- By Raju Kumar
- Fri, 05 Dec 2025 04:32 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
Kerala Temple Fund Issue: The Supreme Court on Friday observed that temple funds "belong to the deity". The top court, while hearing the special leave petitions (SLPs) filed by Kerala-based cooperative banks, said the temple funds cannot be used to aid struggling cooperative banks.
A Bench of Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi dismissed the SLPs, challenging a Kerala High Court direction to return the fixed deposits of the Thirunelly Temple Devaswom immediately.
Denying grant relief to cooperative banks, the SC refused to interfere with the Kerala High Court's orders. The CJI Kant-led Bench remarked that the money collected from devotees must be "saved, protected and utilised only for the interests of the temple" and cannot become a "source of income or survival" for any cooperative bank.
"You want to use the temple money to save the bank?" Temple money, first of all, belongs to the deity," observed the apex court, dismissing the cooperative bank's SLPs against the Kerala High Court's directive to repay matured deposits and shift the funds to nationalised banks.
What Were Cooperative Banks' Arguments
The cooperative banks argued before the Supreme Court that the Kerala High Court's "abrupt" two-month deadline made compliance difficult.
"You should establish your credibility among the people. If you are unable to attract the customers and deposits, that is your problem," the apex court said. The SC bench said that deposits must be released as soon as they mature.
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The apex court dismissed the petitions but granted liberty to the banks to move the Kerala High Court seeking an extension of time for repayment. The SLPs were filed by Mananthawady Co-operative Urban Society Ltd and Thirunelly Service Co-operative Bank Ltd after the Kerala High Court held that temples under the Malabar Devaswom Board cannot keep deposits with cooperative societies in violation of binding circulars.
In its detailed judgment, the Kerala HC noted that the Malabar Devaswom Board's circulars clearly barred temples from keeping deposits in cooperative banks. After reviewing the audit findings, it held that the banks had "no right whatsoever" to deny closure of the deposits.
(With IANS Inputs)
