Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GULAM ABBAS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HAJI KAYYUM ALI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT18/09/1972
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
GROVER, A.N.
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
CITATION:
1973 AIR 554 1973 SCR (2) 300
1973 SCC (1) 1
ACT:
Mahomedan Law-Estoppel-Execution of deeds acknowledging
receipt of valuable consideration and relinquishing future
possible rights of inheritance in the properties of father-
On father’s death executants filing suit for partition of
properties comprised in deed-Applicability of the rule of
estoppel-Evidence Act, 1872-Section 115.
HEADNOTE:
Muslim jurisprudence, where theology and moral concepts are
found sometimes mingled with secular utilitarian legal
principles, contains a very elaborate theory of acts which
are good (because they proceed from haana), those which are
bad (because they exhibit ’qubuh’), and those which are
neutral per se. It classifies them according to varying
degrees of approval or disapproval attached to them. The
renunciation of a supposed right, based upon an expectancy,
could not, by any test found there, be considered
"prohibited". The binding, force in future of such a ren-
uticiation would, even according to strict Muslim
jurisprudence, depend upon the attendant circumstances and
the whole course of conduct of which it forms a part. In
other words, the principle of equitable estoppel, far from
being opposed to any principle of Muslim Law will he found,
on investigation, to be completely in consonance with it.
[306 F]
Abdul Rahim, Muhammedan Jurisprudence, P. 106, referred to.
K, a Muslim, had incurred debts so heavily that all his
property would have been swallowed up to liquidate the
debts. The appellant and two of his brothers, with their
labour and money, rescued the estate of their father and
paid up the debts. Two other sons of K who could not con-
tribute anything towards the clearing up of the debts of
their father executed deeds acknowledging receipt of cash
and moveable properties as consideration for not claiming
any eights in future in the properties mentioned in the
deeds. On K’s death the two sons who had executed the deeds
instituted a suit for partition of the properties mentioned
in the deeds. The first appellate court ,held that the
deeds in question evidenced family settlements and that the
sons were estopped from claiming their share in the
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inheritance. The High Court in second appeal, decreed the
suit. It proceeded on the assumption that, if law had not
prohibited the transfer of his right of inheritance by a
muslim heir, an estoppel would have operated against the
respondent on the findings given and held that the rule of
Muslim Personal law on the subject had the same effect as
Section 6 (a). of the Transfer of Property Act and the
chance of a Mahomedan heir apparent succeeding to an estate
could not be the subject of a valid transfer of lease. In
coming to this conclusion, the High Court relied on the
decision of the Madras High Court in Abdul Kafoor v. Abdul
Razack (A.I.R. 1959 Mad. 131) in preference to the view
adopted by the Allahabad High Court in Latafat Hussain v.
Bidayat Hussain (A.I.R. 1936 All. 573.)
Allowing the appeal and setting aside the judgment and
decree of the High Court,
HELD: Upon the facts and circumstance in the case found by
the courts below, the two sons could not, when rights of
inheritance vested
301
in them at the time of, their father’s death, claim these
rights as such a claim would be barred by estoppel.
The object of the rule of Mahomedan law which does not
recognise a purported transfer, of a spes successionis as a
legally valid transfer at all, is not to prohibit anything
but only to make it clear what is and what is not a
transferable right or interest in property just as this is
what Section 6(a) of the Transfer of Property Act is meant
to do. Its purpose could not be to protect those who,
receive consideration for what they do not immediately have
so as to be able to transfer it at all. It is not possible
to concur with the view of the Madras High Court in Abdul
Kafoor’s case that a renunciation of an expectancy, as a
purported but legally ineffective transfer, is struck by
section 23 of the Indian Contract Act. As it would be void
as a transfer at all there was no need to rely on section 23
of the Contract Act, If there was no "transfer" of property
at all, which was the correct position, but a simple
contract which could only operate in future, it was
certainly not intended to bring about an immediate transfer
which was all that the rule of muslim law invalidated. The
real question is whether, quite apart from any transfer or
contract, the declarations in the deeds of purported
relinquishment and receipt of valuable consideration could
not be parts of a course of conduct over a number of years
which, taken as a whole, created a bar against a successful
assertion of a right to property when that right actually,
came into being. An equitable estoppel operates, if its
elements are established as a rule of evidence preventing
the assertions of rights which may otherwise exist. [304 D]
While the Madras view is based upon the erroneous assumption
that a renunciation of a claim to inherit in future is in
itself, illegal or prohibited by Muslim law, the View of the
Allahabad High Court in Latafat Hussain’s case, while fully
recognising that "under the Mohammedan law relinquishment by
an heir who has no interest in the life-time of his ancestor
is invalid and void", correctly lays down that such an aban-
donment may nevertheless, be part of a course of conduct
which may create an estoppel against claiming the right at a
time when the right of inheritance has accrued.
Latafat Hussain v. Bidayat Hussain, A.I.R. 1936 All. 573,
approved.
View contra in Abdul Kafoor v. Abdul Ratack, A.I.R. 1959
Mad.131 and Asa Beevi v. Karuppan, (1918) 41 Madras I.L.R.
365, disapproved.
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Ameer Ali’s Mahomedan Law, Vol. 11, Hurmoot-Ool-Nisa Begum
v. Allahdis Khan, (1871) 17 W.R.P.C. 108 and Mohammad Ali
Khan v. Nisar Ali Khan, A.I.R. 1928 Oudh 67, referred to.
(Since the Court was of opinion, that there was nothing in
law to bar the application of the principle of estoppel
contained in section 115 of the Evidence Act upon the
totality of facts found by the final court of facts, it was
found unnecessary to deal with at length with the question
whether the facts found could give rise to an inference of a
"family settlement" in a technical sense.)
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2134 of 1970.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 5, 1970 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in (Indore
Bench) in Second Appeal No. 618 of 1964.
K. Rajendra Chowdhry, for the appellant.
P. C. Bhartari, D. N. Mishra and J. B. Dadachanji, for,
respondent No. 1.
302
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BEG, J. This is a Defendant’s appeal by Special Leave
against the judgment and decree of the High Court of Madhya
Pradesh allowing a second appeal in a partition suit between
members of a family governed by Muslim law. The Defendant-
Appellant and the Plaintiff-Respondent are both sons of
Kadir Ali Bohra who died on 5-4-1952 leaving behind five
sons, a daughter and his widow as his heirs. It appears
that Kadir Ali had incurred debts so heavily that all his
property would have been swallowed up to liquidate these.
Three of his sons, namely, Ghulam Abbas, Defendant No. 1,
Abdullah, Defendant No. 2, and Imdad, Defendant No. 3, who
had prospered, came to his rescue so that the property may
be saved. But, apparently, they paid up the debts only in
order to get the properties for themselves to the exclusion
of the other two sons, namely, Kayyumali, Plaintiff-
Respondent, and Nazarali, Defendant No. 4, who executed, on
10-10-1942, deeds acknowledging receipt of some cash and
moveable properties as consideration for not claiming any
rights in future in the properties mentioned in the deeds in
which they gave up their possible rights in future. The
executant of each deed said :
"I have accordingly taken the’ things
mentioned above as the equivalent of my share
and I have out of free will written this. I
have no claim in the properties hereafter and
if I put up a claim in future to any of the
properties I shall be proved false by this
document. I shall have no objection to my
father giving any of the properties to my
other brothers.....".
During the father’s life-time, when all chance or
expectation of inheritance by either Kayyumali or Nazarali
could be destroyed by disposition of property, neither of
these two raised his little finger to object. The only
question before us now is whether the Plaintiff and
Defendant No. 4 are estopped by their declarations and
conduct and silence from claiming their shares in the
properties covered by these deeds.
The first Appellate Court, the final court on questions of
fact, recorded the following findings, after examining the,
whole set of facts before it, to conclude that the plaintiff
and defendant No. 4 were estopped from claiming their shares
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in the inheritance
"In the instant case, it is evident that the
release deeds Ex.D/2 and Ex.D/3 were executed
by the plaintiff and defendant No. 4,
Nazarali, when the defendants NO. 1, 2 and 3
had with their labour and money straightened
the status of his father Kadar Ali and had
cleared up the debts which would have devoured
the,
303
whole property of Kadar Ali and the plaintiff
was doing nothing and was in a way a burden to
his father. In such state of things when the
plaintiff and defendant No. 4 executed the
release deeds in question, it can be said that
it was a family settlement to prevent the
future disputes that may arise and to secure
the peace and happiness in the family of the
parties and thereby induced the defendants No.
1, 2 and 3 to believe that the plaintiff would
not claim a share in the suit properties and
led them to discharge the debts due to Kadar
All and to be in affluent circumstances
themselves as they are at present and the
plaintiff now seeks benefit of it against his
own past undertakings".
The High Court reproduced the passage, quoted above, from
the judgment of the First Appellate Court, without any
dissent from any of the findings of fact contained there.
It specifically held that the Court below was correct in
finding that consideration had passed the Plaintiff and
Defendant No. 4 for the relinquishment of their future
possible rights of inheritance. It proceeded on the
assumption that, it the law had not prohibited the transfer
of his right of inheritance by a Muslim heir, an estoppel
would have operated against the Plaintiff and Defendant No.
4 on the findings given. It held that the rule. of Muslim
Personal law on the subject has the same effect as Section
6(a) of the Transfer of Property Act which lays down:
"The chance of an heir-apparent succeeding to
an" estate, the chance of a relation obtaining
a legacy on the death of a kinsman, or any
other mere possibility of a like nature,
cannot be transferred.
It pointed out that, although, Section 2 of the Transfer of
Property Act provided that nothing in the second Chapter of
the, Act will be deemed to affect any rule of Mahomedan Law,
so that section 6(a) contained in Chapter 2 could not really
be applied, yet, the effect of Mahomedan Law itself was that
the chance of a Mahomedan heir-apparent succeeding to an
estate cannot be the subject of a valid transfer or lease"
(See : Mulla’s Principles of Mahomedan Law-17th Edn. ss 54,
page 45). After equating the effect of the. rule of Mahomed
an Law with that of Section 6(a) of the Transfer of Property
Act, the High Court applied the principle that no estoppel
can arise against statute to what it considered to be an
estoppel put forward against a rule of Mahomedan law.
The High Court had relied on a decision of the Madras High’
Court in Abdul Kafoor v. Abdul Razack(l), which had been
(1) A.I.R. 1959 Mad. p. 131.
304
followed by the Kerala High Court without giving fresh
reason in Valanhivil Kunchi v. Kengayil Pattikavil Kunbi
Avulla(1) in preference to the view adopted by the Allahabad
High Court in Latafat Hussain v. Hidayat Hussain(2) followed
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by the, Travancore Cochin High Court in Kochunni Kachu
Muhammed v. Kunj Pillai Muhammed(3) The principal question
for decision before us is whether the Madras or the
Allahabad High Court view is correct.
The Madras High Court, in Abdul Kapoor’s case (supra) had
specifically dissented from the Allahabad view in Latafat
Hussain’ case (supra) on the ground that, if an estoppel was
allowed to pleaded as a defence, on the strength of
relinquishment of a spes successionis for consideration, the
effect could be to permit the pro visions of Mahomedan Law
to be defeated. Hence, it held that such an attempt would
be struck by section 23 of the Indian Con tract Act. The
object however, of the rule of Mahomedan law which does not
recognise a purported transfer of a spes succession is as a
legally valid transfer at all, is not to prohibit anything
but only to make it clear what is and what is not a
transferable right or interest in property just as this is
what section 6(a) of Transfer of Property Act is meant to
do. Its purpose could not be to protect those who receive
consideration for what they do not immediately have so as to
be able to transfer it at all. It could, if protection of
any party to a transaction could possibly underlie such a
rule, be more the protection of possible transfers so that
they may know what is and what is not a legally enforceable
transfer. With due respect, we are unable to concur with
the view of the Madras High Court that renunciation of an
expectancy, as a purported but legally ineffective transfer,
is struck by Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act. As it
would be void as a transfer at all there was no need to rely
on Section 23 Contract Act, If there was no "transfer". of
property at all, which was the correct position but a simple
contract, which could only operate in future, it was
certainly, not intended to bring about an immediate transfer
which was all that the rule of Muslim law invalidated. The
real question was whether quite apart from any transfer or
contract, the declarations in the deeds of purported
relinquishment and receipt of valuable consideration could
not be parts of a course of conduct over a number of years
which, taken as a whole, created a, bar against a successful
assertion of a right to property when that Tight actually
came’ into being. An equitable estoppel operates, if its
elements are established, as a rule of evidence preventing
the assertion of rights which may otherwise exist.
(1) A.F.R. 1964 Kerala P. 200 (2) A I R. 1936 All. 573.
(3) A.I.R. 1956 Travancore 217.
305
High Court in Asa Beevi v. Karuppan(1) where Macnaghten’s
"Principles and Precedents of Moohumudan Law", Sir Roland
Wilson’s Digest of Anglo-Mohhamadan Law" P. 260, and Ameer
Ali’s "Mohommedan Law" (Vol. II, third edition, p. 50-51),
and Tyabji’s "Muslim Law" have been referred to in support
of the conclusion that ",here is a large preponderance of
authority in favour of the view that a transfer or
renuniciation of the right of inheritance before that right
vests is prohibited under the Mahomedan Law". The whole
discussion of the principle in the body of the judgment,
however brings out that the real reason is not a prohibition
but that there cannot be a renunciation of a right which is
incohate or incomplete so long as it remains in that state.
In fact, it is not correct to speak of any right of
inheritance before it arises by the death of the predecessor
who could have, during his life-time, deprived the-
prospective heir of his expectation entirely by dispositions
inter vivos.
Sir Roland Wilson, in his "Anglo Mohhamadan Law" (P 260,
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paragraph 208) states the position thus :-
"For the sake of those, readers Who are
familiar with the joint ownership of father
and son according to the most widely prevalent
school of Hindu Law, it is perhaps desirable
to state explicitly that in Muhammadan, as in
Roman and English Law, nemo est heres
viventis-a living person has, no heir. An
heir-apparent or presumptive has no such
reversionary interest as would enable him to
object to any sale or gift made by the owner
in possession; see Abdul Wahid, L.R. 12 I.A.,
91, and 11 Cal. 597 All., 456 (1885) which was
followed in Hasan Ali, 1 1 All. 456 (1889).
The converse is also true : a renunciation by
an expectant heir in the lifetime of his
ancestor is not valid, or enforceable against
him after the vesting of the inheritance".
This is a correct statement, so far as it goes, of the law,
because a bare renunciation of an expectation to inherit
not bind the expectant heir’s conduct in future. But if the
expectant heir goes further and receives consideration and
so conducts himself as to mislead an owner into not making
dispositions of his property inter vivos the expectant heir
could be debarred from setting up his right when it does
unquestionably vest in him other words, the principle, of
estoppel remains untouched by this statement.
As the Madras Full Bench pointed out, the subject was dis-
cussed more fully, in Ameer Ali’s "Mohammedan Law" (Vol.
11), than elsewhere. There we find the reason for or the
object underlying the rule. It is that there is nothing to
renounce in such a case because an expectancy remains at
most before it has mate-
(1) [1918] (41 Madras) I.L.R. 365.
306
rialized only an "incohate right". It is in this light that
the following observations in Hurmoot-Ool-Nisa Begum v.
Allehdia Khan,(‘) is explained by Ameer Ali :
"According to the Mahomedan Law the right of
inheritance may be renounced and such
renunciation need not be express but may be
implied from the ceasing or desisting from
prosecuting a claim maintainable against
another."
Ameer Ali explained, citing an opinion of the law officers,
given in Khanum Jan v. Jan Bibi; (2
.lm15
"Renunciation implies the yielding up of a right already
vested, or the ceasing or desisting from prosecuting a claim
maintainable against another. It is evident that, during
the life-time of the mother the daughters have no right of
inheritance and their claim on that account is not
maintainable against any person during her life-time. It
follows, therefore, that this renunciation during the
mother’s life-time of the daughters’ shares is null and void
it being in point of fact giving up that which had no
existence."
In view of the clear exposition of the reason for the rule
contained in the authorities relied upon by the Full Bench
of the Madras High Court in Asa Beevi’s case (supra), we
think that it described, by oversight, a rule based on the
disability of a person to transfer what he has not got as a
rule of prohibition enjoined by Mohamedan Law. The use of
the word "prohibited" by the Full Bench does not really
bring out the object or character of the rule as explained
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above.
It may be mentioned here that Muslim Jurisprudence, where
theology and moral concepts are found sometimes mingled with
secular utilitarian legal principles, contains a very
elaborate theory of acts which are good (because they
proceed from ’hasna’), those which are bad (because, they
exhibit "qubuh"), and those which are neutral per se. It
classifies them according to ’varying degrees of approval or
disapproval attached to them (see Abdur Rahim’s "Muhammadan
Jurisprudence" P. 105). The renunciation of a supposed
right, based upon an expectancy, could not, by any test
found there, be considered "prohibited". The binding force
in ’future of such a renunciation would, even according to
strict Muslim Jurisprudence, depend upon the attendant
circumstances and the whole course of conduct of which it
forms a part.. I In other words, the principle of an
equitable estoppel, far from being opposed to any principle
of Muslim law will be found, on investigation, to be
completely in consonance with it.
(1) [1871] 17 W.R.P.C. 108
(2) [1827] 4 S.D.A. Rep. 210.
307
As already indicated, while the Madras view is based upon
the erroneous assumption that a renunciation of a claim to
inherit in future is in itself illegal or prohibited by
Muslim law, the view of the Allahabad High Court, expressed
by Suleman, C.J., in Latafat Hussain’s case (supra) while
fully recognising that "under the Mahomedan law
relinquishment by an heir who has no interest in the life-
time of his ancestor is invalid and void", correctly lays
down that such an abandonment may, nevertheless, be part of
a course of conduct which may create an estoppel against
claiming the right at a time when the right of inheritance
has accrued. After considering several decisions, including
the Full Bench of, the Madras High Court in Asa Beevi’s case
(supra) Suleman, C.J., observed at page 575 :
"The question of estoppel is really a question
arising, under the Contract Act and the
Evidence Act, and is not a question strictly
arising under the Mahomedan Law."
He pointed out (at page 575-576)
"It has been held in this Court that
contingent reversioners can enter into a
contract for consideration which may be held
binding on them in case they actually succeed
to the, estate : See 19 A.L.J. 799, and 21 A.L
J. 235. It was pointed out in 24 A.L.J. 873,
at PP. 876-7, that although a reversionary
right cannot be the subject of a transfer, for
such a transfer is prohibited by s. 6, T.P.
Act, there was. nothing to prevent a re-
versioner from so acting as to estop himself
by his own ,conduct from subsequently claiming
a property to which he may succeed. Among
other cases reliance was placed on the
pronouncement of their Lordships of the Privy
Council in 40 All 487, where a reversioner was
held bound by a compromise to which he was a
party."
Incidentally, we may observe that, in Mohammad Ali. Khan v.
Bisar Ali Khan,(1) the Oudh Chief Court has relied upon
Hurmoot-Ool-Nisa Begum’s. case (supra) to hold that
"according to Mahomedan Law there may be renunciation of the
right to inheritance and such renunciation need not be
express but may be implied from the ceasing or desisting
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from prosecuting a ,claim maintainable against another".
As we are clearly of opinion that there is nothing in law to
bar the application of the principle of estoppel, contained
in Section 115 of the Evidence Act, against the plaintiff
and
(1) A.I.R. 1928 Oudh 67.
308
Defendant No. 4, upon the totality of facts found by the
final Court of facts, which were apparently accepted by the
High Court,, it is not necessary for us to deal at length
with the question whether the facts found could give rise to
the inference of a "family settlement" in a technical sense.
It is true that in Latafat Hussain’s case (supra) Suleman,
C.J., had observed that the conclusion of the Subordinate
Court, that there had been an arrangement between a husband
and a wife "in the nature of a family settlement which is
binding on the plaintiff", was correct. This was held upon
circumstances which indicated that a husband would not have
executed a deed of Wakf if the wife had not relinquished her
claim, to inheritance. In other words, an arrangement which
may avoid future disputes in the family, even though it may
not technically be a settlement or definition of actually
disputed claims, was referred to broadly as a "family
arrangement". It was in this wide sense that in the case
before us also, the first Appellate Court had considered the
whole set of facts and circumstances examined by it to be
sufficient to raise the inference of what it described as a
"family settlement".
As our law relating to family arrangements is based on
English law, we may refer here to a definition of a family
arrangement in Halsbury’s Laws of England, (1) where we
find: A family arrangement is an agreement between members
of the same family intended to be generally and reasonably
for the benefit of the family either by compromising
doubtful or disputed rights or by preserving the family
property or the peace and security of the family by avoiding
litigation or by saving its honour. We also find there :
The agreement may be implied from a long course of ,dealing,
’but it is more usual to embody or to effectuate the
against in a deed no which the term ’family arrangement’ is
:applied." It is ,pointed out there : "Matters which would
be fatal to the validity of similar transactions between
strangers are not objections to the binding effect of family
arrangements."
As we have already indicated, it is enough for the decision
of this case that the plaintiff and defendant No. 4 were
estopped by their conduct, on an application of Section 115
Evidence Act, from claiming any Tight to inheritance which
accrued to them, on their father’s death, covered by the
deeds of relinquishment for consideration, irrespective of
the question whether the, deeds could operate as legally
valid and effective surrenders of their spes successionis.
Upon the facts and circumstances in
(1) Halsbury’s Laws of England, 3rd. edn. Vol. 17, p.
215,216.
309
the case found by the courts ,below we hold that the
plaintiff and defendant No. 4 could not, when rights of
inheritance vested in them at the time of their father’s
death, claim, these as such a claim would be barred by
estoppel.
The result is that we allow this appeal, set aside the judg-
ment and the decree of the High Court, and restore that of
the first Appellate Court. In the circumstances of this
case, we order that the parties will bear their own costs.
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K.B.N. Appeal allowed.
310