Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
PRESIDENT OF THE BIHAR STATE BOARD OF RELIGIOUS TRUST & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NALINI CHOUDHARI & ORS.(With connected appeals)
DATE OF JUDGMENT23/08/1973
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
CITATION:
1973 AIR 2578 1974 SCR (1) 481
1973 SCC (2) 752
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC1794 (7)
ACT:
Bihar Hindu Religious Trusts Act, 1950, ss. 43 and 67-Scope
of.
HEADNOTE:
Section 43(1) of the Bihar Hindu Religious Trusts Act, 1950,
as amended in 1956, provides, that all disputes as to
whether any immovable property is or is not a trust property
shall be inquired into by the authority appointed by the
State Government; and s. 67 of the Act provides that if a
trustee fails without reasonable cause to comply with
certain matters or furnish certain particulars which he is
required or called upon to furnish under the Act, he shall
be liable to punishment.
The respondents, who were called upon to furnish certain
particulars falling tinder s. 67, in relation to certain
temples, contended, that there was no trust, that s. 43
provides a machinery for deciding whether there is a trust
and who is the trustee of the trust, and that a decision
under the section was a condition precedent to the launching
of a prosecution under s. 67. The High Court accepted the
contention.
Allowing the appeals to this Court,
HELD : Neither expressly nor by necessary implication, s. 43
or any other provision of the Act bars the prosecution
tinder s. 67 without a decision under 43- [486 B]
In a prosecution under s. 67, it is open to the persons
prosecuted to contend that there is no trust and that they
are not trustees. It would then be for the prosecution to
make out all the ingredients of the offence and the two main
ingredients are : (1) that there is a trust and (2) that the
person prosecuted is a trustee. In that case, it will be
for the Court before which the prosecution has been
instituted to decide the questions on the material placed
before it. There is nothing preventing the criminal courts
from going into these questions. [484H-485C]
Under s. 43, the only question that can be decided is
whether any immovable property is a trust property or not.
Under the section as it originally stood, the Board of
religious trusts or any person interested in a religious
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trust may, at any time, apply to the District Judge for a
declaration that any immovable property is trust property;
and under the section, as amended in 1956, all disputes as
to whether any immovable property is trust property, shall
be inquired into by the authority appointed. But, in either
case, the only question that can be decided under the
section is whether any immovable property is or is not trust
property. The section, before or after amendment, does not
provide for a decision as to whether there is any religious
trust or whether any person is a trustee. [485G-486B]
It is possible that, when a question is raised before the
authority under the section whether a certain immovable
property is trust property or not, the person interested
might contend that the was no trust at all. In such case.
the authority, for the purpose of deciding whether the
property is trust property. will have to decide whether
there is a trust at all. But such a decision is. only for
the purpose of deciding whether it has the jurisdiction to
decide whether the property in question is trust property.
if it wrongly decides that there is a trust and that it has
jurisdiction. such a decision can be questioned in a civil
court. In any case, under the section, it cannot be decided
whether any body is a trustee. Thus, the only question that
can be decided under s. 43 is
482
irrelevant to the case of the prosecution in respect of many
of the offences mentioned in s. 67. [485D-G]
Mahanth Ramdhan Purl v. President, S.B.R.T. Pattna, 1955
B.L.J.R. 665, Bihar State Religious Trust Board v. Mahanth
Jaleshwar Gir & Ors., I.L.R. (1967) 46 Patna 23, B. S. Board
of R.T. v. R. R. Gir, 1969 B.L.J.R. 63, S.S. Cloubey v.
B.H.R.T. Board, [1969] B.L.J.R. 74 and Parmeshwari Pd. Singh
v. The Bihar State Board of Hindu Religious Trusts, 1968
P.L.J.R. 386, approved.
Mahant Ram Saroop Dasji v. S. P. Salhi, [1959] Sup. 2 S.C.R.
583 explained.
Mst. Champa Sahu v. The Bihar Religious Trust Board Patna,
24-8-1961 of the Patna High Court, overruled.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2029 of
1970.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated December 22, 1969
of the Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 571 of 1969 and
Civil Appeals Nos. 41 & 42 of 1970.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated December 22, 1969
of the Patna High Court in Criminal Miscellaneous Case Nos.
1181 and 1182 of 1969.
L.N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India and D. Goburdliun,
for the appellants (in all the appeals).
S.C. Sinha and Rathin Das, for respondent No. 1 (in C.A.
2029 of 1970).
S.K. Sinha, K. K. Sinha and B. B. Sinha, for the
respondent (in appeal No. 42 of 1970).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J. These three appeals arise out of the common
judgment of the High Court of Patna in Civil writ
jurisdiction Case No. 571 of 1969 and Criminal
Miscellanceous Cases Nos. 1181 and 1182 of 1969. The
question that arises for decision in all the three appeals
is the same: whether a decision under section 43 of the
Bihar Hindu Religious Trusts Act, 1950 (hereinafter to be
called the, Act) is a condition precedent to the, launching
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of a prosecution under section 67 of that Act. The facts
necessary may first be stated. The 1st respondent in the
Civil Appeal No. 2,029 of 1970 was called upon by the Bihar
State Board of Religious Trusts to submit a statement
relating to the Giri Gobardhan Mandir of Bana Nava Gram on
pain of prosecution under section 67. Thereupon he filed
the writ, out of which this appeal arises, alleging that
there was no temple of Giri Gobardhan but only the idol of
Giri Gobardhan which was his family idol and the income of
the land was not the income derived from the properties of
the idol. He further contended that there was no trust of
any kind relating to the Properties and that no member of
the public had any access to the idol nor was any offering
made by them and prayed for the notices issued by the Board
to be quashed. The respondent in Criminal Appeal No. 41 of
1970 who was prosecuted under
483
section 67 of the Act claimed that he was the sole shebait
of a temple in village Basarhia in the district of
Darbhanga. He also did not submit the account demanded
under the Act on the ground that the property of which the
return was sought was not trust property and that without a
declaration under section 43 of the Act he could not be
prosecuted under section 67. The respondent in Criminal
Appeal No. 42 of 1970, who was similarly prosecuted claimed
that the temple in village Basarhia in the district of
Purnema of which he was the sole shebait was within the
family dwelling house with which the public have no concern
and that he was, therefore, not liable to render an account
of the income and expenditure. His other contention was
also similar to the contention of the respondent in Civil
Appeal No. 41 of 1970. The High Court allowed the three
petitions and quashed the notice issued as well as the
prosecutions. The Bihar Hindu Religious Trusts Board has
filed these appeals.
Section 67(1) of the Act reads:
"If a tustee fails without reasonable cause,
the burden of proving which shall be upon him,
to comply with any order or direction made or
issued under clause (i), (o) (q) of sub-
section (2) of section 28 or under section 58,
to comply with the provisions of sub-section
(1) of section 59, sub-section (1) of section
60, section 61 or section 62, or to furnish
any statement, annual account, estimate,
explanation or other document or information
relating to the religious trust of which he is
the trustee, which he is required or called
upon to furnish under any of the provisions of
this Act, he shall be punishable with fine
which may extend, in the case of the first
offence, to two hundred rupees, and, in the
case of the second or any subsequent offence,
to five hundred rupees and, in default of
payment of the fine, with simple imprisonment
for a term which may extend to six months or
one year, as the case may be."
Under section 59 of the Act, within six months from the date
of the publication in the Official Gazette of the names of
the President and members of the first Board, the trustees
of every religious trust existing on the said date should
furnish to the Board a statement in the prescribed form
containing the prescribed particulars in respect of the
trust of which he is the trustee. Under section 60, the
trustee of every religious trust has to prepare a budget of
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such trust and send a copy thereof to the Board. Under
section 59 and 60 there is no obligation cast on the Board
to give a notice to the trustee calling upon him to furnish
the statement contemplanted under s.59 or the budget under
s.60. The duties cast upon the trustee under those sections
are irrespective of the fact whether a notice has been
issued or not. The fact that notices were issued does not
make any difference to this position. If for a failure to
comply with the provisions of sg. 59 and 60 a prosecution
lies under s.67. the prosecution cannot fail, on the ground
that no notice was issued. of course, it is open to a per-
son who apprehends that action might be taken against him
for his
844
failure to comply with the provisions of either section 59
or 60, or on whom a notice is served calling on him to
comply with the provisions of those sections to approach the
ordinary civil court for a declaration that there is no
trust and that he is not a trustee and therefore he cannot
be called upon to comply with the provisions of ss. 59 and
60 or prosecuted for failure to do so. If without a notice
a prosecution is launched under section 67 it is open to the
persons prosecuted to contendbefore the court that there is
no trust and that they are not trustees. In that case it
would be for the prosecution to make outall the
ingredients of the offence to the satisfaction of thecourt
before which the prosecution is launched. The two main
ingredients would be: that there is a trust and that the
person prosecuted is a trustee. Under the Act no machinery
has been set up for deciding the question whether there is a
trust and whether any person is a trustee of such a trust.
The whole basis of the contention of the respondents in
these three appeals which has in substance been accepted by
the High Court of Patna is that section 43 provides such a
machinery. It is to be noticed that there is nothing in
section 67 which bars a prosecution under that section.
Therefore, the question that would arise is whether by
necessary implication section 43 would bar any prosecution
under section 67. Section 43 as it stood originally read:
"43. (1) The Board or any person interested in
a religious trust may, at any time, apply in
the prescribed manner to the’ District Judge
for a declaration that any immovable property
is trust property.
This section was amended in 1956 to read as
follows:
"43. (1) All. disputes as to whether any
immovable property is or is not a trust
property shall be inquired into, either on its
own motion or on application, by the authority
appointed in this behalf by, the State
Government, by notification, in the Official
Gazette."
It would be noticed that under the original section as well
as under the section as amended in 1956 the only question
that can be decided is whether any immovable property is a
trust property or not. It does not provide for a decision
as to whether there is any religious trust, as defined under
clause (1) of section 2 of the, Act, or whether any person
is a trustee or not. It does not even provide for a deci-
sion on the- question whether any property is a trust
property. It provides only for decision on the question
whether any immovable property is a trust property. It is
quite conceivable that a trust has no immovable property at
all but only movable property, or as happens more often the
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trust Propery may consist of both movable and immovable
property. Therefore, a decision under section 43 will not
be a final or a complete adjudication as regards the
question whether there is any trust or whether any person is
a trustee. It stands to reason, therefore, that under
section 43 there cannot be a conclusive decision which Will
provide an answer to a prosecution under section 67.
Furthermore in any prosecution under every one
485
of the sections mentioned in section 67 the question that
arises is whether the person prosecuted is a trustee. And
section 43 does not provide for a decision of that question.
The only question that can be decided ’under that section is
irrelevant to the case of prosecution in respect of many of
the offences mentioned ill section 67. Therefore, when a
question arises in a prosecution under section 67 whether
any trust is a trust coming within the ambit of the Act and
whether the person prosecuted is a trustee, it is a
question which the court before which the prosecution has
been instituted has to decide on the material placed before
it. of course the prosecution cannot succeed unless both
these propositions are established. There is nothing
preventing the criminal court from going into both these
questions.
A decision under section 43 is not a decision by a court.
It is only a decision by a tribunal and it is subject to the
results of a suit to be instituted under that section within
90 days of the decision of the tribunal, Though originally
the tribunal consisted of a District Judge, it was
nonetheless only a tribunal. Normally when a power is con-
ferred on an ordinary court of the land to decide a question
it attracts all the procedure that attaches to the
proceedings of the court on which the power is conferred
including right of appeal, revision etc. Such was not the
position even before 1956. That question no longer arises
because of the amendment made in 1956. The position is now
beyond doubt that it is only a tribunal that determines
cases under section 43. When the question is raised before
the authority under section 43 whether a certain immovable
property is trust property or not the person interested
might say that there is no trust and the property is not the
trust property. In such a case the authority may for the
purpose of deciding whether the property is trust property
have to decide whether there is a trust at all. But such
decision is only for the purpose of deciding whether it has
the jurisdiction to decide whether the property in question
is trust property. It is true that a subordinate tribunal
cannot by a wrong decision on the question of jurisdiction
assume jurisdiction which it does not possess. If it
wrongly decides that it has jurisdiction on the ground that
there is a trust, such a decision can be questioned before
the ordinary civil courts. But in many cases the person
interested may be content with merely saying that the
property in question is not trust property and not raise the
other question whether there is a trust at all. In any case
under this section it cannot be decided whether anybody is a
trustee.
The High Court seems to have thought that the fact that
under section 43, as it originally stood, the Board or any
person interested in a religious trust may at any time apply
to the District Judge for a declaration and under the
section as amended in 1956 all disputes shall be inquired
into by the authority appointed in this behalf makes a
difference to the question whether a prosecution under s.67
was barred without a decision under s. 43. It does no such
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thing. In either case the only question that can be decided
under that section is whether any immovable property is or
is not trust property. Even under the section as amended in
1956 questions as regards any trust property, both movable
and immovable, which includes the question
486
whether there is a trust at all cannot be decided. In any
case the question as to whether a person is a trustee or not
cannot be decided either under the original section or under
the section as amended ill 1956. And that is the crux of
the question in a prosecution under section 67. We are
clearly of the opinion that the High Court was in error in
proceeding on the basis that without a decision under
section 43 no prosecution can be launched under section 67.
Neither expressly nor by necessary implication section 43 or
any other provision of the Act bars the prosecution under
section 67 without a decision under section 43.
The Full Bench had taken a view contrary to that taken by
earlier decisions of the same court. in Manth Ramdhan Puri
v. President, S.B.R.T., Patna(1) it was observed:
"If in every case where a person raises a
claim that the property is not trust property
the Board is bound to stay its hands by reason
of such denial, then the Act will be unwork-
able and meaningless.... .. . Section 43 of
the Act is merely an enabling section...... It
should be obvious that section 43 can have no
application if the trust--is not a religious
trust at all. Section 43 applies only when
the Act applies. If the Act does not apply,
section 43 can have no application. It is,
therefore, unreasonable to infer from section
43 that any denial by a person that the
property is not trust property will at once
oust the jurisdiction of the Board."
In Bihar State Religious Trust Board v. Mahanth Jaleshwar
Gir & Ors.(.2) is was pointed out :
"Under the provisions of section 43(1), of the
Bihar Hindu Religious Trusts Act, 1950,
disputes as to whether a particular property,
and that too only when it is immovable, is or
is not a property appertaining to a public
trust can be enquired into by the authority.
That is to say, if the dispute relates to any
particular immovable property or properties
forming part of or appertaining to a public
trust, such a dispute shall be enquired into
by the authority either of its own motion or
on application of any person. In terms, if a
dispute,, is in regard to the nature of the
trust itself, section 43 is not attracted.
Nobody can approach the authority, either the
State Board of Religious Trusts, Bihar, or the
trustee or any other person, for a declaration
that a particular endowment or trust or
institution is not a public trust but a
private one. nor can anybody file an
application before the authority for a mere
declaration that it is a public trust. It may
well be that when question is raised before
the authority in regard to a particular
immovable property that it appertains to a
public trust, by way of answer to such a
claim, the person or the trustee may raise a
dispute that even though the parti-
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(1) 1955 B. L. J. R. 665.
(2) 1. L. R. [1967] 46 Patna 23
487
cular property appertains to the trust, the
trust is not a public one, and, therefore, the
property should be held as not appertaining to
a public trust. Incidentally and indirectly,
in such a case the question may arise for the
determination, of the authority and, on
determination of this question, the ultimate
declaration which the authority would be
competent to give under sub-section (3) of
section 43 will be that the property is or is
not trust property. But unless the determi-
nation of the character of the trust is
involved incidentally, and indirectly, the
authority, either within the terms of sub-
section ( 1 ) or as made expressly clear by
the, terms of subsection (3), has got no
jurisdiction to adjudicate purely in regard to
the nature of the trust and to give a
declaration as to whether it is a public trust
or a private trust."
and it was held that the non-determination of the, question
as to the nature of the trust by the authority under section
43 is not a bar to,the’ launching of the prosecution under
section 67. In B.S. Board of R. T.v. R.R. Gir(1) it was
held that
"the scope of Sec. 43 is that if a dispute was
in regard to the nature of the trust itself,
Sec. 43 was not ’at all attracted and that
neither the Board nor the Trustees nor any
other person could approach the Authority for
a I declaration that a particular endowment or
trust or institution was a public trust and
not a private one or vice-versa. On the scope
and ambit of Sec. 43 it was neither open to
the special officer, Bihar Hindu Religious
Trust Board, Patna, who approached the
authority for any such declaration or order,
nor was it competent for the authority to make
the impugned order."
In S. S. Choubey v. B.H.R.T. Board(2) a Divisiion Bench
followed the earlier decision in Mahanth Jaleshwar’s case
(supra). It is interesting to note that Justice Choudhary,
who was a member of this Bench was also the Judge who
decided the case in Cr. Revision No. 170 of 1.961 (Mosst.
Champa Sahu v. The Bihar Religious Trust Board, Patna)
disposed of on 24th August, 1961, the only decision of’ that
court which appealed to the Full Bench. We must point out,
however, that this decision is based on a plain misreading
of the decision of this Court in Mahant Ram Saroop Dasji v.
S. P. Sahi(3). In that decision this Court held that the
Act does not apply to private trusts. There was an earlier
decision obtained in First Appeal No. 10 of 1941 that the
properties under consideration there did not constitute a
public trust and this Court therefore pointed out that as
long as the declaration made by the High Court in First
Appeal No. 10 of 1941 stands and in the absence of some I
evidence to the contrary, the appellant was entitled to say
that the properties did not constitute a public trust and
the Act and its provisions did not apply to it. The further
observations of this Court did not say that a decision
under, section 43 was a pre-requisite to a prosecution under
section 67. This
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(1) 1969 B. L. J. R. 63. (2) 1969 B.
L, J. R. 74.
(3) [1959] (Supp.) 2 S. C. R. 583
488
Court left it open to the respondents therein, i.e. the
Board, to take such steps as may be available to them in law
to get it determined by a competent authority that the trust
in question is a public trust. The decision in Parmeshwari
Pd. Singh v. The Bihar State Board of Hindu Religious
Trusts(1) also followed the earlier decisions of the Patna
High Court. Thus all the earlier decisions are in
consonance with the view which we have taken. We hold that
the Full Bench was in error in the view it took.
All the appeals are allowed. The respondent in Civil Appeal
No. 2029 of 1970 will pay the appellant’s costs.
V.P.S.
Appeals allowed.
1) 1968 P. L. J. R. 386
489