Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LAKKIREDDI CHINNA VENKATA REDDI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAKKIREDDI LAKSHMAMA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/03/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1601 1964 SCR (2) 172
CITATOR INFO :
F 1976 SC1715 (13)
RF 1977 SC2230 (17)
ACT:
Hindu Law--Joint family property--Partition--Right of
minor--Severance of joint property--Suit for partition by
minor if can be continued after his death-Separate or self-
acquired property, when impressed with the character of
joint family property.
HEADNOTE:
Butchi Tirupati was a member of a Hindu co-parcenary
consisting of himself, his five brothers and his son Pulla
Reddy. After Butchi Tripati’s death in 1947, Pulla Reddy,
his son and Lakshmama, his widow, filed a suit for partition
and separate possession of their share in the property of
the joint family and a fourth share in certain property
devised under a will executed by VenKata Konda Reddy in
July, 1910. Palia Reddy was then a minor and his mother
acted as his next friend. Pulla Reddy died during the
pendency of the suit and his mother was shown in the record
as his legal representative for the suit. The suit was
contested on the ground that it was highly prejudicial to
the interest of Pulla Reddy to have his share separated from
the joint family estate. It was also denied that Pulla
Reddy and his mother had been driven away from the family
house.
The trial court hold, that partition of the joint family
property was for the benefit of the minor Pulla Reddy and
the High Court affirmed that view. Two questions raised
before the Supreme Court.were whether the suit for partition
of joint
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family property could, after the death of the minor, Pulla
Reddy, be continued by his mother and whether the property
devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy in favour of
defendants 1, 2, 5 and Butchi Trirupati had, because of
blending with their joint family estate, been impressed with
the character of joint family property.
Held, that the suit for partition of the joint family
property could, after the death of the minor, be continued
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by his mother. Action by the minor for a decree for
partition and separate possession of his share in the family
property was not founded on a cause of action personal to
him. The right claimed was in property and devolved on his
death even during minority upon his legal representative.
The effect of the decision of the Court granting a decree
for partition in a suit instituted by a minor was not to
create a new right which the minor did not possess but
merely to recognise the right which accrued to him when the
action was commenced. It is the institution of the suit,
subject to the decision of the Court and not the decree of
the Court that brings about the severance. A suit filed on
behalf of a Hindu minor for partition of a joint family
property does not, on the death of the minor during the
pendency of the suit abate and may be continued by his legal
representative and decree obtained therein if the Court
holds that the /institution of the suit was for the benefit
of the minor.
Held, also, that there was no evidence on the record to show
that by any conscious act or exercise of volition, Butchi
Tirupati surrendered his interest in the property devised in
his favour under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy so as to
blend it with the joint family property. Lakshmama, mother
of the minor, was entitled to a fourth share in the
property.
Property separate or self-acquired of a member of a joint
Hindu family may be impressed with the character of joint
family property if it is voluntarily thrown by the owner
into the common stock with the intention of abandoning his
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separate claim therein. To establish such abandonment,a
clear intention to waive separate right must be established.
From the mere fact that other members of the family were
allowed to use the property jointly with himself or that the
income of the separate property was utilised out of
generosity to support persons whom the holder was not bound
to support or from the failure to maintain separate
accounts, abandonment cannot be inferred for an act of
generosity or kindness will not ordinarily be regarded as an
admission of a legal obligation.
Kakumanu Peda Subbayyas v. Kakumanu Akkamma, [1959] S. C. R.
1249, relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 251 of 1961.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated October 21, 1955
of the former Andhra High Court in A. S. No. 64 of 1951.
A. Ranganandham Chetty, A. Veda Valli and
A. V. Rangam, for the appellants.
B. K. B. Naidu, for the respondent.
1963. March 4. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHAH J.-This appeal with certificate granted by the High
Court of Andhra Pradesh is against the decree in appeal No.
64 of 1951 modifying the decree in Suit No. 111 of 1949 of
the file of the Subordinate judge, Guddapah.
The following genealogy- explains the relationship between
the parties to the appeal :
175
Lakkireddi Tirupati Reddy
|
--------------------------------------------
| | |
Venkata Konda Pedda Tirupelu Chinna Tirupelu
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Reddy Reddy Reddy
|
|----------------------------|
| | |
Bala Konda Pedda Butchi Chinna Butchi
Reddy Reddy Reddy
|
|
----------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | |
Pedda Chinna Bala Butchi Konda Raju Venkatta
Venkata Venkata Venkata =Lakshmama Konda Konda
(D-1) (d-2) (D-3) (2nd pltff) (D-3) (D-4)
=Venkattarama |
(D-9) |
| |
|-----------|----------| |---------------------------|
Venkatta Ram Ram Pulla Reddy pullamma
Rami- Chandra Krishna (1st pltff)
reddy Reddy Reddy
(D-6) (D-7) (D-8)
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Butchi Tirupati was one of the six sons of Bala Konda. Pulla
Reddi and Lakshmama-son and widow respectively of Butchi
Tirupati-instituted Suit No. 111 of 1949 in the Court of
the Subordinate judge, Cuddapah for partition and separate
possession of their share in the property of the joint
family to which they belonged and a fourth share in certain
property devised under the will executed by Venkata Konda
Reddy, on July 1, 1910. Pulla Reddy was at the date of the
suit a minor and his mother Lakshmama acted as his next
friend. Pulla Reddy died during the pendency of the suit
and Lakshmama was shown in the record as his legal
representative for the suit. The Trial Court held that the
property devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy in
favour of Pedda Venkata (D-1), Chinna Venkata (D-2), Bala
Venkata (D-5) and Butchi Tirupati had on account of blending
with the joint family estate been impressed with the
character of joint family property, and on that account
Lakshmama was entitled to a fifth share in all the property
in suit. The High Court in appeal awarded to Lakshmama a
fourth share in the property devised under the will of
Venkata Konda Reddy and confirmed the decree of the Trial
Court awarding a fifth share in the property of the joint
family. Defendant-2 Chinna Venkata, Defendant-3 Raju Konda
and Defendant-4 -Venkata Konda have appealed to this Court,
with certificate under Art. 133 (1)
(a) granted by the High Court.
Two questions survive in this appeal
(1) Whether Suit No. 111 of 1949 for partition of joint
family property could, after the death of the minor Pulla
Reddy, be continued by his mother Lakshmama. That question
necessitates an investigation whether the suit was
instituted for the benefit of the minor Pulla Reddy, because
it is settled law that the Court will not
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grant a decree for partition of joint family property in a
suit instituted by a Hindu minor through his next friend,
unless the Court is satisfied that the partition is likely
to be for the benefit of the minor by advancing or
protecting his interest ; and
(2) Whether the property devised under the will of Venkata
Konda Reddy in favour of defendants 1, 2, 5 and Butchi
Tirupati had, because of blending with their joint family
estate, been impressed with the character of joint family
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property.
We will set out such facts as have a bearing on these
questions.
It is common ground that at the date of his death in 1947
Butchi Tirupati was a member of a Hindu coparcenary
consisting of himself, his five brothers and Pulla Reddy.
After the death of Butchi Tirupati, defendants 1, 2, 3 and 4
purported to partition the estate in their possession, and
executed a deed of partition (Ext. A-3) on August 12, 1948,
in which the minor Pulla Reddy was represented by the fourth
defendant. By this deed certain properties were allotted to
the share of the first defendant Pedda Venkata, but the deed
was silent about the dissolution of the joint family qua
other members of the family, and about allotment of shares
to those members. Thereafter Lakshmama instituted the suit
out of which this appeal has arisen on behalf of herself and
as next friend of her minor son, for a decree for partition
of their share in the estate of the joint family and the
property devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy,
alleging that defendants 2, 3 and 4 declined to give to the
minor Pulla Reddy his share in the estate, and drove her and
the minor away from the family house, and that with a view
to prejudice the right of the minor in the property they had
brought into existence a deed of partition
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which did not disclose the entire estate of the joint
family. The first defendant substantially admitted the
claim of the plaintiffs to a share in the properties in
suit. Defendants, 2, 3 and 4 denied that the two plaintiffs
were driven away from the joint family house as alleged by
Lakshmama, and submitted that it would be "highly
prejudicial" to the interests of Pulla Reddy to have his
share separated from the joint family estate. They
contended that the property of Venkata Konda Reddy had
devolved by survivorship on their father Bala Konda and
after the death of Bala Konda, his sons (defendants 1 to 5
and Butchi Tirupati) took it by survivorship, that the will
executed by Venkata Konda Reddy was not valid because it
attempted to devise property which belonged to the joint
family, that in any event the property devised under that
will had been blended with the joint family estate and had
been treated as of the joint family and on that footing were
included in the partition deed dated August 12, 1948, and
that certain lands-items Nos. 6, 7 and 8 in the schedule
annexed to the plaint-had been given to Chinnamma sister of
the contesting defendants for her maintenance and were not
liable to be partitioned.
The Trial Court held that partition of the property of the
joint family was for the benefit of the minor Pulla Reddy
and the High Court affirmed that view.
The contentions raised in the written statement filed by
defendants 2, 3 and 4 clearly disclose that the continuance
of the joint family status would be prejudicial to the
interest of the minor Pulla Reddy. They denied that certain
items of property which were found by the Court to be joint
family property were of that character : they sought to set
up title of their sister Chinnamma to certain other
property, and pleaded that the property devised under the
will of Venkata Konda Reddy had ceased to be the separate
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property of the devisees. The evidence on the record
establishes that the contesting defendants made it difficult
for Pulla Reddy and his mother Lakshmama to live in the
joint family house. The deed dated August 12, 1948 which
included. some and not all the joint family property for the
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purpose of partition, appeared also to be an attempt to
create evidence that the property set out in the deed was
the only estate of the joint family. It is true that
normally the family estate is better managed in union than
in division, nevertheless the interest of the minor is the
prime consideration in adjudging whether the estate should
be divided at the instance of a minor suitor. If the
conduct of the adult coparceners, or the claim made by them
is prejudicial to the interest of the, minor the Court will
readily presume that it is for his benefit to divide the
estate. The conclusion recorded by the Trial Court and the
High Court that partition would be for the benefit of the
minor was amply supported by evidence. In the circumstances
it is unnecessary to express any opinion on the question
whether Lakshmama was entitled in her own right to file a
suit for a share in the property of the joint family, and
for the share of her husband Butchi Tirupati in the estate
devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy and prosecute
it after the death of her son Pulla Reddy.
Action by a minor for a decree for partition and separate
possession of his share in the family property is not
founded on a cause of action personal to him. The right
claimed is in property,, and devolves on his death even
during minority upon his legal representative. The’ Court,
it is true, will direct. partition only if partition is in
the interest of the minor but that limitation arises not
because of any peculiarity in the estate of the minor but is
imposed for the protection of his interest. The effect of
the decision of the Court granting a: decree for partition,
in a suit instituted by a minor is not to create a new
180
right which the minor did not possess, but merely to
recognize the right which accrued to him when the action was
commenced. It is the institution of the suit, subject to
the decision of the Court, and not the decree of the Court
that brings about the severance. In Kakumanu Peda Subbayyas
v. Kakumanu Akkamma (1), it was held by this Court that a
suit filed on behalf of a Hindu minor for partition of,’
joint family properties does not on the death of the minor
during the pendency of the suit abate, and may be continued
by his legal representative and decree obtained therein if
the Court holds that the institution of the suit was for the
benefit of the minor. Death of the minor pulla Reddy during
the pendency of the suit had not, therefore, on the view
ultimately taken by the Court the effect of terminating the
suit which was instituted for partition of the property in
suit.
We may now consider the second question, about the quantum
of interest awardable to’ Lakshmama in the property devised
under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy. Lakkireddi Tirupati
had three sons, Venkata Konda Reddy, Pedda Tirupelu Reddy
and Chinna Tirupelu Reddy. Venkata Konda Reddy executed a
will on July 1, 1910 devising in favour of the four sons of
his nephew Bala Konda, named, Pedda Venkata, Chinna Venkata,
Bala Venkata and Butchi Tirupati (who were born before the
date of the will), all his property which he claimed to have
received on partition between him and his brothers. Bala
Konda instituted on July 2, 1910 suit No. 466 of 1910 in the
Court of the District Munsif, Proddatur for division of
properties which he claimed were jointly enjoyed by him and
his two uncles Venkata Konda Reddy and Chinna Tirupelu
Reddy. Under a decree dated June 26, 1911 passed in the
suit with the consent of parties the property in suit was
divided into five shares one of which was allotted to Bala
Konda and the rest was
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(1) [1959] S. C. R, 1249.
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taken in two equal moieties by his two uncles. Venkata
Konda Reddy died in 1915 and the property which fell to his
share by the compromise decree devolved by virtue of the
disposition under his will on the four sons of Bala Konda.
It is contended by defendants 2, 3 and 4 that the property
devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy became by
subsequent blending, property of the joint family, and the
plaintiffs were not entitled to claim a share larger than
the share they had in the joint family property. It may be
mentioned that Defendants 3 and 4 were born after the date
of Venkata Konda’s will, and they were not devices under
that will.
Law relating to blending of separate property with joint
family property is well settled. Property separate or self-
acquired of a member of a joint Hindu family may be
impressed with the character of joint family property if it
is voluntarily thrown by the owner into the common stock
with the intention of abandoning his separate claim therein
but to establish such abandonment a clear intention to waive
separate rights must be established. From the mere fact
that other members of the family were allowed to use the
property jointly with himself, or that the income of the
separate property was utilised out of generosity to support
persons whom the holder was not bound to support, or from
the failure to maintain separate accounts, abandonment
cannot be inferred, for an act of generosity or kindness
will not ordinarily be regarded as an admission of a legal
obligation. It is true that Butchi Tirupati who was one of
the devisees under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy was a
member of the joint family consisting of himself, his five
brothers and his father Bala Konda. It is also true that
there is no clear evidence as to how the property was dealt
with, nor, as to the appropriation of the income thereof,
But there is no evidence on the record to show that by any
conscious art or exercise of volition Butchi Tirupati
surrendered
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his interest in the property devised in his favour under the
will of Venkata Konda Reddy so as to blend it with the joint
family property. In the absence of any such evidence, the
High Court was, in our judgment, right in holding that
Lakshmama was entitled to a fourth share in the property
devised under the will of Venkata Konda Reddy.
The. appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.