Ugamsingh & Mishrimal Vs. Kesrimal
& Ors, [1970] INSC 242 (26 November 1970)
26/11/1970 REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN REDDY, P.
JAGANMOHAN SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION: 1971 AIR 2540 1971 SCR (2) 836
ACT:
Worship-Right of-If of a civil nature for which
suit maintainable--Idol of Adeshwarji in temple at Paroli-If idol of Digambri
or Swetambri Jain sect idol.
HEADNOTE:
Respondents 1 to 9 filed a suit against the
Appellants and some of the other respondents for a declaration that they hid
been carrying on, and were entitled to the worship without interference of the
idol of Adeshwarji in the temple named after him at Paroli according to the
tenets observed by the Digambri Sect of the Jain religion. They further alleged
: that the temple was constructed and the idol consecrated according to and by
the followers of their sect;
that in December, 1949, the defendants had
attempted to convert the said idol into the idol of the Swetambri Sect by
putting Chakshus (artificial eyes) thereon, but were prevented due to strong
opposition of the followers of Digambri Sect. It was claimed that although a
temporary settlement was reached between the two sects while the rights in the
temple were to be adjudicated upon by a Civil Court, the defendants had made
arrangements to alter the temple according to their tenets and that they were
intending to enclose the idol by doors and locks with the object of interfering
with the free exercise of a Digambris' right to worship the idol. It was
therefore prayed that the defendants be restrained by a permanent injunction
from altering the nature and shape and appearance of the idol in any manner or
from doing any act which would interfere with the right of worship of the
followers of the Digambri Sect.
The defendants denied that the Digambri Sect
had any right of worship of the idol or had ever exercised such a right and
contended that the idol and the temple is in all respects a temple of the Jain
Swetambri Sect.
The Trial Court decreed the suit and the
District Judge in appeal as well as the High Court confirmed the decree. The
High Court also fixed three hours a day when the Digambris may use the temple
for worship- In appeal to this Court, it was contended inter alia on behalf of
the appellant that the reliefs claimed made it clear that the dispute was not
of a civil nature; and that the judgment of the Trial Court was wholly vitiated
because the Trial Judge not having accepted the evidence produced before him,
based his findings on his own inspection. It was also contended that unless the
ownership of the temple, was established or that the idol belonged to the
Digambri Sect, no injunction could be given nor could the respondents be
permitted to worship there; in the plaint the respondents had averred that the
idol is a Digambri idol and as they had failed to prove this, their right to
worship also failed.
HELD:Dismissing the appeal, (i)From the
pleadings and the controversy between the parties it was clear that the issue
was not one which was confined merely to rites and rituals but one which
effected the rights of worship. If the Digambries have a right to worship at
the temple, the attempt of the Swetam- 837 belies to put Chakshus or to place
Dhwajadand or Kalash in accordance with their tenets and to claim that the idol
is a Swetamberi idol was to preclude the Digamberies from exercising their
right to worship at the temple, with respect to which a civil suit is
maintainable under Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Code. This position is well
established. [843 B] Sir Seth Hakam Chand & Ors. vs. Maharaj Bahadur Singh
& Ors., 60 I.A. 313 and Nar Hari Sastri and Ors. vs. Shri Badrinath Temple
Committee, [1952] S.C.R. 849, referred to.
(ii)While, giving his findings the Trial
Judge remarked that the evidence led by the Plaintiffs appeared to be correct.
These observations themselves show that the evidence on record was an element
in the formulation of the Trial Court's judgment buttressed by the observations
of the learned Judge during the site inspection. it was clear that the description
given by the learned Judge of the idols in the Adeshwarji Temple and the Temple
of the Swetemberies were observations made during an inspection at which both
the Plaintiffs and Defendants Advocates were present and that there must have
been notes also in respect of the inspection made on both the occasions. There
was therefore no validity in the contention that the finding of the Trial Judge
was based entirely on the result of his inspection.
[844 G-845 C] (iii)The concurrent findings of
the Courts below that the idol was Nirker' (naked), that there were no
Chakshus, no Mukat, no Armlet, no Dhwajadand or no Kalash, would show that the
idol was consecrated by the Digamberies. It was also clear that it was an
ancient temple and that both the Digamberies and the Swetamberies worship the
idol. It was not denied that while the Digamberies will not worship an idol
which has Chakshus or which has clothes or Mukat, the Swetamberies would
worship a Digamberi idol without these and hence the right to worship a
Digamberi idol by both the sects is possible and it has been rightly so held by
all the courts. [846 E] Once the right of worship of Digamberies was
established they would be entitled to the injunction sought for by them against
the Appellants from preventing them from worshiping or from interfering with
that right by placing Chakshus in the idol, Dhwajadand, Kalash on the Temple..
The directions of the High Court extending
the time for worship by Digamberi Sect from one hour to three hours was not
unreasonable. [848 A-B]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal
No. 158 of 1967.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and
order dated August 5, 1966 of the Rajasthan High Court. in S. P. Civil Regular
Second Appeal No. 222 of 1964.
S. T. Desai, P. C. Bhartari, J. B. Dadachanji
and Pukhraj Singh, for the appellant.
S.V. Gupte, K. K. Jain and H. K. Puri, for
respondents Nos. 1 to 9.
That Judgment of the Court was delivered by
P.Jaganmohan, Reddy, J. This Appeal by Special Leave of this Court is against
the Judgment of a Single Judge of the Rajas- 838 than High Court affirming the
Judgment and decree of the, District Court with certain variations.
Respondents 1 to 9 filed a suit against the
Appellants and Respondents 10 and 11 and two others for a declaration that they
have been carrying on and are entitled to carry on Darshan, Prakshal and Poojan
etc. of the idol of Adeshwarji, the first Tirthankar in the Temple named after
him at Paroli without interference according to the tenets observed by the Digambri
Sect of the Jain religion.' The said Temple of Shri Adeshwarji is said to have
been in existence for 200 years while, the Respondents aver that the
inscriptions on it bear Vikram Samvat 1510 (1454 AD).
The Plaintiffs further alleged that the
Temple was constructed and the idol, was consecrated according to and by the
followers of the tenets of the Digamber sect; that the Plaintiffs and the other
followers of the Digamber Sect have been performing Darshan, Prakshal and
Poojan of the said idol according to their tenets every since the Temple was
founded; that on the 23rd of December 1949 the Defendants attempted to convert
the said idol into the idol of Swetambri Sect by putting Chakshus (artificial
eyes ) thereon, but were prevented from doing so by a strong opposition of the
followers of the Digamber Sect; that thereafter some temporary arrangements
were made between the followers of the two Sects who agreed to maintain the
status-quo until a decision of the Civil Court on the rival claims of the parties
was given; that in disregard of the temporary settlement and without getting
the rights in the Temple adjudicated upon by the Civil Court, the Defendants
made arrangements to put Dhwajadand and Kalash on the said Temple according to
their tenets,, and that they also further learnt that the Defendants were
intending to enclose the said idol by putting up doors and locks with the.
object of interfering with and obstructing the free exercise by the Digamberies
of their unfettered rights to perform Poojan, Prakshal and worship of the said
ideal according to their tenets. On these allegations it was prayed that the
Defendants be restrained by a permanent injunction from (i) erecting the
Dhwajadand, and putting up Kalash; (ii) enclosing the idols by putting up doors
and locks; or in any manner altering the nature and shape and appearance of the
idols installed in the said Temple; or directly or indirectly doing any act or
thing which may have the effect of wounding the religious susceptibilities and
sentiments of the followers of the Digamberi-Jain Sect; and (iii) from
interfering with the free and unfettered rights of the Plaintiffs of performing
Darshan. Prakshal and Poojan and other rites according to the tenets of
Digamber Jain Sect.
839 The Defendants did not deny that they intended
to put the Netras' but said that they did so because the Netras which the idol
had even before the said date having been damaged and fallen out, new Netras
were put up. They further claimed that since its existence the Temple of Adeshwarji
has been in the possession of the Defendants who have been in exclusive
management of the Temple and its property; that the Plaintiffs never used to do
Poojan or Prakshal in the Temple nor had they any Tight thereto, and that when
in 1949 there was a dispute between the parties a temporary arrangement was
made but the Defendants did not admit any right of Plaintiffs to Poojan. It,
was further averred that the said- idol and the Temple is in all respects Jain
Swetambri Sect, that it has been so used and described in all the historic
records from time to time and that the Civil Court had no jurisdiction to
decide the religious rights of the parties nor is it a dispute of a civil
nature.
On these pleadings issues were framed on
3-12-55 but subse- quently after the evidence in the case was recorded and
having regard thereto fresh issues were framed in substitution of the former
ones on 4-6-57 but thereafter no evidence was led by either party. The
controversy between the parties as is evident from these issues was, as to
which Sect of the Jains the main idol of Adeshwarji belongs, which Sect has
constructed the upper portion of the idol referred to and the nearby portion of
the temple; under what tenets have the followers of the Sects, Digamber and Swetamber,
performed Darshan, Prakshal and Poojan of the idol of the temple referred to
and can any Sect change those previous tenets-, whether the Notras (artificial
eyes) of the idol, Bhujband and Dhwajadand over the temple existed before and
if not, can they be placed and inserted now; and whether the Temple is in
possession and under the management of the Defendants alone from the time it
came into existence.
The Civil Judge of Bhilwara decreed the suit
of the Plain- tiffs, against which the Defendants appealed. The District Judge,
however, allowed the appeal and dismissed the suit on the ground that in his
opinion no question of any right to property or office was involved in the
suit' and consequently the plaintiffs suit was dismissed with costs.
On an appeal from this Judgment the High
Court allowed the Appeal holding that inasmuch as the allegations in the plaint
relate to an assertion of a right of worship and an interference with that
right, a dispute of civil nature arises which is, clearly cognizable by a Civil
Court. In this view the case was, remanded to the District Judge for
determining the appeal on merits. Leave to Appeal was also refused.
840 After remand the District Judge confirmed
the Judgment and decree of the Trial Court with certain variations. Against
this Judgment the Appellants filed an appeal to the High Court and the
Respondents filed cross objections. The High Court affirmed the Judgment of the
District Judge except for that part of the decree directing the Appellants to
keep open the doors of the Temple between 8.30 and 9.30 each morning to enable
the Respondents to worship without interference, which, however, was modified
to enable Respondents to worship at the Temple between 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. every
morning, during which time the Temple was not to be locked. It further directed
that if the Swetambaries wanted also to worship during this period without
disturbing the Digamberies they had the liberty to do so.
The learned Advocate for the Appellants Shri
S. T. Desai urged several contention before us namely; (i) the High Court was
in error in not deciding the ownership of the Temple or of the idol; (ii) that
it should have held that a presumption of ownership would arise having regard
to the concurrent findings that the Swetamberies were in management and
possession of the Temple; (iii) that the reliefs claimed make it clear that the
dispute is not of a civil nature for in any view of the matter the Courts were
in error that placing of the Dhwajadand and Kalash on the Temple changes the
nature of the temple; (iv) that the High Court should not have accepted the
cross appeal fixing 3 hours time for the worship of the Digamberies Sect; (v)
that the Judgment of the Trial Court is wholly vitiated because the Trial Judge
not having accepted the evidence based his findings on his own inspection.
Before as deal with these contentions, it is
necessary to detail the findings of the Courts below The Trial Court while
decreeing the Plaintiff's suit held that though it was not proved as to who built
the Temple of Adeshwarji initially, both Digamberies and Swetamberies
worshipped in the said Temple; that the management and the possession of the
Temple was with the Defendants Swetamberies for a long time, that the
Swetamberies were not entitled to put artificial eyes or to put Dhwajadand or
Kalash on the Temple; and that the Defendants were trying to interfere with the
rights of the Plaintiffs' and were making alterations to transform the
character of the Temple. In this view the Trial Judge gave a declaration in
favour of the Plaintiffs against Defendants in their personal capacity as well
as representatives of the Jain Swetamberies Sect that the Plaintiffs or the
followers of the Digamberi Sect have been performing Prakshal, Poojan and
Darshan and are also entitled to do so in future. He also issued a permanent
injunction against the Defendants in their personal capacity as well as
representatives 841 of the Jain Swetamberi Sect restraining them from changing
the shape and appearance of the idol by putting Netras (artificial eyes),
Armlets, and Mukat, from erecting Dhwajadand and putting Kalash on the Temple
and putting locks on the shutters of the Temple. The Appellants were further
directed not to restrain the followers of the Jain Digamber Sect from
performing Darshan, Poojan and Prakshal according to their tenets. After the
remand Appellants urged before the District Judge the following contentions :
(1)That the Temple belongs to Swetamber Sect
and the Plaintiffs are entitled to have Darshan only of the idol, otherwise
they have got no right to worship it according to their tenets;
(2) That the idol being Swetamberi, the
Defendants are entitled to put artificial eyes in the idol, Dhwajadand and
Kalash on them Temple;
(3) That the Defendants having been managing
the Temple for the last so many years, their management cannot be interfered
with it for the betterment of the idol, it is kept under lock, it cannot be
said to wound the sentiments and religious feelings of the Plaintiffs.
The District Judge held on the first
contention that though the Temple is admittedly an old one there is not an iota
of evidence as to who constructed the Temple originally; that the Appellants
have been in management- and possession of the Temple, which fact was not really
challenged by the Respondents, though this by itself does not imply that the
Temple is a Swetamberi Temple. It was also contended that the Respondents had
no right to worship the idol but can only have Darshan. This contention was
also rejected on a review of the evidence led by both parties, and also, by
relying on Exh. 1 which embodied a compromise between the two Sects under which
the right of the Respondents to worship the idol was specifically admitted.
On the second point urged before him the District
Judge held that the Appellants case that there were eyes already in the idol,
but as they got damaged they wanted to replace them is not substantiated by the
evidence led on behalf of the Appellants themselves. It also held that an
attempt was made by, the Swetamberies in 1949 to install the eyes in the idol
and that as most of the Appellant's witnesses admitted that though Dhwajadand
was offered on certain occasions which were retained by the Oswals
(Swetamberies) there was no Dhwajadand and Kalash on the temple itself.
On the third point it was held that the
Appellants, who were in management and possession of the Temple for the last so
many- 842 years, have a right to lock the main Temple, to prevent it from being
defiled, which does. not in any way interfere with the right of worship of the
Respondents or any other person on their behalf. This being so' the Trial
Courts decree excepting for restraining the Appellants to lock the Temple was
affirmed subject to the further,direction as already noticed keeping the Temple
open for worship of the Respondents and the Digambaries Sect between 8.30 and
9.30 a.m.
When the appeal and cross objections were
pending before the High Court the Appellants filed an application under Order
41, Rule 27 of the Civil Procedure Code for recording the evidence of Shri
Satya Prakash Srivastava, Director of Archaeology and Museum, Rajasthan to
establish the denominational identity of. the idol in the Temple. It was stated
in that, application that since he District Judge had remarked that the parties
had not produced sufficient evidence and it was not possible to come to any
conclusions regarding the nature of the idol as to whether it is Swetamberi or
Digamberi, the petitioner had moved the Direc- tor of Archeology who after a
thorough examination came to the conclusion that the idol was Swetamberi. In
view of this Report it was prayed that the said Director be called in evidence
and be examined. In the alternative it was prayed that the case be remanded to
the Trial Court for allowing the parties to lead additional evidence so that
effective adjudication can be made. The High Court however,- did not feel the
need for any additional evidence as the case could be disposed of on the
material on record.
In this view it dismissed the application.
Even before us the learned Advocate for the Appellant tried to persuade us to
look into that Report and urged that the evidence of the Director was necessary
and ought to have been allowed to be adduced. In view of the concurrent findings
of all the Courts on certain material aspects of the case to which we shall
presently refer, it is possible to determine the controversy between the
parties, as such we agree with the High Court that no additional evidence is
required at this stage, though the parties could have led better evidence in
the initial stages itself.
It was further contended on behalf of the
Appellants that the Respondents suit was not maintainable because it did not
involve a dispute of a Civil nature. Respondents' learned Advocate though he
first indicated that he would raise a preliminary objection to this contention
being urged because when the High Court set aside the Judgment of the District
Judge and remanded the case to be decided on merits holding that the suit was
maintainable as it raised a dispute of a civil nature, the Appellants ought to
have appealed to the Supreme Court. The learned Advocate for the Appellants
however contends that the remand order of the 843 High Court did not finally
dispose of the rights of the parties as such it is open to him to urge in this
appeal that the suit was not maintainable on the ground that it does not raise
any dispute of a civil nature. Though the preliminary objection was not
subsequently pressed even on the merits, the learned Advocate for the Appellant
is unable to satisfy us that the suit is not of a civil nature. From the
pleadings and the controversy between the parties it is clear that the issue is
not one which is confined merely to rites and rituals but one which effects the
rights of worship namely whether the Swetamberies by placing Chakshus,
Dhwajadand and Kalash according to their tenets or by locking the temple could
preclude the Digamberies from worshipping in accordance with their tenets. It
is admitted that the Digamberies will not worship the idol which is not
Nirakar' or which has Chakshus. If the Digamberies have a right to worship at
the temple the attempt of the Swetamberies to put Chakshus or to place
Dhwajadand or Kalash in accordance with their tenets and to claim that the idol
is a Swetamberi idol was to preclude the Digamberies from exercising their
right to worship at the temple. These findings clearly establish that the
Appellants interfered with the rights of Digamberies to worship with respect to
which a civil suit is maintainable under Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Code.
This position is well established.
If authority was needed we may refer only to
two cases. The Privacy Council in Sir Seth Hukam Chand & Ors. v. Maharaj
Bahadur Singh & Ors.(1), had to deal with the practices observed by
Digamberies and Swetamberies on the Parasnath Hill which is considered to be
sacred by. both the Sects but in respect of which the Digamberies objected to
the continuous employment of human beings on the Hill and against building
thereon of Dwellings necessarily involving according to their tenets of a
sacrilegious pollution and desecration of the sacred hill, while the
Swetamberies had no such belief. Sir John Wallace delivering the opinion of the
Board observed :"These are matters for the Jain themselves and the Civil
Courts are only concerned with them in so far as they are relevant to questions
of civil right such as an alleged interference with the Plaintiffs rights to
worship on the hill, and in that case the issue must be not whether the acts
complained of are in accordance with orthodoxy or with previous practice, but
whether they do in fact interfere with the plaintiff's rights of worship".
Again this Court in Nar Hari Sastri and
Others v. Shri Badrinath Temple Committee (2 ) was concerned with the rights of
the Deoprayagi Pandas to enter the Badrinath Temple alongwith their Yajmans or
clients, which it was claimed the Pawal or the Trustee denied and threaten to
obstruct the said Deoprayagi (1) 60 LA. 313.
(2) [1952] S.C.R. 849.
844 Pandas from entering the precincts of the
Temple along with their Yajmans or from assisting the pilgrims in the matter of
Darshans etc. inside the Temple. The Defendant however, asserted that it was
neither necessary nor desirable that the plaintiffs should be allowed to
accompany their Yajmans or clients into the Temple, as he had himself made
adequate arrangements for the Darshan and worship of the pilgrims and that as
the sole Trustee and manager of the Temple he had the right to regulate entry
into the Temple so the over- crowding might be avoided and order maintained
inside it.
Mukerjea J, (as he then was) speaking for the
Court dealt with this contention in the following passage "The true
position therefore is that the Plaintiffs' right of entering the temple along
with their Yajmans is not a precarious or permissive right depending for its
existence upon the arbitrary discretion of the Temple authorities; it is a
legal right in the true sense of the expression but it can be exercised subject
to the restrictions which the Temple Committee may impose in good faith for
maintenance of order and decorum within the Temple and for ensuring proper
performance of customary worship. In our opinion, the Plaintiffs are entitled
to a declaration in this form." It is clear therefore that a right to
worship is a civil right, interference with which raises a dispute of a civil
nature though as noticed earlier dispute which are in respect of rituals or
ceremonies alone cannot be adjudicated by Civil Courts if they are not
essentially connected with Civil rights of an individual or a sect on behalf of
whom a suit is filed. In our view the contention of the learned Advocate for
the Appellant to the maintainability of the suit is not well founded.
One other objection which the learned
Advocate for the Appellants urged at the outset is that the findings of the
Trial Judge are vitiated because he did not rely on the evidence on record but
decided to which Sect the idol in dispute belongs, only on what he found on his
inspection of the idol and the Temple which cannot be evidence in the case,
without his being subjected to cross-examination. It is further contended that
even if what has been stated in the Judgment is what the Trial Judge had
observed in his inspection there is nothing to show that he had drawn up
inspection notes and made them part of the record as required under the law.
The contention that the Trial Judge had given his findings mainly on the
observations made during his inspection in the first place is based on
insufficient appreciation of what was really observed when dealing with the
question as to 845 which Sect the idol in dispute belongs. It was observed in
the Judgment that most of the witnesses produced were non- Jains and therefore,
their evidence does not carry much weight to establish to which Sect the idol
belongs. After stating that the remaining witnesses of the parties have given
statements in favour of their party the Trial Judge said that these statements
also cannot be much relied upon.
The decision of his case is based mostly on
the site inspection and the evidence on record. Even while giving the findings
the Trial Judge remarked that the evidence led by the Plaintiff appears to be
correct. These observations themselves show that the evidence on record was an
element in the formulation of the Trial Courts Judgment buttered by the
observations of the learned Judge during the site inspection. There is
therefore, no validity in the contention that the finding of the Trial Judge
was based entirely on the result of his inspection. It is also evident from a
narrative given in the Judgment of what was noticed during the inspection that
the Judge had inspected the site on two occasions once on 24-3-1956 and again a
year and two months thereafter on 23-5-1957. The details given by him could not
have been given if he had not made some inspection notes. It would also appear
that at the time of the inspection Council for the Plaintiffs- and Defendants
were present because when giving a description of the idol of Neminathji in the
Swetemberi Jain Temple when it was noticed that some portion of the idol under
the waist and naval is raised and is like a line, the Council for the
Plaintiffs pointed out to him that mark denoted the wearing of a loin cloth
while the Counsel for the Defendants said it was the mark of an Artist. Again
in respect of the observation that on the back-side and at the lower portion of
the navel some portion is raised, the Counsel for the Plaintiffs had pointed
out to the loin cloth, while the Counsel for the Defendants said that it has
been engraved by an Artist without any sense. We are satisfied that the
description given by the learned Judge of the idols in the Adeshvarji Temple
and the Temple of the Swetambaries were observations made during an inspection
at which both the Plaintiffs' and Defendants' Advocates were present and that
there must have been notes also in respect of the inspection made on both the
occasions. The Appellants had at no time made a grievance either to the
District Judge or to the High Court or even before this Court except during the
stage of arguments that there were no inspection notes nor that the inspection
was made by the Judge behind the back of the parties. if these objections had
been raised earlier the Respondents would have had an opportunity of showing
that there were inspection notes. The Judgment in our view is not based solely
on the result of personal inspection made by the Trial Judge, which inspection
was for the purposes of understanding the evidence in the case and has been so
used by the Trial Judge. We must, 846 therefore, reject the contention of the
learned Advocate for the Appellants that the finding in respect of the idol is
vitiated. In this view it is not necessary to deal with any of the decisions
referred to before us.
It was contended by Shri Desai that unless
the ownership of the Temple is established or that the idol belongs to the
Digamberies no injunction can be given nor the Plaintiffs permitted to worship.
It is argued that in the plaint the Respondents wavered that the idol is a
Digamberi idol and if they have failed to prove it then their right to worship
fails. At any rate the argument proceeds that the High Court was in error in
not deciding the ownership of the Temple or of the idol. We have earlier
indicated the plaint averments in which there is no mention of the ownership of
the Temple or of the idol but that paragraphs 2 and 3 of the plaint merely gave
a description of the Temple and the idol when it is averred that the idol was
constructed and consecrated according to and by the followers of the Digamberi
Sect and that the Plaintiffs and the other followers of the Digamberi sect have
been performing Darshan, Prakshal and Poojan of the said deity in the said
Temple for a considerable number of years past and really ever since the Temple
was founded. There is therefore, force in the contention of Shri Gupte, learned
Advocate for the Respondents that having regard to the concurrent findings of
the Courts below that the idol was Nirakar' (naked) that there were no
Chakshus, no Mukat, no Armlet, no Dhwajadand or no Kalash, would show that the
idol was consecrated by the Digamberies. It was also held as had already been
noticed that though- it is not possible to say when the Temple was constructed
and the idol consecrated it was an ancient Temple and that both the Digamberies
and the Swetamberies worship the idol. It is not denied that while the
Digamberies will not worship an idol which has Chakshus or which has clothes or
Mukat( the Swetamberies would worship a Digamberi idol without these and hence
the right to worship a Digamberi idol by both the sects is possible and indeed
has been so held by all the Courts. Even the Defendants' witnesses substantiate
these findings. We would refer to only two of these witnesses. Shri Suwa Lal
D.W. 4 even though he says that the Temple belonged to the Oswals in which he
and his father has been performing Sewa for the last 30 or 35 years on behalf
of the Oswals (Swetamberies) admitted that since he attained the age of
discretion and upto the time of giving evidence he had never seen Adinathji
wearing clothes, never saw the idol with eyes and had never seen Dhwajadand or
Kalash on the Temple and does not know whether the idol belongs to Oswals or
Saravagis (Digamberies). D.W. 3-Shri Pokhar a barber of Oswals also supports
this witness. That the Digamberies had a right to worship is also borne out by
Ex. 1 dated 847 23-12-49 which was a compromise entered into between Swetam- beries
and Digamberies at the time when the Swetamberies attempted to put Chakshus in
the idol. No doubt this was an interim arrangement till the decision of a Civil
Court adjudicating the respective rights, but there was never any question of
either Sect not having the right to worship the idol. The dispute had arisen
only as to whether Swetamberies can fix Chakshus in the idol. Exh. 1 states as
follows:
"We Panchas give this award that a
dispute had arisen between the Swetamberies and Digamberies as Swetamberies
recently fixed eyes on the idol. This new thing should not continue. These eyes
should be removed.
Digamberies have a right to perform Poojan so
they can mark saffron Tiki' and have Darshan and come back. Digambries will not
performs Prakshal, Poojan. Swetamberies will continue incurring expenses as
usual. The idol shall remain backed (Nirakar)".
The representatives of both Sects have signed
this award, as a temporary measure agreeable to both the Sects, who indicated
that they would press their rights in a Civil Court. Once the right of worship
of the Digamberies is established there is little doubt that they are entitled
to the injunction sought for by them against the Defendants Appellants from
preventing them from worshiping or from interfering with that right by placing
Chakshus in the idol, Dhwajadand, Kalash on the Temple. In view of these
findings the further question that when once it has been found that the
Swetamberies have the right of management and possession of the Temple there is
a presumption of ownership under Sec. 110 of the Evidence Act does not arise
nor is it relevant.
It is no doubt contended by the Respondents
Advocate that when consecration of an idol takes place the ownerships of the
Temple is in the idol and therefore, the question, of presumption under Sec.
110 does not arise. It is again contended by Shri Desai that the moment it is
held that it is not possible to, come to a conclusion as to which Sect the idol
belongs, as has been held by the Court below, the Respondents cannot be allowed
to object to the Appellants worshipping the idol according to their tenets.
This contention, however, in our view ignores the rights of the Digamberies to
worship in accordance with their tenets. If the contention of the learned
Advocate for the Appellants is accepted it will be tantamount to holding that
Digamberies have no right to worship as there would denomination change in the
idol if the Swetamberies are held to have the right to worship it according to
their tenets by placing Chakshus in the idol or by erecting their Dhwajadand or
Kalash over the Temple.
848 Lastly it is urged that the High Court
ought not to have entertained the cross objection by extending the time for
worship from 1 hour to 3 hours. In our view the directions of the High Court
are not unreasonable nor do they in any way affect the right of the Respondents
to worship because the directions clearly enable the Swetamberies who wish to
worship the deity within that period without disturbing the Digamberies to be
at liberty to do so and likewise it will be open to Digamberies to go and
worship in the temple during the period it is kept open. In view of the acute
controversy between these 2 sects and their reluctance to arrive at an amicable
settlement the directions given by the High Court are manifestly reasonable
just and proper. In this view the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
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