Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS. HEM NOLINI JUDAH (SINCE DECEASED) AND AFTER HER LEGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MRS. ISOLYNE SAROJBASHINI BOSEAND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/02/1962
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1962 AIR 1471 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 294
ACT:
Will-Probate-Letters of Administration-Establishment of
right-Legatee-Other persons claiming under legatee -Bar of
claims-Probate proceedings-Title-Not determined-Res-judi-
cata-Estoppel-Indian Succession Act, 1925(39 of 1925), ; 213
(1)-Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act, 5 of 1908) 8. 11-
Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872), s. 115.
HEADNOTE:
One Dr. Miss Mitter who owned a house died leaving her
mother and three sisters. The plaintiff respondent filed -a
suit for a declaration that she was the owner of the house.
Her case was that the deceased gave the house to Mrs. Momin
another sister) by a will and Mrs. Momin in turn gifted the
(house to the plaintiff. The case of Mrs. Judah, the
defendant appellant was that Dr. Miss Mitter had bequeathed
the house by a will in favour of her mother who in turn
bequeathed the house to her by a will. Admittedly no
probate of either of the wills alleged to have been made by
Dr. Miss Mitter was taken out. The another died and it was
alleged
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that she had executed three wills one in favour of each of
three daughters. Applications were filed by each of the
daughters for letters of administration each claiming that
the will in her favour was the last will of Mrs. Mitter.
Each of the alleged wills include the house in question
among the properties of the deceased. The application of
the was granted while the other two application were Appeals
were filed by the two sisters whose application were
rejected. The appellate court while rejecting their claims
for granting letters of administration in favour of the
present appellant. The, appellant thereupon appealed to the
Privy Council and; the Privy Council allowed her appeal.
The respondent then filed the suit out of which the present
appeal has arisen claiming a declaration that she was the
owner of the house in whole or to the extent of two-thirds.
The trial court found the defendant-appellant became the
owner of the house under the will of Mrs. Mitter and the
suit of the plaintiff-respondent was barred by res-judicata
and estoppel. The plaintiff-respondent took the matter -in
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appeal to the High Court. The High Court held that as the
will of Dr. Miss Mitter in favour of her mother was not
probated the latter did not acquire the house under the will
and therefore the mother alongwith her three daughters took
equal share in the house. Since the appellant got the
mother’s share under her will and she had got one fourth
share of the house in her own right she was entitled to one
half share of the house in all. The appellant has come upto
this Court on a a certificate granted by the High Court.
Apart from the pleas of res-judicata and estoppel the
appellant contended that it was not necessary to obtain
probate of the will of Dr. Miss Mitter in favour of her
mother in order to success. fully claim the house under the
will of her mother in her favour.
Held, that s. 218 of the Indian Succession Act is a have to
the establishment of any right under a will by an execution
or legatee unless probate or letters of administration have
been obtained. This bar operates irrespective of the fact
that the right is claimed by a plaintiff or a defendant in
suit. The bar, is not restricted only to cases in which the
claim is made by a person directly claiming as a legatee of
executor but it applies also to any person who might find in
necessary in order to establish the right of some legatee of
executor from whom he might have derived title.
Questions of title are not decided in proceedings for the
grant of probate or letters of administration and therefore
the decision given ill such proceedings cannot operate a
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res-judicata in subsequent proceedings relating to the
dispute title.
Estoppel can arise as is clear from s. 115 Evidence Act when
one person has by his declaration, act, or omission
intentionally caused or permitted another person to believe
a thing to be true and to act on such belief. No estoppel
arose in the present case on the facts.
Ghanshamdoss v. Gulab Bi Bai, (1927) I. L. R. 50 Med. 927,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 273 of 1959.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 17th 1957,
of the Allahabad High Court it (Lucknow Bench) at Lucknow in
first Civil Appeal No. 16 of 1950.
Sarjoo Prasad, E. Udayarathnam and S. S. Shukla, for the
appellant.
C.B. Agarwala and D. N. Mukherjee, for respondent No. 1.
1962. February 16. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO, J.-This appeal on a certificate granted by the
Allahabad High Court arises out of a suit filed by Mrs. Bose
(plaintiff-respondent) by which she claimed a declaration
that she was the owner of house No. IO’) Ghasiari mandi
Road, Lucknow, or in the alternative a declaration that she
was the owner of two-thirds of the house. The previous
history of litigation with respect to this house is relevant
and may be set down. The house originally belonged to Dr.
Miss - Mitter, who died in July 1925. At the time, of her
death she left three sisters, namely, the appellant Mrs.
Judah, the plaintiff-respondent Mrs. Bose and the defendant-
respondent Mr. Momin, and her mother Mrs. Mitter. The
plaintiff’s case was that Dr. Miss Mitter had made a will in
favour of Mrs. Momin in April 1921 by which she gave. the
whole house to her. Mrs. Momia in turn made a gift of the
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house
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to the plaintiff who thus became the Owner of the house.
The defence of the appellant on the other hand’was that Dr.
Miss Mitter had executed a will in June 1925 bequeathing the
house to her mother Mrs. Mitter. Subsequently the mother
made a will in favour of the appellant in April 1930. It
appears that no probates of the two alleged wills by Dr.
Miss Mitter of April 1921, and June 1925 were taken out. It
appear,,; further that Mrs. Mitter was living in this house
when she died in 1934. On her death three wills alleged to
have been made by her -were propounded one in favour of each
of her three daughters, namely, Mrs. Bose, Mrs. Judah and
Mrs. Momin Applications for letters of administration were
made by the three sisters each claiming that the will in her
favour was the last will of Mrs. Mitter, and among the
property left by Mrs. Mitter by the three wills was included
the house in dispute. Farther the house in question was
also shown in the’ applications Made by the three sisters
for letters of administration of the alleged wills in their
favour. Letters of administration were granted to the
appellant while the applications of Airs. Bose and Mrs.
Momin were dismissed. This was followed by appeals to the
then Chief Court of Oadh. The said Court rejected the
appeals of Mrs. Bose and Mrs. Momin and thus their
applications for letters of administration on the basis of
-the wills propounded by them stood finally dismissed. The
Chief Court however allowed them against the grant of
letters of administration the appellant and dismissed -her
application also. The matter was then taken before their
Lordships of the Privy Council by the appellant and in 1945
the appeal of the appellant was allowed and the decree of
the Chief Court was set aside and that of the trial judge
granting letters of administration to the appellant was
restored.
In the meantime, however, certain other
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events had transpired. In 1942, Mrs. Bose filed a suit for
partition. This suit was still pending when the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council allowed the appeal of the
appellant in March 1945. So in December 1945 Mrs. Boge made
an application to withdraw the partition suit with
permission to bring a fresh suit, and she was allowed to do
so on the condition that she would pay the costs of the
appellant before filing the fresh suit. In July 1946 Mrs.
Momin made a gift of her interest in the house in dispute in
favour of Mrs. Bose. Thereafter in the same year viz.,
1946, Mrs. Bose filed an application for grant of letters of
administration of the will alleged to have been executed by
Dr. Miss Mitter in Mrs. Momin’s favour. This was objected
to by the appellant and certain preliminary issues were
framed in 1947; but eventually Mrs. Bose did not pursue this
application for letters of administration and it was
dismissed in 1948.
In the meantime, Mrs. Bose bad filed an application for the
revocation of the letters of administration granted to the
appellant but this was also dismissed. About the same time
in September 1916, the present suit was filed by Mrs.
praying for reliefs already set out. Eventually this suit
was the only proceeding which was pursued to the end by Mrs.
Bose.
In the trial court the case based on the will of Dr. Miss
Mitter was given up and the plaintiff respondent only
pressed her alternative prayer for a declaration that she
was entitled to two-thirds of the house. The trial court
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however found that there was a will by Dr. Miss Mitter in
favour of her mother, though no probate or letters of
administration were taken out in that behalf The trial court
also found that Mrs. Mitter made a will in favour of the
appellant and that letters of administration, as already
indicated, were granted to the appellant with respect to
Mrs. Mitter’s will by
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the judgment of the Privy Council in 1945. The trial judge
therefore held that the appellant was entitled to the house
by virtue of the letters of administration granted to her of
Mrs. Mitter’s will. It repelled the contention of the
plaintiff-respondent that as no letters of administration
were taken out of the will of Dr. Miss Mitter in favour of
Mrs. Mitter, no right to the house could be established by
the appellant ’on the basis of the, letters of
administration granted to her. The trial court also held
that the suit was barred by the principles of res judicata
and estoppel. It therefore dismissed the suit.
The plaintiff-respondent then went in appeal to the High
Court, and the main contention raised on behalf of the
respondent before the High Court was that in view of s. 213
of the Indian Succession Act, No. 39 of 1925, (hereinafter
referred to as the Act), the appellant could not claim any
right to the house in dispute as the will of Dr. Miss Mitter
in favour of ’her mother was neither probated nor letters of
administration were obtained with respect thereto. The High
Court accepted this contention of the plaintiff-respondent.
The High Court also negatived the other contentions raised
on behalf of the appellant and allowed the appeal in part.
The High Court pointer out that on the death of Dr. Miss
Mitter her three sisters and mother were alive and they were
entitled equally to the property left by her. But as the
share of Mrs. Mitter must be deemed to have been willed"
away to the appellant and as the share of Mrs. Momin must be
deemed to have been gifted to the plaintiff-respondent, the
plaintiff- respondent was entitled to half the house. The
High Court therefore gave her a declaration that she was
entitled to a half share in the house in dispute.’ As the
decree was one of reversal the appellant applied for and
obtained a certificate to appeal to this Court; and that is
how the matter has come before us.
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Learned counsel for the appellant has urged only three
contentions before us, namely, (i) that the High Court was
not right in holding that if was necessary to obtain probate
or letters of administration of the will executed by Dr.
Miss Mitter in favour of Mrs. Mitter and that as neither
probate nor letters of administration of that will were
obtained it, was not open to the appellant is view of s. 213
of the Act to take advantage of that will; (ii) that the
suit was barred by res judicata and (iii) that the
plaintiff-respondent’was estopped from contesting the title
of Mrs. Mitter to the, property in dispute.
Re. (i).
We have already pointed out that though it was said that Dr.
Miss Mitter had executed a will in favour of her mother Mrs.
Mitter in June 1925 bequeathing the house in dispute to her,
no probate or letters of administration were ever obtained
by Mrs. Mitter. It is true that Mrs. Mitter in her turn
made a will in favour of the appellant and she obtained
letters of administration of that will. In that will the
house in dispute was mentioned as the property of Mrs.
Mitter and was bequeathed to the appellant and in the
letters of administration granted to her this property was
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mentioned as one of the proper ties coming to her by the
will of her mother. The question therefore that arises is
whether it was necessary before the appellant could take
advantage of the bequest in favour of Mrs. Mitter that
letters of administration of the will of Dr. Miss Mitter
should have been obtained by Mrs. Mitter Section 213 (1)
which governs this matter is in these terms :-
" (1) No right as executor or legatee can be
established in any Court, of Justice, unless a
Court of competent jurisdiction in India has
granted probate of the will under which the
right is claimed, or has granted letter’)
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of administration with the will or with a copy
of an authenticated copy of the will annexed."
This section clearly creates a bar to the establishment of
any right under a will by an executor or a legatee unless
probate or letters of administration of the will have been
obtained. It is now well-settted that it is immaterial
whether the right under the will is claimed as a plaintiff
or a defendant ; In either case s. 213 will be a bar to any
right being claimed by a person under a will whether as a
plaintiff or as a defendant unless probate or letters of
administration of the will have been obtained: (see Gansham-
doss v. Gulab Bi Bai) (1). But it is urged on behalf of the
appellant that this section Will not bar her because she
obtained letters of administration of the will of her mother
Mrs. Mitter under which she is claiming and that it was not
necessary for Mrs. Mitter to have obtained probate of the
will of Dr. Miss Mitter in her favour. Now it is not in
dispute that, the grant of probate or letters of
administration does not establish that the person making the
-’Will was the owner of the property which he may have given
away by the, will, and any person interested in the property
included in the will can always file a suit to establish his
right to the property to the exclusion of the testator in
spite of the grant of probate or letters of administration
to the legatee or the executor, the reason being that
proceedings for probate or letters of administration are not
concerned with titles to property but, are only concerned
with the due execution of the will. Therefore, when the
plaintiff respondent contended in effect that the appellant
could not establish her right to the full ownership of this
property on the basis of the will of Mrs. Mitter because
Mrs. Mitter had not obtained probate or letters of
administration of the will of Dr. Miss Mitter, she was
really contending that Mrs. Mitter was not the full owner of
this property so that
(1) (1927) I.L.R. 50 Mad. 927.
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she could dispose it of as she willed. The plaintiff-
respondent was thus disputing the title of Mrs. Mitter to
dispose of the entire disputed house by her will on the
ground that Mrs. Mitter was not the sole owner of this house
after the death of Dr. Miss Mitter. In order therefore that
the appellant should succeed on the basis of the letters of
administration of the will of Mrs. Mitter which had been
granted to her with respect to this house, she had to show
that Mrs. Mitter was the full owner of this house at the
time she made the-will in her favour. Now the appellant
could show this by other evidence; but if the appellant
wanted to rely on any will of Dr. Miss Mitter in favour of
Mrs. Mitter, in proof of full ownership of Mrs. Mitter of
this house, it would amount to this that the appellant was
saying that Mrs. Mitter was the owner of the house as the
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legatee under the will made by Dr. Miss Mitter. The
appellant would thus be asserting the ownership of Mrs.
Mitter of the whole house as a legatee, and this is what
sub-s. (1) of s. 213 clearly forbids, for it says that no
right as - a legatee can be established in, a Court of
Justice, unless the probate or letters of administration
have been obtained of the will under which the right as a
legatee is claimed. It is true that so far -is the will of
Mrs. Mitter in favour of the appellant is concerned, she has
obtained letters of administration of that and she can
maintain her right as -a legatee under that will ; but that
will in her favour only gives her those properties which
really and truly belonged to Mrs. Mitter, that will however
does not create title in the appellant in properties which
did not really and truly belong to Mrs. Mitter but which
Mrs. Mitter might have thought it fit to include in the
will. Therefore, as soon as the appellant, in order succeed
on the basis of the will in her favour of which she obtained
letters of administration, alleges that Mrs’ Mitter was full
owner -of the property able to will it away to her, she had
to prove the
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title of Mrs. Mitter to the property. Now it that title
rests on Mrs. Mitter’s being legatee of Dr. Miss Mitter the
appellant will have to prove that Mrs. Mitter bad the right
as a legatee under the will of Dr. Miss Mitter. As soon as
the appellant wants to prove that, s. 213 will immediately
stand in her way for no right as an executor or a legatee
can be proved unless probate or letters of administration of
the will under which such right is claimed have been
obtained. The words of s. 213 are not restricted only to
those cases where the claim is made by a person directly
claiming as legatee. The section does not say that no
person can claim as a legatee or as an executor unless he
obtains prabate or letters of administration of the will
under which be claims. What it says is that no right as an
executor or legateee can be established in any Court of
Justice, unless probate or letters of administration have
been obtained of the will under which the right is claimed,
and therefore it is immaterial who wishes to establish the
right as a legatee or an executor. Whosoever wishes to
establish that right, whether it be a legatee or an executor
himself or somebody else who might find it necessary in
order to establish his right to establish the right of some
legatee or executor from whom he might derived title, he
cannot do so unless the -will under which the right as a
legatee or executor is claimed has resulted in the grant of
a probate or letters of administration. Therefore, as soon
as the appellant wanted to establish that Mrs. Mitter was
the legatee of Dr. Miss Mitter and was therefore entitled to
the whole house she could only do so if the will of Dr. Miss
Mitter in favour of Mrs. Mitter had resulted in the grant of
probate or letters -of administration. ’Admittedly that did
not happen and therefore s. 213(1) would be a bar to the
appellant showing that her mother was the full owner of the
property by virtue of the will made in her favour by Dr.
Miss Mitter. The difference between a right
304
claimed as a legatee under a will and a right which might
arise otherwise is clear in this very case. The right under
the will which was claimed was that Mrs. Mitter became the
owner of the entire house. Of course without the will Mrs.
Mitter was an equal heir with her daughters of the property
left by Dr. Mitter, as the latter would be taken to have
died intestate, and would thus be entitled to onefourth. It
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will be seen from the judgment of the High Court that it has
held that the appellant is entitled to the one-fourth share
to which Mrs. Mitter was entitled as an heir, to Dr. Miss
Mitter and granted the plaintiff-respondent a declaration
with respect to only half the house. Therefore, the High
Court was right in holding that s. 213 would bar the
appellant from establishing the right of her mother as a
legatee from Dr. Miss Mitter as no probate or letters of
administration had been obtained of the alleged will of Dr.
Miss Mitter in favour of Mrs. Mitter. The contention of the
appellant on this head must therefore fail.
Re. (ii).
Turning now to the question of res judicata, learned counsel
for the appellant has been unable to point out any judgment
inter parties in which the question of title to this house
has been decided and which would bar the plaintiff-
respondent from raising the question of title which she has
raised in the present suit. As we have already said ques-
tions of title are not decided in proceedings for the grant
of probate or letters of administration. Whatever therefore
might have happened in those proceedings would not establish
the title to the house either of the appellant or of Mrs.
Mitter. In particular, learned counsel for the appellant
relied on the order of the High Court dated December 17,
1948, by which the application of the plaintiff-respondent
for letters of administration of the will of Dr. Miss Mitter
was dismissed. In that ease certain
305
preliminary issues were framed one of which related to
estoppel with respect to Mrs. Mitter’s right to this
property. What happened in that case was that Mrs. Bose who
had made the application did not appear and thereupon her
application was dismissed for that reason obviously under 0.
XVII r. 2, of the Code of Civil Procedure. In these cir-
cumstances there can be no question of res judicata as -to
the title to the property in dispute. The contention on
this head must therefore be rejected.
Re.(iii).
As to estoppel, reliance is mainly placed on the
applications of Mrs. Bose herself for the grant of letters
of administration of a will alleged to have been made in her
favour by Mrs. Mitter. In that application Mrs. Bose had
shown the house as if it belonged to Mrs. Mitter. Her
application was as we have already noted dismissed. It may
be that Mrs. Bose in her application for letters of
administration showed this house as the property of her
mother Mrs. Mitter; but as we have already said, proceedings
leading to the grant of probate or letters of administration
have nothing to do with titles. Further estoppel can only
arise as is clear from s. 115 of the Indian Evidence Act,
when one person has by his declaration, act or ommission
intentionally caused or permitted another person to believe
a thing to be true and to act upon-such belief. Therefore
before Mrs. Bose can be estopped from pleading that Mrs.
Mitter was not the owner of the entire property it must be
shown that by her showing the house as the property of Mrs.
Mitter in her application for letters of administration she
intentionally caused or permitted the appellant to believe
that thing to be true and to act on that belief It is
obvious that the "appellant cannot be said to have acted in
her turn with respect to this
306
house simply because Mrs. Bose said in her application for
letters of administration that the house belonged to Mrs.
Mitter. It appears that after the death of Mrs. Mitter the
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three sisters put forward three separate. wills each in her
favour and there was no question of one sister acting on any
representation made by another. We are therefore of opinion
that no question of estoppel arises in this case.
The appeal therefore fails and is hereby dismissed: No order
as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.