Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MST. KANCHANIYA AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHIV RAM AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/04/1992
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
BENCH:
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1239 1992 SCR (2) 670
1992 SCC Supl. (2) 250 JT 1992 (3) 174
1992 SCALE (1)868
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959--Sections 2,237,
248(1) read with Section 13, kawaid Maufidaran of Gwalior
State--Maufi land--Control of Aukaf Deptt. of Government--
Mutation of land in the name of Maufidar (Pujari of the
temple)--Whether Pujari can lease out--Whether lessee
acquired Bhumiswami rights on the commencement of the Code--
Possession of land by the lessee whether authorised--
Ejection of lessee--Validity of.
Constitution of India, 1950--Article 226--Writ petition
under--Pendency--Death of lessee--Effect of.
Constitution of India, 1950--Article 136--Appeal--
Appreciation of evidence--Legal heirs of lessee not
cultivated the maufi land--Direction to Govt. to determine
whether permission to be given for cultivation.
HEADNOTE:
The ruler of the former Gwalior State by way of maufi
gave 78 Bighas 17 Biswas of Agricultural land to a temple of
Shri Ram Janakiji.
The father of respondent no.1 was the Pujari of the
temple and he was described as the Maufidar in the revenue
records. The maufi grant was revoked and the maufi land was
handed over to the Department of Aukaf as Government
property vide Circular dated August 13, 1934 of the
Government of Gwalior State.
Mutation was made of the agricultural land as Govern-
ment property and its management was handed over to the
Pujari, the father of respondent No. 1 On the death of the
Pujari, his son, the respondent No.1’s name was mutated by
the Collector’s order dated March 26, 1960.
Out of the agricultural land, 19 Bighas 8 Biswas was given
by the father of respondent No.1 to one Malkhan, the prede-
cessor of the appellants for cultivation and he continued to
cultivate the same even after the death of respondent No.1’s
father.
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In 1967, respondent no.1 moved an application under
section 248(1) of the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959
before the Tehsildar for eviction of the predecessor of the
appellants, Malkhan, alleging that he was in unauthorised
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possession of the land measuring 19 Bighas 8 Biswas.
The Tehsildar initially passed an order for ejectment
against Malkhan treating him as a trespasser.
On appeal the order was set aside and the matter was
remanded for reconsideration. Therefore, the Tehsildar
recorded evidence and rejecting the application of respond-
ent no.1, held that land was given by respondent No.1 to
Malkhan on lease for his life and as the said lease was
still effective, Malkhan was not in unauthorised possession
of the land.
The Tehsildar’s order was affirmed in appeal by the
Sub-divisional officer.
Second appeal filed by respondent No.1 was allowed by
the Additional Commissioner holding that the priest of the
temple could only manage the affairs of the temple and he
could either himself cultivate the land of the temple or get
the same cultivated by any other person, but he could not
change the ownership of the temple and since the priest was
not the land-owner, he had no right to lease out the land of
the temple to any other person and the lease given by him
was meaningless and illegal and ineffective since the land
in question was Aukaf property.
Malkhan filed a revision before the Board of Revenue
which was allowed wherein it was held that the State
Government gave the land for worship and service in the
temple cultivating the land by the priest of the temple or
getting it cultivated by somebody else. It was also held
that the father of respondent No.1 allotted the land to
Malkhan for his life time and that under the authority of
the said patta, Malkhan was in possession and he had made
improvements on the land and that respondent No.1 was regu-
larly receiving Rs.100 annually towards the land revenue and
also passed over its receipt.
The Board of Revenue’s order was challenged by
respondent No.1 filing a writ petition in the High Court,
which was allowed by a Single Judge. The High Court held
that the application of the Pujari was maintainable under
s.248(1) of the Code; that the Board of Revenue was wrong
672
in treating the possession of Malkhan as authorised; that
section 168(4) of the Code was not applicable to the present
case because the land in dispute was Aukaf land and neither
the deities nor the respondent No.1 could be regarded as the
Bhumiswamis thereof. Restoring the order passed by the
Additional Commissioner, the High Court ordered the eviction
of the appellants from the land in accordance with the
provisions of section 248 of the Code.
Against the Judgment of the High Court this appeal by
special leave was filed by the lessees.
The appellants urged that the High Court was in error
in holding that Malkhan (lessee) was in unauthorised
possession of the land and that the application filed by
respondent no.1 under section 248(1) of the Code was
maintainable; that it was competent for father of the
respondent No.1 (lessor) to grant a sub-lease in favour of
Malkhan in view of the relevant law applicable to the land
in the former State of Gwalior; that after coming into force
of the Code, lessee (Malkhan) acquired Bhumiswami rights
over the said land with effect from October 2, 1960 that the
decision of the Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court in Thakur Panchamsingh v. Mahant Ram, Kishan Das and
ors. AIR 1972 MP 14 did not lay down the correct law; that
respondent No.1, having inducted Malkhan as a tenant on the
land in dispute, was estopped from asserting that he had no
right to grant tenancy in favour of Malkhan and that posses-
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sion of lessee was unauthorised; that since Malkhan had been
granted a patta by the father of respondent No.1 (lessor),
which was valid for life time of Malkhan and respondent no.
1 addmitted having received rent from lessee after the death
of the lessor, the Board of Revenue rightly held that pos-
session of the lessee was authorised and that the High Court
was not justified in interfering with the order passed by
the Board of Revenue in exercise of its jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution.
Dismissing the appeal, this court,
Held: 1.01. Pujari does not have any right in the land
and his status is that of a manager and that he could get
the land cultivated either himself or through others so that
the income derived therefrom could be applied towards
worship and upkeep of the temple and that the grant would be
resumed for breach of any of the conditions or upon the
death of the former
673
Pujari. In other words, the rights of the Pujari do not
stand on the same footing as those of a Kashtakar Mourushi
in the ordinary sense who was entitled to all rights
including the right to sell or mortgage. [683 A-C]
1.02. The Pujari or the manager of the Devasthan holds
the lands given to him under the Parwana issued under s.13
of the Kawaid Maufidaran of Gwalior State as a manager of
Government property. He functions under the overall control
and supervision of the Aukaf Department because in the event
of his failure to properly manage the affairs, he can be
removed and the Parwana issued in his favour can be revoked.
Since under the terms of the Parwana, the Pujari or the
manager can get the land given for the worship and upkeep of
the Devasthan cultivated by some other person, it is
necessary that the Aukaf Department exercises control in the
matter of initiation of proceedings for ejectment of a
person who is allowed to cultivate by the Pujari or the
manager which means that the proceedings for such ejectment
under s.248(1) of the Code should be initiated by the Pujari
or manager only after obtaining the approval of the Aukuf
Department. [686 B-D]
1.03. A Pujari had no other status than that of the
manager functioning under the control of the Aukuf Depart
ment and he had no right to transfer, either by way of sale
or mortgage or by lease, the land entrusted to him. [683 C]
1.04. Once it is held that Pujari (lessor), father of
respondent No.1 was not competent to grant a lease in
respect of the land in dispute and the patta granted by him
in favour of Malkhan (lessee) was invalid and no rights were
conferred on Malkhan in the land as a result of the patta,
the claim of the appellants that they have acquired Bhumis-
wami right on the land in dispute cannot be sustained. [683
E]
1.05. Since no rights were created in favour of Malkhan
under the patta granted by the lessor, Malkhan (lessee)
cannot claim to be a subtenant of the land in dispute on the
date of the commencement of the Code and, therefore, the
submission that of Malkhan had acquired Bhumiswami rights
over the land in dispute cannot be accepted. [684 A-B]
1.06. In 1967, when the application was moved by
respondent no.1, s.248(1) empowered the Tehsildar to
summarily eject any person who unauthorisedly takes or
remains in possession of any occupied land, abadi,
674
service land or any land which has been set apart for any
special purpose under s.237. [684 C]
1.07. The land in dispute does not fall in any of the
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excepted categories mentioned in s.2(z-3). It must,
therefore, be held to be unoccupied land. Since it was set
apart for a public purpose, viz., for the upkeep of temple,
it can be said to be land set apart for a special purpose
under clause (j) of sub-s.(1) of s.237 of the Code. [684 E]
Thakur Pancham Singh v. Mahant Ramkishandas and Ors.
AIR 1972 MP 14, approved.
2.01. In view of the death of Malkhan during the
pendency of the writ petition in the High Court the question
whether respondent No.1 has granted a patta permitting
Malkhan to cultivate the land in dispute during his life
time, does not survive because even if it is held that the
patta granted in favour of Malkhan by respondent no.1
permitted Malkhan to cultivate the land during his life
time, the said authority under which Malkhan was in
possession of the land came to an end on the death of
Malkhan and the possession of the appellants over the land
in dispute after the death of Malkhan cannot be said to be
authorised by respondent no.1. [685 A-C]
2.02. Malkhan had died during the pendency of the writ
petition in the High Court and, as a result, the possession
of the appellants has become unauthorised, since then. The
appellants cannot, therefore, seek relief on the ground that
their possession over the land in dispute is not
unauthorised and they cannot be evicted under s.248(1) of
the Code. [685 H-686 A]
Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul and Ors. v. Keshwar Lal
Chaudhuri and Ors., 1940 FCR 84, Patterson v. State of
Alabama. [1934] 294 US 600, at page 607 and Qudrat Ullah v.
Municipal Board, Bareilly, [1974] 2 SCR 539, referred to.
3. In the instant case, the Board of Revenue, has
stated that respondent no.1 has never cultivated the land
and has no arrangement for cultivation and that even if the
land is given in his possession he would give it to somebody
else for cultivation. In these circumstances, it is directed
that a senior official in the Aukuf Department of the Gov-
ernment of Madhya Pradesh should examine whether the appel-
lants can be per-
675
mitted to cultivate the land in dispute on terms as suitably
revised and till the matter is so considered, the appellants
are no dispossessed from the land in dispute. [686 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 4010 of
1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated 6.10.1980 of the
Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No.12 of 1973.
Shiv Dayal and S.K. Gambhir for the Appellants.
S.K. Bagga, Sheeraj Bagga, Mrs. Surestha Bagga, V.K.
Sapre and S.K. Khandekar for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S.C. AGRAWAL, J. This appeal by special leave is
directed against the judgment of the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh dated October 6, 1980 in M.P. No. 12/73 arising out
of proceedings initiated by Shiv Ram, respondent no. 1
herein, against Malkhan under Section 248(1) of the Madhya
Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959 (hereinafter referred to as
’the Code’), for his ejectment from 19 Bighas 8 Biswas of
land in Village Juara, District Morena, Madhya Pradesh, on
the ground that he was in unauthorised possession of the
said land.
In Village Juara, District Morena, falling in the
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former Gwalior State, there is a temple of Shri Ram
Janakiji. 78 Bighas 17 Biswas of agricultural land had been
give, by way of maufi, for the temple by the ruler of the
former Gwalior State. Vasudev Rao, father of respondent
no.1, was the Pujari of the said temple and he was described
as the Maufidar in the revenue records. The said maufi grant
was revoked and the maufi land was handed over to the
Department of Aukaf as Government property vide Circular
dated August 13, 1934 of the Government of Gwalior State. By
order of the Commissioner (Maufi & Aukaf), Government of
Gwalior State, dated December 10, 1935, mutation was made of
the said agricultural land as Government property and its
management was handed over to the Pujari, Vasudev Rao for
the purpose of management through Parwana issued is his
favour. On the death of Vasudev Rao, the name of respondent
no.1 was mutated in the place of Vasudev Rao by order of the
Collector of Morena dated March 26, 1960. Out of the said
agricultural land, 19
676
Bighas 8 Biswas was given by Vasudev Rao to Malkhan for
cultivation and he continued to cultivate the same even
after the death of Vasudev Rao. Malkhan has died and the
appellants herein are his legal representatives.
In 1967, respondent no.1 moved an application under
section 248(1) of the Code before the Tehsildar, Juara
wherein it was alleged that Malkhan was in unauthorised
possession of the said 19 Bighas 8 Biswas of land and it was
prayed that he may be evicted from the same. On the said
petition, the Tehsildar initially passed an order for eject-
ment against Malkhan treating him as a trespasser. The said
order was set aside on appeal and the matter was remanded
for reconsideratoion. Thereafter, the Tehsildar recorded
evidence and passed an order rejecting the said application
of respondent no.1 and holding that land has been given by
respondent no.1 to Malkhan on lease for his life and that
the said lease was still effective and, therefore, Malkhan
was not in unauthorised possession of the land. The said
order of the Tehsildear was affirmed in appeal by the Sub-
divisional officer, Juara by his order dated April 7, 1971.
Secona appeal filed by respondent no.1 was allowed by the
Additional Commissioner, Gwalior Divisxion, Gwalior, by his
order dated February 22, 1972 whereby it was held that the
priest of the temple could only manage the affairs of the
temple and he could either himself cultivate the land of the
temple or get the same cultivated by any other person but he
could not change the ownership of the temple and since the
priest is not the landowner, he has no right to lease out
the land of the temple to any other person and the lease
given by him is meaningless and illegal and that Malkhan did
not get any benefit from his statement that father of re-
spondent no.1 had given the lease to him and that he had
also got a lease for eight years again after the Code came
into effect in the year 1959. It was held that the said
lease should be deemed to be illegal and ineffective since
the land in question is Aukaf property. Aggrieved by the
said order of Additional Commissioner, Malkhan filed a
revision before the Board of Revenue which was allowed by a
member of the Board of Revenue by order dated September 27,
1972. It was held that the State Government has given the
land for worship and service in the temple and that the
intention was that either the priest of the temple should
cultivate the land or get it cultivated by somebody else and
to carry on the expenses of the temple with its income . The
learned Member of the Board of Revenue also held that father
of respondent no.1 had allotted that land to Malkhan for his
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life time and that under the authority of the said patta,
Malkhan is in
677
possession and has made improvements on the land and the
respondent no.1 had regularly received Rs.100 annually
towards the land revenue and also passed over its receipt.
It was observed that respondent no.1 has never cultivated
the land and had no arrangement for cultivation and even if
the land was given in his possession, he would give the same
to somebody else. The Board of Revenue was of the view that
though Malkhan had no interest in the disputed land it would
not be just that he is dispossessed for the simple reason
that there is possibility of some more income to respondent
no.1. Against the said order of the Board of Revenue, re-
spondent no.1 filed a writ petition in the High Court which
was allowed by a learned Single Judge by judgment dated
October 6, 1980. Before the High Court it was claimed, on
behalf of the appellants, that since Malkhan had been in-
ducted as a sub-tenant by Vasudev Rao and by resopondent
no.1 after him, their possession was not unauthorised and as
such they were not liable to be evicted in proceedings under
s.248 of the Code. Another contention that was raised before
the High Court was that the land in dispute being Government
land on his own showing, respondent no.1 had no right to
maintain an application under s.248(1) of the Code. It was
lastly urged that the land in dispute endowed to temple of
Shri Ram Jankiji and as such deities of Shri Ram Jankiji are
Bhumiswamis of the suit land and therefore, ejectment pro-
ceedings could be started only before the Sub-divisional
Officer under Section 168(4) of the Code. The High Court
rejected all the three contentions. As regards the question
of maintainability of an application for ejectment under
s.248(1) of the Code, the High Court, relying on an earlier
Division Bench decision of the same Court, in Thakur Pancham
Singh v. Mahant Ramkishandas and Ors., AIR 1972 MP 14 held
that the application of the Pujari was maintainable under
s.248(1) of the Code and the learned Member, Revenue Board
was wrong in treating the possession of Malkhan as autho-
rised. The High Court further held that section 168(4) of
the Code was not applicable to the present case because the
land in dispute was Aukaf land and neither the deities of
Shri Ram Jankiji nor the respondent no.1 could be regarded
as the Bhumiswamis thereof. The High Court, therefore,
allowed the writ petition filed by respondent no.1 and
restored the order passed by the Additional Commissioner
dated February 22, 1972 and ordered that the appellants be
ejected from the land in dispute in accordance with the
provisions of section 248 of the Code.
Shri Shiv Dayal, the learned counsel appearing for the
appellants, assailing the judgment of the High Court, has
urged that the High Court was
678
in error in holding that Malkhan was in unauthorised posses-
sion of the land in dispute and that the application filed
by respondent no.1 under section 248(1) of the Code was
maintainable. The submission of the learned counsel is that
it was competent for Vasudev Rao to grant a sub-lease in
favour of Malkhan in view of the relevant law applicable to
the land in dispute in the former State of Gwalior and that
after coming into force of the Code, Malkhan acquired Bhu-
miswami rights over the said land with effect from October
2, 1960. In this context, Shri Shiv Dayal has submitted that
the decision of the Division bench of the Madhya Pradesh
High Court in Thakur Pancham Singh v. Mahant Ramkishandas
and Ors. (supra) does not lay down the correct law. Shri
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Shiv Dayal has also submitted that respondent no.1, having
inducted Malkhan as tenant on the land in dispute, is
estopped from asserting that he had no right to grant tenan-
cy in favour of Malkhan and that possession of Malkhan was
unauthorised. It has been urged that since Malkhan had been
granted a patta by Vasudev Rao which was valid for life time
of Malkhan and respondent no.1 has admitted having received
rent from Malkhan after the death of Vasudev Rao, the Board
of Revenue had rightly held that possession of Malkhan was
authorised and that the High Court was not justified in
interfering with the order passed by the Board of Revenue in
exercise of its jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Con-
stitution.
We will first examine the question as to the nature of
right of Vasudev Rao in the land in dispute and whether he
was competent to grant a lease in favour of Malkhan in
respect of the said land. For that purpose it is necessary
to refer to the relevant provisions of the "Kewaid
Maufidaran" and "Qanoon Mal" of the former Gwalior State.
Maufi grants for Devasthan lands were governed by
section 13 of Kawaid Maufidaran. The said provision, as
translated in English, was as under:
"13. Where, on enquiry or at the time of mutation, a
Devasthani Maufi land is found to have been derived from
Nagis (Defective) Sanad, it shall be deleted from Maufi
category and shall be entrusted to the Aukaf Department for
Management of Devasthan, and entry of such land shall be
made in the Patwari Papers as follows:-
’Government property, under management of Aukaf
Department relating to Devasthan.’
679
The Maufidar shall be deemed to be holding
the land as Pujari or manager Devasthan and,
in lieu of service he shall have the right of
a Mourushi Kashtakar in such land for which a
rent free patta shall be granted to him by Aukaf
Department:
Provided that in the event of the services
being not rendered satisfactorily by the
Pujari or manager the Aukaf Department shall
have the authority to dispossess such Mourushi
Kashtakar and appoint another Pujari or manager in
his place and grant him patta for such land."
The expression ’Kashtakar Mourushi’ was defined in clause
(29) of s.2 of the ’Qanoon Mal’ which provision, as
translated in English, was as follows:
"Kashtakar Mourushi" :- "Kashtakar Mourushi is one
whose rights being heritable, the Malguzar cannot
evict him without order of the Court, nor can he
enhance the rent without his consent or without an
order of the court :
provided that in case a Pujari or manager who
has mourushi rights under section 13 of Kawaid
Maufidaran Juzne Arazi and Naqdi does not render
his services properly, the Aukaf Department shall
have the authority to dispossess him without an
order of the Court.
The following four categories of tenants were specified
in Section 249 of Qanoon Mal :
(i) Ex-proprietary tenant;
(ii) Mourushi or Dakhilkar, i.e., Occupancy
Tenant;
(iii) Gair Mourushi of Gair Dakhilkar, i.e., Non-
occupancy Tenant; and
(iv) Sub-Tenant.
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In Section 265 of Qanoon Mal, it was provided that
dakhilkar right is transferable by way of sale or mortgage
subject to the conditions laid down. One of the conditions
prescribed in the second proviso to s.265 was
680
that dakhilkar right acquired by a pujari or manager under
s.13 of the Qanoon Mal could not be subject to sale of
mortgage.
The aforesaid provisions in s.13 of the Kawaid
Maufidaran and s.265 of Qanoon Mal have been considered by
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Pancham Singh’s case
(supra) wherein also the Maufi grant in respect of a temple
had been resumed and a parwana had been granted to the
Pujari of the temple in accordance with Section 13 of
Maufidaran and the Pujari had granted a sub-lease and the
question was whether the Pujari was competent to grant the
sub-lease. In that context, the High Court has also referred
to s.110 of the Land Records Manual of the former Gwalior
State wherein it was provided that a Pujari should be
recorded as a Kashtakar Dakhilkar Bila Lagani, i.e., with no
right or interest, and to Circular No.4 of Samvat 1991 of
the former Gwalior State which required that :
"The entry of such land in the Jamabandi should be
made in the Patti of Milkiyat Sarkar under the
management of the Aukaf Department in the column
of ’owner’ and the Pujari of Mujavir should be
entered in ziman 4 as Mourusi Bila Lagani."
In Pancham Singh’s case (supra), the learned Judges
have also set out the terms of the Parwana (as contained in
the printed from) which is granted by the Aukaf Department
in accordance with s.13 of Kawaid Maufidaran. In the said
Parwana, it is mentioned that in accordance with s.13 of
Kawaid Maufidaran the land which was earlier entered in the
Maufi Register has been deleted from the said Register and
has been handed over to the Aukaf Department and the said
land is now being given by the Department to the grantee
’bila lagani’ in lieu of service for the purpose of worship
of Devasthan and it shall be under the control of Aukaf
Department. The grantee shall keep the Devasthan in a proper
condition and shall make proper arrangement for worship from
the income of the land by cultivating the same personally or
getting it cultivated through somebody else. So long as the
grantee and his heirs property manage the Devasthan, till
then only they would be entitled to enjoy the land. If any
defect or mismanagement in the worship of devasthan on the
part of the grantee or his heirs is found proceedings for
removal will be initiated and another person would be ap-
pointed from amongst the heirs, if found fit from conducting
the worship or otherwise another proper person would be
appointed to manage the Devasthan and the land would be
delivered to
681
him. It was clearly mentioned in the Parwana that as a
result of cancellation of the maufi the grantee, as
Maufidar, does not have any right in the same and now this
land would be entered in the Register and other papers of
the Patwari as Government property under the control of
Aukaf Department for the management of the Devasthan.
Construing the terms of the Parwana in the light of
Section 13 of Kawaid Maufidaran, the High Court has held :
"The Parwana must be read in the context of
Section 13 of the Kawaid Maufidaran. The deed must
be read as a whole in order to ascertain the true
meaning of its several clauses. Strict legal
language having been used in the Parwana, it must
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receive its legal meaning. Under the terms of the
Parwana, the former Pujari has no other status than
that of a manager. He could get the lands cultivat-
ed either himself or through servants, but he had
no right to alienate the same in any manner. It
cast a duty upon him to keep the lands under culti-
vation so that the income derived therefrom could
be applied towards the Puja and the upkeep of the
temple. He was under the direct control of the
Aukaf Department. The Parwana expressly stated that
the grant shall be resumed for breach of any of
the conditions or upon the death of the former
Pujari. The maufi lands all the while belonged to
the Government. The former Pujari was, therefore,
not a Kashtakar Mourushi or a government lessee or
an ordinary tenant of the maufi lands, but was
merely holding them on behalf of the Aukaf Depart-
ment for purpose of management."(p.16)
Referring to the definition of "Mourushi Kashtakar"
contained in clause (29) of s.2 of the Qanoon Mal, the High
Court had observed:
"On a plain reading, the definition excludes a
Pujari. The former Pujari was, therefore, not a
Kashtakar Mourushi of the maufi land, but was
merely holding them on behalf of Aukaf Department
for purposes of management."(p.16)
Rejecting the contention that every Mourushi Kashtakar
had the right to sub-let and that though a Pujari had no
right to transfer by mortgage or sale there was no restric-
tion on sub-letting, the High Court has laid down :
682
"It would be repugnant to the nature of the grant
itself to clothe such a person with a right to
transfer of any kind. The whole purpose of the
grant, which was for upkeep of the temple, would
be frustrated if the maufi lands were allowed to
be sub-let by the Pujari and new rights created in
favour of a stranger. Where a grant of land is
made in consideration for service to be rendered
by a grantee, in lieu of wages, it is an implied
condition of the grant that if the services are
not performed or are not required, the grant can
be resumed. The Parwana expressly stated that the
grant in favour of the former Pujari was resumable
for breach of any of the conditions set out there-
in, or upon his death or removal. The death of the
former Pujari was, in the instant case, the termi-
nal point. That being so, the grant lapsed with his
death. As the grant created no interest in favour
of the former Pujari, whatever rights the peti-
tioners’s father, Thakur Murlidhar Singh had also
lapsed and he became a rank trespasser." (p.17)
Shri Shiv Dayal has submitted that the learned judges of
the Division Bench of the High Court were in error in hold-
ing that a Pujari was not a Kashtakar Mourushi of the maufi
land and that the said finding is contrary to the language
of s.13 of Kawaid Maufidaran wherein it is clearly stated
that the Pujari would have the rights of a Kashtakar Mou-
rushi. According to Shri Shiv Dayal the only limitation on
the rights of the Pujari as a Kashtakar Mourushi was that
contained in s.265 of the Qanoon Mal whereby he was preclud-
ed from selling or mortgaging the Maufi lands but there was
no provision restricting his right to create a lease for
cultivation of the lands. We are unable to agree. Although
under s.13 of Kawaid Maufidaran, the right of a Kashtakar
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Mourushi have been conferred on the Pujari and under s.265
of the Qanoon Mal, the restriction on his right was with
regard to sale and mortgage only but it cannot be ignored
that under s.13 of Kawaid Maufidaran the right of a Kashta-
kar Mourushi which have been conferred on the Pujari is
subject to the overriding condition that in case he does not
perform his duties properly, he can be removed and another
Pujari can be appointed and a patta would be issued in his
favour. This is also borne out by definition of the expres-
sion ’Kashtakar Mourushi’ in s.2(29) of the Qanoon Mal which
imposes the condition that the Aukaf Department would be
entitled to dispossess, without an order of the court, the
Pujari who obtains the right of Kashtakar Mourushi on the
basis of Kawaid Maufidaran and who does not
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render his services properly. The matter is further made
clear by the prescribed form of the Parwana which is issued
to the Pujari wherein it is also clearly mentioned that
Pujari does not have any right in the land and his status is
that of a manager and that he could get the land cultivated
either himself or through others so that the income derived
therefrom could be applied towards worship and upkeep of the
temple and that the grant would be resumed for breach of any
of the conditions or upon the death of the former Pujari. In
other words, the rights of the Pujari do not stand on the
same footing as those of a Kashtakar Mourushi in the ordi-
nary sense who was entitled to all rights including the
right to sell or mortgage. We are, therefore, in agreement
with the view of the Division Bench of the Madhya Pradesh
High Court in Pancham Singh’s case (supra) that a Pujari had
no other status than that of the manager functioning under
the control of the Aukaf Department and he had no right to
transfer, either by way of sale or mortgage or by lease, the
land entrusted to him. In that view of the matter, it must
be held that patta granted in favour of Malkhan by Vasudev
Rao, father of respondent no.1, was not valid and did not
confer any right or interest on Malkhan in the land covered
by the said patta.
Once it is held that Vasudev Rao was not competent to
grant a lease in respect of the land in dispute and the
patta granted by him in favour of Malkhan was invalid and no
rights were conferred on Malkhan in the land as a result of
the said patta, the claim of the appellants that they have
acquired Bhumiswami right on the land in dispute cannot be
sustained. The said claim is based on the provisions of
ss.185, 189 and 190 of the code.
Under s.185(1), every person, belonging to any of the
categories specified thereunder, shall be called an
occupancy tenant and shall have all the rights and be
subject to all the liabilities conferred or imposed upon an
occupancy tenant by or under the Code. Under s.190, Bhumis-
wami rights are conferred on an occupancy tenant in cases
where the Bhumiswami, whose land is held by an occupancy
tenant, fails to make an application under s.189(1) within
the period laid down therein. The submission of Shri Shiv
Dayal is that Malkhan, being in occupation of the land in
dispute as a sub-tenant, became an occupancy tenant under
s.185(1), and since the Bhumiswami of the land in dispute
did not make an application under s.189(1), Malkhan acquired
Bhumiswami rights over the same under s.190 of the Code.
This contention proceeds on th assumption that Malkhan was a
sub-tenant of the land in dispute on the date of coming into
force of
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the code. But since we have found that no rights were
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created in favour of Malkhan under the patta granted by
Vasudev Rao. Malkhan cannot claim to be a sub-tenant of the
land in dispute on the date of the commencement of the Code
and, therefore, the submission of Shri Shiv Dayal that
Malkhan had acquired Bhumiswami rights over the land in
dispute cannot be accepted.
The only question which remains to be considered is
whether the application filed by respondent no.1 under
s.248(1) of the Code was maintainable. In 1967, when the
application was moved by respondent no. 1, s.248(1)
empowered the Tehsildar to summarily eject any person who
unauthorisedly takes or remains in possession of any occu-
pied land, abadi, service land or any land which has been
set part for any special purpose under s.237. The expression
’unoccupied land’ is defined in s.2(z-3) of the Code as
under :
" ‘unoccupied land, means the land in a village
other than the Abadi or service land or the land
held by a Bhumiswami, a tenant or a Government
lessee;"
The land in dispute does not fall in any of the
excepted categories mentioned in s.2(z-3). It must,
therefore, be held to be unoccupied land. Since it was set
apart for a public purpose, viz., for the upkeep of temple,
it can be said to be land set apart for a special purpose
under clause (i) of sub-s.(1) of s.237 of the Code. What has
to be seen is whether the possession of Malkhan of the same
was unauthorised. It has been urged on behalf of the
appellants that the possession of Malkhan could not be said
to be unauthorised on the date of the filing of the
application by respondent no.1 in view of the fact that
Vasudev Rao, father of respondent no.1, had granted a patta
permitting Malkhan to cultivate the land during his
(Malkhan’s) life time and after the death of Vasudev Rao,
respondent no.1 had also granted a patta permitting Malkhan
to continue in cultivation of the land in dispute and had
been receiving Rs.100 annually as rent for Malkhan. There is
dispute between the parties with regard to the terms of the
patta granted by respondent no.1. According to the appel-
lants, under the said patta, Malkhan was entitled to contin-
ue for his life time whereas according to respondent no.1,
the patta was granted for a limited period which had ex-
pired. It has been urged by learned counsel for the appel-
lants that in view of the patta whereby Malkhan was permit-
ted to cultivate the land in dispute for his life, it
685
cannot be said that possession of Malkhan was unauthorised.
In view of the death of Malkhan during the pendency of the
writ petition in the High Court, the question whether re-
spondent no.1 has granted a patta permitting Malkhan to
cultivate the land in dispute during his life time, does not
survive because even if it is held that the patta granted in
favour of Malkhan by respondent no.1 permitted Malkhan to
cultivate the land in dispute during his life time, the said
authority under which Malkhan was in possession of the
disputed land came to an end on the death of Malkhan and the
possession of the appellants over the land in dispute after
the death of Malkhan cannot be said to be authorised by
respondent no.1.
In Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul and Ors. v. Keshwar Lal
Chaudhuri and Ors., (1940) FCR 84, Varadachariar, J. has
observed :
"It is also on the theory of an appeal being in
the nature of a re-hearing that the courts in this
country have in numerous cases recognized that in
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moulding the relief to be granted in a case on
appeal, the court of appeal is entitled to take
into account even facts and events which have come
into existence after the decree appealed against."
(p.103)
In his concurring judgment, Gwyer, C.J. has referred to
the following observations of Hughes C.J. in Patterson v.
State of Alabama, [1934] 294 US 600, at p.607 :
"we have frequently held that in the exercise of
our appellate jurisdiction we have power not only
to correct error in the judgment under review but
to make such disposition of the case as justice
requires. And in determining what justice does
require, the Court is bound to consider any
change, either in fact or in law, which has
supervened since the judgment was entered". (p.87)
In Qudrat Ullah v. Municipal Board, Bareilly, [1974] 2
SCR 539, this Court has held that it is permissible for the
court to take note of the extinguishment of the statutory
tenancy while considering the appeal and grant relief to the
appellant accordingly. We can, therefore, take note of the
fact the Malkhan has died during the pendency of the writ
petition in the High Court and, as a result, the possession
of the appellants has become unauthorised, since then. The
appellants cannot, therefore, seek
686
relief on the ground that their possession over the land in
dispute is not unauthorised and they cannot be evicted under
s. 248(1) of the Code.
On the aforesaid view of the matter, the appellants
must fail and the appeal has to be dismissed. But before we
do so, we consider it necessary to advert to an aspect which
cannot be ignored. We have found that the Pujari or the
manager of the Devasthan holds the lands given to him under
the Parwana issued under s.13 of the Kawaid Mufidaran as a
manager of Government property. He functions under the
overall control and supervision of the Aukaf Department
because in the event of his failure. to properly manage the
affairs, he can be removed and the Parwana issued in his
favour can be revoked. Since under the terms of the Parwana,
the Pujari or the manager can get the land given for the
worship and upkeep of the Devasthan cultivated by some other
person, it is necessary that the Aukaf Department exercises
control in the matter of initiation of proceedings for
ejectment of a person who in allowed to cultivate by the
pujari or the manager which means that the proceedings for
such ejectment under s.248(1) of the Code should be initiat-
ed by the Pujari or manager only after obtaining the approv-
al of the Aukaf Department. In the instant case, the Board
of Revenue, has stated that respondent no. 1 has never
cultivated the land and has no arrangement for cultivation
and that even if the land is given in his possession he
would give it to somebody else for cultivation In these
circumstances, we consider it appropriate to direct that a
senior official in the Aukaf Department of the Government of
Madhya Pradesh should examine whether the appellants can be
permitted to cultivate the land in dispute on terms as
suitably revised and till the matter is so considered, the
appellants are not dispossessed from the land in dispute.
The appeal is, therefore, dismissed. It is, however,
directed that a senior official in the Aukaf Department of
Government of Madhya Pradesh shall consider whether the
appellants can be permitted to cultivate the land in dispute
on terms which may be suitably revised. In case the said
official is of the view that the appellants can be so per-
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mitted, a suitable direction in that regard may be given by
the Aukaf Department directing respondent no.1 to permit the
appellants to cultivate the land on the revised terms. The
appellants shall not be ejected from the land in dispute
till the matter is so considered. The parties are left to
bear their own costs.
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