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[Cites 17, Cited by 121]

Supreme Court of India

Atyam Veerraju And Others vs Pechetti Venkanna And Others on 20 September, 1965

Equivalent citations: 1966 AIR 629, 1966 SCR (1) 831, AIR 1966 SUPREME COURT 629, 1966 (1) SCWR 309, 1966 2 ANDHLT 291, 1966 2 SCD 903, 1967 (1) SCJ 17, 1966 (1) SCR 831

Author: R.S. Bachawat

Bench: R.S. Bachawat, A.K. Sarkar, M. Hidayatullah, Raghubar Dayal, J.R. Mudholkar

           PETITIONER:
ATYAM VEERRAJU AND OTHERS

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
PECHETTI VENKANNA AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1965

BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.

CITATION:
 1966 AIR  629		  1966 SCR  (1) 831
 CITATOR INFO :
 RF	    1987 SC2192	 (4)


ACT:
Adverse Possession-Suit lands owned by Deity-Sanad  executed
by  trustee  in	 1851 in  favour  of  defendants--Defendants
claiming  permanent lease-Nature of rights  conferred  could
not  be presumed in favour of defendants without  production
of  sanad--Defendants were lessees from year  to  year-Their
possession  not adverse to deity-As tenants they  could	 not
challenge  title of landlord-Indian Evidence Act,  1872,  s.
116-lndian Limitation Act, 1908, Arts. 144, 134-B, 139.



HEADNOTE:
The suit lands belonged to a Hindu Deity.  In 1851 the	then
Archaka	 and de facto trustee of the temple arranged with  P
the  great  grandfather	 of the first  defendant,  that	 the
latter would supply one fourth seer of gingili oil every day
to the temple and instead of receiving the price of the	 oil
would  enjoy the income of the lands.  The  arrangement	 was
reduced	  into	writing.   The	first  defendant   and	 his
predecessors continued in possession of the lands under this
arrangement.   The arrangement was put an end to by  notices
dated  December	 6, 1948 and August 31, 1949 issued  by	 the
plaintiff's  Advocate  to the first defendant.	 The  second
defendant  was	a lessee to the suit lands under  the  first
defendant.   In	 their	written	 statements  the  defendants
denied	that plaintiff was a trustee of the deity or  had  a
right  to  sue	on  its	 behalf.   Various  other   defences
including  that	 of adverse possession were  taken  up.	 The
trial court held : (1) The suit lands belonged to the deity,
(2) the arrangement of 1851 amounted to a permanent lease of
the  lands by the then Archaka and de facto trustee  of	 the
temple	to the ancestor of the first defendant on  condition
of his supplying one fourth seer of gingili oil every day to
the temple and (3) the first defendant and his	predecessors
in  interest  had  acquired title to the  lands	 by  adverse
possession burdened with this condition.  On these  findings
the  trial  court  dismissed  the  suit.   The	decree	 was
confirmed  by the High Court on appeal.	 Without  expressing
any opinion on the first two questions the High Court agreed
with  the  finding  of the trial court of  the	question  of
adverse	 possession.   The plaintiff and two  other  persons
appealed to this Court by special leave.
The  following	questions arose for decision : (1)  Was	 the
deity  the owner of the suit lands? (2) If so,	what  rights
were  acquired by the ancestor of the first defendant  under
the arrangement of 1851 and (3) Had P and his successors-in-
interest acquired title by adverse possession subject to the
burden of supplying oil every day?
HELD  :	 (i) On an examination of the  documentary  evidence
produced  by both sides it was clear that the deity was	 the
owner of the lands. [836 D]
(ii) The  claim	 of the defendants that by the	sanad  dated
November  10, 1851 the lands were conveyed to P	 subject  to
the  burden of supplying oil for evening  lighting  purposes
could not be accepted.	Had the properties been conveyed  by
the  Sanad  to	P, he and his  successors  would  have	been
entered	 in  the village accounts as the  inamdars  and	 the
pattas	in respect of the suit lands would have been  issued
to  them.   But	 all  along  the  deity	 was  shown  as	 the
registered inamdar and the relevant pattas were issued
832
to  the deity and not the plaintiff, or his successors.	  In
spite of a notice served by the plaintiff the defendants had
rim  produced the sanad.  Their explanation that it was	 not
in their possession could not be accepted. [836 E]
(iii)  Nor could it be accepted that under the	Sanad  dated
November 10, 1851, P and his successors-in-interest acquired
a right of permanent tenancy.  Had the origin of the tenancy
been  not  known an inference could fairly have	 been  drawn
from  the  facts  that the tenancy  was	 permanent.   Having
regard to the long lapse of time it could have been presumed
that the permanent tenancy was granted for legal  necessity.
But in the present case the origin of the tenancy was known.
The  tenancy  was granted by the Sanad	dated  November	 10,
1851.	Only the Sanad could show what interest was  granted
by  it.	  The  defendants  had	deliberately  withheld	this
document,  and	therefore every presumption had to  be	made
against	 them  to  their disadvantage  consistent  with	 the
facts.	It could therefore be presumed that the document  if
produced   would  have	shown  that  the  tenancy  was	 not
permanent.   Considering all these facts it was	 clear	that
the  Sanad granted to P was a lease of the suit	 lands	from
year  to year in consideration of his rendering	 one  fourth
seer of gingili oil every day to the temple. [837 A; 838 E]
(iv) The  Manager of the temple in 1851 had ample  power  in
the  course of the management to grant a lease from year  to
year.  The lease was binding on the temple.  It continued of
its  own  force	 till terminated by  notice  in	 1949.	 The
possession  of	the tenants during the	continuancy  of	 the
tenancy	 was  therefore not adverse to the  to	the  temple.
[838 F-G]
Vidya  Varuthi	Thirtha v. Baluswami  Ayyar,  (1921)L.R.  48
I.A.302
Moreover having regard to s. 116 of the Indian Evidence Act,
during	the  continuance of the tenancy	 the  defendants  as
tenants	 could	not be permitted to deny the  title  of	 the
deity at the beginning of the tenancy. [839 E]
(v)  Nor  could the defendants be allowed to  claim  adverse
possession  from  1929 onwards on the basis of	the  adverse
notice	given  by  them to the	Hindu  Religious  Endowments
Board.	  The  tenant  cannot  acquire	by  prescription   a
permanent right of occupancy in derogation of the landlord's
title by mere assertion of such a right, to the knowledge of
the landlord. [839 F-G]
Bilas  Kunwar  v. Desraj Renjit	 Singh,	  (1951)  I.L.R.  37
All.  557.Mohammad Mumtaz Ali Khan v. Mohan Singh,  L.R.  50
I.A.  202, Raghunath Venkatesh Deshpande, L.R. 50 I.A.	255,
Patna Municipal Corporation v. Ram Das, C.A. No. 598 of 1963
decided on August 11, 1965, and Bastacolla Colliery Co. Ltd.
v. Bandhu Beldar, A.I.R. 1960 Patna 344, referred to.
(vi)The	 present  suit	was one by  a  landlord	 to  recover
possession from a tenant and was governed by Art. 139.	 The
tenancy was determined in 1949 and the suit being instituted
on  November 1, 1954 was well within time.   The  defendants
could not be said to acquired title 'o the lands by  adverse
possession. [841 B-C]
(vii) Art. 134-B of the Indian Limitation Act does not apply
to a suit for recovery of a property where the property	 his
been  lawfully	transferred by a previous manager,  aid	 the
transfer  remains effective after his death, resignation  or
removal.   Tne	transfer contemplated by Art.  134-B  is  an
unauthorised and illegal transfer by the previous,  manager.
[84 A-B]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATe JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 452 of 1963.

833

Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated March 24, 1960 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Appeal Suit No. 198 of 1957.

A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, K. Rangachari and T. V. R. Tata- chari,for the appellants.

A. Ranganadham Chetty and T. Satyanarayana, for the respondents.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bachawat J. This appeal arises out of a suit instituted by Atyam Veerraju as trustee of Sri Janardhana Swami Varu of Penugonda, a Hindu deity, against Nuli Subba Rao and Pechetti Venkanna for recovery of possession of agricultural Inam lands, R.S. No. 153/3, 2 acres 38 cents and R.S. No. 167, 4 acres 36 cents, totaling 6 acres 74 cents in Cherukuvada village, West Godavari District, Andhra Pradesh. The case made in the plaint is as follows : The suit lands belong to Sri Janardhana Swami Varu. In 1851, one Ponnuri Anandu, the then Archaka and de facto trustee of the temple, arranged with Nuli Peda Narasimhulu, the great grandfather of the first defendant, that the latter would supply one- Fourth seer of gingili oil every day to the temple and instead of receiving the price of the oil would enjoy the income of the lands. The arrangement was reduced into writing. The first defendant and his predecessors have been in possession of the lands under this arrangement. The arrangement did not amount to an alienation; it gave only a license to receive the income and appropriate it towards the price of the oil. Even if the arrangement amounted to a lease, the plaintiff has a right to put an end to it and to recover the lands. The arrangement was put an end to by notices dated December 6, 1948 and August 31, 1949 issued by the plaintiff's advocate to the first defendant. The second defendant is a lessee of the suit lands under the first defendant.

The defence is as follows : The plaintiff is not the trustee of the deity and has no right to sue on its behalf. There was no arrangement a,, alleged in the plaint. The first defendant is entitled to the suit lands subject only to the burden of supplying one-fourth seer of gingili oil every day to the temple out of its income. In 1851, there was an arrangement between Peda Narasimhulu, the great grandfather of the first defendant and Ponnuri Anandu, the then Archaka of the temple that Peda Narasimhulu would provide one-fourth seer of gingili oil every day to the temple out of the P. C. I./65-10 834 income of the suit lands. This arrangement was reduced to writing. When this arrangement was made in 1851, Peda Narasimhulu was the owner in possession of the lands. Assuming that he got possession of the lands under the arrangement, Ponnuri Anandu and not the deity was the owner. Assuming that the lands belonged to the deity, the arrangement amounted to a transfer for valuable consideration of a permanent right for possession and enjoyment of the lands in favour of Peda Narasimhulu and his successors-in-interest, reserving for the deity only the right to the supply of the oil. The arrangement is binding on the deity. In any event, Peda Narasimhulu and his successors-in-interest have been in uninterrupted possession and enjoyment of the lands for over a century and have acquired title to the lands by adverse possession subject only to the burden of supplying the oil. The suit filed a century after the death or termination of office of Ponnuri Anandu is barred by time. Pending the suit, the first defendant died, and his legal representatives, the third and fourth defendants, were substituted in his place. The Subordinate Judge, Eluru negatived the defence contention that the plaintiff is not the trustee of the temple, and this contention is no longer pressed. He found that (1) the suit lands belong to the deity, (2) the arrangement of 1851 amounted to a permanent lease of the lands by the then Archaka and de facto trustee of the temple to Peda Narasimhulu, on condition of his supplying onefourth seer of gingili oil every day to the temple, and (3) the first defendant and his predecessors-in-interest have acquired title to the lands by adverse possession burdened with this condition. On these findings, he dismissed the suit. This decree was confirmed by the High Court on appeal. Without expressing any opinion on the first two questions, the High Court agreed with the finding of the trial Court on the question of adverse possession. The plaintiff and two other persons now appeal to this Court by special leave.

In this appeal, the following questions arise : (1 ) Is the deity the owner of the suit lands ? (2) 'if so, what righits were acquired by Peda Narasimhulu under the arrangement of 1851, and (3) Have Peda Narasimhulu and his successors-in- interest acquired title to the lands by adverse possession subject to the burden of supplying one-fourth seer of gingili oil every day to the deity ?

In support of their respective cases, both parties rely on documentary evidence. The documents filed by the plaintiff disclose that in all public records of the village of Cherukuvada, the deity is shown as the inamdar of the suit lands. The Inam Fair Register of 835 Cherukuvada village (Ex. A-4) shows that since fasli 1203 corresponding to 1795 one Subnivas Raghoji Pantulu was the inamdar and in 1835, he sold the suit lands to one Murari Venkatarao, who, in his turn, sold the lands in 1851 to Penugonda Sri Janardhana Swami Veru for Rs. 120. By an order of the Inam Commissioner dated October 27, 1859, the title of the deity as inamdar of the suit lands was confirmed and title deed No. 469 was issued to the deity. In the Re-settlement Register of the village prepared in 1932 (Ex. A-6) also, the deity is shown as the inamdar. In the Inam 'B' Register for the village for fasli 1342 corresponding to 1934, the suit lands are described as Devadavam, the deity shown as the inamdar and the occupation is shown as religious for the purpose of Deeparadhana in temple. These records do not show that Peda Narasimhulu or his successors-in-interest had any ,interest in the suit lands. By an order dated October 26, 1931, the Hindu Reli- gious Endowments Board, Madras framed a scheme for the temple under ss. 18 and 57 of the Madras Hindu Religious Endowments Act (Madras Act 2 of 1927) in the presence of Nuli Subbt Rao, the then successor-in-interest of Peda Narasimhulu. In the schedule to the scheme, the suit lands are shown to be the property of the deity in the possession and enjoyment of Nuli Subba Rao. Subject to certain modifications, which are not material for the purpose of this suit, the scheme was confirmed by a decree of the District Judge, West Godavari on December 4, 1937, in O.S. No. 30 of 1932.

The documents disclosed by the defendants show that since 1851 Nuli Peda Narasimhulu, his son, Subbarayudu, his grand- sons, Sriramulu and Narasimhulu, and his great grandson, Nuli Subba Rao, possessed and enjoyed the suit lands. Exhibit B-1 dated October 19, 1895 shows a mortgage and lease for six years by Sriramulu and Narasimhulu, Ex. B-2 dated April 7, 1902 discloses a mortgage and lease by Sriramulu, Exs. B-3, B-4, B-5 and B-6 show a mortgage and lease for five years by Sriramulu on March 1, 1910 and Ex. B-7 dated March 10, 1938 and Ex. B-8 dated August 19, 1942 are leases oil the suit lands for five years and eight years executed by Subba Rao. These documents and particularly Exs. 13-3, B-4 and B-5 recited that the lands were entered in the name of the deity in the village accounts of Cherukuvada and from generation to generation were in the possession and enjoyment of the family off Peda Narasimhulu who got them under the Sanad dated November 10, 1851 for purposes of Nanda Deepam (evening lighting) of the deity. It is not shown that these documents and the recitals in them were brought to the notice of the temple authori- ties. These unilateral declarations cannot affect the title of the 836 deity. Moreover, these documents contain admissions that the lands were entered in the village accounts in the name of the deity. By a notice dated June 16, 1929, the Hindu Religious Endowments Board demanded from Nuli Subba Rao annual contribution for the expenses of the temple. By his reply dated October 25, 1929, Nuli Subba Rao denied liability for the payment of the contribution and alleged that the lands were granted to his great grandfather, Peda Narasimhulu, by Ponnuri Anandu under the Sanad dated November 10, 1851, subject to the condition of supplying one-fourth seer of oil every day to the deity, and under the terms of the Sanad, the lands passed to Peda Narasimhulu and the deity is entitled to get only the oil and to no ether right. But soon thereafter on notice to Nuli Subba Rao, the Board framed the scheme dated October 26, 1931 declaring the lands to be the properties of the temple. The documents produced by the defendants do not displace the entries in the Inam Fair Register, the Inam 'B' Register and the Re- survey and Re-settlement Register, which show that the suit lands are Devadayam, the deity is the registered inamdar and the pattas were issued to the deity. We are satisfied that the deity is the owner of the lands. We reject the claim of the defendants that in 1851 either Peda Narasimhulu or Ponnuri Anandu was the owner.

We also reject the claim of the defendants that by the Sanad dated November 10, 1,851, the lands were conveyed to Peda Narasimhulu subject to the burden of supplying oil for evening lighting purposes. Had the properties been conveyed by the Sanad to Peda Narasimhulu, he and his successors would have been entered in the village accounts as the inamdars and the pattas in respect of the suit lands would have been issued to them. But all along the deity is shown as the registered inamdar and the relevant pattas were issued` to the deity and not. to Peda Narasimhulu or his successors. In spite of a notice served by the plaintiff, the, legal representatives of Nuli Subba Rao did not Produce the Sanad. We are unable to accept their explanation that they are not in possession of the Sanad. They have produced other ancient documents. A perusal of Exs. B-3 to B-7, A-9 and the written statement --,how,.; that up to the date of the filing of the written statement the Sanad was in the possession of the successors of Peda Narasimhulu. We are satisfied that the legal representatives of Nuli Subba Rao are, still in possession of the Sanad and that they have deliberately withheld it.

We must now examine the claim of the defendants that under the Sanad dated November 10, 1851, Peda Narasimhulu and his 837 successors-in-interest acquired a right of permanent tenancy. The onus is upon the defendants to establish this claim. Where the tenancy is granted by an instrument in writing, the question whether the tenancy is permanent is a matter of construction, having regard to the terms of the deed, and where the language of the deed is ambiguous, having regard also to the object of the lease, the cir- cumstances under which it was granted and the subsequent conduct of the parties, for an instance, see Sivayogeswara Cotton Press, Devangere v. M. Panchaksharappa(1). If the origin of the tenancy is not known, the tenant may lead circumstantial evidence to establish his permanent right of occupancy.The evidence of long possession coupled with other circumstances such as uniform payment of rent, construction of permanent structures, successive devolutions of property by transfer and inheritance may lead to the inference that the tenancy is permanent, see Bjoy Gopal Mukherji v. Pratul Chandra Ghose(2). The Court may refuse to draw this inference of a permanent tenancy at a fixed rent where the demised land belongs to a Hindu religious endowment, for the manager of the endowment has no power to grant such a lease in the absence of legal necessity, and the Court will not presume a breach of duty on his part. See Maharanee Shibissouree Debia v. Mothooranath Acharjoo(3), Naini Pillai Marakayar v. Ramanathan Chettiar(4). But the disability of the manager to grant a permanent lease at a fixed rent is not absolute; he may grant such a lease for legal necessity. If by the production of the original grant or by other cogent evidence the tenant establishes the grant of a permanent by him and the validity of the lease comes in question after a long lapse of time when direct evidence of the circumstances under which the grant was made is no longer available, the Court will make every presumption in favour of its validity and may assume that the grant was made for necessity, see Bawa Sitaram v. Kasturbbhai Manibhai(5). This case was followed in Muhammad Mazaffar-Al-Musavi v. Jabeda Khatun (6), where similar principles were applied to the case of a Muslim religious endowment.

Now, consider the facts of the present case. defendants proved that Peda. Narasimhulu and his successors-in- interest for four generations have been in continuous and uninterrupted possession of the suit lands for over a century since 1851. They supplied to the temple one-fourth seer of gingili oil every day for the evening lighting of the temple during all these years In 1851, the lands were dry, fetching very, little income, and it is possible (1) [1962] 3 S.C.R. 876.

(2) [1869] 13 M. 1. A. 270, 275.

(3) (1929) L.R. 49 I.A. 54.

(2) [1953] S.C.R. 930.

(4) (1923) L.R. 51 I.A., 83, 96-98.

(6) (1930) I.L.R. 57 Cal. 1293 P.C. 838 that one-fourth seer of gingili oil daily was then a reasonable rent. Subsequently, the lands were converted into wet lands, and they are now fetching a large income. In spite of the increase in land and the letting value, the temple authorities made no attempt to raise the rent of the lands or to evict the tenants. From time to time, the tenants created mortgages and leases of the suit lands for short periods. Had the origin of the tenancy been not known, we could from the facts fairly draw the inference that the tenancy was permanent. Having regard to the long lapse of time, we might even have presumed that the permanent tenancy was granted for legal necessity. But in this case, the origin of the tenancy is known. The tenancy was granted by the Sanad dated November 10, 1851. Whether or not a permanent tenancy was granted is a question of construction of the Sanad. Only the Sanad could show what interest was ranted by it. The most striking feature of this case and the thing which tilts the scales against the defendants is the non-production of this Sanad. The defendants have deliberately withheld this document. We should, therefore, make every presumption against them to their disadvantage consistent with the facts. We hold that the document, if produced, would have shown that the tenancy is not permanent. The proved facts are consistent with a lease rather than a license. The manager of the temple in the ordinary course of management had authority to grant leases of the agricultural 'lands from year to year. Considering all these facts, we hold that the Sanad granted to Peda Narasimhulu a lease of the suit lands from year to year in consideration of his rendering one-fourth seer of gingili oil every day to the temple.

The next question is whether the suit is barred by limitation and adverse possession. The manager of the temple had no authority to grant a permanent lease of the temple lands at a fixed rent without any legal necessity and had he granted such a lease, it would have endured for the tenure of his office only. See Vidya Varuthi Thirtha v. Baluswami Ayyar(1). But he had ample power in the course of management to grant a lease from year to year. The lease from year to year granted by Ponnuri Anandu in 1851 was, therefore, binding on the temple. This lease did not terminate with the expiry of the office of Ponnuri Anandu or the succeeding managers. It continued of its own force until it was terminated by notice in 1949. The possession of the tenants during the continuance of this lease was not adverse to the temple.

The defendants, however, contend that the possession of Nuli Subba Rao became adverse as from October 25, 1929 when by a (1) (1921) L.R. 48 I.A. 302.

839

notice (Ex. A-9) of that date he asserted a hostitle title. This notice was addressed to the President, Hindu Religious Endowments Board, Madras. The object of the notice was to deny the liability of Subba Rao to pay any contribution to the Board in respect of the temple. Incidentally, Subba Rao claimed title to the suit lands under the Sanad dated November 10, 1851, subject only to the burden of supplying gingili oil to the temple daily. This claim was based on the Sanad and ultimately it was a question of construction of the Sanad whether it granted the right claimed by Subba Rao. We have already held that under the Sanad the grantee got a tenancy from year to year only. Moreover, after the service of this notice, the Hindu Religious Endowments Board, Madras framed a scheme in the presence of Nuli Subba Rao declaring that the suit lands belonged to the deity. No objection was raised by Nuli Subba Rao to this scheme. It is to be noticed also that the trustees of the temple were not served by Nuli Subba Rao with the notice of his claim of absolute right to the suit lands. It is not shown that since October 25, 1929 Nuli Subba Rao continued to be in possession of the suit lands on the basis of a notorious claim of a hostitle title,.

Having regard to s. 116 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, during the continuance of the tenancy, a tenant will not be permitted to deny the title of the deity at the beginning of the tenancy. In Bilas Kunwar v. Desraj Ranjit Singh(1), the Privy Council observed :

"A tenant who has been let into possession cannot deny his landlord's title, however defective it may be, so long as he has not openly restored possession by surrender to his landlord."

It is also well settled that during the continuance of the tenancy, the tenant cannot acquire by prescription a permanent right of occupancy in derogation of the landlord's title by mere assertion of such a right to the knowledge of the landlord. See Mohammad Mumtaz Ali Khan v. Mohan Singh(2), Madhavrao Waman Satindalgekar v. Raghunath Venkatesh Deshpande (3) , Naini Pillai Marakayar v. Ramanathan Chettiar(4). In the last case, Sir John Edge said :

"No tenant of lands in India can obtain any right to a permanent tenancy by prescription in them. against his landlord from whom he holds the lands."

(1) (191 5) I.L.R. 37 All. 557, 567.

(2) L.R. 50 I.A. 202.

	      (3)	L.R.	   50	    I.A.	255.
	      (4) L.R. 51 I.A. 83.
	      840

These decisions received the approval of this Court in Patna Municipal Corporation v. Ram Das(1). In the last cited case, this Court refrained from pronouncing upon the soundness of the following observations in Bastacolla Colliery Co. Ltd. v. Bandhu Beldar (2) :

"There are however, some cases in which a Jesse-, can acquire the right of a permanent right by prescription in spite of payment and acceptance of rent. Those are cases where the lessee pays rent on the basis of a notorious claim of permanent tenancy to the knowledge of the owner. The acceptance of rent by the owner on the basis of the lessee's claim as a permanent tenant will not prevent the acquisition of such a right by the, lessee."

As we did not hear any argument on that point, we do not also decide whether this passage lays down the correct law. This passage must be read with the following observation of the Patna High Court in the same case :

"If once a tenancy of some kind comes into existence either under an express lease or under a lease implied by law, the tenant cannot convert his tenancy into a permanent one by doing any act adverse to the landlord."

In the instant case, on October 25, 1929, Nuli Subba Rao was a tenant and by an adverse notice during the continuance of his tenancy he could not acquire absolute title to the suit lands, nor could he convert his tenancy into a permanent one. Moreover, it is not shown that since 1929 Nuli Subba Rao held the suit lands under a notorious claim of either an absolute title or a permanent tenancy, or that he supplied oil to the temple on the basis of such a claim. It follows that during the period from 1851 to 1949 the possession of Peda Narasimhulu and his successors-in- interest was not adverse to the deity. During the period from 1851 to 1929 the title of the deity was not extinguished by adverse possession under S. 28 read with Art. 144 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1908 (Act IX of 1908) and the corresponding s. 28 and Art. 144 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877 (Act XV of 1877), s. 29 and Art. 145 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1871 (Act IX of 1871) and s. 1, cl. 12 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1859 (Act XIV of 1859). Nor was the title of the deity extinguished the period from 1929 to 1949 by the operation of s. 28 read with Art. 134-B introduced in the Indian Limitation Act. 1908 by the Limitation (1) C.A. No. 593/03 decided on 11-8-1965 (2) A. I.R. 1960 Patna. 344.

841

(Amendment) Act (Act 1 of 1929). In our opinion, the transfer contemplated by Art. 134-B is an illegal or unauthorised transfer by a previous manager. Article 134-B does not apply to a suit for recovery of a property, where the property has been lawfully transferred by a previous manager, and the transfer remains effective after his death, resignation or removal. The lease of 1851. by the previous manager was lawful and binding on the temple, and continued of its own force until 1949. Consequently, Art. 134-B has no application to the present suit. The suit is one by a landlord to recover possession from a tenant and is governed by Art. 139. The tenancy was determined in 1949, and the suit being instituted on November 1, 1954 is well within time. The contention that Peda Narasimhulu and his successors-in-interest acquired title to the suit lands by prescription and the suit is barred by limitation is therefore, rejected.

The validity of the notice terminating the tenancy is not disputed. The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to recover the suit lands.

In the result, the appeal is allowed, the judgment and decree of the Courts below are set aside. There will be a decree in favour of the trustees of the temple for possession of the properties mentioned in the schedule to the plaint. The trial Court is directed to enquire into the mesne profits and to pass an appropriate decree for the same in accordance with law. There will be no order as to costs in this Court and in the Courts below.

Appeal allowed.

842