Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SITABAI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM CHANDRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/08/1969
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMI, V.
SHAH, J.C. (CJ)
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 343 1970 SCR (2) 1
1969 SCC (2) 544
CITATOR INFO :
R 1985 SC 716 (7)
R 1988 SC 845 (7)
ACT:
Hindu Law-Joint family properties in the hands of sole
surviving coparcener-If properties lose their character of
joint family property.
Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act (78 of 1956) ss. 11 to
14-Adoption by widow-Deceased husband, if deemed to be
father.
Madhya Bharat Land Revenue and Tenancy Act (M.B. Act 66 of
1950), s. 86-Tenancy right of ordinary tenant, if heritable-
Heritability governed by personal law.
HEADNOTE:
Two brothers were in possession of ancestral properties
consisting of a house and tenancy rights of an ordinary
tenant in agricultural lands. The eider brother died in 1930
leaving a widow, the first appellant. The first appellant
continued to live with the younger brother and had an
illegitimate son by him, the respondent. In March 1958, she
adopted the second appellant, and some time later, the
surviving brother died. After his putative father died the
respondent took possession of all the joint family
properties. The two appellants thereupon filed a suit for
ejectment. The trial court decreed the suit. The first
appellate court found that a will executed by the
respondents father (the younger brother) was valid in so far
as his half share in the house was concerned and therefore
modified the decree by granting a half-share of the house to
the respondent. In second appeal, the High Court held that
the appellants were: not entitled to any relief and that
there suit should be dismissed, on the grounds that: (1) the
joint family properties ceased to have that character in the
hands of the surviving brother when he became the sole
surviving coparcener and (2) the second appellant did not
become, on his adoption, a coparcener with his uncle in the
joint family properties.
In appeal to this Court.
HELD: (1) The joint family properties continued to
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retain their character in the hands of the surviving
brother, as the widow (the first appellant) of the eider
brother was still alive and continued to enjoy the right of
maintenance out of the joint family properties. [5 B]
Gowli Buddanna v.C.I.T. Mysore, 60 I.T.R. 29.3 (S.C.),
followed.
A. G. of Ceylon v.A.R. Arunachalam Chettiar [1957]
A.C. 540, applied.
(2) The scheme of ss. 11 and 12 of the Hindu Adoptions
and Maintenance Act, 1956, is that in the case of adoption
by a widow the adopted child becomes absorbed in the
adoptive family to which the widow belonged. Though s. 14
of the Act does not expressly state that the child adopted
by a widow becomes the adopted son of her deceased husband,
it is a necessary implication of ss. 12 and 14 of the Act.
That is why, s. 14(4) provides that when a widow adopts a
child and subsequently marries, that husband becomes the
step-father of the adopted child. There-
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fore, in the present case, when the the second appellant
was adopted by the first appellant he became the adopted son
of the first appellant and her deceased husband, namely, the
elder brother, and’ hence became a coparcener with the
surviving brother in the joint family properties; and,
’after the death of the surviving brother the second
appellant became the sole surviving coparcener entitled to
the possession of all the joint family properties except
those bequeathed under the will, that is, except the half
share of the house. [7 D--G; A--B]
Arukushi Narayan v. Janabai Sama Sawat, 67 B.L.R. 864,
approved.
(3) Section 86 of the Madhya Bharat Land Revenue and
Tenancy Act, 1950 ’applies to the rights of an ordinary
tenant in agricultural lands which were therefore heritable.
In the absence of any special statutory provision, the
heritability is governed by the personal law of the tenants.
Therefore, the second appellant was entitled to the tenancy
rights of his uncle on his death. [8 G--H; 9 C--D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 856 of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree
dated September 7, 1965 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court,
Indore Bench in Second Appeal No. 275 of 1962.
M.C. Chagla and A. K. Nag, for the appellants.
K. A. Chitale and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ramaswami, J. This appeal is brought by special leave
from the judgment of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dated
September 7, 1965 in Second Appeal No. 275 of 1962.
Dulichand and Bhagirath were brothers and the properties
concerned are, according to the written statement of the
defendant himself, ancestral. Plaintiff Sitabai is the
widow of Bhagirath, who predeceased Dulichand, his eider
brother sometime in 1930. It is the admitted case of both
the parties that after Bhagirath died, the plaintiff Sitabai
was living with Dulichand as a result of which connection an
illegitimate child defendant Ramchandra was born in 1935.
Dulichand died on March 13, 1958. Sometime before his death
Sitabai adopted plaintiff no. 2 Suresh Chandra and an
adoption deed was executed on March 4, 1958. After the
death of Dulichand Ramchandra took possession of the joint
family properties. The plaintiff therefore brought the
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present suit for ejectment of the defendant Ramchandra, the
illegitimate son of Dulichand from the disputed properties.
The suit was contested by the defendant on the ground that
Dulichand had in his lifetime surrendered the lands to the
Jagirdar who made resettlement of the same with the
defendant. As regards the house the contention of the
defendant was that Dulichand had executed a will before his
death making a bequest of his house entirely to him. The
trial court decided all the issues in favour of the
plaintiff and
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granted the plaintiffs a decree for possession with regard
to the land and the house. The defendant took the matter
in appeal to the District Judge who modified the decree.
The District Judge took the view that the will executed by
Dulichand was valid so far as half of his share in the house
was concerned and, therefore, defendant was entitled to
claim half the share of the house in dispute. The defendant
preferred a second appeal before the Madhya Pradesh High
Court which reversed the decree of the lower courts and
held that the plaintiff was not entitled to any relief and
the suit should be dismissed in its entirety. The High
Court held that plaintiff no. 2 became the son of plaintiff
no. 1 in 1958 from the date of adoption and did not obtain
any coparcenary interest in the joint family properties.
The High Court thought that on the date of adoption
Dulichand was the sole coparcener and there was nobody
else to take a share of his property and plaintiff no. 2 had
no concern with the coparcenary property in the hands of
Dulichand.
The first question to be considered in this appeal is
whether the High Court was right in holding that plaintiff
no. 2 Suresh Chandra at the time of his adoption by
plaintiff no. 1 did not become a coparcener of Dulichand in
the joint family properties. It is the admitted case of
both the parties that the properties consisted of
agricultural land and a house jointly held by Bhagirath and
Dulichand. After the death of Bhagirath, Dulichand became
the sole surviving coparcener of the joint family. At the
time when plaintiff no. 2 Suresh Chandra was adopted the
joint family still continued to exist and the disputed
properties retained their character of coparcenary
properties. It has been pointed out in Gowli Buddanna v.
Commissioner of Income-tax, Mysore(1) that under the Hindu
system of law a joint family may consist of a single male
member and widows of deceased male members and that the
property of a joint family did not cease to belong to a
joint family merely because the family is represented by a
single coparcener who possesses rights which an absolute
owner of property may possess. In that case, one Buddappa,
his wife, his two unmarried daughters and his unmarried son,
Buddanna, were members of a Hindu undivided family.
Buddappa died and after his death the question arose whether
the income of the properties held by Buddanna as the sole
surviving coparcener was assessable as the individual income
of Buddanna or as the income of the Hindu Undivided Family.
It was held by this Court that since the property which came
into the hands of Buddanna as the sole surviving coparcener
was originally joint family property, it did not cease to
belong to the joint family and income from it was assessable
in the hands of Buddanna as income of the Hindu Undivided
Family. As a pointed out by the Judicial Committee in
Attorney General of Ceylon v.A.R. Arunachalam Chettiar(2) it
is only by analysing
(1) 60 I.T.R. 293 (S.C.). (2) [1957] A.C.
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540.
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the nature of the rights of the members of the undivided
family, both those in being and those yet to be born, that
it can be determined whether the family property can
properly be described as ’joint property’ of the undivided
family. In that case one Arunachalam Chettiar and his son
constituted a joint family governed by the Mitakshara school
of Hindu law. The father and son were domiciled in India
and had trading and other interests in India, Ceylon and Far
Eastern countries. The undivided son died in 1934 and
Arunachalam became the sole surviving coparcener in the
Hindu undivided family to which a number of female members
belonged. Arunachalam died in 1938, shortly after the
Estate Ordinance no. 1 of 1938 came into operation in
Ceylon. By s. 73 of the Ordinance it was provided that
property passing on the death of a member of the Hindu
undivided family was exempt from payment of estate duty. On
a claim to estate duty in respect of Arunachalam’s estate in
Ceylon, the Judicial Committee held that Arunachalam was at
his death a member of the Hindu undivided family, the same
undivided family of which his son, when alive, was a member
and of which the continuity was preserved after
Arunachalam’s death by adoption made by the widows of the
family and since the undivided family continued to persist,
the property in the hands of Arunachalam as a single
coparcener was the property of the Hindu undivided family.
The Judicial Committee observed at p. 543 of the report.
" ...... though it may be correct to
speak of him as the ’owner’, yet it is still
correct to describe that which he owns as the
joint family property. For his ownership is
such that upon the adoption of a son it
assumes a different quality; it is such, too,
that female members of the family (whose
members may increase) have a right to
maintenance out of it and in some
circumstances to a charge for maintenance upon
it. And these are incidents which arise,
notwithstanding his so-called ownership, just
because the property has been and has not
ceased to be joint family property. Once
again their Lordships quote from the judgment
of Gratiaen, J. To my mind it would make a
mockery of the undivided family system if this
temporary reduction of the coparcenary unit
to a single individual were to convert what
was previously joint property belonging to an
undivided family into the separate property
of the surviving coparcener. To this it may be
added that it would not appear reasonable to
impart to the legislature the intention to
discriminate, so long as the family itself
subsists, between property in the hands of a
single coparcener and that in the hands of two
or more coparceners."
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The basis of the decision was that the property which was
the joint family property of the Hindu undivided family did
not cease to be so because of the "temporary reduction of
the coparcenary unit to a single individual". The character
of the property, viz. that it was the joint property of a
Hindu undivided family, remained the same. Applying the
principle to the present case, after the death of Bhagirath
the joint family property continued to retain its character
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in the hands of Dulichand as the widow of Bhagirath was
still alive and continued to enjoy the right of maintenance
out of the joint family properties.
The question next arises whether Suresh Chandra,
plaintiff no. 2, when he was adopted by Bhagirath’s widow
became a coparcener of Dulichand in the Hindu joint family
properties. The High Court has taken the view that Suresh
Chandra became the son of plaintiff no. 1 with effect from
1958 and plaintiff no. 2 would not become the adopted son of
Bhagirath in view of the provisions of the Hindu Adoptions
and Maintenance Act, 1956 (Act 78 of 1956). It was argued
on behalf of the appellant that the High Court was in
error in holding that the necessary consequence of a widow
adopting a son under the provisions of Act 78 of 1956 was
that the adopted would be the adopted son of the widow and
not of her deceased husband. In our view the argument put
forward on behalf of the appellant is well-founded and must
be accepted as correct. Section 5(1) of Act 78 of 1956
states:
"(1) No. adoption shall be made after the
commencement of this Act by or to a Hindu
except in accordance with the provisions
contained in this chapter ...... "
Section 6 deals with the requisites of a
valid adoption and provides:
"No adoption shall be valid unless--
(i) the person adopting has the capacity,
and also the right, to take in adoption.
(ii) the person giving in adoption has the
capacity to do so;
(iii) the person adopted is capable of
being taken in adoption; and
(iv) the adoption is made in compliance
with the other conditions mentioned in this
Chapter."
Sections 7 and 8 relate to the capacity of a male Hindu and
a female Hindu to take in adoption Under s. 7 any male Hindu
who is of sound mind and is not a minor has the capacity to
take a son or a daughter in adoption. If he is married,
requires the consent of his wife in connection with the
adoption. A person
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having more than one wife is required to have the consent of
all his wives. Under s. 8 any female Hindu, who is of sound
mind and not a minor is stated to have capacity to take a
son or a daughter in adoption. The language of this
section shows that all females except a wife have capacity
to adopt a son or a daughter Thus,, an unmarried female or a
divorcee or a widow has the legal capacity to take a son or
a daughter in adoption. Section 11 relates to "other
conditions for a valid adoption".
Clause (vi) of s. 11 states:
"(vi) the child to be adopted must be
actually given and taken in adoption by the
parents or guardian concerned or under their
authority with intent to transfer the child
from the family of its birth to the family of
its adoption."
Section 12 enacts:
"An adopted child shall be deemed to be
the child of his or her adoptive father or
mother for all purposes with effect from the
date of the adoption and from such date all
the ties of the child in the family of his or
her birth shall be deemed to be severed and
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replaced by those created by the adoption in
the adoptive family; Provided that--
(a)
(b)
(c) the adopted child shall not divest any
person of any estate which vested in him or
her before the adoption."
Section 14 provides:
"( 1 ) Where a Hindu who has a wife
living adopts a child, she shall be deemed to
be the adoptive mother.
(2) Where an adoption has been made
with the consent of more than one wife’, the
senior-most in marriage among them shall be
deemed to be the adoptive mother and the
others to be step-mothers.
(3) Where a widower or a bachelor
adopts a child any wife whom he subsequently
marries shall be deemed to be the step-mother
of the adopted child.
(4) Where a widow or an unmarried
woman adopts a child, any husband whom she
marries subsequently shall be deemed to be the
step-father of the
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adopted child."
It is clear on a reading of the main part of s. 12 and
sub-s. (vi) of s. 11 that the effect of adoption under the
Act is that it brings about severance of all ties of the
child given in adoption in the family of his or her birth.
The child altogether ceases to have any ties with the family
of his birth. Correspondingly, these very ties are
automatically replaced by those created by the adoption in
the adoptive family. The legal effect of giving the child
in adoption must therefore be to transfer the child from the
family of its birth to the family of its adoption. The
result is, as mentioned in s. 14(1) namely where a wife is
living, adoption by the husband results in the adoption of
the child by both these spouses; the child is not only the
child of the adoptive father but also of the adoptive
mother. In case of there lying two wives, the child becomes
the adoptive child of the senior-most wife in marriage,
the junior wife becoming the step-mother of the adopted
child. Even when a widower or a bachelor adopts a child, and
he gets married subsequent to the adoption, his wife becomes
the step-mother of the adopted child. When a widow or an
unmarried woman adopts a child, any husband she marries
subsequent to adoption becomes the step-father of the
adopted child. The scheme of ss. 11 and 12, therefore, is
that in the case of adoption by a widow’ the adopted child
becomes absorbed in the adoptive family to which the widow
belonged. In other words the child adopted is tied with the
relationship of sonship with the deceased husband of the
widow. The other collateral relations of the husband would
be connected with the child through that deceased husband
of the widow. For instance, the husband’s brother would
necessarily be the uncle of the adopted child. The
daughter of the adoptive mother (and father) would
necessarily be the sister of the adopted son, and in this
way, the adopted son would become a member of the widow’s
family, with the ties of relationship with the deceased
husband of the widow as his adoptive father. It is true
that s. 14 of the Act does not expressly state that the
child adopted by the widow becomes the adopted son of the
husband of the widow. But it is a necessary implication of
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ss. 12 and 14 of the Act that a son adopted by the widow
becomes a son not only of the widow but also of the
deceased husband. It is for this reason that we find in
sub-s. (4) of s. 14 a provision that where a widow adopts a
child and subsequently marries a husband, the husband
becomes the "step-father" of the adopted child. The true
effect and interpretation of ss. 11 and 12 of Act No. 78 of
1956 therefore is that when either of the spouses adopts a
child, all the ties of the child in the family of his or her
birth become completely severed and these are all replaced
by those created by the adoption in the adoptive family. In
other words the result of adoption by either spouse is that
the
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adoptive child becomes the child of both the spouses. This
view is borne out by the decision of the Bombay High
Court in Arukushi Narayan v. Janabai Sama Sawat(1). It
follows that in the present case plaintiff no. 2 Suresh
Chandra, when he was adopted by Bhagirath’s widow, became
the adopted son of both the widow and her deceased husband
Bhagirath and, therefore, became a coparcener with
Dulichand in the joint family properties. After the death of
Dulichand, plaintiff no. 2 became the sole surviving
coparcener and was entitled to the possession of all joint
family properties. The Additional District Judge was,
therefore, right in granting a decree in favour of the
plaintiff no. 2 declaring his title to the agricultural
lands in the village Palasia and half share of the house
situated in the village.
It is contended on behalf of the respondent that the
rights of the Inamdar’s tenants were not heritable under
the Madhya Bharat Land Revenue and Tenancy Act, 1950 (Act
no. 66 of 1950) and therefore the plaintiffs could not claim
to become the Inamdar’s tenants after the death of Dulichand
in the absence of a contract between the Inamdar and
themselves. Reference was made to ss. 63 to 88 dealing with
the rights of pakka tenants and it was argued that there was
no provision in the Act dealing with the rights of an
ordinary tenant. Section 87 states:
"An ordinary tenant is entitled to hold
the land let to him in accordance with such
terms as may be agreed upon with the person
from whom he holds, provided that they are
not inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act."
Section 89 deals with the rights of sub-
tenants and reads:
"( 1 ) A sub-tenant is entitled to hold the
land let to him in accordance with such terms
as may be agreed upon with the person from
whom he holds, subject to his compliance with
the general conditions of tenancy as laid down
in section 55, provided that he shall, in no
circumstances, lease out the land to any
person."
It is not possible to accept the argument advanced on behalf
of the respondent that under the scheme of Act 66 of 1950
the rights of ordinary tenant are not heritable. It is true
that there are special provisions with regard to
heritability as regards pakka tenant. But in the absence of
any special statutory provision, the heritability of
ordinary tenancies must be governed by the personal law of
the tenants concerned. Section 86 of the Act contains
provisions with regard to mutation of names. Sub-section
(1) of s. 8 6 states:
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(1) 67 B.L.R. 864
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"When a holder of land, other than an
assignee of proprietary rights, loses his
rights, in any land in a village by death or
by surrender of abandonment of the land or by
transfer of his rights to any other person, or
by dispossession or otherwise, the patwari of
the village in which the land is situated shah
forthwith report the fact to the Tehsildar
intimating the name of the new holder and the
grounds on which the latter claims to succeed
to the title of the former holder. Any
person claiming to succeed to the title of the
former holder may also apply to the Tehsildar
for the mutation of his name within a period
of two years from the date the last holder
loses his rights."
The section applies to all classes of tenants and
contemplates heritability and transferability of the rights
of a tenant or a subtenant. We accordingly reject the
argument of the respondent that the rights of Dulichand
were not heritable.
It is also urged on behalf of the respondent that the
jurisdiction of the Civil Court was barred by the provisions
of the Madhya Bharat Land Revenue Administration and
Ryotwari Land Revenue and Tenancy Act, 1950 (Act no. 66 of
1950). This issue was decided against the respondent in the
trial court and also in the first appellate court. The
decision of the lower courts on this point was not
challenged in the High Court and it is not permissible for
the respondent to raise this question at this stage.
For the reasons already given we hold that the judgment
and decree of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh dated
September 7, 1965 in Second Appeal no. 275 of 1962 should be
set aside and the judgment and decree of the Additional
District Judge, indore dated April 21, 1962 in First Appeal
No. 26 of 1961 should be restored. This appeal is
accordingly allowed with costs.
V.P.S. Appeal allowed.
J., 1 Sup CI/70---2
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