Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
JODH SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/10/1980
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 2081 1981 SCR (1) 929
1980 SCC (4) 306
ACT:
Special Family Pension granted under rule 74 of the
Pension Regulations for Air Force-Whether a special family
pension admissible to a widow in her capacity as widow could
ever form part of the estate of the deceased which could be
disposed of by testamentary disposition-Pension Regulations
for the Air Force Rules 74, and 79.
HEADNOTE:
Dismissing the special leave petition, the Court
^
HELD: (1) Special family pension sanctioned to the
widow of an officer of the Indian Air Force by the President
of India under rule 74 of the Rules could not be subject-
matter of testamentary disposition. Special family pension
is payable to the widow on the death of the officer. It is
not payable in his life time. What is not payable during
life time of the deceased over which he has no power of
disposition cannot form part of his estate. It is the event
of his death that provides the eligibility, qualification
for claiming special family pension. Such qualifying event
which can only occur on the death of the deceased and which
event confers some monetary benefit on someone other than
the deceased albeit related to the deceased, cannot form
part of the estate of the deceased which he can dispose of
by testamentary disposition. [934B, 933H-934A]
(2) Where a certain benefit is admissible on account of
status and a status that is acquired on the happening of
certain event, namely, on becoming a widow on the death of
the husband, such pension by no stretch of imagination could
ever form part of the estate of the deceased. If it did not
form part of the estate of the deceased it can never be the
subject-matter of the testamentary disposition. [933B-C]
Special family pension under rule 74 is admissible
amongst others to widow of an officer. It is not that the
deceased gets pension or earns special family pension. It is
the untimely death of the deceased, the process of death
having been hastened or accelerated by the hazards of
service that the widow who is rendered destitute is granted
special family pension. Whether the widow qualifies for
special family pension is to be determined by the
sanctioning authority, the President in this case. The
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special family pension is admissible on account of the
status of a widow and not on account of the fact that there
was some estate of the deceased which devolved on his death
to the widow. [932H; 933A-B]
(3) Whether a widow has qualified for a special family
pension, gratuity or ordinary family pension is a matter to
be determined by the President. If the President is
satisfied that the widow is eligible for pension, she cannot
be denied the benefit by some dependents of the deceased
claiming that
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instead of the widow he or she should have been held
eligible for special family pension. Therefore, it is
irrelevant whether the deceased had shown his wife as his
dependent or not if the President is satisfied that she as
the widow of the deceased officer was eligible for special
family pension. [933F-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Special Leave Petition
(Civil) No. 7254 of 1980.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22-5-1980 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Regular Second Appeal No.
555/80.
Hardev Singh and R. S. Sodhi for the Petitioner.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J.-Whether a special family pension awarded by
the President to the widow of a deceased officer who
belonged to Air Force could be the subject-matter of a
testamentary disposition by the deceased in his life time,
presents the core problem in this petition.
Flt. Lt. Panj Rattan Singh, 5081 GD(P) was serving in
Indian Air Force. He died in an aircraft accident arising
out of and in the course of his employment on June 17, 1966.
His survivors are the widow, Hardev Kaur respondent 2, his
parents, the petitioner in this petition being the father of
the deceased, two brothers and two sisters. Prior to his
death he had made his last will and testament dated May 14,
1959, whereby he bequeathed ’absolutely and forever all his
property both moveable and immovable to his father’,
petitioner herein, and also appointed his father as the
executor under his will. Further, during his life time the
deceased had appointed by letter dated March 5, 1960,
petitioner and Gurcharan Kaur, his father and mother
respectively, nominees in respect of his provident fund. He
had also nominated his parents, brothers and sisters by
letter dated December 10, 1958, to claim pensionary benefit
which may accrue in the event of his death. By a subsequent
communication dated January 29, 1966, he had declared his
parents, two brothers and one unmarried sister as his
dependents. The deceased had never referred to his wife as
either his dependent or entitled to any pensionary benefit.
It appears that his relations with his wife were far from
cordial and actually he had filed a petition for annulment
of the marriage which he had subsequently withdrawn with the
result that the marriage was subsisting till the date of his
death. Respondent 2 Hardev Kaur is thus the widow of the
deceased.
By an order dated March 10, 1967, a special family
pension was awarded by the President to respondent 2 Hardev
Kaur being
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the widow of the deceased officer at the rate of Rs. 160
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p.m. By the same order she was also awarded gratuity in the
amount of Rs. 2670. The deceased was a member of a general
provident fund to which he was making his subscriptions. On
his death the amount standing to his credit in the provident
fund account and certain other amounts were to be paid to
whosoever was legally entitled to the same.
On a petition filed by the petitioner, will of the
deceased was admitted to probate. In the probate proceedings
the petitioner, inter alia, contended that over and above
all other sums payable to the heirs and/or nominees of the
deceased, the special family pension at the rate of Rs. 160
p.m. and the gratuity of Rs. 2670 awarded to respondent 2
Hardev Kaur by the President formed part of the estate of
the deceased and under the will as well as the nomination he
was entitled to collect the same. Probate proceeding was
contested by respondent 2, widow of the deceased. The
learned single judge while granting probate excluded the
aforementioned two items from it. Both the parties preferred
appeal under the Letters Patent of the High Court. While
disposing of both the appeals by a common judgment a
Division Bench of the Punjab & Haryana High Court modified
the probate granted to the petitioner by including the
gratuity amount of Rs. 2670 in the probate as forming part
of the estate of the deceased but confirmed the order of the
probate court in respect of special family pension awarded
to respondent 2.
Petitioner then filed a suit against the Union of India
and respondent 2 for a declaration that the order awarding
special family pension to respondent 2 widow of the deceased
was illegal, unjust and improper. The trial Court decreed
the suit but on appeal by respondent 2 widow, the first
appellate court set aside the decree of the trial court and
the decision of the appellate court was confirmed in second
appeal by the High Court. Hence this petition.
The only question argued by Mr. Hardev Singh, learned
counsel for the petitioner before us was that special family
pension is admissible to the dependents and as respondent
widow was nowhere shown as dependent of the deceased, the
same could not be granted to her and in any case even if it
was granted by the President in favour of respondent 2 it
would still form part of the estate of the deceased and,
therefore, the petitioner would be entitled to the same.
Special family pension is granted under rule 74 of the
Pension Regulations for the Air Force (’Rules’ for short).
Relevant portion of rule 74 reads as under:
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"Rule 74: A special family pension to the widow of
an officer and special children’s allowance to his
legitimate children under 18 years of age, or
dependents’ pension to his parents or brothers/sisters,
may be granted if his death was due to or hastened by
either a wound, injury or disease which was
attributable to air force service, or the aggravation
by air force service of a wound injury or disease which
existed before or arose during the air force service,
provided that...."
Could the special family pension specifically awardable
to the widow of an officer and in fact awarded to respondent
2 as widow of the officer, ever form part of the estate of
the deceased ? A special family pension stands apart, aloof
and separate from a general provident fund set up under the
Provident Funds Act, 1925. Deceased was a subscriber to the
General Provident Fund set up under the 1925 Act. The amount
standing to his credit in the provident fund account was
treated by the High Court as forming part of the estate of
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the deceased and, therefore, its devolution would be
according to the wishes of the deceased as disclosed in his
last will testament. The amount thus standing to the credit
of the subscriber would be payable in the event of death of
the subscriber or on his retirement from service.
Pension is a retirement benefit. It is admissible under
the relevant rules on superannuation. It is payable on
superannuation to the employee himself during his life time
after retirement. Special family pension is not admissible
to the employee but to the specified members of the
employee’s family and that too in the event of his death
while in service or after his retirement as provided in the
Regulations. It is in the nature of a compensation because
the death was due to or hastened by either a wound, injury
or disease which was attributable to Air Force service or
the aggravation by Air Force service of a wound, injury or
disease which existed before or arose during Air Force
service, etc. (see Rule 74). If death is not referable to
any of the events mentioned in Rule 74, special family
pension is not admissible. To compensate for death on
account of hazards of service rendering dependents destitute
that benefit of special family pension is conferred on
certain persons having a certain status arising out of and
directly attributable to relation with the deceased. Special
family pension under rule 74 is admissible, amongst others,
to widow of an officer. It is not that the deceased gets
pension or earns special family pension. It is the untimely
death of the deceased, the process of death having been
hastened or accelerated by the hazards of service, that the
widow who is rendered destitute is granted special family
pension.
933
Whether the widow qualifies for special family pension is to
be determined by the sanctioning authority, the President in
this case. The special family pension is admissible on
account of the status of a widow and not on account of the
fact that there was some estate of the deceased which
devolved on his death to the widow.
Where a certain benefit is admissible on account of
status and a status that is acquired on the happening of
certain event, namely, on becoming a widow on the death of
the husband, such pension by no stretch of imagination could
ever form part of the estate of the deceased. If it did not
form part of the estate of the deceased it could never be
the subject-matter of testamentary disposition.
It was, however, said that not all widows are entitled
to special family pension but only the dependent wife who
becomes widow on the death of an officer alone becomes
eligible for pension and in this case the deceased had not
shown his wife as one of his dependents but on the contrary
the parents, the sisters and the brothers were shown as
dependents of the officer. Rule 74 envisages a special
family pension to the widow, a special children allowance to
his legitimate children or dependents’ pension to his
parents, brothers or sisters. To each one of them, if he or
she qualifies for special family pension, the benefit is
admissible. Rule 75 envisages ordinary family pension to
widow and legitimate children of the deceased officer. Rule
79 confers discretion on the President to grant a pension
and/or gratuity to a widow who may not be eligible under
rule 74 or rule 75 because she was separate from the husband
at the time of his death. Thus, whether a widow has
qualified for a special family pension, gratuity or ordinary
family pension is a matter to be determined by the
President. If the President is satisfied that the widow is
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eligible for pension, she cannot be denied the benefit by
some other dependents of the deceased claiming that instead
of the widow he or she should have been held eligible for
special family pension. Therefore, it is irrelevant whether
the deceased had shown his wife as his dependent or not if
the President is satisfied that she as the widow of the
deceased officer was eligible for special family pension.
The real controversy is whether a special family
pension admissible to a widow in her capacity as widow could
ever form a part of the estate of the deceased which could
be disposed of by testamentary disposition? Special family
pension is payable to the widow on the death of the officer.
It is not payable in his life time. What is not payable
during life time of the deceased over which he has no power
of disposition cannot form part of his
934
estate. It is the event of his death that provides the
eligibility qualification for claiming special family
pension. Such qualifying event which can only occur on the
death of the deceased and which event confers some monetary
benefit on someone other than the deceased albeit related to
the deceased, cannot form part of the estate of the deceased
which he can dispose of by testamentary disposition.
Therefore, it is unquestionably established that special
family pension sanctioned to the widow of an officer of the
Indian Air Force by the President of India under Rule 74 of
the Rules could not be subject-matter of testamentary
disposition.
Further, whether a gratuity specifically sanctioned in
favour of the widow as widow of the deceased by the
President under the Rules could be the subject-matter of
testamentary disposition has not been considered in this
matter because the amount has been included in the probate
of the will of the deceased and the widow has not questioned
that order before us. That question is kept open.
With these observations we dismiss this special leave
petition.
S.R. Petition dismissed.
935