Relief denied falls into two categories: where no effective argument for a stay was made by the counsels who were heard, and, where the court, after considering arguments, has denied relief. In the first category, for instance, no meaningful challenge was made in course of arguments to the newly-added proviso to Section 2 of the Waqf Act, 1995, excluding from the application of the Act any charitable institution that was ever registered as a trust under any law, irrespective of the nomenclature and although the purpose may have been similar to a waqf. To understand its impact, let’s look at Maharashtra, where historically, all waqfs were registered with the Charity Commissioner as trusts under the Bombay Public Trusts Act, 1950. These were transferred to the jurisdiction of the Waqf Board much later. As such, by this amendment, the vast majority of waqfs in Maharashtra will potentially cease to be subject to waqf law. As is well-known, the land on which ‘Antilia’—the Ambani home in Mumbai—stands, once belonged to such a ‘Muslim trust’, an Ismaili Shia orphanage, and its transfer to Mukesh Ambani was, until this amendment, being contested on the ground that waqf land cannot be sold. By excluding all such trusts from the Waqf Act’s purview, the new proviso removes this bar, potentially validating transfers like Antilia’s, as trust property in Mumbai can be sold with the permission of the Charity Commissioner, which had been obtained by Ambani. The new proviso, which begins with the words “notwithstanding any judgement of any court” amounts to a legislative overruling of two prior decisions of the Supreme Court—Nawab Zain Yar Jung in 1962 and Shaikh Yusuf Bhai Chawla in 2022—which held that the intent of the waqif (donor) and the objects and purposes of the dedication would determine whether a charity is a waqf, irrespective of its form as a trust. None of this was placed before the court in proper perspective by the counsels who argued, and as a consequence, it finds no consideration in the judgement.