Full Judgment Text
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL Nos.521-522 OF 2023
(Arising out of SLP(C)Nos.14948-14949 of 2017)
ELUMALAI @ VENKATESAN & ANR …APPELLANT (S)
VERSUS
M. KAMALA AND ORS. & ETC. …RESPONDENT(S)
J U D G M E N T
K.M. JOSEPH, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. One Shri Sengalani Chettiar was married to one
Rukmini. The said marriage produced a son, namely, Shri
Chandran. The appellants are the sons of Shri Chandran.
Sengalani Chettiar married again this time with one
Smt. Kuppammal. From the second marriage Sengalani
Signature Not Verified
Digitally signed by
Jagdish Kumar
Date: 2023.01.25
15:26:53 IST
Reason:
Chettiar had 5 daughters and a son. The controversy in
this case relates to A-Schedule property in the suit
1
for partition filed by two children out of the 6
children born to Sengelani Chettiar from his second
marriage. The property in dispute was the self-acquired
property of Shri Sengalani Chettiar. In regard to the
said property, Chandran,the father of the appellants
had executed a Release Deed. The terms of the Release
Deed dated 12.11.1975, are as follows:
THIS DEED OF RELEASE is executed on the 12th
day of November, 1975 in favour of 1.
C.Sengalani Chettiar, son of Singara Chettiar,
residing at No.144, Venkatachala Mudali Street
Meersapet, Mylapore, Chennai, 2. Sengalani
Chettiar, as the guardian of his minor son,
Vinayagarnurthy, aged about 2 years, this deed
executed by S.Chandran, son of Sengalani
Chettiar, residing at No.19, Santha Sahib
Street, Meersapet, Mylapore, Chennai is as
follows:
I am the son of your first wife. As I could
not be with you, I had received through the
transfer of mortgage gold jewellery which is
worth of Rs. 10,000/- and the materials of a
value of Rs.5000 /- and releasing my share in
respect of the house sites situate at Manamathi
Village, which belong to us and more
particularly described in the schedule
hereunder, through this document on this day.
The mortgage amount of Rs.10,500 / - as against
the above said house site, shall be settled by
you. Hereafter we do not have any other
connection except blood relation.
In this manner I had execute this Deed of
Release.
2
3. As destiny would have it, Shri Chandran passed away
on 09.12.1978. Sengalani Chettiar died on 19.01.1988.
The second wife of Sengalani Chettiar, Smt. Kuppammal
breathed her last on 25.08.2005. O.S. No.8173 of 2006
came to be filed by one Uma Ravi Chandran and Vinayaga
Murthy, who were, as already noticed, children of
Sengalani Chettiar from his second marriage.
Defendants 1 to 3 were the other daughters of Sengalani
Chettiar from the second marriage. The appellants were
subsequently impleaded as defendants 4 and 5.
Defendant No.6 came to be impleaded as such and he is
the son of the deceased daughter of Sengalani Chettiar
from the second marriage.
4. The case of the plaintiffs to exclude the
appellants was based on the Release Deed executed by
the father of the appellants. The trial Court however
found that the Release Deed in question was a void
document for the reason that Chandran executed the
Release Deed in 1975 while his father Sengalani
Chettiar was alive. It is found that the Release Deed
would not be a bar for the appellants to inherit the
property of their grandfather Sengalani Chettiar. The
3
plaintiffs were only found to be eligible to get only
2/7 share. Plaintiffs were accordingly given a decree
of 2/7 share inter alia. The suit came to be dismissed
as far as ‘B’schedule property is concerned.
Plaintiffs filed AS No.883 OF 2009. Defendants 1, 3 and
6 filed appeal AS No.718 of 2009. By the impugned
judgment the High court has allowed these appeals and
found that the appellants were not entitled to claim
any share in the property of the deceased Sengalani
Chettiar. The foundational premise for overturning the
decree of the trial court was furnished by the dicta
laid down by this court in Gulam Abbas v. Haji Kayyam
1
Ali and others . Briefly put, the premise is that
insofar as Shri Chandran executed a deed of Release
having obtained consideration from his father, the
appellants would stand estopped from laying a claim to
a share in A-Schedule property. The court also noticed
the death of the second plaintiff and found that the
first plaintiff and her siblings namely, defendants 1
to 3 alone would entitled to succeed to the share of
second plaintiff. In other words, after finding that
1
AIR 1973 SC 554
4
the plaintiffs D1 to D3 and D6 would be entitled to
one-sixth share each in A-Schedule property and in view
of the death of the second plaintiff, the first
plaintiff and defendants 1 to 3 were found to get 5/24
th
share and the 6 defendant was to get 4/24 share. It
is feeling aggrieved by the denial of share in A-
schedule property that the defendants 4 and 5 are
before this Court.
5. Heard Shri Sidharth Iyer, learned counsel for the
appellants, Shri Umashankar, learned counsel on behalf
of the first plaintiff and Shri Jayanth Muth Raj,
learned senior counsel on behalf of defendant nos. 2
and 6.
6. Shri Sidharth Iyer, learned counsel for the
appellants would contend that the High Court erred in
drawing support from Gulam Abbas (supra). He would
point out that the case arose under Mohammadan Law and
the principle laid down in the said judgment could not
be employed to deprive the appellants of their share
as Class-I heirs under Section 8 of the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956. He would, in fact, point out that
the first appellant was hardly three years old in 1975
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when the Release Deed was executed. What is even more
noteworthy is that the second appellant was not even
born. The property being the separate property of the
grandfather of the appellants and the appellants being
the sons of the pre-deceased son of Sengalani Chettiar,
under Section 8, the law vouchsafed shares to the
appellants. Reference is made to Section 6 of the
Transfer of Property Act. He points out that in 1975
when the Release Deed was executed, Shri Chandran, the
father of the appellant, had a mere spes successionis.
The mere expectation of succeeding in future could
not form the subject matter of a legitimate transfer.
Therefore, the trial court is entirely right in
ignoring the Release Deed as a null and void document.
In other words, when succession to the estate of
Sengalani Chettiar opened in the year 1988, the
property in question stood in the name of Sengalani
Chettiar and in terms of Section 8, the appellants’
right to succeed to a legitimate share cannot be
questioned on the basis of the Release Deed. He would
also point out that the High court has overlooked the
mandate of Section 8 of the Hindu Minority and
6
Guardianship Act, 1956. It is contended that Shri
Chandran, the father of the appellants could perhaps
be treated as having entered into a covenant with his
father. The covenant, however, could not operate to
bind the appellants in view of Section 8. He would
further submit that nothing prevented the grandfather
of the appellants from executing a Will or otherwise
dealing with the property. He was conscious of the
consequence of Shri Chandran dying intestate but yet
he did not make any safeguard known to law to eliminate
the appellants from succeeding to the property. Based
on the dates of the death of their father Shri Chandran
in 1978 and the grandfather in 1988, it is contended
that there is no scope for applying the doctrine of
feeding the grant within the meaning of Section 43 of
Transfer of Property Act.
7. Shri Jayanth Muth Raj, learned Senior Counsel
appeared to support the appellants. He concedes that
the support for the appellants is a later development.
In other words, originally, the clients of Shri Jayanth
Muth Raj, one of whom is one of the daughters of
Sengalani Chettiar and the other Shri Babu, the Sixth
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defendant (the son of a pre-deceased daughter of
Sengalani Chettiar) had contested the claim of the
appellants. It would however appear that there has been
a subsequent assignment in regard to the share of the
appellants, made in favour of the clients of Shri
Jayanth Muth Raj. This explains, apparently, the
somersault and inevitable change in the stand of his
clients. Shri Jayanth Muth Raj would contend that the
judgment of this court in Gulab Abbas (supra) relied
upon by the High Court involved facts based on which
the principle of estoppel was applied. The facts of the
instant case, however, did not warrant the principle
of estoppel. He would contend that in the case of Gulam
Abbas, the conduct of the co-heirs was taken into
consideration by this Court to hold that they are
estopped. On the other hand, in this case he would
contend that there was a stark contrast. There is no
conduct attributed to the appellants. The children of
Sengalani Chettiar have not made out a case based on
the principle of estoppel on the basis of conduct by
the co-heirs as was the position in the case in Gulam
Abbas (supra). No doubt, in regard to the question as
8
to whether if estoppel did apply qua Shri Chandran, it
could be invoked against the appellants to deprive them
of their right as Class I heirs (being children of pre-
deceased son), the learned Senior Counsel would proceed
on the basis that the property involved was a separate
property of Sengalani Chettiar. He would fervently
contend that the principle in Gulam Abbas (supra) was
wrongly applied by the High Court. Shri Jayanth Muth
Raj would contend that this court may notice that the
grandfather did not deal with the property and it did
show that he wanted the succession to the property to
take place in accordance with the mandate of Section 8
of the Succession Act.
8. Per contra , Shri Umashankar, learned counsel
appearing on behalf of first plaintiff and the other
contesting respondents support the judgment of the High
Court. Learned counsel drew our attention to the terms
of the Release deed. He pointed out that the court
should bear in mind the intention of the parties. In
the second marriage Sengalani Chettiar had a son. He
was not mentally well. Parties wanted to protect the
interest of the son. This explained why the Release
9
Deed is executed in favour of the son represented by
grandfather of the appellants. This is apart from
pointing out that Shri Chandran having received
consideration and given up all his rights, it would not
lie in the mouth of the appellants to stake a claim for
succession to the property.
ANALYSIS
9. The property in question has been found to be the
separate property of Sengalani Chettiar. He died in
1988. Sengalani Chettiar had married twice. From his
first marriage, was born Shri Chandran. Shri Chandran
pre-deceased his father in the year 1978. Being the
children of the pre-deceased son, the appellants would
ordinarily have inherited the share as decreed by the
trial court in this case. The terms of the Release Deed
recites that Shri Chandran has released his share in
respect of the property. It is also clear that the
Relinquishment made by Shri Chandran was based on his
having received valuable consideration. Shri Jayanth
Muth Raj, learned Senior Counsel made an attempt to
contend that the Release Deed is about the property
belonging to “us”. Nothing turns on the same and we are
10
inclined to proceed on the basis of the finding
rendered by both the courts that the property was the
self-acquired property of Shri Sengalani Chettiar.
10. Section 6 of the Transfer of Property Act
enumerates property which can be transferred. It
declares that property of any kind may be transferred
except as otherwise provided by the Transfer of
Property Act or by any other law for the time being in
force. Section 6(a) declares that a chance of an heir
apparent succeeding to an estate, the chance of a
relation obtaining a legacy on the death of a kinsman
or other mere possibility of a like nature cannot be
transferred. A living man has no heir. Equally, a
person who may become the heir and entitled to succeed
under the law upon the death of his relative would not
have any right until succession to the estate is opened
up. When Shri Sengalani Chettair, the father of Shri
Chandran, was alive, Shri Chandran his son had at best
a spes successonis. Unlike a co-parcener who acquires
right to joint family property by his mere birth, in
regard to the separate property of the Hindu, no such
right exists. Thus, there can be no doubt that the
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Release Deed may not by itself have the effect of a
transfer of the rights of Shri Chandran in favour of
either his father or the minor son of his father from
the second marriage.
11. What however remains to be seen is whether conduct
of Shri Chandran in executing the release deed and what
is even more important receiving consideration for
executing the Release Deed would result in the creation
of estoppel. Having regard to the equity of the matter,
in short, whether it is a case where the doctrine of
equitable estoppel would have prevented Shri Chandran
from staking a claim if he had survived his father.
What is the effect of the existence of estoppel as
against Shri Chandran if such estoppel is made out, as
far as the claim of the appellants is concerned? The
further question would be what is the effect of Section
8 of Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act.
12. Before we proceed to deal with the contentions, it
is necessary to take a closer look at the facts of the
case of Gulam Abbas (supra) and what has been laid down
therein. In the said case the facts involved were as
follows:
12
In that case, a Mohammadan died leaving behind 5
sons, a daughter and a widow as his heirs. Three of his
sons did well in life. Their father had incurred debts.
At the time, when their father was staring at the
prospect of being completely deprived of the property
as a result of his indebtedness, two of his sons came
forward and they paid up the debt. It came with the
price however. Two of his sons, namely the plaintiff
and the fourth defendant in the deeds acknowledged
receipt of some cash and movable property as
consideration for not claiming any rights in future in
the property. The words relevant in this regard are as
follows:
| “I have accordingly taken the things mentioned | ||
|---|---|---|
| above as the equivalent of my share and I have | ||
| out of free Will written this. I have no claim | ||
| in the properties hereafter and if I put up a | ||
| claim in future to any of the properties I | ||
| shall be proved false by this document. I shall | ||
| have no objection to my father giving any of | ||
| the properties to my other brothers...... | ||
| .....” | ||
the High Court of Allahabad in AIR 1976 Allahabad 573.
The court found as follows:
13
| “…With due respect, we are unable to concur | |
|---|---|
| with the view of the Madras High Court that a | |
| renunciation of an expectancy, as a purported | |
| but legally ineffective transfer, is struck by | |
| Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act. As it | |
| would be void as a transfer at all there was | |
| no need to rely on Section 23, Contract Act. | |
| If there was no “transfer” of property at all, | |
| which was the correct position, but a simple | |
| contract, which could only operate in future, | |
| it was certainly not intended to bring about | |
| an immediate transfer which was all that the | |
| rule of Muslim law invalidated. The real | |
| question was whether, quite apart from any | |
| transfer or contract, the declarations in the | |
| deeds of purported relinquishment and receipt | |
| of valuable consideration could not be parts | |
| of a course at conduct over a number of years | |
| which, taken as a whole, created a bar against | |
| a successful assertion of a right to property | |
| when that right actually came into being. An | |
| equitable estoppel operates, if its elements | |
| are established, as a rule of evidence | |
| preventing the assertion of rights which may | |
| otherwise exist. |
7. Sir Roland Wilson, in his “ Anglo Mohamadan
Law” (p. 260, para 208) states the position
thus:
“For the sake of those readers who are familiar
with the joint ownership of father and son
according to the most widely prevelant school
of Hindu Law, it is perhaps desirable to state
explicitly that in Mohammedan, as in Roman and
English Law, nemo est heres viventis.........a
living person has no heir. An heir apparent or
presumptive has no such reversionary interest
as would enable him to object to any sale or
gift made by the owner in possession; See Abdul
Wdhid , L.P. 12 I.A., 91, and 11 Cal 597 (1885)
which was followed in Hasan Ali , 11 All 456,
(1889). The converse is also true: a
renunciation by an exepectant heir in the
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lifetime of his ancestor is not valid, or
enforceable against him after the vesting of
the inheritance.”
This is a correct statement, so far as it goes,
of the law, because a bare renunciation of
expectation to inherit cannot bind the
expectant heir's conduct in future. But, if the
expectant heir goes further and receives
consideration and so conducts himself as to
mislead an owner into not making dispositions
of his property inter vivos the expectant heir
could be debarred from setting up his right
when it does unquestionably vest in him. In
other words, the principle of estoppel remains
untouched by this statement.”
(Emphasis supplied)
14. The property, i.e., ‘A’ schedule, was not the
ancestral property of Shri Chandran. Shri Chandran
would have acquired rights over the same only if his
father had died intestate. He was, thus, only a heir
apparent. Transfer by an heir apparent being mere spes
successonis is ineffective to convey any right. By the
mere execution of Release Deed, in other words, in the
facts of this case, no transfer took place. This is for
the simple reason that the transferor, namely, the
father of the appellants did not have any right at all
which he could transfer or relinquish. However, if his
conduct was such that he could be estopped then the
15
execution of the Release Deed would imperil his right
and therefore cast an irremovable shadow on the claim
of the appellants as well unless we find merit in other
submissions of Shri Siddharth Iyer, learned counsel for
the appellants.
15. The argument of the appellants and Shri Jayanth
Muth Raj that there is no evidence that the grandfather
of the appellant acted on the Release Deed and that he
did not execute any deed on the basis of the Release
Deed does not appeal to us. Shri Sengalani Chettiar
married twice. The first union produced the father of
the appellants. Thereafter, he married again. It is
after the second marriage and the birth of the children
from the said wedlock that Release Deed came to be
th
executed on 12 November, 1975. It would appear that
from the second marriage, a son was born who
incidentally was ill and in whose favour the father of
the appellants executed the Release Deed. The intention
of Sengalani Chettiar would appear to have been to
secure the interest of the son from the second
marriage. He wished to secure his interest created
under the second marriage and for which the father of
16
the appellants who was his son from the first marriage
was given some valuable consideration, which persuaded
Shri Chandran to release all his rights in respect of
property in question. The words in the ‘Release Deed’
that hereafter he did not have any other connection
except blood relation appears to signify that the
intention of Shri Chettiar was to deny any claim to
Shri Chandran in regard to the property. He apparently
thought that he achieved his goal and in law if the
principle in Gulam Abbas (supra) is applied and Shri
Chandran did not pre-decease his father, all would have
gone according to the plan of the parties.
16. We are of the view that conjecturing that Shri
Chandran has survived his father and his succession had
opened intestate in regard to the estate of his father,
the conduct of executing the Release Deed though by
itself may not have resulted in a lawful transfer, his
conduct being accompanied by the receipt of
consideration would have estopped Shri Chandran. The
very fact that Shri Chettiar did not execute any
document by way of Will only shows that he proceeded
on the basis that the branch represented by Shri
17
Chandran was being cut off from inheritance from the
property in question.
17. When we queried learned counsel for the plaintiff
as to why no Release Deed was got executed from the
children of Shri Chandran, viz. , the appellants,
learned Counsel responded by contending that Sengalani
Chettiar, apparently, proceeded on his understanding
of the law.
THE IMPACT OF SECTION 8 OF THE HINDU MINORITY AND
GUARDIANSHIP ACT
18. Section 8 (1), (2) and (3) of the Hindu Minority
and Guardianship Act, 1956 (hereinafter referred to as,
‘the 1956 Act’), inter alia, reads as follows:
| “8. Powers of natural guardian. — | |
|---|---|
| (1) The natural guardian of a Hindu minor has | |
| power, subject to the provisions of this | |
| section, to do all acts which are necessary or | |
| reasonable and proper for the benefit of the | |
| minor or for the realisation, protection or | |
| benefit of the minor’s estate; but the guardian | |
| can in no case bind the minor by a personal | |
| covenant. | |
| (2) The natural guardian shall not, without the | |
| previous permission of the court,— | |
| (a) mortgage or charge, or transfer by sale, | |
| gift, exchange or otherwise, any part of the | |
| immovable property of the minor; or |
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(b) lease any part of such property for a term
exceeding five years or for a term extending
more than one year beyond the date on which
the minor will attain majority.
(3) Any disposal of immovable property by a
natural guardian, in contravention of sub-
section (1) or sub-section (2), is voidable at
the instance of the minor or by any person
claiming under him.”
19. The appellants rely upon the prohibition against
the natural guardian of a Hindu minor, binding the
minor by a personal covenant. In view of the said
embargo, the principle enunciated in Gulam Abaas
(supra) would not apply it is contended. We would think
that it is a contention, which may not pass muster on
a proper interpretation of Section 8.
20. Section 6 of the 1956 Act, inter alia , declares
that the father and, after him, the mother, shall, in
the case of a boy or an unmarried girl, be the natural
guardians of the minor’s person as well as in respect
of the minor’s property. However, the minor’s property
would not include the undivided interest the minor has
in the joint family property. It is, thereafter, that
Section 8 appears and it purports to delineate the
powers of a natural guardian. The powers of a natural
19
guardian, in other words, relate either to the person
or to the minor’s property or both. Section 8 purports
to, inter alia, provide that the natural guardian would
have the power to do all acts, which are necessary or
reasonable and proper for the benefit of the minor or
realisation, protection or benefit of the minor’s
estate. It is, thereafter, that the Law-Giver has
interdicted the guardian from binding the minor by a
personal covenant. In short, in order that we pour
meaning into the words in question, the backdrop must
be provided by the existence of the minor and who has
a right to some property. If, in regard to the property
of the minor, the natural guardians were to enter into
a covenant, then, it may be open to the minor to invoke
the prohibition against the natural guardian, binding
the minor by a personal covenant.
21. In the facts of this case, the case of the
appellants may be noted. It is their case, that Shri
Chandran, their father, himself did not have any right
in the plaint schedule property. This is for the reason
that being the separate property of Shri Sengalani
Chettair, Shri Chandran did not have any right by
20
birth. He himself had only, what is described a spec
successionis within the meaning of Section 6(a) of the
Transfer of Property Act. It is not even the case of
the appellants that they had any independent right in
the plaint schedule property either at the time of
their birth or at the time when their father died or
even when their grandfather Shri Sengalani Chettair
died in 1988. The right, which they claim, at the
earliest point, can arise only by treating the property
as the separate property of Shri Sengalani Chettair on
his death within the meaning of Section 8 of the Hindu
Succession Act. Therefore, we are unable to discard the
deed of release executed by their father Shri Chandran
in the year 1975 as a covenant within the meaning of
Section 8 of the ‘1956 Act.’
22. As far as the argument of the appellants that the
appellants would have an independent right, when
succession open to the estate of Shri Sengalani
Chettair, when he died in 1988, in view of the fact
that the appellants are the children of the predeceased
son, viz ., Shri Chandran, who died on 09.12.1978, we
are of the view that there is no merit in the said
21
contention. It is true that under Section 8(a) of the
Hindu Succession Act, 1956, property of a male Hindu,
dying intestate, will devolve, firstly, upon the heirs,
being the relatives specified in Class I of the
Schedule. The son of a predeceased son, it is true, is
a Class I heir. Therefore, it could be argued that
since Shri Sengalani Chettair died intestate, a right
was created in the property in favour of the
appellants, being the children of the predeceased son.
What estoppel brings about, however, is preventing a
party from setting up the right, which, but for the
estoppel, he would have in the property. In this
regard, we may notice the following discussion under
the caption ‘Death or disability of the representor’
(pages 125-126) in the work Estoppel by Representation
by Spencer Bower and Turner:
“Death or disability of the representor
128. In case of the death, or the total or
partial disability (whether by reason of
insolvency, infancy, lunacy, coverture, or
otherwise), of the representor at the time
of the proceedings in which the question of
estoppel is raised, the liability to the
estoppel, speaking generally, devolves
upon, or is transmitted to, the same
persons, in accordance with the same rules,
22
and subject to the same conditions, as the
liability of such a representor to
proceedings for the avoidance of a contract
procured by the representation.
Where the representor has died between
the date of the representation and the date
of the raising of the estoppel, the
executor or administrator, or (in case of
title to, and estates in, land) the heir or
devise, of the deceased representor is
bound by the representation to the same
extent as the representor would have been,
and succeeds to all the burdens of estoppel
in respect thereof to which, at the date of
his decease, such representor was subject…”
23. It will be noticed that the father of the
appellants, by his conduct, being estopped, as found
by us, is the fountainhead or the source of the title
declared in Section 8(a) of the Hindu Succession Act.
It is, in other words, only based on the relationship
between Shri Chandran and the appellants, that the
right under Section 8(a) of the Hindus Succession Act,
purports to vest the right in the appellants. We would
think, therefore, that appellants would also not be in
a position to claim immunity from the operation of the
Principle of Estoppel on the basis of Section 8(a) of
the Hindu Succession Act. If the principle in Gulam
Abbas (supra) applies, then, despite the fact that what
23
was purported to be released by Shri Chandran, was a
mere spec successonis or expectation his conduct in
transferring/releasing his rights for valuable
consideration, would give rise to an estoppel. The
effect of the estoppel cannot be warded off by persons
claiming through the person whose conduct has generated
the estoppel. We also find no merit at all in the
attempt at drawing a distinction based on religion. The
principle of estoppel applies without such distinction.
24. The only further contention which remains to be
dealt with is that raised by Shri Jayanth Muth Raj,
learned Counsel. He made an attempt to contend that the
principle in Gulam Abbas (supra) may not be available
in view of the factual matrix. It is his case that in
the said case, the brothers received a benefit and
thereafter gave-up the rights, which, as it was found,
they did not possess at the time. The position in this
case, however, is not similar. We are of the view that
this argument ignores the play of the facts. Having
received valuable consideration and allowed his father
Shri Sengalani Chettair to proceed on the basis that
24
he was free to deal with the property without the
prospect of being haunted by any claim whatsoever as
regards the property by Shri Chandran, a clear estoppel
sprang into existence following the receipt of
consideration by Shri Chandran. Estoppel would shut
out in equity any claim otherwise either by Shri
Chandran or his children, viz ., the appellants.
25. In such circumstances, we find no merit in the
appeals. The appeals will stand dismissed. Parties will
bear their own costs.
……………………………………………J.
[K.M. JOSEPH]
…………………………………………J.
[HRISHIKESH ROY]
NEW DELHI;
DATED: JANUARY 25, 2023.
25