Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAMBUDAMURTHI MUDALIAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADRAS AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/09/1969
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2363 1970 SCR (2) 424
ACT:
Madras Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act (19
of 1951), s. 6(9)--Trustee of temple elected for fixed
period by members of community who established temple--If
hereditary trustee.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was elected as a trustee of a temple for
one year. The temple was rounded two hundred years ago by
the members of the community and according to the usage of
the temple, the trustees were elected for one year, at a
meeting of the members of the community.
On the question whether the appellant has a hereditary
trustee, because he was, under s. 6(9) of the Madras Hindu
Religious and Charitable Endowments Act, 1951, the ’trustee
of a religious institution succession to whose office is
regulated by usage’,
HELD: The phrase ’succession to whose office is
regulated by usage’ would only apply when the ordinary rules
of succession under the Hindu law are modified by usage, and
succession has to be determined in accordance with the
modified rules. The office of a hereditary trustee is in
the nature of property. Succession in relation to property
implies passing of an interest from one person to another.
[428 C-D]
In the present case, the election to the office was for
a fixed period of one year. In such a case, it is not
possible to say there is a succession to the office,
because: (a) on the efflux of the period for which one
trustee is appointed, there is a vacancy and another is
elected to that vacancy, and (b) since there is a
possibility of the same trustee being reelected, an
impossible legal position arises in which a person could be
a successor of himself. [429 F-H]
In re Hindu Women’s Right to Property Act, 1941 [1941]
F.C.R. 12, Ganesh Chunder Dhur v. Lal Behary, 63 I.A. 448,
Bhabatarini v. Ashalata, 70 I.A. 57, Angurbala Mullick v.
Debabrata Mullick, [1959] S.C.R. 1125. 1134 and Sital Das v.
Sant Ram, A.I.R. 1954 S.C. 606 applied.
Shri Mahant Paramananda Das Goswwami v. Radhakrishna
Das. 51 M.L.J. 258, referred to.
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State of Madras v. Ramakrishna, I.L.R. [1957] Mad. 1084,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1671 of 1966.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated March 31, 1965
of the Madras High Court in Appeal No. 276 of 1962.
M.K. Ramamurthi, Vineet Kumar, L Ramamurthy and Shyamala
Pappu, for the appellant.
A.V. Rangam, for the respondents.
425
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. This appeal is brought by certificate
from the judgment of the Madras High Court dated March 31,
1965 in A.S. No. 276 of 1962.
The appellant ’brought the suit in O.S. No. 3 of 1961 in
the Court of Subordinate Judge, Nagapattinam for setting
aside the order dated May 10, 1960 of respondent No. 1 the
Commissioner of Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments,
Madras who had affirmed earlier the order of the second
respondent, the Deputy Commissioner, holding that the
trusteeship of the Kumaran Koil in Manjakollai village was
not hereditary. The appellant was elected as a trustee by
the Sengunatha Mudaliars of Manjakollai village at a meeting
held on June 27, 1957. According to the appellant the
temple was rounded two hundred years ago by the members of
his community and since then the management of the temple
and is affairs was always vested in the community of the
Sengunatha Mudaliars and no person other than the elected
trustee had at any time the right of management and control
of the temple. The appellant said that the temple was
declared as an "exempted" temple under the provisions of
Madras Act 1 of 1925. The case of the appellant was that
the trusteeship of the temple was "hereditary". The
respondents, however, took a different view and proceeded on
the basis that trusteeship of the Kumaran Koil was not
hereditary. The Subordinate Judge held that the appellant
was a hereditary trustee and the suit was not barred by
limitation. The respondents took the matter in appeal to
the Madras High Court which by its judgment dated March 31,
1965 allowed the appeal and set aside the judgment of the
Subordinate Judge Nagapattinam.
Section 6, sub-s. (9) of Madras Act 19 of 1951 states:
"In this Act, unless there is
anything repugnant in
the subject or context--
(9) ’hereditary trustee’ means the trustee
of a religious institution succession to whose
office devolves by hereditary right or is
regulated by usage or is specifically provided
for by the founder, so long as such scheme of
succession is in force;"
This Act has been substituted by Madras Act 22 of 1959 but
the definition of the trustee is identical in both the Acts.
The question to be considered in this appeal is whether
the appellant is a hereditary trustee Within the meaning of
the section. The definition includes three types of cases:
(1) succession to the office of trusteeship devolving by
hereditary right; (2) succession
426
to such office being regulated by usage; and (3) succession
being specifically provided for by the founder on condition
that the scheme of such succession is still in force. It is
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not the case of the appellant that the trustees of the
temple of the Kumaran Koil are hereditary trustees because
their office’ devolves by hereditary right or because
succession to that office is specifically provided for by
the founder. The contention on behalf of the appellant is
that the succession is "regulated by usage". It was said
that according to the usage of the temple the trustees were
elected for a period of one year each at a meeting of the
members of the Sangunatha Mudaliar Community and so the
appellant must be held to be a trustee within the meaning of
s. 6(9) of Act 19 of 1951. In our opinion, there is no
warrant for this argument. The phrase "regulated by usage"
in s. 6(9) of the Act must be construed along with the
phrase "succession to this office" and when so construed
that part of the definition would only apply where the
ordinary rules of succession under the Hindu law are
modified by usage and succession has to be determined in
accordance with the modified rules. The word "succession"
in relation to property and rights and interests in property
generally implies "passing of an interest from one person to
another" (vide in Re: Hindu Women’s Right to Property Act,
1941 (1). It is now well-established that the office of a
hereditary trustee is in the nature of property. This is so
whether the trustee has a beneficial interest of some sort
or not (see Ganesh Chunder Dhur v. Lal Behary(2) and
Bhabatarini v. Ashalata(3). Ordinarily a shebaitship or the
office of dharmakartha is vested in the heirs of the founder
unless the ,founder has laid down a special scheme of
succession or except when usage or custom to the contrary is
proved to exist. Mukherjea J., in Angurbala Mullick v.
Debabrata Mullick(4) delivering the judgment of this Court
observed:
"Unless therefore, the founder has
disposed of the shebaitship in any particular
manner--and this right of disposition is
inherent in the founder--or except when usage
or custom of a different nature is proved to
exist, shebaitship like any other species of
heritable property follows the line of
inheritance from the founder."
In the case of mutts, whose heads are often celibates and
sometimes sanyasins, special rules of succession obtain by
custom and usage. In Sital Das v. Sant Ram(5) the law was
taken as wellsettled that succession to mahantship of a mutt
or religious institution is regulated by custom or usage of
the particular institution except where the rule of
succession is laid down by the founder himself who created
the endowment. In that case the custom in
(1) [1941] F.C.R. 2.
(2) 63 I. A. 448.
(3) 70 I.A. 57.
(4) [1959] S.C.R. 1r2,5,
(5) A.LR. 1954 S.C. 606.
427
matters of succession to mahantship was that the assembly of
bairagis and worshippets of the temple appointed the
successor; but the appointment had to be made from the
disciples of the deceased mahant if he left any, and failing
disciples, any one of his spiritual kindred. Such a
succession was described as not hereditary in the sense that
on the death of an existing mahant, his chela does not
succeed to the office as a matter of course, because the
successor acquires a right only ’by appointment and the
authority to appoint is vested in the assembly of the
bairagis and the worshippets. In Sri Mahant Paramanda Das
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Goswami v. Radhakrishna Das(1) the Madras High Court took
the view that where succession to the mahantship is by
nomination by the holder in office, it was not a hereditary
succession. In that case Venkatasubba Rao, J. said:
"If the successor owes his title to
nomination or appointment, that is, his
succession depends on the volition of the last
incumbent and does not rest upon independent
title, I am inclined to the view that the
office cannot be said to be hereditary."
Krishnan J., stated as follows:
"Where succession is by nomination by
the holder in office of his successor it seems
to be impossible to contend that it is a
hereditary succession. Hereditary succession
is succession by the heir to the deceased
under the law, the office must be transmitted
to the successor according to some definite
rules of descent which by their own force
designate the person to succeed. There need
be no blood relationship between the deceased
and his successor but the right of the latter
should not depend upon the choice of any
individual."
It is true that the artificial definition of hereditary
trustee in s. 6(9) of the Act would include even such cases.
But the election to the office of trustee in the present
case is for a fixed period of one year and not for life. It
is, therefore, difficult to hold that the office of the
appellant is hereditary within the meaning of s. 6(9) of the
Act. It is not possible to say that there is a succession
of As office to another when on the efflux of the period for
which A was appointed, there is a vacancy and B is elected
to that vacancy. It is quite possible that for that
vacancy A himself might be reelected because a retiring
trustee is eligible for reelection. The possibility of A
being the successor A himself is not merely an anomaly,
it is an impossible legal position. No man can succeed to
his own office. In Black’s Law Dictionary the word
’succession’ is defined as follows:
"The revolution of title to property
under the law of descent and distribution.
(1) 51 M.L.J. 258.
428
The right by which one set of men may, by
succeeding another set, acquire a property in
all the goods, movables, and other chattels of
a corporation.
The fact of the transmission of the
rights, estate, obligations, and charges of a
deceased person to his heir or heirs."
The view we have taken is borne out by the reasoning of the
Madras High Court in State of Madras v. Ramakrishna(1).
For these reasons we hold that this appeal fails and
must be dismissed with costs.
V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
(1)I.L.R. [1957] Mad. 1084-.
429