Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ANNAGOUDA NATHGOUDA PATIL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
COURT OF WARDS AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
17/12/1951
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1952 AIR 60 1952 SCR 208
CITATOR INFO :
C 1970 SC 789 (13)
RF 1970 SC1643 (13)
ACT:
Hindu Law--Inheritance--Succession to property of fe-
male-Hindu Law of Inheritance (Amendment) Act (II of
1929)--Applicability-Rights of sister’s sons--Property of
maiden--Order of succession.
HEADNOTE:
The Hindu Law of Inheritance (Amendment) Act (Act II of
1929) which introduced the son’s daughter, daughter’s daugh-
ter, sister and sister’s son between the grandfather and the
paternal uncle in the order of succession applies only to
the separate property of a Hindu male who dies intestate.
It does not alter the law as regards the devolution of any
other kind of property owned by a Hindu male and does not
purport to regulate succession to the property of a Hindu
female at all. The Act cannot therefore be invoked to
determine the heirs of a Hindu female in respect of her
stridhan property.
The property of a Hindu female who dies as a maiden goes
in the first place to her uterine brothers, then to the
mother and then to the father, and on failure of the mother
and father, it goes to the nearest relations, that is to
say, to the sapindas of the father and in their default the
sapindas of the mother, both in the order of propinquity.
Under the Mitakshara law of succession as well as the
Mayukha law the paternal uncle’s son is entitled to succeed
to the property of a Hindu in preference to sister’s sons.
Manda Mahalakshmamma v. Mantravadi (I.L.R. 1947 Mad.
23), Shakuntala Bai v. Court of Wards (I.L.R. 1942 Nag.
629), Taluhraj Kuar v. Bacha Kuar (I.L.R. 28 Pat. 150),
Kuppuswami v. Manickasari (A.I.R. 1950 Mad. 196) approved.
Shamrao v. Raghunandan (I.L.R. 1939 Bom. 228), Mst. Charjo
v. Dinanath (A.I.R. 1937 Lah. 196), Kehar Singh v. Attar
Singh (A.I.R. 1944 Lah. 1142), Indra Pal v. Humangi Debi
(I.L.R. 1949 All. 816) not approved.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 115 of
1950.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree of the Bombay High
Court (Macklin and Rajadhyaksha JJ.) dated 14th March. 1945,
in First Appeal No. 274 of 1941 which arose out of a decree
dated 15th March,
209
1941, of the First Class Subordinate Judge of Satara in
Civil Suit No. 890 of 1938.
G.R. Madbhavi (K. R. Bergeri, with him) for their
appellant.
H.J. Umrigar for respondent No. 1.
M.C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (K. G.Datar, with
him) for respondent No. 2.
1951. December 17. The Judgment of the Court was deliv-
ered by
MUKHERJEA J.--This appeal is directed against a judgment
and decree of a Division Bench of the Bombay High Court
dated the 14th of March, 1945, which affirmed, on appeal,
the decision of the First Class Subordinate Judge, Satara,
passed in Civil Suit No 890 of 1938. The appellants before
us filed the suit as plaintiffs in the original court, for
establishment of their title to the property in dispute
which is known as Chikurde Estate, on the allegation that
they were, under the Hindu Law, the nearest heirs of one
Bhimabai, who was admittedly the last holder of the estate.
The suit was brought initially against one defendant, name-
ly, the Court of Wards, Satara, and admittedly the Court of
Wards took possession of the property of Bhimabai, while she
was alive, and is continuing in possession of the same even
now after her death. Later on, defendants 2, 3 and 4, who
put forward rival claims of succession to the estate, were
allowed to intervene in the suit and were added as parties-
defendants. The Court of Wards, which now figures as defend-
ant No. 1, took up, all through, a neutral attitude and
expressed its willingness to hand over the estate to any
person who would be declared to be rightfully entitled to
it by the Court. The Courts below have negatived the claims
of defendants 2 and 3 and they have not come up to press.
their claims in the appeal before us. The two rival claim-
ants, who are now on the scene, are the plaintiffs on one
side and defendant No. 4 on the other, and the whole contro-
versy in this appeal centres round the
210
point as to who amongst them have the preferential right to
succeed to the disputed estate after the death of Bhimabai.
To appreciate the material facts of the case and the conten-
tions that have been raised by the parties, it will be
convenient to refer to the following genealogy which is not
disputed by either side.
Vithalrao (died 1896)
---------
Ganpatrao (died 1914) Nilkanthrao Anandrao
Tangawa alias (died 1899) (died 1913)
Anandibai (Deft. 2) Krishnabai
Adopted Deft. 3 Vithalrao (Deft. 4)
Babasaheb on adopted by
3-2-1939. Krishnabai on
4-11-1924 Respdt. 2.
Firangojirao (died Tanakka (predeceas- angabai (died
15-11-1919.) ed her sister Gangabai on 14-2-1924)
without any issue). Nathgauda
Annagauda Balgauda (Plff. 2)
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Bhimabai (daughter) (Plff. No. 1) Appellant No. 2.
(died on 27-1-1932). Appellant No. 1
It is the case of both the parties that Vithalrao, whose
name appears at the top of the pedigree table, and who was
the common ancestor of the parties, held the disputed
property as watan property appertaining to the hereditary
office of Deshmukhi service. Vithalrao was the recipient of
a Sanad dated 28th November, 1892, under what was called the
Gordon Settlement, the object of which was to commute serv-
ices of certain watandars in that part of the country and
relieve them from liability to perform the services attached
to their office on certain terms and conditions which were
agreed upon between the Government on the one hand and the
watandars on the other. The terms of the settlement were
generally embodied in Sanads and one such Sanad was granted
to Vithalrao in 1892. It is not disputed that after this
settlement Vithalrao continued to be watandar as defined by
Bombay Act III of 1874, and that the watan in dispute was an
impartible estate governed by the rule of
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primogeniture. In 1896 Vithalrao died and he was succeeded
by his eldest son Ganpatrao under the law of primogeniture.
Ganpatrao died childless in 1914, leaving behind him his
two widows Anandibai and indirabai, of whom the senior widow
Anandibais defendant No. 2 in the present suit. Both the
two brothers of Ganpatrao, namely, Nilkanthrao and Anan-
drao had predeceased him. Nilkanthrao left behind him one
son named Firangojirao and two daughters, while Anandrao
died childless, leaving him surviving his widow Krishnabai,
who later on adopted Vithalrao, who is defendant No. 4 in
the suit. Ganpatrao had left a will bequeathing all his
watan and nonwatan properties to Firangojirao and the latter
succeeded to the estate both under the will as well as under
the law of lineal promogeniture, he being the only male
member of the family at that time. Firangojirao died in
1919, leaving Bhimabai, his only daughter, who was a minor
at that time. On 23rd September, 1921, the name of Bhimabai
was entered in the village records as watandar in place of
Firangojirao and in the year following the Court of Wards,
Satara, assumed superintendence of Bhimabai’s estate. On
11th October, 1923, the Government of Bombay by their Reso-
lution No. A-471 declared the Chikurde Deshmukh watan as
lapsed to Government, presumably on the ground that there
was no male heir in the watan family after the death of
Firangojirao. A new entry was then made in the village
register which recorded Bhimabai not as watandar, but as
heir of Firangojirao and the lands were described as being
converted into ryotvari lands after forfeiture by Govern-
ment and subjected to full assessment. On 4th of November,
1924, Krishnabai, the widow of Anandrao, adopted defendant
No. 4 as a son to her husband. On 27th January, 1932, Bhima-
bai died unmarried and her estate continued under the man-
agement of the Court of Wards. The appellants before us,
who are the sister’s sons of Firangojirao, brought this suit
on 5th of August, 1938, and their case, in substance, is
that after the Resolution of the Government passed on 11th
212
of October, 1923, the Chikurde estate ceased to be a watan
property and the succession to such estate was governed by
the ordinary rules of Hindu Law and not by the provisions of
Act V of 1886 which postpone relations claiming through a
female to a male member of the watan family. It was urged
that the property being the absolute property of Bhimabai
and she having died while still a maiden, the plaintiffs,
being the nearest heirs of her father, were entitled to
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succeed under the general rules of Hindu Law. As said al-
ready, the defendant No. 4, who is respondent No. 2 in this
appeal, was added as a party-defendant sometime after the
suit was filed and the contention raised on his behalf was
that by reason of his having been duly adopted. to Anandrao
on 4th of November, 1924, he was the nearest heir to the
property in suit which was a watan property and prayed that
a declaration in his favour might be made by the court. The
defendant No. 3 claimed to have been adopted as a son to her
husband Ganpatrao by Anandibai, the defendant No. 2, some
time in February 1939.
The trial court on a consideration of the evidence came
to the conclusion that the Chikurde estate was an impartible
property governed by the rules of primogeniture. It was
held that, it being an impartible joint estate, the rule of
survivorship still applied and consequently on the death of
Ganpatrao, without leaving any son, the estate passed by
survivorship to the next senior branch which was that of
Firangojirao. The view taken by the Subordinate Judge is
that after Firangojirao’s death Bhimabai took only a provi-
sional interest in the property which was liable to be
divested by the emergence of a male member by adoption in
the family and in fact she was legally divested of her
interest in the property when defendant No. 4 was adopted by
Anandrao’s widow. In the opinion of the Subordinate Judge
the resolution of the Government treating the Chikurde
estate as lapsed was premature and could not be made legally
so long as there were widows living, who were capable of
adopting sonS. The trial judge held further that even
213
if Bhimabai was taken to have held the property as watan
till her death, the next heir to succeed under the Bombay
Act V of 1886 would be defendant No. 4 and not the plain-
tiffs. The result was that the plaintiffs’ suit was
dismissed. The plaintiffs then took an appeal to the High
Court of Bombay and this appeal was heard by a Division
Bench consisting of Macklin in and Rajadhyaksha JJ. The
learned Judges dismissed the appeal and confirmed the deci-
sion of the trial court, though the reasons given by them
are not the same as those given by the trial judge. It was
held by the High Court, on a construction of the Sanad
granted to Vithalrao in 1892, that the order of lapse or
forfeiture of the watan estate passed by the Government in
the year 1923 on the ground of failure of male heirs was not
a valid and legal order and although under the relevant
clause of the Sanad the Government could, in the absence of
male heirs, resume the watan in the sense that they could
make the property liable to full assessment, the other
incidents of the watan estate still continued. Consequently,
Act V of 1886 would still govern succession to such property
and defendant No. 4 had preferential rights over the plain-
tiffs under section 2 of that Act. It is against this
decision that the plaintiffs have come up on appeal to this
court.
The learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the plain-
tiffs-appellants has raised a two-fold contention in support
of the appeal. It has been contended in the first place that
the High Court was in error in holding that the Chikurde
estate retained its watan character even after it was re-
sumed by the Government by its Resolution of 11th October,
1923; and if it was non-watan, the plaintiffs would be
nearer heirs to Bhimabai than defendant No. 4. The other
contention raised is that even if the property remained
watan in the hands of Bhimabai, the latter would have to be
regarded as a watandar in the true sense of the word and
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would be a fresh stock of descent. In that view the plain-
tiffs would come within the family of
28
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watandar as defined in Bombay Act V of 1886, whereas the
defendant No. 4 would be outside the family.
The points undoubtedly are interesting, but having regard
to the view which we have decided to take, it would not be
necessary to investigate the merits of either of them. It
may be pointed out that the learned Judges of the High Court
proceeded throughout on the assumption that the plaintiffs
would have preferential rights of succession if the property
was regarded as non-watan in the hands of Bhimabai. It is
only if the property was watan that the Bombay Act of 1886
will apply and the plaintiffs, who were descended through
females, would be postponed to defendant No. 4 who by adop-
tion became a male member of the family. Mr. Setalvad,
appearing for defendant No. 4 who is respondent No. 2 in
this appeal, contended before us that this assumption is
wrong, and that even if the property was regarded as nonwa-
tan property and belonging absolutely to Bhimabai as her
stridhan, still as heir of Bhimabai’s absolute property the
defendant No. 4 would have higher rights than the plain-
tiffs. As this point was not touched upon in the judgments
of either of the courts below, we heard the learned Counsel
on both sides at great length upon it and the conclusion
that we have reached is that the contention of the learned
AttorneyGeneral is well-founded and must prevail.
For the purpose of this argument we would assume that
the property in suit was non-watan stridhan property of
Bhimabai and the only question is, as to who amongst the
rival claimants would be the nearer heir after her death
according to the Hindu Law of inheritance ? It is admitted
that Bhimabai died while she was a maiden and that a maid-
en’s property under the Hindu Law goes in the first
place to her uterine brothers, in default of them to the
mother and then to the father. This is according to the
text of Baudhayana (1)which is accepted by all the commenta-
tors. Viramitrodaya adds to this that "on failure of mother
and father it goes to their
(1) See Mitakshara, Chap. II, sec. XI, para 30.
215
nearest relations"(1). It has been held in a large number of
cases that the expression "nearest relations of the parents"
means and refers to the sapindas of then, father and in
their default the sapindas of the mother both in order of
propinquity(2). In the case c before us, both the plain-
tiffs and defendant No. 4 are sapindas of Firangojirao, the
plaintiffs being the sister’s sons of Firangojirao, while
the latter is his paternal uncle’s son. It is not dis-
puted that apart from the changes introduced by the Hindu
Law of Inheritance (Amendment) Act, (Act II of 1929), the
place of the paternal uncle’s son in the line of heirs under
the Mitakshara Law of Succession is much higher than that of
the sister’s son and the Mayukha Law, which prevails in the
State of Bombay, does not make any difference in this re-
spect. Under the Mitakshara Law, the paternal uncle comes
just after the paternal grandfather and his son follows him
immediately. By Act II of 1929, however, four other rela-
tions have been introduced between the grandfather and the
paternal uncle and they are the son’s daughter, daughter’s
daughter, sister and sister’s son, and the paternal uncle
and his son are thus postponed to these four relations by
the Hindu Law of Inheritance Act of 1929. The question is,
whether the provisions of this Act can at all be invoked to
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determine the heirs of a Hindu female in respect of her
stridhan property. The object of the Act as stated in the
preamble is to alter the order in which certain heirs of a
Hindu male dying intestate are entitled to succeed to his
estate; and section 1 (2) expressly lays down that "the Act
applies only to persons who but for the passing of this Act
would have been subject to the Law of Mitakshara in respect
of the provisions herein enacted, and it applies to such
persons in respect only of the property of males not held in
coparcenary and not disposed of by will". Thus the scope of
the Act is limited. It governs succession only to the
separate property of a Hindu male who dies intestate. It
does
(1) See Viramitrodaya, Chap. V, Part II, Sec. 9.
(2) See Mayne’s Hindu Law, 11th edition, Art. 621, page 741.
216
not alter the law as regards the devolution of any other
kind of property owned by a Hindu male and does not purport
to regulate succession to the property of a Hindu female at
all. It is to be noted that the Act does not make these
four relations statutory heirs under the Mitakshara Law
under all circumstances and for all purposes;it makes them
heirs only when the propositus is a male and the property in
respect to which it is sought to be applied is his separate
property. Whether this distinction between male and female
propositus is at all reasonable is another matter, but the
language of the Act makes this distinction expressly and so
long as the language is clear and unambiguous, no other
consideration is at all relevant. This is the view which has
been taken, and in our opinion quite rightly, in a number of
cases of the Madras, Patna and Nagput High Courts(1). We
are not unmindful of the fact that a contrary view has been
expressed in certain decisions of the Bombay, Lahore and
Allahabad High Courts (2). The line of reasoning that is
adopted in most of the decisions where the contrary view is
taken can be thus stated in the language of Mr. Justice
Somjee (3):__
"The Act is not sought to be applied to determine the
succession to the stridhan of a Hindu maiden but is sought
to be used by the petitioner to ascertain the fourth class
of heirs to the stridhan of a Hindu maiden mentioned at page
139 of Mulla’s Hindu Law...... The heirs of the father at
the time of her death have to be ascertained in accordance
with the Hindu Law as it existed at the time of the death of
Bai Champubai. Thus the Act comes into operation for ascer-
taining the order in which the heirs of her father would be
entitled to succeed to his estate, because the heirs of the
father
(1) Vide Manda Mahalakshmamma v. Mantravadi (I.L.R. 1947
Mad. 23); Shakuntalabai v. Court of Wards (I.L.R. 1942 Nag.
629); Talukraj Kuer v. Bacha Kuer (I.L.R. 26 Pat. 150);
Kuppuswami v Manickasari (A.I.R. 1950 Mad. 196).
(2) Shamrao v. Raghunandan (I.L.R. 1939 Bom. 228); Mst.
Charjo v. Dinanath (A.I.R. 1937 Lah. 196); Kehar Singh v.
Attar Singh (A.I.R. 1944 Lah. 442); Indra Pal v. Humangi
Debi (I.L.R. 1949 All. 816).
(3) Vide Shamrao v. Raghunandan (I.L.R. 1939 Bom. 228 at
230).
217
in the order of propinquity who would be entitled to succeed
to him if he died on August 3, 1937, would be the heirs of
Bai Champubai in the absence of the uterine brother, the
mother and the father."
It is true that we have got to ascertain who the heirs
of the father are at the date when the daughter dies, but
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the enquiry is for the purpose of finding out who the suc-
cessor to the estate of the daughter is. This being the
subject of the enquiry, the operation of Act II of 1029 is
excluded by its express terms and for that purpose the Act
is to be treated as non-existent. In other words, the
stridhan heirs are to be ascertained with reference to the
general provisions of the Hindu Law of Inheritance ignoring
the statutory heirs who have been introduced by the Act.
The fallacy in the line of approach adopted in these cases
seems to be that they treat the Inheritance Act of 1929 as
amending or altering the Mitakshara Law of succession in all
cases and for all purposes, whereas the Act has absolutely
no operation when succession to the separate property of a
male is not the subject-matter of investigation. The result
is that in our opinion the plaintiffs are not the nearest
heirs of Bhimabai even assuming that the property was non-
watan and belonged to her absolutely. The appeal will thus
stand dismissed. We make no order as to costs in this appeal
except that defendant No. 1, the Court of Wards, would have
its costs as between attorney and client out of the estate.
The order for costs made by the courts below will stand.
Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: M.S.K. Sastri.
Agent for respondent No. 1: P.A. Mehta.
Agent for respondent No. 2: K.J Kale.
218