Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 6
PETITIONER:
P. V. BHEEMSENA RAO
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SIRIGIRI PEDDA YELLA REDDIAND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/03/1961
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1350 1962 SCR (1) 339
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC1457 (12)
R 1968 SC1489 (9)
ACT:
Inam grant-Personal, burdened with service--Alienation by
grantee and service discontinued-If resumable by revenue
authorities-Madras Hindu Religious Endowments Act, No. 11 of
1927, ss- 44-B(1), 44-B(2)(a)(1) and (II), Board’s Standing
Order 54.
340
HEADNOTE:
The property in dispute was granted in inam to the ancestors
of the predecessors-in-interest of the plaintiff-respondents
for the performance of parak service in certain temples but
the grantees alienated considerable portion of the property
and ceased to perform the parak service. On being moved by
the trustees under s. 44-B(2)(a)(i) and (ii) of the Madras
Hindu Religious Endowments Act, 1927, the revenue
authorities after holding an enquiry ordered resumption of
the inam lands and regranted them to the temple. The
alienees thereupon filed a suit in which their main
contention was that the revenue authorities had no
jurisdiction to order the resumption of the inam under S.44-
B of the Act which is in these terms-
"Any exchange, gift, sale or mortgage and any lease for a
term exceeding five years, of the whole or any portion of
any inam granted for the performance of a charity or service
connected with a math or temple and made, confirmed or
recognised by the British Government, shall be null and
void."
Both the trial court and the High Court on appeal held that
the inam was a personal inam burdened with service to the
temple and the case did not fall under s. 44-B of the Act.
On appeal by the trustees with a certificate of the High
Court,
Held, that the distinction between a grant for an office to
be remunerated by the use of land and a grant of land
burdened with service is that the former is a case of
service grant and is resumable when the service is not
performed; the latter is not a service grant as such but a
grant in favour of a person though burdened with service and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 6
its resumption will depend upon whether the circumstances in
which the grant was made establish a condition that it was
resumable if the service was not performed.
Shrimant Lakhamgouda v. Raosaheb Baswantrao, (1931) LXI
M.L.J. 449, referred to.
Though on a wide interpretation s. 44-B(1) might also
include personal inams burdened with service it is really
confined to inams directly granted to the temple or service
inams for the purpose of a temple or math or inams the whole
income of which is meant for charity and does not include
personal inams burdened with service. Such inams would
continue to be dealt with under Board’s Standing Order 54
class (b) as introduced by the amendment to that order.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 752 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 8, 1954,
of the Madras High Court in Second Appeal No. 312 of 1949.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and P. V. B. Tatachari, for the
appellant.
341
P.Somasundaram and T. Satyanarayana, for the respondents.
1961. March 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
WANCHOO, J.-This appeal on a certificate granted by the
Andhra Pradesh High Court raises the question of the
interpretation of s. 44-B(1) of the Madras, Hindu Religious
Endowments Act No. II of 1927 (hereinafter called the Act).
The point arises in this way. The property in dispute was
originally granted in inam to the ancestors of the
predecessors-in-interest of the plaintiffs-respondents for
the performance of parak service in the pagodas (temples) of
village Panyam in Nandyal Taluk of the Kurnool District.
The grantees of the land in this inam alienated a
considerable portion of it and also ceased to perform the
parak service. In consequence, the trustees of the temples
at Panyam applied. to the Sub-Collector under s. 44-B (2)
(a) (i) and (ii) of the Act for the resumption of the lands
and their regrant to the temples on the ground that the
holders of the inam had alienated the property and had
failed to perform the service required of them. An inquiry
was conducted into these allegations, and it was held by the
Revenue Divisional Officer, Nandyal, that the inam had been
granted on the condition of parak service being rendered and
that there had been breach of the condition on failure to
perform the service and also that the lands comprised in the
inam had been alienated in a manner falling within s. 44-B
(2) (a) (i) of the Act. On these findings the resumption of
the inam lands was ordered and the inam was re-granted to
the temples in Panyam village. The alienees took the matter
in appeal to the Collector but failed. Thereupon they filed
the suit out of which the present appeal has arisen; and
their main contention was that. the revenue authorities had
no jurisdiction to order the resumption of the inam under s.
44-B. The suit was resisted by the trustees who were
defendants to it and their case was that the, inam was a
religious service inam in the sense of being emoluments for
the performance of service and
342
alternatively that even if the grant was a personal inam,
burdened with the performance of parak service, the grant
was conditional on the performance of the service and as
there was breach of this obligation, the resumption and re-
grant were justified under s. 44-B.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 6
Certain preliminary facts are not in dispute now. It has
been found by all the courts that the inam grant comprised
both the warams. It has also been found that the grant to
the inamdar was personal to him though burdened with parak
service and not a service inam in the sense of the inam
constituting emoluments of any office. On the finding that
the inam was a personal inam burdened with service to the
temple the trial court held that the case did not fall
within s. 44-B of the Act. On appeal the district court
confirmed the decree of the trial court. In the High Court
on second appeal the finding as to the inam being of both
warams was not contested and it was conceded that it was a
personal inam burdened with service. The only question that
was agitated there was whether the case would fall within
the four corners of s. 44-B even if the inam which was
granted in the present case was, a personal inam of both
warams burdened with service to the temple. The High Court
held against the trustees and dismissed the appeal.
Thereupon the trustees who are the appellants before us
applied for a certificate which was granted to them; and
that is how the matter has come up before us.
Section 44-B (1) is in these terms:-
"Any exchange, gift, sale or mortgage, and any
lease for a term exceeding five years, of the
whole or any portion of any inam granted for
the performance of a charity or service
connected with a math or temple and made,
confirmed or recognised by the British
Government, shall be null and void."
The question for consideration is whether a personal inam
burdened with service to a temple can be said to come within
the meaning of the words "any inam granted for the
performance of a service connected with a temple". It is
urged that the words used in s. 44-B (1) are of very wide
import and any personal
343
grant of land howsoever large, if it is burdened with some
service to a temple howsoever small, would be within the
meaning of these words and would therefore come within the
terms of s.44-B (1). The High Court has repelled this wide
construction of the words used in s. 44-B (1), and we think
rightly. The distinction between a grant for an office to
be remunerated by the use of land and a grant of land
burdened with service is well known in Hindu law. The
former is a case of a service grant and is resumable when
the service is not performed. The latter is not a service
grant as such but a grant in favour of a person though
burdened with service and its resumption will depend upon
whether the circumstances in which the grant was made
establish a condition that it was resumable if the service
was not performed: (see Shrimant Lakhamgouda Basavprabhu
Sardesai v. Raosaheb Baswantrao alias Annasaheb Subedar and
Others (1)). The question therefore is whether s. 44-B
covers only the first type of grant, (namely, a service
grant) and not a personal grant burdened with service.
Prior to the introduction of s. 44-B in the Act, the
enforcement of a condition of a grant in favour of
charitable and religious institutions in Madras was by
taking recourse to Board’s Standing Order 54. Under para.
1 of this Order, a duty was laid on the revenue officers to
see that inams confirmed by the Inam Commissioner for the
benefit of or for services to be rendered to any religious
and charitable institution are not enjoyed without the terms
of the grant being fulfilled. Under para. 2 thereof,
religious and charitable inams were liable to be resumed on
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 6
the ground that the whole or a portion of the land had been
alienated or lost to the institution or service to which it
once belonged or that the terms of the grant were not
observed. Provision was also made in the Order for the
authorities which would exercise the power to resume.
Further provisions in that Order show that the intention
normally was not to dispossess the inamdar even in the event
of failure to perform the conditions of the grant but the
land was subjected to
(1) (1931) LXI M.L.J. 449.
344
full assessment and the assessment was made available to the
institution in lieu of the service lost. In the case of
personal inams burdened with service in particular what was
usually resumed in the event of nonperformance of service
with or without alienation was that portion of the grant
which represented the value of the service burdened and not
that which was personal and there was no injustice in this
course for as we have already said a personal inam burdened
with service was granted to an individual for himself
though, he was required to perform certain services to the
temple. Therefore, in case he failed to do so there might
be resumption of such portion of the inam as would represent
the burden of the service leaving the rest to him.
It is in this background that we have to examine s. 44-B (1)
introduced in the Act in 1934 and see whether personal inams
burdened with service are included within its ambit. It may
be mentioned that on the introduction of s. 44-B (1) in the
Act., B.S.O. 54 was amended and religious and charitable
inams which were all governed till then by it were divided
into two classes, namely-
(a) inams granted for the performance of a charity or
service connected with a Hindu math or temple; and
(b) inams not falling under class (a).
Inams falling under class (a) were to be governed by the
provisions of the Act while inams falling under class (b)
were to be governed by B.S.O. 54 as heretofore. This
amendment would also show that all religious inams, i.e.,
inams which had some connection howsoever slight with a
temple or other religious institution were not to be
governed by s. 44-B and only those inams which were granted
for the performance of a charity or service connected with a
Hindu math or temple wore to be dealt with under s. 44-B
while others would still be governed by B.S.O. 54. We
therefore agree with the High Court that this history
affords a clue to the interpretation of s. 44-B (1) and
suggests that though the words used in s. 44-B are open to a
wide interpretation, the intention was to
345
bring within its purview only those inams which were granted
directly to the temple and also those inams which were
granted for the performance of a charity or service
connected with a math or temple, i.e., service inams or such
inams the whole income of which was for charity and not
those inams which were personal inams though burdened with
some service to a temple or math. As we have already said
the land granted under a personal inam burdened with service
may be very large and the service expected may be very
slight, and it could not be the intention of the legislature
when it enacted s. 44-B (1) that large personal inams with
slight service attached to them should be resumed and re-
granted to the temple under s. 44-B (1) for failure to
perform the service with which the grant was burdened. It
would make no difference to the validity of this argument
even if the service attached absorbed a larger portion of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 6
the inam leaving only a smaller portion to the grantee.
This conclusion is in our opinion enforced if we look at el.
(iii) of s. 44-B (2)(a) which permits resumption of an inam
on the ground that either the math or temple has ceased to
exist or the service in question has in any way become
impossible of performance. Now it could not be the
intention of the legislature, where an inam was granted as a
personal inam though burdened with some service to a temple
or math, that such inam should be resumed simply because the
math or temple has ceased to exist or for some other reason
the service has become impossible of performance. The
nature of a personal inam burdened with service is that it
is meant for the individual to whom it is granted though the
individual is required to perform some service to the temple
also. The legislature could not have intended when it
enacted s. 44-B (2)(a)(iii) that even such an inam should be
resumed when the math or temple ceases to exist. But this
would be the result if the wide interpretation contended for
by the appellants is accepted. In such a case obviously the
personal portion of the grant has to be separated from the
service portion
44
346
and if the service is not performed it is only the service
portion that is liable to resumption. Further if we look at
s. 44-B (2)(f)(i), it provides that where an inam is resumed
under s. 44-B (1) it shall be re-granted as an endowment to
the temple or math concerned In the case of a personal inam
burdened with service it will mean that if the service is
not performed the whole inam would be liable to resumption
and would be re-granted to the temple, though the inam was
granted to an individual and the service with which it was
burdened might have been ’slight, the remaining income of
the inam being intended as a personal grant to the
individual. Therefore when s. 44-B(2)(f)(i) provides for
re-grant of the resumed inam to the temple it presumes that
the whole of the inam resumed was meant for service of the
temple and there was no element of personal grant in it. It
is on that basis that we can understand the re-grant of the
resumed inam to the temple, the idea behind the word "re-
grant" being that originally also it was granted for the
temple though as a service inam. Similarly, s. 44-
B(2)(f)(ii) provides that where the math or temple has
ceased to exist and an inam is resumed on that ground it
shall be re-granted as an endowment to the Board for
appropriation to such religious, educational or charitable
purposes not inconsistent with the objects of such math or
temple, as the Board may direct. Here again it seems to us
that the legislature could not have intended that a personal
inam granted to an individual though burdened with service
should be resumed when the temple has ceased to exist and
the service could not be performed and should be taken over
by the Board as an endowment for such purposes as the Board
may direct, Such a provision would completely overlook the
personal part of a personal inam burdened with service.
Therefore, the view taken by the High Court that s. 44-B(1),
though on a wide interpretation it might also include
personal inams burdened with service, is really confined to
inams directly granted to the temple or service inams. for
the purpose of a temple or math or inams the whole of the
income of which
347
is meant for charity and does not include personal inams
burdened with service, is correct. Such inams would
continue to be dealt with under B.S.O. 54, class (b) as
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 6
introduced by the amendment to that Order. In this view,
there is no force in this appeal and it is hereby dismissed
with costs.
Appeal dismissed.