Petition No. 823/83 dated 7-10-1982 (sic) held that a founder trustee if he is a hereditary trustee can be kept under suspension ... judgment which we referred above . Further a founder trustee need not necessarily be a hereditary trustee. The definition
Kum. Shashikala And Four Others vs Smt. Babita Sharma And Three Others on 2 May
words In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, coming to
the definition of Archika, Section 2(1) and (1 A) of the Act Archaka ... office devolves according to the
rule of succession laid down by the founder or according to the usage
or custom applicable to the institution
difficulties will disappear.
This is not a case where the founder of a temple has provided for devolution of the office in a particular manner ... only in cases where a line of succession is provided by the founder of an institution, the office of the trustee could be said
provision. Nor was he a manager expressly constituted as such by any founder or other competent authority. He was the De facto manager ... subjected to a permanent liability; the amendment merely enlarged the definition of a 'trustee' as including a 'manager' as well
Commissioner alone is competent to recognise/declare a person as belonging to founder's family and the Assistant Commissioner is not competent to give ... issued by the Assistant Commissioner only when the petitioner claimed right as founder trustee in the temple. Second respondent immediately obtained order copy
includes' was substituted for the word
'means'. The definition of the words "person having interest"
in Section ... other persons interested in the trust. It would therefore appear
that the definition of the expression "person having interest" in
Section
Regulation, the nature of the Mash relating to Vemulawada fell under the definition of 'Mash Mashruthul Kidmat' and not that ... office of Trusteeship. It was not known as to who was the founder of the temple and it was also not known if the founder
Jain or Buddhist temple is a "Hindu temple", though the founders of these creeds were Hindus conscious perhaps of a purificatory evangelism ... Firs) is a "Hindu temple" within the scope of the definition, merely because the Hindus also worship there in public on certain occasions
meaning, in policies, all kinds of marine casualties, such as shipwreck, foundering, stranding, and every species of damage to the ship or goods ... Hamilton v. Pandorf (1887), 12 App.Cas.518,526, but this definition is not exhaustive, for damage colliding with the carrying ship is a peril