Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5473 of 1998
PETITIONER:
SMT. VIJAYALAKSHMAMMA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
B. T. SHANKAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/03/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & Doraiswamy Raju.
JUDGMENT:
RAJU, J.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
The appellants (defendants) have filed the above appeal
against the judgment and decree dated 29.5.1998 of a
Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court in R.F.A. No.14
of 1989 partly allowing their appeal but in other respects
affirming the judgment and decree dated 7.10.1988 of the
Civil Judge, Madhugiri, in Original Suit No.83 of 1987,
decreeing the suit for partition and separate possession, as
prayed for.
The case of the respondent-plaintiff is that he has been
adopted on 22.6.1970 as per the customs prevalent in the@@
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community by Sharadamma, wife of one A.T. Nanjappa Rao, who@@
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died in the year 1968 leaving behind him the suit schedule
properties and also two widows, Smt. Sharadamma, the first
wife, and Smt. Neelamma, the second wife. It was urged for
the plaintiff that since late Nanjappa Rao had no issues
through his wives, named above, the plaintiff, the son of
Nanjappa Raos elder brother, came to be adopted by both the
widows and the factum of adoption was also evidenced by an
Adoption Deed written on the same day and, therefore, he
became the absolute owner of the suit schedule properties.
The adoption so made was claimed to have been acted upon by
entering the name of the plaintiff in the revenue records as
a son of late Nanjappa Rao and that he had been managing all
the properties thereafter. Sharadamma, the senior widow,
died on 25.5.1984 after prolonged illness. Since disputes
arose between the plaintiff and Sharadamma on one hand and
the junior widow, Neelamma, on the other hand, the junior
widow in collusion with another brother of Nanjappa Rao by
name B.S. Krishnaoji Rao and his wife started giving
trouble to the plaintiff by projecting a claim of adoption
of their daughter by name Vijayalakshmamma in the year 1970
when she was nine years old but reduced into writing and
affirmed under a registered deed dated 26.3.1984, and
further said to be fortified by a Will dated 28.3.1984
jointly claimed to have been executed by late Sharadamma and
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Neelamma. After asserting a claim for partition of his
share of the properties by issuing a notice preceding the
filing of the suit, the respondent filed Original Suit
No.83/87 praying for a decree for declaration that he is the
only adopted son of late Nanjappa Rao and for partition of
his 3/4th share in the suit schedule properties by metes and
bounds and for delivery of separate possession of his share
and for future mesne profits from the date of suit till the
date of delivery of separate possession to be determined
under Order 20 Rule 12 of the C.P.C. The stand of the
plaintiff also was that after the death of Sharadamma, the
Appellants-defendants herein with the help of their men were
able to dispossess the plaintiff from some of the properties
necessitating the suit claim as noticed above.
The junior widow of late Nanjappa Rao was impleaded as
the second defendant and the proclaimed adopted daughter
Vijayalakshmamma was impleaded as the first defendant to the
suit. The defendants filed a common written statement
disputing the facts averred as well as claims made by the
plaintiff by contending that there was no adoption of the
plaintiff by Sharadamma as claimed; that the unregistered
deed of adoption was a fabricated one and no rights can be
claimed on the basis of such a document. The further stand
was that the adoption of the first defendant as evidenced by
the registered document dated 26.3.1984 (Exb. D.2) and the
Will dated 28.3.1984 (Exb. D.1) fortified the claim of
adoption projected by the defendants and at no point of time
the plaintiff was the owner of the properties in question.
As an alternate plea, it was projected that in any event the
second defendant-junior widow of late Nanjappa Rao, having
not either accorded her consent or participated in the
so-called adoption of the plaintiff by Sharadamma, the
senior widow, the adoption of the plaintiff, if at all,
could be for Sharadamma only and not for or the estate of
her husband, late A.T. Nanjappa Rao, and that no adoption
could have been properly or legally made of the plaintiff
without the consent of both the widows of late Nanjappa Rao.
In support of the claim of the plaintiff, PWs. 1 to 8
were examined of whom P.W.1 being himself, P.W.2, the
Purohit, who was said to have performed the adoption
ceremony, P.Ws. 7 & 8 the natural parents, P.W.6, the
natural maternal grand father of the plaintiff and P.Ws. 3
to 5 neighbours of the plaintiff, who were said to have
attended the adoption ceremony. P.Ws. 4 & 5 were also said
to have attested the adoption deed Exb. P.1, the
unregistered deed of adoption of the plaintiff. Exbs. P.1
to P.5 were also marked as material documentary evidence.
To prove the claim of the defendants, D.Ws. 1 to 5 were
examined in addition to marking Exbs. D.1 to D.7. On a
consideration of the oral and documentary evidence on
record, the learned Trial Judge decreed the suit as prayed
for, after adverting to in great detail the overwhelming
materials and evidence on record, rejecting at the same time
the perfunctory evidence placed on record by the defendants.
Aggrieved, the appellants pursued the matter in appeal
before the High Court and, as noticed earlier, the Division
Bench affirmed the findings of the learned Trial Judge on
the question of factum of adoption of the plaintiff while
equally confirming the findings that the defendants
miserably failed to prove the case projected by them of
adoption of the first defendant. The registered deed of
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adoption (Exb.D.2) and the Will (Exb. D.1) were held to
have not been proved in respect of their genuineness and due
execution as well by examining either the Attestors or by
taking any steps for proving the signature of Sharadamma,
the senior widow, on them. At the same time while
considering the alternate plea of the appellants, the High
Court held that since the adoption of the plaintiff was
shown to have been made only by Sharadamma, the senior
widow, without the actual consent and participation of the
junior widow, who was alive at that time, the adoption was
held to be for Sharadamma, the senior widow, alone and not
on behalf of both the widows of late Nanjappa Rao. Keeping
in view the legal position that on the death of Nanjappa Rao
in the year 1968 under the provisions of the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956, the widows came to inherit the suit
schedule properties with equal share, it was held the
adoption of the plaintiff by Sharadamma alone without the
consent of the second wife did not affect the share of
Neelamma in the properties and the plaintiff would be
entitled to inherit only the share of late Sharadamma alone.
To that extent, the judgment and decree passed by the Trial
Court came to be modified into one for an half share in
favour of the plaintiff as against the 3/4th share granted
by the Trial Court. Not satisfied with the partial relief
granted, the appellants have come before this Court.
Mr.T.L. Viswanatha Iyer, learned senior counsel, while
inviting our attention to the relevant provisions of the@@
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Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 (hereinafter@@
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referred to as ‘the Act) contended that when there are two
co-widows, one widow alone cannot adopt a son or daughter
without the consent of the other co-widow, for or the estate
of the late husband. The reason, according the learned
counsel, being that as per Section 12 of the Act the adopted
son or daughter shall be deemed to be the child of his or
her adoptive father or mother for all purposes with effect
from the date of adoption. Argued the learned senior
counsel further that the proviso to Section 7 and the
Explanation thereto must necessarily be read into Section 8
providing for adoption by a female Hindu and in case where
there are more than one wife, the right to adopt in such
cases has to or can be exercised only either jointly by both
the widows acting together or not at all. Hence, it was
urged that the so-called adoption of the plaintiff-
respondent was neither proper nor valid in law to clothe him
with any rights, as the adopted son of and that too in the
properties left behind by, late Nanjappa Rao. The judgment
of the Courts below was challenged only on these legal
submissions and not based on any challenge to the factum of
proof of adoption of the plaintiff or on the question or
proof or the legality and propriety of the adoption of first
defendant projected by the appellants but rejected
concurrently by the Courts below. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondent adopted the reasoning of the
Courts below to justify the conclusions arrived at and
sought to sustain the decree passed in favour of his client.
There has been no cross appeal on the part of the plaintiff
to challenge the modification in the decree allowed by the
High Court by reducing the share of the plaintiff from 3/4th
to one half only.
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To have a proper appreciation of the legal submissions
of the principles of law pleaded on behalf of the
appellants, it becomes necessary to have a proper
perspective of the position of law governing the matter as
on the date of coming into force of the Hindu Adoption and
Maintenance Act, since the Act in question was not only to
amend but also codify the law relating to adoption and
maintenance comprehensively dealing with every phase and
aspect of the law specifically dealt with and further more
with a provision of the nature in Section 4 of the Act
giving an overriding effect to the provisions of the Act
over any text, rule or interpretation of Hindu Law or any
custom or usage as part of that law or any other law in
force with respect to which any provision has been made in
the Act or insofar as it is inconsistent with any or the
provisions of the Act. The need to delve at length with the
various principles governing adoption under the Shastric
Hindu Law based on the ancient texts is considerably averted
due to the law laid down by this Court on more than one
occasion, after an exhaustive review of the case law
rendered by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council and
some of the High Courts.
Every male Hindu who is of sound mind and has attained
the age of discretion though he be a minor was held entitled
to, subject to the provisions of any law for the time being
in force, take a son in adoption provided he has no son,
grandson or great grandson, natural or adopted living at the
time of such adoption. When a Hindu makes an adoption
during his life time, his wife would necessarily join him in
the essential religious ceremonies to be performed therefor
and, therefore, he was not obliged to take the consent of
the wife and the assent of the wife has never been
considered to be a condition precedent for the exercise of
the right by the husband. The nature and character as also
the purport and object of an adoption came to be considered
in great detail while dealing with the capacity or a right
of a Hindu woman to adopt, in V.T.S. Chandrasekhara
Mudaliar vs Kulandaivelu Mudaliar & Ors. (AIR 1963 SC 185),
K.Subba Rao, J., as the learned Judge then was, on an
elaborate consideration of the relevant case law, held as
follows:
12. It is common place that a widow adopts a boy to
her husband and that nobody except a widow can make an
adoption to her husband. The reason is that Hindu law
recognises her not merely as an agent of her husband but, to
use the felicitous Hindu metaphor, as his surviving half;
see Brihaspati XXV, II and Yagnavalkya I, 156. In Sarkar
Sastris Hindu Law, 8th Edn. Pp 161-162 it is stated that
though according to the commentaries the widow adopts in her
own right, the modern view is that she acts merely as a
delegate or representative of her husband, that is to say,
she is only an instrument through whom the husband is
supposed to act. Mulla in his book Principles of Hindu
Law stated that she acts as a delegate of her husband. The
Judicial Committee in Balusu Gurulingaswami vs Balusu
Ramalakshmamma, ILR 22 Mad. 398 at p.408 (PC), pointed out
that if the consent of the husbands kinsmen has been
obtained, the widows power to adopt is co-extensive with
that of her husband. It is, therefore, clear that a Hindu
widow in making an adoption exercises a power which she
alone can exercise, though her competency is conditioned by
other limitations which we shall consider at a later stage.
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Whether she was authorised by her husband to take a boy in
adoption or whether she obtained the assent of the sapindas,
her discretion to make an adoption, or not to make it, is
absolute and uncontrolled. She is not bound to make an
adoption and she cannot be compelled to do so. But if she
chooses to take a boy in adoption there is an essential
distinction between the scope of the authority given by her
husband and that of the assent given by the sapindas. As
the widow acts only as a delegate or representative of her
husband, her discretion in making an adoption is strictly
conditioned by the terms of the authority conferred on her.
But in the absence of any specific authorization by her
husband, her power to take a boy in adoption is coterminus
with that of her husband, subject only to the assent of the
sapindas. To put it differently, the power to adopt is that
of the widow as the representative of her husband and the
requirement of assent of the sapindas is only a protection
against the misuse of it. It is not, therefore, right to
equate the authority of a husband with the assent of the
sapindas. If this distinction is borne in mind, it will be
clear that in essence the adoption is an act of the widow
and the role of the sapindas is only that of advisers.
As to what is the object of an adoption, the learned
Judge proceeded further to observe that it would be
unnecessary and even be pedantic to consider the old Hindu
Law texts at such a late stage in the evolution of the Hindu
law when the subject was fully and adequately considered
from time to time by the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council and came to be categorically held that the
substitution of a son of the deceased, for the failure of a
male issue, for spiritual reasons is the essence of adoption
and the devolution of property is a mere accessory to it.
Reference has also been made to the decision in G. China
Ramasubbayya vs M. Chenchuramayya (AIR 1947 PC 124) wherein
the two-fold object of adoption was stated to be (a) to
secure the performance of the funeral rites of the person to
whom the adoption is made; and (b) to preserve the
continuance of his lineage and reiterated the position that
the validity of the adoption has to be judged by spiritual
rather than temporal considerations and that devolution of
property is only of secondary importance.
While adverting to the question as to why does the Hindu
Law insist upon the assent of the sapinda as a pre-requisite
for the validity of an adoption made by a widow, the learned
Judge, on an elaborate consideration of the principles laid
down in the various texts and the catena of case law, held
as follows:
17. It will be seen that the reason for the rule is
not the possible deprivation of the proprietary interests of
the reversioners but the state of perpetual tutelage of
women, and the consent of kinsmen was considered to be an
assurance that it was bona fide performance of a religious
duty and a sufficient guarantee against any capricious
action by the widow in taking a boy in adoption.
In Guramma Bhratar Chanbasappa Deshmukh & Ors., etc.
Vs. Mallappa Chanbasappa & Anr., etc. (AIR 1964 SC 510),
the very learned Judge had an occasion to deal with the
object of adoption and the limitations, if any, on the said
power and held as follows:
8. .. These texts ex facie do not equate a son
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in existence with a son in the womb. If the authors of the
said treatises intended to equate the one with the other,
they would not have left in the doubt, for such an extension
of the doctrine would introduce an element of uncertainty in
the matter of adoption and defeat, in some cases, the
religious object underlying adoption. It is now well
settled that the main object of adoption is to secure
spiritual benefit to the adopter, though its secondary
object is to secure an heir to perpetuate the adopters
name. Such being the significance of adoption, its validity
shall not be made to depend upon the contingencies that may
or may not happen. It is suggested that an adoption cannot
be made unless there is certainty of not getting a son and
that if the wife is pregnant, there is a likelihood of the
adopter begetting a son and, therefore, the adoption made is
void. The texts cited do not support the said proposition.
Its acceptance will lead to anomalies. Suppose a husband
who is seriously ill and who had no knowledge of the
pregnancy of his wife, makes an adoption; in such an event,
the existence of a pregnancy, of which he has no knowledge,
invalidates the adoption, whether the pregnancy turns out to
be fruitful or not. If he has knowledge of the pregnancy,
he will not be in a position to take a boy in adoption,
though ultimately the wife may have an abortion, or deliver
a still-born child or the child born may turn out to be a
girl. Further, as it is well settled law that a son
includes a sons son and a grandson of the son, the
pregnancy of a sons widow or a grandsons widow, on the
parity of the said reasoning, will invalidate an adoption.
We cannot introduce such a degree of uncertainty in the law
of adoption unless Hindu law texts or authoritative
decisions compel us to do so. There are no texts of Hindu
law imposing a condition of non- pregnancy of the wife or
sons widow or a grandsons widow for the exercise of a
persons power to adopt. The decisions of the High Courts
on the subject discountenance the acceptance of any such
condition. But there is a decision of Sudr Adalut in
Narayana Reddi vs Varadachala Reddi, S.A. No.223 of 1859
MSD 1859, p. 97 wherein it was observed that it was of the
essence of the power to adopt that the party adopting should
be hopeless of having issue. Mr. Mayne commenting upon the
said observation drew a distinction between a husband taking
a boy in adoption knowing that his wife was pregnant and
doing so without the said knowledge and stated:
If a wife, known to be pregnant at the time of
adoption, afterwards brought forth a son, it might fairly be
held he was then in existence to the extent of precluding an
adoption .
A Division Bench of the Madras High Court in
Nagabhushanam vs Seshammagaru, ILR 3 Mad. 180 criticised
the opinion of the pandits as well as the observation of Mr.
Mayne, and came to the conclusion that an adoption by a
Hindu with knowledge of his wifes pregnancy was not
invalid. The Bombay High Court in Shamavahoo vs Dwarkadas
Vasanji, ILR 12 Bom. 202 (note) accepted the said view. A
Division Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Daulat Ram vs
Ram Lal, ILR 29 All. 310 followed the Madras and Bombay
decisions. No other decision has been brought to our notice
either taking a different view or throwing a doubt thereon.
All textbooks-Mayne, Mulla, Sarkar Sastri-accepted the
correctness of the said view without any comment.
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The question as to how the adoption could or ought to be
made when a Hindu male dies leaving behind more than one
widow came to be considered by this Court in Eramma and
others vs Muddappa (AIR 1966 SC 1137), with particular
reference to the Mysore Hindu Law Womens Rights Act 1933,
stipulating that in the absence of an express prohibition in
writing by the husband, his widow, or where he has left more
widows than one, the seniormost of them shall be presumed to
have his authority to make an adoption, and this position
was also found to be in conformity with law in the Bombay
State. In Tehsil Naidu and another Vs Kulla Naidu and
others (AIR 1970 SC 1673) this Court held that the
requirement of consent from a sapinda for adoption by a
widow was considered to be necessitated only when the widow
has not obtained the consent of her husband in his lifetime.
While dealing with the necessity or otherwise to obtain the
consent of the female sapinda in addition to male sapinda of
the deceased husband, this Court observed that if the
consent of the husband or sapinda was held to be necessary
for the reason that a woman is incapable of exercising
independent judgment in the matter of deciding whether she
should adopt a son to her deceased husband, she can hardly
be a competent adviser to another widow on the same matter
and, therefore, it was held that the absence of consent of a
female sapinda would not invalidate the adoption in a given
case.
Speaking for a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court, in a decision reported in K. Varadamma Vs. Kanchi
Sankara Reddi & Ors. (AIR 1957 A.P. 933), K. Subba Rao,
CJ., as the learned Judge then was, has meticulously and
exhaustively analysed the case law on the subject pertaining
to adoption made by a senior widow without obtaining the
consent of the junior widow and observed as hereunder :-
11. It is therefore clear that the presumed incapacity
of a woman to arrive at a balanced and independent judgment
connected with matters of adoption was the foundation of the
doctrine of consent. It is futile to enquire at this stage
whether there was any justification for that assumption. It
was considered that the advice of the nearest sapindas would
enable the widow to act without any caprice in the discharge
of her religious duty. If that be the reason for the rule,
it would obviously be incongruous to hold that a widow
incompetent to act independently can, relying upon another
woman suffering from the same infirmity, make a valid
adoption. It would be more anomalous if it were to be held
that a senior widow with a presumed mental incapacity could
sustain her act by invoking the aid of the junior widow who
by the same party of reasoning would be mentally deficient
to a higher degree.
12. But it is said that, as the proprietary interests
of the junior widow would be affected by the adoption, it is
just and equitable that she should be consulted before the
remoter sapindas are consulted. It is true that at one time
greater emphasis was laid on the proprietary interests
affected by reason of the adoption. But that question was
finally and authoritatively decided in Amarendra Nath Man
Singh v. Sanatan Singh, ILR 12 Pat 642; (AIR 1933 PC 155
(E), by the Judicial Committee.
14. The Judicial Committee in ILR (1948) Mad. 362:
(AIR 1947 PC 124) (B), accepted ILR 12 Pat. 642: (AIR 1933
PC 155) (E), as laying down the correct position on this
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aspect of the case. It is therefore clear that the doctrine
of consent is based upon the presumed incompetency of a
widow rather than upon the idea of any interference with the
proprietary rights of the sapindas.
15. But it is contended that the word ‘sapinda has a
comprehensive meaning so as to take in a widow and there is
no justification for excluding her when the decided cases do
not in terms do so. In the Mitakshara, the term ‘sapinda
is used in the sense of, one of the same body, i.e., a blood
relation. But, according to the Hindu mode of computation,
this includes relations within the seventh degree. The term
‘sagotra sapinda was used in respect of relations of the
same gotra and binnagotra sapinda for bandhus. Lawfully
wedded wives of the sapindas were also brought under that
category. See Gopalchandra Sarkar Sastris Hindu Law, 8th
edition, p. 69. There is, therefore, justification for the
contention that the word ‘sapinda takes in the widow of the
last male holder. But the principle underlying the doctrine
of consent cannot sustain any such wide interpretation in
the present context. The acceptance of this argument would
destroy the principle itself. Indeed all decisions which
form landmarks in the development of the doctrine, either
expressly or impliedly use the word in the sense of male
sapindas. In 12 Moo Ind App 397 (PC)(A), the widow of a
divided member took a boy in adoption with the consent of
her father-in-law. Their Lordships, in dealing with that
question, observed at p. 441:
In such a case, therefore, their Lordships think that
the consent of the father-in-law to whom the law points as
the natural guardian and venerable protector of the widow
would be sufficient.
22. Learned counsel for the appellant relied upon a
long catena of cases wherein the preferential right of the
senior widow to take a boy in adoption was recognised. See
Ranjit Lal V. Bijoy Krishna, ILR 39 Cal 582 (L), Chukkamma
V. Punnamma, 28 Mad LJ 72: (AIR 1915 Mad 775) (M),
Muthuswami Naicken V. Pulavaratal, ILR 45 Mad 266: (AIR
1922 Mad 106 (2)(N), Byra Goudu V. Muniammal, 1939-2 Mal LJ
805: (AIR 1940 Mad 5)(O). These cases lay down a principle
applicable to a different situation altogether. A Hindu
with two or more wives may take a boy in adoption or after
his death one of his widows may take a boy in adoption. In
such cases in a competition between two or more wives or two
or more widows, Courts were called upon to decide on the
preferential right of the one or other of them. Invariably,
they accepted the doctrine that the elder of the two being
the dharmapathni is entitled to take a boy in adoption
unless the husband expressly or by necessary implication
directed otherwise. When once the preferential right of the
senior widow is conceded it follows that the junior widow
cannot take a boy in adoption unless the senior widow
agrees. The decisions in 28 Mad LJ 72: (AIR 1915 Mad
775)(M) and Rajah Venkatappa Nayanim Bahadur Vs. Ranga Rao,
ILR 39 Mad 772: (AIR 1916 Mad 919 (2) (P), where it was
held that an adoption by the junior widow with the consent
of sapindas but without consulting the senior widow was
invalid, can be supported on the aforesaid principle. As
the senior widow who had a preferential right in the matter
of adoption was not consulted, the adoption was held to be
invalid. Those decisions have obviously no bearing on the
doctrine of consent evolved by Hindu Law.
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23. Before closing we should refer to the decision of a
Division Bench of the Madras High Court in Narayanaswami
Naick v. Mangammal, ILR 28 Mad 315 (Q), which is the only
direct decision on the point. There the senior widow took a
boy in adoption after having obtained the consent of his
sapindas but without consulting the junior widow. The
learned Judges, Davies and Benson, JJ., held that the
adoption was good. At p. 319, the learned Judges observed:
The junior widow is bound, as a matter of duty, to
consent and if as their Lordships of the Privy Council say
(12 Moo Ind App 397 (A)) the consent of kinsmen is required
by reason of the presumed incapacity of women for
independence rather than the necessity of procuring the
consent of all those whose interest in the estate would be
defeated by the adoption it would seem that the omission to
consult the co-widow though no doubt improper, would not be
a sufficient reason for holding the adoption to be invalid.
24. We entirely agree with the aforesaid observations.
While for family peace and good relationship ordinarily a
senior widow should do well to consult the younger one
before introducing a boy into the family, there is nothing
in law which compels her to do so. We therefore hold
agreeing with the learned Judge that the adoption in the
present case is valid.
The said decisions not only succinctly and correctly
stated the law on the subject but seem to accurately accord@@
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with the basic principles of law laid down in the judgments@@
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of this Court, noticed supra.
Coming to the position of law, as found codified, in the
Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, it is found that@@
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apart from the overriding effect given to the provisions of@@
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the Act, Section 5 mandates that no adoption shall be made
after the commencement of this Act by or to a HIndu except
in accordance with the provisions contained in Chapter-II,
and proclaims the consequences any contravention thereof to
render such adoption void, thereby neither creating any
rights in the adoptive family nor destroying the rights in
the family of birth. While Section 6 lays down the
requisites of a valid adoption, the provisions of Section 7
deals with the capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption
whereas Section 8 deals with the capacity of a female Hindu
to take in adoption. It is necessary to set out those
provisions to properly consider the claim made on behalf of
the appellants. Section 7 reads as follows :-
Capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption.Any male
Hindu who is of sound mind and is not a minor has the
capacity to take a son or a daughter in adoption:
Provided that, if he has a wife living, he shall not
adopt except with the consent of his wife unless the wife
has completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased
to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent
jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.
Explanation. If a person has more than one wife living
at the time of adoption, the consent of all the wives is
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necessary unless the consent of any one of them is
unnecessary for any of the reasons specified in the
preceding proviso.
Section 8 reads, thus
Capacity of a female Hindu to take in adoption. Any
female Hindu
(a) who is of sound mind,
(b) who is not a minor, and
(c) who is not married, or if married, whose marriage
has been dissolved or whose husband is dead or has
completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased to
be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent
jurisdiction to be of unsound mind, has the capacity to take
a son or daughter in adoption.
A reference to Sections 12 and 14 also become necessary
and Section 12 reads as hereunder :-
12. Effects of adoption.An adopted child shall be
deemed to be the child of his or her adoptive father or
mother for all purposes with effect from the date of the
adoption and from such date all the ties of the child in the
family of his or her birth shall be deemed to be severed and
replaced by those created by the adoption in the adoptive
family : Provided that
(a) the child cannot marry any person whom he or she
could not have married if he or she had continued in the
family of his or her birth;
(b) any property which vested in the adopted child
before the adoption shall continue to vest in such person
subject to the obligations, if any, attaching to the
ownership of such property, including the obligation to
maintain relatives in the family of his or her birth;
(c) the adopted child shall not divest any person of any
estate which vested in him or her before the adoption.
Section 14 reads, thus
14. Determination of adoptive mother in certain
cases.(1) Where a Hindu who has a wife living adopts a
child, she shall be deemed to be the adoptive mother.
(2) Where an adoption has been made with the consent of
more than one wife, the senior- most in marriage among them
shall be deemed to be the adoptive mother and the others to
be step-mothers.
(3) Where a widower or a bachelor adopts a child, any
wife whom he subsequently marries shall be deemed to be the
step-mother of the adopted child.
(4) Where a widow or an unmarried woman adopts a child,
any husband whom she marries subsequently shall be deemed to
be the step-father of the adopted child.
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A compendious reading of all the above provisions
harmoniously with due regard to the purpose sought to be
achieved will inevitably lead to certain inescapable
consequences. They are (i) a female unmarried or if married
but satisfying the requirements of clause (c) of Section 8,
conferred with a right to adopt subject to the other
provisions of Chapter-II, and (ii) since, unlike the
position in the old Hindu Law a Hindu female is not only
adopting for the husband but rendered eligible and entitled
to adopt a son or a daughter in her own right and to herself
also if unmarried, it has become necessary for the
Legislature to enact a fiction to the extent that the
adopted child shall be deemed to be the child of his or her
adoptive father or mother for all purposes with effect from
the date of adoption, with certain enumerated consequences
also flowing from the same, one of such being that the
adopted child shall not divest any person of any estate
which vested in him or her before the adoption. This Court
also in Sawan Ram Vs. Mst. Kalawanti & Ors. (AIR 1967 SC
1761) after adverting to Section 5 of this Act, has held as
follows :-
7.It is significant that, in this section, the
adoption to be made is mentioned as by or to a Hindu,.
Thus, adoption is envisaged as being of two kinds. One is
adoption by a Hindu, and the other is adoption to a Hindu.
If the view canvassed on behalf of the appellant be
accepted, the consequence will be that there will be only
adoptions by Hindus and not to Hindus. On the face of it,
adoption to a Hindu was intended to cover cases where an
adoption is by one person, while the child adopted becomes
the adopted son of another person also. It is only in such
a case that it can be said that the adoption has been made
to that other person. The most common instance will
naturally be that of adoption by a female Hindu who is
married and whose husband is dead, or has completely and
finally renounced the world, or has been declared by a court
of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind. In such a
case, the actual adoption would be by the female Hindu,
while the adoption will be not only to herself, but also to
her husband who is dead, or has completely and finally
renounced the world or has been declared to be of unsound
mind.
[Emphasis supplied]
Adverting to Section 12 of the Act and as to the
correctness of the view taken by the Andhra Pradesh High@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
Court in N. Hanumantha Rao Vs. N. Hanumayya [ILR (1966)@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
Andh. Pra. 140] , it was observed as hereunder:-
8. The second provision, which was ignored by the
Andhra Pradesh High Court, is one contained in S. 12
itself. The section, in its principal clause, not only lays
down that the adopted child shall be deemed to be the child
of his or her adoptive father or mother for all purposes
with effect from the date of the adoption, but, in addition,
goes on to define the rights of such an adopted child. It
lays down that from such date all the ties of the child in
the family of his or her birth shall be deemed to be severed
and replaced by those created by the adoption in the
adoptive family. A question naturally arises what is the
adoptive family of a child who is adopted by a widow, or by
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a married woman whose husband has completely and finally
renounced the world or has been declared to be of unsound
mind even though alive. It is well recognised that, after a
female is married, she belongs to the family of her husband.
The child adopted by her must also, therefore, belong to the
same family. On adoption by a widow, therefore, the adopted
son is to be deemed to be a member of the family of the
deceased husband of the widow. Further still, he loses all
his rights in the family of his birth and those rights are
replaced by the rights created by the adoption in the
adoptive family. The right, which the child had, to succeed
to property by virtue of being the son of his natural
father, in the family of his birth, is, thus, clearly to be
replaced by similar rights in the adoptive family, and,
consequently, he would certainly obtain those rights in the
capacity of a member of that family as an adopted son of the
deceased husband of the widow, or the married female, taking
him in adoption. This provision in S. 12 of the Act, thus,
itself makes it clear that, on adoption by a Hindu female
who has been married, the adopted son will, in effect, be
the adopted son of her husband also. This aspect was
ignored by the Andhra Pradesh High Court when dealing with
the effect of the language used in other parts of this
section.
[Emphasis supplied]
It was also emphasised by this Court that the ultimate
decision given in N. Hanumantha Rao Vs. N. Hanumayya@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
(supra) by the Andhra Pradesh High Court is not in any way@@
JJJJJJJJJJJJJJJ
rendered incorrect while making it clear at the same time
that the restriction placed upon the adopted child under
clause (c) of Section 8 cannot lead to the inference that a
child adopted by the widow will not be deemed to be the
adopted son of her deceased husband.
The legality of the adoption in this case is challenged
on the ground of want of consent of the junior widow (the
second wife/second appellant). Though under Section 7 of
the Act, a restriction has been specifically engrafted on
the exercise of power and right of the male Hindu not to
adopt, if he has a wife living, except with the consent of
his wife unless the wife has completely and finally
renounced the world or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been
declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of
unsound mind and the Explanation further enjoins the
necessity of taking the consent of all the wives, if the
person has more than one wife living at the time of
adoption, unless the consent of any one of them has been
rendered unnecessary for any of the reasons specified in the
main proviso itself. The question that now requires to be
considered is as to whether the plea on behalf of the
appellants that the proviso and Explanation thereto
engrafted in Section 7 can and also should be dovetailed or
read into Section 8, for any justifiable reason or purpose,
deserves or merit our acceptance.
The nature, object and purpose of the Act in question
has already been noticed supra. The Parliament has
consciously and deliberately effected certain vital and
substantial changes in the personal law of the Hindus on
several branches including the law relating to adoptions.
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The statement of objects and reasons, so far as it pertains
to the law on adoption reads as follows:-
This part of the Hindu Code deals with the subject of
adoptions and maintenance among Hindus.
2. With the passing of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956,
which treats sons and daughters equally in the matter of
succession, it has now become possible to simplify the law
of adoption among Hindus. The Bill provides for the
adoption of boys as well as girls. There is no longer any
justification for allowing a husband to prevent his wife
from taking a child in adoption after his death. The
adoption made by a Hindu widow will hereafter be in her own
right. No person need be divested of any property which has
vested in him by reason only of the fact that subsequent to
such vesting an adoption has been made. This rule of
divesting has been the cause of many a ruinous litigation.
[Emphasis supplied]
This Court also endorsed the said position in the
decision reported in G. Appaswami Chettiar & Anr. Vs. R.
Sarangapani Chettiar & Ors. (AIR 1978 SC 1051) vide Para
13. The extent to which and the areas and aspects or facets
of old Hindu Law which required modernisation, modification
and alteration are matters of legislative policy and merely
because a particular change has been brought into effect in
respect of one facet of law in force and a provision has
been made specifically only to that limited extent, the
Courts neither by means of an interpretative process nor
under the guise of ensuring parity in what it may seem to
Court would be desirable to achieve uniformity (an area once
again exclusively pertaining to policy of legislation) add
to or alter the language, structure and content of a
provision by reading into it what was not specifically
intended or what perhaps was deliberately and consciously
avoided by the Parliament itself. Section 7 bears the
caption ‘Capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption in
the same manner the immediately following Section 8 bears
the heading ‘Capacity of a female Hindu to take in
adoption. When the Parliament resolved to provide for and
insist upon the obtaining of the consent of the wife or if
there are more than one living wives the consent of all of
them, unless they or any one of them suffered any of the
enumerated infirmities rendering such consent unnecessary,
the conscious and positive as well as deliberate omission to
provide for a female Hindu seeking or obtaining any such
consent from a co or junior widow is a definite pointer to
indicate that the legislative intent and determination was
not to impose any such clog on the power specifically
conferred upon the female Hindu - may be for the obvious
reason that under the scheme of the Act the Hindu female has
been enabled and empowered to adopt not only to herself but
also to her husband, and also in tune with the changed and
modern concept of equality of women and their capabilities
to decide independently statutorily recognised, and the very
reason for insisting upon such an authority or consent from
the Husband or the sapindas under the old Hindu Law having
lost its basis and thereby ceased to be of any relevance or
valid purpose whatsoever. In such circumstances, acceding
to the submission to read into Section 8 the stipulation in
the proviso to Section 7 with the Explanation thereto would
amount to legislation by Courts on the lines as to what in
its view the law should be, which is wholly impermissible
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for Courts, dehors any justification or necessity for such a
provision. In our view, there is no necessity even for such
a provision in the context of the changed circumstances
brought about by the various alterations and amendments to
the Hindu Code regulating hitherto the personal law of the
Hindus. We are also of the view that either having regard
to state of law prevailing on the eve of coming into force
of the Act or the nature and extent of the changes and
alterations effected in the then existing personal law
envisaged by the Parliament could there be any justification
whatsoever for Courts to re-write Section 8 of the Act by
doing violence to the language by adding something which has
been consciously and deliberately omitted by the Parliament
itself. To subject the exercise of power by the senior
widow to adopt, conditioned upon the consent of the junior
widow where a Hindu male died leaving behind two widows with
no progeny of his own, would render the exercise of power
more cumbersome and paradoxical, leaving at times, such
exercise of power to adopt only next to impossibility.
Having regard to the provisions contained in proviso (c) to
Section 12 of the Act which ensures that the adopted child
shall not divest any person of any estate which vested in
him or her before the adoption and consequent protection of
the rights vested with the junior widow in the property left
behind by the deceased husband and the real and ultimate
object of adoption by the widow, no injustice could be said
to be caused to the junior widow on account of the
legislature not making it obligatory for the senior widow to
obtain the consent of the junior widow to adopt a child
which would be deemed to be not only for her but also to the
deceased husband as envisaged in Section 12 of the Act.
For all the reasons stated above, we find no error of
law or infirmity of any kind in the ultimate decision of the
High Court to call for any interference at our hands. The
appeal fails and is dismissed. No costs.