ISLAMABAD: Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) leader Hanif Abbasi on Tuesday filed a written response in the Supreme Court of Pakistan in the Imran Khan and Jahangir Tareen disqualification case.
On November 15, a three-member bench of the apex court — headed by Chief Justice Saqib Nisar and comprising Justice Faisal Arab and Justice Umar Ata Bandial — had concluded hearing a petition filed by Abbasi against Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) Chairman Imran Khan and secretary-general Jahangir Tareen.
The petition seeks the disqualification of the two PTI leaders.
The SC had earlier reserved its verdict in t
he case. The chief justice had asked the petitioner as well as th
e respondents to submit any additional written material if they wanted.
“According to Black’s Law Dictionary, a trust should be considered to be an asset,” stated th
e response submitted by Abbasi on Tuesday.
It further identifies a bare trust ? “which has a single beneficiary” ? as one in which “the beneficiary has an identifiable, equitable interest in some
property”. Th
e response states that t
he case against Imran “involves a bare trust”.
It argues that Imran’s offshore company, Niazi Services Limited, operated on his instructions and it,
therefore, cannot be said that the PTI chief is not the owner of the company.
Th
e response also states that t
he case concerning Tareen involves a discretionary trust where “although the beneficiary has an interest in the trust [sic]
there is no commitment on the part of the trustee to confer on him the benefit of any defined
property”. “It is within the discretion of the trustee as to who, one or more, of the beneficiaries shall have the benefit of the trust
property.”
“Nevertheless, a beneficiary under a discretionary trust has an ‘interest’ to be considered as
a potential recipient of benefit under the trust and a right to have his interest protected by the court of equity,” th
e response states.
“The whole class of beneficial beneficiaries, under a discretionary trust, can call upon the trustee to surrender the
property according to the instructions of the beneficiaries.” Th
e response states that Tareen,
therefore, cannot refuse ownership of a trust through which he had bought
property in Britain. In a previous hearing of t
he case, Tareen’s lawyer had told the court that the trust was established on May 5, 2011.
Th
e response concludes that “anything that can be disposed of for value is, by definition, an asset”.
Abbasi’s response maintains that Tareen and Imran did not disclose the trust and the offshore company, respectively, in their nomination papers.
Published in Daily Times, November 22nd 2017.