K. Strinivasa Aiyangar And Ors. vs Sriman Shadagopa Strinivasa … on 6 April, 1892

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Madras High Court
K. Strinivasa Aiyangar And Ors. vs Sriman Shadagopa Strinivasa … on 6 April, 1892
Equivalent citations: (1892) IIMLJ 139


JUDGMENT

1. The plaint in this suit was filed with the consent of the Advocate-General under Section 539, Civil Procedure Code, and asks for two reliefs, (1) for a declaration that defendant is not the duly appointed successor to the late head of the Mutt who died on the 10th August 1888, and (2) that the Court will fill up the vacancy by appointing a duly qualified disciple of the late Jheer as his successor. It is admitted that the defendant is in possession of the Mutt and its properties. The learned judge in the court below dismissed the suit on the ground that Section 539, Civil Procedure Code, does not apply to suits brought against a trespasser. Against this view it is argued that plaintiffs have a right to sue whether the sanction of the Advocate-General is given or not, and that it is necessary that the court should make an appointment of a successor to the late Jheer in order that there may be some one qualified to give religious instruction to the disciples of the Mutt and clothed with the rightful authority to sue to eject the trespasser and to recover the Mutt and its properties. It appears to us that this suit is not of the character to which Section 539, Civil Procedure Code, was intended to apply. That section merely enables two or more of the general public, having an interest in a trust and having obtained the consent of the proper officer to sue the trustees to enforce the better administration of the trust. It thus confers a right of suit against trustees which did not previously exist, and is not applicable to a suit brought by the disciples of a Mutt with the real object of ejecting a trespasser, which right of suit must have existed quite independently of the enactment of Section 539. In addition to the unreported case (S. A. No. 194 of 1888) relied on by the learned judge we may refer to the decisions reported in I. L. R, 15 B, 148, Vishvanath Govind Deshmane v. Rambhat, and I. L. R. 10 M. 375 at p. 506, Giyana Sambandha Pandara Sannadhi v. Kandasami Tambiran, from which it is clear that Section 539 does not apply to suits brought against trespassers. It is then urged that the two plaintiffs have substantial individual interests of their own, and have a right to sue for the reliefs asked for even though the consent of the Advocate-General be regarded as an unnecessary formality. It appears to us that it is not necessary to determine in this suit whether the provisions of Section 30 of the Civil Procedure Code apply. Assuming that the two plaintiffs can sue alone without joining other disciples under the provisions of Section 30, the present suit must fail under Section 42 of the Specific Relief Act, inasmuch as the plaintiffs do not seek the consequential relief to which, on their own plaint, they would be entitled. On the facts stated by thorn they are entitled to ask that some duly qualified person be appointed as the head of the Mutt and approved by the court, and that the Mutt and its properties be handed over to the person so appointed, the defendant being ejected therefrom. A similar course was approved by the High Court in Appeal No. 10 of 1887 (Ganjam) and is evidently necessary to avoid multiplicity of suits. We think that the fee fixed in the District Court was too low, and will allow Rs. 50. Upon these grounds we confirm the decree of the court below and dismiss this appeal with costs.

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