Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
N.KRISHNAMMAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
R. EKAMBARAM & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1979
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1298 1979 SCR (3) 700
1979 SCC (3) 273
ACT:
Hindu Succession Act, 1956-Ss. 8 to 10- Scope of.
Testator’s will stated that in case his son died
sonless "my heirs shall take the properties" bequeathed to
him-Testator’s son died without leaving behind a male issue-
Expression "my heirs" meaning of-Testator whether created an
artificial class of heirs-Term heirs used in a will-How
construed-The point of time when heirs should be
ascertained.
HEADNOTE:
By a will the testator bequeathed certain properties to
each of his three sons. With regard to his third son (NP)
the testator provided in Clause 5 of the will that if he had
no male issues "my heirs shall take the aforesaid
properties" after his life time. NP died in 1957 without any
male issue. His widow (plaintiff-appellant) filed a suit for
declaration of her title to the properties on the ground
that her husband got the same absolutely by way of partition
and that she, as his heir, inherited the properties or in
the alternative for a declaration of her right to the
properties on a true construction of the testator’s will.
(Defendants 1 and 2 were the sons of the testator’s eldest
son while defendants 3 to 7 were the daughters and defendant
8 the widowed daughter-in-law of the testator’s second son.)
The trial judge of the High Court decreed the
plaintiff’s suit holding that on the termination of the life
interest given to NP who died sonless the properties
devolved on the heirs of the testator as if on intestacy,
that the plaintiff was entitled to 1/3 share of the
properties, and that the remaining 2/3 share should be share
by the defendants.
Defendants 1 and 2 appealed to a Division Bench of the
High Court, claiming that as the only heirs of the testator
they were entitled to get the entire property of NP who had
only a life interest in it. Construing cl. 5 of the will,
the Division Bench held : (1) that by his will the testator
had made his heirs as an "artificial" class of ultimate
residuary legatees; (2) that the mandate implicit in the
words "if there are no male issues as aforesaid" is that
such class of legatees or heirs of the testator would be
ascertained and worked out at that point of time when NP
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died sonless and at no other; (3) that this class of heirs
of the testator was to be ascertained on the death of NP on
the hypothesis that the testator had been upto the time of
NP’s death, but according to orthodox Hindu Law prevailing
at the time of the testator’s death in 1928; (4) that
neither Hindu Women’s Right to Property Act, 1937, nor the
Hindu Succession Act, 1956 was applicable because the
testator actually died long before the coming into force of
these two enactments and he did not die intestate; (5) that
according to Hindu Law prevailing at the time of the
testator’s death in 1928, respondents 1 and 2 would be the
only persons entitled to the property on the death of NP, to
the exclusion of the latter’s widow, the plaintiff.
701
Allowing the appeal.
^
HELD: 1(a) On a proper construction of the will the
testator could not be said to have created or carved out an
"artificial" class of heirs and made a residuary bequest in
their favour. It is well established that the term "heirs"
used in a will must be construed in a legal sense and cannot
normally be limited to "issues" only. It must mean all
persons who are entitled to the property of another under
the law of inheritance. [705E-F]
Angurbala Mullick v. Debabrata Mullick, [1951] 2 SCR
1125 at p. 1144; referred to.
(b) The expression "my heirs" used in cl. 5 of the will
must be construed as equivalent to "my legal heirs". The
words "if there are no male issues my heirs shall take the
aforesaid properties" are not words of gift over to any
artificial class of heirs. [705G]
2. Construction of clause 5 of the will brings out
expressly or by inevitable implication, these instructions
of the testator:
(a) In the event of NP’s death, without male issue, the
property would devolve on the testator’s heir.
(b) Such heirs of the testator would be ascertained
according to Hindu Law of intestate succession.
(c) Ascertainment of these "heirs" of the testator, is
to be done at the time of NP’s death on the hypothesis that
the testator lived up to and died a moment after NP’s death.
(d) It logically follows from (a), (b) and (c) that
these heirs of the testator would be ascertained according
to the Hindu Succession Act 1956, which was the law in force
on 31-1-57 when NP died sonless and succession opened out.
[706 D-F]
3. On the port and scope of cl. 5 of the will, as
spelled out above, ascertainment of the testator’s heirs on
whom the property would devolve on NP’s death, is to be done
according to ss. 8 to 10 of the Hindu Succession Act. At
that point of time, the plaintiff (who would be assumed to
be the widow of a "predeceased" son) and the defendants
would all be the heirs of the testator, falling in Class I
of the Schedule referred to in s. 8, and in accordance with
Rules 3 and 4 in Section 10 of the Act, the plaintiff would
be entitled to 1/3rd share, in the property, while the
remaining 2/3rd share shall go equally to the branches of
Ramaswami and Vedivelu. [707 DE]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2085 of
1969.
From the Judgment and Decree dated 15-11-68 of the
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Madras High Court in Criminal Side Appeal No. 45/65.
M. Natesan and Mrs. S. Gopalakrishnan for the
Appellants.
V. S. Desai, P. G. Gokhale and S. R. Agarwala for the
Respondents 1-2.
702
Ex parte for the Respondents 3.8.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.-This appeal by certificate is directed
against an Appellate Judgment and Decree, dated November 15,
1968, of the High Court of Madras.
The facts leading to this appeal are as follows:
The following pedigree table will be helpful in
understanding the relationships of the parties:
Palaniandi Pillai
(died on 19-5-1928)
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
| | |
| | |
Ramaswami Pillai Vadovelu Pillai Nataraja Pillai
| (dies in 1953) (died in 31-1-57)
| Dharmambal
| (died in 1940)
|
--------------- |
| | |
R.Ekambaram R.Bala- |
subramaniam|
(1st Defdt.) (2nd Defdt)|
|
------------------------------------------------------------
|
Rajamani Kamala Padma Sarada Laitha Selvaraj
(3rd (4th (5th (6th (7th (died in 1952)
Defdt.) Defdt.) Defdt.) Defdt.) Defdt.) =Rajammal (8th
Defdt.)
Palaniandi Pillai, shown in the above pedigree-table,
owned considerable properties. On December 12, 1927, he
executed a Will whereby he bequeathed certain properties to
each of his three sons. He appointed his sons, Ramaswami
Pillai and Vadivelu Pillai, as Executors of his Will. In
regard to his third son, Nataraja Pillai, the testator in
clause 5 of the Will stated:
"My third son, Nataraja Pillai, shall take the
income accruing from the properties, namely, my cast-
stand, house and ground, situate in the Western Row of
Mint Street, bearing Municipal Door No. 278, Re-survey
No. 600, Collector’s Certificate No. 750 and the 5
Godowns, namely, 2 Godowns situate in Varadaraja Mudali
St., bearing Municipal Door No. 90 and 91, and 3
Godowns situate in 3rd North Beach Road bearing
Municipal Door Nos. 5, 6 and 7 to 9, Re-survey No. 3158
and 3187, Collector’s Certificate No. 2550. After his
life-time, if he leaves any male issue, they shall take
the aforesaid properties, with
703
powers of alienations such as gift, usufructuary
mortgage and sale. If there are no male issue as
aforesaid, my heirs shall take the aforesaid
properties."
Although the Will had not been probated, yet, by mutual
arrangements between the first two sons who were named
Executors in the Will, and the third son, Nataraja Pillai,
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the properties were distributed in consonance with the terms
of the Will and the Executors conveyed and transferred the
same to the respective legatees, and mutual release deeds
were, also, executed by the three sons.
Ramaswamy Pillai died in 1954 and Vadivelu Pillai in
1953, Nataraja Pillai died on January 31, 1957, without
leaving any issue. His widow, Krishnammal, the appellant
herein, filed the suit (C. S. No. 7 of 1959) out of which
this appeal has arisen. She claimed-
(a) partition and separate possession of one-third
share in the (plaint-schedule) properties left by her
husband Palaniandi Pillai, alleging that the properties’
were in the possession of the joint family consisting of his
sons, or in the alternative, (b) for a declaration of her
title and for possession of the properties on the ground
that her husband Nataraja Pillai got the same absolutely by
way of partition under the deed, dated July 14, 1928, and
she, as his heir, inherited the properties; in the
alternative, (c) for a declaration of her rights to the
properties on a true construction of the Will of her father-
in-law, Palaniandi Pillai, and for possession of the
properties.
The sons of Ramaswamy Pillai, respondents 1 and 2
herein, were impleaded as defendants 1 and 2, and the
daughters of Vadivelu Pillai, respondents 3 to 7, were
defendants 3 to 7. The daughter-in-law of Vadivelu Pillai,
respondent 8 herein, was added as 8th defendant.
The findings of the learned trial Judge, material for
our purpose, were as follows:
(i) Nataraja Pillai got only a life estate in the
properties set out in Schedule I of the Plaint; (ii) the
contingent interest in favour of the heirs of Palaniandi
Pillai became vested only on the death of Nataraja Pillai,
(iii) it is not open to the plaintiff, Krishnammal, to
invoke Section 8 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956; (iv) on
the termination of the life interest given to Nataraja
Pillai, the gift over in favour of the male issues could not
take effect as he did not leave any male issue, with the
consequence, that the properties, in effect, became revested
in Palaniandi Pillai, but devolved on his heirs as if on
intestacy; (v) Section 111 of the Indian succession Act
would be applicable.
704
In the result, the appellants’ suit was decreed and it
was held that she was entitled to one-third share and
separate possession of the same by partition of the Plaint-
Schedule 1 properties, and defendants 3 to 8 were equally
entitled to one-third share together with mesne profits
relating to their shares in the said properties, while
defendants 1 and 2 were entitled to the remaining one-third
share.
Aggrieved, defendants 1 and 2 preferred Letters Patent
Appeal in the High Court, contending that, according to the
terms of the Will of Palaniandi Pillai, they were his only
heirs and entitled to get the entire properties in which
Nataraja Pillai held only a life interest; and that neither
the plaintiff nor defendants 3 to 8 were entitled to any
share.
The Appellate Bench of the High Court purporting to
proceed mainly on the scope and construction of Clause 5 of
the Will of Palaniandi Pillai, held:
(1) By his Will (Ex. P. 2) the testator had made "my
heirs", i.e. the testator’s heirs as an "artificial" class
of ultimate residuary legatees.
(2) This class of legatees or "my heirs" did not
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acquire a vested interest in the residuary bequest on the
death of the testator.
(3) The ultimate bequest in their favour would become
vested only in the event of Nataraja dying sonless.
(4) The mandate implicit in the words "if there are no
male issues as aforesaid" occurring in Clause 5 of the Will
(Ex. P. 2) is that such class of legatees or heirs of the
testator would be ascertained and worked out at that point
of time when Nataraja died sonless, and at no other.
(5) This class of "my heirs" of the testator would be
ascertained with reference to the point of Nataraja’s death
(without a son) on January 31, 1957, when succession opened
out and the bequest became distributable, "on the hypothesis
that Palaniandi Pillai had lived up to that time" i.e.
January 31, 1957.
(6) Although this class of the heirs of the testator
was to be ascertained on January 31, 1957 on the hypothesis
that the testator and Nataraja died simultaneously, such
ascertainment could not be done either by resorting to the
Hindu Women’s Rights to Property Act, 1937 or to the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956, because Palaniandi Pillai actually
died in 1928, long before the coming into force of these two
enactments and he did not die intestate.
705
(7) Such class of heirs of the testator were to be
determined according to the orthodox Hindu Law prevailing at
the time of the testator’s death on May 19, 1928.
(8) Section 111 of the Indian Succession Act was not
applicable.
On the above reasoning, the Appellate Bench of the High
Court reversing the decree of the learned trial Judge, held
that Respondents 1 and 2 herein were the only persons
entitled to the entire Schedule 1 property on the death of
Nataraja Pillai, to the exclusion of the latter’s widow, the
plaintiff. Thus the appeal was allowed and the plaintiff’s
suit dismissed.
After obtaining a certificate under Article 133 of the
Constitution from the High Court, the plaintiff,
Krishnammal, has come in appeal before this Court.
Controversy in this case hinges around the scope and
construction of Clause 5 of the Will (Ex. P-2). In that
connection, the first question that arises for consideration
is: Did the testator by this Clause create or carve out an
"artificial" class of his heirs’ and make a residuary
bequest in their favour ?
In our opinion, on a proper construction of the Will,
the answer to this question must be in the negative.
It is well settled that legal terms such as "heirs",
used in a Will must be construed in the legal sense, unless
a contrary intention is clearly expressed by the testator.
The word "heirs", as pointed out by this Court in Angurbala
Mullick v. Debabrata Mullick(1) cannot normally be limited
to "issues" only. It must mean all persons who are entitled
to the property of another under the law of inheritance.
There is nothing in the language of Clause 5 of the
Will which compels the construction that by use of the
expression "my heirs" the testator meant something different
from his ’heirs under the law.’ The expression "my heirs"
has therefore to be construed as equivalent to "my legal
heirs". Thus considered, the words used in the last two
sentences of Clause 5 of the Will are not words of gift over
to any ’artificial’ class of heirs. They only indicate that
in the event of Nataraja’s death without any male issue,
further devolution of the estate that had been given to him
for life, would be regulated in favour of the testator’s
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heirs ascertained in accordance with Hindu Law of intestate
succession. That is to say, the testator did not specify or
lay down any line of heirs, deviating from the Hindu Law of
intestate succession.
706
The ground is now clear to consider the second question
which is pivotal to the whole problem: Whether the heirs of
the testator, on whom the estate was to devolve in the event
of Nataraja dying sonless, were to be ascertained according
to Hindu Law in force at the time of Nataraja’s death or
according to Hindu Law, prevailing in 1928 when the testator
died. This question, also, is one of reaching at the real
intent of the testator.
In order to expatiate, the true import of the last two
sentences of Clause 5 of the Will (Ex. P 2), the same can be
legitimately expanded, parenthesized and elucidated so as to
read like this:
"After Nataraja’s life-time, if he leaves any male
issue, they shall take the aforesaid properties, with
powers of alienation... If Nataraja dies without
leaving any male issue, then my heirs, then ascertained
according to law of inheritance, shall take the
aforesaid properties."
Thus amplified and elucidated, Clause 5 of the Will
brings out, expressly or by inevitable implication, the
intention and instructions of the testator in regard to the
following:
(a) In the event of the termination of the life-estate
of Nataraja on his death, without male issue, the property
will devolve on "my heirs" i.e. the testator’s heirs.
(b) Such heirs of the testator are to be ascertained
according to the Hindu Law of intestate succession.
(c) Such ascertainment of the heirs of the testator is
to be done on the date of Nataraja’s death without male
issue, when succession opens out in favour of those heirs,
and not with reference to the date of the testator’s death.
This necessarily implies that "my heirs" of the testator are
required to be ascertained on the hypothesis that the
testator lived upto and died a moment after Nataraja’s
death.
If what is spelled out at (a), (b) and (c) be the true
construction of Clause 5 of the Will, it logically and
inexorably follows therefrom, that ascertainment of the
heirs of the testator, on whom the property was intended to
devolve in the event of Nataraja dying sonless, was to be
made in accordance with Hindu Law of intestate Succession as
in force on the date of Nataraja’s death, on January 31,
1957, when succession opened out, and not in accordance with
the orthodox Hindu Law prevailing in 1928, which on the
relevant date, January 31, 1957, stood abrogated and
superseded by the Hindu Succession Act. 1956. The conclusion
is therefore inescapable that "my heirs" referred to by the
testator in Clause 5 of his Will, have to be ascertained in
accordance with the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. In so
707
doing, we are only giving effect to the import and
construction of the Will of the testator, and no question of
giving retrospective operation to the statute is involved.
The learned Judges of the High Court have said that at
the time of making the Will, the testator could not
predicate that at the time of Nataraja’s death without
leaving any son, the Hindu Law of Succession would be
different from the one prevailing at the time of making the
Will or the testator’s death. Nevertheless, the testator was
definitely contemplating the contingency of Nataraja dying
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without any male issue, and the necessity of ascertaining
the testator’s heirs at that point of time for further
devolution of the property. It cannot, therefore, be said
that ascertainment of the testator’s heirs according to the
law in force at the time of happening of the contemplated
contingency, was wholly beyond the ken of the testator.
In the view we take of the import and scope of Clause 5
of the Will (Ex. P. 2) ascertainment of the heirs of
Palaniandi Pillai has to be done on the assumption that he
died intestate, a moment after Nataraja Pillai’s death,
according to Sections 8 to 10 of the Hindu Succession Act.
At that point of time, the plaintiff (who would be
assumed to be the widow of a "predeceased" son), and the
defendants would all be heirs of the testator, falling in
Class I of the Schedule referred to in Section 8. According
to Section 9, all the heirs in Class I of the Schedule shall
take simultaneously, to the exclusion of all other heirs.
The distribution of the property among the plaintiff and
defendants will be governed by Rules 3 and 4 in Section 10,
which are as under:
"Rule 3.-The heirs in the branch of each
predeceased son or each predeceased daughter of the
intestate shall take between them one share."
"Rule 4.-The distribution of the share referred to
in Rule 3-
(i) among the heirs in the branch of the
predeceased son shall be so made that his
widow (or widows together) and the surviving
sons and daughters get equal portions; and
the branch of predeceased sons gets the same
portion;
(ii) among the heirs in the branch of the
predeceased daughter shall be so made that
the surviving sons and daughters get equal
portions."
708
In accordance with the aforesaid provisions of the
Hindu Succession Act, the plaintiff would be entitled to get
1/3rd share in Schedule I property in which her husband had
a life-interest, while the remaining 2/3rd share in the
property shall be equally distributed among the two branches
of the defendants, the branches of Ramaswami and Vadivelu
getting 1/3rd share each.
For the foregoing reasons, we allow this appeal, set
aside the judgment of the High Court and pass a preliminary
decree for partition and separate possession in favour of
the plaintiff with respect to her 1/3rd share in the suit
property. In the circumstances of the case, the parties are
left to pay and bear their own costs.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
709