Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3350-54 of 1993
PETITIONER:
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, Amritsar
RESPONDENT:
Bagga Singh and Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/12/2002
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL & ARIJIT PASAYAT.
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
These five appeals by special leave arise from a common judgment of
a Division Bench of the Punjab and Haryana High Court. The five appeals
before it were directed against the order dated 1.8.1978 passed by the Sikh
Gurdwaras Tribunal Punjab, Chandigarh (in short ’the Tribunal’) in Petition
nos. 663 and 654 of 1975.
Synoptical resume of the factual position is as follows:
One Bakhtawar Singh and fifty nine other worshippers of an
institution alleged to be Gurdwara Sahib Ji situated in the revenue estate of
Kot Fatta, Tehsil and District Bhatinda filed a petition under sub-section (1)
of Section 7 of the Sikh Gurdwaras Act, 1925 (in short ’the Act’) to the
appropriate Secretary, Government of Punjab, praying, inter alia, that the
said institution be declared as Sikh Gurdwara and properties mentioned in
the petition be declared as belonging to the Gurdwara. The appropriate
Secretary to the Government of Punjab, in terms of sub-section (3) of
Section 7 of the Act published the petition along with rights, titles and
interests showing rights, titles and interests belonging to the Gurdwara in
question vide notification in the Punjab Government Gazette dated
4.11.1974 One Mahant Sarna Ram, an Udasi, filed a petition under
Section 10 of the Act claiming that there was no Sikh Gurdwara in
existence, the alleged institution was his residential house, and agricultural
land alleged to be belonging to the Gurdwara was his property. One Ramji
Dass and others also filed identical petition stating that the alleged Gurdwara
building was residential house of Sarna Ram Chela Chet Ram and the
agricultural land belonged to him and they have purchased about 60 Kanals
of land from him. Both these petitions were forwarded by the appropriate
Secretary to the Government of Punjab to the Tribunal under sub-section (1)
of Section 14 of the Act. Tribunal treated the petition to be a composite one
under Sections 8 and 10 of the Act. By its order dated 22.7.1975 Tribunal
held that since Sarna Ram had not claimed that he was a hereditary office
holder of the institution in dispute, he had no locus standi to file the petition
under Section 8. Ramji Dass and others neither claimed any personal interest
in the Gurdwara building nor did they claim to be worshippers or hereditary
office-holders of the institution and their petition was similarly not
maintainable. However, the Tribunal proceeded to deal with the petition
under Section 10. It is to be noted that the Tribunal registered the petitions
as No. 663/1975 (Bagga Singh and another v. S.G.P.C. Amritsar) filed by
Sarna Ram and No.654/1975 (Ramji Dass and others v. S.G.P.C. Amritsar)
filed by Ramji Das and others. The petitions under Section 10 of the Act
were registered giving identical numbers. Vide its order dated 31.7.1978 the
Tribunal held that the building in question was a Gurdwara and the land
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attached to it belonged to the Gurdwara in question.
Challenging the correctness of said order, the successors-in-interest of
late Mahant Sarna Ram filed First Appeal No. 434 of 1978 and the alienees
from late Mahant Sarna Ram assailed the order in First Appeal no. 435 of
1978. As a consequence of the order dated 31.7.1978 passed by the Tribunal,
Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, Amritsar (hereinafter referred
to as ’the Committee’) filed two suits under Section 25-A of the Act. One
was against Bagga Singh and Darshan Singh, legal representatives of late
Mahant Sarna Ram and the other against Ramji Dass and others who were
alienees from aforesaid late Mahant Sarna Ram and these were registered as
suits No. 89 and 90 of 1979 respectively. Both these suits were decreed by
the Tribunal by order dated 18.12.1979 and decrees were passed in favour of
the Committee. Aforesaid decrees were challenged in First Appeal nos. 34
of 1980, 198 of 1980 and 144 of 1980.
Tribunal, inter alia, came to the conclusion on consideration of the
oral and documentary evidence that the institution in question was a Sikh
Gurdwara. It placed reliance on the two decisions of the Lahore High Court
in Kahan Dass v. Shiromani Gurdwara Parbandhak Committee, Lahore (AIR
1934 Lahore 68) and Sunder Singh and others v. Mahant Narain Dass and
others (AIR 1934 Lahore 920).
Tribunal also noticed that after a petition is dismissed by reason of its
incompetence it must be taken not to have been presented in accordance
with the provisions of Section 8 and the local Government could notify the
institution under Section 9. Consequence of such notification is that the
Gurdwara was to be declared as a Sikh Gurdwara. Further Section 18(1)(g)
raised a presumption that where assignment of land is made by way of
succession from Guru to Chela, the presumption under Section 18(1)(g)
arises. It was further held that presumption attached to the entries in the
Jamabandi under Section 44 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887 ( in
short ’Revenue Act’) is rebutted by the presumption under Section 18(1)(g)
of the Act. Dismissing Sarna Ram’s petition it was held that he had no right,
title or interest in the land which belonged to the Gurdwara. As a
consequence, other applications filed by Ramji Dass and others were not
entertainable and, therefore, the transfer in favour of the alienees by the sale-
deed was of no consequence.
Before the High Court, stand of the appellants in the appeals was that
the Tribunal’s approach was clearly erroneous. It committed first faux pas
by treating applications to be composite one under Sections 8 and 10 of the
Act. The parameters of Sections 8 and 10 are entirely different and the
petitions filed by Sarna Ram and his alienees were in terms of Section 10.
Further the evidence on record clearly established that the land in question
was the personal land of Sarna Ram. In a suit filed in the year 1949, there
was a declaration about the absolute ownership of Sarna Ram and that itself
was sufficient to show that the property did not belong to the Sikh Gurdwara
and it had no right, title or interest over the land in question. Stand of the
respondents before the Tribunal, so far as this plea is concerned, was that the
Committee was not a party in this suit, and principle of res judicata was not
applicable.
Appellants before High Court submitted that suit was filed in the year
1949 which was disposed of in the year 1951. At the point of time the suit
was decided, the Committee was not in existence as for the first time the
application under Section 7 of the Act was filed in the year 1960, publication
was made in the official gazette in the year 1974, and the petition was
registered before the Tribunal in the year 1975. Therefore, the binding
effect of this judgment and decree passed long time before, cannot be diluted
and specious plea of the respondents being not party should not have been
accepted by the Tribunal.
The High Court found that the Tribunal has proceeded on erroneous
premises by holding that the application was a composite one under Sections
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8 and 10 of the Act. The petition was reproduced in extenso, to conclude that
the petition was one under Section 10, and the artificial bifurcation made by
the Tribunal was not proper. It also noticed that the Tribunal lost sight of
the fact that Sarna Ram was Udasi and the decisions referred to by the
Tribunal were not applicable. In fact Exhibits R-1, R-2, R-3, R-4, R-5 and
R-7 are clearly indicative of the fact that the (kaum of) Chet Ram and Sarna
Ram was "Sadh Bairagi". It was held that the entries do not warrant any
presumption that mere passing from Guru to Chela was indicative of its
religious character. There is no allegation much less proof which will prove
that the land was given to the Mahant for religious and charitable purposes.
Reference was made to decision of the Privy Council in Pandit Parma Nand
v. Nihal Chand and another (AIR 1938 PC 195), to conclude that there was
no presumption about property being religious property. It further observed
that the two Lahore decisions on which reliance was placed by the Tribunal
were factually distinguishable. It was held that the observations made in
those cases relate to different factual situations and the Court had no
occasion to express any opinion that a person of the Udasi order cannot
acquire private property.
It noticed that the judgment of civil court which adjudicated the suit of
1949 and disposed it of by judgment dated 31st August, 1951 was relevant
under Section 13 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1882 (in short ’the Evidence
Act’). With reference to the evidence tendered by the parties by
examination of witnesses, it was concluded that the statements of witnesses
examined as PWs were reliable and cogent and that of RWs was clearly
unacceptable. The factual findings so far as evidence of RWs is concerned,
were, inter alia, as follows:
x x x x x x
"The Committee examined two witnesses, namely,
R.W.1 Bakshi Singh and R.W.2 Gurdit Singh. They
deposed that they had seen the disputed premises which
is used as a Gurdwara; that people go there for worship;
that income from the land is used for langar (free
kitchen) and providing food to the wayfarers and for
repaid of the Gurdwara building. They admitted in cross-
examination that there was another Gurdwara in the
center of the village and there is no land attached to that
Gurdwara.
The oral evidence led by the appellant appears to
be credible and trustworthy. Perusal of the documentary
evidence indicates that predecessor Mahants have been
recorded as owner-in-possession of the agricultural land
since 1883-84 A.D. In Ex.R-1, which is copy of
Jamabandi for the year 1883-84, Chet Ram, Predecessor-
in-interest of the appellant, is recorded as owner-in-
possession of the land in dispute. The testimony of the
appellant’s witnesses finds corroboration from the
documentary evidence referred supra and it lends
credence to the witness’ testimony that the disputed
agricultural land had devolved on the appellant from his
ancestors. On the other hand, the oral evidence led by
the committee does not inspire confidence. Their bold
statements receive no corroboration from the
documentary evidence. They could not tell which place
in the disputed Dera was being used as Parkash Asthan.
They admitted that for the last 6/7 months there was no
Parkash of Guru Granth Sahib, but they did not state
whether any Gurparb was celebrated in the institution or
that Guru Granth Sahib was the only mode of worship
and it was being recited religiously in the institution.
Their parrot-like statements are not reliable."
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Resultantly it was observed that there is no escape from the
conclusion that the property mentioned in the Punjab Government
Notification dated 4.11.1974 published under sub-section (3) of Section 7 of
the Act is the private property of Mahant Sarna Ram, and the appeals were
allowed.
In support of the appeals, it was contended by the learned counsel for
the appellant that on every count the High Court judgment is erroneous on
application of law and appreciation of evidence. It was submitted that the
effect of notification under Section 9 of the Act and the presumption under
Section 18(1)(g) of the Act were lost sight of. The entries showing that
Sarna Ram acquired the property by succession from his Guru as Chela
clearly establish that the property was a religious property and no other
conclusion is available. The notification under Section 9(1) was issued on
16.5.1978 and, therefore, Part III of the Act was applicable and the petition
under Section 10 was misconceived. Though the maintainability of the
petition was not specifically raised by the Committee before the Tribunal or
the High Court that being a question of law was available to be urged in
these appeals. High Court erroneously proceeded on the basis that the
application was under Section 10 of the Act. Conclusion of the Tribunal that
it was composite petition under Sections 8 and 10 of the Act, and its
observations that the petition was incompetent, had attained finality.
Presumption under Section 44 of the Revenue Act was rebutted in view of
what has been stated in Section 18 (1)(g) of the Act. The High Court only
referred to Section 13 of the Evidence Act, but lost sight of Section 11 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (in short ’the CPC’) dealing with res
judicata. Admittedly, the Committee was not a party in suit, and merely
because it was decided in the year 1951, the decision in the suit does not
operate as res judicata. There was no material to show that Mahant Sarna
Ram belonged to the Udasi order and the High Court held so on mere
presumptions. Two decisions of the Lahore High Court on which the
Tribunal placed reliance are clearly applicable to the facts of the case, and
the High Court was in error by holding the factual position in said cases to
be distinguishable.
Respondents supported the judgment and submitted that the
conclusions on law and facts are irreversible. In addition to re-iteration of
points urged by them before the High Court it was submitted that requisite
conditions for declaration as Sikh Gurudwara as mandated by Section 16(2)
have not been established.
In order to appreciate the rival submissions birds eye view of the
pivotal provisions is necessary. They are Sections 7, 8, 9, 10, 14, 16(2) and
18(1)(g), and read as follows:-
Section 7: Petitions to have a gurdwara declared a Sikh
Gurdwara- (1) Any fifty or more Sikh worshippers of a
gurdwara, each of whom is more than twenty-one years
of age and was on the commencement of this Act or, in
the case of the extended territories from the
commencement of the Amending Act, resident in the
police station area in which the gurdwara is situated, may
forward to the appropriate Secretary to Government so as
to reach the Secretary within one year from the
commencement of this Act or within such further period
as the State Government may by notification fix for this
purpose, a petition praying to have the gurdwara declared
to be a Sikh Gurdwara:
Provided that the State Government may in respect
of any such gurdwara declare by notification that a
petition shall be deemed to be duly forwarded whether
the petitioners were or were not on the commencement of
this Act or, in the case of the extended territories, on the
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commencement of the Amending Act, as the case may
be, residents in the police station area in which such
gurdwara is situated, and shall thereafter deal with any
petition that may be otherwise duly forwarded in respect
of any such gurdwara as if the petition had been duly
forwarded by petitioners who were such residents:
Provided further that no such petition shall be
entertained in respect of any institution specified in
schedule I or schedule II unless the institution is deemed
to be excluded from specification in schedule I under the
provisions of Section 4.
(2) List of property claimed for the gurdwara and of
persons in possession thereof to accompany a petition
under sub-section (1) A petition forwarded under the
provisions of sub-section (1) shall state the name of the
gurdwara to which it relates and of the district, tahsil and
revenue estate in which it is situated, and shall be
accompanied by a list, verified and signed by the
petitioners, of all rights, titles or interest in immovable
properties situated in Punjab inclusive of the gurdwara
and in all monetary endowments yielding recurring
income or profit received in Punjab, which the petitioners
claim to belong within their knowledge to the gurdwara
the name of the person in possession of any such right,
title or interest, and if any such person is insane or a
minor, the name of his legal or natural guardian, or if
there is no such guardian, the name of the persons with
whom the insane person or minor resides or is residing,
of if there is no such person, the name of the person
actually or constructively in possession of such right, title
or interest on behalf of the insane person or minor, and if
any such right, title or interest is alleged to be in
possession of the gurdwara through any person the name
of such person shall be stated in the list; and the petition
and the list shall be in such form and shall contain such
further particulars as may be prescribed.
(3) Publication of petition and list received under sub-
sections (1) and (2)- On receiving a petition duly signed
and forwarded under the provisions of sub-section (1) the
State Government shall as soon as may be, publish it
along with the accompanying list, by notification, and
shall cause it and the list to be published, in such manner
as may be prescribed, at the headquarters of the district
and of the tahsil and in the revenue estate in which the
gurdwara is situated, and at the headquarters of every
district and of every tahsil and in every revenue estate in
which any of the immovable properties mentioned in the
list is situated and shall also give such other notice
thereof as may be prescribed:
Provided that such petition may be withdrawn by
notice to be forwarded by the Board so as to reach the
appropriate Secretary to Government at any time before
publication, and on such withdrawal, it shall be deemed
as if no petition had been forwarded under the provisions
of sub-section (1).
(4) Notice of claims to property to be sent to persons
shown in the list as in possession- The state Government
shall also, as soon as may be, send by registered post a
notice of the claim to any right, title or interest included
in the list to each of the persons named therein as being
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in possession of such right, title or interest either on his
own behalf or on behalf of an insane person or minor or
on behalf of the gurdwara:
Provided that no such notice need be sent if the
person named as being in possession is a person who
joined in forwarding the list.
(5) Effect of publication of petition and list under sub-
section (3)- The publication of a notification under the
provisions of sub-section (3) shall be conclusive proof
that the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2), (3) and (4)
have been duly complied with.
Section 8: Petition to have it declared that a place
asserted to be a Sikh Gurdwara is not such a gurdwara
When a notification has been published under the
provisions of sub-section (3) of Section 7 in respect of
any gurdwara, and hereditary office-holders or any
twenty or more worshippers of the gurdwara, each of
whom is more than twenty-one years of age and was on
the commencement of this Act or, in the case of the
extended territories, on the commencement of the
Amending Act, as the case may be, a resident of a police
station area in which the gurdwara is situated may
forward to the State Government, through the appropriate
Secretary to Government so as to reach the Secretary
within ninety days from the date of the publication of the
notification, a petition signed and verified by the
petitioner, or petitioners, as the case may be, claiming
that the gurdwara is not a Sikh Gurdwara, and may in
such petition make a further claim that any hereditary
office holder or any person who would have succeeded to
such office holder under the system of management
prevailing before the first day of January, 1920 or, in the
case of the extended territories, before the Ist day of
November, 1956, as the case may be, may be restored to
office on the grounds that such gurdwara is not a Sikh
Gurdwara and that such office-holder ceased to be an
office-holder after that day:
Provided that the State Government may in respect
of any such gurdwara declare by notification that a
petition of twenty or more worshippers of such gurdwara
shall be deemed to be duly forwarded whether the
petitioners were or were not on the commencement of
this Act or, in the case of the extended territories, on the
commencement of the Amending Act, as the case may
be, resident in the police station area in which such
gurdwara is situated, and shall thereafter deal with any
petition that may be otherwise duly forwarded in respect
of any such gurdwara as if the petition had been duly
forwarded by petitioners who were such residents.
Section 9: Effect of omission to present a petition under
section 8- (1) If no petition has been presented in
accordance with the provisions of Section 8 in respect of
a gurdwara to which a notification published under the
provisions of sub-section (3) of Section 7 relates, the
State Government shall after the expiration of ninety
days from the date of such notification, publish a
notification declaring the gurdwara to be a Sikh
Gurdwara.
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(2) Effect of publication of a notification under sub-
section (1)- The publication of a notification under the
provisions of sub-section (1) shall be conclusive proof
that the gurdwara is a Sikh Gurdwara, and the provisions
of Part III shall apply to the gurdwara with effect from
the date of the publication of the notification.
Section 10: Petition of claim to property including in a
list published under sub-section (3) of Section 7 (1) any
person may forward to the State Government through the
appropriate Secretary to Government, so as to reach the
Secretary within ninety days from the date of the
publication of a notification under the provisions of sub-
section (3) of Section 7, a petition claiming a right, title
or interest in any property included in the list so
published.
(2) Signing and verification of petitions under sub-
section (1) A petition forwarded under the provisions of
sub-section (1) shall be signed and verified by the person
forwarding it in the manner provided by the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (5 of 1908), for the signing and
verification of plaints, and shall specify the nature of the
right, title or interest claimed and the grounds of the
claim.
(3) Notification of property not claimed under sub-
section (1) and effect of such notification The State
Government shall, as soon as may be, after the expiry of
the period for making a claim under the provisions of
sub-section (1), publish notification, specifying the
rights, titles or interest in any properties in respect of
which no such claim has been made, and the notification
shall be conclusive proof of the fact that no such claim
was made in respect of any right, title or interest
specified in the notification.
Section 14: Tribunal to dispose of petition under sections
5, 6, 8, 10 and 11 (1) The State Government shall
forward to a tribunal all petitions received by it under the
provisions of sections 5, 6, 8, 10 and 11, and the tribunal
shall dispose of such petitions by order in accordance
with the provisions of this Act.
(2) The forwarding of the petitions shall be conclusive
proof that the petitions were received by the State
Government within the time prescribed in sections 5, 6,
8, 10 and 11 as the case may be, and in the case of a
petition forwarded by worshippers of a gurdwara under
the provisions of Section 8, shall be conclusive proof that
the provisions of section 8 with respect to such
worshippers were duly complied with.
Section 16(2): If the Tribunal finds that the gurdwara
(i) was established by, or in memory of any of the
Ten Sikh Gurus, or in commemoration of any incident in
the life of any of the Ten Sikh Gurus and was used for
public worship by Sikhs before and at the time of the
presentation of the petition under sub-section (1) of
Section 7; or
(ii) owing to some tradition connected with one of the
Ten Sikh Gurus, was used for public worship
predominantly by Sikhs before and at the time of the
presentation of the petition under sub-section (1) of
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Section 7;
(iii) was established for use by Sikhs for the purpose of
public worship and was used for such worship by Sikhs,
before and at the time of the presentation of the petition
under sub-section (1) of Section 7; or
(iv) was established in memory of a Sikh martyr, saint
or historical person and was used for such worship by
Sikhs, before and at the time of the presentation of the
petition under sub-section (1) of Section 7; or
(v) owing to some incident connected with the Sikh
religion was used for such worship by Sikhs, before and
at the time of the presentation of the petition under sub-
section (1) of Section 7;
the tribunal shall decide that it should be declared to be a
Sikh Gurdwara, and record an order accordingly.
Section 18(1)(g): Presumption in favour of a Notified
Sikh Gurdwara on proof of certain facts when a claim to
property is made by an office-holder In any
proceedings before a Tribunal, if any past or present
office-holder denies that a right, title, or interest
recorded, in his name or in that of any person through
whom claims, in a record of rights, or in an annual
record, prepared in accordance with the provisions of the
Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887 ( 17 of 1887), and
claimed to belong to a Notified Sikh Gurdwara, does so
belong, and claims such right, title or interest to belong to
himself shall, notwithstanding anything contained in
section 44 of the said Act, be a presumption that such
right, title or interest belongs to the gurdwara upon proof
of any of the following facts namely
(a) x x x x x x
(b) x x x x x x
(c) x x x x x x
(d) x x x x x x
(e) x x x x x x
(f) x x x x x x
(g) the devolution of the succession to the right, title
or interest in question from an office-holder to the
successor-in-office as such on two or more consecutive
occasions.
Basic issue according to us is whether the High Court had rightly
decided the questions raised before it in the background of Section 10. Copy
of the petition which was extracted by the High Court clearly shows that it
was under Section 10. The petition was reproduced in extenso. Bare reading
thereof shows that that it was in terms of Section 10. Sections 8 and 10
operate in different fields. While Section 8 deals with the nature and
character of the institution, Section 10 deals with adjudication of right, title
and interest of the applicant. Section 9 only makes Part III of the Act
applicable where a notification is issued. Said Part deals with management
and administration of the property. Section 9 nowhere bars an application in
terms of Section 10. Since they operate in different fields, it cannot be said
that an application under Section 10 was excluded when notification under
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Section 9 was issued by the Government.
Though it was pleaded that there is no material to show that the Sant
Sarna Ram belong to Udasi order. The same is clearly untenable in view of
the evidence, more particularly, that of PW 10, who has stated that Sarna
Ram is the Chela of Chet Ram. The property which Sarna Ram claimed
devolved upon him from his Guru Chet Ram, and they were Udasi Sadhus.
In the Jamabandi records the kaum of Chet Ram and Sant Ram was recorded
to be, as noted above, "Sadh Bairagi". High Court was not in error in
holding that the Sant Ram belonged to Udasi order.
At this juncture it will be necessary to take note some of the
observations made by the Privy Council in Pandit Parma Nand’s case
(supra). That was a case which related to Udasis. It was observed, inter alia,
as follows :-
"The principal ground, upon which the judgment
of this High Court proceeds, is that the Baghichi and
other properties have descended from guru (religious
preceptor) to enable chela (religious disciple); but this
circumstance does not necessarily lead to the conclusion
that a property, when acquired by a mahant, loses its
secular character. It is common ground that the mahants
of this Institution belonged to an ascetic order called
Udasi. The Udasis rarely marry; and, if they do so,
generally lose all influence; for the dharamsala or
Gurdwara soon becomes a private residence closed to
strangers; Maclagants. Census Report for the Punjab,
Part 1, Chap. 4, p.152. When a person enters the Udasi
order, he severs his connection with the members of his
natural family. It follows that neither he nor his natural
relative can succeed to the property held by the other.
There is however no reason for holding that an Udasi
cannot acquire private property with his own money or
by his own exertions. If he does acquire private property,
it cannot be inherited by his natural relatives, but passes
on his death to his spiritual heir including his chela who
is recognized as his spiritual son. The descent of the
property from a guru to his chela does not warrant the
presumption that it is religious property."
(Underlined for emphasis)
In view of the aforesaid, it is really not necessary to deal in detail with
the plea relating to non-compliance of the stipulations in Section 16(2),
except to take note of two decisions of this Court, rendered by three learned
Judges in each, throwing beacon light on the issue.
In Pritam Dass Mahant v. Shiromani Gurdwara Prabhandhak
Committee (AIR 1984 SC 858), it was held as under:-
x x x x x x
"Temples are found almost in every religion but
there are some differences between the Sikh temples and
those of other religions. The Sikh Gurdwaras have the
following distinctive features:
(1) Sikh temples are not the place of idol worship
as the Hindu temples are. There is no place for idol
worship in a Gurdwara. The central object of worship in
a Gurdwara is Sri Guru Granth Sahib, the holy book.
The pattern of worship consists of two main items:
reading of the holy hymns followed by their explanation
by some learned man, not necessarily a particular Granthi
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and then singing of some passages from the Holy Granth.
The former is called Katha and the second is called
Kirtan. A Sikh thus worships the Holy Words that are
written in the Granth Sahib, the Words or Shabada about
the Eternal Truth of God. No idol or painting of any
Guru can be worshipped.
(2) Sikh worship in the Gurdwara is a
congregational worship, whereas Hindu temples are
meant for individual worship. A Sikh does the individual
worship at home when he recites Gurbani daily. Some
scriptures meant for this purpose are Japji, Jaap, Rahras,
Kirtan Sohila. Sangat is the collective body of Sikhs who
meet every day in the Gurdwara.
(3) Gurdwara is a place where a copy of Guru
Granth Sahib is installed. The unique and distinguishing
feature would always be the Nishan Sahib, a flagstaff
with a yellow flag of Sikhism flying from it. This serves
as a symbol of the Sikh presence. It enables the
travellers, whether they be Sikhs or not, to know where
hospitality is available. There may be complexity of
rooms in a Gurdwara for the building may also serve as a
school, or where children are taught the rudiments of
Sikhism as well as a rest center for travellers. Often
there will be a kitchen where food can be prepared
though langar itself might take place in the yawning.
Sometimes the Gurdwara will also be used as a clinic.
But its pivotal point is the place of worship and the main
room will be that in which the Guru Granth Sahib is
installed where the community gathers for diwan. The
focal point in this room will be the book itself."
The sine qua non for an institution, to be treated as Sikh Gurdwara as
observed in the said case, is that there should be established Guru Granth
Sahib, and the worship of the same by congregation, and a Nishan Sahib.
There may be other rooms of the institution made for other purposes but the
crucial test is the existence of Guru Granth Sahib and the worshippers
thereof by the congregation and Nishan Sahib.
Unless the claim falls within one or the other of the categories
enumerated in sub-section (2) of Section 16, the institution cannot be
declared to be a Sikh Gurdwara.
In Shiromani Gurudwara Prabhandhak Committee Amritsar v.
Mahant Kirpa Ram and Ors. (AIR 1984 SC 1059), it was observed that
Udasis form an independent sect. They do venerate Sikh scriptures.
Therefore, in an institution of Udasis sect, one can visualize reading of
Granth Sahib or veneration of Sikh scriptures. That itself is not decisive of
the character of the institution. On the contrary, where the succession was
from Guru to Chela and those Gurus were followers of Udasis faith and the
institution was known as Dera of Udasi Bhekh and they followed some of
the practices of Hindu traditional religion, such things were completely
destructive of the character of the institution as Sikh Gurdwara.
Above being the factual position and the legal principles applicable
thereto, the appeals deserve dismissal, which we direct.