15 October 1985
Supreme Court
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GOLLALESHWAR DEV AND ORS. Vs GANGAWWA KOM SHANTAYYA MATH & ORS.

Bench: SEN,A.P. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1195 of 1972


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PETITIONER: GOLLALESHWAR DEV AND ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: GANGAWWA KOM SHANTAYYA MATH & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT15/10/1985

BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) MADON, D.P.

CITATION:  1986 AIR  231            1985 SCR  Supl. (3) 646  1985 SCC  (4) 393        1985 SCALE  (2)811

ACT:      Bombay Public  Trust Act,  1950, sections 2(10), 50, 51 and 52(i)  read with  section 92 of Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, scope of -Whether two or more trustees of a registered public trust  can with  the permission  in writing  of   the Charity Commissioner,  bring a  suit  for  declaration  that certain  property  belongs  to  the  public  trust  and  for possession of the same from a person holding it adversely to the trust - Words and phrases "Meaning of the phrase ’person having interest  in the  trust occurring in section 2(10) of the Act  - Persons  having interest  includes  trustees  and other beneficiaries -

HEADNOTE:      The first  appellant Gollaleshwar  Dev  is  an  ancient temple situate in village Golgeri in the district of Bijapur which formed  part of the erstwhile State of Bombay prior to the  reorganisation  of  the  States.  Consequent  upon  the enactment of  the Bombay  Public Trust Act, 1950, the temple was registered  as a  public trust.  The district of Bijapur became part  of the  new State of Karnataka on the appointed day i. e. November 1st, 1956 under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.  The Bombay  Public Trust Act continued to remain in force  in the  areas which  formed part  of the erstwhile State of  Bombay. Appellant  No.2 is  the present trustee of the temple  and appellant  No. 3 the  grandson of ex-trustee Mariyappa  the   elder  brother   of  appellant  No.2  is  a beneficiary.      it had  been  customary  for  the  trustees  to  permit persons rendering  services to  the temple to reside in suit premises on  leave  and  license    basis.  The  respondents Shantayya and  Smt. Shankarawa,    who  were  taken  in  the service of  the temple  and allowed  to reside  in the  suit premises free  of rent on condition that they were to occupy the said  premises so  long as  their services to the temple were required,  started   creating trouble  in the year 1957 with the  result the  father of  appellant  No.2  terminated their services  and asked  them to vacate the suit premises. On their failure to do so, he  brought two suits being Civil Suits Nos. 244 and 255 of 1937 in the name of the idol Shree Gollaleshwar Dev as plaintiff  No.1 with himself being 647

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trustee as  plaintiff No.  2. The  respondents contested the claim on  various grounds  and pleaded  inter alia, (i) that the temple  had no right to title to the suit premises which belonged to  them by  virtue of a registered gift deed dated February  19,   1917  executed  by  Mariyappa  Lingappa  the grandfather  of   appellant  No.   3  in   favour  of  their Predecessor-in- title  Balalochanayya  Hiremath,  the  first license of  the suit  premises; (ii)  that the suits brought under section  50 (11)  of the Act were not maintainable for want of  consent in  writing given  by Charity  Commissioner under section  51; ant  (iii) that  the Court  of the  Civil Judge, Senior  Division,  Bijapur  had  no  jurisdiction  to entertain  the   suits.  The  suits  Mysore  High  Court  in Marikamba  Temple  and  Hanumant  Temple,  Sirsi,  by    its Manager, S.S.  Dhakappa v.  Subraya Venkataramanappa  Barkur reported in I.L.R. 1958 Mysore 736. Thereafter a Fresh Civil suit No.  2 of 1962 was instituted before the District Judge Bijapur after  obtaining  the  consent  in  writing  of  the Charity Commissioner  by   the appellant  No. 2’s  father as plaintiff No.  2 and  the idol  as plaintiff   No.  1. Later Appellant No.  3  in  the  capacity  of  a  beneficiary  and Appellant No.  2 in the capacity of the present trustee were impleaded as plaintiffs  Nos. 2 and 3 as "persons interested in the  trust." The High Court in the meanwhile had reversed the decision  in Marikamba’s  case in  Ganapathi Ram  Naik & ANR. V.  Kusta Shri  Venkataraman Dev  in 1964  I Mysore  LJ 172. Following  the said D.B. decision in the District Judge held  that,   although  a  suit  for  recovery  of  property belonging to  the idol  could be  brought either by the idol represented by  section 50  (ii)  of    the  act  and    was therefore   not maintainable and that such a suit would be a governed by  the ordinary  law and  would  not  lie  in  the District Court,  but either in the  Court of the Civil Judge , Junior  Division or  the court of the  Civil Judge, Senior Division according to the valuation of the subject matter of the   suit." Aggrieved  by the  said Judgment the appellants preferred an  appeal    before  the   High Court. A Division Bench which  heard the  appeal felt  that  the  decision  in Ganapathi   Ram’s case required reconsideration and referred the matter  for the  opinion of  the Full   Bench.  The Full Bench upon  the hypothesis  that section 50 of the Act is in pari materia  with section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure expressed that  the well-  settled principles      governing section 92 of the Code are  equally applicable to section 50 of the   Act.  It accordingly  held:      (1) that  the suit contemplated by     section 50  of the   Act  was one  of  a representative  character; (ii) that a  suit by a deity  for possession     being a suit for vindicating its own personal rights 648 was not  governed by  section 50 of the Act that persons who institute  suits in their capacity as trustees do so  not in their representative  capacity representing the interests of the public but in their own individual or personal  capacity to vindicate their own rights or that of the idol that is to say, merely  because trustees . were persons having interest in the  trust the  provision of  section 50(ii)  of the  Act would not  be attracted  to a  suit of  this kind. Upon that view the  full Bench answered the question referred to it as follows: (i)  the expression "persons having interest in the trust" occurring  in section 2(10) and section 50 of the Act does not  include  the  trustees  when  they  institute  the suits in  their capacity  as trustees  for vindicating their private rights;  and (ii)  consequently two or more trustees or a public trust cannot file a suit under section 50(11) of

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the Act  for a  declaration that the property belongs to the public trust  and for  possession of  the same from a person holding it  adversely to  the trust.  In accordance with the opinion of the Full Bench, the Division  Bench dismissed the appeal filed  by the appellants. Hence the appeal by special leave.      Allowing the appeal, the Court ^      HELD : 1.1 The expression "person having interest" in a trust occurring  in section  2(10) and  section  50  of  the Bombay Public  Trust  Act  cannot  be  given  a  restrictive construction.  The  definition  of  the  expression  "person having interest"  in section   -  2 (10)  being an inclusive one, there  is no  Lawful justification  to exclude the suit brought by  two or more trustees in the name of the idol, to recover possession  of its property against a person holding it adversely to the trust from the purview of section 50(ii) of the  Act. The  definition  of  the  words  person  having interest" in section 2  (10) of the Bombay Public Trust Act, as   amended in  1953 was  made inclusive to set at rest all doubts and  difficulties as  to the  meaning of these words, which were  intended and meant to be used in a generic sense so as  to  include  not  only  the  trustees  but  also  the beneficiaries   and other  persons interested  in the trust. The definition  of the  expression person having interest in section 2(10)  is wide  enough to  include  not  merely  the beneficiaries of  a temple,  math, wakf  etc. but  also  the trustees. Therefore  appellants Nos. 2 and 3 who undoubtedly are members  of the founder’s family i.e. beneficiaries, are entitled to  attend at  performance of worship or service in the   Distribution   of   offering             to  the  also entitled   to partake in the distribution of offering to the deity and   thus     answer the  description "person  having inter" as  defined   in Section  2 (10) of the Act. [657A-D; 660 A-B] 649      1.2 Provisions  contained in  sections 50  to 52 of the Bombay by  Trust Act  make it clear that the Act created and regulated a  right  to  institute  a  suit  by  the  Charity Commissioner or  by two  or more  persons interested  in the trust, in  the form  of supplementary  statutory  provisions without defeasance  of the right of  manager or a trustee or a shebait  of an  idol to  bring suit  in the  use  idol  to recover the  property of  the    trust  in  the  usual  way. Further, although  although   sub-section (1)  of section 52 makes sections  92 and  93 of  the Code  of Civil  Procedure inapplicable to  public trust  registered under  the Act, it has made  provision by  section 50  for institution  of such suits the  Charity Commissioner  or by  two or  more persons interested in  the trust and having obtained  the contest in writing of  the Charity  Commissioner under section   50  of the Act.  Therefore, any  two or  more persons interested in the trust   should not deprived of the right to bring a suit as contemplated by section 50   (ii) (a) of the Act. 1658 D- F]      1.3 section  50 of  the Bombay Trust Act is not in pari materia with  section 92  of the  Code of  Civil  Procedure. Although section  50 of  the  Act  is  structured  upon  the pattern of  section 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure, there is no   provision  in section  92 of  the Code  analogous to clause (ii)  or relief  (a )     of section  50 of  the Act. Section 50  authorises the  institution of  a  suit  by  the Charity Commissioner  or two  or more  persons interested in the trust  only in the District Court having jurisdiction to try it.  The scope  of section  50 of  the Act is wider than

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that of  section 92  of the  Code  of  Civil  Procedure.  It applies to  a case  so long  as  the  relief  claimed  falls within the scope of the section. One of the reliefs that can be claimed  in a suit brought under section 50 of the Act is that covered by relief (a) set out in clause (ii) namely for a declaration  that a  certain property  belongs to a public trust and  for possession  thereof from  person  holding  it adversely to  the trust  viz. suit  brought by  the  Charity Commissioner or  two or  more persons  interested and in the trust with  his consent in writing as provided in section 51 of the Act. Section 50  of the  Bombay Trust  act contemplated  not only suits of  a representative character but also suit by two or yore trustees for preservation of the property of the trust. Therefore, in  a suit  filed the  Idol to enforce it private rights, the  provision of  section 92  of the  Code of civil Procedure  are not  attracted.[659  D-H]      Bisimannath &  Anr. v.  Shri  Thakur  Radhaballabhji  & ors.[1967] 2 S.C.R.. 618 distinguished. 650      Ganapathi Ram   Naik  v. Kumta  Shri   Venkataraman Dev I.L.R. A 1963 Mysore 1059 overruled.      Shree GOLLALESHWAR Dev & Ors. v. Gangawwa Kom Shantayya Math Ors., A.I.R. 1972 Kart (F.B.) p. reversed.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1195 of 1972.      From the  Judgment  and  Decree  dated  19.10.1971  and 5.4.1971 of  the Mysore  High Court  in Regular First Appeal No. 57 of 1967.      S.S. javali and B.P. Singh for the Appellants.      R.B. datar for the Respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      SEN, J.  This appeal  on certificate from the judgement and decree  of the  Karnataka High Court dated April 5, 1971 raises a question of general public importance. The question is whether two or more trustees of a registered public trust can,  with   the  permission   in  writing  of  the  Charity Commissioner as  provided for  in 8.51  of the  Act, bring a suit for  declaration that  certain property  belongs to the Public trust  and for  possession of  the same from a person holding it  adversely to  the trust  under s.50(ii)  of  the Bombay Public  Trusts Act, 1950. That depends on whether the words ’persons  having interest  in the  trust occurring  in s.2(10) and  s.50 of  the Act  to  or  do  not  include  the trustees of  a registered  public trust. If they do not, two or more  trustees cannot  file a  suit  as  contemplated  by s.50(ii) of  the Act. There had been a divergence of opinion in the  High Court  as to  the precise  meaning of the words ’persons having  interest in  the trust’ in s.2(10) and s.50 of the  Act and  as conflicting  views had been expressed by different Benches from time to time, the matter was referred to a  Full Bench.  The correctness  of the view taken by the Full Bench is in question in this appeal.      Put very  briefly, the essential facto are there. Shree GOLLALESHWAR Dev  is an  ancient temple  and is  situate  in village Golgeri in the district of Bijapur which formed part of the erstwhile State of Bombay prior to the reorganization of the  States. consequent  upon the enactment of the Bombay Public Trusts  Act, 1950,  the temple  was registered  as  a public trust. The district of Bijapur became part of the new State of Karnataka on

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651 the appointed  day i.e.  November 1,  1956 under  the States Reorganization Act, 1956. The Act has continued to remain in force in  the areas which formed part of the erstwhile state of Bombay.      It had  been  customary  for  the  trustees  to  permit persons rendering  services to  the temple  to reside in the suit premises  on leave  and licence.  The subject-matter in dispute consisting or arches alongside the eastern, northern and southern  walls of  the temple  are meant for the use of devotees for  their temporary  rest and stay, when they come to visit  the temple.  The main temple itself is situated in the  middle  surrounded  by  an  open  courtyard.  The  suit premises being  within the  four walls  of the  temple, they form part  of the  temple and are entered in the certificate of registration as belonging to the temple.      It appears  that  plaintiff  no.  2’s  uncle  Mariyappa Lingappa permitted  one Balalochanayya Hiremath to reside in a part  of the  suit premises  as he happened to be a man of saintly pursuits  and one  without a  family.  Subsequently, Balalochayya left  the premises occupied by him. Thereafter, plaintiff  no.  2’s  father  as  the  trustee  employed  two brothers, Ramchayya and Gurunandayya to perform services for the temple  and he  assigned the  suit premises  to them for their residence  with a  view that they should be allowed to occupy the  premises free  so long  as the  trustees allowed them to  remain in  occupation and  so  long  as  they  were retained in  the service  of the temple. they were to remain occupation of  the suit premises as licensees of the trustee of the  temple. Rachayya  and Gurunandayya started asserting rights derogatory  to the  trust. Accordingly, plaintiff No, 2’s father as the trustee filed civil Suit No, 96 of 1935 in the Court  of the Joint Civil Judge, Bijapur ant the learned civil Judge by his judgment dated August 8, 1936 decreed the plaintiffs’ claim.  The  defendants went up in appeal to the Court of  the District  Judge in  Regular Appeal  No. 109 of 1936 but  the appeal  was dismissed  on November  22,  1937. Thereafter, plaintiff no. 2’s father terminated the services of Rachayya  Gurunandayya yet  called on  them to vacate the suit  premise,   which  they   tilt.  After   Ramchayya  and Gurunandayya  were  removed  from  service  of  the  temple, Shantayya brother  of Rachayya  ant Smt. Shankarawa, also of Gurunandayya were taken in service of the temple and allowed to reside  in the  suit premises  free of  rent on condition that they  were to occupy the said premises so long as their services to  the temple  were required.  In 1957,  Shantayya along with Smt. Shankarawa also started creating trouble and plaintiff  No,   2’s  father,   according  terminated  their services and asked them to vacate the suit 652 premises. On  their failure  to do  so, he brought two suits being Civil  suits Nos.  244 and  255 of 1957 in the name of the idol  Shree Gollaleswar  Dev as  plaintiff  no.  1  with himself being  the trustee  as plaintiff  no. 2. The case of the plaintiffs was that the defendants were in occupation of the said  premises with  leave and licence of the trustee of the temple  and as they refused to deliver possession of the suit  premises,   the  suits   had  been  instituted  for  a declaration that  the property  belong to the temple and for possession thereof. The defendants contested the plaintiffs’ claim on  various grounds. They pleaded inter alia, that the temple had  no right  or title  to the  suit premises  which belonged to  this by  virtue of a registered gift-deed dated February 19,  1917 executed by Mariyappa, uncle of plaintiff no.   2    in   favour    of   their    predecessor-in-title

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Balalochanayya, that  there was  no consent in writing given by Charity  Commissioner under 8. 51 and therefore the suits brought under 8. 50(11) of the Act were not maintainable and further that  the Court of the Civil Judge, Senior Division, Bijapur had    jurisdiction  to  entertain  the  suits.  The learned Civil  Judge following  the decision  of the  Mysore High Court  in Marikamba Temple   Hanumant  Temple, Sirsi by its manager,  S.S.. Dhakappa  v. Subrava    Venkataramanappa Barkur, I.L.R. 1958 Mysore 736, upheld these contentions and dismissed the suit as not maintainable. It was  after this  that the present suit was brought by the aforesaid plaintiffs  in the  Court of  the District  Judge, Bijapur as  Civil Suit  No. 2 of 1962 under 8. 50(ii) of the Act for  the aforesaid  reliefs, with the consent in writing of  the  Charity  Commissioner  granted  under.  8.  51.  As earlier, the suit was instituted by appellant no. 2’s father as plaintiff no. 2 in the name of idol Shri Gollaleshwar Dev as plaintiff  no. 1.  Plaintiff no.  2 was  impleaded as the present trustee  of the  temple and  plaintiff no.  3 as the grandson of  Mariappa, the elder brother of plaintiff no. 2. as a beneficiary. Plaintiffs nos. 2 and 3 joined the suit as persons interested  in the  trust’. The  High Court  in  the meanwhile had  revered the  decision in  Marikamba’s case in Ganapathi Ram  Naik &  Anr. v.  kumta Shri Venkataraman Dev, 1964 1 My-ore L.J. 172. The learned District Judge following the decision in Ganapathi Ram Naik’s case held that although a suit  for recovery of property belonging to the idol could be brought  either by the idol represented by the trustee or the manager, such a suit is not contemplated by s. 50(li) of the Act  and was therefore not maintainable. It was observed :           "The words  ’persons having interest in the Trust’           in  6.  50  denote  a  person  whose  interest  is           inferior to 653           that of  trustee or manager and it is by reason of           the existence of that inferior or that inferior or           smaller interest  that s. 50 of the Act like s. 92           of the   Code  of Civil Procedure  1908 authorises           the institution  of suit regulate it in the manner           provided there  in.  But  that  section  does  not           govern the  institution of  a  suit  by  a  person           possessing higher and higher interest which is not           regulated by it." The learned   district  Judge accordingly  held that  such a suit would  by governed   by  the ordinary law and would not lie in  the District  Court but  either in  the Court of the Civil Judge,  Junior Division  or the  Court  of  the  Civil Judge, junior  Division, according  to the  valuation of the subject-matter of the suit.      Aggrieved by  the judgement  of the  District Judge the appellants preferred  an appeal  before the  High  Court.  A Division Bench which heard the appeal felt that the decision in Ganapathi  Ram’s case  required consideration  and framed two questions for the opinion of the full bench, namely :           1.  Whether   the  expression   ’persons    having           interested in the trust’ occurring in s. 2(10) and           s. 50 of the act includes trustees  also .           2. Whether  two or more trustees of a public trust           can file  suit for  declaration  that  a  property           belongs to  the   public trust and for recovery of           possession  of   the  from  a  person  holding  it           adversely to trust under s.50 (ii) of the Act.      The full  Bench upon  the hypothesis  that s 50  of the Act is in pari materia with s. 92 of tho Code expressed that

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the well settled principles governing s. 92 of the  Code are equally  Applicable to s. 50 of the see. It accordingly held following the  decision of  Woodroffe, J. in Budree mukia v. Chooni lal  Johurry, I.L R. (1906) 33 Cal. 789 at p.807, and various other decisions of different High Courts laying down the scope  and effect  of s.  92 of  the  Code  and  Dr.B.K. Mukherjea,s  Tagore   Law  Lactures  on  the  Hindu  Low  of Religious Charitable  Trusts, 3rd  tn end  p. 347,  that the suit  contemplated   by  s.   50  of  the  act  was      one representative character.  Tbe observations  of woodroffe J. in the case of Budree Das Mukin v. Chooni Lal Johurry (supra ) which has become the locus classicus  were to the effect; 654           "The suit  contemplated by the section is one of a           representative character.           It is obvious that the Advocate-General, Collector           or other  Public Officer  can and  do sue  only as           representing the  public and  if, instead of these           public officers,  two or  more persons  having  an           interest in  the trust,  sue with  their  consent,           they so  sue under  a  warrant  to  represent  the           public  as   the  objects   of  the  trust  :  see           Lakshmandas Raghunath Das v. Jugal Kishore, I.L.R.           (1896) 22 Bom. 216, 220.           It follows from this that when a person or persons           sue  not   to  establish  the  general  member  or           members, but  to remedy  a particular infringement           of their  own individual  right, the  suit is  not           within or need not be brought under the section."      It next  relied upon  the decision  of  this  Court  in Bishwanath &  Anr. v.  Shri  Thakur  Radhaballabhji  &  Ors. [19671 2  S.C.R. 618, laying down that a suit by an idol, as a juristic  person against persons who interfered unlawfully with the property of the idol, was a suit for enforcement of its private  right and  was therefore not a suit to which s. 92 of  the Code applied and thus such a suit was outside the purview of  s. 92  of the  Code and  it was  not a bar to is maintainability, for  the conclusion  that a suit instituted by the idol represented by its trustees or by presons as qua trustees for  recovery of  trust  property  is  a  suit  for enforcement of  the  private  rights  of  the  idol  or  the trustees.      The Full  Bench  approved  of  the  view  expressed  by Somnath Iyer  and Gopivallabha  Iyengar, JJ. in Ganpathi Ram Naik v.  Kumt Shri Venkataraman Dev I.L.R. (1963) Mys. 1059, that a  suit by  a deity  for possession  being a  suit  for vindicating its  own personal  rights was not governed by 8. 50 of  the Act  but disagreed  with it  on the  construction placed by  it upon  the words  ’person having  interest’  in s.2(10) and  s.  50  of  the  Act.  The  Division  Bench  in Ganapathi Ram’s case held that the expression ’person having interest’ denotes one whose interest is inferior two that of a trustee  or a  manager and it is by reason of existence of that inferior  or smaller  interest that  8. 50  of the Act, like s.  92 of the Code authorises the institution of a suit and regulates  it in  the manner provided therein. It was of the   view that s. 50 of the Act does not govern institution of a  suit by  a  person  possessing  larger  and  a  higher interest which is not regulated by it, and differed from the view taken by Hegde, J. in 655 Shri Marikaba  Temple v.  Subraya  Venkataramanappa,  I.L.R. (1958) Mys.  736, holding that a suit by an idol represented by the  trustee was  governed by  8. 50  of the Act. me Pull Bench accordingly  held that  persons who institute suits in

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their capacity as trustees do 60 not in their representative capacity representing  the interests  of the  public but  in their own individual or personal capacity to vindicate their own rights  or that  of the  idol. That  is to  say,  merely because the  trustees were  persons having  interest in  the trust, the  provisions of  s. 50(ii) of the Act would not be attracted to  a suit  of this kind. Upon this reasoning, the Full Bench observed .           "It is,  therefore, clear that the expression "two           or more  persons having  an interest in the trust"           s. 8. 50 of the Act cannot include the trustees bu           persons  other  than  the  trustees  who  have  as           interest in the trust. The reason for holding that           the expression  "two -  or more  persons having an           interest in  the trust"  cannot  be  construed  to           include trustees,  is not because the trustees are           not persons interested in the trust but because of           the character of the suit contemplated under 8. 50           of the Act.           The remedy of the idol represented by its trustees           or of  the trustees  to enforce  their  individual           rights is  not to institute a suit under s. 50 but           to sue     in the ordinary courts in the usual way           as any  other citizen,  and for  such a  suit, the           trustees  are   not  required   to   satisfy   the           conditions of  s.  50  of  the  Act.  A  suit  for           recovery of trust property instituted by a trustee           t because  one for enforcement of the right of the           public, but  being merely  for enforcement  of the           private rights of the trust or trustees, does not,           in our  opinion, fall  within the scope of section           50 of the Act. Upon that  view,  the  Full  Bench  answered  the  questions referred as follows :           1. The  expression ’Persons having interest in the           trust" occurring  in s.  2(10) and 8.50 of the Act           docs not  include the trustees when they institute           the  suits  in  their  capacity  as  trustees  for           vindicating their private rights.           2. Consequently,  two or more trustees of a public           trust cannot file a suit under s.50(ii) of the Act           for 656           a declaration  that the  property belongs  to  the           public trust and for possession of the same from a           person holding lt adversely to the trust. In accordance  with the  opinion  of  the  Full  Bench,  the Division  Bench   dismissed  the     appeal   filed  by  the appellants.      Before we  advert to  the argument based on s.50 of the Act, it  should be  mentioned that it is undisputed that the temple  of   Shree  Gollaleswar   Dev  is  a  public  temple registered as  a public  trust under  the provisions  of the Act. The  plaintiff- suing  are, first,  the idol, Second, a trustee, and  third, a  member of  the family  cr-sting  the endowment i.e.  a beneficiary.  The question  is whether the plaintiffs nos.  2 and  3 are  persons having an interest in the trust within  the meaning of s.2(10) which reads :           "2(10) "Person having interest" includes -           (a) in  the case  of a  temple, a  person  who  is           entitled to  attend at  or  is  in  the  habit  of           attending the performence of worship or service in           the temple, or who is entitled to partake or is in           that habit  of partaking  in the  distribution  of           gifts therof;

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         (b) in  the case of a math, a disciple of the math           or a  person of  the religious pursuasion to which           the math belongs ;           (c) in the case of a wakf a person who is entitled           to receive any pecuniary or other benefit from the           wakf ant  includes a  person who  has a  right  to           worship or  to P  perform any  religious rite in a           mosque, idgah,  imambara, dargah, maqbara or other           religious institutions  connected with the wakf or           to participate  in  any  religious  or  charitable           institution under the wakf;           (d) in  the case of a society registered under tho           Societies Registration  Act, 1860,  any member  of           such society; and           (e) in  the Case  of any  other public  trust, any           beneficiary." The word ’trustee’ as   defined in s. 2(18) reads : 657           "2(18). "trustee"  means a  person in  whom either           alone or  in association  with other  persons, the           trust property is vested and includes a manager;"      By the  Bombay Public Trusts (Amendment) Act, 1953, the word includes’  was substituted  for the  word  ’means’.  me definition of  the words ’person having interest’ in 8.2(10) was  made   inclusive  to   set  at   rest  all  doubts  and difficulties as  to the  meaning of  these words, which were intended and  meant to  be used  in a generic sense so as to include not only the trustees but also the beneficiaries and other persons  interested in  the trust.  It would therefore appear that  the definition of the expression ’person having interest’ in  s.2(10) is  wide enough  to include not merely the beneficiaries  of a temple, math, wakf etc. but also the trustees. It must therefore follow that plaintiffs nos.2 and 3 who  undoubtedly are members of the founder’s family i.e.. beneficiaries, are  entitled to  attend  at  performance  of worship or  service in  the  temple  and  also  entitled  to partake in  the distribution  of offerings  to the deity and thus answer  the description  ’person  having  interest’  as defined in s.2(10) of the Act.      Section 50  of the Act on the construction of which the appeal depends, insofar as material, provides as follows :           "50. In any case -           (i) * * * *           (ii) where  a  declaration  is  necessary  that  a           particular property  is a  property belonging to a           public trust  or where  a direction is required to           recover the  possession of  such property  or  the           proceeds  thereof   or  for  an  account  of  such           property or  proceeds from  any person including a           person holding adversely to the public trust, or           (ii) where  the direction  of the  court is deemed           necessary for  the administration  of  any  public           turst.           The Charity  Commissioner or  two or  more persons           having  an   interest  in  the  trust  and  having           obtained the  consent in  writing of  that Charity           Commissioner  as   provided  in   Section  51  may           institute a suit whether contentious or not in the           court   within   the   local   limits   of   whose           jurisdiction the  whole or  part  of  the  subject           matter of the trust is situate, to obtain a decree           for any of the following reliefs : 658           (a) an order for the recovery of the possession of           such property or proceeds thereof.

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Sub-section (1)  of s.  51 of  the  Act  which  also  has  a material bearing, reads :           51(1) If  the persons  having an  interest in  any           public trust  intend to  file a suit of the nature           specified in  section 50,  they shall apply to the           Charity Commissioner  in writing  for his consent.           The  Charity   Commissioner,  after   hearing  the           parties and after making such inquiry as he thinks           fit, may  within a  period or  six months from the           date on  which the  application is  made, grant or           refuse his  consent to  the  institution  of  such           suit.  The   order  or  the  Charity  Commissioner           refusing his consent shall be in writing and shall           state the reasons, for the refusal. Sub-s.(l) of s.52 of the Act provides that not with standing anything contained in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, the provisions of s.92 of the Code shall not apply to the public trusts governed by the Act.      It is  clear from these provisions that s.50 of the Act created and  regulated a  right to  institute a  suit by the Charity Commissioner  or by two or more peron interested in the trusts in the form of supplementary statutory provisions without defeasance  of the right of the manager or a trustee or a  shebait of an idol to bring a suit in the name of idol to recover the property of the trust in the usual way. There is therefore  no reason  why the two or re person interested in the trust should be deprived of the right to bring a suit as contemplated  by s.50(ii)(a)  of the Act. Although sub-s. (1) of s. 52 makes ss. 92 and 93 of the Code inapplicable to public trues registered under the Act, it has made provision by s.  50 for  institution of  such   suits by  the  Charity Commissioner or  by two  or more  persons interested  in the trust and  having obtained  the consent  in writing  of  the Charity Commissioner under a. 51 of the Act .      we are unable to subscribe to the view expressed by the high Court. Although the full Bench rightly adverted to sub- S. (13  or s. 52 of the Act which excludes the applicability of ss.92 and 93 of the Code to the public trusts governed by the Act,  it is  not right  in its  conclusion that  a  suit instituted by  the idol represented by two or more trustees, with the written consent of 659 the Charity  Commissioner as  provided in  s. 51 of the Act, was not  within the  purview of  s. 50(ii)(a) of the Act and therefore could  A not  be  brought  in  the  Court  of  the District Judge. Although s. 50 of the Act is structured upon the pattern  of s.  92 of the Code, the Full bench failed to appreciate that  there is  no provision in s. 92 of the Code analogous to  cl(ii) or  relief (a)  of s. 50 of the Act. It will be  seen from  B. 50  that the  section authorizes  the institution of  a suit by the charity Commissioner or two or more persons  interested in  the trust  only in the District Court having  jurisdiction to  try it. The scope of s. 50 of the Act  is wider than that of s. 92 of the Code. It applies to a  case so  long as  the relief  claimed falls within the scope of the section. One of the reliefs that can be claimed in a  suit brought under s. 50 of the Act is that covered by relief (a) set out in cl. (ii) viz. for a declaration that a certain property belong to a public trust and for possession thereof from a person holding it adversely to the trust viz. a suit  brought by  the Charity  Commissioner or  two or  re persons interested  in the trust with his consent in writing as provided in s. 51 of the Act. The fallacy  underlying in  the reasoning  of the Full Bench lies in  the wrongful assumption that s. 50 of the Act is in

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pari materia  with s.  92 of  the  Code.  It  is  upon  that erroneous  hypothesis   that  it   observes  that  the  suit contemplated by  s. 50 of the Act is one of a representative character. It overlooks the scope and effect of s. 50 of the Act which  contemplates not  only suits  of a representative character but  also  suits  by  two  or    re  trustees  for preservation of  The property of the trust. The reasoning of the Full  Bench that  if the  suit is  filed by  the idol to enforce its  private rights,  the provisions of s. 92 of the Code are  not attracted  and a  fortiori the same principles equally govern  suits under  s. 50 of the Act, is not worthy of acceptance. The Full Bench was also wrong in relying upon the decision of this Court in Bishwanath’s case which turned on the  construction of  s. 92 of the code. In that case, it was held that the bar of s. 92 did not apply to a suit by an idol or  by its  trustees for  a declaration  that the  suit properties belonged  to the  trust and for possession of the same from  persons holding  the properties  adversely to the trust  inasmuch   as  such  a  suit  is  not  a  suit  of  a representative character  instituted in the interests of the public, but  is really  a suit  for the  vindication of  the individual or  personal rights or the deity or the trustees. The decision  in  Bishwanath’s  case  is  therefore  clearly distinguishable and  the principles  laid  down  as  to  the applicability of  s.92 of  the Code  to such  suits are  not attracted. 660      There is  no warrant  for the  restrictive construction placed by  the Full  Bench on  the expression ’person having interest’ in  a trust occurring in 8. 2(10) and 8. 50 of the Act.  The   definition  of  the  expression  ’person  having interest’ in  s. 2  (10) belng  an inclusive  one, there  is Lawful justification  to exclude  the suit brought by two or re trustees  in the  name of the idol, to recover possession of its property against a person holding it adversely to the trust from the purview of 8. 50(ii) of the Act.      In the  result, the appeal succeeds ant is allowed with costs. The  judgment and  decree of the high Court affirming those passed  by the  District Judge,  Bijapur are set aside ant the plaintiffs’ suit for declaration of title to ant for posession of  the suit  property together with mesne profits is decreed. S.R.                                         Appeal allowed. 661