LAWS(MAD)-1944-10-5

SRI KOTHANDARAMASWAMI TEMPLE AT ADAMBAR REPRESENTEDBY ITS TRUSTEES S. VAITHINATHA AYYAR AND ANR. Vs. VEEZHINATHA AYYAR AND ANR.

Decided On October 04, 1944
Sri Kothandaramaswami Temple At Adambar Representedby Its Trustees S. Vaithinatha Ayyar And Anr. Appellant
V/S
Veezhinatha Ayyar And Anr. Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) BY a will dated the 6th June, 1895, one Ponnammal directed that out of the income of certain immovable properties belonging to her the cost of performing religious services in temples specified by her should be met. One of the temples is the Sri Kothandaramaswami Temple at Adambar in the Tanjore district, of which the appellants are the trustees. In 1941 they instituted a suit in the Court of the District Munsiff of Mayavaram against the first and the second respondents, the successors in interest of one Subbaraya Aiyar who became possessed of the properties subject to the charges created by the testatrix. There were other defendants but it is not necessary to state why they were joined as parties. The first and second respondents strenuously defended the action. In the first place they denied that a valid charge had been created by the testatrix in favour of the Sri Kothandaramaswami temple and they averred that the suit was not ' maintainable by reason of the provisions of Sections 44 and 73 of the Madras Hindu Religious Endowments Act of 1926. The District Munsiff held that a valid charge had been created and under it the first and second respondents were liable to pay to the trustees of the temple 15 kalams of paddy per annum. He considered, however, that the plea that the only remedy of the trustees was an application under Section 44 of the Act must prevail, when the section was read together with Section 73 and accordingly he dismissed the suit. On appeal by the trustees the Subordinate Judge concurred in the opinion of the District Munsiff that a valid charge had been created in favour of the Sri Kothandaramaswami temple. He did not agree with the District Munsiff that Section 44 was a bar to the suit, but went on to hold that it was not maintainable by reason of Section 73, inasmuch as sanction for the institution of the suit had not been granted by the Hindu Religious Endowments Board. The Subordinate Judge agreed with the District Munsiff that the charge in favour of the Sri Kothandaramaswami temple was in respect of an annual payment of 15 kalams. The trustees then appealed to this Court. This appeal was heard by Chandrasekhara Ayyar, J., who agreed with the District Munsiff that Section 44, read in conjunction with Sub -section (3) of Section 73, prohibited the trustees from filing a suit and limited their remedy to an application under Section 44. The learned Judge gave, however, a certificate under Clause 15 of the Letters Patent which has permitted the trustees to file this further appeal.

(2.) WE are of the opinion that Section 73 of the Act has no application here. Subsection (1) permits the Board or any person having an interest and having obtained the consent of the Board to institute a suit in the District Court to obtain a decree (a) appointing or removing the trustee °of a math or excepted temple or of a specified endowment attached to a math or excepted temple, (b) vesting property in a trustee, (c) declaring what proportion of the endowed property or of the interest therein shall be allocated to a particular object of the endowment, (d) directing accounts and enquiries, or (e) granting such further or other relief as the nature of the case may require. The words "granting such further or other relief as the nature of the case may require" cannot be read as extending the classes of suits contemplated by the section. The present suit does not come within any of the categories specified in Sub -section (1). Sub -section (2) admittedly is not in point. Sub -section (3) states that Sections 92 and 93 and Rule 8 of Order 1 of the First Schedule of the Civil Procedure Code shall have no application to a suit claiming relief in respect of the administration or management of a religious endowment and no suit in respect of such administration or management shall be instituted except as provided by the Act. This is not a suit for the administration or management of a religious endowment. It is a suit filed by the trustees to recover money due to the temple and secured by a charge on immovable properties. As the suit does not come within the categories referred to in Sub -section (1) and is not one for the administration or management of a religious endowment, Section 73 cannot have application.

(3.) THE more substantial question is whether Section 44 in itself precludes the institution of a suit in such a case as the present one. The section says that, where an endowment for the performance of a charity or service connected with a temple consists merely of a charge on property and there is failure in the due performance of the charity or service by the person responsible, the trustee of the temple may require the person in possession of the property on which the endowment is charged to pay to the trustee the expenses incurred or likely to be incurred in causing the charity or service to be performed otherwise. In default of the payment as required by the trustee the Court shall on his application pass an order for the recovery of the amount and the order may be enforced as if it were a decree of the Court. The Court referred to in this section is the District Court.