The learned Judges in the Calcutta case negatived the applicability of the principle enunciated in 1913 Appeal Cases 546 and applied by the Privy Council in several cases to the matter before them, on the following reasoning set out by Mr. Justice Das: 1043 "The incidents and powers attached to the Registrar as a tribunal fall far short of those which were attached, to the tribunal in the Gurdwara case (1) and to which Sir George Rankin particularly and pointedly referred Having regard to the plain language of clause 16, and in the absence therein of like words which appeal in the concluding portions of the correspond clauses of the Letters Patent of the other High Court to which I have already referred and which make their appellate jurisdiction flexible and elastic it is impossible to hold that section 76 of the has merely extended the appellate jurisdiction of this Court under clause 16 by the addition of a new subject matter of appeal so as to attract the general principle enunciated in 1913 Appeal Cases 546 . .