In 1909, he began his career in the judiciary in
Iran as a judge in the provincial court. He returned to Iran in 1921 and founded the "Radical party of Iran" (
Hezb-e Radical). He also founded the newspaper
Mard-e Azad ("The Free Man") in which he published regular comments. He was elected to the 4th, 5th, and 6th
Majles as the representative of
Varamin from
Tehran province and
Lar from
Fars province. Along with contemporaries such as
Abdolhossein Teymourtash and
Farman Farmaian, Dāvar took a lead role among the politicians who voted for the abolition of the
Qajar dynasty, opposing such parliamentarians as
Sayyed Hasan Taqizadeh,
Sayyed Hassan Modarres,
Yahya Doulatabadi and
Mohammad Mosaddegh. In 1925, Dāvar became the minister of commerce in the
Foroughi Cabinet, and a year later was appointed minister of judicial affairs in the Cabinet of
Mostowfi ol-Mamalek. In March 1926, with the approval of parliament, he dissolved Iran's entire judiciary, initiating a wave of fundamental restructuring and overhauling reforms with the aid of
French judicial experts. Iran's modern judicial system was born in April 1927 with 600 newly appointed judges in Tehran. Dāvar subsequently attempted to expand the new system into other cities of Iran through a programme involving training of 250 judges. In December 1936, he proposed a bill to Majles that would seal a large contract with two American companies. The bill came under heavy protest from the British and the Russian governments, putting intense pressure on Dāvar's ministry. ==Death==