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Behari Lal And Ors. vs Ghisa Lal And Ors.

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|14 June, 1902

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Blair, J.
1. This appeal impugns the propriety of a decision of the Subordinate Judge of Moradabad dismissing the plaintiffs' suit under the following circumstances. The plaintiffs are the owners of a house adjacent to the site of a Hindu temple. Near their house stands in the temple inclosure a pipal tree, the branches of which extend over their house, and which has, of course, been growing there for many years. The plaintiffs, alleging that the branches of the tree afforded facilities for a thief to obtain entrance into their house, and endangered life and property, desired to cut those branches. They were prevented from so doing by the defendants. The plaintiffs ask that an injunction may be issued against the defendants, enjoining them not to offer obstruction to the cutting of those branches which spread over the plaintiffs' house. Both the Munsif and the Subordinate Judge have found that the pipal tree is an object of veneration to pious Hindus, and has been growing there for over 20 years. Both of them have dismissed the plaintiffs' suit. The question is a serious one in this country, because, on the one hand, it is highly undesirable to insult or irritate the religious susceptibilities of the people; and on the ether, one has to look for the existence of some principle of law by which the general feeling of one part of the population can be allowed to override the ordinary rights of property vested in another person. Mr. Tej Bahadur, for the appellants, contends that there is no such curtailment of individual right of property known to the law, and Mr. Malaviya, for the respondents, is unable, out of the long array of Indian cases, to produce a single authority in support of the judgments of the Courts below. It is not for me to find facts, but to accept them implicitly as found by the Courts below. The lopping of inconvenient boughs of such a tree as this may possibly be regarded as a sort of sacrilege by certain of the Hindu population. But it appears that the tree has been lopped before. And it is also found by the Subordinate Judge that the branches of this tree have been hanging over the old building for a considerable time. But that fact cannot, in my opinion, override the right of the appellants to occupy their house in comfort and safety. Mr. Malaviya does not attempt to found any argument upon the fact that the tree has been standing there for over 20 years, and indeed no such easement could be claimed.
2. The proposition put before me is, that if the general body of a muhalla entertain a feeling of reverence towards any tree, no individual owning a house in that muhalla can seek to lop off any of its branches which may overhang his property, even though they may prejudicially affect it. That is a proposition unsupported by authority and inconsistent with common sense. I set aside the judgments and decrees of the Courts below and degree this appeal with costs.
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Title

Behari Lal And Ors. vs Ghisa Lal And Ors.

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
14 June, 1902
Judges
  • Blair