Mukarram Jah, the titular Nizam of Hyderabad, now lives in Turkey. Richest man in India untill 1980s, he lost his tag after a costly divorce settlement with his third wife

The UK High Court has granted Mukarram Jah, the titular Nizam of Hyderabad, the ownership of a fund which has been in dispute for over 70 years and now amounts to £35 million.

The eighth Nizam of erstwhile province Hyderabad has won a major case against Pakistan in the UK High Court. The UK High Court has granted Mukarram Jah, the titular Nizam of Hyderabad, the ownership of a fund which has been in dispute for over 70 years and now amounts to £35 million.

The Pakistan government had claimed the ownership of the fund and had filed a case against Mukarram Jah in the UK court in 2013.

"We are delighted that today's judgement recognises His Exalted Highness the VIII Nizam's rights to funds which have been in dispute since 1948," Paul Hewitt, one of Nizam's lawyers said.

"The judgement covers a complex historical and legal set of issues, interpreting facts and events that occurred 70 years ago to establish that the funds, which now amount to £35 million, were always held in trust for our client's grandfather, HEH the VII Nizam," Paul Hewitt said.

"Our client was still a child when the dispute first arose and is now in his 80s. It is a great relief to see this dispute finally resolved in his lifetime," he said.

Nizam of Hyderabad vs Pakistan

The dispute started around the time of partition. In 1948, the Nizam of Hyderabad Asaf Jah sent £1 million and one Ginni to the then Pakistan High Commissioner’s London account as a fund for "trust for safekeeping" of Hyderabad from India if there were an invasion. At that time, the princely state of Hyderabad was not under the Indian government.

However, a few days later, the Nizam denied that the fund was transferred with his consent and asked it back. But the bank denied the request as the money was not in his name.

The bank said that the fund could not be transferred without the agreement of Pakistan, which now had legal title to the fund.

The Nizam issued proceedings against the bank in the 1950s. The case reached the House of Lords, which held that the question of who owned the fund could not be decided because Pakistan had claimed sovereign immunity.

The money has been frozen ever since and the fund is now worth £35 million at the NatWest bank in the UK.

In 2013, Pakistan waived its sovereign immunity by issuing a claim for the fund that opened the way for the current case to proceed.

The central question, in this case, was who was beneficially entitled to the fund following the original transfer, the Nizam or Pakistan?

The last and the seventh grandson of the Nizam - Mukkaram Jah, who now lives in Turkey, persuade the case to claim the money. The Indian government and the Nizam family came to an agreement over the matter and India supported the Nizam’s claim over the money.

On Wednesday, the Pakistan government lost the case in the UK High Court, returning the money to the Nizam of Hyderabad.