeal via  Special  Leave Petition is  against  the  judgment of the High Court.      Mr.  Ashok Sen,  learned  counsel  appearing  for   the

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appellant   has  taken us through  the   judgment   of   the Trial   Court   and  that  of  the Lower  Appellate   Court. According   to   him,   the   High   Court   has   erred  in upsetting  the  findings  of the  courts  below   based   on appreciation   of evidence. Mr.  Sen  contended   that   the appellant’s   ancestors  were  in possession of’  more  than 140  Kanals  of  land for a  very   long   period   and  had established possessory title over the said  land.  According to  him, the Government took over the said  land  from   the father  of  defendants and in lieu of that two grants in the years 1955 and 1958  were  given  to Mian  Lal  Din  in  his personal    capacity.    It   was    contended    that    on appreciation   of   the   evidence   produced   before   the Trial    Court   the courts below found as a fact  that  the defendants  were  the   owners  of   the  property   subject matter  of  the  Government  grants  and  as  such  the High Court  acted  illegally  in   upsetting   the   same.    The learned   counsel relied upon the  following   findings   of the  Lower  Appellate  Court  in support of his contention:                                                        257          "As   discussed  above,  the  possession   of   the          defendants  and their father and grand  father  and          Hazrat Baba Ibrahim over 40 kanals of land as  Arak          and  about 100 kanals of land under cultivation  is          proved,   and  it  is  further  proved   from   the          Government   order   Ext.   D.A./4   refusing   the          recommendation  of the Financial Commissioner  that          the  basis for the grant of proprietary  rights  in          respect  of  74  kanals of land  was  the  personal          possession of the father of the defendants and  his          predecessors  and it was in lieu of the  possession          of  that chunk of land that the  Government  parted          with  74  kanals  of land.   The  counsel  for  the          plaintiff  has further argued  that   because   the          Government   orders  of 1955 and 1958 mentions  the          word   "Ziarat"   as   the   grantee   it  is   not          permissible  for the Civil Court to hold  that  the          grant   was  in  favour  of  the  father   of   the          defendants.      Keeping   in view the  back-ground          as  discussed  above,  I  am  unable  to agree with          the contention  of  the  learned  counsel  for  the          plaintiff. The mere fact that  Mian  Lal  Din   was          associated with the  Ziarat  as  a  descendant   of          Hazrat  Baba  Ibrahim Sahib and the mere fact  that          the  word  "Ziarat"  was  used  in the   Government          orders   of  1955  and  1958  would  not   preclude          this  Court  from  holding  that  the   grant   was          not   in  favour of the Ziarat but was in  fact  in          favour  of   the  father of  the  defendants.   The          contents   of  the  Government  orders of 1955  and          1958  referred  to  above  are  to  be   considered          with the facts that Mian Lal Din and  his  ancestor          possessed  the land in their individual   capacity;          that   the  Government repelled the claim  of  Mian          Lal  Din   for  additional  grant  of land  on  the          simple ground that the  land  already  granted   to          him  was costlier than the land which he  held   in          possession;  that  there was no intention  on   the          part   of  the  Government to dedicate the land  to          the Ziarat out  of  any  pious  intention; that  it          was  a sort of  bargain  between  Mian   Lal   Din,          the    father   of   the   Defendants    and    the          Government   where  under the  land  measuring   74          kanals  was  parted  within  the proprietary rights          by   the   Government  in   consideration   of  Lal

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        Din’s  having  abandoned possession of   over   400          kanals   Of  land;  the  fact  that  the  Committee          plaintiff also  treated  the grant in favour of Lal          Din as is evident  from  Ext.  PD  also supports my          view. The  fact  that  the  defendants  and   their          father leased out a part of the property on a  long          lease    to  third  parties,  the  fact  that   the          defendants  got  compensation for a portion of  the          land  acquired  by  the  Government;  the fact that          there  was  no claim laid to  the   land   by   the          Wakf                                                         258           Committee  upto  the  year  1966  even  when   the           Government  orders were passed in 1955  and  1958,           the fact that no demand was ever made from Lal Din           to  render  accounts  in  respect  of  the  income           specially  derived by him from the  suitland,  the           fact  that  a large number of shops,  khokhas  and           buildings have been constructed by the  defendants           (assuming  that  one room was constructed  by  the           Wakf Committee) also is determinative of the  fact           that the transfer was infact made in favour of Lal           Din and not in favour of the Ziarat as such."      It  is not disputed that the property which is  subject matter  of the dispute was granted by the  State  Government under the two orders dated September 22, 1955 and  November, 29,  1958.  The respondent plaintiff claims that  the  grant was in favour of the Ziarat whereas the appellant-defendants claim  that  the  property was given to the  father  of  the defendants absolutely and in his personal capacity.  The two documents  of title by which the grant was made may  now  be referred to.  The Government order dated September 22,  1955 is as under:      "It is ordered that 3 acres of land of Rakhbahu of  the Rakhs  and  Farms Deptt. surrounding the Ziarat  Shareef  of Baba  ibrahim Shah be granted to the  said  Ziarat-e-Shareef permanently.                      By order of the Cabinet.                                           Sd/- (G.M. Bakshi)                                           Prime  Minister".  The Government order dated November, 1958 runs thus;           "(1)  The confirmation of the action taken by  the           Prime Minister in granting land measuring 6  acres           2  kanals  and  6 marlas to  Ziarat  Shareef  Baba           Ibrahim  Shah Sahib at Ghandi Nagar Jammu and  (2)           The grant of compensation amounting  to Rs. 12,500           by  debit to Housing grant in favour of  the  said           Ziarat  for  12.5  kanals of land @ Rs.  1000  per           kanal,  taken over by the Public Works  Department           for development of Gandhi Nagar out of the area of           3  acres sanctioned vide Cabinet Order No.  1418-C           dated  20.9.55. By order of the Jammu and  Kashmir           Government                                           Sd/- Noor  Mohd                                     Secretary to Government"                                                         259     The   above   quoted  orders  of  the   Government   are absolutely clear and  unambiguous  and  can  admit  one  and only  one   interpretation   that the Government intended to grant the land to Ziarat alone and   not   to the appellant- defendants   in  their  personal  capacity.  In   fact   the names  of the  appellants-defendants  or   their   ancestors are   not  even  mentioned in  the  two  orders.  The   High Court   interpreted   the   above  quoted    two  orders  as under:

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         "  The order of  1955  specifically  stated   that           the  lands  in Rakhbahu  surrounding  the   Ziarat           Shared   of    Baba   Ibrahim Shah be  granted  to           the  said  Ziarat  permanently.  The  later  order           of   1958  also  says  the  same  thing.   It   is           nowhere  mentioned in any of  these  orders   that           the   land   was  given not to the Ziarat  but  to           the   defendant  who  was  Mujawar  of the  Ziarat           either  in  his personal capacity or in  lieu   of           compensation  for  his  personal  lands   acquired           by  the  Government. Since  the  recitals  in  the           documents  are  absolutely clear and are expressed           in   unmistakable  terms,  there  is  no room  for           adducing  evidence  adduced  to   contradict   the           recitals  of  these  two   documents.   Thus   the           evidence  adduced  by the defendants to show  that           the  grant  was  made  not  to  the Ziarat but  to           them is clearly hit by sections 91 and 92 of   the           Evidence  Act and  is,  therefore,   inadmissible.           Further  more the grant was made in 1955 and 1958,           that   is  to  say  several years  before  and the           Government   has   not   come   forward after such           a  long lapse of time to support  the   stand   of           the defendants that the  grant  was  intended  for           them  in  their personal capacity and not for  the           Ziarat.   I  fail  to  understand how in  face  of           such clear recitals in the  documents  the  courts           below  have  by a process  of   evisceration   and           interpolation construed the documents to means  as           if it  was  a  grant in favour of the  defendants.           The  courts below appear to have  been  influenced           by    the   fact   that   when   the    defendants           represented  to  the  Government  that  the  lands           in    their  cultivating  possession   had    been           taken    over    by   the   Government     without           paying      compensation,     some      Government           Officers  replied  that a substantial   grant   of           land  had  been made to the Ziarat. This obviously           was   a   wrong  stand  taken  by  the  Government           Officers     and    could    not    clothe     the           defendants with the right of wiping out the  legal           validity   of  the grant made  year   before   the           officers  gave  this  reply. Indeed the remedy  of           the  defendants  was  to  sue  for  damages or for           compensation    for,    the    land     unlawfully           acquired   by   the  Government.  There   was   no           justification   for   the                                                        260           defendants  to  cast their covetous  eyes  on  the           property of the Ziarat, taking advantage of  their           possession over the same which was an managers  or           trustees and asset a hostile title to it.  The law           on the subject is absolutely clear that a  manager           or  a trustee in possession of a religious  shrine           cannot be allowed to asset a hostile title  unless           he  formally surrenders possession to  the  lawful           authority.  Before going into this point of law at           some  length  it  may be  necessary  to  refer  to           certain proved facts in the case:-           (1)  It  is not disputed that the  present  Ziarat           existed  since  a long time and became a  Wakf  by           long public user.           (2) That the first defendant was the  Sajadanashin           or -caretaker of the Ziarat.           (3)   That  the land belonged  to  the  Government

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         originally.           (4)  That  the  Government  granted  the  land  in           dispute to the Ziarat and not to the defendants.           (5)   That  the  defendants  were  admittedly   in           possession  of the Ziarat as also  the  properties           appurtenant thereto.           In  these circumstances it is clear that  even  if           the  defendants were in possession of  the  lands,           their  possession would have to be referable to  a           lawful  title and cannot be treated to be  adverse           to  the Ziarat.  In other words the possession  of           the  defendants  would be for the benefit  of  the           Ziarat.      We  agree with the above quoted findings of’  the  High Court  and  approve  the same.  We do  not  agree  with  the argument  of Mr. Ashok Sen that the High Court was in  error in upsetting the findings of the courts below.  The question before  the  High  Court  was  the  interpretation  of   two government  orders which was essentially a question of  law. The  High Court was justified in observing that in the  face of  clear and unambiguous terms of the Government orders  it was  not permissible for the appellant-defendants to  adduce evidence to show that the grant was made to them and not  to the Ziarat.  No other point was raised before us.     We,  therefore,  dismiss the  appeal.   The  respondent- plaintiff  shall  be entitled to costs throughout  which  we quantify as Rs. 15,000. N. P. V.                                   Appeal dismissed.                                                        261