Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 13
PETITIONER:
ANANT KIBE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PURUSHOTTAM RAO & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/04/1984
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
DESAI, D.A.
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1121 1984 SCR (3) 484
1984 SCALE (1)783
CITATOR INFO :
R 1991 SC1972 (31)
ACT:
Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code 1959, s. 158(1)
complete extinction of inam rights and conferral of
bhumiswami rights-Inam lands became bhumiswami lands-
Impartibility and devolution by survivorship by rule of
lineal primogeniture lost.
Words and Phrases-"In respect of land held by him"-
Meaning of S. 158 (1)(b) Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code
1959.
HEADNOTE:
In 1837 the late Maharaja Harihar Rao Holkar made a
grant of an inam of a garden to the priest of the Holkar
family. The grant of inam was on Putra Pautradi Vansh
Parampara condition by way of parvarish i.e., maintenance,
The three appellants in the appeal were the legal heirs
and successors of the grandson of the original inamdar, and
the 1st Respondent as the sole survivor of the eldest male
line of the last holder, the inamdar and as also the karta
of the joint Hindu family.
The appellants-plaintiffs instituted a suit for
partition and separate possession of their half-share in the
joint family property alleging that defendant No. 1 in his
capacity as the karta of the joint Hindu family was in
possession and management of the joint family property,
including the inam lands. The claim was contested by
respondents-defendants 1 and 2 who contended that the
plaintiffs predecessor-in-interest had separated from the
family by taking his share in the year 1917-18 and therefore
the plaintiffs had no kind of right or title in the suit
property and that the inam lands and the properties acquired
from and out of the inam being impartible in nature, the
succession to which was governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture, the properties exclusively belonged to
defendant No. 1 and that the conferral of bhumiswami right
on defendant No. 1 under S. 158 (1)(b) of the Madhya Pradesh
Land Revenue Code, 1959 made the suit lands his separate and
exclusive property and it was not part of the joint estate
of the undivided family.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 13
The Additional District Judge held that the inam lands
together with the property acquired from the income of the
inam were ancestral impartible estate since the same had
devolved by survivorship by the rule of linea
485
primogeniture and therefore constituted joint family
property and that the rule of impartibility and the special
mode of succession by the rule of lineal primogeniture were
nothing but incidents of the inam which stood extinguished
by S. 158(1)(b) of the Code. The plaintiff’s claim for
partition and separate possession to the extent of their
half-share in the plaint schedule properties and to mesne
profits were decreed.
On appeal, the High Court reversed the judgment of the
Additional District Judge with regard to the inam lands and
the houses and other property acquired out of the inam
holding. The High Court held that the plaintiffs who were
the junior members of the family had no kind of right or
title to the inam lands except the right to maintenance and
that defendant No. 1, the inamdar for the time being, became
the bhumiswami of the suit lands under S. 158(1)(b) of the
Code which constituted his separate property. The High Court
however maintained the decree of the Additional District
Judge with regard to partition and separation of the
plaintiffs’ share of immovable property.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: 1. S. 158 (1)(b) of the Madhya Pradesh Land
Revenue Code, 1959 effected a complete extinction of the
inam rights followed by simultaneous conferral of bhumiswami
rights. Every person, in respect of the land held by him in
the Madhya Bharat region, as an inamdar, at the time of the
coming into force of the Code, became a bhumiswami thereof,
and acquired all the rights and became subject to all the
liabilities of a bhumiswami under the Code. [493B]
2. The words "in respect of land held by him" appearing
in S. (158)(1) (b) refer to the status and character of the
tenure holder in relation to the holding on the appointed
day. The accrual of the status of bhumiswami by such person
was automatic and he acquired all the rights and became
subject to all the liabilities conferred or imposed upon a
bhumiswami by or under the Code. [493C]
3. On a combined reading of SS. 158(1) (b) and 164 the
legal consequence that ensued was that the incident of the
impartibility and the special mode of succession by the rule
of primogeniture which were terms of the grant of inam lands
under the Jagir. Manual of the Holkar State stood
extinguished. After the conferment of bhumiswami rights, the
incidents and character of the tenure became transformed the
restrictions placed thereon disappeared, and such lands
became capable of being held in joint ownership like any
other coparcenary-property. [493E]
4. The conferral of bhumiswami rights on the holder for
the time being under S. 158(1)(b) of the Code in respect of
ancestral inam lands necessarily enures to the benefit of
all the members of the joint family. [493F]
5. Impartibility is essentially a creature of custom.
Here it is a term of the grant. The junior members of a
family in the case of an ancient
486
impartible joint family estate take no right in the property
by birth and therefore have no right of partition having
regard to the very nature of the estate that it is
imartible. The only incidence for joint property which still
attaches to the joint family property is the right of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 13
survivorship which, of course, is not inconsistent with the
custom of impartibility. [495D]
In the instant case, the incident of impartibility
attached to inam lands, no longer exists by reason of S.
158(1)(b) of the Code as they have now become bhumiswami
lands. The right of junior members of the family for
maintenance is governed by custom and not based upon any
joint right or interest in the property as co-owners. [495E]
6. To establish that a family governed by the
Mitakshara in which there is an impartible estate has ceased
to be joint, it is necessary to prove an intention, express
or implied, on the part of the junior members of the family
to renounce their succession to the estate. [495H]
7. The impartibility of the tenure governed by the
Jagir Manual of the Holkar State and the rule of lineal
primogeniture governed by the Jagir Manual, Chapter 11,
rules 2 and 3 did not per se destroy its nature as joint
family property or render it the separate property of the
last holder so as to destroy the right of survivorship; the
estate its character of joint family property and its
devolution was governed by the devolution was governed by
the rule of survivorship as modified by the rule of lineal
primogeniture. [495G]
Shiba Prasad Singh v. Rani Prayag Kumari Debi & Ors.,
LR (1931-32) 59 IA 331 and Nagesk Bisto Desai v. Khando
Tirmal Desai, (1982) 3 SCR 341, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 497 of
1971.
Appeal by certificate from the Judgment and Decree
dated 2.5.1969 of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh, (Indore
Bench) in Civil First Appeal No. 91 of 1962.
V.A. Bobde, S.D. Mudaliar and A.G. Ratnaparkhi for the
appellants.
G.L. Sanghi, D.N. Misra and S. Sukumaran for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J. This appeal on certificate is directed against
a judgment and decree of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dated
May 2, 1969 substantially reversing the judgment and decree
passed by the third Additional District Judge, Indore dated
June 18/19,1962
487
and dismissing the plaintiffs’ suit for partition and
separate possession of their half share of the suit
properties detailed in Schedule ’A’ appended to the plaint
except with respect to a house and the agricultural lands at
Ujjain. During the course of the hearing the parties have
come to a settlement and the terms of the compromise have
been recorded. Nevertheless, the correctness of the judgment
delivered by the High Court is open to serious doubt and as
it involves a question of general importance, we proceed to
record our views.
The facts giving rise to the appeal are as follows. The
report of the Inam Commissioner discloses that in 1837 the
late Maharaja Harihar Rao Holkar made a grant of an inam of
a garden known as Rambag in Kasba Indore admeasuring 15.62
acres to Abaji Ballal, the priest of the Holkar family on
his representation that he was in service of the Huzur
Darbar for a long period but had no garden at Kasba Indore
and was therefore finding it difficult in getting tulsi
leaves and flowers for making offerings to the deities. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 13
grant of inam to him was on Putra Pautradi Vansh Parampara
condition by way of parvarish. It appears from the report
that Abaji Ballai had only one son named Laxman and he also
had only one son named Raghunath Rao. After the death of
Abaji Ballal be was succeeded by Laxman. It appears that
Laxman represented in the year 1886 that he was entitled to
hold as inam an area of 15.62 acres in Kasba Indore while
the land in his possession was only 5.91 acres, the
remaining area having been acquired by the Durbar and prayed
for a grant of an area of 9.72 acres in exchange. An inquiry
was thereupon held and the claim was found to be true. By
Durbar Order No. 9 dated December 14, 1888 the inamdar was
given 9.72 acres of land in Mauja Palashiya Hana. It also
appears that the family built residential houses at Indore
presumably out of the income of the inam and also acquired
immovable properties at Ujjain consisting of a house and
some agricultural lands. After the death of Laxman Rao, his
son Raghunath Rao was recognized to be the inamdar.
The common ancestor Raghunath Rao had three sons,
Madhav Rao, Sadashiv Rao and Gopal Rao. Of these, Madhav Rao
and Sadashiv Rao had predeceased their father Raghunath Rao.
Madhav Rao died without leaving an heir while Sadashiv
488
Rao left a son Purushottam Rao. The third son Gopal Rao
disappeared about an year before the death of his father
Raghunath Rao and his whereabouts were not known till the
news of his death in 1932 at the Secunderabad was received,
after the death of Raghunath Rao in 1928. On the death of
Raghunath Rao, the last Purushottam Rao being the sole
survivor of the eldest male line of holder became the
inamdar and also the karta of the joint Hindu family.
The suit out of which this appeal arises was instituted
by the three appellants Anant, Govind and their mother Smt.
Laxmi Bai being the legal heirs and successors of Gopal Rao,
as plaintiffs on December 12, 1955 for partition and
separate possession of their half share in the joint family
property described in Schedule ’A’ appended to the plaint
against respondents 1 and 2 Purushottam Rao and his mother
Smt. Rama Bai being defendants 1 and 2, impleading Krishna
Rao, the eldest son of Gopal Rao as defendant 3 because he
failed to join them as a plaintiff in the suit. The case of
the plaintiffs was that defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao in
his capacity as the karta of the joint Hindu family was in
possession and management of the joint family property,
including the inam lands at Kasba Indore and Mauja Palashiya
Hana. The plaintiffs’ claim was contested by defendants 1
and 2 Purushottam Rao and Smt. Rama Bai. They pleaded inter
alia that the plaintiffs’ predecessor-in-interest Gopal Rao
had separated from the family by taking his share in the
year 1917-18 and therefore the plaintiffs had no kind of
right or title in the suit properties that the inam lands
and the properties acquired from out of the inam being
impartible in nature, the succession to which was governed
by the rule of lineal primogeniture, the properties
exclusively belonged to defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao; and
that the conferral of bhumiswami rights on respondent 1
under s. 158(1)(b) of the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code,
1959 made the suit lands his separate and exclusive property
and it was not part of the joint estate of the undivided
family. Incidentally, the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code,
1959 was brought into force w.e.f. October 1, 1959 which had
the effect of changing the nature of the tenure.
The point in controversy in this appeal is now limited
to the
489
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 13
inam lands and the houses and other properties built from
out of the income of the inam lands at Kasba Indore and
Mauja Palashiya Hana. The learned Additional District Judge
held that the inam lands together with the properties
acquired from the income of the inam were ancestral
impartible estate since the same had devolved by
survivorship by the rule of lineal primogeniture and
therefore constituted joint family property and that the
rule of impartibility and the special mode of succession by
the rule of lineal primogeniture were nothing but incidents
of the inam which stood extinguished by s. 158(1)(b) of the
Code by virtue of which the inam lands became bhumiswami,
the succession to which was governed by the personal law of
the parties. The learned Additional District Judge
accordingly held that the inam lands at Kasba Indore and
Mauja Palashiya Hana constituted joint family property of
the parties and decreed the plaintiffs’ claim for partition
and separate possession to the extent of their half share in
the properties described in Schedule ’A’ to the plaint and
to mesne profits thereof. On appeal, the High Court reversed
the judgment of the learned Additional District Judge with
regard to the inam lands and the houses and other property
acquired at Indore out of the income of the inam holding
that they constituted a special grant regulated by the Jagir
Manual of the Holkar State. According to the High Court, the
plaintiffs who were the junior members of the family had no
kind of right or title to the inam lands except perhaps the
right of maintenance and that too up to a certain degree and
subject to its determination by the State. Accordingly the
High Court held that defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao, the
inamdar for the time being, became the bhumiswami of the
suit lands under s. 158(1) (b) of the Code which constituted
his separate property. The High Court however maintained the
decree of the learned Additional District Judge with regard
to partition and separation of the plaintiffs’ share of
immovable properties at Ujjain.
The short and narrow question involved in this appeal
is whether the inam lands which became bhumiswami lands
under s. 158(1)(b) of the Code were the self-acquired
property of the inamdar and defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao
was entitled to remain in full and exclusive possession and
enjoyment thereof, or the conferral of bhumiswami rights in
respect of such inam
490
lands on him must enure to the benefit of the members of the
joint Hindu family and therefore the bhumiswami lands were
liable to be partitioned like any other coparcenary
property.
It is common ground that the inam lands were
impartible, the succession to which was governed by the rule
of lineal primogeniture. That must be so because the Jagir
Manual of the Holkar State by r. 134 provides that the rule
which refers to jagirs will apply to inams also except to
the extent modified by any Darbar Order or circular. Chapter
II, r. 2 provides:
"2. A Jagir grant shall be indivisible and impartible
property."
R. 3 provides for the rule of lineal primogeniture and
it follows:
"3. Every Jagir grant, which is not a purely lifegrant,
shall descend in the order of primogeniture i.e. to the
eldest male line of the last holder e.g. If a grantee
has descendants as shown in the following pedigree
table:
A (Grantee)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 13
|
|
-----------------------------------------
B C D
| | |
----------- ------------ |
| | G H I |
| | | J
E F | |
| N |
| ---------
K L M
The Jagir will after A’s death descend to B. After
B it will descend to E to K."
Proviso to r.3 preserves the right of maintenance of
the junior members of the family and it reads:
"Provided that the right of the members of the
491
junior branches, claiming descent from the original
grantee to a share in the income of the Jagir or
maintenance according to the custom of the family or
orders of the Government, shall not be affected
thereby."
Although the original sanad granted to Abaji Ballal in
1837 is not forthcoming, the report of the Inam Commissioner
discloses that the grant of inam to him was on Putra
Pautradi Vanash Parampara condition by way of parvarish i.e.
maintenance. Thus the grant of the inam lands was for
maintenance of the members of the joint family and was also
heritable.
There is ample evidence on record to show that the inam
lands although impartible were always treated by members of
the family as part of the joint family properties and the
succession to the inam was by the rule of survivorship as
modified by the rule of lineal primogeniture. It is also
clear that the junior members were in joint enjoyment of the
inam lands and that was because the proviso to r. 3
expressly recognized their rights of maintenance. Further,
the evidence shows that the properties acquired by the
inamdar for the time being from out of the income of the
inam such as the two houses at Indore and other properties
were always dealt with as part of the joint family property.
There is on record, an application for mutation made by
defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao on December 15, 1928 (Ex.P-
6) wherein he had stated that his grand-father had died on
August 8, 1928 and therefore he prayed for substitution of
the names of the legal heirs in the inam register, the
material portion of which reads:
"I am his son’s son i.e. his grandson and as such
his heir. (A) Besides me the sons of my uncle i.e. (1)
Krishna Rao (2) Anant Rao and (3) Govind Rao are also
his heirs, Besides us no other person is his heir (A)."
The prayer was that the names of all these heirs be
substituted. There is also an affidavit of Purushottam Rao
dated December 7, 1928 (Ex. P-5) regarding the death of his
grand father Raghunath Rao and it mentions that he had three
sons viz, Madhav Rao, Sadashiv Rao and Gopal Rao. It was
averred that Madhav
492
Rao who was the eldest had already expired leaving no issue
and his wife had also died and that the whereabouts of Gopal
Rao were not known since 3 1/2 or 4 years. It was stated
that Gopal Rao had three sons viz. Krishna, Anant and Govind
and all the three of them were minors. It then recites: "All
the three minor sons of Gopal Rao were living jointly with
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 13
me." Purushottam Rao examined as DW 24 has stated that the
whereabouts of Gopal Rao were not known when his grand-
father Raghunath Rao was operated upon resulting in his
death in the hospital. When confronted with portion marked
’AA’ in Ex. P-6 he unequivocally admitted that he could not
deny the statement made therein. He however went on to
assent that the expenditure incurred by him on the
plaintiffs by way of maintenance was not incurred by reason
of their being the members of the joint family but because
they had no resources of their own and it was necessary to
give them maintenance allowance under the Inam Rules. It is
quite apparent from the course of dealings that the inam
lands at Kasba Indore and Mauja Palashiya Hana and other
inam properties in the hands of the common ancestor
Raghunath Rao which devolved upon defendant No. 1
Purushottam Rao were nothing but an ancestral impartible
estate.
Under the scheme of the Code there was a drastic change
brought about not only in the nature of the tenure of inam
lands but also in the mode of succession. S.158(1)(b) of the
code provides:
"158. Bhumiswami-(1) Every person who at the time
of coming into force of this Code, belongs to any of
the following classes shall be called a Bhumiswami and
shall have all the rights and be subject to all the
liabilities conferred or imposed upon a Bhumiswami by
or under this code, namely:
(a)
(b) every person in respect of land held by him in the
Madhya Bharat region as a Pakka Tenant or as a
Muafidar, Inamdar, or Concessional Holder, as defined
in the
493
Madhya Bharat Land Revenue and Tenancy Act, Samvat
2007(66 of 1950)";
The plain language of s.158(1)(b) effected a complete
extinction of the inam rights followed by simultaneous
conferral of bhumiswami rights. Every person, in respect of
the land hold by him in the Madhya Bharat region as an
inamdar, at the time of the coming into force of the code,
became a bhumiswami thereof, and acquired all the rights and
became subject to all the liabilities of a bhumiswami under
the Code. The words "in respect of land held by him"
appearing in s.158(1)(b) refer to the status and character
of the tenure holder in relation to the holding on the
appointed day. The accrual of the status of bhumiswami by
such person was automatic and he acquired all the rights and
became subject to all the liabilities conferred or imposed
upon a bhumiswami by or under the Code. As a necessary
corollary, he became subject to the provisions of s.164.
S.164 provides that subject to his personal law, the
interests of a Bhumiswami shall, on his death, pass by
inheritance, survivorship or bequest, as the case may be. On
a combined reading of ss.158(1)(b) and 164, the legal
consequence that ensued was that the incident of
impartibility and the special mode of succession by the rule
of primogeniture which were terms of the grant of inam lands
under the Jagir Manual of the Holkar State, stood
extinguished. After the conferment of bhumiswami rights, the
incidents and character of the tenure became transformed and
the restrictions placed thereon disappeared, and such lands
became capable of being held in joint ownership like any
other coparcenary property. It must logically follow that
the conferral of bhumiswami rights on the holder for the
time being under s.158(1)(b) of the Code in respect of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 13
ancestral inam lands must necessarily enure to the benefit
of all the members of the joint family.
In our judgment, the view expressed by the High Court
that the inam lands and the two houses constructed at Indore
and other properties acquired from out of the income of the
inam exclusively belonged to defendant No. 1 Purshottam Rao,
the holder for the time being at the time when the Code was
brought into force, can hardly be sustained. Since the
decision of the Privy Council in Shiba Prasad Singh v. Rani
Prayag Kumari Debi and ors(1). it must taken as well-settled
that an estate which is impartible by custom cannot be said
to be the separate or exclusive
494
property of the holder of the estate. Where the property is
ancestral and the holder has succeeded to it, it would be
part of the joint estate of the undivided Hindu family. In
the following illuminating passage Sir Dinshaw Mulla
observes:
"The keynote of the whole position, in their Lord
ships view, is to be found in the following passage in
the judgment in the Tipperah(1) case:
"Where a custom is proved to exist, it supersedes
the general law, which however, still regulates all
beyond the custom."
"Impartibility is essentially a creature of
custom. In the case of ordinary joint family property,
the members of the family have (1) the right of
partition; (2) the right to restrain alienations by the
head of the family except for necessity, (3) the right
of maintenance and (4) the right of survivorship. The
first of these rights cannot exist in the case of an
impartible edate, though ancestral from the very nature
of the estate. The second is incompatible with the
custom of impartibility as laid down in Sartaj Kumari’s
case(2) and the first Pittapur case(3) and so also the
third as held in the second Pittapur case(4). To this
extent the general law of the Mitakshara has been
superseded by custom, and the impartible estate though
ancestral is clothed with the incidents of self-
acquired and separate property. But the right of
survivorship is not inconsistent with the custom of
impartibility. This right, therefore, still remains and
this is what was held in Baijanth’s case(6). To this
extent the estate still retains its character of joint
family property, and its devolution is governed by the
general Mitakshara law applicable to such property.
Though the other rights which a coparcener acquired by
birth in joint family property no longer exist, the
birthright of the senior member to take by survivorship
still remains, Nor is this right a mere succession-is
similar to that of a reversioner succeeding on the
death
495
of a Hindu widow to her husband’s estate. It is a right
which is capable of being renounced and surrendered.
Such being their Lordship’s view, it follows that in
order to establish that a family governed by the
Mitakshara in which there is an impartible estate has
ceased to be joint it is necessary to prove an
intention, express or implied, on the part of the
junior members of the family to renounce their right of
succession to the estate."
The incidents of impartible estate laid down in Shiba
Prasad Singh’s case and the law there stated have been
reaffirmed in the subsequent decisions of the Privy Council
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 13
and of this Court. It is not necessary to refer to them as
they have all been dealt with in a recent judgment of this
Court in Nagesh Bisto Desai v. Khando Tirmal Desai(1).
Impartibility is essentially a creature of custom. Here it
is a term of the grant. The junior members of a joint family
in the case of ancient impartible joint family estate take
no right in the property by birth and therefore have no
right of partition having regard to the very nature of the
estate that it is impartible. The only incidence for joint
property which still attaches to the joint family property
is the right of survivorship which, of course, is not
inconsistent with the custom of impartibility. The incident
of impartibility attached to inam lands no longer exists by
reason of s.158(1)(b) of the Code aa they have now become
bhumiswami lands. The right of junior members of the family
for maintenance is governed by custom and not based upon any
joint right or interest in the property as owners. In case
of inams in the Holkar State such right was again a
condition of the grant. In view of the authorities cited in
Nagesh Bisto Desai’s case, supra, it must be held that the
inam lands though impartible were nevertheless joint family
properties of the parties. The impartibility of the tenure
governed by the Jagir Manual of the Holkar State and the
rule of lineal primogeniture governed by the Jagir Manual,
Chapter II, rr.2 and 3 did not per se destroy its nature as
joint family property or render it the separate property of
the last holder so as to destroy the right of survivorship;
the estate retained its character of joint family property
and its devolution was governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture. To establish that a family governed by the
Mitakshara in which there is an impartible estate has ceased
to be joint, it is necessary to prove an intention, express
or implied on the part of the junior members of the family
to renounce their succession to the estate.
496
The learned Additional District Judge during the course of
his judgment has held on consideration of the evidence that
there was no partition in the joint family as alleged by
defendants 1 and 2 and that finding has not been reversed by
the High Court in appeal.
The learned Additional District Judge has referred to
several well-known decisions of the Privy Council dealing
with the incidents of an impartible estate, including that
of Shiba Prasad Singh’s case, supra, but the High Court
surprisingly did not refer to any one of them. He has also
particularly referred to the nature and incidence of a
protected thekedari under s.102 of the C.P. Land Revenue
Act, 1917 and relied upon the decision of the Privy Council
in Thakur Bhagwan Singh v. Darbar Singh’(1) and also to
several decisions of the Nagpur and Madhya Pradesh High
Courts and in particular to Mani Ram v. Ram Dayal(2) and
Smt. Pilanoni Janakram v. Anandsingh Sakharam(3) where a
similar question arose. He further felt that the principles
laid down by the Bombay High Court in Lingappa Rayappa Desai
v. Kadappa Bapurao Desai(4) dealing with the Bombay
Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 holding that watan lands stand
in the same footing as ancestral impartible estate in a
joint Hindu family passing by survivorship from one line to
another according to primogeniture, must govern the case.
The High Court declined to follow the long line of decisions
of the Nagpur and Madhya Pradesh High Courts dealing with
the protected the kedari tenure under s. 109 of the C.P.
Land Revenue Code, 1917 saying that they were "inapplicable"
to the case of jagir and inam properties which at no time
were considered to be joint family properties but
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 13
constituted a ’special kind of grant’ regulated by the terms
of the grant or the rules governing the same. It also
declined to follow the decision of the Bombay High Court in
Lingappa’s case, supra, because it did not "appeal" to the
Court as it distinguished the decision of the Madras High
Court in Sri Pavu Janardhana Krishna Ranga Rao Bahadur v.
The State of Madras "for reasons which did not appear to be
sound". It is difficult to sustain both on principle and
precedent the view of the High Court that inam lands being
impartible in nature, the succession to which was governed
by the rule of lineal primogeniture, the two houses
constructed at Indore and other properties acquired
497
from out of the income of the inam exclusively belonged to
defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao, the holder for the time
being and constituted his separate property.
In the former State of Madhya Pradesh, the existence of
such and impartible tenure was not unknown. The nature and
incidence of a protected thekedari tenure under s.109 of the
C.P. Land Revenue Act, 1977 came up for consideration before
the Privy Council in Bhagwan Singh’s case, supra. The Privy
Council observed that though the tenure of a protected
thekedari was impartible and descended by primogeniture and
was made inalienable, and it was provided that only one
person at a time shall be entitled to succeed to such
status, at the same time:
"The Act recognises that leasehold interests,
though impartible, may nevertheless be joint family
property of the thekedar and his family."
This was in consonance with the view expressed by Sir
Bipin Krishna Bose, Addl. J.C. in Fagwa v. Budhram(1) that
the grant of a protected thekedari tenure to the eldest male
member of a family did not make the property his separate
property. In Narayan Prasad v. Laxman Prasad(2) J. Sen, J.
hold that where protected thekedari rights in respect of a
village were acquired out of joint family funds, the village
would be joint family property and a member of the joint
family would be entitled to a share in the theka and to be
maintained out of it. In Chandanlal v. Pushkarraj(3),
Kaushalendra Rao, J. speaking for the Court observed:
"It has always been the accepted view that the
grant of protected status to a thekedar did not make
the theka the exclusive property of the person on whom
the protected status is conferred."
The learned Judge then referred to the decision of the
Privy Council in Bhagwan Singh’s case and rejected the
contention that the conferral of the protected status on one
of the members destroyed the pre-existing rights of the
other members of the family.
In Sukhanboi & Anr. v. Ramsharan Doma Sao and Ors(4).
Mudholkar, J. tried to draw a distinction between the
present tights and future rights of the members of the
family and held that while the junior members have future or
contingent rights such as
498
a right of survivorship, they have, apart from custom or
relationship, no present rights as, for instance, a right to
restrain alienation or to claim maintenance. The decision of
Mudholkar J. in Sukhambai’s case taking a narrow and
restricted view of the rights of the members of a joint
Hindu family to participate in the present enjoyment and
management of a protected thekedari tenure was however
reversed on appeal by B.P. Sinha, C.J. and Hidayatullah, J.
in Shiv Prasad Sao v. Sukhan Bai (Letters Patent Appeal No.
19 of 1449 decided on December, 30, 1954) observing that if
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 13
there was a family arrangement for the joint enjoyment of
the theka in the past, it would bind not only the protected
thekedar for the time being but the whole family and so long
as the family arrangement is not rescinded by the family
itself, it must continue. The learned Judges considering the
implications of s.109(1)(a) of the Act observed:
"The conferral of protected status does not
disturb the rights of the members inter se though they
may not be recognised by the State. As between members
the rights of any particular member under the
arrangement must continue."
As regards the validity of arrangements made by the co-
sharers in a theka dividing the property between themselves
for beneficial enjoyment of the thekedar, they said:
"From the year 1881 when all existing arrangements
were to continue, down to this day when private
partitions and family arrangements have been recognised
as binding on the family, there is an underline/current
of recognition of joint family status. Most of these
villages, when they were acquired, belonged, to a joint
family and the intention in conferring protection was
not to disturb arrangements but to recognise one member
as a Thekedar and to restrain transfers and impose
impartibility and primogeniture. Even though the Act of
1917 enacted about private partitions and arrangements,
the law was merely declaratory of family custom as is
apparent from a perusal of the various Settlements
Reports."
The learned Judges then added a word of caution:
"Under the C.P. Land Revenue Act, a protected
status could be conferred not only upon Hindus but also
upon Muslims and others. The rules of impartible
499
estates as understood in Hindu law cannot, therefore,
be made applicable and the analogy is apt to be
misleading."
Similar question arose in Mani Ram v. Ram Dayal, supra,
and Smt, Pilanoni Janakram v. Anandsingh Sakharam, supra.
The decision in Mani Ram’s case is of some importance. Here,
T.C. Shrivastava, J. had to consider the impact of s.39(1)
of the M.P. Abolition of Proprietary Rights (Estates Mahals,
Alienated Lands) Act, 1951 which provided that where the
proprietary rights held by a protected thekedar vest in the
State under s. 3, the Deputy Commissioner may reserve to
such proprietor the rights of an occupancy tenant in the
whole or part of the home-farm land and shall determine the
rent thereon. S. 39(2) there of provided that any person
becoming an occupancy tenant under sub-s(1) shall be a
tenant of the State. The contention on behalf of the
protected thekedar who brought the suit was that by virtue
of such settlement he became the full and exclusive tenant
thereof. The learned Judge after referring to the decision
of the Privy Council in Bhagwan Singh’s case, supra, and the
aforesaid decision of the High Court in Shiv Prasad Sao’s
case, supra, reiterated that although s. 109(1)(a) of the
C.P. Land Revenue Act, 1917 provided that protected
thekedari rights would descend by the rule of primogeniture
and the theka was impartible in nature, the rights of the
other members of the joint Hindu family in the theka
continued though they could not obtain a partition of the
lands in the theka or claim to be in possession of any lands
pertaining to the theka. He referred to the observations
made in Shiv Prasad Sao’s case set out above and observed
that it was open to the protected thekedar to come to an
arrangement with his co-sharers to divide the lands attached
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 13
to the theka and such a family arrangement would be binding
on the co-sharers. Repelling the contention based on s. 39
(1) of that Act he held that after the abolition of the
proprietary rights in 1950, the rights of protected
thekedars had completely disappeared and the statutory bar
of impartibility and inalienability removed and therefore
the lands which were joint family lands subject to statutory
restrictions assumed the character of normal joint family
property free from the statutory restrictions. In Smt.
Pilanoni’s case, supra, K.L. Pandey, J. held that although
under cl.(5) of the Sarangarh State Wazib-ul-erz there was
no right of partition given to a thekedar gaontia, but it
permitted joint and divided management of the bhogra lands
attached to the theka
500
among the members of the family and though the State had
reserved to itself under cl.(15) the right to induct a new
thekedar who became entitled to the entire bhogra lands in
the village, the effect of the two provisions was that the
State could not be bound by a partition effected among the
members of the family by way or a family arrangement but it
would be binding on the members or the family, including the
new thekedar who may have succeeded to the status of a
thekedar gaontia. As to the settlement of such bhogra lands
with the thekedar in raiyati rights under s.54(1) of the
M.P. Abolition of Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals,
Alienated Lands) Act, 1951, the Court held that such
settlement must enure to the benefit of the bhogra holders
under a family arrangement since the lands continued to be
impressed with the character of being joint family property.
The point in controversy really stands concluded by the
recent decision of this Court in Nagesh Bisto Desai’s case,
supra. There, the question was whether the plaintiff being
the holder for the time being of the Kundgol Deshgat estate
which was an impartible estate, the succession to which was
governed by the rule of lineal primogeniture, was entitled
to remain in full and exclusive possession and enjoyment of
the watan lands resumed under s. 3(4) of the Bombay Pargana
& Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950 and s. 4 of the
Bombay Merged Territories Miscellaneous Alienations
Abolition Act, 1955 which had been regranted to him as an
occupant thereof under ss. 4 and 7 of the Acts respectively.
It was held that the plaintiff’s contention ran counter to
the scheme of the Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 and
was against settled legal principles, and that the Watans
Act was designed to preserve the pre-existing rights of the
members of the joint Hindu family. The submission based on
the alleged impartibility of watan property and the
applicability of the rule of lineal primogeniture regulating
succession to the estate was rejected on the ground that it
could not prevail as these being nothing more than the
incidents of the watans stood abrogated by s. 3(4) of the
1950 Act and s. 4 of the 1955 Act. It was held that the
effect of the non-obstante clause in s. 3(4) of the 1950 Act
was to bring about a change in the tenure or character of
the holding as watan lands but did not affect the other
legal incidents of the property under the personal law and
if the property belonged to the joint Hindu family, then the
normal rights of the members
501
of the family to ask for partition were not in any way
affected and therefore the re grant of the lands to the
watandar under s. 4(1) of the 1959 Act and s. 7 of the 1955
Act must ensure to the benefit of the entire joint Hindu
family. That precisely is the position here. Although under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 13
the Bombay Pargana & Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950
and the Bombay Merged Territories Miscellaneous Alienations
Abolition Act, 1955 there was at first an abolition of
watans and resumption of watan lands, followed by re-grant
of such lands to the watandar as an occupant under the
Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, that hardly makes a
difference in principle. The only difference is that under
s. 158(1)(b) of the M.P. Land Revenue Code, there was a
simultaneous extinction of the inams resulting in conferral
of bhumiswami rights on every person holding inam lands on
the date on which the Code was brought into force.
The result therefore is that the appeal must succeed
and is allowed. The judgment and decree passed by the High
Court are reversed and those of the learned Additional
District Judge decreeing the plaintiff’s suit for partition
and separate possession of their half share in the
properties described in Schedule ’A’ to the plaint are
restored. The decree shall be drawn in terms of the
compromise arrived at.
There shall be no order as to costs.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
502