Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRIPAD GAJANAN SUTHANKAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DATTARAM KASHINATH SUTHANKAR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/03/1974
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
PALEKAR, D.G.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 878 1974 SCR (3) 474
1974 SCC (2) 156
ACT:
Hindu Law-Prior to Hindu Succession Act, 1956-Death of
Coparcener leaving widow-Partition among other coparceners
later-Adoption by widow--Share of adopted son in coparcenary
property.
HEADNOTE:
M had two sons-the first defendant and K. K died in 1921
leaving a widow and a daughter. In 1944 there was a
partition between M and the first defendant, and, in that
partition, allotment for residence and maintenance of K’s
widow was made. Thereafter, M gifted away his share, which
he got in partition, to the first defendant’s son, the
second defendant (appellant). In 1956, before the Hindu
Succession. Act came into force, the widow of K adopted her
daughter’s son (respondent) and he filed the suit for a
fresh partition claiming a half share of the entire property
ignoring the earlier partition and gift.
On the question of the rights and shares of the parties,
HELD : (1) The finding of the High Court that the adoption
of the respondent was true and valid, both from the angles
of custom and factum, is established by the evidence. [476F]
(2)(a) Under the Mitakshara School of Hindu Law a widow’s
adoption cannot be stultified by an anterior partition of
the joint family and the adopted son can claim a share as if
he were begotten and alive when the adoptive father breathed
his last. [485E]
(b) Nevertheless the factum of partition is not wiped out
by the later adoption. [485E-F]
(c) Any disposition testamentary or inter vivos, lawfully
made antecedent to the adoption is immune to challenge by
the adopted son. [485F]
(d)Lawful alienation, in this context, means not
necessarily for a family necessity but alienation made
competently in accordance with law. [485F-G]
(e)A widow’s power of alienation is limited, and if only
if the conditions set by the Hindu Law are fulfilled will
the alienation bind a subsequently adopted son. ’So also
the alienation by the Karta of an undivided family or
transfer by a coparcener governed by the Banaras School of
Hindu Law; [485F-G]
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(f)Once partitioned validly, the share of a member of a
Mitakshara Hindu family in which his own issue have no right
by birth, can be transferred by him at his will and such
transfers, be they by will, gift or sale, bind the adopted
son who ,comes later on the scene. [485G-B]
(3)In computing the net available property for giving a
share to the respondent, the property gifted by M.to the
second defendent has to be excluded while the allotment for
maintenance will have to be brought into the corpus. But,
in calculating his share, the adopted son’s right, arising
long after other proprietary events, should be worked out,
not rigidly but justly. If the respondent is given his 1/3
share as at the time when the partition took place, since
The share, which had been gifted away, should be ignored,
the respondent will get his 1/3 share of the entire family
property from out of the 1/2 share of the first defendant
got by him at the 1944-partition. But it would be unfair to
the first defendant to deprive him of such a large share
mere because he had not parted with his properties before
the respondent’s adoption. Equally it would be unjust to
the respondent if he is given only 1/3 of the properties
given to the 1st defendant and remaining with him at the
date of adoption. Therefore, it would be eminently just to
divide the properties got by the first defendant at the
1944-partition which were with him at the date of adoption,
into two equal shares and award one share to the plaintiff-
respondent. Hence, a decree should be passed, (i) allowing
the respondent an half share out of such properties allotted
to the ant under the 1944-partition as were with the first
defendant the adoption, including, therein,:the times set
apart, for the mainte-
475
nance of the adoptive mother; (ii) directing profits to be
paid to the plaintiff on that basis; and (iii) directing the
cessation of payment of maintenance by the first defendant’s
branch to the adoptive mother. (479A-E; 485H-486G)
Govind v. Nagappa, [1972] 3 SCR 200, P. Ammal v. Ramalingam,
[1970] 3 SCR; 894, Srinivas [1955], 1 S.C.R. 1;17; 24-45;
Krishna Murthi, [1962] 2 S.C.R. 813, Bhimji Krishna Rai,
[1950] 52 D.L.R., 290, in Bijoor v. Padmanabh (9) I.L.R.,
[1950] Dom. 480, Krishtappa v. Gopal, A.I.R. 1957 Bom. 214,
215, Balaji, (1944) 47 B.L.R121, Sankaralingam, I.L.R.
(1943) Mad. 309 and Some sekharappa v. Basappa Chan-
nabasappa, (1960) Mys. L. J. 687, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1264 of
1967.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated the 8th April 1964
of the Mysore High Court at Bangalore in Regular Appeal No.
100 of 1958.
S. V. Gupte and R. B. Datar for the appellant
S. S. Javali and H. K. Puri, for respondent No. 1
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. An intricate point of Hindu Law bearing on
an adoption by a widow and its impact on an earlier
partition in the coparcenary-all prior to the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956-arise for decision in this appeal by
certificate against the decree of the Mysore (now Karnataka)
High Court. The plaintiff succeeded in both the Courts and
the aggrieved second defendant., who is the appellant before
us, has confined his challenge to two major contentions,
although a few minor matters also require our attention in
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working out the ultimate relief.
Now the facts. A small family of Gowd Saraswat Brahmins of
Balgaum had, as its head, one Mahadev and as coparceners his
two sons, Gajanand (Defendant No. 1) and Kashi Nath, who
died in 1921 leaving behind a widow, Rakhama Bai (Defendant
No. 3), and a daughter Lilawati. The plaintiff is
Lilawati’s son, i.e., the daughter’s Ron of late Kashi Nath.
Gajanand, the first defendant had an only son, Shripad, the
second defendant. Long years after the demise of her
husband, the third defendant adopted the plaintiff on
February, 16, 1956. In the considerable interval that
elapsed, a partition took’ place in the family on April 24,
1944 between the then two living coparceners, namely,
Mahadev and the first defendant. The former passed away in
1946 but before his death he gifted his entire share in the
joint family derived under the partition of 1944 to the
second defendant. For completeness sake it must be
mentioned that at the partition in 1944, an allotment for
the residence and maintenance of the third defendant had
been made. The second defendant, the donee from Mahadev,
alienated some of those properties but the alienees are not
parties to the present appeal although they were defendants
to the litigation. The adopted son, i.e., the plaintiff,
filed the present suit on April 20, 1956 ignoring the
partitions of 1944 and praying for fresh partition by metes
and bounds of his half share. His case was that the gift
was invalid like the partition and that he was entitled to
476
an equal share with the first defendant together with
profits attributable to his share. The contesting defendant
was the second defendant who challenged the factum and
validity of the adoption and also the right of the adopted
son to re-open the partition or impugn the gift effected
prior to the adoption. Other contentions had been raised
which need not be noticed now.
The Trial Court granted a decree more or less as prayed for
upholding the factum and validity of the adoption and the
right of the plaintiff to re-open the partition and ignore
the gift. The decree declared that the plaintiff was
entitled to 1/3rd share, the first defendant to a 1/6th
share, the second defendant to a half share, and so on.
Profits that fell to the share of the plaintiff were also
decreed. The liability of defendants 1 and 2 to pay
maintenance to the third defendant under the partition deed
of 1944 was to cease from the date of the suit. The High
Court in appeal upheld the adoption and the right of the
plaintiff to re-open the partition. Certain minor
modifications were made which will be referred to, to the
extent necessary, later.
Shri Gupte, appearing for the appellant (second defendant)
has taken us through the evidence regarding the custom of
adopting the daughter’s son by the widow, and argued that as
a source of law-undoubtedly, custom is a source of Hindu
law-there was not sufficient material to hold on the triune
aspects of antiquity, adequacy and continuity. He urged
that the adoption was, therefore, invalid even though there
was concurrence in the conclusions of the courts below. He
did not seriously argue on the factum of the adoption, and
even otherwise this is a finding of fact rendered by the
courts below which we are not disposed to re-examine.
Counsel far the first respondent. Shri Javali, took us
through the High Court’s discussion of the evidence bearing
on custom and we ate satisfied that there is ample
justification for the finding reached that the adoption of
the plaintiff is true and valid, both from the angles of
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custom and, factum.
It is established law that the adoption by a widow relates
back to the date of the death of the adoptive father, which,
in this case, took place in 1921. Indeed, the complexity of
the present case arises from the application of this legal
fiction of " relation-back" and the limitations on the
amplitude of that fiction vis a vis the partition of 1944.
in the light of the rulings of the various High Courts and
of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, and of this
Court, the last of which is Govind v. Nagappa.(1) According
to the appellant, the rights of the adopted son, armed as he
is with the theory of "relation-back", have to be
effectuated retroactively, the guidelines wherefor are
available from the decided cases. It is no doubt true that
"when a member of a joint family governed by Mitakshara law
dies and the widow validly adopts a son to him, a
coparcenary interest in the joint property is immediately
created by the adoption co-extensive with that which
(1) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 200.
477
the deceased coparcener had, and it vests at once in the
adopted son". (see Mulla on Hindu Law, 13th edn. page 516).
The same author, however, points out that "the rights of an
adopted son arise for the first time on his adoption-. He
may, by virtue of his rights as adopted son, divest other
persons in whom the property vested after the death of the
adoptive father, but all lawful alienations made by previous
holder would be binding on him. His right to impeach
previous alienations would depend upon the capacity of the
holder who made the alienation as well as on the nature of
the action of alienation. When the holder was a male, who
had unfettered right of transfer, e.g., the last surviving
member of a joint family, the adopted son could not impeach
the transfer. In case of females who had restricted right
of transfer even apart from any adoption, the transfers
would be valid only when they are supported by legal
necessity." (ibid; pp; 516-517; para 507). "An adopted son
is bound by alienations made by his adoptive father prior to
the adoption to the same extent as a natural born son would
be." (lbid, p.517; para 508).
It is settled law that rights of an adopted son spring into
existence only from the moment of the adoption and all
alienations made ’by the widow before the adoption, if they
are made for legal necessity or otherwise lawfully, such as
with the consent of the next reversioners, are binding on
the adopted son. The narrow but important question that
arises here is as to whether the adoption made in 1956 can
upset the partition of 1944, validly made under the then
conditions, and whether the gift by Mahadev of properties
exclusively set apart to him, and, therefore, alienable by
him, could be retroactively invalidated by the plaintiff on
the application of the legal fiction of "relation-back". it
is unlikely that a similar question will arise hereafter
since s. 4 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 has practically
swept off texts, rules and the like in Hindu Law, which were
part of that law in force immediately before the
commencement of the Act, if provisions have been made for
such matters in the Act. Since on the husband’s death the
widow takes an absolute estate, questions of the type which
engage us in this appeal will be stilled for ever. Of
course, we need not investigate this aspect of the matter as
the present case relates to a pre-statutory adoption. Even
s. 12 of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956,
makes it plain that an adopted child shall be deemed to be
the child of his or her adoptive father or mother for all
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purposes with effect from the date of the adoption.
We may now proceed to consider the contention of Mr. Gupte
that the adopted son cannot challenge the partition And the
gift.
The plaintiff. as the adopted son, for secular and spiritual
purposes continues the line of the adoptive father and when
the widow adopts, the doctrine of ’relation-back’ makes
sonship retroactive from the moment of death of the late
husband. ’the new entrant is deemed to have been born on
the date of death of the adoptive father. Supposing there
was an undivided family in existence when the adoptive
478
father died, how far can the legal fiction of anterior
sonship disrupt the doings between notional birth and actual
adoption? Mulla sums up the result of the rulings thus :
(p. 496).
"If, therefore, there was a coparcenary in
existence when the adoptive father died, then
whether it came to an end by the death of the
last surviving coparcener or by subsequent
partition among the remaining members, an
adoption validly made by the widow of the
deceased coparcener would have the effect of
divesting the estate in the hands of the heir
to the last surviving coparcener in the first
case and of putting an end to the partition in
the second and enabling the adopted son to
claim a share in the family properties as if
they were still joint."
This means that at the partition of 1944 although as a
physical fact only Mahadev and defendant No. 1 were alive,
the plaintiff must be deemed to have been alive. The
division had denied a share to him while he was eligible, in
the eye of law, to a share. There were thus three co-
parceners and the plaintiff was entitled to a third out of
the estate of the joint family as it then existed.
Illustration (a) at page 497 of Mulla, based on Surendra
Nandan(1) is apt and reads:
"A and B are undivided brothers governed by
the Mitakshara law. A dies leaving authority
to his widow to adopt a son to him. On A’s
death his undivided half share in the
coparcenary property passes to B, the
surviving coparcener. While B is still alive,
A’s widow adopts a son to A. The effect of the
adoption is that a coparcenary interest is
created in the joint property coextensive with
that which A has in the property (that is,
onehalf), and it vests in the adopted son."
The plaintiff’s claim for a share is thus well-founded-not
half, which is tall but one-third which fits the fiction as
in 1944.
Two crucial questions then arise. One-third share out of
what? Should the gift by Mahadev of what was under the then
circumstances his exclusive property be ignored in working
out the one-third share? Two principles compete in this
jurisdiction and judges have struck a fair balance between
the two, animated by a sense of realism, impelled by desire
to do equity and to avoid unsettling vested rights and
concluded transactions, ’lest a legal fiction should by
invading actual facts of life become an instrumentality of
instability. Law and order are jurisprudential twins and
this perspective has inarticulately informed judicial
pronouncements in this branch of Hindu law. In short, the
principle of relating the birth of the adopted son to the
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last day of the adoptive father’s life is put in peaceful
co-existence with recognition of rights lawfully vested on
the basis of the realities then existing. The law frowns on
divesting vested rights and keeping in cold storage or
suspended animation normal legal events like competent
transfers and collateral succession, except when compelled
by jural mandate. So viewed,the partition of 1944 was
valid; so also the gift
(1) (1891) 18 Cal. 385.
479
of his exclusive share by Mahadev, to Shripad, Defendant No.
2. The plaintiff could reopen the partition only to the
limited extent rights flowing from these two facts viz.
disruption of jointness and a lienation by one share
permitted. Nor is law inhuman or inequitable or abstract,
its essence being social engineering. Therefore, the humane
endeavour to work out equities in a given case has engaged
the conscience of judges in the reported rulings. Here’ the
circumstance that the whole share of Mahadev has gone out of
the corpus of the coparcenary on account of the gift
inflicts an injustice on the plaintiff if he is to get only
one-third of the properties which were allotted to Gajanan
whose branch still remained in tact; equally unjust it would
be on Gajanan if out of his allotment the plaintiff were to
slice off what is equal to one half of the total assets as
at the time of partition in 1944 merely because of the
misfortune that he had still kept it as the asset of his
branch at the time of the adoption. Equitable con-
siderations would suggest a modification. When the adoption
was made there were only two coparceners and the corpus
available only Gajanan’s properties. So a half share out of
those items may be fair, in the totality of circumstances.
Maintenance to the mother and profits due to the plaintiff
are minor matters and will be gone into last.
The broad approach made and the general conclusions reached
above do fit into the conspectus of judge-made law, as we
will presently discuss. May be, a flash-back method of
reference to the case law will be more effective, and, that
way the recent decision in Govind v. Nagappa(1) clears the
ground a great deal. Hegde J., speaking for the Court drew
the lines clearly in the situation of confrontation between
the fiction of relation-back and the fact of partition, in a
way analogous to our case. In asking for a share the
adopted son could overlook the prior division but in pushing
the fiction to its plenary extreme of nullifying the
partition so as to re-unite a divided family, the Court
cried halt. The learned Judge observed :
"It is true that by a fiction of law-well
settled by decided cases-that an adopted son
is deemed to have been adopted on the date of
the death of his adoptive father. He is the
continuator of his adoptive father’s line
exactly as an aurasa son and an adoption, so
far as the continuity of the line is
concerned, has a retrospective effect.
Consequently he is deemed to have been a
coparcener in his adoptive father’s family
when Krishna Rao and Lakshmana Rao pa
rtitioned
the properties. The partition having been
effected without his consent, it is not
binding on him. But from this it does not
follow that Krishna Rao and Lakshmana Rao did
not separate from the family at the time of
the partition. It was open to Krishna Rao and
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Lakshmana Rao to separate themselves from the
family. Once they did separate, the appellant
and his adoptive mother alone must be deemed
to have continued as the members of the
family.
(1) [1972] 3 S.C.R. 200.
480
When the partition took place in 1933, the
appellant even if he was a coparcener on that
day could have only got 1/3rd share. We fail
to see how his position can be said to have
improved merely because he was adopted
subsequent to the date of partition. It is
true that because he was not a party to the
partition, he is entitled to ask for reopening
of the partition and have his share worked out
without reference to that partition.
The doctrine of relation back is only a legal
fiction. There is no justification to
logically extend that fiction. In fact the
plaintiff had nothing to do with his adoptive
father’s family when Krishna Rao died.
The devolution of Krishna Rao’s property must
be held to have taken place at the very moment
Krishna Rao died. We know of no legal fiction
under which it can be said to have been in a
suspended animation till the plaintiff was
adopted.
We see no basis for the contention of the
appellant that he can ignore the events that
took place in 1933. He can no doubt ignore
the actual partition by metes and bounds
effected by Krishna Rao and Lakshmana Rao and
ask for a repartition of the properties but
his adoption by itself does not and cannot re-
unite the divided family. It is one thing to
say that an adopted son can ignore a partition
effected prior to his adoption, which effects
his rights and it is a diifferent thing to say
that his adoption wipes out the division of
status that had taken place
in his family.
Further the interest of the society is not
advanced by engrafting one more fiction to the
already existing fiction that an adopted son
is deemed to hive been born on the date of
death of his adoptive father. Acceptance ’of
the new fiction canvassed on behalf of the
plaintiff is bound to create various
complications. Hindu widows in the past were
preverbially long lived because of the child
marriage system. Adoptions might take place
and have taken place more than half a century
after the death of the adoptive father.
Meanwhile the other coparceners mi
ght have
dealt with the family property on the basis of
the then existing rights. They might have a
lienated the property. We see no
justification to create chaos by inventing a
new fiction unknown to Hindu law texts nor
authorised by stare decisis.
But where the succession to the property of a
person other than the adoptive father is
involved, the principle applicable is not the
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rule of relation back but the rule that inheri
tance once vested cannot be divested."
481
By parity of reasoning we have to give the plaintiff a one-
third share, which alone even an aurasa son of late
Kashinath would have got stirpitally. To undo the divided
status and continue the coparcenary till the date of the
suit so as to award a half share to the plaintiff as
representing one of the two surviving branches would be
legal fiction run riot. Neither principle nor precedent
compels that coursed.
We now sail into still more troubled waters. Where is this
share to come from ? From the coparcenary property, less
what has legitimately gone out of it. If the widow of a
deceased coparcener had alienated for binding necessity,
such property has to be excluded although a strict
projection of the fiction would mean that the adopted son
was alive at the time succession opened and the widow could
not have the right to even a limited estate and a fortiori
could not competently alienate for necessity or otherwise.
Liberties with the legal fiction have been taken in this and
other aspects of the "relation back" theory. If a property
has validly gone out of the hotch-potch the adopted son
cannot recall it. The fact of partition cannot be drowned
by the subsequent adoption because when it was entered into
there was no legal impediment in doing it. Likewise, if a
manager or widow alienate& for binding necessity the
constructive ante-dated nativity of the adopted son cannot
nullify what has taken place before he in actuality entered
the coparcenary. By the same token, a sole surviving
coparcener (except perhaps in the Banaras School where
unlike in other schools he has no independent power of
transferring his share) may dispose of the estate before
adoption by a deceased coparcener’s widow and that act
defeats the claim of’ a later adoptee. Such is the
inexorable operation of time and circumstance on long later
adoplions and their proprietary fall-out. You cannot put
the clock back beyond a certain stage. We may express the
’view that some observations, clearly obiter, in P. Ammal v.
Ramalingam,(1) relied on by Shri Javali for the 1st
respondent are wider than justified. Legal fictions have
legal frontiers. In Srinivas(2), Venkatarama Iyer, J.,
after referring to the relevant books and cases, cautioned
against the application of the defeasance right of the
adopted son to cases of collateral succession opening before
adoption. "The law was thus well settled that when
succession to the properties of a person other than an
adoptive father was involved, the principle applicable was
not the rule of relation back but the rule that inheritance
once vested could not be divested." The learned Judge,
expressing some dissent from Anant Bhikappa(3), stated the
proposition thus:
"When an adoption is made by widow of either a
coparcener or a separated member, then the
right of the adopted son to claim properties
as on the date of the, death of the adoptive
father by reason of the theory of relation
back is subject to the limitation that
alienations made prior to the
(1) [1970] 3 S.C.R. 894.
(2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1;17;24-25
(3) 70 I.A. 232.
482
date of adoption are binding on him, if they
were for purposes binding on the estate.
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Thus, transferees from limited owners, whether
they be widows or coparceners in a joint
family, are amply protected. But no such
safeguard exists in respect of property
inherited from a collateral, because if the
adopted son is entitled on the theory of
relation back to divest that property, the
position of the mesne holder would be that of
an owner possessing a title defeasible on
adoption, and the result of such adoption must
be to extinguish that title and that of all
persons claiming under him. The alienees from
him would have no protection, as there could
be no question of supporting the alienations
on the ground of necessity or benefit. And if
the adoption takes place long after the
succession to the collateral had opened-in
this case it was 41 years thereafter-and the
property might have meanwhile changed hands
several times, the title of the purchasers
would be liable to be disturbed quite a long
time after the alienations. We must hesitate
to subscribe to a view of the law which leads
to consequences so inconvenient. The claim of
the appellant to divest a vested estate rests
on a legal fiction, and legal fictions should
not be extended so as to lead to unjust
results."
This Court, in Krishnamurthi’s (1) case, also considered the
amplitude of end embankments on the "relation back" stream
of adoption by a widow. But there one basic fact deserves
attention. The adopted sons’s claim was as heir to his
grandfather whose property devolved, on death, on his
daughters, the adoptive father having died long before the
grandfather and the adoption having taken place long after
the grandfather’s death. The Court took the view that the
daughters who, took as heirs did so on a defeasible title.
For one thing, there was no coparcener alive and no joint
family-either as a whole or even a branch thereof at the
time of,the adoption and the adopted son displaced those who
got title only in the absence of a son. Secondly,
inheritance stands on a different footing from alienation-
or, at any rate, the erosion of the relation back doctrine
has not affected claiming back from direct heirs. (The
adopted son’s claim to divest collateral heirs has been
negatived in Srinivasa.(2) Krishnamurthi’s(1) crucial ratio,
giving it full scope, is that property inherited absolutely
but subject to defeasance, fails when the divesting even
occurs, and the character of the property does not change
from coparcenary property to Self-acquired property so long
as the possibility of defeasance by a widow of the last
coparcener, by adding a member by adoption, exists. In the
present case, by parity of reasoning,’ the properties which
came to Gajanan’s share (Defendant No. 1 must remain
vulnerable to the claims of the potential coparcener-
projected into the family by the widow’s adoption. But this
case does not deal with and cannot govern valid alienations
which have effectually changed its character as family
property. In Bhimji Krishna Rao(3) Chagla, C. J., speaking
for himself, and Gajendragadkar, J., (as he than was)
affirmed this position. We may usefully extract the
headnote here
(1) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 813. (2) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1,17,24-25.
(3) [1950] 52 B.L.R. 290.
483
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"A Joint Hindu family consisted of the sole
surviving coparcener and the widow of a
deceased coparcener. The Surviving coparcener
made alienations of portions of the family
property. Subsequently, the widow adopted a
son. The son having sued to set aside the
alienations:-
Held, that at the dates of the alienations the
coparcener had full right to treat the family
property as if it was his own property, and
that the adoption which was subsequent to the
alienations could not affect the property
which was already disposed of by the
coparcener as a person who acted as the full
owner of the property,
In considering whether a particular alienation
made of joint family property- prior to the
date of adoption is or is not a lawful
alienation, the alienation must be lawful, not
in relation to the rights of the adopted son,
but it must be lawful at the date when the
alienation was made. If it is lawful, it
cannot be questioned or challenged by the
adopted son whose adoption is subsequent to
the alienation."
The Court relied on the observations of the Privy Council in
Krishnumurthi Ayyar v. Krishnamurthy Ayyar (1),and quoted
the following passage which illumines the principle:
"When a disposition is made intra vivos by one
who has full power over property under which a
portion of that property is carried away, it
is clear that no rights of a son who is subse-
quently adopted can affect that portion which
is disposed of. The same is true when the
disposition is by will and the adoption is
subsequently made by a widow who has been
given power to adopt. For the will speaks as
at the death of the testator, and the property
is carried away before the adoption takes
place."
Thus, alienations by a sole coparcener or testamentary
dispositions by him are beyond assail by a subsequently
adopted son. This proposition was affirmed in a slightly
later decision by the same strong bench in Bijoor vs.
Padmanabh(1). The headnote sufficiently sums up the law
thus
"The doctrine of relation back under which a
son adopted by a Hindu widow is deemed to have
been in existence in the adoptive family at
the death of the adoptive father cannot be
accepted in its entirety. It is a doctrine
with certain definite limitations and
exceptions, and one of the important
limitations and exceptions is that the adopted
son is bound by all the lawful alienations
made by his adoptive father if he was the sole
surviving coparcener of a joint family. In
this behalf there is no difference in
principle between an alienation inter vivos
and a disposition made by a will."
(1) 54 I.A. 248.
(2) I.L.R. (1950] Bom. 480.
484
A full bench of the Bombay High Court had occasion to touch
on a similar issue arising before us although the case was
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eventually decided on the equities of the situation. We may
extract the observations in this case (Krishtappa v. Gopal)
(1) as, in a way, they reinforce our view :
"It is possible to take the view that the
position of the members of the divided family
is in law the same as that of a sole surviving
coparcener. Just as the sole surviving copar-
cener has every right and authority to dispose
of the property as if it was of his absolute
ownership, so also after partition the members
of the erstwhile coparcenary have equally the
right ,of disposing of the share which came to
them on partition as if it was their
property."
Dealing with a fair working out of rights the Court made
observations relevant for us at a later stage of this case.
Chagla, C. J., observed in that context :
"Whenever a partition is re-opened, shares
must be allocated on a fair and equitable
principle, and what was uppermost in the minds
of these two learned Judges was that, in
giving to the adopted son his proper share, no
injustice should be done to any coparcener and
the adopted son should get his own fair share.
As Mr Justice Bavdekar himself observes in the
judgment at page 257 ; "It is really a
question of equity ; and if the judgment
proceeds on a question of equity, we entirely
agree with the two learned judges that equity
could only be done provided the basis adopted
is the basis suggested by these two learned
Judges in their judgment. We, therefore, do
not look upon this judgment as in any way
impairing the principle which was laid down by
this Court in 52 Bom LR 290 : (AIR 1950 Bom
271), This is not a case of interfering with
the right of a divided coparcener to deal with
his share as his own ; nor is this a case of
impairing the principle accepted by this Court
over a long period that an adopted son is
bound by all lawful allegations made prior to
the adoption. But we look up-an this case as
a simple case of doing equities on the re-
opening of a partition in order that the
property should be re-divided on a fair and
equitable basis."
Shri Javali pressed before us that Balaji’s(2) case was a
closer parallel to our case, forgetting that as Chagla, C.
J., explained in Bhimji (Supra) that Lokur, J. decided that
case on the footing that a partition was not an alienation
and the conclusion would have been different had he treated
a partition as a transfer.’ But now, this Court has laid
down that a post-partition adoption cannot re-unite the
family even though it may not deprive him of a share so long
as some coparcenary
(1) A.I.R. 1957 Bom. 214, 215.
(2) (1944) 47 B.L.R. 121.
485
property existed. The Full Bench case in Sankaralingwn(1)
also does not militate against the Bombay view. Leach, C.
J., in the course of the judgment, observed
"If the law recognizes in an adopted son of a
deceased coparcener the right to share in the
estate as it existed before the partition,
property which has not been lawfully alienated
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in the meantime is still within his reach."
(emphasis supplied).
Mysore also has fallen in line with this strand of thought.
In Some-sekharappa v. Basappa Channabasappa(2) a Bench of
that Court laid down the law condensed in the headnote thus
:
"A son adopted by a widow of a deceased
coparcener cannot claim the joint family
property in the hands of a transferee from the
heir of the last surviving coparcener, even
though the transfer took place before the
adoption. The doctrine of relation back will
not extend to a case where a transfer has
already been made either by the sole surviving
coparcener or by his heir. The principle is
that when a disposition is made inter vivos by
one who has full power over property under
which a portion of that property is carried
away, no rights of a son who is subsequently
adopted can affect that portion which is
disposed.".
True, the decision under appeal before us also is from
Mysore and takes the opposite view.
We reach the end of the journey of precedents, ignoring as
inessential other citations. The balance sheet is clear.
The propositions that emerge are that : (i) A widow’s
adoption cannot be stultified by an anterior partition of
the joint family and the adopted son can claim a share as if
he were begotten and alive when the adoptive father breathed
his last ; (ii) Never-the-less, the factum of partition is
not wiped out by the later adoption ; (iii) Any disposition
testamentary or inter vivos, lawfully made antecedent to the
adoption is immune to challenge by the adopted son; (iv)
Lawful alienation, in this context, means not necessarily
for a family necessity but alienation made competently in
accordance with law (v) A widow’s power of alienation is
limited and if-and only if-the conditions set by the Hindu
Law are fulfilled will the alienation bind a subsequently
adopted son. So also alienation by the Karta of an
undivided Hindu family or transfer by a coparcener governed
by the Banaras school ; (vi) Once partitioned validly, the
share of a member of a Mitakshara Hindu family in which his
own issue have no right by birth can be transferred by him
at his will and such transfers, be they by will, gift or
sale, bind the adopted son who comes later on the scene. Of
course, the position of a void or voidable transfer by such
a sharer may stand on a separate footing but we need not
investigate it here.
Applying the above formulations to the present facts, the
conclusion is clear. The plaintiff will be eligible to girt
one-third of the available joint family property. In
computing net property the gift by Mahadev
(2) [1960] Mys. L.J. 687.
(1) I.L.R. [1943] Mad. 309.
486
to the 2nd defendant has to be excluded. But the allotment
for maintenance of the 3rd defendant will have to be
ignored, brought into the ,corpus and, in the division by
metes and bounds allotted to the share of the plaintiff.
One more problem, rather ticklish, remains-the equitable
effectuation of the partition. The Full Bench decision of
the Bombay High Court in Krishtappa (Supra) emphasized that
the adopted son’s right, arising long after other
proprietary events, should be worked out, not rigidly but
justly. Chagla, C. J., laid down the guidelines already
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extracted while dealing with the case earlier. We agree
with this sensitive approach and proceed to adopt it here.
The plaintiff has to be given his one-third share as in
1944, when the partition took place. Assuming that the
entire estate was then worth 3 lakhs, the adopted son would
have got a lakh of rupees, say. But Mahadev’s share has
been entirely gifted away and must be ignored. Which means
that the plaintiff’s one-third share valued at one lakh will
have to come out of Gajanan’s properties which, on our
arithmetical assumption, would be one-half of three lakhs,
i.e. 1-1/2 lakhs. It would be unfair to deprive Gajanan of
a lion’s share out of his allotment merely because, before
adoption, he had not parted with his properties. It would
be eminently just to make the first defendant bear only one-
half the burden ,cast by the notional re-entry of the
plaintiff into the coparcenary and we direct a division into
two equal shares of such of the properties ,which fell to
the first defendant’s share in the 1944 partition as were
with the first defendant at the date of adoption, and award
one share to the plaintiff. The justice and equity of the
situation, not any in.flexible-legal principle, prompts this
course. We confess that the prestatutory law of adoption,
in its conflict between fiction and fact, has had a zigzag
course in courts and we have read the diverse dicta imbued
by the Holmseian thought that the life of the law is not
logic but experience.
We are informed that the first defendant is now no more and
rival claims to his inheritance are being agitated in some
other litigation. We do not take note of it in this decree.
Nor do we think it necessary to direct inter se partition
between the first and the second defendants as was done in
the courts below. In substantial allowance of the appeal,
we direct that a decree be passed (a) allowing the plaintiff
a half share out of such of the properties allotted to the
original first defendant under the 1944 partition as were
with the first defendant at the date of adoption, including
among the items to be divided the item set apart for the
maintenance of defendant No. 3 ; (b) directing profits to be
paid to the plaintiff on the basis of the one-half share of
the divisible assets ; and (c) directing the cessation of
maintenance to be payable by the first defendant’s branch to
the 3rd defendant. Parties to bear their costs throughout.
V.P.S.
487