The case of the original plaintiff was that by means of 'Sanand ' (Exhibit I) Raja Sri Dibyasingha Deb, the then Superintendent of the Temple, granted to his great grandfather, Gangadhar Suar, a permanent lease of the site on which the two suit rooms stood on an annual rent of Rs. 7/ that it was provided in the 'Sanad ' that the grantee or lessee would be entitled to enjoy the site from generation to generation and in case a permanent structure was constructed thereon, the rent would be enhanced to Rs. 14/ per year; that as a result of the death of his great grandfather, Gangadhar Suar, of his grandfather Bela Suar, and of his father, Chakhi Suar, he had become the sole owner of the property; that a few days after the commencement of the lease, two permanent pucca rooms for storing and selling 'Mahaprasad ' where constructed by his great grandfather, Gangadhar Suar, who according to the stipulation contained in the aforesaid Sanad ' became liable to pay an annual rent of Rs. 14% that since the commencement of the lease, his ancestors had from generation to generation been using the suit property as a store room and as a shop for selling dry 'Mahaprasad ' in their capacity as tenants of the Raja of Puri who was the Superintendent of the Temple and the said right of his had been acknowledged and duly recorded in the record of rights.