The order was issued two months ago by the Custodian of Enemy Property for India, Mumbai (CEPI), which had decreed that the estate in question be confiscated.
Justice Vandana Kasrekar yesterday also served notices to CEPI, the central and Madhya Pradesh governments during the preliminary hearing on a petition moved by Saif challenging the order. The notices are returnable in four weeks.
Saif, son of late Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, a former cricketer, and yesteryear actress Sharmila Tagore, approached the HC after CEPI passed an order on February 25 declaring the property of erstwhile Bhopal state inherited by the actor and his family members as "enemy" property.
The Act relates to properties left behind by those who migrated to Pakistan at the time of Independence and after. Labelling these as "enemy" properties, the Act allowed the government control over them through CEPI.
CEPI declared the property of late nawab of Bhopal, Hamidulla Khan (ancestor of Saif) as enemy property after finding that his elder daughter Abida Sultan left India in 1950 and migrated to Pakistan, when Hamidulla was alive.
Sajida Sultan was the grandmother of Saif, he said.
Pancholi told the court that Abida Sultan went to Pakistan on her own and no property of Nawab of Bhopal was devolved upon her.
