Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NAZAR SINGH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAGJIT KAUR AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/11/1995
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
BENCH:
JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J)
MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 855 1996 SCC (1) 35
JT 1995 (8) 161 1995 SCALE (6)476
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
B.P.JEEVAN REDDY,J.
Leave granted. Heard counsel for the parties.
This appeal is preferred against the judgment and
decree of the Punjab and Haryana High Court dismissing the
second appeal filed by the defendants-appellants. The suit
for "possession of the land (suit lands) to the extent of
7/8th share" has been decreed by the trial court and
affirmed in appeal and second appeal.
Gurdial Singh was a resident of a village in Bhatinda
district in Punjab. He owned 94 kanals and 19 marlas of land
in the village. He was working as an employment officer in
Madhya Pradesh. The relations between him and his wife,
Smt.Harmel Kaur, were strained. They were living apart.
Harmel Kaur filed a petition under Section 488 of the
Criminal Procedure Code (old code) for grant of maintenance.
In those proceedings, a compromise was arrived at between
Gurdial Singh and Harmel Kaur whereunder the suit lands (94
kanals and 19 marlas in extent) were given to Harmel Kaur in
lieu of her maintenance. The compromise entered into between
them is evidenced by Exh. P-3. The lands were given to
Harmel Kaur subject to the following conditions:
"1. That the possession of the land in
dispute was given to Harmel Kaur
defendant No.4.
2. That Harmel Kaur would be entitled to
get the land cultivated or to lease it
out and to utilize its income for
herself, wherever she likes.
3. That she would not sell or mortgage
this land. She would however be
responsible for the payment of land
revenue or any other Govt. Tax from time
to time.
4. If during the life time of Harmel
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Kaur, Gurdial Singh gets back the land
from her he would pay her Rs.50/- per
month as maintenance.
5. If Gurdial Singh died before Harmel
Kaur, then, in that case, Harmel Kaur
would be entitled to get her share from
the said land as a legal heir in
accordance with the law.
6. The maintenance allowance of Rs.25/-
per month already being paid to her,
shall be stopped.
7. Harmel Kaur shall also be entitled to
keep her residence at V.Mehraj in the
house belonging to Gurdial Singh.
8. Harmel Kaur also thumb marked this
agreement/compromise and agreed that in
case the land is taken away back by
Gurdial Singh, then she would get
Rs.50/- per month as maintenance from
him."
Exh.P-3 is dated December 3, 1963.
Gurdial Singh died on July 30, 1981.
Harmel Kaur executed four sale deeds in November, 1987 and
August, 1988 in favour of Defendant Nos.1 to 3 (appellants
herein) whereunder she sold 70 kanals and 19 marlas of land
out of the suit lands for a consideration of Rs.1,62,200/-.
On that basis, mutation was also effected in the name of the
appellants.
In January, 1991 the present suit was filed. The first
plaintiff claimed to be the wife (second wife) of Gurdial
Singh while Defendant Nos.2 to 4 claimed to be their
daughters. According to the plaintiffs, the first plaintiff
was married to Gurdial Singh on March 21, 1946. They claimed
a 7/8th share in the suit lands (including 70 kanals and 19
marlas sold to the appellants) under and in accordance with
the Hindu Succession Act. According to them, Harmel Kaur was
entitled only to a 1/8th share. The defendants denied that
the first plaintiff was married to Gurdial Singh or that
Plaintiff Nos.2 to 4 are the daughters of Gurdial Singh.
This issue is, however, concluded by the finding of the
first appellate court to the effect that the first plaintiff
was indeed married to Gurdial Singh and that Plaintiff Nos.2
to 4 are their daughters.
The courts below have decreed the suit holding that
under the compromise aforementioned, only a life interest
was created in Harmel Kaur and not an absolute interest.
According to them (the High Court dismissed the second
appeal in limine), it is sub-section (2) of Section 14 of
the Hindu Succession Act that applies herein and not sub-
section (1). The correctness of the said view is questioned
by the defendants-appellants. Section 14 of the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 reads as follows:
"14. Property of a female Hindu to be
her absolute property.-- (1) Any
property possessed by a female Hindu,
whether acquirod before or after the
commencement of this Act, shall be held
by her as full owner thereof and not as
a limited owner.
Explanation.-- In this sub-section,
’property’ includes both movable and
immovable property acquired by a female
Hindu by inheritance or devise or at a
partition, or in lieu of maintenance or
arrears of maintenance, or by gift from
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any person, whether a relative or not,
before, at or after her marriage, or by
her own skill or exertion, or by
purchase or by prescription, or in any
other manner whatsoever, and also any
such property held by her as stridhana
immediately before the commencement of
this Act.
(2) Nothing contained in sub-section (1)
shall apply to any property acquired by
way of gift or under a will or any other
instrument or under a decree or order of
a civil court or under an award where
the terms of the gift, will or other
instrument or the decree, order or award
prescribe a restricted estate in such
property."
According to sub-section (1), any property possessed by a
female Hindu shall be held by her as full owner thereof and
not as a limited owner irrespective of the fact whether the
said property was acquired by her before the commencement of
the Act or after the commencement of the Act. Explanation to
sub-section (1) elaborates the meaning and content of the
expression "property" in sub-section (1). It includes
property given in lieu of maintenance.
Section 14 and the respective scope and ambit of sub-
section (1) and (2) has been the subject-matter of a number
of decisions of this Court, the most important of which is
the decision in V.Tulasamma v. V.Sesha Reddi (1977 (3)
S.C.C.99)*. The principles enunciated in this decision have
been reiterated in a number of decisions later but have
never been departed from. According to this decision, sub-
section (2) is confined to cases where property is acquired
by a female Hindu for the first time as a grant without any
pre-existing right under a gift, will, instrument, decree,
order or award, the terms of which prescribe a restricted
estate in the property. It has also been held that where the
property is acquired by a Hindu female in lieu of right of
maintenance inter alia, it is in virtue of a pre-existing
right and such an acquisition would not be within the scope
and ambit of sub-section (2) even if the instrument, decree,
order or award allotting the property to her prescribes a
restricted estate in the property. Applying this principle,
it must be held that the suit lands, which were given to
Harmel Kaur by Gurdial singh in lieu of her maintenance,
were held by Harmel Kaur as full owner thereof and not as a
limited owner notwithstanding the several restrictive
covenants
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*Reference may also be had to the decision in Jagannathan
Pillai v. Kunjithapadam Pillai (1987 (2) S.C.C.572) which
deals with post-Act acquisition of property by a female
Hindu.
accompanying the grant. [Also see the recent decision of
this Court in Mangat Mal v. Punni Devi (1995 (6) S.C.C.88)
where a right to residence in a house property was held to
attract sub-section (1) of Section 14 notwithstanding the
fact that the grant expressly conferred only a limited
estate upon her.] According to sub-section (1), where any
property is given to a female Hindu in lieu of her
maintenance before the commencement of the Hindu Succession
Act, such property becomes the absolute property of such
female Hindu on the commencement of the Act provided the
said property was "possessed" by her. Where, however, the
property is given to a female Hindu towards her maintenance
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after the commencement of the Act, she becomes the absolute
owner thereof the moment she is placed in possession of the
said property (unless, of course, she is already in
possession) notwithstanding the limitations and restrictions
contained in the instrument, grant or award whereunder the
property is given to her. This proposition follows from the
words in sub-section (1), which insofar as is relevant read:
"Any property possessed by a female Hindu.....after the
commencement of this Act shall be held by her as full owner
and not as a limited owner". In other words, though the
instrument, grant, award or deed creates a limited estate or
a restricted estate, as the case may be, it stands
transformed into an absolute estate provided such property
is given to a female Hindu in lieu of maintenance and is
placed in her possession. So far as the expression
"possessed" is concerned, it too has been the subject-matter
of interpretation by several decisions of this Court to
which it is not necessary to refer for the purpose of this
case.
The learned counsel for the respondents-plaintiffs
relied upon a recent decision of this Court in Gumpha v.
Jaibai (1994 (2) S.C.C.511) in support of his contention
that in the facts of this case, it is sub-section (2) of
Section 14 and not sub-section (1) that is attracted. But
that was a case where certain property was given to a Hindu
female under a Will. The Bench held that since Will is
referred to only in sub-section (2) and not in sub-section
(1), it is sub-section (2) that is attracted in the case of
a property bequeathed under a Will. Since, the suit lands
were given to Harmel Kaur under a compromise - and not under
a Will - the principle of the said decision has no
application herein.
For the above reasons, we hold that the said lands
became the absolute property of Harmel Kaur the moment she
was placed in possession thereof. (It is not disputed that
the said property was indeed placed in her possession and
that she was in possession and enjoyment thereof from the
date of the aforesaid compromise.) Once this is so, the suit
must fail. The courts below were in error in holding that
because the compromise whereunder the said lands were given
to Harmel Kaur towards her maintenance, created a life
estate and a restricted estate, sub-section (1) of Section
14 is not attracted and that it is sub-section (2) that is
attracted here.
The appeal is allowed. The judgment and decree of the
trial court as affirmed by the first and second appellate
courts are set aside and the suit is dismissed. There shall
be no order as to costs.