Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1913 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Joint Commnr., H.R. & C.E. Administration Department
RESPONDENT:
Jayaraman & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/10/2005
BENCH:
S.N. VARIAVA,P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN & P.P. NAOLEKAR
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
P.K. BALASUBRAMANYAN, J.
1. An extent of 10.38 acres of land, which was government
land and situated around four temples, namely, Keelakottai Sri.
Vinayagar Temple, Muthampatti Sri Vinayagar Temple, Mottakottai Sri
Vinayagar Temple and Mariamman and Bhagavathiamman Temples
were set apart by the British Government for the purpose of the use of its
income for the poojas and maintenance of the temples. The land was put
in the possession of one Veerana Pandaram, who was the poojari.
Respondent Nos. 1 to 7 herein, the descendents of Veerana Pandaram
filed a petition before the Deputy Commissioner, Hindu Religious and
Charitable Endowments, Madurai, under Section 63 of the Tamil Nadu
Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act, 1959 (hereinafter
called the ’H.R & C.E. Act’) praying that they may be declared as
hereditary trustees cum poojaries of the Mariamman and
Bhagavathiamman Temples. This application was made, when after an
enquiry, a preliminary report was made by the Special Inspector, to the
Assistant Commissioner of H.R & C.E. Administration Department,
Madurai, to the effect that the lands endowed and belonging to the
temples, are being enjoyed by the three poojaries, who render pooja
services. The poojaries were taking the income, but were not
maintaining any accounts. As various development works had to be
done in the temple, the lands may be assessed to contribution from the
concerned fasli. The Special Inspector also suggested that show cause
notices be issued to the poojaries regarding the appointment of trustees
for the temple. In their application, the successors of Veerana Pandaram
prayed in terms of Section 63(b) of the H.R & C.E. Act, that they and the
three respondents to the said application, may be declared as hereditary
trustees of both the temples, the office as hereditary and them as the
trustees of Mariamman and Bhagavathiamman Temples. By order dated
4.10.1972, the Deputy Commissioner, H.R & C.E. Department, declared
that the applicants before him are holding the office of trusteeship cum
poojariship of Mariamman and Bhagavathiamman Temples at
Keelakottai village, Dindigul Taluk, Madurai district hereditarily. No
declaration was given regarding the rights of the applicants, since no
court fee was paid for the grant of such a relief. Thus, the successors of
Veerana Pandaram were recognized as trustees of the temples.
Subsequently, the Settlement Tahsildar, Madurai passed an order on
31.03.1968 for issue of ryotwari pattas for lands covered by four title
deeds referred to in that order, in favour of the four institutions
represented by respondent Nos. 1 to 7. The respondents appear to have
belatedly challenged the said order before the Appellate Tribunal.
Neither the deity nor the H.R & C.E. Department was impleaded in the
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appeal which was filed four years after the order of the Settlement
Tahsildar. That appeal is seen to have been allowed and the matter
remitted for a fresh consideration by the Settlement Tahsildar. It was
noticed in the order of remand that the H.R & C.E. Department was not
impleaded, and that it was necessary to implead the Department for an
effective adjudication. In spite of it, it is seen that the respondents did
not bring on record the H.R & C.E. Department or the deity in the array
of parties, before the Settlement Tahsildar. The order does not also
show that notice was issued either to the deity or to the Department.
That no notice was issued is seen admitted by the respondents before the
High Court of Madras in a revision filed by them against the order
refusing to grant a stay pending a revision filed by them against the
proposal to appoint a fit person under the H.R & C.E. Act in their place.
The said order of the High Court dated 7.6.2002 is annexed as Annexure
P-11 and in paragraph 4 thereof, it is recorded by the learned Judge that :
"The petitioners (the contesting respondents herein)
would further submit that in none of the above
referred proceedings, the H.R & C.E. Authorities were
the parties and that being so, on coming to know that
the petitioners have deposited a sum of Rs. 4,50,000/-
in the name of the four institutions, the second
respondent (Joint Commissioner, H.R & C.E.) has
initiated the proceedings in NK. No.3369 of 2002/A1,
dated 12.4.2002 against the petitioners on the ground
that the sanction as prescribed under Section 34 of the
Tamil Nadu Hindu Religious and Charitable
Endowments Act had not been obtained and by order
dated 12.4.2002, the second respondent has suspended
the petitioners and also directed them to hand over the
charges to the third respondent."
Thus, the mandate in the order of remand was not complied with either
by the descendents of Veerana Pandaram or by the Settlement Tahsildar.
2. Thereafter, it is seen that the Settlement Tahsildar
proceeded to uphold the claim of the successors of Veerana Pandaram.
But the Settlement Tahsildar noticed that the claimants did not produce
either the original grants or the extract of the Inam Fair Register, in spite
of the reference to the four title deeds Nos.1049, 1050, 1051 and 1052
said to be in favour of the four institutions represented through the
claimants. He proceeded to hold that the claimants before him were
eligible to get ryotwari patta subject to the condition of rendering service
to the four institutions. Patta was thus granted subject to the conditions
laid down in Section 21(2) of the Tamil Nadu Minor Inams (Abolition
and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1963.
3. What requires to be emphasized once again, is that the
Settlement Tahsildar did not see either the original grants in respect of
the lands or the extract of the Inam Register, while directing the issue of
the patta by changing the pattadar from the temples to the claimants and
did not care to insist on the claimants impleading the deities and the H.R
& C.E. Department as respondents in the proceedings, in spite of the
directions in that behalf contained in the order of remand. It was clearly
a case of total non-application of mind by the Settlement Tahsildar
amounting to dereliction of duty. The patta thus granted by him cannot
either affect the rights of the deities or of the temples and cannot bind
them or the H.R & C.E. Department. Nor can it affect the right of the
worshipping public in these public temples.
4. The claimants, thereafter, purported to make an application
in the court of the District Judge of Dindigul as O.P. No. 44 of 2001
under Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act. Again, none was shown as
the respondent to that petition. Against respondents, it was said "nil".
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The District Judge apparently did not even apply his mind to direct the
claimants, the petitioners before him, to implead the deity or the H.R &
C.E. Department especially in the context of the nature of the claim
made by the petitioners before him. One could even say that the District
Judge apparently did not even read the petition filed before him since in
the petition the claimants had clearly stated even at the threshold:-
"The undermentioned properties were originally the
Government Promboke lands and around the said
properties there are 4 familiar and powerful temples
namely Keelakottai Sri. Vinayagar Temple,
Muthampatti Sri Vinayagar Temple, Mottakottai Sri
Vinayagar Temple and one Mariamman and
Bhagavathiamman Temples . Since those temples
were not cared and looked after by anybody, to
maintain the said temples and to do poojas etc., the
British Government had rested the said properties in
favour of one Veerana Pandaram, and directed him to
perform poojas, keep the temple and its boundaries
clean and for other incidental purposes out of the
income from the undermentioned properties and thus
he was appointed as a trustee and poojari of the said
temples. In pursuance of that, the said Veerana
Pandaram had been in possession and enjoyment of
the undermentioned properties and he was doing
pooja, Neivethiyam etc., and keeping the temple clean
and he was also conducting yearly and periodical
function of the temple, out of the income from the
undermentioned properties."
(emphasis supplied)
He also did not care to notice the further statement that the petitioners
had been in possession and enjoyment of the properties and management
of the temple as trustees and hereditary poojaries. They had also referred
to the original patta being granted in the name of the deities and to the
relevant finding in that order. He also failed to notice the clear plea that
the petitioners before him were in possession of the properties as trustees
and the further plea that the petitioners are not given any right of
alienation of the properties. A cursory application of mind would have
induced the District Judge to direct the impleading of the deity and the
H.R & C.E. Department and would also have made him ask himself
whether the application under Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act was
maintainable at all before him and whether it was in the interests of the
temple to permit the sale of the properties and whether the price for
which it was proposed to be sold, was the prevalent market price or the
price that alone could have been fetched by a sale. Consistent with this
total lack of application of mind, the District Judge proceeded to allow
the application filed under Section 34 of the Act, not realizing even at
that stage, the need to hear the deity or the H.R & C.E. Department. By
order dated 10.9.2001, the District Judge allowed the application as
prayed for and permitted the sale of the properties and directed that the
proceeds amounting to Rs. 4,50,000/- be deposited in the State Bank of
India, Dindigul branch in Fixed Deposit. The claimants promptly sold
the properties under cover of that order.
5. The Joint Commissioner of H.R & C.E. Administration
Department, Madurai, on coming to know of the order thus passed by
the District Court and the alienation effected, filed a petition under
Article 227 of the Constitution of India in the High Court of Madras on
behalf of the Department after obtaining permission to challenge an
order to which he was not eo-nominee a party. The Joint Commissioner
questioned the jurisdiction of the District Court to entertain the petition
under Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act pointing out that it was a
public trust or a charity, certainly a religious trust, and Section 34 had no
application. He also contended that the alienation was clearly in
violation of the relevant provisions of the H.R & C.E. Act and the order
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passed by the District Judge without notice to the H.R & C.E.
Department was void in law and the District Judge was incompetent to
grant the permission in view of the fact that the provisions of the H.R &
C.E. Act were attracted and the transaction would be hit by Section 34 of
the H.R & C.E. Act. The High Court, rather surprisingly, without
properly applying its mind to the facts, the conduct of the claimants and
the non-binding nature of the orders passed by the Settlement Tahsildar
or the District Judge, without notice to the H.R & C.E. Department and
to the deities, has upheld the order of the District Court. By a reasoning
that skirts the issue, the High Court confirmed the order of the District
Court and dismissed the revision filed by the Joint Commissioner. It is
this order of the High Court that is challenged in this appeal by special
leave.
6. At the outset, it must be stated that in the absence of the
original grants being produced by the claimants, the grants could not
have been construed by the District Court or by the High Court to decide
upon the nature of the grant. That apart, it was clearly a case where
orders have been obtained by the claimants without impleading the deity
or the H.R & C.E. Department and the orders so obtained and the patta
thus procured, were not binding either on the deities or on the H.R &
C.E. Department. Therefore, neither the District Judge nor the Judge of
the High Court could have relied on those proceedings as against the
deities or as against the H.R & C.E. Department.
7. It is seen that the claimants had got themselves appointed as
hereditary trustees by applying under Section 63(b) of the H.R & C.E.
Act. They could not thereafter shed their character as trustees of the
temples holding the lands belonging to the temples at a subsequent stage
at least without impleading the H.R & C.E. Department and the deities
and without getting a valid adjudication of their right over the properties.
It is clear that in spite of the necessity for impleading the H.R & C.E.
Department being pointed out, the claimants made no attempt to implead
the H.R & C.E. Department either before the Settlement Tahsildar or
before the District Judge and consequently, the orders passed by the
Settlement Tahsildar and by the District Court were clearly illegal and
not binding on the deities or the H.R & C.E. Department. The claimants
had, in fact, acted totally without bona fides in an attempt to corner the
properties for themselves or at least to make undue gains for themselves
by selling the properties. Such action would certainly not bind the
deities or the H.R & C.E. Department. The High Court, representing the
sovereign as parens patriae ought to have come down on the respondents
herein and ought to have issued directions for the protection of the
properties.
8. The grant was of government land. The grant was, even
going by the case of the claimants, in favour of persons who were acting
as poojaries of the temple, for the purpose of utilizing its income for
poojas and maintenance of the temple. Even in the extract of the fasil
register, it is shown that the registered name of the inamdar is poojaries
of Mariamman and Bhagavathiamman Temples and the enjoyers as
Veerana Pandaram and Arunachalam Chetty. The relation between the
inamdar and the enjoyer is shown as ’Devadayam’ and in the column
regarding details of inam, it is shown as for poojas to God (Sasvatham)
and in the column relating to details of endowment, it is shown that the
income of the land is used by the poojaries for pooja and maintenance of
the temples. Prima facie, Government land had been dedicated to the
temples by way of grants by the Government. Even if, the income
therefrom had alone been dedicated to the temples, it would still be a
religious trust or endowment and certainly not a private trust to which
the Indian Trusts Act would apply. Section 1 of the Indian Trusts Act
itself provides that nothing contained therein applies to public or private
religious or charitable endowments. The endowment here was certainly
not a private endowment since there is no case that the temples are
private. The endowment was for a religious purpose, the conduct of
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poojas in the temples and the maintenance of the temples. Therefore,
endowment was of public property for the benefit of public temples and
the poojaries were constituted the trustees. They were trustees imposed
with the obligation of spending the income from the properties, for the
poojas and maintenance of the temple. It was clearly a case of a public
religious endowment and by virtue of Section 1 of the Act, the Indian
Trusts Act would have no application. Learned counsel for the
respondents tried to argue that the application under Section 34 of the
Indian Trusts Act was maintainable but could not argue that these were
private trusts by reference to any relevant material. The lands were
government lands and the Government had dedicated the properties or
the income therefrom for the up-keep of public temples. By no stretch
of imagination, it can be held that it was a private trust coming within
the purview of the Indian Trusts Act. The District Judge has, therefore,
clearly acted without jurisdiction in entertaining the application under
Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act. On this short ground, it has to be
held that the order passed by the District Judge in the application filed
under Section 34 of the Act granting permission to the claimants to sell
the properties is one without jurisdiction. The High Court was
completely in error in brushing aside this vital aspect while considering
whether the District Judge had acted within jurisdiction in entertaining
the application under Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act.
9. H.R & C.E. Act applies to all Hindu Public Religious
Institutions and endowments. This is clear from Section 1(3) of that Act.
A religious endowment or endowment is defined in Section 6(17) of the
Act. It reads:-
"6(17) "religious endowment" or "endowment"
means all property belonging to or given or endowed
for the support of maths or temples, or given or
endowed for the performance of any service charity of
a public nature connected therewith or of any other
religious charity; and includes the institution
concerned and also the premises thereof, but does not
include gifts of property made as personal gifts to the
archaka, service holder or other employee of a
religious institution;
Explanation (1) Any inam granted to an archaka,
service holder or other employee of a religious
institution for the performance of any service or
charity in or connected with a religious institution
shall not be deemed to be a personal gift to the
archaka, service holder or employee but shall be
deemed to be a religious endowment.
Explanation (2) All property which belonged to, or
was given or endowed for the support of a religious
institution, or which was given or endowed for the
performance of any service or charity of a public
nature connected therewith or of any other religious
charity shall be deemed to be a "religious
endowment" or "endowment" within the meaning of
this definition, notwithstanding that, before or after
the date of the commencement of this Act, the
religious institution has ceased to exist or ceased to be
used as a place of religious worship or instruction or
the service or charity has ceased to be performed;
Provided that this Explanation shall not be
deemed to apply in respect of any property which
vested in any person before the 30th September 1951,
by the operation of the law of limitation."
Section 6(18) defines a "religious institution" as meaning a math, temple
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or specific endowment. Going by the definition it is clear that the
endowment in question is governed by the H.R & C.E. Act. Even if one
were to accept the case of the claimants that it was an Inam granted to an
archaka, the same would come within the definition of "religious
endowment" or "endowment" under the Act in view of Explanation (1)
thereto. Thus, it is clear that the endowment, gift or donation was
governed by the H.R & C.E. Act. It is in this context that we have to
appreciate the effect of the conduct of the claimants in getting
themselves appointed as trustees by moving under Section 63(b) of the
Act. Any alienation would, prima facie, be hit by Section 34 of the Act
and even if the case of the claimants were to be taken at face value, the
transaction would be hit by Section 41 of the Act. In either case, the
permission contemplated by the respective sections was a must and the
District Court lacked jurisdiction to give the permission for sale on an
application under Section 34 of the Indian Trusts Act, that too, without
issuing notice to and hearing the authorities under the H.R & C.E. Act.
10. The claimants had themselves applied under Section 63(b)
of the H.R & C.E. Act and had got themselves appointed as trustees.
They had themselves held out and accepted that H.R & C.E. Act applies
to the trust concerned. There is no case that the temples are not public
temples and are not under the control of the H.R & C.E. Department in
terms of H.R & C.E. Act. At best, the contention is only that the lands
were conveyed in trust not to the temples or to the deities, but to the
poojaries of the temples but with an obligation to utilize the income from
the properties for the poojas and the up-keep of the temples. This
certainly brought in the H.R & C.E. Act and the control of the authorities
thereunder, even in respect of the administration of the trust by the
claimants. The claimants were really estopped from raising a contention
that the H.R & C.E. Act had no application or that they did not need the
permission of the Commissioner under the Act for alienation either
under Section 34 or under Section 41 of the H.R & C.E. Act. The
claimants were disentitled to by-pass the provisions of the H.R & C.E.
Act and to secure an order from the District Judge without notice to the
H.R & C.E. Department by moving an application under Section 34 of
the Indian Trusts Act. The order thus obtained cannot bind the trust or
the properties, or the deities or the H.R & C.E. Department. Similarly,
no reliance can be placed on the so-called patta obtained by the
claimants from the Settlement Tahsildar without notice to the H.R &
C.E. Department.
11. It was contended that the purchase price had been deposited
in a Fixed Deposit and so long as there is no failure on the part of the
claimants to perform the services which they are liable to perform, there
is no necessity to interfere with the transaction of sale affected by them.
It is seen that going by the prevalent valuation and the market value as
reported, the lands were sold for a meager price or that the sale deeds
indicated only a meager price as consideration for the same with all that
it implies. Such a transaction is clearly seen to be not in good faith.
That the District Court proceeded to accept the value for which the
property was being sold even without making an enquiry into the market
value that the properties would have fetched at the relevant time while
giving the permission for the sale, is shocking. The jurisdiction under
Section 34 is advisory. The Court should have satisfied itself of the need
for sale and the propriety of the sale proposed. The mere pleas that it
was difficult to protect the property and that there was only meager
income therefrom were by themselves not grounds to direct or permit the
sale.
12. It is seen that there has been a clear attempt by the
claimants to over-reach the deities and the authorities under the H.R &
C.E. Act, while managing the properties dedicated for the purposes of
the temple, properties granted and managed by them in their capacities
as poojaries, for the maintenance of the temples. The attempt has to be
deprecated.
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13. In the circumstances, we allow this appeal and setting aside
the order of the High Court in Civil Revision Petition (NPD) No. 1684
of 2002 and that of the Principal District Judge, Dindigul in Trust
Original Petition No. 44 of 2001, dismiss Trust Original Petition No. 44
of 2001 filed by the claimants. Consequently, the permission granted for
the sale would also stand set aside and the sale effected by the claimants
pursuant to such permission will be deemed void and would confer no
right on the purchasers thereunder or on any one claiming under or
through them. It is also clarified that the revised order of the Settlement
Tahsildar under Act 30 of 1963 and the revised patta granted are not
binding on the deities or on the H.R & C.E. Department. The appellant
would be entitled to its costs both here and in the High Court.