Judicial Oversight of Religious Institutions
Subject : Law & Judiciary - Administrative Law
THIRUVANANTHAPURAM – In a scathing rebuke of systemic financial mismanagement, the Kerala High Court has mandated the immediate digitization of all accounts for the Travancore Devaswom Board (TDB). The Court condemned the Board's "gross administrative indifference," citing its continued reliance on archaic manual record-keeping and a staggering failure to conduct timely audits, which it observed has created "fertile ground for misappropriation and corruption."
The division bench, comprising Justice Raja Vijayaraghavan V and Justice K V Jayakumar, issued the far-reaching order while adjudicating a matter that began with a single employee's pension dispute but spiraled into a comprehensive judicial review of the TDB's entire financial administration. The ruling underscores a fundamental dereliction of statutory duties and signals a new era of enforced accountability for one of the state's most significant religious institutions.
From Pension Grievance to Systemic Overhaul
The case, titled Joint Director v The Secretary, Travancore Devaswom Board , originated from a complaint filed by a retired Deputy Devaswom Board Commissioner regarding the non-payment of his full pensionary benefits. An interim report by the Devaswom Ombudsman revealed that audit objections amounting to ₹21,03,471 had been raised against the officer due to missing vouchers. While a significant portion was later accounted for, an outstanding liability of over ₹7 lakh remained unverified.
This individual grievance peeled back the layers of a much deeper institutional malaise. The High Court, looking beyond the immediate dispute, discovered that the audit report for the financial year 2014-15, encompassing nearly 150 temples and other institutions under the TDB, remained incomplete nearly a decade later. This revelation prompted the bench to diagnose a systemic failure rather than an isolated incident.
"A Passive Enabler" in Financial Indiscipline
The bench did not mince words in its assessment of the TDB's administrative practices. The Court directly linked the antiquated system of manual registers and paper vouchers to the potential for financial crimes, making the Board's accounting system dangerously vulnerable.
“The continued reliance on manual registers and paper vouchers has made the accounting system vulnerable to manipulation, falsification, and defalcation,” the bench observed. “It is this lack of transparency and failure to enforce accountability that has enabled misappropriation of temple funds to persist unchecked.”
The Court's observations paint a picture of an organization whose outdated methods have not only failed to prevent misconduct but have actively facilitated it. The judgment forcefully articulated this point:
“The continued reliance on archaic manual record-keeping, absence of digitised accounting systems, and failure to conduct timely audits reveal a pattern of gross administrative indifference. Such neglect has rendered the Board a passive enabler, and in effect, an active participant in financial indiscipline. When vouchers disappear, receipts remain unverified, and audits are delayed for years, opacity becomes institutionalised, creating fertile ground for misappropriation and corruption.”
To illustrate the tangible consequences of these systemic weaknesses, the Court cited the recent Nilakkal petrol pump embezzlement case, where a significant shortfall of ₹40 lakh was detected amidst a backdrop of missing records and unverified cash books.
A Breach of Statutory Duty
At the core of the Court's legal reasoning was the TDB's failure to adhere to its statutory obligations under the Travancore-Cochin Hindu Religious Institutions Act, 1950. The bench specifically referred to Sections 32, 102, and 103 of the Act, which impose a clear and non-negotiable duty upon the Board to maintain accurate, auditable accounts and ensure they are audited annually by auditors appointed by the High Court itself.
The Court categorized the TDB's long-standing failure to comply with these provisions as a "fundamental lapse in management and a serious dereliction of statutory responsibility." It asserted that this abdication of duty has allowed employees to misuse temple funds with impunity, protected by the very opacity the Board is statutorily bound to prevent.
This judicial intervention is consistent with the same bench's previous actions, including ordering an appraisal of valuables at the Sabarimala Temple after an alleged loss of gold from idols came to light. These actions signal a pattern of heightened judicial scrutiny over the management of Devaswom institutions.
The Mandate for Modernization
Moving from critique to concrete action, the High Court has ordered a complete technological overhaul of the TDB's financial infrastructure. The directive is not merely to digitize but to implement a robust, centralized financial management system. Key features mandated by the Court include:
To ensure compliance and effective implementation, the Court has summoned the Director of the Kerala State Audit Department to appear on October 30. The Director is tasked with submitting a detailed action plan outlining the precise steps for modernizing the TDB's accounting practices, including software adoption, training protocols, and ongoing monitoring mechanisms.
The Court concluded its order by framing this reform not just as an administrative necessity but as a prerequisite for restoring public trust. “An immediate systemic overhaul and a culture of strict financial accountability must be established,” the bench stated, emphasizing that only through such comprehensive reforms can the "sanctity of temple finances be preserved and public confidence in the administration of the Devaswom institutions be restored."
#AdministrativeLaw #JudicialOversight #FinancialAccountability
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