06 September 1966
Supreme Court
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SRI VEDAGIRI LAKSHMI NARASIMHA SWAMI TEMPLE Vs INDURU PATTABHIRAMI REDDY

Case number: Appeal (civil) 605 of 1964


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PETITIONER: SRI VEDAGIRI LAKSHMI NARASIMHA SWAMI TEMPLE

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: INDURU PATTABHIRAMI REDDY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/09/1966

BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHELAT, J.M.

CITATION:  1967 AIR  781            1967 SCR  (1) 280  CITATOR INFO :  R          1989 SC2102  (7)

ACT: Madras Hindu Religious and Charitable Endownments Act (19 of 1951),  Chapter  VI]  and s.  93-Ex-trustees’  liability  to account-Scope  of-Suit against ex-trustees for rendition  of accounts-Maintainability.

HEADNOTE: The  trustees  of a tempter filed a suit  for  rendition  of accounts  ’against  ,the ex-trustees, in  respect  of  their management  of  the temple. The trial court  and  the  first appellate  court, in their discretion and having  regard  to the  circumstances of the case, directed the  defendants  to render accounts for about six years prior to the  plaintiffs taking  possession of the temple.  The High Court held  that the  defendants were not obliged to render accounts  in  the absence  of  allegations of acts of  negligence  or  willful default,  and that, s. 93 of the Madras Hindu Religious  and Charitable   Endowments  Act,  1951,  was  a  bar   to   the maintainability of the suit. In appeal to this Court, HELD : (i) No trustee can get a discharge unless he  renders account  of his management irrespective of any  question  of negligence  or wilful default.  The  defendants,  therefore, were  liable to render accounts of their management  to  the plaintiffs.  As regards the period for which they should  be made liable to render        accounts, it would depend  upon the  facts of each case, and there was no Justification  for interfering with the discretion of the lower courts in  that regard. [284 D-E; 286 C] Case law referred to. (ii)  Section 93 is not a bar to the maintainability of  the suit. [292 A] The  section  only imposes a restriction on suits  or  other legal  proceedings  in  respect  of  matters  for  which   a provision has been made in the Act.  The legislative history of the section shows that even in -regard to suits or  other legal  proceedings relating to administration or  management of  religious institutions, restriction is imposed  only  in respect of matters for which a provision is made in the Act. It  does  not bar suits under the general law which  do  not

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fall  within  the scope of any of the sections of  the  Act. Chapter VII of the Act, on which reliance was placed by  the defendants  as providing a complete machinery  for  deciding disputes  in  regard  to accounts, has  no  bearing  on  the question of the liability of an ex-trustee to render account of  his  management  to the present  trustee  and  does  not provide for determining or deciding a dispute in respect  of such -rendition of accounts. [287 F; 289 C; 291 H; 292 A] Case law referred to.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 605 of 1964. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and decree  dated April 12, 1963 of the Andhra Pradesh High Ccurt in S.A.  No. 124 of 1959. 281 P.   Ram Reddy and A. V. V. Nair, for the appellant. H.   R.  Gokhale, S. P. R. Vital Rao, K. Rajendra  Chaudhari and K. R. Chaudhuri, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Subba  Rao,  C.J. This appeal by special  leave  raises  the question  whether  a suit would lie at the instance  of  the present  trustees of a temple for rendition of  accounts  of the management of the temple by the ex-trustees. The appellant is Sri Vedagiri Lakshmi Narasimha Swami temple situated  at Narasimhuly konda, Nellore taluk, in the  State of  Andhra  Pradesh,  represented  by  its  trustees.    The respondent  and two others were non-hereditary  trustees  of the  said temple and functioned as such for a term  of  five years  ending  with January 1951.  The  respondent  was  the managing trustee during that period.  The new trustees  were appointed  by order of the Hindu Religious Endowments  Board dated  January  21,  1951 ; but they  were  able  to  obtain possession  of  the  temple only on July  21,  1952.   They, representing  the temple, filed O.S. No. 246 of 1953 in  the Court   of  the  Subordinate  Judge,  Nellore  against   the respondent and others for the following three reliefs :  (1) to  direct  all or such of the defendants as  may  be  found liable  to  render  a  true  and  proper  account  of  their management  of the temple and its properties since the  date of their functioning as trustees and to pay over to the  new trustees  such amounts as may be found due ; (2)  to  assess the  amount  due to the temple as a result, of  the  various acts  of  malfeasance, misfeasance and  nonfeasance  of  the defendants  1  to 3 in respect of their management,  and  to direct them to pay the same to the new trustees ; and (3) to direct the defendants 1 to 3 to deliver to the new  trustees all  documents, accounts, registers, s. 38 register,  jewels and  movable  properties,  after rendering  a  true  account thereof and failing such delivery, to pass a decree  against the defendants for their value, or pass such decree  against them  for such damages as the temple had sustained.  In  the plaint,  the new trustees alleged that the  defendants  were guilty  of acts of misfeasance, malfeasance and  nonfeasance and  also of gross negligence.  The defendants, inter  alia, apart  from denying the said allegations made against  them, pleaded that the suit was not maintainable in a civil  court in  view  of  the provisions of s. 87 of  the  Madras  Hindu Religious  and  Charitable Endowments Act, 1951 (Act  19  of 1951), hereinafter called the Act. The learned Subordinate Judge, by his judgment dated  August 12,  1953,  held that the suit was  maintainable.   He  also found  that  defendants  1 to 3 were  liable  to  render  an

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account  of  their  management during the  period  of  their trusteeship and to pay damages for the loss suffered by  the temple on account of theinr 282 acts  of misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance.   In  the result, he passed a preliminary decree in favour of the  new trustees directing the respondent and defendants 2, 5 and  6 the  legal representatives of defendant 3, to render a  true and proper account of their management of the temple and its properties  for the period commencing from the beginning  of 1946 to the date when the plaintiffs took possession of  the temple in July 1952 and to pay such amounts as may be  found due  from them on taking accounts.  The 1st  defendant,  the ex-managing  trustee  of  the temple,  preferred  an  appeal against the said decree to the court of the District  Judge, Nellore.    To  that  appeal,  the  plaintiffs   were   made respondents.  Pending the appeal, the plaint was amended and the words "of pass such decree against them for such damages as the temple has   sustained  thereby"  were  deleted  from prayer 3 of the plaint. The   learned   advocate   for   the plaintiffs made an endorsement on the   plaint    and    the appeal memo stated as follows :               "Plaintiffs have given up prayer in respect of               the   damages  as  endorsed  by  the   learned               advocate  on behalf of the plaintiffs  on  the               plaint on 20-8-1958." The  learned  District Judge also recorded in  his  judgment that  the  appellant (respondent herein) did not  press  his appeal  in respect of the claim for damages given up by  the plaintiffs.  Prima facie this amendment related only to  the prayer  to  deliver to the new trustees  the  documents  and other  movable  properties  and did  not  affect  the  other prayers   for  rendition  of  accounts  on  the  ground   of malfeasance, misfeasance and nonfeasance of the  defendants. The  learned District Judge understood the finding given  by the learned Subordinate Judge as follows :               "Setting  out  all these things in  detail  in               paras  13 and 14 of his judgment, the  learned               Subordinate Judge came to the conclusion  that               it  was  sufficient  to  say  that  there   is               liability   to  account  in  respect  of   the               management  on  the part of  the  ex-trustees,               i.e.,  defendants 1 and 3, and that  they  are               liable  to pay to temple whatever  damages  it               has  suffered  on  account of  their  acts  of               misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance."               After  considering the relevant  evidence  and               the  case law on the subject, he came  to  the               following conclusion :               "  I  have  no hesitation  to  hold  that  the               plaintiffs have established liability for  ex-               trustees to render account of their management               to  deliver possession of the  other  property               yet to be delivered and also the records  men-               tioned in the plaint." The  learned  District  Judge, therefore,  agreed  with  the learned Subordinate Judge that the defendants had to  render accounts  283 of  their management of the temple and to pay to the  temple damages  suffered  by  it  on  account  of  their  acts   of misfeasance, malfeasance and nonfeasance.  In the result the decree of the learned Subordinate Judge was confirmed. But,  on Second Appeal, Jaganmohan Reddy, J., of the  Andhra Pradesh High Court, held that the suit for accounts was  not

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maintainable.   The reasoning of the learned Judge is  found in the following observations :               "It is true that a suit for back accounting on               the  authority  of the decisions  cited  above               does  not lie and unfortunately in  this  case               though the frame of the suit was for  recovery               of  damages for negligence of the trustees  in               not  taking leases, in not filing rent  suits,               in  not  collecting rents  and  generally  for               other acts of negligence, that plea was  given               up  by the respondents, probably because  they               were  not  in a position  to  establish  these               facts.    The   learned   advocate   for   the               respondents admits that this plea was given up               by  the clients and in the  circumstances  the               only relief that the respondents claim against               the   appellant   now  is  one   for   general               accounting  relating  to  the  management   or               administration  of  the  trust  property   and               applying  the principle laid down by  the  two               judgments  of this Court in  Venkataratnam  v.               Narasimha  Rao  (1) and  Sri  Saraveswaraswami               Vari  temple v. Veerabhadrayya (2),  1  cannot               but  hold  that suit will not he and  in  this               view, the appeal is allowed and the  judgments               and  the decrees of the courts below  are  set               aside." Though,  prima  facie,  as  we have  said  earlier,  we  are inclined to hold that what was given up by the appellant was only a part of the third relief, in view of the  unambiguous admission made by the learned advocate for the appellant and recorded  in  the  judgment of the High Court,  we  have  no option but to hold that the appellant had given up the  plea of  wilful default against the defendants and  confined  the relief only to a rendition of accounts by them in respect of their  management of the temple during their tenure  and  to pay the amount that might be found due to the appellant. Mr. P. Ram Reddy, learned counsel for the  appellant-temple, raised before us three points : (1) The suit was for damages for   gross  negligence  and  the  learned  Judge  did   not appreciate  the correct scope of the concession made by  the learned  advocate appearing for the temple before  him.  (2) Section 93 of the Act is not a bar to a suit by the  present trustees  against the ex-trustees for rendition of  accounts of their management of the temple (1) [1960] 2 Andh.  W.R. 319. M15Sup.CI/66-5 (2) [1961] 1 Andh.  W.R. 25J. 284 properties  and recovery of the amounts due from  them.  (3) The  learned  Judge went wrong in holding that  a  suit  for back-accounting would not lie. On  the  first point we have already expressed  our  opinion earlier that, in view of the unambiguous concession made  by the  learned  advocate  for the appellant  before  the  High Court,  we must hold that the suit, after the  amendment  of the plaint, was confined only to rendition of accounts,  not on  account  of wilful default or negligence, but  only  for rendition of accounts by the ex-trustees of their management and to pay the amounts due to the present trustees. The question, therefore, is whether the present trustees can demand  a  rendition  of accounts from  the  ex-trustees  in respect  of their management without alleging  against  them any acts of negligence or wilful default and, if so, whether s. 93 of the Act was a bar to the maintainability of a  suit

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for the relief of rendition of accounts in a civil court. It  is  common  place that no trustee can  get  a  discharge unless   he  renders  accounts  of  his  management.    This liability  is irrespective of any question of negligence  or wilful  default.   In  the  present  case,  the  ex-trustees admittedly  did  not  give an account  of  their  management though  they  put  the  plaintiffs  in  possession  of   the properties  in the year 1952 and that too after  adopting  a course of obstructive attitude.  They are, therefore, liable to  render  accounts  of their  management  to  the  present trustees. The  decisions relied upon by the learned Judge to not  sup- port the view that an ex-trustee need not render accounts in the absence of allegations of negligence or wilful  default. In  V. K. Kelu Achan v. C.S. Sivarama Pattar (1) one of  the questions raised was whether the 1st defendant therein,  who was  a karnavan of a tarwad and also the manager  of  temple properties,  should be made to give a general  rendition  of accounts of his management from 1900.  It was found in  that case  that the 1st defendant was not personally  responsible for any loss to the temple, that no relief for rendition  of accounts  was asked for against him and that he was not  the person who was maintaining the accounts. on those facts, the High  Court  refused  to  give  a  decree  against  the  1st respondent  for  back-accounting.   In  the  course  of  the judgment the following observations were made :               "It  is  a general principle  also  that  back               accounting will not be decreed except on proof               of  dishonesty and malversation, and  we  have               not  found  any such proof  here  against  the               present trustee." These  observations  do not circumscribe the  scope  of  the court’s  discretion,  but  only lay down  a  guide  for  its exercise.  They must (1)  A.I.R. 1928 Madras 879, 887.  285 be read in the context of the facts found in that case.  Nor the decision in The Madura etc.  Devasthanams v.  Doraiswami Nayudu(1)  lays down any such wide proposition.  There,  the executive officer of a temple sought to recover from its ex- trustee a certain amount by way of damages on foot of  gross negligence.  It was found that the trustee was not guilty of any wilful default and that he was justified in acting  upon the vouchers and accounts furnished by the law department of the  Devasthanam and also that it was not  established  that any items were really due to the temple.  On those facts the suit  was  dismissed.  Briefly stated, that was a  suit  for rendition of account on the ground of wilful default in  the course of management of the temple affairs and, as no wilful default  had  been established, the suit  for  accounts  was dismissed.,  It  is not an authority for the  position  that unless wilful default is established an ex-trustee need  not account to the present trustee and to pay to him the  amount due  under the said accounts.  In the case of  rendition  of accounts  by  an ex-trustee to a present  trustee,  it  will necessarily  relate to back accounting, for no  question  of accounting in future arises in his case.  The question  that invariably arises in such a context is as to what period  he shall be made liable to render accounts.  That depends  upon the  facts of each case.  Sir Thomas Flumer, M. R., said  in Attorney General v. Exetor Mayor (2) :               "It has, I think, been properly stated on both               sides, that there is no fixed limit of time in               directing  an account against a trustee  of  a               charity,........ It does not, however,  follow

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             that  the relief will be given after  a  great               length  of time, it being the constant  course               of  Courts  of  Equity  to  discourage   stale               demands ; even in cases of fraud, in which, if               recent, there would have been no doubt,  lapse               of time has induced the Courts to refuse their               interference.   In  cases of  charities,  this               principle has often been acted on. When  there               has  been a long period, during which a  party               has, under an innocent mistake, misapplied,  a               fund, from the leaches and neglect of  others,               that is, from no one of the public setting him               right,   and   when  the  accounts   have   in               consequence become entangled, the Court, under               its   general  discretion,   considering   the               enormous  expense of the enquiries, the  great               hardships  of calling upon representatives  to               refund what families have spent, acting on the               notion  of its being their property, has  been               in  the  habit, while giving  the  relief,  of               fixing a period to the account." These observations were followed by a Division Bench of the- Madras High Court in Sanyasayya v. Murthamma (3).  Where (1) [1943] 1 M.L.J. 144. (2) [1822] 37 E.R. 918. (3)  A.I.R. 1919 Madras 943. 286 a  suit was filed for an account for the year 1884  and  the 1st defendant was asked to account for the management of his father  and grand-father, the learned Judges of  the  Madras High Court fixed the period of accounting at 12 years.   The said  observations  were also followed by  the  Andhra  High Court  in  Hariharabrahmam v. Janakiramiah (1)  and,  having regard  to  the circumstances in that case,  the  said  High Court  directed  accounts to be taken for a  period  of  six years prior to 1938. In  the present case the learned subordinate Judge  and  the learned  District  Judge, in exercise of  their  discretion, having regard to the circumstances of the case, directed the respondent  to  render accounts of his management  from  the beginning of the year 1946 to the date when then  plaintiffs took  possession of the temple in July 1952.  We do not  see any  justification to interfere with the discretion  of  the courts in that regard. The  next question is whether s. 93 of the Act is a  bar  to the maintainability of the suit.  The said section reads :               "No suit or other legal proceeding in  respect               of  the  administration  or  management  of  a               religious  institution or any other matter  or               dispute  for  determining  or  deciding  which               provision  is  made  in  this  Act  shall   be               instituted in any Court of law, except  under,               and in conformity with, the provisions of this               Act." The  learned  counsel for the appellant  contended  that  in order to invoke this section the following conditions  shall be  complied with: (1) The suit shall be in respect  of  the administration  or management of a religious  institution  ; (2) it shall be in respect of any other matter in dispute  ; and  (3)  for determining or deciding such a suit  or  other legal proceeding there shall be a provision in the Act ;  if there  is such a provision, such a suit or proceeding  could not  be instituted in any court of law except under, and  in conformity  with,  the provisions of the Act.   The  further argument was that the administration or management  referred

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to  in  s.  93 related to s. 58 of the Act,  and  the  other matters  of dispute related to s. 57 thereof, and  that,  as the suit for rendition of accounts did not fall either under s. 57 or under s. 58 of the Act, the present suit for such a relief was outside the scope of s. 93 of the Act. Mr.  Gokhale, learned counsel for the respondent,  contended that Ch.  VII of the Act provided for rendition of  accounts and  a  machinery for determining or  deciding  disputes  in respect thereof, and that, therefore, no suit or other legal proceeding  could be taken in any court except under and  in conformity with the provisions of that Chapter. (1) A.I.R. 1955 Andhra 18.  287 Under s. 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the courts  shall have  jurisdiction  to  try  all suits  of  a  civil  nature excepting   suits  of  which  their  cognizance  is   either expressly  or  impliedly  barred.  It  is  a  well   settled principle  that a party seeking to oust the jurisdiction  of an ordinary civil court shall establish the right to do  so. Section  93  of the Act does not impose a total bar  on  the maintainability of a suit in a civil court.  It states  that a  suit  of the nature mentioned therein can  be  instituted only  in conformity with the provisions of the Act; that  is to  say,  a  suit or other legal proceeding  in  respect  of matters not covered by the section can be instituted in  the ordinary  way.  It therefore imposes certain statutory  res- trictions  on suits or other legal proceedings  relating  to matters  mentioned therein.  Now, what are those  matters  ? They are : (1) administration  or  management  of  religious institutions ; and (2)   any  other  matter or  dispute  for determining or deciding which provision, is made in the Act. The  clause  "determining or deciding which a  provision  is made  in this Act", on a reasonable construction, cannot  be made to qualify "the administration or management" but  must be  confined only to any other matter or dispute.  Even  so, the  expression  "administration or  management"  cannot  be construed  widely  so  as  to take  in  any  matter  however remotely  connected with the administration  or  management. The  limitation  on the said words is found  in  the  phrase "except under and in conformity with the provisions of  this Act."  To  state it differently, the said  phrase  does  not impose  a  total  bar on a suit in a civil  court  but  only imposes a restriction on suits or other legal proceedings in respect of matters for which a provision is made in the Act. Any other construction would lead to an incongruity, namely, there will be a vacuum in many areas not covered by the  Act and   the  general  remedies  would  be  displaced   without replacing them by new remedies. The  history  of  this  provision  also  supports  the  said interpretation.   Sub-section  (2) of s. 92 of the  Code  of Civil Procedure says :               "Save as provided by the Religious  Endowments               Act, 1863, no suit claiming any of the reliefs               specified   in   subsection   (1)   shall   be               instituted in respect of any such trust as  is               therein referred to except in conformity  with               the provisions of that sub-section." Suits  for  reliefs mentioned in sub-s.(1) of s. 92  of  the Code  of Civil Procedure can only be instituted  in  special courts and in the manner mentioned therein.  Construing  the said  sub-section, a Full Bench of the Madras High Court  in Appanna v. Narasinga (1) held that a suit by a trustee of  a public religious trust against a co-trustee for accounts did not fall within the section, though the relief claimed (1)  (1922) I.L.R. 45 Madras 113.

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288 was  the one specified in sub-s. (1), cl. (d).   The  reason given  was  that  the relief was sought not  in  the  larger interest  of  the  public  but merely  for  the  purpose  of vindicating  the private rights of one ,of the trustees  and of  enabling  him to discharge the  duties  and  liabilities which  were  imposed upon him by the  trust.   Another  Full Bench  of  the  Madras  High  Court  in  Tirumalai  Tirupati Devasthanam  ,Committee v. Udiavar Krishnayya Sahnbhaga  (1) held that the ,said section did not apply where the  general trustees  of  a public temple sued the trustees  of  certain offerings  given to the deity, for accounts, on  the  ground that in that suit the right of the public was not sought  to be enforced but only the personal rights of the trustees qua the trustees. These  decisions  indicate that s. 92 of the Code  of  Civil Procedure  does not impose a general embargo on filing of  a suit  in a civil court, but only directs that suits  of  the nature   mentioned  in  sub-s.(1)  thereof  shall   not   be instituted  in a civil court except in conformity  with  the provisions  of  the said ’sub-section.  If a suit  does  not fall within the ambit of s. 92(1) of the Code of Civil  Pro- cedure,  it is not hit also by sub-s.(2) thereof.  When  the Madras  Hindu  Religious  Endowments Act  (2  of  1927)  was passed, in respect of the endowments covered by that Act, s. 73  of  that  Act  replaced  s. 92  of  the  Code  of  Civil Procedure.   Sub-section  (4) ,thereof, which was  added  by Madras Act X of 1946 read :               "No  suit or other legal  proceeding  claiming               any relief provided in this Act in respect  of               such  administration  or management  shall  be               instituted except under and in conformity with               the provisions of this Act." The  expression  "except under and in  conformity  with  the provisions  of  this Act" in the said  sub-section  is  also found  in  s.  93 of the Act.  The scope of  the  said  sub- section  came under judicial scrutiny in  Manjeshwar  Srimad Anantheswar  Temple v. Vaikunta Bhakta (2) Therein  Horwill, J., summarised the legal position reached in respect of  the construction of that section thus :               "It  will be seen therefore that from 54  Mad.               1011  (Vythilinga  Pandarasannadhi  v.  Temple               Committee,  Tinnevelly)  onwards there  was  a               considerable body of opinion that the  general               scope  of  s. 73, Hindu  Religious  Endowments               Act,  is the same as s. 92, Civil  P.C.,  that               the  last  paragraph of s-. 73 of the  Act  is               meant  to refer only to the classes  of  cases               referred to in s. 73(1) and other sections  of               the  Act,  and that suits which  do  not  fall               within  the  scope of these  sections  can  be               tried under the general law.  I have not  come               across  any case in which these opinions  were               dissented    from   or    contrary    opinions               expressed," (1) A.I.R. 1943 Madras 466. (2) A.I.R. 1943 Madras 228, 230.  289 Sub-section (4), which corresponds to s. 93 of the Act,  was held  not  to impose a total bar on a civil  suit  but  only confined to suits relating to the classes of cases  referred to in s. 73(1) and other sections of the Act.  Section 93 of the  Act enlarges the scope of s. 73(4) thereof It bars  not only suits or legal proceedings in respect of administration or management of religious institutions but also in  respect

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of  any other matter or dispute for determining or  deciding which provision is made in the Act.  By repeating the phrase "except  under and in conformity with the provisions of  the Act"    which    had   received    authoritative    judicial interpretation  when it remained in s. 73(4) of the  earlier Act,  the  Legislature  must be held to  have  accepted  the interpretation  put  upon  the phrase  by  the  courts.   It follows  that  s. 93 will apply only to  matters  for  which provision  has been made in the Act.  It does not bar  suits under the general law which do not fall within the scope  of any section of the Act. Even  so, the learned counsel for the  respondent  contended that  Ch.  VII of the Act provided a complete machinery  for deciding  disputes in regard to accounts and, therefore,  no suit for accounting against an ex-trustee could be filed  in a  civil  court.  This interpretation was  accepted  by  two decisions of the Andhra Pradesh High Court.  The decision in Venkataratnam  v.  Narasimha Rao(1) dealt with a case  of  a suit  filed with the permission of the Advocate General  for removing   the  trustee,  for  framing  a  scheme  for   the management  of  the  trust property, for  appointing  a  new trustee and for accounts and other incidental reliefs.   The contesting defendant pleaded inter alia that because of  the provisions of the Madras Act 19 of 1951, the suit could  not be entertained by the civil court, and that s. 93 was a  bar to such a suit.  The Andhra Pradesh High Court held that  s. 93  of the Act clearly interdicted the determination of  the subject matter of the suit by a civil court.  The  reasoning of the decision is summarized thus :               "Now the suit is entirely based on allegations               of  breach  of  trust and  every  one  of  the               reliefs prayed for in the plaint can flow from               appropriate action that officers named in  the               Act may take.  The first relief sought in  the               present  plaint can result from  action  taken               under  section 45 of the Act ; the second  and               third  reliefs from action under  section  58;               the fourth from action under section 60 ;  the               6th  relief from action under section  57  and               the relief numbered and lettered as 6(a)  from               action under section 87."               The High Court also observed               "In  our  opinion, all these are  ’matters  or               disputes  for  determining or  deciding  which               provision is made’ in the Act."               (1)   [1960] 2 Andh.  W.R. 319, 323.               290               On  that basis it held that s. 93 of  the  Act               was a bar to the maintainability of the  suit.               It may be mentioned that the observation  that               the  fourth  relief could result  from  action               under s. 60 appears to be a mistake, for s. 60               applies  only  to a defunct  religious  insti-               tution.               In   Sri   Sarveswaraswami  Vari   Temple   v.               Rudrapaka  Veerabhadrayya(1)   Seshachelapati,               J., speaking for the court, said thus               "It will be seen, as correctly observed by the               learned  Subordinate Judge, that  the  section               has  two  limbs.  The  first  limb  interdicts               suits or other legal proceedings with  respect               to the administration or management of the re-               ligious  institution.  The second limb  enacts               an  embargo on suits and legal proceedings  on               any   other   matter  in   dispute   for   the

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             determination  of which a provision  had  been               made in this Act." There, the suit was by the present trustees for the recovery of the temple properties from the hereditary archakas.   The High  Court held that such a suit was not one in respect  of the   administration  or  management  of  the  temple   and, therefore,  it  did not attract the embargo entered  in  the first  limb of the section.  This decision, therefore,  held that  unless  the  suit fell within  the  classes  of  suits mentioned in s. 93 of the Act, the provisions of the section were not attracted. It leads us to the consideration of the scope of Chapter VII of  the  Act.   If  Chapter VII  of  the  Act  provides  for determining or deciding a dispute in respect of rendition of accounts, s. 93 of the Act would be attracted.  The  heading of  the  said  Chapter is  "Budgets,  Accounts  and  Audit". Section 70 provides for the presentation of budgets and  the particulars to be mentioned therein. Section 71 enjoins upon a  trustee of every institution to keep regular accounts  of receipts and disbursements.  Section 71(4) prescribes for an audit  of the accounts every year.  Section 72  directs  the auditor to send a report of the results of the audit to  the prescribed  authorities.  Section 73 enumerates the  matters in  respect  of which the auditor has to  send  his  report. Section  74 directs the prescribed authorities to  send  the said  report  to  the trustees  for  remedying  the  defects pointed  out  therein.   The  Area  Committee,  one  of  the prescribed  authorities  under s. 74(2) of the Act,  has  to forward to the Commissioner the report of the auditor  along with  the  report  of the trustees, if  any,  and  with  his remarks.  If the Commissioner thinks that the trustee or any other  person is guilty of misappropriation or wilful  waste of funds of the ninstitu- (1)  [1961] 1 Andh.  W.R. 250, 251.  291 tion  or  of  gross  neglect resulting  in  a  loss  to  the institution, after making the requisite inquiry, certify the amount so lost and direct the trustee or such person to  pay within a specified time such amount personally and not  from the  funds of the religious institution.  On the receipt  of such an order, the trustee can apply to a court to modify or set aside the same.  Instead of filing an application to the Court, he has an alternative remedy to file an appeal to the Government  which  shall pass such order as it  thinks  fit. Under  sub-s. (7) of s. 74, an order of surcharge under  the section against a trustee shall not bar a suit for  accounts against  him except in respect of the matter  finally  dealt with  by  such order.  Sub-section (8)  thereof  provides  a machinery  for collecting the said amounts from the  trustee or other person by way of surcharge. Relying  upon  the scheme of this Chapter, it  is  contended that it provides an exhaustive and self-contained  machinery for  scrutinizing the accounts, for orders of surcharge  and to  recover the amount surcharged from the trustee or  other persons  and  for  a  suit  to  set  aside  such  orders  or alternatively  for  an appeal to the  Government  and  that, therefore,  no  suit  for rendition of  accounts  would  lie dehors the provisions of the Act. We  find it difficult to accept this argument.  Chapter  VII only provides for a strict supervision of the financial side of  the administration of an institution.  The scope of  the auditor’s investigation is limited.  It is only an effective substitute  for  the trustee himself furnishing  an  audited account.   It is concerned only with the current  management of  a trustee.  It does not even exonerate a trustee of  his

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liability  to  render accounts except to  a  limited  extent mentioned  in sub-s. (7) of s. 74 ; it only facilitates  the rendition of accounts.  Under sub-s. (7) of s. 74, an  order of surcharge under that section against a trustee shall  not bar a suit against him except in matters finally dealt  with in  such order.  This shows by necessary implication that  a suit  can be filed for accounts against a trustee  in  other respects.   In  any  view, it has nothing  to  do  with  the management  of a temple by a previous trustee.  It  is  con- tended  that  under sub-s. (5) of s. 74 the trustee  or  any other person aggrieved by such order may file a suit in  the civil   court  or  prefer  an  appeal  to   the   Government questioning the order of the Commissioner and, therefore, it is open to any member of the public to file a suit under the Act.   "Any person" there only refers to a person  mentioned in  sub-s.  (3) of s. 74, i.e., a person who  is  guilty  of misappropriation  or  wilful  waste  of  the  funds  of  the institution  etc.  It obviously refers to a trustee or  some other person in management of the institution who is  guilty of  misappropriation.  We, therefore, hold that Chapter  VII of the Act has no bearing on the question of liability of an ex-trustee  to render account to the present trustee of  his management.  Chapter VII does not provide for 292 determining  or  deciding  a  dispute  in  respect  of  such rendition of accounts.  If so, it follows that s. 93 of  the Act is not a bar to the maintainability of such a suit. In the result, we set aside the decree of the High Court and restore   that  of  the  learned  Subordinate  Judge.    The respondent will pay the costs of the appellant throughout. V.P.S.                                     Appeal allowed. 293