Chapter I§1–4A
Preliminary
Five sections set the stage. §1 names the Act and extends it to the whole of India (post-2019, after the J&K reorganisation). §2 was repealed by the Repealing Act, 1938. §3 keeps both Courts of Wards regimes and the original Chartered High Courts' inherent jurisdiction intact. §4 is the dictionary — 'minor', 'guardian', 'ward', 'District Court', 'the Court' (after the 1926 recast), 'Collector' and 'prescribed'. §4A (1926) lets a High Court empower subordinate judicial officers and lets a District Judge transfer guardianship proceedings to them.
5 sections · MVP coverage
Title, extent and commencement
Names the Act, extends it to the whole of India (post-2019), and fixes 1 July 1890 as the commencement date.
(1) This Act may be called the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890.
(2) It extends to the whole of India.
(3) It shall come into force on the first day of July, 1890.
[Repealed]
Repealed by the Repealing Act, 1938 (1 of 1938), §2 and the Schedule.
[Repeal.] Rep. by the Repealing Act, 1938 (1 of 1938), s. 2 and the Schedule.
Saving of jurisdiction of Courts of Wards and Chartered High Courts
Read the Act subject to every Courts-of-Wards enactment; nothing here derogates from the inherent High Court guardianship jurisdiction or any Courts-of-Wards authority.
This Act shall be read subject to every enactment heretofore or hereafter passed relating to any Court of Wards by any competent legislature, authority or person in any State to which this Act extends, and nothing in this Act shall be construed to affect, or in any way derogate from the jurisdiction or authority of any Court of Wards, or to take away any power possessed by any High Court.
Definitions
Defines 'minor' (Indian Majority Act, 1875), 'guardian' (of person / property / both), 'ward', 'District Court' (CPC sense, includes a High Court in its ordinary original civil jurisdiction), 'the Court' (recast by Act 4 of 1926), 'Collector' and 'prescribed'. Clause (7) was omitted in 1951.
In this Act, unless there is something repugnant in the subject or context,— (1) "minor" means a person who, under the provisions of the Indian Majority Act, 1875 (9 of 1875) is to be deemed not to have attained his majority: (2) "guardian" means a person having the care of the person of a minor or of his property, or of both his person and property: (3) "ward" means a minor for whose person or property, or both, there is a guardian: (4) "District Court" has the meaning assigned to that expression in the Code of Civil Procedure (14 of 1882), and includes a High Court in the exercise of its ordinary original civil jurisdiction: (5) "the Court" means— (a) the District Court having jurisdiction to entertain an application under this Act for an order appointing or declaring a person to be a guardian; or (b) where a guardian has been appointed or declared in pursuance of any such application— (i) the Court which, or the Court of the officer who, appointed or declared the guardian or is under this Act deemed to have appointed or declared the guardian; or (ii) in any matter relating to the person of the ward the District Court having jurisdiction in the place where the ward for the time being ordinarily resides; or (c) in respect of any proceeding transferred under section 4A, the Court of the officer to whom such proceeding has been transferred: (6) "Collector" means the chief officer in charge of the revenue-administration of a district, and includes any officer whom the State Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, may, by name or in virtue of his office, appoint to be a Collector in any local area, or with respect to any class of persons, for all or any of the purposes of this Act: * * * * *; and (8) "prescribed" means prescribed by rules made by the High Court under this Act.
Power to confer jurisdiction on subordinate judicial officers and to transfer proceedings to such officers
High Court may empower subordinate civil officers to dispose of transferred guardianship proceedings; District Judge may transfer pending proceedings to such officers; the transferee Court may be deemed the appointing Court.
(1) The High Court may, by general or special order, empower any officer exercising original civil jurisdiction subordinate to a District Court, or authorise the Judge of any District Court to empower any such officer subordinate to him, to dispose of any proceedings under this Act transferred to such officer under the provisions of this section.
(2) The Judge of a District Court may, by order in writing, transfer at any stage any proceeding under this Act pending in his Court for disposal to any officer subordinate to him empowered under sub-section (1).
(3) The Judge of a District Court may at any stage transfer to his own Court or to any officer subordinate to him empowered under sub-section (1) any proceeding under this Act pending in the Court of any other such officer.
(4) When any proceedings are transferred under this section in any case in which a guardian has been appointed or declared, the Judge of the District Court may, by order in writing, declare that the Court of the Judge or officer to whom they are transferred shall, for all or any of the purposes of this Act, be deemed to be the Court which appointed or declared the guardian.