26 March 1962
Supreme Court
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THAKUR MOHD. ISMAIL Vs THAKUR SABIR ALI

Case number: Appeal (civil) 256 of 1959


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PETITIONER: THAKUR MOHD.  ISMAIL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THAKUR SABIR ALI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/03/1962

BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. SARKAR, A.K.

CITATION:  1962 AIR 1722            1963 SCR  (1)  20

ACT: Wakf-alal-aulad  Executed by Oudh talukdar--If offends  rule against  perpituity-Oudh Estates Act. 1869 (1 of 1869),  ss. 11,  12,18-Mussalman wakf Validating Act, 1913 (6 of  1913), ss. 3,4.

HEADNOTE: A Hanafi Mussalman, owner of a talukdari estate governed  by the Oudh Estate, 1869, executed in 1925 a deed of wakf-alal- aulad,   for  the  benefit  of  himself,  his   family   and descendants  generation after generation.  He was to be  the first  mutwalli and thereafter his second son and after  him his  other  sons and descendants according to  the  rule  of primogeniture.   Certain  amounts were also to  be  paid  to charities and for the maintenance of members of his  family. The  remainder was to go to the mutwalli.  After  his  death the  suit,  out  of which the  present  appeal  arises,  was instituted  by the eldest son of his predeceased eldest  son claiming  succession to the estate according to male  lineal primogeniture  under the Act.  His case mainly Was that  the wakf  deed was invalid in view of ss. 11 and 12 of the  Act. The trial court found that the deed 21 was genuine and valid and dismissed the suit.  On appeal the High  Court, while upholding the finding of the trial  court that  the  wakf deed was a genuine document,  dismissed  the suit  on the ground that the deed contravened s. 12  of  the Act.   Section  11  of  the Act  provided  that  the  estate conferred on a talukdar was an absolute estate he having the right  to  transfer or bequeath it in any manner  he  liked. Section  18  dealt with gifts to  religious  and  charitable uses.  Section 12 of the Act provided as follows:- "No transfer or bequest under this Act shall be valid  where by the vesting of the thing transferred or bequeathed may be delayed beyond the lifetime of one or, more persons,  living at  the  decease  of  the transferee  or  testator  and  the minority  of  some person who shall be in existence  at  the expiration  of that period, and to whom, if he attains  full age, the thing transferred or bequeathed is to belong." Held,  (Gajendragadkar and Wanchoo, jj.), the  oudh  Estates Act,  1869,  was  a complete Code by itself so  far  as  the

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holders  of talukdari estates were concerned and the  rights of such holders must be determined and circumscribed by  the provisions of the Act. Although  a wakf-alal-aulad was a gift in favour of God,  it could  be  valid only if it came within s. II  of  the  Act. Section  18  of the Act merely provided  the  procedure  for making gifts to charitable and religious uses and the  power to make a gift was to be found in s. 11. In any case, such a gift was subject to the provision of s. 12 of the Act. The words ’religious or charitable uses’ in s. 18 of the Act which  applied  to  talukdars  of  all  religious,  properly construed, could not mean that provision for one’s  children would  be  provision for religious and charitable  uses.   A wakf,  such  as the one in the present case,  in  which  the beneficiaries mainly were the descendends of the wakf  would not, therefore, fall within s. 18 of the Act.  Treated as  a gift to God, He would have no beneficial ownership in it for generations  to  come.   Sections  3  and  4  of  the   wakf Validating Act, 1913, could not alter the position. Bikani Mis v. Shuklal Poddar, (1893) T. ’L.  R. 20 Cal.  16, considered. Abdul  Pala Mohamed Ishak v. Russomoy Dhur Choudhry,  (1894) L. R. 22 T. A. 76, referred to. The  word  ‘vesting’  in  s. 12 of  the  Act  mean  absolute vesting,  meaning  thereby  that  the  person  in  whom  the property  vested could deal with it and its usufruct  as  he liked.  Even though therefore, the, property in the  instant case might vest 22 in  God immediately on the creation of wakf-alal-aulad,  the absolute vesting which s. 12 contemplated would be postponed beyond  the  period prescribed by it.   The  wakf-alal-aulad was, therefore, hit by s. 12 of the Act and must fail. Per  Sarkar, J.-The religious and charitable uses  mentioned in  s.  18 of the Act were not such as are  contemplated  in English law only.  The Act contemplates a transfer by way of Wakf  as  a transfer intervious such a transfer would  be  a gift which is permitted by s. 11 of the Act. The  wakf, in the instant case, was valid under ss. 3 and  4 of  the Mussalman Wakf Validating Act, 1913, and it was  not correct to say that under it the usufruct was transferred to unborn  discendants.   Under the Mohamedan law a wakf  is  a gift  to charity and everything vests in god immediately  on the declaration of wakf so that the profits may revert to or be applied for the benefit of mankind. Since  the passing of the wakf Validating Act, 1913, a  wakf alal-aulad  w as as much a wakf as any other variety of  and its  subject-matter  vested immediately on its  creation  in God, for the benefit of mankind, not as a trustee but as the owner.   The  descendant  of the  wakf  acquired  no  vested interest  in  the  usufruct of  the  wakf  properties.   The vesting  of the property not being postponed at all,  there, was no contravention of s. 12 of the Act.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE   JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  256  of 1959. Appeal from the judgment and decree dated February 22, 1954, of  the Allahabad High Court (Lucknow Bench) at  Lucknow  in First Civil Appeal No. 50 of 1946. S.   P. Sinha and Remeshwar Nath for the appellant. C.   K. Daphtary, Solicitor General of India,E.   Udayarathnam and S. S. Shukla, for respondent No. 1.

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1962.   March  26.   The  Judgment  of  Gajendragadkar   and Wancboo,  JJ.,  was  delivered by Wanchoo,  J.  Sarkar,  J., delivered a separate Judgment. WANCHOO,  J.-This  is a defendant’s  appeal  on  certificate granted by the Allahabad High Court. 23 The   suit  was  brought  by  Thakur  Sabir  Ali   plaintiff respondent  for  possession.  The following  pedigree  table (omitting  the unnecessary names) which is not  in  dispute, may be set out to appreciate the case of the plaintiff--                     Amir Baksh                    (died in 1857)                         |      ---------------------------------------     |                                      |  Nabi Baksh                           Fath Mohd. (died in 1899)                      (died in 1890)     |     -----------------------                           | First wife     =      Asghar Ali       =   Second wife    |                (died in 1937)            |    |                                          |    --------------------           --------------------    |      |      |     |          |       |           | Fatim, Nsirali Aeysba Mohd.      Mohd    Mohd.      Bibi Bibi     |     Bibi   Umar       Ali    Ismail    Zainal D-3   Sabirali D-2    D- 1      D-5      D-6        D-7                          (now appellant) The  case of the plaintiff was that Thakur Amir Baksh  owned considerable  property  Known  as  Tipraha  Estate  in   the district of Bahraich at the time of the, annexation of Oudh. He  died in 1857 and was succeeded by his son  Thakur  Fateh Mohd., who was subsequently recognised by the Government  as the talukdar of the Tipraha Estate.  Thakur Fateh Mohd. died issueless  and on his death Thakur Nabi Baksh succeeded  him as  the  talukdar  under the family  custom  and  under  the provisions  of  the  Oudh  Estates  Act,  No.  1  of  1.869, (hereinafter  called the Act).  On the death of Thakur  Nabi Baksh  the estate passed to his only son Asghar Ali, who  in his life time acquired certain other properties which 24 were both talukdari and non-talukdari in nature.  In August, 1925,  Thakur Asghar Ali executed a deed of wakf  alal-aulad by  means of which he created a wakf of his entire  property for  the  benefit  of himself, his  family  and  descendants generation  after  generation.   He  was  to  be  the  first mutwalli  for  his lifetime and thereafter  his  son  Thakur Mohd.   Umar,  and after him, his other sons  and  then  his other   descendants  selected  according  to  the  rule   of primogeniture were to be mutwallis.  The wakf deed  provided that  some  amounts would be paid to charities and  some  as maintenance   allowance  to  the  members  of   his   family generation  after  generation, the remainder  going  to  the mutwalli.  Asghar Ali died in February, 1937, leaving behind properties  included  in Schedules A to I  appended  to  the plaint.   Disputes arose thereafter about succession to  and possession  of  his properties.  Mohd.  Umar claimed  to  be entitled  to  the  entire property under the  wakf  deed  of August,  1925, while the plaintiff, being the eldest son  of the  eldest on Nasirali who had died in the lifetime of  his father Thakur Asghar Ali claimed succession to the  property under  the  rule  of  lineal  primogeniture.   This  led  to protracted  litigation in the Revenue Courts and  eventually an  order for mutation was passed in favour of Thakur  Mohd.

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Umar  defendant  who is now dead.  Thakur Mohd.   Umar  came into possession of the properties mentioned in schedules  A, B, D, E, F, H ’except certain items mentioned therein) while the  other defendants came into possession of certain  other properties,  with the details of which we are not  concerned now. Thakur  Sabir Ali then instituted the present suit  for  the possession  of the entire property left by Thakur  Asgharali and for mesne profits.  His case was that he was entitled to succession  under the rule of male lineal  primogeniture  in accordance  with  the provisions of the Act and  the  family custom.  He denied the execution, attestation, genuineness,  25 and validity of the wakf deed alleged to have been  executed by  Thakur Asgharali, which was relied upon by Thakur  Mohd. Umar  for  his  title to the property.  The  wakf  deed  was further  challenged  on  other grounds  with  which  we  are however  not concerned now except one.  But the main  attack against  the validity of the wakf deed was that the  subject matter  of  the  deed was property subject  to  the  special provisions  of the Act and therefore the said deed  was  not valid,  particularly in view of the provisions contained  in ss.  11  and 12 of the Act.  This is the  main  point  which falls to be considered in the present appeal. The  defence  was that the wakf deed was duly  executed  and registered and acted upon and that no fraud, undue influence or  coercion as alleged by the plaintiff had been  practiced upon  Thakur Asgharali in that connection.  It  was  further alleged that even if the wakf was invalid as a gift it would be operative as a will and the mutwalli would be entitled to the  possession  of  the  whole  of  the  estate  of  Thakur Asgharali under the wakf deed.  The defendants also resisted the  attack on the wakf deed based on the provisions of  the Act. The  trial court found that the wakf deed was duly  executed and was a genuine and valid document.  The trial court  also found  that  the  plaintiff was entitled  under  the  family custom  and also under the provisions of the Act to  inherit by the rule, of male lineal primogeniture such properties as were left by Thakur Asgharali at the time of his death;  but as  the  trial court held that the wakf deed was  valid,  it dismissed  the suit of the plaintiff except with respect  to two  properties in Schedule A to the plaint.  The  suit  was decreed  with respect to these two properties on the  ground that they were not included in the wakf deed. There was then an appeal by Sabirali to the High Court.   It upheld the finding of the trial court 26 that  the  wakf deed was a genuine document.  It  also  held that  it  was a: valid wakf as a wakf-alal-aulad  under  the Mussalman  Wakf Validating Act (No. 6 of 1913); but it  held that  the wakf deed was invalid because it  contravened  the provision  of  s.  12 of the Act.  The  High  Court  however further held that even though the wakf deed failed as a deed creating  a  wakf, the directions contained in  it  for  the payment  of maintenance allowance and right of residence  in favour of persons who were alive at the date of the death of Asgharali and for the expenses to be incurred in respect  of charities  would  be binding on the plaintiff as  being  the last will and testament of Asgharali.  It therefore  allowed the  appeal and decreed the plaintiff’s suit for  possession over the properties which were included in the deed of  wakf as   also-over  the  other  properties  which  belonged   to Asgharali at the time of his death subject to allowances and charities  to  persons living at the time of  the  death  of

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Asgharali and declared that the allowances and amounts to be spent  on  charities were to be a charge on  the  properties mentioned in the deed of wakf.  The High -Court decree  also contained various consequential directions with which we are however not concerned in the present appeal.  The  plaintiff having  riot appeared from that part of the decree by  which the allowances and the amounts to be spent on charities have to  be  paid out of the properties included in the  deed  of wakf  and  by which a charge was created on  the  properties therefore,  that  part of the decree of the High  Court  has become final. The  main question therefore that falls to be considered  in this  appeal is whether the High Court’s view that the  wakf is  invalid in view of a. 12 of the Act is correct.   It  is necessary  therefore to refer briefly to the history of  the talukdari estates with which the Act is concerned.   Suffice it  to  say  that after the Mutiny of 1857  was  over,  Lord Canning, the                              27 then Governor-General of India issued a proclamation on  the 15th of March, 1858, by which all proprietary rights in  the soil belonging to persons in Oudh (with the exception of the rights  of a few talukdars) were confiscated.  At  the  same time  indulgence  was  promised  to  those  who  surrendered promptly.  In view of that promise most of the talukdars did surrender  with  the result that they  received  back  their estates’,-  only  those  who did not  surrender  lost  their estates and these estates were given to other talukdars  who had  proved loyal to the British Government as a reward  for their loyalty.  This re-grant was done by making settlements with  talukdars  and issuing sanads to them.  Thus  all  the preexisting  rights of the talukdars were first  taken  away and  then  fresh  grants  under  the  terms  of  sanads  and proclamations  issued at the time were made to  them.   This was followed by the Oudh Estates Act of 1869, which  further defined  the rights of talukdars to the estates  granted  to them  by  the British Government.  It will appear  from  the provisions  of  the  Act that the rights  of  talukdars  and grantees  to  whom  estates  were  granted  by  the  British Government  were defined in the Act without  distinction  of religion  or caste, so that the Act governed  all  talukdars irrespective  of  the religion to which they  might  belong. Further the right of succession is also provided in the  Act and  the  personal  law of a talukdar with  respect  to  the talukdari property stands abrogated except and in so far the Act  imports  it.  Further it is clear that  in  respect  of matters  dealt with by the Act, it is a  self-contained  and complete Code with respect to talukdari property covered  by it.  This was the view taken by the Privy Council in Chandra Kishore Pewari v. Sissendi Estate (1), where it was observed that  ,the  Oudh  Estates Act is  a  special  Act  affecting special  class  of  persons in  respect  of  the  properties conferred upon them.  The Act is self-contained (1)  A. 1. R (1949) P. C. 207. 28 and complete in regard to the matters contained in it".   It is  in  this  background  that  we  have  to  consider   the provisions of the Act. Let  us therefore examine the scheme of the Act.   The  long title  of  the Act says that it is ",an Act  to  define  the rights  of talukdars and others in certain estates in  Oudh, and  to regulate the succession thereto." The preamble  then says,  "Whereas,  after the  reoccupation of  Oudh  by  the British  Government in the year 1858, the proprietary  right in  diverse  estate  in that  province  was,  under  certain

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conditions, conferred by the British Government upon certain talukdars and others; and whereas doubts may arise as to the nature of the rights of the said talukdar and others in such estates,  and  as to the course of succession  thereto;  and where  as  it is expedient to prevent such  doubts,  and  to regulate such course, and to provide for such other  matters connected  therewith  as are hereinafter mentioned."  It  is clear  therefore that the Act was made to define the  rights of  holders  of  talukdari  estates  and  to  regulate   the succession  thereto  and the provisions in the Act  being  a complete  Code relating to the special class of the  persons in  respect  of the properties conferred upon  them  by  the British Government, whatever right the talukdars had in  the property conferred on them would have to be found in the Act and would be circumscribed by its provisions. Sections 2 of the Act is the definition section ,Ind we  are primarily   concerned  with  the  definition  of  the   word "’transfer" therein which is as follows:-               "Transfer with its grammatical variations  and               cognate   expressions,   means  to   make   an               alienation inter vivos whether before or after               the commencement of this Act." Section  3  defines the rights of a talukdar and  lays  down that a talukdar has a permanent, heritable and  transferable right in the estate comprising the                              29 villages  and  lands  named  in the  list  attached  to  the agreement or kabuliyat executed by such talukdars when  such settlement  was  made  with him.   Section  8  provides  for preparation of lists of talukdars and others grantees and it is  not in dispute that the Tipraha estate is  mentioned  in lists I and II prepared under s.8 of the Act.  Then we  come to  s.all which deals with the powers of talus  to  transfer and  bequeath  properties hold by them under  the  Act,  the relevant portion of which is as below--               "Subject to the provisions of this Act, and to               all the conditions other than’ those  relating               to  succession  under which  the.  estate  was               conferred  by  the British  Government,  every               talukdar  and  grantee,  and  every  heir  and               legatee  of a talukdar and grantee,  of  sound               mind  and not a minor, shall be  competent  to               transfer  the  whole  or any  portion  of  his               estate, or of his right and interest  therein,               during  his  life-time,  by  sale,  exchange-,               mortgage, lease or gift and to bequeath by his               will to any person the whole or any portion of               such estate, right and interest............. It will be clear from a bare perusal of this provision  that the  estate conferred on a talukdar was an  absolute  estate for  he had the right to transfer it in any manner be  liked and  to  any  person  be liked and  even  to  sell  it  away completely ignoring the heirs under the personal law.   Then comes S. 12 which reads thus -               "No  transfer or bequest under this Act  shall               be  valid  whereby the vesting  of  the  thing               transferred  or  bequeathed  may  be   delayed               beyond the life-time of one or, more persons,               living  at  the decease of the  transferee  or               testator  and the minority of some person  who               shall  be  in existence at the  expiration  of               that  period, and to whom, if he attains  full               age, the thing transferred or bequeathed is to               belong,"               30

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              .lm0               This   section  provides  the   rule   against               perpetuity  so that even though  the  talukdar               under the Act had an absolute estate and could               transfer  it as he pleased or will it away  as               he pleased he could not in view of s. 12  make               a transfer or bequest which might infringe the               rule  against  perpetuity.  Section  13  deals               with procedure relating to transfers by  gifts               and  provides  that transfer by gift  will  be               made by an instrument signed by the donor  and               attested  by  two or more witnesses  not  less               than   three  months  before  his  death   and               presented  for registration within  one  month               from the date of its execution and registered;               and  it  further provides that  no  gift  made               shall  be  valid unless  followed  within  six               months  from  the  date of  execution  of  the               instrument  of gift, by delivery by the  donor               or   his   representative  in   interest,   of               possession of the property comprised  therein.               The following sections deal with bequests  and               with  procedure of transfer other  than  gifts               with which we are not concerned.  Then we come               to s. 18, which deals with gifts for religious               and charitable uses and is in these terms:-               "No  taluqdar  or  grantee,  and  no  heir  or               legatee  of  a  taluqdar or  grantee,  and  no               transferee  mentioned  in section 14,  and  no               heir or legatee of such transferee, shall have               power  to  give  his estate,  or  any  portion               thereof, or any interest therein, to religious               or charitable uses, except by an instrument or               gift  signed by the donor and attested by  two               or  more witnesses not less than three  months               before    his   death   and   presented    for               registration within one month from the date of               its execution and registered." It  will be seen that there is one difference between s.  13 which deals with gifts for purpose other than religious  and charitable  and s. 18 which deals with gifts  for  religious and  charitable uses inasmuch as delivery of  possession  is not made necessary for the                              31 validity  of  the gift under s. 18 as is the case in  s.  13 (2).   The rest of the Act deals with  intestate  succession and other matters with which however we are not concerned. The  main  contention on behalf of the appellant is  that  a wakf-alal-aulad  is  outside  the  provisions  of  the   Act altogether  and must be deemed to be a valid  instrument  in view  of Act VI of 1913.  In the alternative it  is  claimed that  even if a wakfalal-aulad comes within the  perview  of the  Act  it will be governed by s. 18, and if  it  complies with the provisions of that section it will not be hit by s. 12,  the argument being that s. 18 is independent of s.  12. We can see no validity in the first contention on behalf  of the  appellant, namely, that a wakf-alal-aulad  is  entirely outside the purview of the Act and the provisions of the Act will not apply to it and it will be valid in view of Act  VI of  1913.  It is not disputed that the property  with  which the  wakf-alal-aulad  in this case deals is  property  which would be governed by the Act.  We have already said that the Act  is a special Act affecting special class of persons  in respect of the properties conferred upon them by the British Government  and  is a ,self-contained and complete  code  in

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regard to the matters contained in it.  Therefore, so far as the property which comes under the Act is concerned, we must find power in the Act conferred on the talukdar to deal with the  property, and it cannot be accepted that  the  talukdar can  deal with the property which is governed by the Act  in any  manner not provided by the Act.  If the creation  of  a wakf-alal-aulad  is out side the purview of the Act it  will be  clear  that any wakf-alal-aulad  dealing  with  property which  is governed by the Act would immediately  be  invalid ,so  far  as that property is concerned,  for  the  property conferred  on the talukdar which is governed by the Act  can only be dealt with as provided in the Act and not otherwise, the Act being a complete Code with respect to the rights  of the  talukdar to deal with such property.  On  the  argument therefore 32 that  a  wakf-alal-aulad  is a manner of  dealing  with  the property  which is entirely outside the Act, the  wakf  must fail  at once so far as it deals with property  governed  by the Act. But we are of opinion that the contention that a  wakf-alal- aulad is some thing which is entirely outside the purview of the  Act, even though it may deal with property governed  by the  Act cannot be accepted.  A wakf-alal-aulad must by  its very  nature  be some kind of transfer of  property  by  the person  making  the wakf.  Previous to Act VI of  1913,  the Privy  Council  had  held  in Abul  Fata  Mahomed  lshak  v. Russomoy  Dhur  Chowdry  (1) that  "under  Mahomedan  law  a perpetual fam ily settlement expressly made as wakf is-  not legal merely because there is an ultimate but illusory  gift to the poor’ It wail because of this judgment by which wakf- alal-aulad  as known to Mahomedan law were declared  illegal that  Act  VI of 1913 was passed by which such  wkfs  became legal.   Obviously, therefore, when such wakfs become  legal there was a transfer of the property covered by the wakf and the  transfer  was  in favour in of  God  Almighty  in  whom thereafter the property subject to wakf become vested.  This following from the theory of Mahomedan law under which wakfs greated for purposes which are considered by that law to  be religious and charitable result in the transfer of ownership of wakf property in perpetuity to God Almighty.  Further the transfer  being without consideration can only amount  to  a gift.   Therefore, wakfs-alal-aulad which have become  valid after Act VI of 1913 must be held to be gifts of property to God Almighty for certain purposes and are clearly  transfers within  the  meaning  of  that term in  s.  2  of  the  Act. Incidentally  we may, add that the use of the  words  "inter vivos"  in  the  definition of the  word  "transfer"  merely emphasises  that the transfer must be one  effective  during the lifetime of the transferor as contrasted with a (1)  (1894) L. R. 22 1. A. 76.                              38 transfer  by  will which takes effect on the  death  of  the transferor.  Whenever therefore a transfer takes place by  a wakf-alal-aulad  and  the property included in the  deed  is governed  by the provisions of the Act we have to go to  the provisions contained in the Act with respect to the power of the talukdar to make such transfer.  The transfer would only be  valid  if  it  is within the  powers  conferred  on  the talukdar. This brings us to the alternative argument raised on  behalf of the appellant.  Obviously, a wakf-alal-aulad being a gift in favour of God Almighty the property covered by it in  the present case being one governed by the Act, we have first to go  to  s.  11  to see if a gift  is  permitted  under  that

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section.   We have already set out s. 11 and that permits  a gift  to be made by the talukdar of all the property or  any portion  of  it  or any interest  therein.   This  takes  us immediately  to ss. 13 and 18.  Section 13 deals with  gifts other  than those for religious and charitable purposes  and we  are therefore not concerned with it.  Section  18  deals with   gifts  for  religious  and  charitable   uses.    The contention of the appellant in this behalf is that s. 18  is an   independent  section  and  gifts  for   religious   and charitable purpose can be made under it and we have only  to look to that section to determine the validity of a gift for religious  or  charitable  purposes made by  a  talukdar  of property  governed  by the Act.  We are however  of  opinion that s. 18 only provides for the procedure for making  gifts to  charitable and religious purposes while s.  13  provides for  the  procedure for making gifts to  other  persons  for other purposes.  The power of the talukdar to make a gift is to be found in s. II, the manner in which he can make a gift is to be found in a. 13 for one class of gifts and in s.  18 for another class of gifts.  Therefore we cannot accept  the argument   that   a.   18   is   an   independent    section fully.providing  of  gifts  of a  charitable  and  religious nature; it is merely a procedural provision 34 for  gifts  of  the type covered by it.   But  even  if  the argument  of  the  learned counsel for  the  appellant  were correct  that s. 18 is an independent provision relating  to gifts  for charitable or religious purpose, the  gifts  made under s. 18 would still be subject to s. 12, as s. 12  opens with the words "no transfer of bequest under this Act  shall be  valid".   Therefore, even if s. 18 were  an  independent section it still deals with a transfer of a particular  type under the Act and that transfer would also be subject to  s. 12.   We  may  in  this connection refer to  s.  18  of  the Transfer of Property Act (No. 4 of 1882) which  specifically provides  that  the rule against perpetuity (s.  14  of  the Transfer  of Property Act) shall not apply to transfer  "for the  benefit of the public in the advancement  of  religion, knowledge,  commerce  health,  safety or  any  other  object beneficial  to  mankind.   Section 18  of  the  Act  however provides no such exception so far as religious or charitable gifts  made under the Act are concerned and such  gifts  are also subject to s. 12. Two  questions  then  arise when we  have  to  consider  the application  of s. 12 to this wake The first is whether  the purpose  of this wakf is a religious or  charitable  purpose within  the meaning of s. 18 of the Act.  Now what the  wakf deed provides is that an insignificant portion of the income would  be used for certain religious purposes; the  rest  of the  income is to be used for the benefit of the  wakif  and his descendants from generation to generation and it is only when  the line of the wakif is completely extinct  that  the whole  of the income of the property could be  utilised  for what may be called charitable or religious purposes.  It  is urged  however  that  even though the lion’s  share  of  the income of the property would be used for the descendants  of the wakif, the wakf will still be a religious and charitable one, for the property immediately vests in God Almighty  and is  to  be used for the benefit of His creatures,  which  of course include the wakif and                              35 hit; descendants.  Reliance in this connection’ is placed on the dissenting judgment in Bikani Mia v. Shuklal Poddar  (1) in  which  Ameerali J. expressed the ’view that  a  wakf  in favour  of  the  wakif  and his  descendants  would  be  for

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charitable purpose under the Mahomedan law.  It is enough to say  that  this  was not the view of the  majority  of  that Court.   Further in Abul Fata Mahomed Ishak’s case  (2)  the Privy  Council  clearly  held that a wakf  under  which  the beneficiaries were the descendants of the wakif could not be treated  as  one  for a charitable purpose  even  under  the Mahomedan law.  Apart from this aspect of the matter, we are not   here  concerned  with  the  Mahomedan  law  and   what constitutes  a  charitable  use  under  that  law.   We  are concerned with a statute passed in 1869 by the British  when they  were rulers of this country and we have  to  interpret the  English  words used in that statute  as  understood  by those  who framed the statute.  The words with which we  are concerned are "religious or charitable uses" which appear in s.  18  of the Act, and it would in our opinion  require  no persuasion to hold that the authority which was framing  the Act could not have possibly intended that provision by  wakf for one’s children was provision for religious or charitable uses.   The  view taken by the Privy Council  in  Abul  Fata Mahomed  Ishak’s case (2) clearly shows that  the  authority responsible  for  the Act could never contemplate  wakfs  in which the beneficiaries were the descendants of the wakif as wakfs for religious or charitable purpose.  Further, the Act applies, as we have already mentioned, not only to Mahomedan talukdars but talukders of all religions and it could hardly be  intended when the words ",religious or charitable  uses" were  used in s. 18 that a wakf in which  the  beneficiaries were  in  the  main the descendants of the  wakif  would  be included in s. 18.  Such wakfs could never be considered  to be for charitable or religious purposes under (1) (18 93) 1. L. R. 20 Cal. 116. (2) (1894) L.R. 22.  I.A. 76, 36 Hindu  law or the Christian law.  In these circumstances  it must  be held that the wakf in the present case,  though  in theory  it  vests the property in God Almighty, is  not  for charitable  or  religious purposes.  It  must  therefore  be treated  as  a  gift to God Almighty in  which  however  for generations  to come God Almighty would have  no  beneficial ownership.  Nor do we think that the Wakf Validating Act  of 1913  makes  any  difference to  this  position.   That  Act specifically  provides  by s. 3 that a Muslim  can  lawfully create  a wakf-alal-aulad.  This however does not mean  that the  purpose  of such a wakf is a  religious  or  charitable purpose.   This is made clear by the proviso to s. 3,  which provides  that the ultimate benefit in such a case  must  be for  a religious or charitable purpose.  The  proviso  would have been unnecessary if the purpose of a wakfalal-aulad was recognised as religious or charitable by this law.  The same in our opinion will follow from the provision in s. 4. In such a case s. 12 must invalidate this wakf.  As we  have already  said, s. 12 provides the rule  against  perpetuity; but it is said that the rule against perpetuity provided  in this  section  is  not infringed by this  wakf  because  the property  is vested in God immediately when  the  wakf-alal- aulad  is  created and all that s. 12 requires is  that  the vesting  of the property transferred should not  be  delayed beyond a certain period.  It is urge, that in this case  the vesting  takes place immediately on the making of  the  wakf and  therefore  the  gift is not covered  by  s.  12.   This immediately  raises  the  question as to what  is  meant  by vesting  under  s.  12.  It may be  conceded  that  property included in a wakfalal-aulad vests in God Almighty, but  the vesting that s. 12 says may not be delayed beyond a  certain period is in our opinion absolute vesting (i.e., vesting  of

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both  legal and beneficial estate) which may not he  delayed beyond a certain period, Such absolute vesting involves that the person in whom 37 the property is vested can deal with it as he likes and  can deal  with its usufruct also as he likes.  If the person  in whom the property may be legally vested cannot deal with the usufruct as he likes, there, is not that absolute vesting of the  property  in  him which  the  rule  against  perpetuity enshrined in. s. 12 requires.  If this were not so, it  will be  quite easy to get round the rule against  perpetuity  by creating a trust in which the property immediately vests  in the  trustee and then providing for beneficial enjoyment  in perpetuity  by  other  persons in whom  the  property  never vests.   It  is  wall  settled that a  trust  of  this  kind immediately vesting the property in the trustee leaving  the usufruct  tied up for ever for the benefit of other  persons infringes the rule against perpetuity.  We may in this  con- nection refer to, a passage from Underhill’s "Law of  Trusts and Trustees", tenth edition, dealing with the Rule  against Perpetuities at p. 70, which is in these terms :-               settled  on private trusts for  an  indefinite               period, so as to prevent it being freely dealt               with  ;  and, consequently, the  power  of  so               doing  has been curtailed by a rule  known  as               the rule against perpetuities.  That rule  is,               that  every future limitation (whether by  way               of  executory  devise  or trust)  of  real  or               personal   property,  the  vesting  of   which               absolutely  as  to personality, or in  fee  or               tail  as to realty, is postponed beyond  lives               in being and twenty-one years afterwards (with               a further period of gestation where it exists)               is void." Even   though  therefore  the  property  may  vest  in   God immediately  on the creation of the wakf-alalaulad  in  this ease,  the  beneficial  enjoyment thereof  is  not  for  the purposes  of  God  religious  or  charitable  purposes,  the vesting which is envisaged by s.,12 is undoubtedly postponed in this case 38 beyond  the period allowed by that section.  Therefore,  the wakf in this case even though it may be treated as a gift to God  legally  vesting  property in Him  immediately  on  its execution  is hit by s. 12, for the absolute  vesting  which that  section  contemplates is postponed beyond  the  period mentioned in that section.  The view therefore. taken by the High Court that the wakf in this case is hit by s. 12 of the Act is correct. Finally,  it  was  urged that at any rate, so  long  as  the appellant  Mohd.  Ismail is alive the  plaintiff  respondent could  not claim possession and therefore the decree of  the High Court to that extent was wrong.  We have not been  able to  appreciate this contention at all.  Once the wakf  fails as  a whole, as we hold that it does, Mohd.   Ismail  cannot claim  to remain in possession, for his right to remain  in possession depends upon his being mutawalli of the wakf  The High Court was therefore right in decreeing the suit brought by  the  plaintiff-respondent.  The appeal  therefore  fails and, is hereby dismissed with costs. SARKAR, J.- Thakur Mohammad Asghar Ali, a Hanafi  Mussalman, was  the  owner of the Tipraba Estate,  a  taluqdari  estate governed by the Oudh Estates Act, 1869.  It appears that  be also  owned certain other immovable properties and  movables of  some  value.  With regard to these latter,  however,  no

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question  has  been  raised in this appeal  and  it  is  not necessary to deal with them especially.  On  August  26,  1925,  Asghar  Ali  executed  a  deed   of Wakf-alal-aulad in respect of all his proper. ties the value of  which was estimated in the (feed at Rs.  10,00,000.   By this  deed he provided for an expenditure of a total  annual sum  of  Rs.  1,000  for  the  purposes  of  a  mosque,  the destitute,  helpless  students and also  provided  for  some guzara  (maintenance) to his mother, wife and children,  and after                              39 them, to their respective heirs till the line of a guzaradar became extinct.  He constituted himself the first  mutawalli under  the  Wakf with full right to spend the  amount  saved after  the payment of the aforesaid sums.  He also  provided that after his death. his second son Mohammad Umar would  be the mutawalli for his life and after him his other sons, one after  the other, and that after the death of his last  son, the  succession  to the mutawalliship would devolve  by  the rule  of primogeniture according to the custom obtaining  in his family.  In the end he provided that if no one  remained to succeed to the office of mutawalli, Government would make proper  arrangements for applying the usufruct of  the  wakf property for purposes of the mosque, religious sacrifice  of goats, distribution of the guzaras and grant of scholarships to poor Mohammedan students.  He died on February 27, 1937. After  Asghar  Ali’s death disputes sprang  up  between  his descendants.  The respondents, Sabir Ali, the eldest son  of Nasir  Ali the predeceased eldest son of Asgar Ali,  claimed that  the  wakf  was  neither genuine  nor  valid  and  that therefore,  under the rule of primogeniture as  provided  in the  Oudh Estates Act which governed the Tipraha  Estate  he alone was entitled to all the properties left by Asghar Ali. This claim was disputed, among others, by Mohammad Umar  who contended that he was entitled to the properties in terms of the  wakf.  It does not appear to have been  in  controversy that  in the absence of the wakf, the respondent  Sabir  Ali would  be  entitled  to the properties  under  the  rule  of primogeniture  by  which admittedly the  devolution  of  the properties  was governed.  Eventually the  respondent  Sabir Ali filed the suit out of which this appeal arises, claiming the  properties  left  by  Asghar  Ali  under  the  rule  of primogeniture.    Ho  denied  the  execution,   attestation, genuineness  and  validity of the deed of  wakf  on  various grounds. Mohamad Umar, who was the first defendant in 40 the  suit, resisted it basing himself on the deed  of  wakf. The  widow  and the other children of Asghar Ali  were  also defendants  in  that suit and opposed the  respondent  Sabir Ali’s claim on various grounds but with these this appeal is not concerned. The trial Court found the deed of wakf to be valid in  every way but came to the conclusion that certain properties  left by  Asghar Ali had not been included in it.  With regard  to these it made a decree in favour of the respondent Sabir Ali and  this  part of the decree was never challenged  and  has therefore become final.  The trial Court dis,missed the rest of the respondent Sabir Ali’s suit as it took the view  that the  deed of wakf was valid and under it Mohammed  Umar  was entitled to the properties as the Mutawalli.          The respondent Sabir Ali then appealed to the  High Court  at  Allahabad.  While the appeal was  pending  their, Mohammad Umar and Mohammad Ali, another defendant, died  and their  legal representatives were brought on the  record  in their  places, and another son of Asghar Ali, the  appellant

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Mohammad Ismail who also was a defendant in the suit and who had become the mutawalli under the terms of the deed of wakf on  the  death  of  Mohammad  Umar  and  Mohammad  Ali,  was substituted as mutawali in the place of Mohammad Umar.   The High Court agreed with the view of the trial Court that  the wakf  deed  was  genuine  and had  been  executed  with  due formalities but held that it was of no effect as it offended the  rule against perpetuity contained in s. 12 of the  Oudh Estates  Act to the terms of which I shall presently  refer. Against that judgment Mohammad Ismail has filed the  present appeal.          Two questions have been raised in this appeal.  The first is whether the Act permits a transfer by way of a wakf as it only permits transfers inter vivos  41. and by will and the second whether the wakf created in  this ease offends s. 12 of the Act. Section  2 of the Act defines transfer’ as alienation  inter vivos.   Section 11 provides that subject to certain  things to  which  it is Dot necessary to refer, every  taluqdar  of sound  mind and not a minor shall be competent  to  transfer the  whole or any portion of his estate or of his right  and interest  therein, during his life time by  sale,  exchange, mortgage,  lease or gift and to bequeath by his well to  any person  the whole or any portion of such estate,  right  and interest.   So  it was said that a taluqdari estate  can  be disposed  of either by a transfer inter vivos in one of  the manners  mentioned  in  s.  11 or by  a  will  also  therein mentioned  but in no other way.  It was contended  that  the wakf in this case did not constitute a disposition in either of these methods and was therefore bad. I think it necessary in how to refer to two more sections of the  Act before examining this contention.  The first is  s. 13 which is concerned with gifts of the estate for  purposes other than religious or charitable and with this section  we are not concerned in this appeal.  The other is s. 15  which provides  that  no ’taluqdar "shall have power to  give  his estate,  or  any portion thereof, ony interest  therein’  to religious  or  charitable uses, except by an  instrument  of gifts  signed  by  the donor and attested  by  two  or  more witnesses  not  less than three month before  his-death  and presented for registration within one month from the date of its execution and registered." It is not in controversy that the properties covered by the deed of walkf from  ,(,states’ within the meaning of the Act. With regard to the contention that a transfer by way of wakf was  not permitted by the Act as it is not a transfer  inter vivos   it  seems  to  me  that  a  transfer   inter   vivos contemplated  by the Act does not exclude a transfer by  way of waif.  Section 18 42 contemplates  a transfer to religious and  charitable  uses. That  section as it now stands was enacted by U. P. Act  III of  1910.  I find it impossible to think that the  religious and  Charitable  uses  mentioned  in it  were  such  as  are contemplated in English law only, for the Act was meant  for Indian  taluqdars  of all communities the larger  number  of whom  were Mohammedans and Hindus.  If it were so, no  Hindu could  have created a debutter nor a Mohamedan any wakf  for each  would  have been badas a gift to a  superstitious  use (Bourne  v.  Keane)(1) and also as gift to  God.   I  cannot imagine that the Act intended such a result.  Therefore,  in my view the Act contemplated a transfer by way of wakf as  a transfer inter vivos.  This variety of transfers can  easily be brought under gifts mentioned in s.  11 as such transfers

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are without consideration and voluntary. The other question is whether a wakf- alal-aulad offends  s. 12.  That section is in these terms :               S.    12 No transfer or bequest under this Act               shall  be  valid whereby the  vesting  of  the               thing transferred or bequeathed may be delayed               beyond  the life-time of one or, more  persons               living  at  the decease of the  transferee  or               testator  and the minority of some person  who               shall  be  in existence at the  expiration  of               that  period, and to whom, if he attains  full               age, the thing transferred or bequeathed is to               belong. The High Court held that the wakf was a valid wakf under the Mussalman  Wakf  Validating Act, 1913 but it  hold  that  it offended  s.  12  inasmuch as "though  the  corpus  of  wakf property is transferred to God Almighty, yet Its usufruct is transferred  to  unborn descendants of the  waqi  generation after  generation." I am unable to accept this view  of  the matter, (1).[1919] A.C. 815,845.                              43 In Abul Pala Mahomed Ishak v. Russomoy Dhur Chowdry (1)  the Privy  Council held that in a wakf of the kind that we  have before us, the gift to charity after the total extinction of the  donors’  family was illusory and  therefore  there  was really no wakf at all and "the poor have been put into  this settlement  merely to give it a colour of piety, and  so  to legalize arrangements meant to serve for the  aggrandizement of  a family": (p. 89).  This decision  caused  considerable dissatisfaction in the Mohammedan community in India and  to legalise  wakfalal-aulad the Mussalman Wakf Validating  Act, 1913  was passed.  That Act defines wakf as  "the  permanent dedication by a person professing the Mussalman faith of any property for any purpose recognised by the Mussalman law  as religious  pious or charitable": s. 2(1).  Sections 3 and  4 of this Act provide as follows :-               S.    3  : It shall be lawful for  any  person               professing  the Mussalman faith to.  create  a               wakf which in all other respects is in  accor-               dance with the provision of Mussalman law, for               the following among other purposes :-               (a)   for  the maintenance and support  wholly               or  partially  of  his  family,  children   or               descendants, and               (b)   where  the person creating a wakf  is  a               Hanafi Mussalman, also for his own maintenance               and  support  during his lifetime or  for  the               payment  of  his debts out of  the  rents  and               profits, of the property dedicated :               Provided that the ultimate benefit is in  such               cases expressly or impliedly reserved for  the               poor  or for any other purpose  recognised  by               the  Mussalman  law as a religious,  pious  or               charitable purpose of a permanent character.               (1)   (1894) L.R. 22 I.A. 76.               44               S.    4.  No such wakf shall be deemed  to  be               invalid  merely because the  benefit  reserved               therein  for  the poor  or  other  religious.’               pious  or charitable purpose of  a  permanent               nature is postponed until after the extinction               of the family, children or descendant,% of the               person creating the wakf. It  will  be  obvious  from these  provisions  of  the  Wakf

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Validating  Act  that in the case of a Hanafi  Mussalman,  a wakf  for the maintenance and support of the wakif  and  his descendants  from  generation to generation  and  after  the extinction  of  the family to the poor  or  other  religious poius or charitable purpose of a permanent nature is a  wakf and  therefore a dedication for a purpose recognised by  the Mussalman law as religious, pious or charitable.   According to  the  concept  of Mohammedan law  ‘wakf’  signifies  "the extinction  of  the appropriator’s ownership  in  the  thing dedicated  and  the detention of the thing  in  the  implied ownership  of  God, in such a manner that  its  profits  may revert  to  or be applied "’for the  benefit  of  mankind,": (Mulla’s Mahomedan Law, 15th ed., p. 154). The  High Court held the wakf created by Asghar Ali to be  a valid wakf within the Act of 1913 and with that view I am in complete  agreement.   But I am unable to agree  that  under that wakf the usufruct is transferred to unborn descendants. A transfer is a wakf only where the usufruct is applied  for the "benefit of mankind".  Since the Act of 1913, there  is, no  doubt that a transfer for the support of the  wakif  and his  descendants generation after generation with a gift  to other charities on the extinction of the wakif’s family is a transfer for the benefit of mankind.  The transfer is a wakf from  the  beginning.   So  all its  purposes  are  for  the "benefit  of mankind".  Whether such a notion is  acceptable to  one who is not a Mahomedan is to no purpose.  In such  a wakf the corpus vests ni                              45 God so that the usufruct may be utilised for the "benefit of mankind".   If what the High Court said was right, then  the corpus  alone  of the wakf property would vest  in  God  and either God had no interest in the usufruct or was a  trustee of the unborn descendants.  But it is well-settled that wakf imports  no trust in the English sense.  So it was  said  in Vidya Varathi v. Balusami Ayyar (1) "But the Mohammedan  law relating  to trusts differs fundamentally from  the  English law.  It owes its origin to a rule laid down by the  Prophet of  Islam;  and  means  "the tying up  of  property  in  the ownership  of  God  the Almighty and  the  devotion  of  the profits  for  the benefit of human beings. When once  it  is declared that a particular property is wakf............  the right  of  the wakif is extinguished and  the  ownership  is transferred to the almighty’.  It would indeed be  difficult to  conceive  of God as a trustee.  The  other  alternative, namely,  that  the  corpus alone vests in  God,  is  equally foreign  to the concept of a wakf.  If the usufruct  in  the present  wakf  vested in the descendants of the  wakif  from generation to generation, on the same principle it might  be said that in a wakf for the support of indigent widows,  the usufruct vested in them and many of them would be born  long after the wakf was created.  I am not aware that it has ever been  so held.  I feel no doubt that in a wakf the  usufruct never  vests  in persons who form the object  of  the  pious purpose for which it was created.  If the usufruct vested in the  unborn descendants, then God has no interest in it  and the  corpus  is  not detained in his  custody  so  that  the usufruct  might be applied for a pious purpose.  ’In such  a case indeed no wakf would have been created.  That would  be a  different case.  Here we have a valid wakf, and the  only question is whether the wakf violates a. 12 of the Act.  The misconception, as I think it is, (1)  (1921) L.R. 48.  I.A. 302, 312, 46 that  the usufruct vests in unborn descendants  arises  from refusing  to recognise that in Muslim law a  wakf-alal-aulad

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is  wholly a gift to charity and everything vest in God  and nothing in the objects of the charity.  It seems to me  that if  the present wakf is a valid wakf, which I think it  is, it  cannot  be  said  that the  descendants  of  Asghar  Ali acquired  under it a vested interest in the usufruct of  the wakf properties. Remembering therefore that since the Wakf Validating Act,  a wakfalal-aulad;  that  is to say, a wakf of  the  kind  with which  we  are  concerned is as much a  wakf  as  any  other variety  of wakf, it has to be said that the subject  matter of such a wakf vests immediately on its creation in God, not as a trustee but as the owner and so vests in Him because it is  a  wakf,  that is to say, because  the  profits  of  the property  are to be spend for the benefit of mankind.   That being  so,  the vesting of the property transferred  is  not postponed  at all and therefore a. 12 is not violated  by  a transfer by way of wakf.  The real effect of the creation of  such a wakf is to transfer the property to God and  vest it in Him immediately for the benefit of mankind. I am, therefore, of the view that the wakf created by Asghar Ali  is a valid wakf and is not bad as offending s.  12  of the Oudh Estates Act.       In the result I would allow the appeal. By  COURT.   GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.- In accor,  dance  with  the opinion of the majority, the appeal is dismissed with costs.                              47