Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KALISHANKER DAS AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DHIRENDRA NATH PATRA AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/05/1954
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
HASAN, GHULAM
CITATION:
1954 AIR 505 1955 SCR 467
ACT:
Hindu law-Widow’s estate--Nature of-Whether anybody has
got vested right in the estate during her life-time-Actual
reversioner-Whether claims through the presumptive
reversioner preceding him.
HEADNOTE:
It is a well-settled doctrine of Hindu law that nobody
has a vested right so long as the widow is alive and the
eventual reversioner does not claim through any one who went
before him.
The interest of a Hindu widow in the properties inherited
by her bears no analogy or resemblance to what may be
described as an equitable estate in English law and which
cannot be followed in the hands of a bona fide purchaser for
value without notice. A Hindu widow has got only qualified
proprietorship in her estate which she can alienate only
when there is justifying necessity and the restrictions on
her powers of alienation are inseparable from her estate.
For legal necessity she can convey to another an absolute
title to the property vested in her. If there is no legal
necessity the transferee gets only the widow’s estate which
is not even an indefeasible life estate for it can come to
an end not merely on her death but on the happening of other
contingencies like re-marriage, adoption, etc. If an
alienee from a Hindu widow succeeds in establishing that
there was legal necessity for transfer, he is completely
protected and it is immaterial that the necessity was
brought about by the mismanagement of the limited owner
herself. Even if there is no necessity in fact, but it is
proved that there was representation of necessity and the
alienee after making bona fide enquiries satisfied himself
as best as he could that such necessity existed, the actual
existence of a legal necessity is not a condition precedent
to the validity of the sale. Therefore if there is no
necessity in fact or if the alienee could not prove that he
made bona fide enquiries and was satisfied about its
existence, the transfer is not void but the transferee would
get only the widow’s estate in the property which does not
in any way affect the interest of the reversioner.
Debi Prasad Chowdhury v. Golap Bhagat (I.L.R. 40 Cal.
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721), Rangasami Gounden v. Nachiappa Gounden (46 I.A. 72),
Bajrangi v. Manokarnika (35 I.A. 1), The Collector of
Masulipatam v. Cavaly Venkata (8 M. I.A. 529) and
Hunoomanpersaud Pandey v. Musammat Babooee Munraj Koonweree
(6 M.I.A. 393) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 108 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated the 29th March,
1950, of the High Court of Judicature at
468
Calcutta in Appeal from Original Decree No. 121 of 1945
arising from the Decree dated the 22nd December, 1944, of
the Court of Subordinate Judge at Alipore, in Title Suit No.
70 of 1941.
N. C. Chatterjee (C. N. Laik, D. N. Mukherjee and Sukumar
Ghose, with him) for the appellants.
S. P. Sinha (B.B. Haldar and S. C. Bannerji, with him) for
respondents Nos. I to 3.
1954. May 21. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
MUKHERJEA J.-This appeal, which has come before us, on a
certificate granted by the High Court of Calcutta, under
article 133(1) of the Constitution, is directed against a
judgment and decree of a Division Bench of that Court dated
the 29th March, 1950, affirming, on appeal, those of the
Subordinate Judge, Fourth Court, Alipore, passed in Title
Suit. No. 70 of 1941.
The appellants before us are the heirs and legal
representatives of the original defendant No. 3 in the suit,
which was commenced by the plaintiffs respondents to recover
possession of the property in dispute, on establishment of
their title, as reversionary heirs of one Haripada Patra,
after the death of his mother Rashmoni, who got the property
in the restricted rights of a Hindu female heir on
Haripada’s death. To appreciate the contentions that have
been raised by the parties to this appeal it would be
necessary to narrate the material facts in chronological
order.
The property in suit which is premises No. 6 Dwarik
Ghose’s Lane situated in the suburb of Calcutta admittedly
formed part of the estate of one Mahendra Narayan Patra, a
Hindu inhabitant of Bengal, owning considerable properties,
who died on the 17th April, 1903, leaving him surviving his
widow Rashmoni, two infant sons by her, Mohini Mohan and
Haripada and a grandson Ram Narayan by a predeceased son
Shyama Charan. Shyama Charan was the son of Mahendra by his
first wife, who died during his lifetime. On the 17th
February, 1901, Mahendra executed a will by which he made
certain religious and charitable dispositions and
469
subject. to them, directed his properties to be divided
amongst his infant sons Mohini and Haripada and his grandson
Ram Narayan. Ram Narayan was appointed’ executor under the
will. After the death of Mahendra, Ram Narayan applied for
probate of the will and probate was obtained by him on the
6th of October, 1904, Ram Narayan entered upon the
management of the estate. He developed extravagant and
immoral habits and soon ran into debts. The bulk of the
properties were mortgaged to one Kironsashi who having
obtained a decree on the mortgage applied for sale of the
mortgaged properties. Thereupon Rashmoni on behalf of her
infant sons instituted a suit against the mortgagee and the
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mortgagor and got a declaration that the mortgage decree
could not bind the infants’ shares in the properties left by
their father. This judgment was given on the 31st March,
1909. On the 13th August, 1909, the two infant sons of
Mahendra to wit Mohini and Haripada, by their mother and
next friend Rashmoni, instituted a suit in the Court of the
Subordinate Judge at Alipore, being Title Suit No. 45 of
1909, claiming administration of the estate left by Mahendra
as well as partition and accounts on the basis of the will
left by him. On the 14th of August, 1909, one Baroda Kanta
Sarkar, Sheristadar of the Court of the District Judge,
Alipore, was appointed, with the consent of both parties,
receiver of the estate forming the subject-matter of the
litigation. The receiver took possession of the properties
immediately after this order was made. The -management by
the receiver, as it appears, was not at all proper or
beneficial to the interest of the two sons of Mahendra.
Mahendra himself left no debts and whatever debts were
contracted,, were contracted by Ram Narayan to meet his own
immoral and extravagant expenses. The receiver however went
on borrowing large gums of money upon ex-parte orders
received from the Court, the ostensible object of which was
to pay off the debts due by Ram Narayan which were not at
all binding on the plaintiffs. Fearing that the longer the
suit continued and the properties remained in the hands of
the receiver the more harmful it- would be to the interests
of the
470
minors, Rashmoni on behalf of the minors compromised the
suit. with Ram Narayan and a Solenama was filed on the 13th
June, 1910. The terms of the compromise, in substance,
were, that the properties in suit were to be held in divided
shares between the three parties and specific allotments
were made in favour of each, the properties allotted to the
share of Haripada being specified in schedules Gha and Chha
attached to the compromise petition. It was further
provided that the receiver would be discharged on submitting
his final accounts. It may be mentioned here that the
property which is the subject-matter of the present suit
was, under the Solenama, allotted to the share of Haripada.
On the very day that the compromise was filed, Rashmoni
applied for discharge of the receiver. The Court made an
order directing the receiver to submit his final accounts
within one month, or as early as possible, when the -
necessary order for discharge would be made. It was further
directed that as the suit was disposed of on compromise the
receiver should discontinue collecting rents and profits due
to the estate from that day. This order however was
modified by a subsequent order made on 23rd June, 19 10,
which directed that the receiver was to continue in
possession of the estate until he was paid whatever was due
to him for his ordinary commission and allowances and until
the parties deposited in Court the amounts borrowed by the
receiver under orders of the Court or in the alternative
gave sufficient indemnity for the same. After this,
Rashmoni on behalf of her minor sons filed two successive
applications before the Subordinate Judge praying for
permission to raise by mortgage, of a part of the estate,
the moneys necessary for releasing the estate from the hands
of the receiver. The first application was rejected and the
second was granted, after it was brought to the notice of
the Subordinate Judge that the receiver was attempting to
dissuade prospective lenders who were approached on behalf
of Rashmoni, to lend any money to her. On the 16th of
January, 191 1, Haripada, the younger son of Rashmoni, died
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and his interest devolved upon his mother as his heir under
the Hindu law. On the 28th January, 1911, the following
order was recorded by the Suborainate Judge:
471
"The receiver has filed a statement showing the amount
as due to him up to the end of the. current month. This
claim amounts to Rs. 20,950-2-6 pies only. The parties may
deposit the sum on or before the 1st February next in Court
and on such deposit the receiver will be discharged and the
possession of the estate of late Mahendr Narayan Patra, will
be made over to the parties."
On the very same day Mohini exectued a mortgage (Ex.
M-1) in favour of one Suhasini Dasi by which he hypothecated
the properties allotted to his share and also his future
interest as reversions to the share of Haripada, to secure
an advance of Rs. 30,000. The loan was to carry interest at
the rate of 18% per annum. One thing may be mentioned in
connection with this mortgage, and that is, that amongst the
properties included in the mortgage were two properties,
namely, premises No. 15/1 and 16 Chetlahat Road, which had
already been sold and to which the mortgagor bad no title at
the date of the mortgage. On the 1st February, 1911, Mohini
deposited in Court the sum of Rs. 2,0,950-2-6 pies, being
the amount alleged to. be due to the receiver and the Court
by an order passed on that date directed the release of the
estate from the hands of the receiver. After the estate was
released a petition was filed on behalf of the plaintiffs on
the 15th February, 1911, praying that the loans said to be
contracted by the receiver should not be paid out of the
money deposited in Court, as these borrowings were made not
for the protection of the estate but only for the personal
benefit of the defendant, Ram Narayan, and to pay off his
creditors. It was contended that the loans raised by the
receiver were not raised in good faith, after proper notice
to the plaintiffs but on the strength of orders which he
obtained ex-parte from the Subordinate Judge without
disclosing the material facts. This application. was
rejected by the Court on the 23rd February,1911. After this
order was made,the plaintiffs put in a petition praying that
payment of the moneys, due to the creditor- with the
exception of what was necessary to pay off one of the
creditors, named Rakhal Das Adhya, be stayed till the
following Monday
472
as the plaintiffs wanted to move the High Court against the
order of the Subordinate Judge mentioned above. The Court
granted this prayer and on the 2nd of March following,
orders were received from the High Court directing that the
moneys were to be detained in Court pending further orders.
The High Court made order on the plaintiff ’s petition on
the 29th May, 1911. The learned Judges were very critical
of the appointment of the Sheristadar of the Court as
receiver of the estate and in no measured terms blamed the
Subordinate Judge for passing ex-parte, orders for raising
loans on the applications of the receiver without any
investigation at all and the receiver also for borrowing
money not for the benefit of the estate but for the personal
benefit of Ram Narayan, the defendant. The High Court
directed a full and proper investigation of the accounts of
the receiver by a Commissioner and a Vakil of the High Court
was appointed for that purpose. The Commissioner after a
protracted enquiry submitted his report which was accepted
by the High Court. Under the final orders passed by the
High Court not only were the plaintiffs held not liable to
pay any money to the receiver but the receiver was directed
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to pay a sum of Rs. 6,708 to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
were also to-receive Rs. 4,084 from the defendant, Ram
Narayan. The defendant was to pay Rs. 19,124 to the
receiver and the receiver wag made personally liable for the
loans that he had incurred. This order was made on the 23rd
July, 1913.
In the meantime while the investigation of accounts were
going on under orders of the High Court, Rashmoni, together
with her son Mohini executed a security bond -(Ex. E-1) on
the 1st August, 1911, and it is upon the legal effect of
this document that the decision of this case practically
depends. By this security bond, which was executed in
favour of Suhasini Dasi, the mortgagee in the mortgage bond
of Mohini, Rashmoni purported to hypothecate all the
properties that she got as heir of Haripada, as additional
security for the loan of Rs. 30,000 already advanced to
Mohini under the mortgage. As is stated already, two
properties situated at Chetla were included in the mortgage
of
473
Mohini although they were already sold. The security bond
recites that the mortgagee having discovered this fact was
about to Institute legal proceedings against the mortgagor
and it was primarily to ward off these threatened
proceedings and remove any apprehension from the minds of
the mortgagee about the sufficiency of the security that
this bond was executed. It is further stated in the bond
that the estate of Haripada in the hands of his mother was
benefited by the deposit of Rs. 20,950 in Court by Mohini
Mohan out of the sum of Rs. 30,000 borrowed on the mortgage
and that Mohini had spent the remaining amount of the loan
towards clearing certain debts of Rashmoni herself and to
meet the litigation and other expenses of both of them.
Mohini died soon after on the 8th of November, 1911. On
October 13, 1917, Suhasini instituted a suit for enforcing
the mortgage and the security bond against Rashmoni and the
heirs of Mohini. preliminary decree was passed on compromise
in that suit on the 24th September, 1918, and on the 25th
July, 1919, the decree was made final. The decree was put
into execution and on the 15th September, 1919, along with
other properties, the property in dispute was put up to sale
and it was purchased by Annada Prasad Ghose for Rs. 13,500.
On the 14th November, 1919, Bhubaneswari, wife of Ram
Narayan, as guardian of her infant sons filed a suit, being
Title Suit No. 254 of 1919 against Suhasini, Rashmoni and
Annada attacking the validity of the mortgage decree
obtained by Suhasini as well as the sale in execution
thereof. The suit ended on the 6th July, 1921, and the
plaintiff gave up her claim. On September 5, 1922, Annada
Ghose borrowed a sum of Rs. 10,000 from Sarat Kumar Das, the
original defendant No. 3 in, the suit and the father of the
present appellants and by way of equitable mortgage
deposited with the lender the title deeds of the property
No. 6, Dwarik Ghose Lane. On the 14th September, 1925,
Annada sold the property by executing a conveyance in favour
of the mortgagee Sarat Kumar Das for a consideration of Rs.
15,500. On the 8th June, 1939, Rashmoni died. About a year
later on July 15, 1940, the three sons of Ram Narayan, who
61
474
are the reversionary heirs of Haripada after the death of
Rashmoni, commenced the present suit in the Court of the
Subordinate Judge at Alipore claiming to recover possession
of the property on the allegation, that the security bond
executed by Rashmoni not being supported by legal necessity,
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the sale in execution of the mortgage as well as the
subsequent conveyance in favour of Sarat Kumar Das could
pass only the right, title and interest of Rashmoni and
could not affect the reversionary rights of the plaintiffs.
Several other persons were impleaded as parties defendants
and a number of issues were raised with which we are not
concerned in this appeal. What concerns us in this appeal
is the dispute between the plaintiffs on the one hand and
defendant No. 3 on the other and this dispute centered.
round three points, namely,
(1)Whether the security bond (Ex. E-1) executed by
Rashmoni along with Mohini was executed for legal, necessity
and was therefore binding on the reversioners, of Haripada
after the death of Rashmoni ?
(2)Whether the fact that Mohini, who was the presumptive
reversioner at that time, joined with his mother in
executing the security bond would make it binding on the
-,actual reversioner after the death of Rashmomi? In’ any
event if such consent on the part of the presumptive
reversioner raised a presumption of legal necessity, was
that presumption rebutted in the present case by the
evidence adduced by the parties ?
(3)Whether the title of defendant No. I was protected ,he
being a stranger purchaser who had purchased the -property
from the purchaser at an execution sale after making proper
enquiries and obtaining legal advice ?
The trial Judge by his judgment dated the 22nd December,
1944, decided all these points in favour of the plaintiffs
and decreed the suit. On appeal by the defendant to the
High Court, the decision of the trial Judge was affirmed.
The heirs of defendant No.3 have now come up to this Court
and Mr. Chatterjee appearing in support of the appeal has
reiterated all the three points which were urged on behalf
of his clients in the Courts below.
475
On the first point both the Courts below have held
concurrently, that there was absolutely no legal necessity
which justified the execution of the security bond by
Rashmoni in favour of Suhasini. Mr. Chatterjee lays stress
on the fact that it was a matter of imperative necessity for
both the plaintiffs to get back the estate of their father
from the hands of the receiver as the debts contracted by
the receiver were mounting Up day after day. It is pointed
out that on the 28th January, 1911, the Court had made a
peremptory order to the effect that the properties could be
released only if the plaintiffs deposited Rs. 20,950 annas
odd on or before the 1st February next. In order to comply
with this order Mohini had no other alternative but to
borrow- money on the mortgage of his properties and this he
had to do before the 1st February, 1911. It is true that
because of the unfortunate death of Haripada only a few days
before, Rashmoni could not join in executing the mortgage
but she, as heir of Haripada, was really answerable for half
of the money that was required to be deposited in Court. It
is said that this was not a mere moral obligation but a
legal liability on the part of the lady, as Mohini could
have claimed contribution from her to the extent that
Haripada’s estate was benefited by the deposit. The
execution of the security bond therefore was an act
beneficial to the estate of Haripada. The contentions,
though somewhat plausible at first sight, seem to us to be
wholly without substance. In the first place the money
borrowed by Mohini or deposited by him in Court did not and
could not benefit Haripada’s estate at all. As was found,
on investigation of accounts, under orders of the High Court
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later on, nothing at all was due to the receiver by the
estate of Haripada or Mohini. On the other hand, both the
brothers were entitled to get a fairly large sum of money
from the receiver. The trial Judge found that there was no
urgent necessity to borrow money for releasing the estate
and in fact it was Mohini who acted in hot haste to execute
the mortgage, his only object being to get the properties in
his own hands. It may be, that it was not possible to know
the actual state
476
of affairs with regard to the’ receiver’s accounts and
consequently it might well have been thought prudent to
borrow money to ward off what was considered to be a danger
to the estate. This might furnish some excuse or
explanation for Mohini’s borrowing money on the 28th
January, 191 1, but that could not make the act of Rashmoni
in executing the security bond, seven months after that
event, an act of prudent management on her part dictated
either by legal necessity or considerations of benefit to
the estate of her deceased son’ In the first place it is to
be noted-that the total amount borrowed by Mohini was Rs.
30,000 out of which Rs. 20,950 only were required to be
deposited in Court. The recital in the security bond that
the rest of the money was spent by, Mohini to pay off
certain debts of Rashmoni herself and also to meet the
litigation and household expenses of both of them has been
held by the Subordinate Judge to be false. It has been
found on facts that Rashmoni had no occasion to incur any
debts either for litigation expenses or for any other
purpose. But the most important thing that would require
consideration is the state of things actually existing at
the time when the security bond was executed. Even if the
release of the estate was considered to be desirable, that
had been already accomplished by Mohini who borrowed money
on his own responsibility. The utmost that could be said
was that Rashmoni was bound to reimburse Mohini to the
extent that the deposit of money by Mohini had benefited the
estate of Haripada. The High Court has rightly pointed out
that Rashmoni did not execute the bond to raise any money to
pay off her share of the deposit and in fact no necessity
for raising money for that purpose at all existed at that
time. As has been mentioned already, by an order passed by
the High Court on the revision petition of Mohini and his
mother against the order of the Subordinate Judge dated the
23rd February, 191 1, the whole amount of money deposited in
Court on the 1st, February, 191 1, with the exception of a
small sum that was paid to a creditor, with the consent of
both parties, was detained in Court. The High Court dispos-
ed of the revision case on 29th May, 1611, and directed
477
investigation into the accounts of the receiver by a
Commissioner appointed by it. As said already, the Court
passed severe strictures on the conduct of the receiver as
well as of the Subordinate Judge and plainly indicated that
the moneys borrowed by the receiver were borrowed not for
the benefit of the plaintiffs at all. Undoubtedly the
accounts were still to be investigated but what necessity
there possibly could be for Rashmoni to execute, after the
High Court had made the order as stated above, a security
bond by which she mortgaged all the properties that were
allotted to Haripada in his share as an additional security
for the entire loan of Rs. 30,000 no portion of which be
defied the estate of Haripada at all? In our opinion the
only object of executing the security bond was to protect
Mohini who was threatened with legal proceedings by his
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creditor for having included a nonexistent property in the
mortgage bond. Rashmoni certainly acted at the instance of
and for the benefit of Mohini and she might have been
actuated by a feeling of Maternal affection to save her son
from a real or imaginary danger. But by no stretch of
imagination could it be regarded as a prudent act on the
part of a Hindu female heir which was necessary for the
protection of the estate of the last male holder. In our
opinion the view taken by the Courts below is quite proper
and as a concurrent finding of fact it should not be
disturbed by this Court.
The second point urged by Mr. Chatterjee raises the question
as to whether the fact of Mohini’s joining his mother in
executing the security bond would make the transaction
binding on the actual reversioner, Mohini being admittedly
the presumptive reversioner of Haripada at the date of the
transaction. We do not think that there could be any
serious controversy about the law on this point. The
alienation here, was by way of mortgage and so no question
of surrender could possibly arise. Mohini being the
immediate reversioner who joined in the execution of the
security bond must be deemed to have consented to the
transaction. Such consent may raise a presumption that the
transaction was for legal necessity or that the mortgagee
had acted therein after proper and bona flde enquiry and has
478
satisfied himself as to the existence of such necessity(1).
But this. presumption is rebuttable and it is open to the
actual reversioner to establish that there was in fact no
legal necessity and there has been no proper and bonafide
enquiry by the mortgagee. There is no doubt that both the
Courts below have proceeded on a correct view of law and
both have come to the conclusion upon a consideration of the
evidence in the case that the presumption that arose by
reason of the then reversioner’s giving consent to the
transaction was rebutted by the facts transpiring in
evidence.
Mr. Chatterjee placed considerable reliance upon another
document which purports to be a deed of declaration and was
executed by Ram Narayan on the 5th of October, 1918. At
this time Mohini was dead ’and Ram Narayan was the immediate
reversioner to the estate of Haripada and by this deed he
declared inter alia that the debts contracted by Rashmoni
were for proper and legal necessity. This deed purports to
be addressed to Bangshidari Ghosh and Keshav Dutt, two other
alienees of the properties of Mohini and Haripada and does
not amount to a representation made to the auction purchaser
Annada Prasad Ghose or to the father of the present
appellants. In fact they had not come in the picture at all
at that time. At the most it can be regarded only as an
admission by a presumptive reversioner and cannot have any
higher value than the consent expressed by Mohini who
figured as a co-execuitant of the security bond. It cannot
bind the actual reversioner in any way. Mr. Chatterjee
attempted to put forward an argument on the authority of
certain observations in the case of Bajrangi v.
Monokarnika(2) that as the present appellants are the sons
of Ram Narayan the admissions made by their father would
bind them as well. It is true that there is a passage at
the end of the judgment in Monokarnika’s case(1) which lends
some apparent support to the contention of the learned
counsel. The concluding words in the judgment stand as
follows:
(1)Vide Debi Prosad Chowdhury v. Golap Bhagat, I.L.R. 40
Cal. 721 at 78I. Approved of by the judicial Committee in
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Gounden v. Gounden, 46 I.A. 72, 84.
(2) 35 I.A. 1.
479
"The appellants who claim through Matadin Singh and
Baijnath Singh must be held bound by the consent of their
fathers."
But the true import of this passage was discussed by the
Privy Council in their later pronouncement in Rangasami
Gounden v. Nachippa Gounden(1) and it was held that the
words referred to above should I not be construed to lay
down the proposition that such consent on the part of the
father would operate proprio vigore and would be binding on
the sons. This proposition, Their Lordships observed, was
opposed both to principle and authority, it being a settled
doctrine of Hindu law that nobody has a vested right so long
as the widow is alive and the eventual reversioner does not
claim through anyone who went before him. As the sons of
Ram Narayan claim as heirs of Haripada and not of their
father, the admissions, if any, made by the latter could not
in any way bind them. This contention of the appellant must
therefore fail.
The third and the last contention raised by Mr.
Chatterjee is that in any event his client is a stranger who
has bona fide purchased the property for good consideration
after making due enquiries and on proper legal advice and be
cannot therefore be affected by any infirmity of title by
reason of the absence of legal necessity. In our opinion
the contention formulated in this form really involves a
misconception of the legal position of an alienee of a Hindu
widow’s property. The interest of a Hindu widow in the pro-
perties inherited by her bears no analogy or resemblance to
what may be described as an equitable estate in English law
and which cannot be followed in the hands of a bonafide
purchaser for value without notice. From very early times
the Hindu widow’s estate has been described as qualified
proprietorship with powers of alienation only when there is
justifying necessity, and the restrictions on the powers of
alienation are inseparable from her estate (2). For legal
necessity she can convey to another an absolute title to the
property vested in her. If there is no legal ’necessity,
the transferee gets only the widow’s estate which is not
even an
(1) 46 I.A. 72 at 83-84.
(2) Vide The Collector of Masaulipatam v. Cavaly Venkata,
S.M.I.A. 529,
480
indefeasible life estate for it can come to an end not
merely on her death but on the happening of other
contingencies like re-marriage, adoption, etc. If an
alienee from a Hindu widow succeeds in establishing that
there was legal necessity for transfer, he is completely
protected and it is immaterial that the necessity was
brought about by the mismanagement of the limited owner
herself. Even if there is no necessity in fact, but it is
proved that there was representation of necessity and the
alienee after making bona fide enquiries satisfied himself
as best as he could that such necessity existed, then as the
Privy Council pointed out in Hunooman Persaud Panday’s case
(1) the actual existence of a legal necessity is not a
condition precedent to the validity of the sale. The
position therefore is that if there is no necessity in fact
or if the alienee could not prove that he made bona fide
enquiries and was satisfied about its existence, the
transfer is undoubtedly not void but the transferee would
get only the widow’s estate in the property which does not
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affect in any way the interest of the reversioner. In this
case the alienation was by way of mortgage. The finding of
both the Courts below is that there was no legal necessity
which justified the execution of the security bond. The
mortgagee also could not prove that there was representation
of the legal necessity and that she satisfied herself by
bona fide enquiries that such necessity did exist. On ’this
point the, finding recorded by the High Court is as follows
:
" In the present case, there is no scope for an argument
that there was such representation of legal necessity or
that on bona fide enquiry the alienee satisfied herself
’that there was such a necessity, for as I have already
pointed out the security bond itself states that it was in
consideration of benefits already received and with a view
to induce Suhasini to forbear from proceeding against
Mohini, that the bond was being executed. There is no
representation in the bond that the alienation was made with
a view to securing any benefit to the estate or to avert any
danger to the estate or for the purpose of any other legal
necessity. Whatever enquiries the appellants may have made
(1) 6 M.I.A,
481
would be of no avail to them when the alienation is not
binding on the whole estate but only on the woman’s estate
of Rashmoni."
In our opinion the view taken by the High Court is quite
proper. On this finding the security bond could operate
only on the widow’s estate of Rashmoni and it was that
interest alone which passed to the purchase. at the mortgage
sale. The subsequent transferee could not claim to have
acquired any higher right than what his predecessor had and
it is immaterial whether he bona fide paid the purchase
money or took proper legal advice. The result is that in
our opinion the decision of the High Court is right and this
appeal must stand dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.