Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NARAIN LAL & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUNDER LAL (DEAD) & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1967
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SHELAT, J.M.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1540 1967 SCR (3) 916
ACT:
Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of 1908), s. 92--
Permission of Advocate-General for filing Suit--Permission
given to four persons-One dies--Surviving three whether can
file suit without obtaining fresh permission.
HEADNOTE:
Four persons obtained. the consent of the Advocate-
General of Rajasthan to institute a suit against the
respondents under s. 92 of the Code o,f Civil Procedure.
Shortly thereafter one of the said four persons died and the
suit was instituted by the three survivors. On the
preliminary issue whether the suit filed by three persons,
when the permission had been given to. four, was
maintainable, the trial court held that it was. The High
COurt, however, in revision held the suit not to. be
maintainable. Appeal was filed in this Court by special
leave.
HELD: An authority to sue given to several persons
without more is a joint authority and must be exercised by
all jointly, and a suit by some of them only is not
competent. When sanction in the present case was given to.
four persons and one of them died before the institution of
the suit, a suit by the remaining three was incompetent.
Fresh sanction must be obtained by the survivors for the
institution of the suit. [918D-E, 919B ]
Muddala Bhagavannarayana v. Vadapalli
Perumallacharyuht, 29 M.L.J. 232, Pitchayya & Anr. v.
Venkatakrishnamacharlu & eleven Ors. I.L.R. 53 Mad. 223,
Sibte Rasid v. Sibte Nabi & Ors. I.L.R. (1943) All 112
Venkatesha Mafia v. B. Ramaya Hegade and twelve Ors.
I.L.R. 38 Mad. 1192, Musammat Ali Begam v. Badr-ul-Islam Ali
Khan, L.R. 65 I.A. 198, Raja Anand Rao v. Ramdas Daduram.
L.R. 48 I.A. 12 and Sheo Ram v. Rama Chand & Ors., A.I.R.
1940 Lab. 356, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: 1964. Civil Appeal No. 767 of
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order
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dated August 14, 1961 of the Rajasthan High Court in D.P.
Civil Misc. Application No. 128 of 1960.
Gopi Nath Kunzru, W.S. Barlingay and Ganpat Rai, for the
appellant.
C.B Agarwala, K.K. Jain, H.K. Puri and Uma Mehta, for
respondents Nos. 3, 4, 5, 7, 12, 13, 15-18, 21, 23 and 24.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bachawat, J. On September 10, 1955, Narain Lal, Mool
Chand, Mangilal and Kesharichand obtained the consent in
writing of the Advocate General, Rajasthan to institute a
suit against
917
the respondents under S. 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The consent was in these terms :
"For the reasons detailed above I grant
permission to the applicants Sarvashri (1)
Narainlal, (2) Mool Chand, (3) Mangilal and
(4) Seth Kesharichand for filing suit against
the opposite parties Shri Malilal Kasliwal and
27 other members and office holders of the
executive committee Jain Atishaya Kshetra Shri
Mahabir Swami Temple Chandangaon, for the
reliefs detailed in para 28 sub-paras I to 5
and 7 of the draft plaint filed by them before
me."
Shortly thereafter Mangi Lal died. On March 6, 1956,
Narain. Lal Mool Chand and Kesari Chand instituted a suit
against the respondents under S. 92 of the Code of Civil
Procedure, claiming a declaration that the temple of Shri
Mahabirji at Naurangabad and the appertaining properties
were a public charitable trust for the benefit of the
Shwetambar Sangh of the Jain community or of the Jain
community as a whole and for other reliefs. On March 9,
1958, Kesari Chand died. The trial court raised and tried
the following preliminary issue
"Whether the suit is not maintainable on the
strength of the permission obtained by the
plaintiffs along with Mangi Lai who died prior
to the institution of the suit ?"
The trial court held that the suit was maintainable. The
High Court in its revisional jurisdiction set aside the
order of the trial’ court and held that the suit was not
maintainable. The present appeal has been tiled from the
order of the High Court by special leave.
A suit claiming any of the reliefs specified in sub-s. (1)
of S. 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure in respect of a
trust for public purposes of a charitable or religious
nature may be instituted by the Advocate-General or "two or
more persons having an interest in the trust and having
obtained the consent in writing of the Advocate-General",
and save as provided by the Religious Endowments Act 1863
and certain other laws, no suit claiming Such reliefs in
respect of any such trust can be instituted except in
conformity with sub-s. (1) of S. 92. In the present case,
fourpersons obtained the necessary sanction of the Advocate
General. one of them died before the suit was filed, and the
remaining three, instituted the suit. The question is
whether the suit is brought in conformity with S. 92(1).
The decided cases show that a suit under S. 92 must be,
brought by all the persons to whom the sanction of the
Advocate General has been given, and a suit instituted by
some of them
918
only is not maintainable. In Muddala Bhagayannarayana V.
Vadapalli Perumallacharyulu(1) where the, sanction was given
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to four persons and two of them alone brought the suit
alleging that the other two had been won over by the
defendants and hall refused to join as plaintiffs, it was
held that the suit was not maintainable. In Pitchayya and
another v. Venkatakrishnamacharlu and eleven others(2),
where the sanction was given to three persons, the court
held that the suit instituted by two of them. was invalidly
brought and the defect could not be cured by impleading the
other person as a defendant. In Sibte Rasul v. Sibte Nabi
and others(1), where four persons obtained the sanction and
the suit was instituted by three of them, it was held that
the suit was incompetent and the defect could not be cured
by impleading the fourth as a plaintiff at the date of the
delivery of the judgment. We may add that in Venkatesha
Malia v. B. Ramaya Hegade and twelve others(1) where the
sanction to sue under S. 18 of the Religious Endowments Act
1863 was given by the district judge to two persons, it was
held that only one of them could not institute the suit.
We hold -that an authority to sue given to several persons
without more is a joint authority and must be acted upon by
all jointly, and a suit by some of them only is not
competent. As Sir George Rankin said in Musammat Ali Begam
v. Badr-ul- Islam Ali Khan(1), "where the consent in writing
of the Advocate General or Collector is given to a suit by
three persons as plaintiffs, the suit cannot be validly
instituted by two only. The suit as instituted must conform
to the consent. Once the representative suit is validly
instituted, it is subject to all the incidents of such a
suit; the subsequent death of a plaintiff will not render
the suit incompetent, see Raja Anand Rao v. Ramdas
Daduram(6), and an appeal by some of the plaintiffs
impleading the remaining plaintiff as a respondent is not
incompetent because all did not join as appellants, see
Musammat Ali Begam v. Badr-ul-Islam Ali Khan (5).
In Shea Ram v. Rain Chand and others ( 7 the sanction of the
Collector to bring a suit under S. 92 was given to twenty
persons. One of them died before the suit was brought and
the remaining nineteen instituted the suit. Skempg, J. held
that in view of tile two Privy Council rulings the suit was
validly instituted. But he erroneously assumed that in
Musammat Ali Begam v. Badr-ul- Islam Ali Khan(5) it was held
that where the sanction had been given to three persons, a
suit by two of them only was validly
(1) 29 M.L.J. 231. (2) I.L.R. 53 Mad. 223.
(3) I.L.R. (1943) All. 112. (4) 1.L.R. 38 Mad. 1192.
(5) I.L.R. 65 1. A. 198. (6) L.R. 48 I.A. 12.
(7) A.I.R. 1940 Lah. 356.
919
instituted. From the report of Raja Anand Rao v. Ramdas
Daduram(1), it is not clear whether all the persons to whom
the sanction was given brought the suit, and the point
raised and decided was that the death of one of the
plaintiffs after the institution of the suit did not render
the suit incompetent. We are unable to agree with the
Lahore ruling. Where sanction is given to four persons and
one of them dies before the institution of the suit, a suit
by the remaining three is incompetent. Fresh sanction must
be obtained by the survivors for the institution of the
suit. We must hold that the suit brought by the appellants
was competent. The High Court rightly held that the suit
was not maintainable.. This judgment will not bar the
institution of a fresh suit in conformity with a fresh
consent obtained from the Advocate-General or Collector.
In the result, the appeal is dismissed without costs.
G.C.
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Appeal dismissed
(1) L. R. 48 I.A. 12.
Cl/67-15
920