Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SRI SADASIB PRAKASH BRAHMACHARI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF ORISSA(With connected petitions)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/01/1956
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
BENCH:
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
BOSE, VIVIAN
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1956 AIR 432 1956 SCR 43
ACT:
Constitution of India, Art. 19(1)(f )-Orissa Hindu Religious
Endowments Act, 1951 as amended by Orissa Act XVIII of 1954-
SS. 42(1)(b), 42(7), 44(2) and s. 79(A)-Whether ultra vires
the Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
Sections 38 and 39 of the Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments
Act, 1939 (Orissa Act IV of 1939) as amended by Orissa Act
XVIII of 1953 were declared unconstitutional and void by the
Supreme Court in Mahant Sri Jagannath Bamanuj Das v. The
State of Orissa ([1954] S.C.R. 1046) on the ground that
legislation in so far as it authorised the framing of a
scheme by the Commissioner along with his associates and
declared such determination as final without any scope for
correction thereof by judicial intervention was an unrea-
sonable restriction on the right of the head of the Math as
respects his interest in the Math which is a, right to bold
property within the meaning of Art. 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution.
After the judgment dated 16th March 1954 delivered by the
Supreme Court in the Case Of Mahant Sri Jagannath Bamanuj
Das v. The State of Orissa, ([1954] S.C.R. 1046) the Orissa
Legislature passed the Orissa Act XVIII of 1954 purporting
to amend not the 1939 Act which was then in operation but
the Orissa Act II of 1952 which had not then come into
force.
The Orissa Act XVIII of 1954 received the assent of the
President on the 2nd December 1954 and came into force at
once and thus the Orissa Act II of 1952 became pro tnnto
amended and modified. The 1952 Act so amended came into
force from the 1st January 1955 by virtue of a notification
dated 22nd December 1954 issued under the provisions of s.
1(3) thereof which provided that the Act wag to come into
force on such date as the State Government may. by
notification provide.
The five petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution in the
present case challenged the validity of various sections of
the Orissa Act II of 1952 as amended by Act XVIII of 1954 on
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the principles laid down in the case of Mahant Sri Jagannath
Bamanuj Das v. The State of Orissa, ([1954] S.C.R. 1046).
Held, that ss. 42(1)(b), 42(7), 44(2) as well as s. 79(A)
of Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1951 (Orissa Act
II of 1952) as amended by Orissa Act XVIII of 1954 are not
unconstitutional and
44
ultra vires and the contention that the provisions of ss. 42
and 44 of the present Act to the effect (1) that a scheme
can be framed by the Commissioner alone on a report of the
Assistant Commissioner on such inquiry as he thinks fit and
not by the Commissioner in association with one or more
Government Officers to be appointed for the purpose by the
Government (2) that there is no right of suit for
challenging the validity or the correctness of the scheme
framed by the Commissioner but there is only an appeal to
the High Court, still continue to be unreasonable
restrictions on the right of Mathadipathi as in the case of
Mahant Sri Jagannath Bamanuj Das v. The State of Orissa
[(1954) S.C.R. 1046] is without substance.
In the initial stage of the framing of the scheme under the
provisions of the present Act there is first of all
something in the nature of a preliminary enquiry by a
judicial officer of the rank of a Munsif and this is
followed by a regular and full enquiry before the
Commissioner who is of the rank of a Subordinate Judge. The
enquiry before the Commissioner is assimilated to and is
governed by the provisions relating to the trial of suits by
enjoining that, as far as may be, it is to be in accordance
with the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating
to trial of suits. ’While, therefore, under the prior Act
the enquiry before the Commissioner might well have been of
the nature of an executive enquiry by an executive officer,
the enquiry under the present Act is by itself in the nature
of a judicial enquiry by judicial officers followed up by a
right of regular appeal to the High Court. A scheme framed
with reference to such a procedure cannot ipso facto be
pronounced to be in the nature of an unreasonable
restriction on the rights of the Mahant. The legislature
might well have thought that instead of making the enquiry
before the Commissioner more or less in the nature of a
preliminary executive enquiry to be followed up by the
affected Mahant by a regular , suit in the Civil Court, it
is much more satisfactory and in the public interests, to
vest the enquiry before the Commissioner himself with the
stamp of greater seriousness and effectiveness and to
assimilate the same to a regular enquiry by the judicial
officer according to judicial procedure and then to provide
a right of direct appeal to the High Court.
The right of appeal to the High Court is given in very wide
and general terms because the appeal can be both on facts
and on law.
Mahant Sri Gadadhar Bamanuj Dos v. The Province of Orissa,
(I.L.R [1949] Cuttack 656), Mahant Sri Jagannath Bamanuj Das
v. The State of Orissa ([1954] S.C.R. 1046) and
Commissioner, Hindu Beligious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Matth, ([1964)
S.C.R. 1006], referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: , Petitions Nos. 651 of
1954 and 39, 46, 51 and 176 of 1955.
45
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Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
S. P. Sinha (S. D. Sekhari, with him), for the petitioner
in Petition No. 651 of 1954.
S. P., Sinha (B. K. Saran and M. M. Sinha, with him), for
the petitioner in Petition No. 39 of 1955.
B. K. Saran and M. M. Sinha, for the petitioner in
Petition No. 46 of 1955.
S. D. Sekhari, for the petitioner in Petition No. 51 of
1955.
R. Patnaik, for the petitioner in Petition No. 176 of
1955.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General of India (R. Ganapathy
Iyer and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for respondents in all the
Petitions.
1956. January 20. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
JAGANNADHADAS J.-These are five petitions under article 32
of the Constitution by the heads of five Maths in the State
of Orissa of which four known as Mahiparakash Math,
Uttaraparswa Math, Dakshinaparswa Math and Radhakant Math
are situated in Puri and the fifth known as Manapur Math is
near Tirtol in Cuttack district. In all these petitions
certain provisions of the Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments
Act, 1951 (Orissa Act II of 1952) as amended by Orissa Act
XVIII of 1954 are challenged as being unconstitutional and
ultra vires. Since the questions raised are mostly common,
all the petitions are dealt with by this single judgment.
These petitions have a background of previous history of
legislation and litigation which it is necessary to set out
in order that the questions raised, may be properly
appreciated. The first statutory interference by the
Provincial Legislature with the management of Hindu
religious endowments in Orissa was by the Orissa Hindu
Religious Endowments Act, 1939 (Orissa Act IV of 1939) which
came into operation
46
on the 31st August, 1939. This was modelled on a similar
Act operating in the Province of Madras at thetime.
ThevalidityoftheActasawholeasalso, of certain provisions
thereof we’re challenged by the Mahants of the various Maths
in Orissa, about 30 in number, by instituting a suit in the
year 1940. The suit was on behalf of the individual Maths
who figured as plaintiffs (including three of the present
petitioners, viz. Mahants of Mahiparakash Math,
Dakshinaparswa Math and Radhakanta Math) and also in a
representative capacity under Order I, rule 8 of the Civil
Procedure Code. (Vide printed record of this Court in Case
No. I of 1950). That suit was dismissed by the District
Judge of Cuttack and came up in appeal to the High Court of
Orissa. The High Court upheld the validity of the Act and
of the various sections thereof by its judgment dated the
13th September, 1949, which is reported in Mahant Sri
Gadadhar Ramanuj Das v. The Province of Orissa(1).
An appeal was filed therefrom to the Supreme Court in
Jaiiuary,’1950, which was numbered as Case No. I of 1950.
This appeal remained pending for over four years and came up
for final hearing in February, 1954. During the period of
pendency of the appeal the Orissa Legislature passed two
further Acts relating to Hindu religious endowments. The
first of them was Orissa Act II of 1952 which was an Act to
"amend and consolidate the law relating to the ad-
ministration and governance of Hindu religious institutions
and endowments in the State of Orissa" and which on its
coming into force was intended to repeal the pre-existing
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Orissa Act IV of 1939. This Act became law on the 16th
February, 1952, by the assent of the President. It did not
however come into force at once on account of sub-section
(3) of section I therein which provided that the Act is to
"come into force on such date as the State Government may,
by notification, direct". No such notification was issued
during the pendency of the appeal in the Supreme Court.
This Act was, in fact, brought into force much later, i.e.,
only as from the 1st Janu-
(1) I.L.R. [19491 Cuttack 656.
47
ary, 1955, by a notification of the Government of Orissa
dated the 22nd December, 1954, published in the Orissa
Gazette dated the 31st December, 1954. While thus the 1952
Act remained on the statute book without its coming into
force., other independent statutory provisions amending the
Act of 1939 were passed and brought into operation. The
first of them was Orissa Ordinance No. 11 of 1953 which was
promulgated by the Governor of Orissa on the 16th May, 1953.
This was later superseded and substituted by Orissa Act
XVIII of 1953 which came into operation on the 28th October,
1953. By these two successive legislative measures, the Act
of 1939 was amended in certain respects and it is the Act so
amended that was in operation during the period from May,
1953 to March, 1954, falling within the later portion of the
pendency of Case No. I of 1950 in the Supreme Court. Some
time in 1953, subsequent to the month of May, the
Commissioner of Hindu Religious Endowments, Orissa, appears
to have initiated proceedings for the framing of schemes in
respect of a number of Matbs, and schemes were actually
framed during this period as regards the four Maths,
Mahiparakash, Uttaraparswa, Daksbinaparswa and Radhakanta
comprised in Petitions Nos. 651 of 1954, 49, 46 and 51 of
1955, respectively. These schemes were brought into
operation and the administration of some of these Matbs was
taken over by the Trustees under the schemes. Thereafter
Mahants of three of the affected Maths, Mahiparakash,
Uttaraparswa and Radhakanta, who are also petitioners before
us, filed applications under article 226 before the High
Court of Orissa challenging the alidity of the schemes.
Those applications were dismissed by the High Court on the
17th February, 1954. Meanwhile the Mahant of Dakshinaparswa
Math who was a petitioner in the High Court and also before
filed along with another Mahant, a petition under icle 32 of
the Constitution to this Court on the d December, 1953,
challenging the Act then in force as being in violation of
their fundamental rights. This was Petition No. 405 of
1953. This petition as
48
well as Case No. 1 of 1950, referred to above, came up for
hearing, together, in this Court on the 9th, 10th and 11th
February, 1954. Judgment of this Court therein was
delivered on the 16th March, 1954, and is reported in Mahant
Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das v. The State of Orissa(2). As a
result thereof, sections 38 and 39 of Orissa Act IV of 1939
as amended in 1953, under which the schemes were framed were
declared unconstitutional. Accordingly, the schemes became
invalid and therefore the possession of such of the Matbs
which had been, taken over under the schemes was restored to
the Mahants. (It may be mentioned in passing, in this
context, that the judgment of this Court refers to Orissa
Act II of 1952 as being the one in force at the time and
whose provisions were under consideration by the Court.
This is a slip. The Act then in force was, as already
stated, the Act of 1939 as amended in 1953. That this is a
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slip in the judgment is admitted before us. That does not
however in any way detract from the reasoning and the bind-
ing character of the judgment, since as a fact what were
really referred to were the sections of the 1939 Act as
amended in 1953). Now, after the judgment of this Court was
delivered in March, 1954., the Orissa Legislature again
intervened and passed another Act, Orissa Act XVIII of 1954.
This Act purported to amend not the 1939 Act which was by
then in operation but the 1952 Act which had not by then
come into force. -Orissa Act XVIII of 1954 received the
assent of the President on the 2nd December, 1954; and came
into force at once and therefore Orissa Act II of 1952
became pro tanto amended and modified. By that date the
1952 Act so amended was awaiting the issue of notification
under section 1(3) thereof for being brought into force.
This notification, as alreay stated, was ultimately issued
on the 22nd December. 1954, bringing Orissa Act II of 1952
as amended Act XVIII of 1954 into force from the 1st
January, 1955, and thereby repealing Orissa Act IV of 1939
amended in 1953. The first of the petitions before us,
relating to Mahiparakash Math was filed in this
(1) [1954] S.C R. 1046
49
Court, anticipating this notification, while the other four
were filed after the notification was issued. As already
stated, all these petitions challenge the validity of
various sections of Act 11 of 1952 as amended in 1954
(hereinafter referred to as the present Act). The challenge
is entirely based upon the principles laid down by this
Court in Mahant Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das v. The State of
Ori8sa(1). The’ above is the history of the relevant
legislation and the connected parallel litigation.
The main attack is in respect of sections 42 and 79-A of
the present Act relating to the schemes for religious
institutions of the kind with which we are concerned in
these petitions. There can be no doubt that the two
sections apply to these Maths. The phrase "religious
institution" occurring in section 42 has been defined as
meaning (also) "a math and endowments attached thereto". A
Math is "an institution succession to the headship of which
devolves in accordance with the directions of the founder or
is regulated by custom" and a hereditary trustee is "a
trustee of an institution succession to whose office
devolves by custom or is specifically provided for by the
founder". A Math is therefore a religious institution
presided over or managed by a hereditary trustee so as to
render section 42 (1) (b) applicable. To appreciate the
ground of attack it is necessary to trace the changes in the
provisions relating to the framing of schemes for such
institutions in the successive legislative measures. In the
Act as it, stood in 1939 the provisions in this behalf are
sections 38, 39 and 40. Since the attack is mainly as
regards the procedure for the framing of the scheme, it is
sufficient to notice what the gist of these three provisions
is in so far as it relates to the procedure for an enquiry
to frame a scheme. Under these three sections the enquiry
is to be held by the Commissioner for Endowments appointed
under the Act. For this purpose he is to function jointly
with one or more persons in the service of the Crown
appointed by the Provincial Government in
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 1046.
7
50
this behalf. The enquiry has to be conducted "in such
manner as may be prescribed". In making the enquiry the
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Commissioner and the person or persons associated with him
therein are to consult the trustee and the persons having
interest. After the scheme is settled and the order
determining the scheme is published in the prescribed manner
the trustee or any person having interest may, within six
months of the date of such publication, institute a suit in
the court to modify or set aside such order. The order
settling a scheme is final and binding on the trustee and
all persons having interest, subject to the result of the
suit, if any, as above mentioned. Of course, the result of
the suit itself would, under the general law, be subject to
further appeal under the Civil Procedure Code in the
ordinary way.
Changes were made in these provisions in 1953 first by
Orissa Ordinance II of 1953 and then by Orissa Act XVIII of
1953 as already stated. The modification is that sub-
section (4) of section 39 which provided for a right of
suit, by the trustee or the person interested, in the
regular civil court (with the concomitant further appeals to
higher courts) was deleted and the following was substituted
as sub-section (4) of section 39:
"Every order under this section shall be published in the
prescribed manner and the order so passed shall be final and
binding on the trustee and all persons having interest".
As a consequence thereof section 40 of the 1939 Act, which
stated that "subject to the result of the suit the order
settling a scheme is final", was omitted. The result of
these two changes was that once the Commissioner with the
assistance of one or more Government officers who were to be
specially nominated, settled a scheme after making the
prescribed enquiry, that order was not open to any further
question or correction in the ordinary courts. It was at
this stage that the validity of the provisions relating to
the framing of a scheme came up for consideration before
this Court in March, 1954. This Court held that the
legislation in so far as it authorised the
51
framing of a scheme by the Commissioner along with his
associates and declared such determination as final without
any scope for correction thereof by judicial intervention,
was an unreasonable restriction on the right of the head of
the Math with reference to his interest in the Math.
Accordingly sections 38 and 39 of the Act then in force were
struck down as unconstitutional and invalid. The present
provisions which are the result of a later amendment are
contained in sections 42 and 44 of the present Act and are
substantially different. The relevant portions thereof are
as follows:
"42. (1) Whenever there is reason to believe that in the
interest of the proper administration of religious
institution a scheme may be settled for it, or when not less
than five persons having interest make an application in
writing stating that in the interests of the proper
administration of a religious institution a scheme should be
settled for it, the Assistant Commissioner or the
Commissioner, as the case may be, shall proceed to frame a
scheme in the manners hereinafter provided-
(a)
(b) in the case of a religious institution presided over
or managed by a hereditary trustee, the Assistant
Commissioner shall make such enquiry as he thinks fit and
submit his report to the Commissioner who shall hold an
enquiry in the manner prescribed and so far as may be, in
accordance with the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure, 1908, relating to the trial of suits and if he is
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satisfied that in the interests of the proper administration
of such institution a scheme of administration should be
settled, he shall consult in the prescribed manner the
trustee and the persons having interest and by order settle
a scheme of administration for the institution.
(7)Every order of the Commissioner settling a scheme
under this section shall, subject to the provisions of
Section 44, be binding on the trustee, the Executive Officer
and all persons having interest. 44. (1)
52
(2) Any party aggrieved by the order of the Commissioner
under sub-section (1) of section 42 may appeal to the High
Court within thirty days from the date of the order or
publication thereof as the case may be".
The effect of these provisions of the present Act is (1)
that a scheme can be framed by the Commissioner alone on a
report of the Assistant Commissioner on such enquiry as he
thinks fit and not by the Commissioner in association with
one or more Government officers to be appointed for the
purpose by the Government, (2) that there is no right of
suit for cballenging the validity or the correctness of the
scheme framed by the Commissioner but there is only an
appeal to the High Court direct. It is urged that these
provisions still continue to be unreasonable restrictions on
the rights of the Mathadipathi and are accordingly ultra
vires and unconstitutional. In the case reported in the
Commissioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutth (1) the
interest of Mathadipathi in the Math has been recognised as
property falling within the scope of article 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution. It was recognised that the ingredients, of
office and property, of duties and personal interest, are
blended together in the rights of a Mahant and that the
Mahant has the right to enjoy the property or the beneficial
interest so long as he is entitled to hold his office. It
was recognised that the beneficial interest which the Mahant
enjoys is appurtenant to his duties and that as he is in
charge of a public institution, reasonable restrictions can
always be placed upon his rights in the interests of the
public. It was however held therein that provisions for the
framing of a scheme which by its terms operate by way of
unreasonable restriction would be unconstitutional and
invalid. It is this principle that was applied in the next
decision of this Court relating to Orissa Maths in Mahant
Sri Jagannath Ramanuj Das v. The State of Orissa(2). There,
the validity of the then provisions of the Act, i.e., of
sections 38 and 39 of
(1) (1954] S.C.R. 1005.
(2) [1954] S.C.R. 1046.
53
Orissa Act IV of 1939 as amended in 1953 was adjudged in the
following terms:
"Sections 38 and 39 relate to the framing of a scheme.
The scheme can certainly be settled to ensure due
administration of the endowed property but the objection
seems to be that the Act provides for the framing of a
scheme not by a civil court or under its supervision but by
the Commissioner, who is a’ mere administrative or executive
officer. There is also no provision for appeal against his
order to the court............ We think that the settling of
a scheme in regard to a religious institution by an
executive officer without the intervention of any judicial
tribunal amounts to an unreasonable restriction upon the
right of property of the superior of the religious
institution which is blended with his office. Sections 38
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and 39 of the Act must, therefore, be held to be invalid".
It is urged that though the obvious purpose of the
amending Act of 1954 passed after this decision by the
Supreme Court, was to remedy the defect above pointed out by
providing for a right of appeal direct to the High Court
from the determination of the Commissioner settling the
scheme, the present provisions still continue to be
unreasonable restrictions on the right of property of the
Mahant. It is further urged that the initial decision in a
scheme-proceeding is still on the basis of an executive
enquiry by an executive officer and that in any case a
direct appeal to the High Court as against the
Commissioner’s order cannot be as adequate a safeguard
regarding the rights of the Mahants, as a suit and a right
of appeal therefrom in the ordinary course to the higher
courts would be. It is undoubtedly true that from a
litigant’s point of view an appeal to the High Court from
the Commissioner’s order is not the same as, an independent
right of suit and an appeal to the higher courts from the
result of that suit. But in order to judge whether the
provisions in the present Act operate by way of unreasonable
restriction for constitutional purposes what is to be seen
is whether the person affected gets a reasonable chance of
presenting his entire case before the original tribunal
which has to
54
determine judicially the questions raised and whether he has
a regular appeal to the ordinarily constituted court or
courts to correct the errors, if any, of the tribunal of
first instance. For that purpose it is relevant to notice
that in the present Act, the Commissioner of Endowments has,
by virtue of section 4 thereof, to be a member of the
Judicial Service (of the State) not being below the rank of
a Subordinate Judge, while under section 7 of Act IV of 1939
a Commissioner of Endowments could be a person of either the
judicial or the executive service and that even where a
member of the judicial service is appointed he may be a
person below the rank of a Subordinate Judge. Another
important difference has also to be noticed, viz., that
while under section 38 of the previous Act the enquiry has
to be conducted "in such manner as may be prescribed" which
means as prescribed by the Provincial Government by rules
made under the Act and hence changeable by the Government,
under the present Act, section 42(1) (b) specifically
enjoins that "the Commissioner shall hold an enquiry in the
manner prescribed and so far as may be in accordance with
the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure relating to
the trial of suits". It may also be noticed that before the
Commissioner starts his enquiry it is expected that the
Assistant Commissioner, who, by virtue of section 5(2), is
to be a person holding a judicial office not lower in rank
than that of a Munsif, is to make such enquiry as he thinks
fit and submit his report. Thus in the initial stage of the
framing of the scheme under the provisions of the present
Act there is first of all something in the nature of a
preliminary enquiry by a judicial officer of the rank of a
Munsif and this is followed by a regular and full enquiry
before the Commissioner who is of the rank of a Subordinate
Judge. The enquiry before the Commissioner is assimilated
to and is governed by the provisions relating to the trial
of suits by enjoining that, as far as may be, it is to be in
accordance with the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure relating to trial of suits. While, therefore,
under the prior Act the enquiry before the Commissioner
might well
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55
have been of the nature of an executive enquiry by an
executive officer, the enquiry under the present Act is by
itself in the nature of a judicial enquiry by judicial
officers followed up by a right of regular appeal to the
High Court. A scheme framed with reference to such a
procedure cannot ipsofacto be pronounced to be in the nature
of unreasonable restriction on the rights of the Mahant.
The legislature’ might well have thought that, instead of
making the enquiry before the Commissioner more or less in
the nature of a preliminary executive enquiry to be followed
up by the affected Mahant by way of a regular suit in the
Civil Court’. it is much more satisfactory and in the public
interests, to impress the enquiry before the Commissioner
himself with the stamp of greater seriousness and
effectiveness and to assimilate the same to a regular
enquiry by the judicial officer according to judicial
procedure and then to provide a right of direct appeal to
the High Court.
It has been strongly urged that a mere right to appeal to
the High Court would virtually be in the nature of a limited
appeal confined to challenge only on certain basic matters
and probably limited to questions of law. We can find no
warrant for any such apprehension. The right of appeal is
given in very wide and general terms. Obviously the appeal
can be both on facts and on law and would relate not merely
to the merits of the scheme but also to all basic matters
whose determination is implicit in the very framing of a
scheme. In our opinion the present provisions cannot be
struck down as being in the nature of unreasonable
restriction on the rights of the Mahant.
Two other minor provisions in this connection have been
brought to our notice and relied upon as indicating
unreasonable restriction on the rights. One is that while
under the 1939 Act the period of limitation for a right of
suit was six months, the period allowed for an appeal under
the present Act is only 30 days. Another is that under
section 74(3) the operation of the order of the Commissioner
is not to be stayed pending the disposal of the appeal. It
56
has been urged that these provisions operate very harshly
against the Mahant affected by a scheme when framed. It is
pointed out that as the result of a scheme being put into
operation immediately, the Mahant may be deprived of the
effective possession of the Math and hence of the
wherewithal to file an appeal within the very short time
that is allowed, as also of the resources to conduct the
appeal in the High Court or to maintain himself during its
pendency which may take years. There is not much force in
this contention. In so far as the question of filing of an
appeal is concerned, there should be no difficulty since the
provisions relating to appeals in forma pauperis would be
applicable and can be availed of if the circumstances call
for it. In so far as any situation may arise which may call
for financial facilities for the conducting of the appeal or
for interim maintenance, the learned Attorney-General
suggests that the appellate Court would have inherent power
and discretion to give appropriate directions for supply of
funds out of the trust estate and that in any view, such
power and discretion have to be implied in the provision for
an appeal so that the said right of appeal may not become
illusory. Having regard to the suggestion thus put forward,
which we accept, we cannot hold that the provision in
section 74(3) that the operation of the order of the
Commissioner framing a scheme is not to be stayed pending
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the disposal of the appeal, brings about an unreasonable
restriction. In this view we think that the incidental
provisions above referred to do not in any way detract from
the reasonableness of the main provisions. In our opinion,
therefore, the provisions in the present Act of 1952 as
amended in 1954, relating to the framing of schemes are not
open to any of the constitutional objections raised, and are
valid.
The next point that has been urged, depends on the fact
that in four of the petitions before us relating to the
Maths of Mahiparakash, Uttaraparswa, Dakshinaparswa and
Radhakanta, schemes were in fact framed in the year 1953
under the provisions of
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Orissa Act IV of 1939 as amended in 1953. It may be
recalled that these provisions were held invalid by the
decision of this Court in March, 1954, above referred to.
It must therefore be taken that these schemes were void as
the law then stood. It is with reference to that situation
that the Orissa Legislature by an amendment in 1954 of the
1952 Act introduced section 79-A into this Act which runs as
follows:
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any of the other
provisions of this Act or in any judgment, decree or order
of any court all schemes purporting to have been settled in
pursuance of sections 38 and 39 of the Orissa Hindu
Religious Endowments Act, 1939, after the commencement of
the Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments (Amendment) Ordinance,
1953, and before the commencement of this Act shall be
deemed to have been settled under the provisions of this Act
and any person aggrieved by any such scheme may within sixty
days from the date of commencement of this Act prefer an
appeal to the High Court and such appeal shall be dealt with
and disposed of in the same manner as appeals provided for
under sub-section (2) of section 44".
This purports to revive the schemes which were pronounced
to be invalid by the judgment of this Court and attempts to
remove the defect noticed in the judgment of this Court by
providing for a regular appeal to the High Court against
that very scheme within 60 days from the date of the
commencement of the Act. It may be noticed that the schemes
so revived are only those which were settled after the
commencement of Orissa Hindu Religious Endowments
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1953, and before the commencement of
the 1952 Act, i.e., between 16th May, 1953 to 31st December,
1954, (hereinafter referred to as the specified period).
This was exactly the period within which the amendment of
1939 Act made in 1953 was in force, abolishing the right of
suit and making the scheme as determined by the Commissioner
final and conclusive. Section 79-A in terms purports to
revive the invalid scheme notwith-
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standing any judgment, decree or order of any court, which
means that though a court may have pronounced the scheme as
void still that is deemed to be alive. It has been
suggested that this is directly flouting the decision of
this Court and that the legislature has no power to declare
as valid and constitutional what was decided by this Court
as invalid and unconstitutional. But it is to be observed
that the legislature does not purport to do anything of the
kind. What it does is not to deem the schemes previously
settled as having been validly settled on those very dates,
under the then existing law. This of course is beyond
legislative competence since the legislature has not the
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power to override unconstitutionality as such. But what the
legislature has purported to do is to take up those very
schemes and deem them to have been settled under the
_provisions of the present Act and thereby to lay them open
to any attack available under the present law. Such a pro-
vision is not uncommon in legislative practice, and is
enacted in order to avoid the public inconvenience of having
to re-do what has previously been done. The result of
section 79-A is to treat the schemes framed within the
specified period as schemes framed immediately after the
commencement of the present Act and to impute thereto, by a
fiction, compliance with the various procedural and other
steps which are requisite under section 42. We can see no
reason for thinking that such a provision is not within the
competence of the Legislature. It has been suggested that
this is really interfering with the jurisdiction of this
Court under article 32. But there is no substance in that
suggestion. The right of any person to seek remedy under
article 32 in respect of any violation of his fundamental
rights is in no way curtailed or affected by the fact that
an actual decision of this Court on an application under
article 32 is, in effect, nullified by appropriate and
competent legislative measures. Indeed, the right has been,
in fact, successfully invoked on the prior occasion and has
again been invoked on the present occasion. If it fails
this time it is not because the right and the remedy under
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article 32 have been taken away or affected but because the
unconstitutionality has been removed. Section 79-A,
therefore, is not open to any objection on the ground of
legislative incompetence.
It has further been urged that to treat the scheme
prepared with reference to the Act of 1939 as amended in
1953 as a scheme prepared under the present Act by means of
a fiction is really in the nature of deprivation of certain
advantages which an aggrieved person would have had if in
fact the scheme was settled under the present Act, and that
therefore such a scheme would still operate by way of
unreasonable restriction. This contention is also without
substance. It is true that in the present Act the procedure
relating to the scheme has four steps which are as follows:
(1) The scheme is to be framed by a Commissioner, who is, by
appointment, a judicial officer.
(2) The procedure is, as far as may be, the same as that in
the trial of suits.
(3) There is a preliminary enquiry by the Assistant
Commissioner.
(4) There is an appeal to the High Court.
Out of these four, the substantial item is the last one and
that has been specifically provided for under section 79-A
and a period of sixty days from the date of the commencement
of the Act has been provided for the right of appeal. There
can be no complaint on this score.
It is true that the schemes under the Act then in
operation, i.e., during the specified period, might possibly
have been framed by (a) an executive officer, as also (b) in
pursuance of procedure under the rules framed by the
Executive Government which may not approximate to that of a
trial of a suit.But this was merely a theoretical
possibility.In fact, as appears from the record and, as
has beenstated to us by the learned Attorney-General on
behalf of the State and not disputed on the other side, the
Endo wment Commissioner during the specified period was a
Subordinate Judge of the Orissa Judicial Service. The
actual procedure which was in force at the time under the
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rules as then prescribed was also in fact in
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consonance with the trial of suits under the Civil Procedure
Code. This appears clearly from rules 51 to 109 of the
Rules framed by the Government of Orissa, an official copy
of which has been supplied to us in court by the learned
Attorney-General on behalf of the State. As regards the
provision that the enquiry by the Commissioner under the
present Act has to be preceded by a preliminary enquiry by
an Assistant Commissioner who is of the rank if a Munsif,
the argument that the deprivation of this feature by the
deeming provision in section 79-A operates to the
disadvantage of the Mahants is not by any means a serious
point. It is to be noticed that this is setoff by the fact
that schemes under the 1939 Act are framed not by the
Commissioner alone but along with one or more Government
officers appointed by the Government. We are, therefore,
unable to, uphold the contention that the deeming provision
under section 79-A which treats the previous schemes as
schemes framed under the present Act results in bringing
about any substantial disadvantages to the detriment of the
Mahants. We accordingly hold that section 79-A of the
present Act is not open to any constitutional objection.
We are, therefore, clearly of the opinion that sections
42(1)(b), 42(7) and 44(2) as well as section 79-A of the
present Act are not open to the constitutional objections
raised before us.
It may be mentioned that in the petitions before us some
other provisions of the present Act have also been
challenged as being unconstitutional. But no arguments have
been advanced before us in respect thereof. It may also be
mentioned that the petitions before us have not raised any
questions relating to the merits of the scheme in so far as
any specific provisions thereof may have operated by way of
unreasonable restrictions, in the light of the considera-
tions pointed out by this Court in its judgment in the
Commi8sioner, Hindu Religious Endowments, Madras v. Sri
Lakshmindra Thirtha Swamiar of Sri Shirur Mutth(1). Nor
does it appear that any appeal as
(1) [1954] S C.R. 1005.
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provided in section 79-A has been filed to the High Court in
respect of these cases challenging the validity or the
propriety of the various provisions in the scheme or
correctness of the decision, express or implied, on the
basic facts which are the foundation of the scheme
proceedings. We express no opinion on any of these matters.
In the last of the petitions relating to Manapur Math, the
facts appear to be slightly dissimilar but this makes no
substantial or material difference. In that case the
original scheme was one framed under sections 38 and 39 of
the 1939 Act as they stood before their amendment in 1953
which provided for a right of suit. The scheme itself was
dated the 22nd May, 1948. Previous to the framing of the
scheme there appears to have been a claim by the Mahant that
the institution was a private one and not a public one and
that it did not fulfil the definition of the word "Math"
under the Act. There appears to have been a compromise
between the then Mahant and the public of the village in
which the Math is situated, who were interested in the Math.
The compromise was to the effect that the institution was to
be declared a Math but that the then Mahant was to be
recognised as the hereditary trustee thereof. This
compromise was recognised by the Commissioner by his order
dated the 12th May, 1947, formally making the above
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declarations. It was on the basis of this that, later on, a
scheme was framed on the 22nd May, 1948. It does not appear
that the Mahant filed any suit which was then available to
him. But it is stated to us by the learned Advocate
appearing for the petitioner that an application was filed
in the High Court for a writ to qudsh the scheme, and that
it was dismissed by the High Court on the 16th November,
1954. The scheme became final under the original Act of
1939 as it stood before the 1953 amendment. Obviously, with
reference to the facts of such a case, no argument of the
kind that has been addressed to us in the other four
petitions was available.
In the result, therefore, all the five petitions must be
dismissed with costs.
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