27 March 1962
Supreme Court
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GWVALIER I. J. IYYAPPAN & ANOTHER Vs THE DHARMODAYAM COMPANY

Case number: Appeal (civil) 565 of 1960


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PETITIONER: GWVALIER I. J. IYYAPPAN & ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE DHARMODAYAM COMPANY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/03/1962

BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. BENCH: KAPUR, J.L. GUPTA, K.C. DAS DAYAL, RAGHUBAR

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1017            1963 SCR  (1)  85

ACT: Company-Director a trustee and in a fiduciary position Trust if could be created on anothers hand-License-of  irrevocable where there has been change of purpose-indian Easements  Act 1882 (5 of 1882),,ss. 60 (b), 62(f ).

HEADNOTE: The  respondent,  a Company with  charitable  objects  owned certain lands and the appellant who was the Chairman of  the Board of Directors, was asked to construct a building on the said  land.  It was subsequently found that the cost.  would be  more  than  the estimated  amount,  which  probably  the Company was not prepared to spend.  At that stage the 86 appellant   made   an  offer  that  he  would   finish   the construction  of  the building at his own cost and  hand  it over to the Company as trust property of which the Directors of  the company would be the trustees and the  Company  will manage  the affairs in accordance with the  conditions  laid down  in  his offer.  The offer was accepted, but  for  some reason  or  other certain members of the  Company  were  not prepared  to stick to the original arrangement and  some  of the members filed a suit and obtained an injunction  against the appellant and the company not to execute the trust  deed as  proposed  by the appellant.   Thereafter  the  appellant resigned  from  Chairman  ship  and  also  ceased  to  be  a Director,  two  days  before his  resignation  he  appellant registered  a trust deed and made himself the first  trustee with powers to appoint other trustees.  The trust deed inter alia,  recited that a rent of Rs. 88/- per annum was  to  be paid to the Company for the compound where the building  had been  erected.  Thus the appellant created a trust by  which the trust became a tenant of the respondent Company  without any transfer from the Company to the trust.  The  respondent Company called upon the appellant to hand over the  building to the Company and file a suit for possession of properties, damages and mesne profit. The  respondent  Company’s case was that the  appellant  had wilfully  contravened the terms of his offer, and the  right of  the appellant therefore ’was only to recover  the  money from  the Company to the extent to which he may be  entitled

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in equity and the trust deed was inoperative. The  defence  of  the  appellant inter  alia  was  that  the respondent  company was estopped from claiming the  building after having accepted the aforesaid offer pursuant to  which the  appellant  had  invested  a  large  sum  of  money   in constructing  the  building; and that as the  offer  of  the trusteeship of the property in dispute made by the appellant and  accepted by the Board of Directors had afterwards  been cancelled  as  a  result of the  resolution  passed  by  the general body of members, the appellant could not  constitute the  respondent  company  as trustee and  therefore  he  was entitled  to implement his original intention by  executing the  deed  of trust.  In the Supreme  Court,  the  appellant relied  on the plea that he had been granted a  license  and acting upon the license he had executed a work of  permanent character and incurred expenses in the execution thereof and therefore under s. 60(b) of the Indian Easements Act,  1882, the license was irrevocable. Held, That a Director is also a Trustee of the assets of the company and is in a fiduciary relationship with the company; therefore he could not do anything in regard 87 to  the  assets  of the Company  which  would  prejudicially affect its rights. A  person  cannot  create a trust in regard  to  land  which belonged to another person nor could he by an unilateral act create a lease in his own favour in regard to the land  over which he has raised a super-structure. The offer and the acceptance of the terms of the trust  deed being  wholly different from what had been executed  by  the appellant  and  from the manner in which the new  trust  had been  constituted into a lessee of the company  without  the company’s  agreement  it  was not possible for  a  Court  in equity to accept the new trust as a bar to the  respondent’s claim  for  possession  and there are  no  equities  in  the appellant’s favour which he is entitled to enforce by way of defence to the suit. Held, further, that no case of license really arises but  if it does, the license was to construct the building and  hand it over to the respondent company as trust property.   There was  no  license to create another kind of trust  which  has been  sought to be created.  It cannot be  said,  therefore, that  there was an irrevocable license which fall  under  s. 60(b)  of the Indian Easements Act.  Even such a license  is deemed  to  be revoked under s. 62(f) of the Act  where  the license is granted for a specific purpose and the purpose is attained or abandoned or becomes impracticable. G.   E.  By. v. Rurner (1872) L.R. 8 Ch.  App. 159,  Manzoor Ahmad v. Muhammad.  Abdul Jamil, (1933) 1. L. R. 56 All. 207 and Dominion of India v. B. B. Sohan Lal, A. 1. R. 1950 E.P. 40, referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 565 of 1960. Appeal  from  the judgment and decree  dated  September  26, 1956,  of the former Travancore Cochin High Court in  A.  S. No. 57 of 1954. A.   V.  Viswanatha  Sastri,  P.  K.  Subramania  Iyer,   R. Ganapathy   Iyer,   C.  S.  Ananthakrishna   Iyer   and   G. Gopalakrishnan, for the Appellants. M.   E.  Nambiyar,  Rameshwar Nath, S. N. Andley and  P.  L. Vohra, for the respondent. 1962.  March 27.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by

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88 KAPUR, J.-This is an appeal against the Judgment and  decree of the High Court of Travancore Cochin modifying the  decree of the District Judge, Trichur.  The appellant was defendant No.1  in  his personal capacity and defendant No. 2  in  the capacity  of  a trustee of a trust.  Defendant No. 5  was  a tenant  of  the  building which is  the  subject  matter  of dispute  between  the  parties,  defendant  No.10  was   its successor-in-interest  and  the present respondent  was  the plaintiff in the suit. The  suit out of which this appeal has arisen was  filed  in the  Court of the District Judge, Trichur, on’  October  31, 1945.   The suit was for possession of properties  described in  schedules A & B and for damages and mesne  profits  with interest.  The defence was that the appellant was not liable to  restore possession on the basis of a document Exhibit  X which  was  a  deed  of trust  executed  by  the  appellant, creating a trust and constituting himself the trustee of the trust.   The 5th defendant claimed Rs.20,000 and Rs.1019  as value  of improvements and extensions made on the  building. A large number of issues were framed by the trial court  and it  passed a decree of which the most important part was  as follows:-               (a)   The  plaintiff  is  allowed  to  recover               possession  of A & B schedule items  from  the               defendants  in possession and to  utilise  the               income  from the B schedule item according  to               the terms mentioned in Exhibit II.               (b)   The 5th & 10th defendants are  permitted               to  remove  within a period of 2  months  from               today the constructions and additions made  in               the  (A and B schedule items by  them  without               causing any damage to the plaint properties.               .lm0               Again this decree three appeals were filed one               by  the  appellant,  the  other  by  the  10th               defendant                                     89               and  the  third by  the  plaintiff-respondent.               The  High Court in appeal modified the  decree               of  the  trial court and held  that  the  only               claim  which the appellant could  put  forward               was for compensation for the structure he  had               erected.   The  amount  of  Compensation   was               R.46,686-2-0.  The High Court also  held  that               the  respondent was entitled to recover  mesne               profit,% as against the appellant at the  rate               of  Rs.88/-  per annum till  the  recovery  of               property mentioned in schedule A and B at  the               rate  of  Rs.1500/-  per annum  in  regard  to               schedule  B  buildings.  It  is  against  this               decree  that the appellant has come in  appeal               to this court by special leave.               In  order to understand the points in  contro-               versy it will be helpful to give certain facts               which   led   up  to  this   litigation’   The               respondent is a nonprofit sharing company, the               main  object of which seems to be  to  provide               pecuniary   assistance   to   the   poor   for               educational and other charitable purpose.  The               respondent company owned survey No. 465 in the               revenue estate of the village Trichur abutting               on  the  public road in 1944-45.   It  was  55               cents in area.  The respondent company erected               buildings  on  the South and  which  had  been

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             rented to the then Imperial Bank of India’ now               the  State  Bank of India, and in  the  middle               portion  there was a building which  has  been               leased  out to the Post Office.  In the  North               there  was  a vacant plot measuring  20  cents               which  has  been described as  schedule  A.  A               building  was  sought  to be put  up  and  was               ultimately put up on about 7 or 8 cents out of               this area which has been described in schedule               B. Schedule A is the whole of the land measur-               ing  20  cents with the building on it  on  an               area  of 7 or 8 cents which is schedule B.  In               1942 the appellant became the Chairman of  the               Board  of Directors of the respondent               company    and   was   entrusted   with    the               construction   of  the  building   which   the               respondent company wanted to put up               90               on  7  or 8 cents out of schedule  A  property               which the appellant agreed to construct.   The               cost   of  the  building  at  that  time   was               estimated  to  be  In Rs.12,000. It  was  also               resolved  to  entrust  to  the  appellant  the               construction  of a latrine, a  kitchen,  gate,               compound  and  partition wall  of  schedule  A               property  which was constructed at a  cost  of               Rs.2,000  expended by the respondent  company.               At  the meeting’ of the Board of Directors  of               January   9,   1944  the  directors   of   the               respondent company were told by the  appellant               that  Rs.  12,000  was  insufficient  for  the               completion  of the building.  On April  1944,.               the  appellant made an offer to the  Directors               of  the respondent company that he would  meet               the  entire  cost of the construction  of  the               building  and  hand over the building  to  the               respondent  company which would be  a  ’trust.               This  offer  is contained in Exhibit  AB.   In               this  offer  he  stated  that  the   estimated               expenditure of the Dew building will be  about               Rs.30,000 and that he would meet the  expenses               and then he stated:-               "I  shall  entrust  this  building  with   the               company  as  my trust property  in  accordance               with  the conditions mentioned below, and  the               company  shall  take  over  the  above   trust               property and manage the affairs in  accordance               with three conditions mentioned below". One  of  the conditions was that the minimum income  of  the property  shall be calculated at Rs.1500/- per  annum  which would be spent for the education of poor students  according to  the  rules  framed by the company and then  he  set  out certain  rules.  He also stated what the name of  the  trust would be.  The document ended as follows.               "I  shall  execute at my own expense  a  trust               deed  and  sign  and  give  the  same  to  the               company,  entering  therein,  all  the   above               mentioned particulars and conditions.  The                                     91               company  shall  accept  the  same  and   shall               mention the fact of acceptance in the deed  in               writing and shall get the same registered". On  the  same  day the directors seem to  have  resolved  as follows:-               "It  is decided to accept this trust  property

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             in  accordance with the conditions,  mentioned               in  it.   Copies of this  resolution  and  the               application, may be sent to the applicant". The company agreed to accept the trust and a sum of Rs.7672- 7-3 which had been given to the appellant by the  respondent company  was returned on April 30, 1944.  On July  2,  1944, the  appellant placed before the Board of Directors a  draft of  the trust deed which is Exhibit IT.  The draft  of  the trust deed was approved by the company as follows:-               "The  company has accepted the  properties  as               ’Trust’  with  all the above  conditions.   To               this effect, the Directors (Trustees) who have               been  authorised  as per the decision  of  the               Director  Board, on behalf of the  Dharmodeyam               Company.               The draft of the ’Trust deed’ has been perused               and   accepted.   Four  Trustees   have   been               empowered  to  prepare the original  deed  and               present it in the Registrar’s Office " . It  appears  that at a meeting of the General  Body  of  the Members of the Company this trust deed was approved.   Later on  February 25, ’1945 another meeting was held and  certain changes  were  suggested in the trust deed.  On  October  7, 1944, certain members of the respondent company filed a suit in" the court of District Munsif of Trichur and obtained  an injunction both against, 92 the appellant and the company not to execute the trust  deed as  had been proposed by the appellant as contained  in  the draft  (Exhibit II).  Thereafter the appellant resigned  his Chairmanship  of the respondent company on May 25, 1945  and also  ceased  to be a Director on May 28,  1945.   Two  days before i.e. on May 23, 1945 the appellant registered a trust deed  in regard, to the property which is Exhibit X.  It  is there stated that he had constructed the building at his own expense  at  a  cost of Rs 75,000/ and it was  to  be  named Dharmodayam   Company  Silver  Jubilee  11  lyyappan   Trust Building.  The first trustee was the appellant with power to appoint other trustee or trustees.  The estimated income  of the  property was Rs. 3600/- out of which a rent of Rs  88/- per  annum was to be paid to the appellant company  for  the compound  where  the  building had  been  erected  and  then provision was made in regard to the income and how it wag to be spent.  This was registered and thus a trust was  created of  the  properties  in schedule A & B in  which  the  trust became  a  tenant  of the  respondent  company  without  any transfer from the respondent Company to the trust. The suit for injunction which had been filed by some of  the members  was dismissed for default on March 25,  1946.   The respondent  company  on  August 13, 1945,  called  upon  the appellant  to  band  over the  building  to  the  respondent company  and  it is stated that on August 22,  1945,  during some holidays the appellant inducted the 5th defendant as  a tenant.   The  respondent thereupon filed the  suit  out  of which this appeal has arisen. The plaintiff in his plaint, after reciting the facts  which have  been  above set out, stated that the appellant  as  an agent of the respondent company had misconducted himself  by the  breach of his duties and had thereby lost any right  he had regarding the building described in schedule B;                              93 that  he had wilfully contravened the terms of his  offer  ; that  the  right  of the appellant  therefore  was  only  to recover the money from the company to the extent to which he may be entitled in equity and the trust deed (Exhibit X) was

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inoperative.   The  respondent further stated  that  it  was ready and willing to pay such sum of money as the court  may find the appellant to be entitled to. The  defence  of  the appellant was that the  offer  of  the appellant  to construct the building and to  constitute  the company  as trustee to carry out the trust according to  the terms  and  conditions detailed in his offer dated  2,  1944 having  been accepted by the Board of Directors, it  put  an end  to any previous relationship which might  have  existed between  the appellant and the respondent company and  could not therefore be enquired into.  It was also submitted  that the  respondent  company  was  estopped  from  claiming  the building after having accepted the aforesaid offer  pursuant to which the appellant had invested a large sum of money  in constructing  the  building;  that  as  the  offer  of   the trusteeship of the property in dispute made by the appellant and  accepted  by the Board of Directors of  the  respondent company  had  afterwards been cancelled as a result  of  the resolution  passed  by  the General  Body’  of  Members  the appellant  could  not constitute the respondent  company  as trustee  and  therefore  he was entitled  to  implement  his original  intention by executing the deed of trust  (Exhibit X.).  He  therefore  pleaded  that the  deed  of  trust  was perfectly  valid:  that  the rental value  of  the  site  in schedule A was not even Rs. 10/- a year and that he had  not be.  come a tenant and the word "verumpattom" had been  used for  the  want  of  a better word and  that  the  trust  had undertaken  the liability to pay to the  respondent  company Rs. 88/- a year.  On these grounds it was submitted that the respondent  company was not entitled to any  relief.   These then are the facts of the case. 94 The  appellant in this Court has mainly relied on  the  plea that  he  had  been granted a licence and  acting  upon  the license he ’had executed a work of a permanent character and incurred  expenses  in the execution thereof  and  therefore under  s.  60(b)  of the Indian Easements Act,  1882  (5  of 1882),  hereinafter  referred  to as the  ’Act’,  which  was applicable  to  the area where the property is  situate  and therefore  the  license was irrevocable.  Now in  the  trial court  no plea of license or its irrevocability  was  raised but  what  was  pleaded was the validity  of  the  trust  in Exhibit  X.  In  the judgment of the  trial  court  no  such question  was  discussed.  In the grounds of appeal  in  his appeal  to the High Court which the appellant  took  against the decree of the trial court the relevant grounds are 9  to 13.   In  the 9th ground it was pleaded that the  first  de- fendant’s  case  of lease should have been  upheld;  in  any event  s.60 of the Act should have been applied.  In  Ground No.  10  it  was  stated that  Rs.  88/-  was  a  reasonable compensation.   Grounds 11 to 13 dealt with the question  of trust.   Thus  it is for the first time in  his  grounds  of appeal  that s. 60 of the Act was sought to be raised as  an alternative  plea.  At the time of the argument  before  the High Court the appellant abandoned his case in regard to the lease  and relied on the irrevocability of the  license  and insisted  that  the  trust  deed (Exhibit  X)  was  a  valid document.  Now it is not open to a party to change his  case at  the appellate stage because at the most the case of  the appellant  in  the  trial court was what  was  contained  in paragraph II of the Written Statement where the question  of estoppel  was  raised  and  the  plea  taken  was  that  the respondent  company was estopped from claiming any right  to the building after accepting the offer of the appellant pur- suant to which the appellant had expended a large amount of

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money,  That was not a plea of license at that stage. it  is not  for us to say what the ease of the parties  would  have been if the case of                              95 license  had been specifically raised but the  fact  remains that  the plea of license was not raised in the trial  court nor was it adjudicated upon there. The  appellant was a Director of the company and it  is  now impossible to dispute the proposition that the Directors are in  some  sense,  trustees  a  proposition  which  has  been established by a long series of cases.  See Palmer’s Company Law p. 158, Ed. 19th.  This two fold character of  directors is, perhaps, best expressed in Lord Belborne’s words in G.   E. Ry. v. Rurner(1) where he said:--               The directors are the more trustees or  agents               of the company-trusees of the company’s  money               and  property  ; agents  in  the  transactions               which  they  enter  into  on  behalf  of   the               company.   And this is the way in which it  is               put  by  Sir George Jessel in the case  of  Re               Forest  Of  Dean etc., Co. (1878) 10  Ch.   D.               450.  Directors are called trustees.  They are               no  doubt trustees of assets which  have  come               into  their  hands, or which are  under  their               control". Thus when the appellant was making the offer for creating  a trust he was not merely an agent of the company; he was also a  trustee  of  the  assets of the  company  and  was  in  a fiduciary  relationship with the respondent.  Therefore  the appellant could not, do anything in regard to the assets  of the  company  which would prejudicially affect  its  rights. The  appellant made an offer that he would errect the  buil- ding  on the land belonging to the respondent which  .is  in schedule  A, the building being schedule B. He also  offered that  it would be a trust property i.e. the super  structure would be the trust property.  He could not create a trust in regard to land which belonged to the company nor could he by a unilateral act create a lease in his own favour in  regard to (1)  (1872) L.R. 8 Ch.  App. 149, 152. 96 the  land which is in schedule A. Thus when a  complaint  is made  that the appellant has unilaterally acted  to  deprive the  company  of  some of its right the  complaint.  is  not wholly without foundation, although the company also may not be  entirely without blame.  But the fact comes to this  the appellant  was asked to construct the building at a cost  of Rs. 12,000; it was subsequently found that the cost would be more  than the estimated amount which probably  the  company was not prepared to spend.  It is not that the building  had not  yet  commenced,  it  had  commenced  and  probably  not completed.  At that stage the appellant made an offer  which was  accepted  but the offer was that he  would  finish  the construction  of  the  building  and hand  it  over  to  the respondent  company as trust property of which the  trustees would  be  the Directors of the company.   The  transaction therefore was confined to the offer as  contained in Exhibit AB and in Exhibit 11.  It     is  true that for some  reason or another certain  members of the company were not prepared to   stick  to the original arrangement and  wanted  certain modifications  but in spite of that it was not open  to  the appellant to ignore his offer altogether and create a wholly new  trust  which he has done.  His right, if any,  if  they could  be  enforced would only be in Exhibit  11  which  the appellant himself has abandoned.  He cannot now be heard  to

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say  that because the company after accepting his offer  had refused  to  abide  by the agreement, he  was  entitled,  to appropriate by means of the trust created by him the land in schedule  A by constituting the trust a tenant  and  deprive the  company  of which he was at that time  a  Director  and therefore   a  trustee.   In  these  circumstances   it   is impossible to say that there were any equities in his favour which  he is entitled to. enforce by way of defence  to  the suit of the respondent.                              97 In  our opinion no case of license really arises but  if  it does  what is the license which the appellant  obtained  and what is the license, which he is seeking to plead as a  bar. The  license,  if  it was a license, was  to  construct  the building and hand it over to the respondent company as trust property.   There was no license to create another  kind  of trust which the appellant has sought to create, It cannot be said  therefore that there was an irrevocable license  which falls  under s. 60 (b) of the Act.  Even such a  license  is deemed  to be revoked under s. 62 (f) of that Act where  the license is granted for a specific purpose and the purpose is attained  or  abandoned or becomes  impracticable.   In  the present  case the purpose for which the license was  granted has  either  been  abandoned  or  has  become  impracticable because of the action of the appellant. In these circumstances the cases which were cited on  behalf of  the appellant are of little assistance.   The  appellant relied on Manzoor Ahmad v.    Muhammad Abdul Jamil(1)  which was a case under a. 60  (b)  of the Easements  Act  where  a license  had become irrevocable under s. 60 (b) and  it  was held  that  it  could  not be revoked  on  payment  of  com- pensation.   The East Punjab case.  Dominion of India v.  B. B.  Sohan  Lal (2) again is not of much  assistance  of  the appellant.  It was there stated that in every case the terms of  the license have to be examined and the law  applied  to such terms.  It was also observed by Das, C. J. (as he  then was) that in order to be irrevocable under s. 60 the license has to be coupled with a transfer of property whereas  under the English law it was enough if it was coupled with a grant or  interest in the nature of profit and in every  ease  the irrevocability  whether under the English law or  under  the Indian’ statute will give way to the special (1)  (1933) I. L. R. 56 ALL. 207. (2) A.I.R. 1950  E.P.  40, 47. 98 agreement if any of the parties but it is unnecessary to  go into these cases because the offer which was originally made by  the appellant and accepted by in the respondent  company has not been adhered to and the appellant is not  proceeding on an entirely new basis. In our opinion the offer and the acceptance of the terms  of the trust deed being wholly different from what has now been executed  by the appellant and from the manner in which  the new trust has been constituted into a lessee of the  company without  the  company’s agreement it is not possible  for  a court  in  equity to accept the new trust as a  bar  to  the respondent’s  claim  for  possession.   In  this  case   the appellant  has  suffered no loss.  The amount which  he  has expended has been returned to him. In our opinion the judgment of the High Court was right  and we therefore dismiss this appeal with costs.                        Appeal dismissed.