Does Section 83 of the Waqf Act confer omnibus jurisdiction on the Waqf Tribunal beyond matters specified in the “list of Auqaf” under Sections 6 and 7?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number C.A. No.-000582-000582 – 2026
Diary Number 1776/2022
Judge Name HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJAY KUMAR
Bench

HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE SANJAY KUMAR

HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE K. VINOD CHANDRAN

Precedent Value Binding authority
Overrules / Affirms

Affirms Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf (2010) 8 SCC 726;

Overrules the expansive reading of Section 83 in Anis Fatma Begum v. W.B. Wakf Board (2010) 14 SCC 588, Rashid Wali Beg v. Farid Pindari (2022) 4 SCC 414, Pritpal Singh v. Punjab Wakf Board (2013) SCC OnLine SC 1345, P.V. Ibrahim Haji v. Akkode Jumayath Palli Paripalana Committee (2014) 16 SCC 65, and P.V. Ibrahim Haji v. Akkode Jumayath (2014) 16 SCC 65

Type of Law Civil procedure – jurisdiction of Waqf Tribunal; Statutory interpretation of Waqf Act, 1995 (amendment of 2013)
Questions of Law
  • Is the Tribunal’s jurisdiction under Sections 6(1) & 7(1) confined to properties specified in the “list of Auqaf” (including register under Section 37)?
  • Does Section 83 independently confer omnibus power to decide any dispute “relating to a waqf or waqf property”?
  • How does the 2013 amendment affect the Tribunal’s power over eviction/encroachment disputes?
Ratio Decidendi The Tribunal’s jurisdiction under Sections 6 and 7 is confined to questions about properties entered in the “list of Auqaf” (survey list under Section 5 and register under Section 37), and to matters expressly conferred elsewhere in the Act (e.g., eviction of encroachers under Section 54 post-amendment). Section 83 merely empowers the State Government to constitute Tribunals; it does not expand their jurisdiction beyond those statutory grants. Section 85 only ousts civil-court power in respect of matters “required by or under this Act to be determined by a Tribunal.” The 2013 amendment clarifies that registered waqfs are included in the “list of Auqaf” and adds a specific eviction remedy but does not alter the fundamental limits of Tribunal jurisdiction.
Judgments Relied Upon
  • Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf (2010) 8 SCC 726
  • Rajasthan SRTC v. Bal Mukund Bairwa (2009) 4 SCC 299
  • National Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Pranay Sethi (2017) 16 SCC 680
  • Zile Singh v. State of Haryana (2004) 8 SCC 1
  • Hitendra Vishnu Thakur v. State of Maharashtra (1994) 4 SCC 602
  • Madanuri Sri Rama Chandra Murthy v. Syed Jalal (2017) 13 SCC 174
  • Faqir Mohamad Shah v. Qazi Fasihuddin Ansari (AIR 1956 SC 713)
  • Syed Mohd. Salie Labbai v. Mohd. Hanifa (1976) 4 SCC 780
  • M. Siddiq (Ram Janmabhumi Temple-5 J.) v. Suresh Das (2020) 1 SCC 1
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by Court
  • Presumption of civil-court jurisdiction unless expressly ousted (Rajasthan SRTC v. Bal Mukund Bairwa).
  • Distinction between specific grants of jurisdiction (Sections 6, 7, 54) and administrative power to constitute tribunals (Section 83).
  • Coordination-bench divergence must yield to the first two-judge Bench (Ramesh Gobindram) unless referred (Pranay Sethi).
  • Amendment of 2013 is clarificatory – includes register under Section 37 and adds eviction remedy under Section 54, not an omnibus jurisdictional grant.
  • Finality and ouster under Section 85 limited to matters “required by or under this Act.”
Facts as Summarised by the Court
  • Appellant-owner developed an apartment; respondent claimed a ground-floor mosque built in 2008 and public prayers, ingress blocked in 2021.
  • Plaintiff sued for perpetual injunction against interference with mosque access.
  • Defendants moved to reject the plaint under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, contending no waqf property, no inclusion in list/register, Tribunal lacks jurisdiction.
  • High Court found a “waqf by user” under Section 3(r)(i) and sustained Tribunal jurisdiction.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On
  • Waqf Tribunals constituted under the Waqf Act, 1995
  • All Civil Courts and Revenue Courts
Persuasive For High Courts
Overrules
  • Anis Fatma Begum v. W.B. Wakf Board (2010) 14 SCC 588
  • Rashid Wali Beg v. Farid Pindari (2022) 4 SCC 414
  • Pritpal Singh v. Punjab Wakf Board (2013) SCC OnLine SC 1345
  • P.V. Ibrahim Haji v. Akkode Jumayath Palli Paripalana Committee (2014) 16 SCC 65
Distinguishes Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf (2010) 8 SCC 726 (limited eviction jurisdiction pre-2013 amendment)
Follows
  • Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf (2010) 8 SCC 726
  • Rajasthan SRTC v. Bal Mukund Bairwa (2009) 4 SCC 299
  • National Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Pranay Sethi (2017) 16 SCC 680
  • Zile Singh v. State of Haryana (2004) 8 SCC 1

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Section 83 merely empowers constitution of Waqf Tribunals; it does not independently confer jurisdiction beyond that granted in Sections 6, 7 and specific provisions (e.g., Section 54 eviction remedy).
  • Only properties in the “list of Auqaf” (survey list under Section 5(2) and register under Section 37, post-2013 amendment) fall within Tribunal’s jurisdiction to decide status disputes.
  • Section 85’s ouster of civil-court jurisdiction is limited to “matters required by or under this Act,” not an all-pervasive bar.
  • 2013 amendment is clarificatory: it expanded “list of Auqaf” and added express power for eviction of tenants/encroachers under Section 54, without altering core jurisdictional limits.
  • Plaintiffs must seek injunction in civil court if property is not a registered/declared waqf; plaint may be rejected under Order VII Rule 11 CPC.
  • Coordinate-bench divergences on Section 83 (Anis Fatma Begum, Rashid Wali Beg, Pritpal Singh, P.V. Ibrahim Haji) are overruled; Ramesh Gobindram remains the binding ratio.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. Presumption of Civil‐Court Jurisdiction
    Civil courts retain jurisdiction unless ousted by clear statutory provision (Rajasthan SRTC v. Bal Mukund Bairwa).
  2. Scope of Sections 6 & 7
    Tribunal may decide status questions only for properties in the “list of Auqaf” (Section 5 survey list and Section 37 register) – finality conferred by Section 6(1) & 7(1).
  3. Section 85 Ouster
    Section 85 bars civil remedies only in respect of matters “required by or under this Act to be determined by a Tribunal.”
  4. Section 83 Is Enabling, Not Granting
    Section 83 authorises constitution of tribunals; does not create new substantive jurisdiction beyond other explicit grants.
  5. 2013 Amendment
    Clarified that registered waqfs are in the “list of Auqaf” and added eviction/encroachment remedy under Section 54, but left Section 83’s enabling role unchanged.
  6. Coordinate‐Bench Divergence
    Expansive readings of Section 83 in Anis Fatma Begum, Rashid Wali Beg, Pritpal Singh, P.V. Ibrahim Haji are inconsistent with Ramesh Gobindram and are overruled.
  7. Application to Present Case
    Property not declared/registered as waqf; Tribunal lacked jurisdiction; plaint rejected under O. VII R. 11 CPC; civil suit may be filed if meritorious.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioners (Appellants)

  • No mosque/waqf property established or registered; not in sanction plan.
  • Tribunal’s jurisdiction under Sections 6 & 7 applies only to properties in “list of Auqaf.”
  • Injunction suit simpliciter impermissible before Tribunal; civil court is proper forum.
  • O. VII R. 11 application should have been allowed to reject plaint.

Respondent (Plaintiff)

  • Waqf status can be conferred by survey (Section 5), registration (Section 37) or by Tribunal under Section 83.
  • “Waqf by user” recognised under Section 3(r)(i); 2013 amendment expanded definition of “list of Auqaf.”
  • Section 83(1) allows Tribunal to decide any dispute or question relating to waqf or waqf property.
  • Civil-court jurisdiction ousted by Section 85; plaint maintainable before Tribunal.

Factual Background

  1. Owner of a land developed an apartment complex under a development agreement.
  2. Respondent claimed a mosque was en­closed on the ground floor in 2008 and public prayers continued until ingress was blocked in 2021.
  3. Respondent sued in the Waqf Tribunal for a perpetual injunction against obstruction of mosque access.
  4. Appellants applied to reject the plaint under Order VII Rule 11 CPC, contending lack of waqf status and Tribunal jurisdiction.
  5. High Court held the mosque constituted a “waqf by user” under Section 3(r)(i) and sustained jurisdiction; appellants appealed.

Statutory Analysis

  • Section 2(r)(i) – Defines “waqf” to include dedication by user from time immemorial.
  • Section 3(g) – Defines “list of Auqaf” (amended in 2013 to include survey list under Section 5(2) and register under Section 37).
  • Section 6(1), 7(1) – Tribunal jurisdiction to decide status of properties specified in “list of Auqaf.”
  • Section 54(3)–(4) – Chief Executive Officer may apply for eviction of encroachers; Tribunal empowered post-2013 to remove unauthorized occupants.
  • Section 83(1) – Enables State Government to constitute tribunals; does not itself create substantive jurisdiction.
  • Section 85 – Bars civil court jurisdiction only for matters that “are required by or under this Act to be determined by a Tribunal.”

Dissenting / Concurring Opinion Summary

No separate dissenting or concurring opinions were delivered.

Procedural Innovations

  • Clarifies use of Order VII Rule 11 CPC to reject plaints in Waqf-Act tribunals for lack of jurisdiction.
  • Reinforces requirement of gazette notification or registration prior to approaching the Waqf Tribunal for status disputes.
  • Establishes that eviction/encroachment remedy is only under Section 54 post-2013 amendment, not under Section 83.

Alert Indicators

  • 🚨 Breaking Precedent – Overrules expansive readings of Section 83 by coordinate benches.
  • ✔ Precedent Followed – Affirms Ramesh Gobindram v. Sugra Humayun Mirza Wakf (2010) 8 SCC 726.
  • 🔄 Conflicting Decisions – Resolves conflicts among Anis Fatma Begum, Rashid Wali Beg, Pritpal Singh, P.V. Ibrahim Haji.

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