Share with your community:
In a legal dispute between the family of the actor Saif Ali Khan and the government of Madhya Pradesh, some properties of the family have been declared as enemy properties.
Saif Ali Khan had challenged the decision of the government in the Madhya Pradesh High Court in the year 2015.
The said properties in question include the Flag Staff House and Noor-Us-Sabah Palace situated in Bhopal. The legal battle has continued for years now, where the previous rulings were in the favour of Saif and his family recognising them as legal heirs. But now the recent High Court ruling has overturned the decisions of the lower Courts classifying the property in question as enemy property. The decision came as a significant setback for Saif Ali Khan, thus continuing a long-standing legal dispute over the inheritance of the ancestral property of the Pataudi family in Bhopal.
After the wars with Pakistan (1965) and China (1962), the Government of India passed a law, the Enemy Property Act, 1968.
As per the new legislation, if someone after leaving India became a citizen of an enemy country, like Pakistan, their property in India, in that case shall be taken over by the Government of India.
In 2017, further changes were introduced in the legislation as well, making it stricter-
Saif Ali Khan is the descendant of the royal families of Bhopal and Pataudi. His grandmother, Sajida Sultan, was daughter of Nawab Hamidullah Khan, the last ruler of Bhopal. However, the controversy starts with his legal heir-
What Does Enemy Property Act Say-
Changes introduced in 2017 to the law-
The present case started as Saif Ali Khan’s great-aunt, Abida Sultan, heir to the Nawab of Bhopal, moved to Pakistan over 70 years ago becoming a citizen there.
According to the Enemy Property Act heirs to such property won’t be allowed to inherit such properties, even when they are Indian citizens.
Recent order by the High Court has now made it harder for Saif’s family to claim their ancestral properties. Though the Court has ordered the parties to start the case anew, so as to decide upon the status of the property.
For further information on the subject, or to follow similar legal news, you may follow our blog under Sharks of Law or on instagram and youtube. If you are involved in a civil or criminal case and wish to talk to a lawyer online or seek free legal counsel, you may contact us through the following information.
Email:-helpdesk@sharksoflaw.com
Help Desk:-+91-88770-01993