Calcutta High Court (Appellete Side)
Gopala Conclave Private Limited And ... vs Haji Nurul Huda Layek And Others on 12 September, 2018
Author: Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya
Bench: Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya
In the High Court at Calcutta
Civil Revisional Jurisdiction
Appellate Side
The Hon'ble Justice Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya
C.O. No. 2563 of 2018
Gopala Conclave Private Limited and another
vs.
Haji Nurul Huda Layek and others
For the petitioners : Mr. Saptangshu Basu,
Mr. Aniruddha Chatterjee,
Mr. Javed K. Sanwarwala.
For the opposite party no. 1 : Mr. Sardar Amjad Ali,
Mr. Amal Krishna Saha,
Mr. Masum Ali Sardar.
For the Board of Wakf : Mr. Sk. Md. Galib,
Ms. Tanwishree Mukherjee Roy Chowdhury.
Hearing concluded on : 04.09.2018
Judgment on : 12.09.2018
Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya, J.:‐
Defendants no. 3 and 4 in a suit for declaration, injunction and recovery of khas
possession have preferred the instant revisional application. By the impugned order, the
Waqf Tribunal, West Bengal allowed on contest an application for temporary injunction filed
by the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1, thereby directing the parties to maintain status quo
over the suit property till disposal of the suit, and rejecting the application of the present
petitioners for dismissal of the suit on the ground that the suit was not maintainable before
the Tribunal and for rejection of the application for temporary injunction.
2. The petitioners argue that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit in
view of the suit property not being specified in the list of auqaf as contemplated in Section 6
of the Waqf Act, 1995 (hereinafter referred to as "the 1995 Act"). It is submitted that
although the suit was filed inter alia for declaration that the suit property is a waqf property,
the Civil Court has jurisdiction to hear such a suit in view of the same falling outside the
purview of Section 6 of the 1995 Act.
3. Learned senior counsel appearing for the petitioners places reliance on a resolution
dated July 20, 2005 passed by the Board of Waqfs, West Bengal (present opposite party no.
2), whereby the Board held that the suit property was a secular property and could not be
enrolled as a waqf property, as the waqif himself, in his Will, excluded the same from the
schedule of the waqf property. The said order was passed, pursuant to an order dated
September 2, 2004 passed by this Court in W.P. No. 824 (W) of 2004, directing the Board to
decide such question.
4. It is further argued, by placing reliance on paragraph no. 21 of the plaint of the
said title suit, that the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1 admitted therein that the Board of Waqf
had arrived at the finding in its resolution dated July 20, 2005 that the suit property, situated
at 51/1, Karaya Road, Kolkata could not be a waqf property. The said paragraph is set out
below:
"21. That the plaintiff states that surprisingly that purporting to comply with the orders dated 2nd
September, 2004 passed in W.P. No. 824 of 2004 and order 01.07.2004 passed in C.C. No. 51 of 2005,
the Board of Wakfs, West Bengal, the custodian of Wakf properties over the State of West Bengal has
over ruled its own decision in a perverse manner on 20.07.2005 by taking or resolution and held that
property situate at 51/1, Karaya Road, Kolkata, cannot be a Wakf property. The said resolution dated
20.07.2005 was mechanically confirmed by the Board of Wakfs, West Bengal in its meeting held on
30.08.2005."
5. In this context, it is also relevant to set out the reliefs claimed in the suit, which are
as follows:
"a) a decree for declaration that the property situate at Premises No. 51/1, Karaya Road, under
Karaya Road, under Karaya Police Station, Kolkata - 700019 within Ward No. 69 of Kolkata
Municipal Corporation along with one storied building thereon is a Wakf Property as described in the
registered Will & Testament dated 8.8.1914 executed by Md. Akbar Ali Khan, the Testator/Wakf.
b) A decree for declaration that the Schedule "A' property of the plaint is a Wakf Property situate at
Premises No. 51/1, Karaya Road, under Karaya Police Station, Kolkata - 700019 as described in Part‐
1 of Schedule B of the registered Will and Testament dated 8.8.1914 executed by Md. Akbar Ali Khan,
since deceased the Testator/Wakif.
c) For a declaration that defendant nos. 3 and 4 or any one claiming under them have no right, title
and interest as described in Schedule "A" property of the plaint;
d) For recovery of khas possession of Schedule "A" property of the plaint be passed in favour of the
plaintiff and against the defendant nos. 3 and 4 upon eviction of the said defendants nos. 3 and 4
therefrom;
e) For an order of temporary injunction restraining the defendants nos. 3 and 4 or anybody claiming
under them including their men, agents, servants, relatives and associates from making any
construction of any nature and transferring, alienating, dealing with and/or parting with possession
or occupation to any third party and/or parties, in respect of any part or portion of the wakf property
under Schedule "A' of the plaint or in any manner whatsoever till the disposal of the aforesaid suit.
f) For an order directing the defendant no. 1 to register the "A" Schedule property of the plaint situate
at Premises No. 51/1, Karaya Road, under Karaya Police Station, Kolkata - 700019 as Wakf property
in terms of the Will and Testament dated 08.08.1994;
g) For Recovery of possession or the "A" Schedule property;
h) For Costs;
i) Leave under Order 2 Rule 2 of the Civil Procedure;
j) For any other relief or reliefs be passed by Learned Wakf Tribunal as it may think fit and proper."
6. The Tribunal, despite taking note of the aforesaid decision of the Waqf Board, held
that even if the dispute, as to the suit property being a waqf property, still persisted, the
Waqf Tribunal had jurisdiction to decide such dispute in the suit on the basis of evidence to
be received in course of trial. Thus the question of jurisdiction was relegated to trial.
7. Learned senior counsel for the petitioners submits that the said approach of the
Tribunal was contrary to law, and the Tribunal had to consider the question of jurisdiction
while deciding upon prima facie case before passing an order of injunction, although in the
form of status quo. In support of such proposition, learned senior counsel cites a Division
Bench judgment of this Court, reported at 2004 (1) CHN 498 [Calcutta Cosmopolitan Club Ltd.
v. Bhanwarlal Bhandari & Ors.].
8. This apart, the Tribunal found that upon a previous suit being instituted by the
present plaintiff / opposite party no. 1, bearing Title Suit No. 25 of 2006, challenging the
order of the Waqf Board, in the Second Court of Civil Judge (Senior Division) at Alipore, the
plaint of the said suit was rejected under Order VII Rule 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure
on the ground that the jurisdiction of the civil court was barred under Section 85 of the 1995
Act, and it was the Waqf Tribunal which had jurisdiction to decide the dispute. As a
consequence, it was held, the present suit was rightly instituted by the plaintiff before the
Tribunal.
9. On this, learned senior counsel for the petitioners submitted that the scope of
challenge in the previous suit might have been different from the present suit, resulting in
rejection of plaint. Moreover, rejection of plaint does not ipso facto debar the plaintiff from
filing the current suit again before a civil court. As such, it is argued, the order of rejection of
plaint in the previous suit by a civil court is, by itself, not binding on the Waqf Tribunal and
is not a valid ground for holding that the current suit is maintainable before the Tribunal.
10. Learned senior counsel for the petitioners lastly submits that the impugned
order, granting status quo, was not backed by reasons. Even the legal tests for grant of
injunction, such as balance of convenience and inconvenience and irreparable injury, were
not applied by the Tribunal while passing the impugned order of status quo.
11. As such, the petitioners submit that the impugned order ought to be set aside.
12. While controverting the petitioners' submissions, learned senior counsel
appearing for the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1 argues that, in paragraph no. 17 of the plaint,
the opposite party no. 1 categorically stated that the suit property, at 51/1, Karaya Road
along with one‐storied building standing thereon, was enrolled as waqf property under E.C.
No. 7268 with the Board of Waqf, West Bengal. The Board had also appointed one
Mobinuddin Ansari as president and the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1 as vice president
thereof.
13. In order to substantiate such averment in the plaint, the opposite party no. 1 also
places reliance on the photocopy of a communication dated March 30, 2004 from the then
Board of Wakfs to the officer‐in‐charge, Karaya police station. The reference number of the
said communication was "E.C. No. 7268". The Board apparently informed the said officer‐
in‐charge by the said communication that the present suit premises was a Wakf property as
per a Wakf deed dated 08‐08‐1914 executed by Akbar Ali. The said property, amongst
others, was enrolled/registered under the Board of Wakfs, West Bengal under Enrolment
Case No. 7268. It was further informed that the Board had approved a committee consisting
of seven persons in that regard.
14. It is submitted that even after such admitted enrolment/registration as a waqf
property, the Board back‐tracked and subsequently, by the resolution dated July 20, 2005,
held that the suit property was an absolutely secular property and could not be enrolled as a
waqf property as the Waqif himself in his Will excluded the same from the schedule of the
waqf property. Even in paragraph no. 21 of the plaint, which is relied on by the petitioners,
the plaintiff challenged the resolution dated July 20, 2005. Therefore, after the suit property
was enrolled as a waqf, the said subsequent resolution could not operate to cancel or set
aside the same. The Board had power to amend the register of auqaf under Section 41 of the
1995 Act alone. Since the resolution dated July 20, 2005 was not passed in a proceeding
under the said provision, the same could not purport to amend or cancel the
enrolment/registration of the suit property as a waqf property.
15. Learned senior counsel for the opposite party no. 1 submits that a resolution of
the Board of Waqf was amenable to challenge before the Waqf Tribunal; as such, the present
suit, which also encompasses a challenge to the Board resolution dated July 20, 2005, was
correctly presented before the Tribunal. A civil court had no jurisdiction to entertain the
matter in view of the bar provided under Section 85 of the 1995 Act.
16. Learned senior counsel for the opposite party no. 1 then cites a judgment
reported at (2016) 2 CHN 457 [Syed Mahamudul Muswi vs. Brajobashi Das]. Placing particular
reliance on paragraph no. 12 of the said judgment, learned senior counsel submits that the
Wakf Tribunal is authorized to decide all questions related to a wakf or wakf property.
Paragraph no. 12 of the said judgment is quoted below:
"12. Accordingly, the Wakf Tribunal is authorized to decide all question related to a wakf or wakf
property. The words "any dispute, question or other matters relating to a wakf or wakf property" are
words of very wide connotation. Therefore, any dispute, question or other matters whatsoever and in
whatever manner, which arises relating to a wakf or wakf property can be decided by the Wakf
Tribunal. Hence, once a property is found be a wakf property under the definition of section 3(r) of the
said Act, then the dispute relating to the wakf property should be agitated before the Wakf Tribunal. It
is needless to mention that the provision under section 85 of the said Act creates a bar for maintaining
any civil suit. According to the provision under section 83(5) of the said Act, the Tribunal has all
powers of the Civil Court under the Code of Civil Procedure, and hence it has also powers under
Order 39 Rule 1, 2 and 2‐A of the CPC, 1908 to grant temporary injunctions and enforce such
injunctions. Hence, a full‐fledged remedy is available to any party if there is any dispute, question or
other matter relating to a wakf or wakf property."
17. Learned counsel for the Board of Wakf (opposite party no. 2) thereafter submits,
by placing reliance on a judgment reported at AIR 1998 SC 972 [Sayyed Ali and others vs.
Andhra Pradesh Wakf Board, Hyderabad and others] that for a property to be a wakf property,
registration as per the 1995 Act is immaterial. It is submitted that, for a property to be wakf,
it is not necessary that the dedication should be in favour of a dargah, but it is sufficient if
the dedication is made for a purpose recognized by Muslim law as pious, religious and
charitable.
18. It is further submitted that the Wakf Tribunal was empowered to adjudicate all
issues relating to a wakf property and the civil court was debarred from taking up such
questions for adjudication, by virtue of Section 85 of the 1995 Act.
19. It is next submitted on behalf of the Board of Wakf that the first proviso to Section
6(1) of the 1995 Act stipulated that no suit, as described therein, shall be entertained by the
Tribunal after the expiry of one year from the date of publication of the list of auqaf. It is
submitted that if, for the purpose of Section 6, a 'list of auqaf' is equated with the Registrar
of auqaf under Section 3(g) of the 1995 Act, particularly for properties which were registered
much prior to enactment of the 1995 Act, an absurdity would result inasmuch as no suit
could be filed within one year from the property being registered as wakf, since the
registration would have taken place much prior to enactment of the 1995 Act itself. It is
submitted that Section 3(g) of the 1995 Act as such covered only the wakf properties
registered under Section 37 of the 1995 Act after enactment of the 1995 Act. Properties
previously registered as wakf fell within the purview of Section 43 of the 1995 Act, which
provides that whether any wakf was registered before commencement of the Act, under
any law for the time being in force, it shall not be necessary to register the wakf under the
provisions of the 1995 Act and any such registration made before such commencement shall
be deemed to be a registration made under the said Act. Hence, it is argued that the present
suit property must be deemed to be registered under Section 43, and not under Section 37 of
the 1995 Act.
20. Learned counsel for the Board next cites a judgment reported at (2017) 14 SCC 561
[Rajasthan Wakf Board vs. Devki Nandan Pathak and others], wherein it was held that the issue,
as to whether a suit land was wakf property or not, would be decided by the Wakf Tribunal
and not the Civil Court. It was further held in such judgment that matters falling under
Sections 51 and 52 of the 1995 Act were also required to be decided by the Tribunal and
jurisdiction of Civil Courts in such matters was barred in terms of Section 85 of the said Act.
However, as rightly pointed out on behalf of the petitioners in reply, the said judgment was
rendered by the Supreme Court in the context of a property which had been registered as
wakf in the list of wakf published under Section 5 of the 1995 Act. As such, the said
judgment is not relevant for the purpose of the present adjudication.
21. Learned counsel for the Board of Wakf further submits that it is now settled that
even if one member of the Wakf Tribunal is available, the Tribunal, and not the Civil Court,
will decide issues relating to wakf properties. Accordingly, it is submitted on behalf of the
Board of Wakf that the present suit was rightly instituted before the Wakf Tribunal and it
was the Tribunal, and not the Civil Court, which had jurisdiction to grant injunction.
22. The question which thus falls for consideration in the present case is, as to
whether the Tribunal or the Civil Court has jurisdiction to decide a dispute relating to the
question as to whether a property is a waqf property or not, even if such property is not
enlisted or registered under the 1995 Act.
23. Upon hearing all concerned and perusing the materials on record, it is clear that
there cannot be any two views about the scope of the suit. The first two reliefs in the plaint,
being reliefs (a) and (b), relate to a declaration that the suit property is a wakf property.
Relief (f) seeks a direction on defendant no. 1, that is, the Board of Waqf, to register
the "A" schedule property of the plaint as waqf property in terms of a Will and Testament
dated August 8, 1994.
24. It is thus clear, as is evident from relief (f), that the suit property is admittedly not
registered as a waqf property. Even paragraph no. 21 of the plaint contains an averment that
the Board of Waqf took a resolution on July 20, 2005, holding that the suit property cannot
be a waqf property, which was admittedly confirmed by the Board in its meeting held on
August 30, 2005, although such resolution was alleged to be absurd and beyond the
jurisdiction of the Board.
25. Moreover, there is no averment anywhere in the plaint as to the suit property
having been enlisted in the list of auqaf.
26. It would be relevant to set out certain provisions of the Waqf Act, 1995 in the
present context:
"3(g) - "list of auqaf" means the list of auqaf published under sub‐section (2) of section 5 or contained
in the register of auqaf maintained under section 37."
"6. Disputes regarding auqaf. - (1) If any question arises whether a particular property specified as
wakf property in the list of auqaf is wakf property or not or whether a wakf specified in such list is a
Shia waqf or Sunni waqf, the Board or the mutawalli of the waqf or any person aggrieved may
institute a suit in a Tribunal for the decision of the question and the decision of the Tribunal in
respect of such matter shall be final:
Provided that no such suit shall be entertained by the Tribunal after the expiry of one year
from the date of the publication of the list of auqaf.
Provided further that no suit shall be instituted before the Tribunal in respect of such
properties notified in a second or subsequent survey pursuant to the provisions contained in sub‐
section (6) of section 4.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub‐section (1), no proceeding under this Act in respect of
any waqf shall be stayed by reason only of the pendency of any such suit or of any appeal or other
proceeding arising out of such suit.
(3) The Survey Commissioner shall not be made a party to any suit under sub‐section (1) and no suit,
prosecution or other legal proceeding shall lie against him in respect of anything which is in good
faith done or intended to be done in pursuance of this Act or any rules made thereunder.
(4) The list of auqaf shall, unless it is modified in pursuance of a decision or the Tribunal under sub‐
section (1), be final and conclusive.
(5) On and from the commencement of this Act in a State, no suit or other legal proceeding shall be
instituted or commenced in a court in that State in relation to any question referred to in sub‐section
(1)."
"7. Power of Tribunal to determine disputes regarding auqaf.--(1) If, after the commencement
of this Act, any question or dispute arises, whether a particular property specified as waqf property in
a list of auqaf is waqf property or not, or whether a waqf specified in such list is a Shia waqf or a
Sunni waqf, the Board or the mutawalli of the waqf, or any person aggrieved by the publication of the
list of auqaf under section 5 therein, may apply to the Tribunal having jurisdiction in relation to such
property, for the decision of the question and the decision of the Tribunal thereon shall be final:
Provided that--
(a) in the case of the list of auqaf relating to any part of the State and published after the
commencement of this Act no such application shall be entertained after the expiry of one year
from the date of publication of the list of auqaf; and
(b) in the case of the list of auqaf relating to any part of the State and published at any time
within a period of one year immediately preceding the commencement of this Act, such an
application may be entertained by Tribunal within the period of one year from such
commencement:
Provided further that where any such question has been heard and finally decided by a civil
court in a suit instituted before such commencement, the Tribunal shall not re‐open such question.
(2) Except where the Tribunal has no jurisdiction by reason of the provisions of sub‐section
(5), no proceeding under this section in respect of any waqf shall be stayed by any court, tribunal or
other authority by reason only of the pendency of any suit, application or appeal or other proceeding
arising out of any such suit, application, appeal or other proceeding.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer shall not be made a party to any application under sub‐section
(1).
(4) The list of auqaf and where any such list is modified in pursuance of a decision of the
Tribunal under sub‐section (1), the list as so modified, shall be final.
(5) The Tribunal shall not have jurisdiction to determine any matter which is the subject‐
matter of any suit or proceeding instituted or commenced in a civil court under sub‐section (1) of
section 6, before the commencement of this Act or which is the subject‐matter of any appeal from the
decree passed before such commencement in any such suit or proceeding or of any application for
revision or review arising out of such suit, proceeding or appeal, as the case may be.
(6) The Tribunal shall have the powers of assessment of damages by unauthorised occupation
of waqf property and to penalise such unauthorised occupants for their illegal occupation of the waqf
property and to recover the damages as arrears of land revenue through the Collector:
Provided that whosoever, being a public servant, fails in his lawful duty to prevent or remove
an encroachment, shall on conviction be punishable with fine which may extend to fifteen thousand
rupees for each such offence."
"83. Constitution of Tribunals, etc.--(1) The State Government shall, by notification in the
Official Gazette, constitute as many Tribunals as it may think fit, for the determination of any
dispute, question or other matter relating to a waqf or waqf property, eviction of a tenant or
determination of rights and obligations of the lessor and the lessee of such property, under this Court
and define the local limits and jurisdiction of such Tribunals.
(2) Any mutawalli or person interested in a waqf or any other person aggrieved by an order
made under this Act, or rules made thereunder, may make an application within the time specified in
this Act or where no such time has been specified, within such time as may be prescribed, to the
Tribunal for the determination of any dispute, question or other matter relating to the waqf.
(3) Where any application made under sub‐section (1) relates to any waqf property which falls
within the territorial limits of the jurisdiction of two or more Tribunals, such application may be
made to the Tribunal within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the mutawalli or any one of the
mutawallis of the waqf actually and voluntarily resides, carries on business or personally works for
gain, and, where any such application is made to the Tribunal aforesaid, the other Tribunal or
Tribunals having jurisdiction shall not entertain any application for the determination of such
dispute, question or other matter:
Provided that the State Government may, if it is of opinion that it is expedient in the interest
of the waqf or any other person interested in the waqf or the waqf property to transfer such application
to any other Tribunal having jurisdiction for the determination of the dispute, question or other
matter relating to such waqf or waqf property, transfer such application to any other Tribunal having
jurisdiction, and, on such transfer, the Tribunal to which the application is so transferred, shall deal
with the application from the stage which was reached before the Tribunal from which the application
has been so transferred, except where the Tribunal is of opinion that it is necessary in the interests of
justice to deal with the application afresh.
(4) Every Tribunal shall consist of -
(a) one person, who shall be a member of the State Judicial Service holding a rank, not below
that of a District, Sessions or Civil Judge, Class I, who shall be the Chairman;
(b) one person, who shall be an officer from the State Civil Services equivalent in rank to that
of the Additional District Magistrate, Member;
(c) one person having knowledge of Mulsim law and jurisprudence, Member,
and the appointment of every such person shall be made either by name or by designation.
(4A) The terms and conditions of appointment including the salaries and allowances payable
to the Chairman and other members other than persons appointed as ex officio members shall be such
as may be prescribed.
(5) The Tribunal shall be deemed to be a civil court and shall have the same powers as may be
exercised by a civil court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), while trying a suit, or
executing a decree or order.
(6) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), the
Tribunal shall follow such procedure as may be prescribed.
(7) The decision of the Tribunal shall be final and binding upon the parties to the application
and it shall have the force of a decree made by a civil court.
(8) The execution of any decision of the Tribunal shall be made by the civil court to which
such decision is sent for execution in accordance with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure,
1908 (5 of 1908).
(9) No appeal shall lie against any decision or order whether interim or otherwise, given or
made by the Tribunal:
Provided that a High Court may, on its own motion or on the application of the Board or any
person aggrieved, call for and examine the records relating to any dispute, question or other matter
which has been determined by the Tribunal for the purpose of satisfying itself as to the correctness,
legality or propriety of such determination and may confirm, reverse or modify such determination or
pass such other order as it may think fit."
"85. Bar of jurisdiction of civil courts.--No suit or other legal proceeding shall lie in any civil
court, revenue court and any other authority in respect of any dispute, question or other matter
relating to any waqf, waqf property or other matter which is required by or under this Act to be
determined by a Tribunal."
27. The Trial Court proceeded on the premise that the dispute, as to whether the suit
property is a waqf property, still persisted and the Waqf Tribunal had the jurisdiction to
decide such dispute. As such, the defendants' application challenging the maintainability of
the suit was rejected and status quo was granted in respect of the suit property, allowing the
temporary injunction application of the plaintiff.
28. As discussed earlier, the property‐in‐suit, at the juncture when the suit was filed
and till the present date, is/was not reflected in the relevant list of auqaf and/or the Register
kept for the said purpose. A plain reading of the language of Section 6(1) of the 1995 Act
shows that only disputes as to whether a particular property, specified as waqf property in the
list of auqaf is waqf property or not, or whether a waqf specified in such list is a Shia waqf or
Sunni waqf. In case of such a question having arisen, the Board of Waqf or the mutawalli of
the waqf or any person aggrieved may institute a suit in the Waqf Tribunal.
29. Section 7 of the 1995 Act empowers the Waqf Tribunal to determine such disputes
as indicated in Section 6 and includes a person who is aggrieved by the publication of the
list of auqaf under Section 5 of the 1995 Act, within the array of persons entitled to approach
the Tribunal.
30. The list of auqaf, as defined in Section 3(g) of the 1995 Act, means the list of auqaf
published under Section 5(2), or contained in register of auqaf maintained under Section 37
of the said Act.
31. However, since admittedly, in the present case, the suit property was/is not
enlisted as a waqf property as contemplated in the 1995 Act since the inception of the suit,
on the face of it the dispute does not attract the provisions of Sections 6 and 7 of the 1995
Act. The bar stipulated in Section 85 of the 1995 Act is restricted to disputes, questions or
other matters relating to any waqf or waqf property or any other matter which is required by
or under the 1995 Act to be determined by a Tribunal. Hence, the jurisdiction of Civil Courts is
obviously not barred when the adjudication falls outside the jurisdiction of the Tribunal as
envisaged in the 1995 Act.
32. Section 83(1) of the 1995 Act might be argued to be ex facie wider in import than
Sections 6 and 7 of the Act. As per the said sub‐section, the State Government has been
empowered to constitute as many Tribunals as it may think fit, by notification in the Official
Gazette, for the determination of any dispute, question or other matter relating to a waqf or
waqf property, eviction of a tenant or determination of rights and obligation of the lessor
and/or lessee of such property, under the 1995 Act and defines the local limits and
jurisdiction of such Tribunals.
33. It is to be noted that, although at the first blush the disputes are not co‐related
with the list of auqaf, as in Sections 6 and 7 of the Act, the disputes contemplated in Section
83 have been circumscribed in Sub‐Section (1) of Section 83 itself by the phrase "under this
Act". As such, Section 83, however, wide it may appear, has to be channelized through the
focal point of Sections 6 and 7 as far as a suit is concerned. There are several provisions of
the 1995 Act which provide for a challenge before the Tribunal, but the scope of a suit is
primarily tied to Sections 6 and 7 of the said Act.
34. In this context, it would be relevant to discuss the judgment of Rajasthan Wakf
Board (supra) cited on behalf of the Board of Waqf. The said judgment, rendered on May 4,
2017, held that the Tribunal, and not the Civil Court, would decide questions as to whether a
suit property is a waqf property or not. While deciding the said case, the two‐Judge Bench of
the Hon'ble Supreme Court considered several judgments. However, a previous two‐Judge
Bench decision of the Supreme Court itself, delivered on March 31, 2014, reported at
(2014)16 SC 38 [Faseela M. vs. Munnerul Islam Madrasa Committee and another], was not
considered in Rajasthan Wakf Board (supra). The two judgments primarily discussed in
Rajasthan Wakf Board (supra) were both considered in Faseela M. (supra), apart from certain
other judgments of the Supreme Court. In the Faseela M. judgment, the Hon'ble Supreme
Court elaborately dealt with the scope of adjudication by the Tribunal. It was held therein,
inter alia, that Ramesh Gobindram - (2010) 8 SCC 726 covered the field. Among many other
things, it was held that Sections 6 and 7 of the Act confer exclusive jurisdiction upon the
Waqf Tribunal for determination of certain disputes regarding auqaf and also take away the
jurisdiction of the Civil Court in respect of such disputes. By relying on Ramesh Gobindram
(supra) and Bhamawar Lal ‐ (2014) 16 SCC 51, the Hon'ble Supreme Court, in Faseela M. (supra)
reiterated such views.
The relevant paragraphs of Faseela M. (supra) are set out below:
" 8. The question, for determination in these appeals, is as to whether the suit for eviction by the
landlord against the tenant relating to wakf property is triable by the civil court or the suit lies within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Wakf Tribunal.
... ... ... ... ...
"10. In Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun
Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] this Court considered Sections 6(1), 6(5),
7(1), 7(5), 83, 85 and few other provisions of the Act and explained the jurisdiction of the Wakf
Tribunal vis‐à‐vis the civil court. As regards the suit for eviction against the tenant(s) of wakf
property, the Court held that such suit is triable by the civil court as it is not covered by Sections 6
and 7 of the Act.
11. The Court in Ramesh Gobindram case [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf,
(2010) 8 SCC 726: (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] held as follows: (SCC p. 738, para 35)
"35. In the cases at hand, the Act does not provide for any proceedings before the Tribunal for
determination of a dispute concerning the eviction of a tenant in occupation of a wakf property or the
rights and obligations of the lessor and the lessees of such property. A suit seeking eviction of the
tenants from what is admittedly wakf property could, therefore, be filed only before the civil court and
not before the Tribunal."
12. Mr Renjith Marar, learned counsel for Respondent 1, submits that in a subsequent decision in
Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] , this Court has taken a different view. According to him, Section 85 of the Act leaves no manner of doubt that the Wakf Tribunal has jurisdiction to decide the suit for eviction. It is so because one of the questions for determination is whether the suit property is wakf property or not.
13. The Court in Bhanwar Lal [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] considered the decision in Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] at quite some length. Besides Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] , the Court in Bhanwar Lal [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] also considered two other decisions, one, W.B. Wakf Board v. Anis Fatma Begum [W.B. Wakf Board v. Anis Fatma Begum, (2010) 14 SCC 588 : (2012) 1 SCC (Civ) 773] and two, Sardar Khan v. Syed Nazmul Hasan [Sardar Khan v. Syed Nazmul Hasan, (2007) 10 SCC 727] . In Anis Fatma Begum [W.B. Wakf Board v. Anis Fatma Begum, (2010) 14 SCC 588 : (2012) 1 SCC (Civ) 773] , this Court had held that the Wakf Tribunal constituted under Section 83 of the Act will have exclusive jurisdiction to deal with the questions relating to demarcation of the wakf property.
14. Pertinently, the Court in Bhanwar Lal [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] held that the suit for cancellation of sale deed was triable by the civil court.
15.Bhanwar Lal [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] follows the line of reasoning in Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] . The decision of this Court in Bhanwar Lal [Bhanwar Lal v. Rajasthan Board of Muslim Wakf, (2014) 16 SCC 51] is not in any manner inconsistent or contrary to the view taken by this Court in Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] . We fully concur with the view of this Court in Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] , particularly with regard to construction put by it upon Sections 83 and 85 of the Act. In Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] the Court said: (SCC p. 738, paras 32‐34) "32. There is, in our view, nothing in Section 83 to suggest that it pushes the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the civil courts extends (sic) beyond what has been provided for in Section 6(5), Section 7 and Section 85 of the Act. It simply empowers the Government to constitute a Tribunal or Tribunals for determination of any dispute, question of other matter relating to a wakf or wakf property which does not ipso facto mean that the jurisdiction of the civil courts stands completely excluded by reasons of such establishment.
33. It is noteworthy that the expression 'for the determination of any dispute, question or other matter relating to a wakf or wakf property' appearing in Section 83(1) also appears in Section 85 of the Act. Section 85 does not, however, exclude the jurisdiction of the civil courts in respect of any or every question or disputes only because the same relates to a wakf or a wakf property. Section 85 in terms provides that the jurisdiction of the civil court shall stand excluded in relation to only such matters as are required by or under this Act to be determined by the Tribunal.
34. The crucial question that shall have to be answered in every case where a plea regarding exclusion of the jurisdiction of the civil court is raised is whether the Tribunal is under the Act or the Rules required to deal with the matter sought to be brought before a civil court. If it is not, the jurisdiction of the civil court is not excluded. But if the Tribunal is required to decide the matter the jurisdiction of the civil court would stand excluded."
16. The matter before us is wholly and squarely covered by Ramesh Gobindram [Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf, (2010) 8 SCC 726 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 553] . The suit for eviction against the tenant relating to a wakf property is exclusively triable by the civil court as such suit is not covered by the disputes specified in Sections 6 and 7 of the Act. "
35. A perusal of Ramesh Gobindram (supra) reveals that the Hon'ble Supreme Court discussed the jurisdiction of the tribunal, vis‐à‐vis the Civil Court, in great detail. Among other things, it was held that Sections 6 and 7 of the 1995 Act debars jurisdiction of the Civil Court only to the extent of trial of suits regarding questions specifically enumerated therein. It was held that the provisions of Section 85, barring jurisdiction of Civil Courts, although apparently wider in perspective than Sections 6 and 7, were not independent in operation, but were limited to matters required by the Act to be determined by the Tribunal, such as matters falling under Sections 33, 35, 47, 48, 51, 54, 61, 64, 67, 72 and 73. Hence, it was held, the jurisdiction of Civil Courts to entertain suits or proceedings in relation to any question not falling within the four corners of the tribunal's power did not stand barred. It was held in the said case that Section 83 did not extend the exclusion of Civil Courts' jurisdiction beyond that provided for in Section 6(5), 7 and 83 of the 1995 Act.
36. This apart, Rajasthan Wakf Board (supra), relied on in the present case, arose from a case where the property in question was registered as waqf in the list of auqaf published under Section 5 of the 1995 Act. As such, the cardinal factor in the present lis was absent in the said case. The said decision, thus, could not be treated to be a precedent for the purpose of the present adjudication.
37. As regards the judgment reported at 2016 (2) CHN 457, rendered by a co‐ordinate Bench of this Court, the same did not consider the present distinguishing feature, which is, as to whether the property which not in the list of auqaf, maintained under the 1995 Act, could be the subject‐matter of a dispute to be resolved by the Tribunal or would be decided before a Civil Court. Hence, the said judgment cannot be treated as a precedent for the present purpose.
38. The judgment reported at AIR 1998 SC 972, relied on by the Board of Waqf, is not at all germane for the present adjudication. In the present case, the question is not as to whether registration is necessary for a property to be a waqf property, since such a question could only fall for adjudication in the suit itself, and not at the stage of deciding the question of jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
39. As to the other contention of the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1, that since plaint of a previous suit was rejected by a Civil Court on the ground of lack of jurisdiction, there was no other option before the plaintiff but to institute the suit before the Tribunal, the said previous order of the civil court could not ipso facto compel the parties to approach the Tribunal. Apart from the fact that at least all the parties to the said suit were not common with the present litigation, the fact that the plaintiffs in the said previous suit chose not to challenge the said order could not be a deterrent for the Tribunal or this Court to return the plaint on a contrary finding. Hence, the rejection of plaint in the earlier suit could not stand in the way of the Tribunal, in the present case, returning/rejecting the plaint on the ground of lack of jurisdiction. This apart, the facts are not clear as to whether the averments in the previous plaint and the present plaint are exactly identical. As such, the said ground, recorded by the Tribunal in the impugned order, cannot be sustained.
40. In view of the aforesaid discussions, it is evident that the present dispute, although relating to the question as to whether the suit property is a waqf property or not, does not pertain to a property which is in the list of auqaf. As such, the jurisdiction of the Civil Court is not barred under Section 85 of the 1995 Act, for the simple reason that the Tribunal does not have jurisdiction, as contemplated in Sections 6 and 7 of the said Act, to decide a suit relating to such question.
41. In such view of the matter, the impugned order suffers from jurisdictional error inasmuch as the Tribunal did not consider the maintainability of the suit before the Tribunal in proper perspective and acted without jurisdiction in assuming jurisdiction and granting injunction, despite the suit being not maintainable before the Tribunal at all.
42. Accordingly, C.O. No. 2563 of 2018 is allowed on contest, thereby setting aside the impugned order, granting injunction and holding that the suit is maintainable before the Tribunal. It is hereby held that Title Suit No. 3 of 2018, pending before the Waqf Tribunal, West Bengal, is not maintainable before the said forum, since the said Tribunal does not have the jurisdiction to entertain or decide the matter. Only a competent Civil Court has the jurisdiction to entertain and decide the said suit. As such, the plaint of the said suit is directed to be returned to the plaintiff/opposite party no. 1, with liberty to present the same before the appropriate forum, subject to the law of limitation and other relevant legal provisions.
43. There will be no order as to costs.
44. Urgent certified website copies of this order, if applied for, be made available to the parties upon compliance of the requisite formalities.
( Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya, J. )