Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MATH SAUNA AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KEDAR NATH @ UMA SHANKAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/09/1981
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
BENCH:
PATHAK, R.S.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1878 1982 SCR (1) 659
1981 SCC (4) 77 1981 SCALE (3)1577
ACT:
Hindu Law-Sannyasi-Whether could acquire personal
property Property acquired by application of nucels-Tests
for deciding.
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiffs in their suit claimed that the
properties in dispute belonged to the Math Sauna temple and
that one of the plaintiffs Mahant Sadashiva Yati on the
death of his predecessor was elected as Mahant of the temple
and that therefore as Sarbarakar he was entitled to all the
properties recorded in the name of the deity or his
predecessor.
The defendant claimed that by virtue of a will executed
by Mahant Shivshankar Yati, the predecessor Mahant, the
properties in dispute which were his personal properties
devolved on him.
The Civil Judge decreed the plaintiffs’ suit with a
finding that Mahant Sadashiv Yati was not the Sarbarakar.
Upholding the respondent’s claim, the High Court in
appeal, held that the properties did not belong either to
the Math or the deity but were the personal and separate
properties of Mahant Shivshankar Yati.
In appeal to this Court the appellants impugned the
correctness of the High Court’s view.
Dismissing the appeal,
^
HELD: The properties in dispute did not form part of
the properties of Math Sauna or of the deity but were the
personal properties of the respondent.
[664 D-E]
It is well accepted that certain sects of Sanyasis
(such as Dashnami Sanyasis in this case) could acquire
personal property of their own and that the pronamis given
to a Mahant are generally his personal property. The mere
fact that a Mahant is an ascetic does not raise any
presumption that the property in his possession is not his
personal property. There is no presumption either way. In
each case the burden is upon the plaintiff to establish that
the properties in respect of which he is asking for
possession are properties to which he is entitled. [662 F-G]
660
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In the instant case the three earlier Mahants before
they took to sanyasa had been grahasthas. They were entitled
to possess, enjoy and acquire personal property. Mahant
Shivpher Yati, one of the predecessor Mahants, whose
reputation as a man of learning and personal attainments was
high, received personal bhents from many of his affluent
chelas. In addition, on the death of his predecessor Mahant
Shivbaran Yati. Mahant Shivpher Yati inherited his personal
property, all of which devolved on Shivshankar Yati. A
succession certificate in respect of these properties was
granted in the name of Shivshankar Yati. The revenue records
also showed him as the owner of the properties and not the
Math or the deity. None of the transfers of small parcels of
these properties made by Mahant Shivshankar Yati from time
to time was challenged by the plaintiffs at any time. [663
A-l]
Whether a property was acquired by the application of
the nucleus could only be determined after taking into
consideration all the facts and circumstances of a case and
on a balancing of the entire evidence. The burden of proof
rests on the party making the claim. [663 F-G]
In the present case there is no material on record to
how whether the total income from the properties belonging
to the Math and the deity, left any appreciable surplus
after meeting the expenditure on bhog and other ceremonies.
The High Court rightly held that the fund from which the
properties were acquired constituted the personal property
of Mahant Shivpher Yati on whose death Shivshankar Yati
employed it for the purchase of the properties and by virtue
of his will the properties devolved on the respondent. [663
H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 196 of 1
970.
From the judgment and decree dated April 21, 1969 of
the Allahabad High Court in First Appeal No. 80 of 1964.
S.T. Desai, A.T.M. Sampath, Mukul Mudgal and Raju
Ramachandran for the Appellants.
R.K. Garg, Mrs. Urmila Sirur and Shiv Pujan Singh, for
the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PATHAK, J: This appeal arises on a certificate under
sub-cl. (b) of clause (I) of Article 133 of the Constitution
granted by the Allahabad High Court against its judgment and
decree dated April 21, 1969 disposing of appeals out of a
suit for declaration and possession.
The plaintiffs filed a suit claiming that the property
in dispute belonged to the Math Sauna or the deity Sri
Thakur Gokarneshwar
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Mahadeo Ji installed in the Math Sauna temple, and that
Mahant Sadashiva Yati was in possession as Mahant and
Sarbarakar. It was claimed that in the event of Mahant
Sadashiva Yati being found out of possession a decree for
possession should be made. Sadashiva Yati pleaded that on
the death of Mahant Shivshanker Yati he was elected Mahant
of Math Sauna and was, therefore, entitled as Sarbarakar to
all the properties recorded in the deity Mahadeo Ji or in
the name of Mahant Shivshanker Yati. These properties
included properties in village Amauli. He asserted that
Shivshanker Yati possessed no personal property. The suit
was contested by the first defendant, Kedar Nath Chaubey,
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also referred to as Uma Shanker Yati. He alleged that Mahant
Shivshanker Yati owned personal properties which included
the properties in village Amauli, that he was the chela of
Mahant Shivshanker Yati and the Amauli properties had passed
to him under a will executed by the Mahant. We are concerned
in this appeal solely with the Amauli properties.
Math Sauna is an old Math situated in the village of
that name in Tehsil Saidpur in the district of Ghazipur. One
of the earliest Mahants of the Math Mahant Gokaran Yati,
raised a temple in the premises of the Math and installed a
deity acclaimed by the name of "Gokarneshwar Mahadeo". On
his death he was succeeded by Mahant Shivbaran Yati, who
executed a waqf deed on November 12, 1892 dedicating various
properties to the deity with the intent that arrangements
for bhog, deepdan and other expenses be met from them. The
surplus, the deed directed was to be employed for acquiring
further property in the name of the deity and was not to be
applied by the Sarbarakar to his personal use.
The learned Civil Judge decreed the suit but included a
finding in his judgment that Sadashiv Yati was not a
regularly constituted Mahant of Math Sauna and Sarbarakar of
the deity. Two appeals were filed in the High Court. First
Appeal No. 80 of 1964 was filed by Kedar Nath Chaubey @ Uma
Shanker Yati against the declaration that the Amauli
properties were owned by Math Sauna or the deity and that
Sadashiv Yati was in possession thereof as Mahant and
Sarbarakar. The other appeal, First Appeal No. 270 of 1965
was filed by the plaintiffs for the relief that Sadashiv
Yati was a properly constituted Mahant of Math Sauna and
Sarbarakar of the deity. The High Court allowed both the
appeals by its judgment and decree dated April 21, 1969. It
held that the Amauli properties had been purchased by
Shivshanker Yati in 1921 from
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the personal and separate funds inherited by him from his
predecessor Shivpher Yati, and that the Amauli properties
must, therefore, be regarded as his personal and separate
properties and they did not belong to the Math or the deity.
The present appeal is directed against that part of the
judgment and decree of the High Court.
It is admitted between the parties that the Amauli
properties were purchased by Mahant Shivshankar Yati for Rs.
40,000 forming part of a fund left behind by his predecessor
Mahant Shivpher Yati. The point for decision is whether the
fund was the personal property of Mahant Shivpher Yati, and
if so, whether it devolved on Mahant Shivshankar Yati.
The Mahants and members of Math Sauna belonged to the
Dashnami Sanyasi sect. The material on the record
establishes that they could own and possess personal
property. They included sanyasis who had formerly been
married men and householders, men who had passed through the
grihastha ashram. Some of them continued to possess and even
to acquire personal property after taking sanyas. It was
observed in Sushil Chandra Sen v. Gobind Chandra Das(l) that
Dashnami sanyasis mixed freely in the business world and
carried on trade and often accumulated property. This Court
in Gurcharan Prasad v. Krishnanand (2) affirmed that Nihang
Dashnami Sanyasis could pursue money-lending business and
could own property as absolute owners, and enjoy them as
their personal property. That certain sects of sanyasis
could acquire personal property was accepted by that eminent
Judge, Dr. B.K. Mukherjee, in his "Hindu Law of Religious
and Charitable Trusts",(a) where he says: "A Mohunt, and for
the matter of that, any other Sanyasi can acquire personal
property of his own...The Pronamis given to a Mohunt are
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generally his personal property.. The mere fact that a
Mohunt is an ascetic does not raise any presumption that a
property in his possession is not his personal property.
Strictly speaking, there is no presumption either one way or
the other, and in each case the burden is upon the plaintiff
to establish that the properties in respect of which he is
asking for possession are properties to the possession of
which he is entitled in the right in which he sues".
663
There is reason to believe that Mohant Shivbaran Yati,
Mohant Shivpher Yati and Mahant Shivshankar Yati were not
celibates and had been grihasthas, and were entitled to
possess, enjoy and acquire personal property. The evidence
discloses that Mahant Shivpher Yati was held in high regard
on account of his personal learning and attainments, and has
a large number of chelas including many affluent persons
from whom he received personal bhents or pranamis of large
amounts of money. His personal property, on his death,
included cash, sovereigns and gold besides two fixed
deposits with the Bank of Bengal of Rs. 45,000. He had also
inherited the personal property of Mahant Shivbaran Yati,
who owned three private properties in village Shiv Dass in
the district of Banaras. On his death in 1917, all those
properties and wealth devolved on Mahant Shivshankar Yati.
He was granted a succession certificate by the District
Judge, Ghazipur in respect of the two fixed deposits made by
Mahant Shivpher Yati in the Bank of Bengal. Mahant
Shivshankar Yati employed the inherited money in the
purchase of two properties in village Amauli in 1921 paying
Rs 30,000 for a full interest in one property and Rs. 10,000
for a moiety share in the other. In respect of both
properties, the revenue records mentioned the name of Mahant
Shivshankar Yati and not that of the Math or the deity.
Small parcels of these properties were transferred by Mahant
Shivshankar Yati from time to time, and none of those
transfers was challenged by the plaintiffs in the present
suit.
It is urged for the appellants that where a nucleus of
dedicated property exists, the acquisition of additional
property should be attributed to the application of the
nucleus and must, therefore, be regarded as property
belonging to the Math or the deity. As has been observed,
there can be no presumption either way. All the facts and
circumstances must be taken into consideration and on a
balancing of the entire evidence it has to be determined
whether the property can be said to belong to the Math or
deity or is the personal property of the Mahant, the burden
of proof resting on the party who makes the claim. In the
present case, it is difficult to conclude from the material
before us that the total income from the properties
belonging to the Math and the deity left any appreciable
surplus after meeting the expenditure on account of bhog,
arpan, deepdan, daily and annual puja and the other
obligations specified in the waqf deed. We are in agreement
with the High Court that the fund from which the Amauli
properties were acquired constituted the personal property
of Mahant Shivpher Yati. On his
664
death in 1917, the fund passed to Mahant Shivshankar Yati,
who in 1921 employed it for the purchase of the Amauli
properties.
Mahant Shivshankar Yati executed a will in 1956, and it
appears beyond dispute that by virtue of this will the
Amauli properties devolved on Uma Shankar Yati.
It is pointed out before us that in assessment
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proceedings under the U. P. Agriculture Income Tax Act 1948,
the Amauli properties were described by Mahant Shivshankar
Yati as properties of the Math and therefore a claim to
exemption from the levy was made. The High Court has found
that the claim was not accepted by the assessing authority,
and that the position in regard to those properties taken in
the assessment proceedings was adopted by the Mahant only
for the purpose of escaping personal liability to tax. We
concur with that finding.
In our judgment, the High Court is right in the view
that the Amauli properties constitute the personal property
of Uma Shankar Yati and do not form part of the properties
of the Math Sauna or of the deity, Sri Thakur, Gokarneshwar
Mahadeoji.
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
P.B.R. Appeal dismissed.
665