Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KAKUMANU PEDA SUBBAYYA ANDANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KAKUMANU AKKAMMA AND ANOTHER
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/09/1958
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
CITATION:
1958 AIR 1042 1959 SCR 1249
ACT:
Hindu Law-Partition-Suit for Partition on behalf of minor
-Severance of joint status-Death of minor pending suit-
Abatement-Right of legal representative to continue suit.
HEADNOTE:
In a suit instituted on behalf of a Hindu minor for
partition of the joint family properties, the minor
plaintiff died during the pendency of the suit and his
mother as the legal representative was allowed to continue
the suit as the second plaintiff, and the suit was decreed
as it was found that the defendants had been acting against
the interests of the minor and that the suit for partition
was therefore beneficial to him. It was contended for the
appellants that the suit had abated by reason of the death
of the minor before the suit was heard and before the Court
could decide whether the institution of the suit was for his
benefit.
Held, that when a suit is instituted by a person acting on
behalf of a minor for the partition of the joint family
properties, a declaration made by him on behalf of the minor
to become divided brings about a severance in status,
subject only to the decision of the Court that the action is
beneficial to the minor. The true effect of the decision of
the Court is not to create in the minor a right which he did
not possess before but to recognise the right which had
accrued to him when the action was instituted.
Rangasayi v. Nagarathnamma, (1933) I. L. R. 57 Mad. 95,
Ramsingh v. Fakira, I. L. R. [1939] Bom. 256 and
Mandilprasad v. Ramcharanlal, I.L.R. [1947] Nag. 848,
approved.
Case law reviewed.
Accordingly, the suit did not abate and the legal represen-
tative was entitled to continue the suit and obtain a decree
on showing that when the suit was instituted it was for the
benefit of the minor.
Held, further, that the suit did not abate on the ground
either that the cause of action for a suit for partition by
a minor was one personal to him, because such a suit is one
relating to property.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 326 of 1955.
1250
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
April 10, 1953, of the Madras High Court in Second Appeal
No. 1815 of 1949, arising out of the judgment and decree
dated January 28, 1949, of the Court of Subordinate Judge,
Bapatla, in A. S. No. 188 of 1947, against the judgment and
decree dated December 23, 1946, of the District Munsif,
Ongole, in O. S. No. 139 of 1946.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India and R.Ganapathy
Aiyar, for the appellants.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri, M. R. Rangaswami Aiyangar, T. S.
Venkataraman and K. R. Choudhury, for the respondents.
1958. September 4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AIYAR J.-This appeal arises out of a suit for
partition of joint family properties instituted on April 2,
1942, in the Court of the District Munsif, Ongole, on behalf
of one Kakumanu Ramanna, a minor of the age of about 2 1/2
years by his material grandfather, Rangayya, as his next
friend. The first defendant is his father. The second and
third defendants are the sons of the first defendant by his
deceased first wife. The fourth defendant is the second
wife of the first defendant and the mother of the
plaintiff-. The fifth defendant is the daugther of the
first defendant by the fourth defendant.
In the plaint, three grounds were put forward as to why the
minor plaintiff should have partition: (1) It was said that
the mother of the plaintiff was ill-treated, and there was
neglect to maintain her and her children. Both the District
Munsif and the Subordinate Judge on appeal, held that this
had not been established, and no further notice need be
taken of it. (2) It was then said that there had been a sale
of the family properties to one Akkul Venkatasubba Reddi for
Rs. 2,300, that there was no necessity for that sale, and
that its object was only to injure the plaintiff. That sale
is dated May 9, 1939. (3) Lastly, it was alleged that item 2
had been purchased on June 1, 1938, and item 11 on June 14,
1939, with joint family
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funds, but that the sale deeds had been taken in the names
of the second and third defendants with a view to diminish
the assets available to the plaintiff. In addition to these
allegations, it was also stated in the plaint that the
family was in good circumstances, and that there were no
debts owing by it. On June 20, 1942, the defendants filed
their written statements, wherein they claimed that the
purchase of items 2 and 11 had been made with the separate
funds of the second and third defendants, and that the joint
family had no title to them. They further alleged that the
family had debts to the extent of Rs. 2,600. Sometime in
January 1943, the minor plaintiff died, and his mother who
was the fourth defendant was recorded as his legal
representative, and transposed as the second plaintiff.
The suit was in the first instance decreed, but on appeal,
the Subordinate Judge remanded the case for trial on certain
issues. At the rehearing, it ",as proved that the first
plaintiff was born on December 20, 1939. On that, the
District Munsif held that the sale of the family properties
to Akkul Venkatasubba Reddi and the purchase of items 2 and
II in the names of the second and third defendants having
been anterior to the birth of the minor plaintiff, no cause
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of action for partition could be founded thereon. The
District Munsif also held on the evidence that the purchase
of items 2 and 11 was not shown to have been made with
separate funds, and that therefore they belonged to the
joint family and further that the family owed no debts and
that the allegations contra in the statements were not made
out. But he held, however, that this did not furnish a
cause of action for partition. In the result, he dismissed
the suit. There was an appeal against this judgment to the
Court of the Subordinate Judge of Bapatla, who affirmed the
findings of the District Munsif that items 2 and 11 belonged
to the joint, family, and that there were no debts owing by
it. But he also agreed with him that as the sale and
purchases in question were prior to the birth of the minor
plaintiff, the suit for
159
1252
partition based thereon was not maintainable. He
accordingly dismissed the appeal. The second plaintiff took
the matter in second appeal to the High Court of Madras, and
that was heard by Satyanarayana Rao J. who held that as the
defendants had falsely claimed that items 2 and 11 were the
separate properties of the second and third defendants,
their interest was adverse to that of the minor and that the
suit for partition was clearly beneficial to him. He
accordingly granted a preliminary decree for partition. The
present appeal has been brought against it on leave granted
by this Court under Art. 136.
The learned Attorney-General who appeared for the appellants
advanced two contentions in support of the appeal: (1) that
there was a concurrent finding by both the courts below that
the suit was not instituted for the benefit of the minor,
and that the High Court had no power to reverse it in second
appeal; and (2) that, in any event, as the minor plaintiff
had died before the suit was heard and before the court
could decide whether the institution of the suit was for his
benefit, the action abated and could not be continued by his
mother as his legal representative.
On the first question, the contention of the appellants is
that it is a pure question of fact whether the institution
of a suit is for the benefit of a minor or not, and that a
finding of the courts below on that question is not liable
to be interfered with in second appeal. But it must be
observed that the finding of the Subordinate Judge was only
that as the impugned sale and purchases were made before the
minor plaintiff was born, no cause of action for partition
could be founded by him thereon, and that, in our opinion,
is a clear misdirection. The transactions in question were
relied on by the minor plaintiff as showing that the
defendants were acting adversely to him, and that it was
therefore to his benefit that there should be a partition.
It is no doubt true that as the plaintiff was not born on
the date of those transactions, the defendants could not
have entered into them with a view to injure him, though
even as to this it should be noted that in May and -June,
1253
1939 when the transactions were concluded, the first
plaintiff was in the womb, and the first defendant admits
knowledge of this, in his evidence. But assuming that there
was no intention to defeat the rights of the first plaintiff
at the time when the transactions in question were entered
into, that does not conclude the matter. The real point for
decision is whether the defendants were acting adversely to
the minor, and if, after he was born, they used documents
which might have been innocent when they came into
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existence, for the purpose of defeating his rights to the
properties comprised therein, that would be conduct hostile
to him justifying partition. Now, what are the facts ? In
the written statements which were filed shortly after the
institution of the suit while the first plaintiff was alive,
defendants I to 3 combined to deny his title to items 2 and
I 1, and at the trial, they adduced evidence in support of
their contention that they were the separate properties of
defendants 2 and 3. Even in the Court of Appeal, the
defendants persisted in pressing this claim, and further
maintained that the joint family had debts, and both the
courts below had concurrently held against them on these
issues. These are materials from which it could rightly be
concluded that it was not to the interest of the minor to
continue joint with the defendants, and that it would be
beneficial to him to decree partition. In holding that as
the transactions in question had taken place prior to his
birth the minor could not rely on them as furnishing a cause
of action, the courts below had misunderstood the real point
for determination, and that was a ground on which the High
Court could interfere with their finding in second appeal.
We accept the finding of the High Court that the suit was
instituted for the benefit of the minor plaintiff, and in
that view, we proceed to consider the second question raised
by the learned Attorney-General-and that is the main ques-
tion that was pressed before us-whether the suit for
partition abated by reason of the death of the minor before
it was heard and decided.
The contention on behalf of the appellants is that while in
the case of an adult coparcener a clear and
1254
unambiguous expression on his part of an intention to become
divided will have the effect of bringing about a division in
status and the filing of a suit for partition would amount
to such an expression, that rule can have no application in
the case of a minor, as under the law he is incapable of a
volition of his own. It is conceded by the appellants that
a suit for partition could be entertained on behalf of a
minor plaintiff, and decreed if the court decides that it,
is in the interests of the minor. But it is said that in
such a case, the court exercises on behalf of the minor a
volition of which lie is incapable, that it is not until
that volition is exercised by the court that there can be a
division in status, and that, therefore, when a minor
plaintiff dies before the court adjudicates on the question
of benefit to him, he dies an undivided coparcener and his
interest survives to the other coparceners and does not
devolve on his heirs by inheritance. The contention of the
respondents, on the other hand, is that a suit for partition
instituted on behalf of a minor coparcener stands on the
same footing as a similar suit filed by an adult coparcener,
with this difference that if the suit is held by the court
not to have been instituted for the benefit of the minor it
is liable to be dismissed, and no division in status can be
held to result from such an action. In other words, it is
argued that a suit for partition on behalf of a minor
effects a severance in status from the date of the suit,
conditional on the court holding that its institution is for
the benefit of the minor.
The question thus raised is one of considerable importance,
on which there has been divergence of judicial opinion.
While the decisions in Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma (1), Lalta
Prasad v. Sri Mahadeoji Birajman Temple (2) and Hari Singh
v. Pritam Singh(3), hold that when a suit for partition is
filed on behalf of a minor plaintiff there is a division in
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status only if and when the Court decides that it is for his
benefit and passes a decree, the decisions in Rangasayi v.
Nagarathnamma (4), Ramsing v. Fakira (5) and Mandliprasad v.
Ramcharanlal (6), lay down that when such a
(1) (1917) I.L.R. 41Mad. 442.
(2) (1920) I.L.R. 42 All. 461.
(3) A.I.R. 1936 Lah. 504.
(4) (1933) I.L.R. 57 Mad. 95.
(5) I.L.R. [1939] Bom. 256.
(6) I.L.R. [1947] Nag. 848.
1255
suit is decreed, the severance in status relates back to the
date of the institution of the suit. While Chelimi Chetty
v. Subbamma (1) decides that when a minor on whose behalf a
suit is filed dies before hearing, the action abates, it was
held in Rangasayi v. Nagarathnamma (2) and Mandliprasad v.
Ramcharanlal (3) that such a suit does not abate by reason
of the death of the minor before trial, and that it is open
to his legal representatives to continue the suit and
satisfy the court that the institution of the suit was for
the benefit of the minor, in which case there would be, a
division in status from the date of the plaint and the
interests of the minor in the joint family properties would
devolve on his heirs. To decide which of these two views is
the correct one, we shall have to examine the nature of the
right which a minor coparcener has, to call for partition
and of the power which the court has, to decide whether the
partition in question is beneficial to the minor or not.
Under the Mitakshara law, the right, of a coparcener to
share in the joint family properties arises on his birth,
and that right carries with it the right to be maintained
out of those properties suitably to the status of the family
so long as the family is joint and to have a partition and
separate possession of his share, should he make a demand
for it. The view was at one time held that there could be
no partition, unless all the coparceners agreed to it or
until a decree was passed in a suit for partition. But the
question was finally settled by the decision of the Privy
Council in Girja Bai v. Sadashiv Dhundiraj (4), wherein it
was held, on a review of the original texts and adopting the
observation to that effect in Suraj Narain v. lqbal Narain
(5), that every coparcener has got a right to become divided
at his own will and option whether the other coparceners
agree to it or not, that a division in status takes place
when he expresses his intention to become separate
unequivocally avid unambiguously, that the filing of a suit
for partition is a clear expression of such an intention,
and that, in consequence,
(1) (1917) I.L.R. 41 Mad. 442.
(2) (1933) I.L.R. 57 Mad. 95.
(3) I.L.R. [1947] Nag. 848.
(4) (1916) L.R. 43 I.A. 151.
(5) (1912) L.R. 40 I.A. 40,45.
1256
there is a severance in status when the action for partition
is filed. Following this view to its logical conclusion, it
was held by the Privy Council in Kawal Nain v. Prabhu Lal
(1), that even if such a suit were to be dismissed, that
would not affect the division in status which must be held
to have taken place, when the action was instituted.
Viscount Haldane observed:
"A decree may be necessary for working out the result of the
severance and for allotting definite shares, but the status
of the plaintiff as separate in estate is brought about by
his assertion of his right to separate, whether he obtains
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consequential judgment or not."
The law being thus settled as regards coparceners who are
sui juris, the question is whether it operates differently
when the coparcener who institutes the suit for partition is
a minor acting through his next friend. Now, the Hindu law
makes no distinction between a major coparcener and a minor
coparcener, so far as their rights to joint properties are
concerned. A minor is, equally with a major, entitled to be
suitably maintained out of the family properties, and at
partition, his rights are precisely those of a major.
Consistently with this position, it has long been settled
that a suit for partition on behalf of a minor coparcener is
maintainable in the same manner as one filed by an adult
coparcener, with this difference that when the plaintiff is
a minor the court has to be satisfied that the action has
been instituted for his benefit. Vide the authorities cited
in Rangasayi v. Nagarathnamma (2 ) at p. 137. The course of
the law may be said, thus far, to have had smooth run. But
then came the decision in Girja Bai v. Sadashiv Dhundiraj
(3) which finally established that a division in status
takes place when there is an unambiguous declaration by a
coparcener of his intention to separate, and that the very
institution of a suit for partition constituted the
expression of such an intention. The question then arose
how far this principle could be applied, when the suit for
partition was instituted not by a major but by a minor
acting through his next friend. The view was expressed that
(1) (1917) L.R. 44 I.A. 159. (2) (1933) I.L.R. 57 Mad. 95.
(3) (1916) L.R. 43 I.A. 151.
1257
as the minor had, under the law, no volition of his own’ the
rule in question had no application to him it was not,
however, suggested that for that reason no .suit for
partition could be maintained on behalf of a minor, for such
a stand would be contrary to the law as laid down in a
series of decisions and must, if accepted, expose the estate
of the minor to the perils of waste and spoliation by
coparceners acting adversely to him. But what was said was
that when a court decides that a partition is for the
benefit of a minor, there is a division brought about by
such decision and not otherwise. It would follow from this
that if a minor died before the court decided the question
of benefit lie would have died an undivided coparcener of
his family and his heirs could not continue the action.
In Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma (1), the point directly arose
for decision whether on the death of a minor plaintiff the
suit for -partition instituted on his behalf could be
continued by his legal representatives. It was held that
the rule that the institution of a suit for partition
effected a severance of joint status was not applicable to a
suit instituted on behalf of a minor, and that when he died
during the pendency of the suit" his legal representative
was not entitled to continue it. The ground of this
decision was thus stated:
" It was strongly argued by the learned pleader for the
respondent that as the plaint states facts and circumstances
which, if proved, would be good justification for the court
decreeing partition, therefore at this stage we must proceed
on the basis that there was a good cause of action and there
was thus a severance of status effected by the institution
of the suit. This clearly does not amount to anything more
than this, that it is open to a person who chooses to act on
behalf of a minor member of a Hindu family to exercise the
discretion on his behalf to effect a severance. What causes
the severance of a joint Hindu family is not the existence
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of certain facts which would justify any member to ask for
partition, but it is the exercise of the option which the
law lodges in a member of the joint family to say whether he
shall continue to remain
(1) (1917) T.L.R. 41 Mad. 442.
1258
joint or whether he shall ask for a division. In the case
of an adult he has not got to give any reasons why lie asks
for partition but has simply to say that he wants partition,
and the court is bound to give him a decree. In the case of
a minor the law gives the court, the power to say whether
there should be a division or not, and we think that it will
lead to considerable complications and difficulties if we
are to say that other persons also have got the discretion
to create a division in the family, purporting to act on
behalf of a minor."
This decision was cited with approval in Lalta Prasad v.Sri
Mahadeoji Birajman Temple (1), wherein it was observed:
" The effect, therefore, we think, of an action brought by a
minor through his next friend is not to create any
alteration of status of the family, because a minor cannot
demand as of right a separation; it is only granted in the
discretion of the court when, in the circumstances, the
action appears to be for the benefit of the minor. See
Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma (2)."
In Hari Singh v. Pritam Singh (3), a suit for partition
instituted on behalf of a minor was decreed, the court
finding that it was for the benefit of the minor. The
question then arose as to the period for which the karta
could be made liable to account. It was held, following the
decisions in Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma (2 ) and Lalla
Prasad v. Sri Mahadeoji Birajman Temple (1), that as the
severance in status took place only on the date of the
decision and not when the suit was instituted, the liability
to account arose only from the date of the decree and not
from the date of the suit. It may be mentioned that in
Chhotabhai v. Dadabhai (4) Divatia J. quoted the decision in
Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma (2) with approval, but as pointed
out in Ramsing v. Fakira (5) and by the learned judge
himself in Bammangouda v. Shankargouda (6), the point now
under consideration did not really arise for decision in
that case, and the
(1) (1920) I.L.R. 42 All. 461.
(2) (1917) I.L.R. 41 Mad. 442.
(3) A.I.R. 1936 Lah. 504.
(4) A.I.R. 1935 Bom. 54.
(5) I.L.R. [1939] Bom. 256.
(6) A.I.R. 1944 Bom. 67.
1259
observations were merely obiter. It is on the strength of
the above authorities that the appellants contend that when
the minor plaintiff died in January 1943, the suit for
partition had abated, and that his mother had no right to
continue the suit as his heir.
Now, the ratio of the decision in Chelimi Chetty v. Subbamma
(1)-and it is this decision that was followed in Lalta
Prasad’s Case (2 ), Hari Singh v. Pritam Singh (3) and
Chhotabhai v. Dadabhai (4)-is that the power to bring about
a division between a minor and his coparceners rests only
with the court and not with any other person, and that, in
our judgment, is clearly erroneous. When a court decides
that a suit for partition is beneficial to the minor, it
does not itself bring about a division in status. The court
is not in the position of a super-guardian of a minor
expressing on his behalf all intention to become divided.
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That intention is, in fact, expressed by some other person,
and the function which the court exercises is merely to
decide whether that other person has acted in the best
interests of the minor in expressing on his behalf ail
intention to become divided. The position will be clear
when regard is had to what takes place when there is a
partition outside court. In such a partition, when a branch
consisting of a father and his minor son becomes divided
from the others, the father acts on behalf of the minor son
as well; and the result of the partition is to effect a
severance in status between the father and his minor son,
oil the one hand and the other coparceners, on the other.
In that case, the intention of the minor to become separated
from the coparceners other than his father is really
expressed on his behalf by his father. But it may happen
that there is a division between the father and his own
minor son, and in that case, the minor would normally be
represented by his mother or some other relation, and a
partition so entered into has been recognised to be valid
and effective to bring about a severance in status. The
minor has no doubt the right to have the partition set aside
if it is shown to have been prejudicial to him but if that
is not established, the partition
(1) (1917) I.L.R. 41 Mad. 442.
(3) A.I.R. 1936 Lah. 504.
(2) (1920) I.L.R. 42 All. 461.
(4) A.I.R. 1935 BOM. 54.
160
1260
is binding on him. Vide Balkishen Das v. Ram Narain Sahu
(1). And even when the partition is set aside on the ground
that it is unfair, the result will be not to annul the
division in status created by the partition but to entitle
the minor to a re-allotment of the properties. It is
immaterial that the minor was represented in the transaction
not by a legal guardian but by a relation. It is true, as
held in Gharib- Ul-Lah v. Khalak Singh (2) that no guardian
can be appointed with reference to the coparcenary
properties of a minor member in a joint family, because it
is the karta that has under the law the right of management
in respect of them and the right to represent the minor in
transactions relating to them. But that is only when the
family is joint, and so where there is disruption of the
joint status, there can be no question of the right of a
karta of a joint family as such to act on behalf of the
minor, and on the authorities, a partition entered into on
his behalf by a person other than his father or mother will
be valid, provided that person acts in the interests of and
for the benefit of the minor.
If, under the law, it is competent to a person other than
the father or mother of a minor to act on his behalf, and
enter into a partition out of court so as to bind him, is
there any reason why that person should not be competent
when he finds that the interests of the minor would best be
served by a division and that the adult coparceners are not
willing to effect a partition, to file a suit for that
purpose on behalf of the minor, and why if the court finds
that the action is beneficial to the minor, the institution
of the, suit should not be held to be a proper declaration
on behalf of the minor to become divided so as to cause a
severance in status? In our judgment, when the law permits
a person interested in a minor to act on his behalf, any
declaration to become divided made by him on behalf of the
minor must be held to result in severance in status, subject
only to the court deciding whether it is beneficial to the
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minor; and a suit instituted on his behalf if found to be
beneficial, must be held to bring about a division in
status. That
(1) (1903) L.R. 30 I.A. 139. :
(2) (1903) L.R. 30 I.A. 165.
1261
was the view taken in a Full Bench decision of the Madras
High Court in Rangasayi. v. Nagarathnamma (1), wherein
Ramesam J. stated the position thus:
" These instances show that the object of the issue whether
the suit was for the benefit of the minor is really to
remove the obstacle to the passing of the decree. It is no
objection to the maintainability of the suit. In my opinion
therefore in all such cases the severance is effected from
the date of the suit conditional on the court being able to
find that the suit when filed was for the benefit of the
minor."
The same view has been taken in Ramsing v. Fakira (2) and
Mandliprasad v. Ramcharanlal (3), and we agree with these
decisions.
On the conclusion reached above that it is the action of the
person acting on behalf of a minor that brings about a
division in status, it is necessary to examine what the
nature of the jurisdiction is which the courts exercise when
they decide whether a suit is for the benefit of a minor or
not. Now, the theory is that the Sovereign as parens
patriae has the power, and is indeed under a duty to protect
the interests of minors, and that function has devolved on
the courts. In the discharge of that function, therefore,
they have the power to control all proceedings before them
wherein minors are concerned. They can appoint their own
officers to protect their interests, and stay proceedings if
they consider that they are vexatious. In Halsbury’s Laws
of England, 3rd Edn., Vol. XXI, p. 216, para. 478, it
is stated as follows:
" Infants have always been treated as specially under the
protection of the Sovereign, who, as parens patriae, had the
charge of the persons not capable of looking after
themselves. This jurisdiction over infants was formerly
delegated to and exercised by the Lord Chancellor; through
him it passed to the Court of Chancery, and is now vested in
the Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice. It is
independent of the question whether the infant has any
property or not."
(1) (1933) I.T.R. 57 Mad. 95.
(2) I.L.R. [1939] Bom. 256.
(3) I.L.R. [1947] Nag. 848.
1262
It is in the exercise of this jurisdiction that courts
require to be, satisfied that the next friend of a minor has
in instituting a suit for partition acted in his interest.
When, therefore, the court decides that the suit has been
instituted for the benefit of the minor and decrees
partition, it does so not by virtue of any rule, special or
peculiar to Hindu law but in the exercise of a jurisdiction
which is inherent in it and which extends over all minors.
The true effect of a, decision of a court that the action is
beneficial to the minor is not to create in the minor
proprio vigore a right which he did not possess before but
to recognise the right which had accrued to him when the
person acting on his behalf instituted the action. Thus,
what brings about the severance in status is the action of
the next friend in instituting the suit, the decree of the
court merely rendering it effective by deciding that what
the next friend has done is for the benefit of the minor.
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It remains to consider one other argument advanced on behalf
of the appellants. It was urged that the cause of action
for a suit for partition by a minor was one personal to him,
and that on his death before hearing, the suit must abate on
the principle of the maxim, actio personalis moritur cum
persona. But that maxim has application only when the
action is one for damages for a personal wrong, and as a
suit for partition is a suit for property, the rule in
question has no application to it. That was the view taken
in Rangasayi v. Nagarathnamma (1) at pp. 137-138 and in
Mandliprasad v. Ramcharanlal (2) at p. 871, and we are in
agreement with it.
All the contentions urged in support of the appeal have
failed, and the appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.
The amounts paid by the appellants to the respondents in
pursuance of the order of this Court dated March 7, 1958,
will be taken into account in adjusting the rights of the
parties under this decree.
(1) (1933) I.L.R. 57 Mad. 95.
Appeal dismissed.
(2) I.L.R. [1947] Nag. 848.
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