Stereo H.C.J.D.
A 38
Judgment Sheet
IN THE LAHORE HIGH COURT LAHORE,
MULTAN BENCH, MULTAN
JUDICIAL DEPARTMENT
Civil Revision No.955 of 2019 converted into Writ Petition No. 2570 of 2022
Abdul Rauf etc. Versus Muhammad Mushtaq etc.
JUDGMENT
Petitioners by: Mr. Hamid Aziz, Advocate.
Respondents by: Ex-parte.
Date of hearing: 21.02.2022.
MUHAMMAD SHAN GUL,J.- This Civil Revision is
not maintainable after the amendment made in Section 115
CPC by the Province of Punjab by means of adding sub clause
5 to the section. The newly inserted sub clause 5 reads as
follows:-
“(5) No proceedings in revision shall be
entertained by the High Court against an
order passed by the District Court under
Section 104,”
This amendment was inserted in the Code of Civil
Procedure through the Punjab Amendment Act XIV of 2018
dated 20.03.2018, therefore, a constitutional petition, if at all,
should have been filed in the matter and not a Civil Revision.
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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The office of this Court realizes its mistake and begs pardon.
Learned counsel for the petitioners insists that this Court has
the jurisdiction to convert one type of proceedings into another
and provided the petitioners’ approach is not barred by the law
of limitation, a civil revision can be ordered to be converted
into a constitutional petition.
2. It has been noted that the Civil Revision was filed within
thirty four days of the impugned judgment passed by the
appellate court and therefore, is not hit by limitation or for that
matter by the doctrine of laches. In view of the law laid down
by the Hon’ble Supreme Court of Pakistan in the case of
Muhammad Akram vs. DCO, Rahim yar khan and others
(2017 SCMR 56) at paragraph 7 as also in view of Capital
Development Authority, Islamabad through its Chairman
vs. Khuda Bakhsh and 5 others (1994 SCMR 771) in the last
paragraph and the case of Shamsul Haq and others vs. Mst.
Ghoti and 8 others (1991 SCMR 1135) at paragraph 10 this
Court has the power to convert one type of proceedings into
another kind and therefore, subject to the petitioners depositing
requisite court fee (Rs. 1500/- since there are three petitioners),
the present Civil Revision is converted into a constitutional
petition and office is directed to allot a number to this writ
petition today.
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
converted into W.P.No.2570 of 2022
3. Through this judgment the titled Writ Petition is sought to
be decided.
4. This case before this court is a classic case calling out
for interference in revisional jurisdiction on account of the
conspicuous and manifest illegality and misdirection in law
exhibited by both Courts below i.e. the trial Court as also
the appellate Court.
5. Brief facts of the case are that the petitioners before this
Court are the children of one Mst. Ruqayya Bibi daughter of
Muhammad Ibrahim. According to the petitioners their
maternal grandfather Muhammad Ibrahim son of Qasim was
owner of Khata No.40/40, Khatooni No.121 to 140, Square
No.50 in respect of land measuring 200K-2M according to the
register Haqdaraan-e-Zameen for the year 2011-2012 situated at
Chak No.85/6-R. That at the time of the death of Muhammad
Ibrahim, inheritance mutation bearing No.1244 dated
15.07.1970 was sanctioned in favour of legal heirs of
Muhammad Ibrahim but cunningly yet mischievously and
purposively, their mother Mst. Ruqayya Bibi was kept out of
inheritance and was deprived of her legal share. That their
mother died on 21.12.1983 and upon learning that their mother
had been denied her share in the matter of inheritance they
approached their maternal uncles who refused pointblank in
either exceeding to their request of being given their due
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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inheritable share or for that matter in sharing the proceeds of
the crops with them and since the respondents wanted to
alienate portions of the said inherited property, the petitioners
approached the Court by means of a suit for declaration and
permanent injunction.
6. Alongwith such suit the petitioners also filed an application
for temporary injunction which was refused by the trial Court.
7. Paragraph No.4 of the order passed the trial Court dated
20.04.2019 has been perused and it can straightaway be
observed that there is misdirection in law on the part of the trial
Court in getting massively swayed by the suggestion of the
respondents that Mst. Ruqayya Bibi had died before her father
died and, therefore, was not entitled to any inheritable share.
The observation of the trial Court ‘the entitlement of the
predecessor of plaintiff is yet to be established’ is entirely
gratuitous and unwarranted, according to the counsel for the
petitioners.
8. Upon being refused interim relief by means of denial of the
request for grant of temporary injunction, the petitioners before
this Court, approached the District Court Sahiwal by filing a
civil appeal seeking the grant of temporary injunction. This
appeal has also been dismissed vide order dated 07.08.2019 and
which is the reason why the petitioners have approached this
Court.
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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9. The order passed by the Appellate Court has also been
perused and this order, too, is equally misdirected and based on
an erroneous application of law and can therefore, not be
supported. Even the Appellate Court has been impressed, albeit
wrongly, by the assertion that Mst. Ruqayya Bibi, the
predecessor of petitioners had passed away prior to the death of
her father Muhammad Ibrahim and, therefore, the Appellate
Court has also misdirected itself in law in not appreciating the
presence of Section 4 of The Muslim Family Laws Ordinance,
1961. The question about the date of death of Mst. Ruqayya
Bibi was therefore absolutely irrelevant in view of section 4.
10. The respondents have been served according to the report
submitted by the office but no one is present on their behalf
and, therefore, they are being proceeded against ex parte.
11. I have heard the counsel for the petitioners and have
perused the record.
12. The written statement submitted by the respondents in the
suit clearly acknowledges the relationship between the parties
(maternal uncles and nephews) and which on the face of it is
enough to establish the entitlement of the petitioners to the
extent of their inheritable share in the property in question and,
therefore, the observations of the trial Court as also of the
appellate Court come across as questionable. The reason
disclosed in the written statement filed by the respondents about
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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not including the name of Mst. Ruqaya Bibi in the inheritance
mutation is itself adequate to establish entitlement of Mst.
Ruqayya Bibi i.e. predecessor-in-interest of the petitioners. The
respondents have wrongly and erroneously relied on the alleged
fact that Mst. Ruqayya Bibi died prior to her father’s death and
was therefore rightly not included in the inheritance mutation.
This aspect of the written statement only accentuates and
heightens the entitlement of the petitioners and reinforces
their case.
13. Both Courts have failed to note the presence of Section 4
of The Muslim Family Laws Ordinance, 1961 which is being
reproduced hereunder for facility of reference:
“4. Succession.– In the event of the death of any son
or daughter of the propositus before the opening of
succession, the children of such son or daughter, if
any, living at the time the succession opens,
shall per stirpes receive a share equivalent to the
share which such son or daughter, as the case may
be, would have received if alive.”
14. In the presence of Section 4 of The Muslim Family Laws
Ordinance, 1961 the entitlement of the petitioners was
established by law and there was no need for establishing it any
further. Both Courts below have failed to take into
consideration the presence of Section 4 of The Muslim Family
Laws Ordinance, 1961 and which is why this case comes across
as a classic case calling out for interference in revisional
jurisdiction of this Court on account of a conspicuous illegality.
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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15. What is also true is that an absolutely irrelevant
consideration has prevailed with the Courts below in denying
the grant of temporary injunction to the petitioners. This, in
turn, clearly means that both Courts below have applied their
minds in an incorrect manner and in the words of (Lord
Greene in the case of Wednesbury Corporation 1948(1) KB
223), the decision maker has directed his attention to an
improper question and taken into account an irrelevant
consideration and, therefore, committed an illegality. In a
nutshell, the decision makers asked wrong questions and their
approach was thus improper. Both Courts below have failed to
take into account settled law on the subject and which is why
both orders need to be set aside.
16. In (PLD 2003 Supreme Court 475), Mst. Fazeelat Jan
and others v. Sikandar through his Legal Heirs and others, it
has been held as follows:
“the trial Court was wrong in holding that the
grandson, under the traditional Muslim Law of
Inheritance was excluded from the inheritance of
his grandfather due to the absence of his own
father. Section 4 of the Muslim Family Laws
Ordinance, 1961, clearly entitles the grandson for
receiving the share which his father would have
inherited, had he been alive. ……..… The grandson,
therefore can inherit the share of his predeceased
father from his grandfather.
The claim under section 4 of Muslim Family
Laws Ordinance, 1961, being besides the point for
the time being, the grandson Sikandar, in the
prevailing succession that existed at the time of
opening of succession, independent of his father,
was entitled to 18/48 share in the inheritance of his
grandfather in his capacity as residuary. The table
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of residuaries is indicative of the fact that the
grandson, as, such, is placed at a higher degree
than a brother's son. In the circumstances, Sikandar
is entitled to 18/48 or 9/24 or 3/8 share in the
inheritance of his grandfather being a residuary in
his own right and also under section 4 of the
Muslim Family Laws Ordinance, 1961……..”
In (2005 CLC 1160 (LHC), Mst. Saabran Bibi and 9 others v.
Muhammad Ibrahim and 12 others, it has been held as follows:
“the above stated position of the inter se
relationship of the parties is not in dispute. It is also
not in dispute that the petitioner was son of
Muhammad Shafi deceased and Mst. Hassan was
his widow, who had married later on with
Muhammad Ibrahim. Section 4 of the Muslim
Family Laws Ordinance, 1961, which deals with the
succession in suchlike matters reads as under:--
"4 Succession.--- in the event of the death of any son
or daughter of; the propositus before the opening of
succession, the children of such son or daughter, if
any, living at the time of succession opens, shall per
stripes receive a share equivalent to the share
which such son or daughter as the case may be,
would have received if alive. (underlined by me due
to its relevance)."
This section relates to and, deals with the right of
inheritance of the issues of the predeceased son and
daughter. It provides that if a person dies and
leaves behind issues of such of his sons or
daughters who were dead in his life time, the issues
of the deceased sons and daughters will be entitled
to inherit the shares that their father or the mother
would have inherited had, they been alive at the
time of death of that person. The object and
rationale behind this provision is to ameliorate the
distress of those unfortunate children whose father
and mother are snatched away by death in the life
of their grandfather. Such orphan grandchildren
are sought to be compensated in such a way by
giving the share in inheritance to which their father
or the mother would have been entitled. The express
and unambiguous phraseology and language of the
provisions of law leaves no obscurity or doubt that
the "children of such son" are only entitled to
inherit and receive share which expression does not
possibly within its ambit include the widow "of such
son". Thus, only the petitioner as son of Muhammad
Shafi was entitled to receive the share………Thus, it
is obvious that a Muslim's estates legally and
juridically vests immediately on his death in his or
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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her heirs and their rights respectively come into
separate existence forthwith". It was not dependent
upon any entry in the mutation which was meant
only to incorporate a factum. ……”
In (2017 CLC 1331 (PHC), Abdul Haleem and others v.
Habibulaah Khan and others, it has been held as follows:
“the perusal of the record depicts that the
deceased Abdul Ghaffar had died in the year 1973
leaving behind four sons and two daughters. One of
his daughter Mst. Bibi Noora and his son
Muhammad Khan had already died in his life time.
They were survived by children when in 1973 Abdul
Ghaffar died and his inheritance mutation No.3504
was attested on 24.7.1973, wherein children of his
pre deceased son Muhammad Khan were given 2/9
shares in his inheritance. Besides one of his
daughter namely Bibi Hawa was given 2/9 share in
his legacy. The plaintiffs in their plaint had claimed
1/8 shares in the legacy of deceased Abdul Ghaffar
but it was not based on correct legal footings that
being the children of pre deceased daughter of
Abdul Ghaffar like Bibi Hawa, they were also
entitled to 7/9 shares in the inheritance mutation
No.3504 attested on 24.7.1973…………..”
17. It is clear from the above precedents that the petitioners
before this Court did indeed have a prima facie case entitling
them to seek a temporary injunction in the matter on the
strength of Section 4 of The Muslim Family Laws Ordinance,
1961. That, likewise, since the respondents through their
written statement reinforced their right to sell the property in
question to whomsoever they pleased and since the respondents
were on the brink of alienating such property, as admitted by
them in reply to paragraph No.6 in their written statement, even
the balance of inconvenience tilted towards the petitioners
despite the doctrine of lis pendens because if such property
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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were to be alienated then the petitioners would be left entangled
in multiple litigation.
18. The fact of the death of the original owner of the property
i.e. predecessor-in-interest of the competing parties not being
disputed and in fact admitted by the respondents did not need to
be established by evidence in view of the admission. It may be
necessary to recapitulate here that grant of temporary injunction
is an equitable relief depending upon the circumstances of each
individual case. In order to ascertain existence of a prima facie
case all pleadings and materials before the court had to be
considered. A prima facie case only means an arguable case and
does not necessarily mean a prima facie title in the property
(even the entitlement in the present case is beyond question
and stands established by virtue of operation of law). It may
also be noted that the pleadings and materials on record
indicated a strong possibility of existence of a right in favour of
the party seeking injunction and breach of such right being
admitted by the opposing party, temporary injunction for the
preservation of the threatened right ought to have been granted.
19. It may be reiterated that the phrase ‘prima facie case’ in
its plain language signifies a triable case where some
substantial question is to be investigated and this phrase should
not be confused with ‘prima facie title’. Also in order to make
out a prima facie case the plaintiff need not establish its title. It
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C.R. No.955 of 2019
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is enough if the plaintiff can show that he has raised a fair
question as to the existence of right in the property in dispute
and which should be preserved until such question is
determined. Kindly see “Sinotec Co. Limited through
Authorized Person v. Province of Sindh through Secretary
Sindh and 5 others” (PLD 2018 Sindh 303), “Naseem ul Haq
through Attorney and another v. Raes Aftab Ali Lashari
through Guardian ad-litem and 5 others” (2015 YLR 550) and
“Farooq Hassan and another v. International Credit and
Investment Company and another” (1996 CLC 507).
Furthermore, in “Sayyid Yousaf Husain Shirazi v. Pakistan
Defence Officers’ Housing Authority and 2 others” (2010 MLD
1267), it has been held as follows:-
“Existence of prima facie case is to be judged or made out
on the basis of material/evidence on record at the time of
hearing of injunction application and such evidence or
material should be of the nature that by considering the
same, Court should or ought to be of the view that plaintiff
applying for injunction was in all probability likely to
succeed in the suit by having a decision in his favour. The
term "prima facie case" is not specifically defined in the
Code of Civil Procedure. The Judge- made-law or the
consensus is that in order to satisfy about the existence of
prima facie case, the pleadings must contain facts
constituting the existence of right of the plaintiff and its
infringement at the hands of the opposite party.”
20. In this view of the matter, the order and judgment passed
by both Courts below are erroneous in law and result out of
misdirection in law. Both decisions cannot be sustained and are
set aside and declared to be of no legal effect. The petitioners
application for grant of temporary injunction is accepted and it
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is ordered that during the pendency of the suit in question the
respondents shall maintain status quo with respect to, and shall
not alienate, the property in question only to the extent of the
inheritable share of the petitioners(to be worked out by the trial
Court in accordance with law) .
21. At this stage, learned counsel for the petitioners submits
that he may be allowed to implead revenue officials in the suit.
Let him make a formal application in this respect before the
trial Court seized of the matter and which Court shall decide the
said application in accordance with law.
22. Allowed in the above terms.
(MUHAMMAD SHAN GUL)
JUDGE
APPROVED FOR REPORTING.
JUDGE
“Gulraiz”