Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOPAL SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UJAGAR SINGH AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
02/04/1954
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
BENCH:
BOSE, VIVIAN
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
HASAN, GHULAM
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
CITATION:
1954 AIR 579 1955 SCR 86
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 226 (9)
R 1974 SC 665 (9)
ACT:
Custom-Succession-Agricultural Jats of village Ralla,
Tahsil Mansa, District Barnala, State Pepsu-Non-ancestral
property Daughter’s sons v. collaterals-Gift by daughter of
non-ancestral property in favour of her sons- Whether
amounts to acceleration-Commission to include a small
portion of the whole property in the gift Surrender-Validity
of.
HEADNOTE:
Held, that among agricultural Jats of Village Relia, in
the District of Barnala, State of Pepsu, daughter’s sons
will inherit, to the exclusion of collaterals, the non-
ancestral lands which had devolved by inheritance on their
mother.
A gift by the daughter to her sons would amount to
acceleration of succession. Omission to include a small
portion of the whole property due to ignorance or oversight
does not affect the validity of the surrender when it is
otherwise bona fide.
Lehna v. Mst. Thakri (32 Punjab Record 1892 F.B.); Lal
Singh
v. Boor Singh (55 P.L.R. 168 at 172); Mulla’s Hindu Law,
11th Edition, page 217; Rattingan’s Digest of Customary Law,
para. 23(2) referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 174 of 1952.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree dated the 27th June,
1950, of the High Court of Judicature of Patiala and East
Punjab States Union in Second Appeal No. 219 of 1949-50
against the Judgment and Decree dated the 21st September,
1949, of the Court of the Additional District fudge,
Bhatinda, in Appeal No. 61 of 1948, arising from the
Judgment and Decree dated the 10th August, 1948, of the
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Court of the Sub-Judge 11 Class, Mansa, in Case No. 134 of
1947.
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Gopal Singh and Sardar Singh for the appellants.
Achhru Ram (K. L. Mehta, with him) for the respondent.
1954. April 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BOSE J. --The plaintiffs appeal. They claim to be the
presumptive reversioners to one Harnam Singh who owned the
property in dispute. On 2nd November, 1914, after Harnam
Singh’s death, his daughter Mst. Biro, the second
defendant, gifted the plaint properties to her sons who have
been grouped together as the first defendant. The
plaintiffs contend that the property is ancestral and that
the daughter got only a life estate, so they sue for ’a
declaration that the gift will not affect their reversionary
rights.
The defendants rely on custom. They state that, according
to the customary law which governs the parties, collaterals
beyond the fifth degree are not heirs in the presence of a
daughter and her line. The plaintiffs, they say, are
collaterals of the seventh degree therefore they cannot
displace the daughter. They also state that the property
was not ancestral and so the plaintiffs cannot challenge the
daughter’s alienation. The third line of defence related to
a portion of the property which is not in dispute before us.
The property in suit consisted of three items:
(1) 253 bighas of Khas land;
(2) a half share in 3 bighas 19 biswas; and
(3) a share in certain shamlat property.
The defendants say that Harnam Singh gifted 123 bighas of
the Khas land to the second defendant : that the gift was
absolute and so the plaintiffs cannot,get that portion of
the property in any event.
The trial Judge held, on the admission of the plaintiffs’
counsel, that the land in dispute was non-ancestral and that
the daughter’s sons would succeed after her to the exclusion
of the plaintiffs, therefore the gift by her to her sons
amounted to an acceleration of the estate. The learned
Judge dismissed the plaintiffs Suit,
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On appeal to the lower appellate Court- the finding ,that
the property was non-ancestral was upheld as the plaintiffs’
learned counsel in that Court did not contest the finding of
the first Court on this point. As regards the acceleration,
the learned Judge thought it necessary to examine a point
which the plaintiffs had raised in the trial Court but which
was ignored there, namely that a house was not included in
the gift. Therefore it was argued that as the whole of the
estate was not passed on to the next heir there was no
acceleration. The learned Judge took evidence on this point
and held that the house was not included and so found
against the defendants. Accordingly he decreed the
plaintiffs’ claim for this part of the estate.
In the High Court the learned Judges upheld the concurrent
finding about the non-ancestral nature of the property.
Before them also the point was conceded by the plaintiff’s
counsel. They also held that the house was not included in
the gift but held that it was such a small part of the
estate that the daughter’s retention of it could not
indicate an intention on her part not to efface herself from
the estate. They also held in the plaintiffs’ favour that
they were collaterals in the fifth degree and not the
seventh but held that as the property was non-ancestral the
daughter’s sons were the nearest heirs, so the gift
accelerated the estate and, vested it in the donees despite
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the exclusion of the house. Accordingly, they reversed the
decree of the lower appellate Court and restored that of the
learned trial Judge.
Before us, the plaintiffs’ learned counsel tried to reopen
the concurrent finding of the three Courts about the non-
ancestral nature of the property but we did not allow him to
do so. The question is a mixed question of law and fact and
the admission involved both. We were not shown how the
facts admitted could be disentangled from the law so that we
could determine whether the conclusion of law drawn from the
admitted facts was wrong. The learned trial Judge said that
the admission was made because of a previous decision in a
former suit between the. same parties or their predecessors,
Harnam Singh had mortgaged a part of
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his estate and placed the mortgagees in possession. When he
died some of his collaterals took possession of the
unencumbered portion of the estate. The daughter Mat. Biro
therefore instituted two suits, one for possession against
the collaterals including the present plaintiffs or their
predecessors, and the other for a declaration against the
mortgagees in possession. In this she also joined the same
set of collaterals. Mist. Biro succeeded on the ground
that the property was non-ancestral. These findings are
obviously res-judicata and if the plaintiffs’ learned
counsel had not conceded the point the question ’would at
once have been raised and the previous judgments, which were
exhibited (Exhibits DD and DF) would-have concluded the
matter. But as the point was conceded in all three’ Courts
it was not necessary for the defendants to fall back on the
previous decisions. It, must therefore be accepted here
that the whole of the land in dispute was non-ancestral.
That brings us to the question of heirship. Paragraph 23(2)
of Rattigan’s Digest’ of Customary Law says that-
In regard to the acquired property of her father, the
daughter is preferred to the collaterals."
That is not disputed but what the plaintiffs contend is that
she only succeeds as a limited heir and that after her the
reversion will go to the father’s heirs in the usual way.
But that is not the Punjab custom among the tribe to which
the parties belong, namely agricultural Jats. Rattigan
quotes the following passage from page 61 of Roe and
Rattigan’s Tribal -Law-of the Punjab at page 411 of the 13th
edition of his Digest:
" Where a succession of a married daughter is allowed, the
general principle is that she succeeds not as an ordinary
heir,, but merely as the means of passing on the property to
another male, whose descent from her father in the female
line is allowed under exceptional circumstances to count as
if it were descent in the male line. She will indeed
continue to hold the land in her own name, even after the
birth of sons and their attaining majority, for her own life
but she has no more power over it than a widow would have.
If she has sons, the estate will of Course descend to them
and their lineal male issue, in the usual way. But if she
has no sons,
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or if their male issue fail, the land will revert, except in
some special instances where her husband is allowed to hold
for his life, to her father’s agnates, just as it would have
done if no exception to the general rule of agnatic
succession had ever been in her favour."
This is supported by at least two decisions from the Punjab.
In Lehna v., Mst. Thakri (1) two learned Judges of the
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Punjab Chief Court (the third dissenting) said ’in the
course of a Full Bench decision, that even in the case of
ancestral property the daughter’s sons and their descendants
would exclude collaterals of the father. In a more recent
case (1953) the Punjab High Court held in Lal Singh v. Roor
Singh (2) that in the case of non-ancestral property the
daughters are preferred to collaterals.
We were told that this rule only applies when the daughter
succeeds and has no application when she predeceases her
father. We say nothing about this because the case before
us is one in which the daughter did succeed and all the
authorities produced before us indicate that in that event
her sons will exclude the collaterals. We were not shown
any decision which has taken a contrary view. We are only
concerned with non-ancestral property here and express no
opinion aboutwhat would happen in the case of
ancestral proper though the observations of two of the
learned Judges in the fullBench of the Punjab Chief
Court to whichwe have referred carry the rule over to
ancestral property as well.
The learned counsel for the plaintiffs relies on, paragraph
64 of Rattigan’s Digest where it is stated that except in
two cases which do -not apply here, no female in possession
of property from, among others, her father can permanently
alienate it. But we are not concerned with an alienation
here. The gift to the sons mayor may not be good after Mst.
Biro’s death as a gift. The question is whether there was
an acceleration. If there was, the form it took would not
matter.
We turn, next, to the question of surrender and the. only
question there is whether the retention by Mst. Biro of the
house would prevent an acceleration of the
(1) 32 Punjab Record 1895.
(2) 55 Punjab Law Reporter 168 at 172.
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estate, The extent of the property covered by the gift is
over 253 bighas. She had an absolute right to gift 123
bighas of this and so the only portion to which the doctrine
of surrender would apply would be the remaining 130 odd
bighas. But the fact that she gave away all her property to
her sons, bar this house, including property to which she
had an absolute right, is relevant to show that her
intention was to efface herself completely. Now as regards
this house. Garja Singh (P.W. 1) gives us this description
of it:
" The distance between the door of the Sabbat and that of
Darwaja is only about two karams. " (eleven feet).
"opposite to Darwaja there is one Jhallani the door of which
opens into the Sabbat and not in the courtyard. Except
Darwaja, Sabbat and Jhallani there is no other roofed
portion in their house. There is only one compound for the
cattle."
In this tiny dwelling live not only Mst. Biro but also her
three sons. It forms, as the High Court held, a very small
part of the whole property. The retention of this,
particularly in these circumstances when the sons already
live there with her, would not invalidate the surrender.
The law about this has been correctly set out in Mulla’s
Hindu Law, 11th edition, page 217, in the following terms:
" But the omission, due to ignorance or to oversight,, of a
small portion of the whole property does not affect the
validity of the surrender when it is otherwise bona fide."’
The present case is, in our opinion, covered by that rule.
We agree with the High Court that the gift operated
accelerate the succession. That being the case, the
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plaintiffs are no longer the reversions even if they would
otherwise have been entitled to succeed
on failure of the daughter’s sons and their line’ We need
not decide whether the plaintiffs, as collaterals in the
fifth degree, would be heirs at all.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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