Sacred Ground, Private Feud: Uttarakhand HC Boots Burial Dispute Out of PIL Court

In a swift ruling, the High Court of Uttarakhand at Nainital dismissed a public interest litigation (PIL) seeking to secure burial rights for the Barelvi Muslim community in a village Kabristan, declaring the intra-community tussle unfit for PIL scrutiny. Delivered by a bench led by Chief Justice Manoj Kumar Gupta and Justice Subhash Upadhyay on April 22, 2026, the decision underscores the boundaries of public interest jurisdiction.

Village Graveyard Becomes Battleground

The dispute unfolded in Village Bhaniyawala, Tehsil Doiwala, District Dehradun , where members of the Barelvi community —claiming numerical superiority—filed Writ Petition (PIL) No. 64 of 2023 through petitioner Mohd. Shahzad in a representative capacity. They alleged that respondents 8 to 16 , affiliated with the Deobandi community , were blocking access to the Kabristan for burials and post-death rituals.

Petitioner sought mandamus orders against state authorities ( respondents 1 to 7 , including the State of Uttarakhand ) to provide protection and against the Deobandi members to cease interference. The Kabristan, traditionally used by both sects, became a flashpoint amid claims of exclusion despite the Barelvis' larger local presence.

One-Sided Plea Meets Quick Rebuttal

With no detailed counter-affidavits dissected in the judgment, the court's focus zeroed in on the petition's nature. The petitioner argued for state intervention to safeguard religious practices, framing it as a broader public right. However, the bench perceived it as a zero-sum claim: one Muslim sub-community's burial entitlement against another, not a public welfare issue warranting PIL.

As echoed in reports from legal outlets, the High Court emphasized that such private assertions don't qualify as public interest matters.

Why PIL Doesn't Bury This Beef

The justices pierced the PIL veil early, reasoning that intra-faith property or usage rights disputes demand individualized civil remedies, not extraordinary writ jurisdiction. No precedents were invoked, but the ruling reinforces PIL's role for systemic failures, not sectarian standoffs—distinguishing it from broader religious freedom claims under Article 25 or 26.

This aligns with evolving judicial caution against PIL misuse for personal or group rivalries, channeling parties to suits for title, easement, or injunctions.

Key Observations

“The right of burial being claimed by members of a particular community of Muslim as against the other community, in our considered opinion, would not be a matter falling under Public Interest Litigation.”

“We leave it open to the petitioner and members of the said community to establish the said right in appropriate civil proceedings or by such other mode as may be advised.”

“The writ petition stands disposed of, accordingly.”

These excerpts capture the court's crisp logic, prioritizing procedural fitness over immediate relief.

Petition Disposed, Path Cleared for Civil Suit

The bench disposed of the PIL, vacating any pending applications, without costs or further directions. Practically, it shields state resources from proxy community battles while nudging Barelvis toward civil courts for ownership proofs or usage rights.

For future cases, this sets a precedent: communal Kabristan clashes stay private until proven public. Amid India's diverse religious landscape, it signals courts' reluctance to entangle in sub-sectarian squabbles via PIL, potentially reducing frivolous filings but leaving graveyards in legal limbo absent swift civil resolution.