Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3660 of 2002
PETITIONER:
SRILEKHA GHOSH (ROY) & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PARTHA SARATHI GHOSH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/07/2002
BENCH:
D.P.MOHAPATRA, SHIVARAJ V.PATIL.
JUDGMENT:
D.P.MOHAPATRA,J.
Leave granted.
One Sailen Ghosh was the original owner of the suit
property. He died on 23rd June, 1942 leaving behind his
widow Smt. Mira Ghosh, son Partha Sarathi Ghosh-who is
respondent herein and two daughters namely Smt.
Srilekha Ghosh (Roy) and Smt. Sulekha Ghosh (Mitra) who
are the appellants herein. According to the law of
succession prevailing then the respondent and his mother
became joint owners of the suit property subject to the
provision in Section 3(3) of the Hindu Woman’s Right to
Property Act, 1937. After coming into force of the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 the widow’s interest became absolute
and thus the respondent and his mother became co-
sharers of the suit property each having a moity share.
The widow by a registered deed of gift dated 23.8.1968
gifted her share to the appellants. After acquiring share
in the suit property through their mother the appellants
filed a suit Title Suit No.29/70 against the respondent
seeking a decree of partition. The suit was decreed in the
preliminary form on 28.2.1972 declaring 8 annas share of
property of the defendant and 4 annas of each of the
plaintiffs. In the preliminary decree liberty was given to
the defendant to pre-empt the share of the plaintiff No.1
who was married. Subsequently plaintiff no.2 also got
married on 12 June, 1976.
Before her marriage the plaintiff no.2 had filed an
application under Section 4 of the Partition Act, 1893 (for
short ’the Act’) Misc. Case No.21 of 1972 praying for pre-
emption of the share of plaintiff no.1. During pendency of
the suit plaintiff no.2 got married. Thereafter the
defendant filed an application before the trial court for an
order to purchase the share of plaintiff no.2. The prayer of
the defendant was rejected by the trial court vide order
dated 8.7.1978. However, Misc. Case No.21/72 was
disposed of by the trial court on 12th January, 1980 with a
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finding that both plaintiff no.2 and the defendant will have
the right to buy the share of plaintiff no.1. Against the
said order the defendant preferred an appeal before the
High Court which was decided by the order dated
23.4.1987. The appeal was allowed and the order passed
by the trial court was set aside holding that the defendant
alone was entitled to purchase the share of plaintiff no.1 as
after marriage the plaintiff no.2 lost the status of a
member of the undivided family. It is not in dispute that
the order was not challenged before any higher forum.
After the aforementioned decision of the High Court
the defendant filed an application under Section 4 of the
Partition Act for purchasing 1/4th share of plaintiff no.2
under the changed circumstances. The trial court
rejected the application mainly on the ground that an
application previously filed by the defendant under Section
4 of the Act had been rejected by the trial court and the
order having not been challenged had attained finality.
The defendant challenged the order in revision before the
High Court in C.O.No.3529 of 1992, which was decided by
the High Court by the order dated 19.4.1999. The High
Court allowed the Revision Petition, set aside the order of
the trial judge and allowed the application for pre-emption
filed by the defendant for purchasing the share of plaintiff
no.2. The trial court was directed to pass all further
necessary orders and directions including fixing of
valuation in terms of Section 4 of the Act. The said order
is under challenge in this appeal filed by the plaintiffs.
The core question that arises for consideration in this
appeal is whether the defendant is entitled to purchase the
share of his sister plaintiff no.2 under Section 4 of the Act.
The provision is quoted hereunder:
"4. Partition suit by transferee of share
in dwelling-house (1) Where a share of
a dwelling-house belonging to an
undivided family has been transferred
to a person who is not a member of
such family, and such transferee sues
for partition, the Court shall, if any
member of the family being a
shareholder shall undertake to buy the
share of such transferee, make a
valuation of such share in such
manner as it thinks fit, and direct the
sale of such share to such shareholder
and may give all necessary and proper
directions in that behalf.
(2) If in any case described in sub-
Section (1) two or more members of the
family being such shareholders
severally undertake to buy such share,
the Court shall follow the procedure
prescribed by sub-section (2) of the last
foregoing section."
On a plain reading of the Section it is clear that there
are certain conditions for its application,such as
(1) the dwelling house must belong to
undivided family;
(2) the transfer must be made to a stranger;
(3) transferee has filed the suit for partition
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and
(4) shareholder claims and undertakes to buy
the share of the stranger.
The condition for application of the statutory
provision is that a dwelling house belonging to an
undivided family must have been transferred to a person
who is not a member of such family and such transferee
sues for partition. If this pre-condition is satisfied then if
any member of the family being a shareholder undertakes
to buy the share of such transferee the Court is to make a
valuation of such share in such manner as it thinks fit and
direct the sale of such share to such share-holder.
Coming to the case in hand it appears from the
discussions in the impugned order that the High Court has
proceeded on the assumption that a daughter on getting
married ceases to be a part of the family of her father for
the purpose of Section 4 of the Act. It is on this
assumption that the respondent made the application
under Section 4 of the Act to purchase the share of
plaintiff no.2 who had got married during pendency of the
petition filed by her under that Section for purchasing the
share of her married sister plaintiff no.1.
The question for consideration is whether for the
purpose of application of Section 4 of the Act a married
daughter can be said to be "a person who is not a member
of such family". If the question is answered in the
affirmative then the application filed by the respondent
was maintainable and could be considered on merit. If the
question is answered in the negative then Section 4 of the
Act is not applicable and the application filed by the
respondent is to be rejected as not maintainable.
The position is well settled that Section 4 of the Act
deserves a liberal construction because its very object and
purpose is to preserve the integrity of the dwelling house.
Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee in his classical exposition of the
meaning of the term ’family’ in the case of Khirode
Chandra vs. Saroda Prasad, 7 Ind. Cases 436 (Cal.)
observed:
"The word "family" as used in the
Partition Act ought to be given a liberal
and comprehensive meaning, and it
does include a group of persons related
in blood, who live in one house or
under one head or management. There
is nothing in the Partition Act to
support the suggestion that the term
"family" was intended to be used in a
very narrow and restricted sense,
namely, a body of persons who trace
their descent from a common
ancestor."
Therein it was further observed :
"When regard is had to Hindu social
customs and manners, it is difficult to
hold that the term "family" is not
comprehensive enough to include
such a body of persons. Indeed, in
cases where there are no male children
in the family and the daughters alone
are entitled to the inheritance, their
husbands very often live as members of
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the family, and they with their wives
may not inappropriately be treated as
the "family" some members of which
have shares in the dwelling house."
This decision has been considered to be a leading
authority on the question in issue. The same principle has
been followed by different High Courts in Mohomed
Sulaiman Khan vs. Mt. Amir Jan AIR 1941 All 281;
Krishna Pillai v. Parukutty Ammal AIR 1952 Mad 33; Alley
Hasan vs. Toorab Hussain AIR 1958 Pat 232; and Paluni
Dei v. Rathi Mallick AIR 1965 Ori 111.
The Paluni Dei case (supra) the Orissa High Court
held that the defendant no.2 in the case though was
married and residing with her husband elsewhere. she at
times used to reside in her father’s house and had not
abandoned her intention to reside there; she was related
by blood to the family of the owner; she must therefore be
treated as a member of the undivided family qua the
dwelling house of defendant 1. She being a shareholder is
entitled to buy the share of the plaintiff-transferee. The
High Court held that judgment of the Court below rejecting
her claim is contrary to law and must be set aside.
In the case of Gautam Paul vs. Debi Rani Paul and
others (2000) 8 SCC 330 this Court considered the
question of liberal interpretation to be given to the
provisions of Section 4 of the Act. This Court made the
following observations:
"Let us now consider whether the sale
to the appellant by Bibhuti Paul can be
said to be a sale to an outsider or a
stranger to the family. Undoubtedly,
Section 4 should be given a liberal
interpretation. However, giving a liberal
interpretation does not mean that the
wordings of the Section and the clear
interpretation thereof be ignored. The
relevant wordings are "dwelling house
belonging to an undivided family".
Thus it must be a dwelling house
belonging to an undivided family. The
further requirement is that the transfer
must be to a person who is not a
member of "such family". The words
"such family" necessarily refers to the
undivided family to whom the dwelling
house belongs."
XXX XXX XXX
"We are in agreement with this opinion.
There is no law which provides that co-
sharer must only sell his/her share to
another co-sharer. Thus strangers/
outsiders can purchase shares even in
a dwelling house. Section 44 of the
Transfer of Property Act provides that
the transferee of a share of a dwelling
house, if he/she is not a member of
that family, gets no right to joint
possession or common enjoyment of
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the house. Section 44 adequately
protects the family members in which
an outsider can get possession is to
sue for possession and claim
separation of his share. In that case
Section 4 of the Partition Act comes
into play. Except for Section 4 of the
Partition Act there is no other law
which provides a right to a co-sharer to
purchase the share sold to an outsider.
Thus before the right of pre-emption,
under Section 4, is exercised the
conditions laid down therein have to be
complied with. As seen above, one of
the conditions is that the outsider
must sue for partition. Section 4 does
not provide the co-sharer a right to
pre-empt where the stranger/outsider
does nothing after purchasing the
share. In other words, Section 4 is not
giving a right to a co-sharer to pre-
empt and purchase the share sold to
an outsider anytime he /she wants.
Thus even though a liberal
interpretation may be given, the
interpretation cannot be one which
gives a right which the legislatures
clearly did not intend to confer. The
legislature was aware that in a suit for
partition the stranger/outsider, who
has purchased a share, would have to
be made a party. The legislature was
aware that in a suit for partition the
parties are interchangeable. The
legislature was aware that a partition
suit would result in a decree for
partition and in most cases a division
by metes and bounds. The legislature
was aware that on an actual division,
like all other co-sharers, the
stranger/outsider would also get
possession of his share. Yet the
legislature did not provide that the
right for pre-emption could be
exercised "in any suit for partition".
The legislature only provided for such
right when the "transferee sues for
partition". The intention of the
legislature is clear. There had to be
initiation of proceedings or the making
of a claim to partition by the
stranger/outsider. This could be by
way of initiating a proceeding for
partition or even claiming partition in
execution. However, a mere assertion
of a claim to a share without
demanding separation and possession
(by the outsider) is not enough to give
to the other co-sharer a right of pre-
emption. There is a difference
between a mere assertion that he has a
share and a claim for possession of
that share. So long as the stranger-
purchaser does not seek actual
division and possession, either in the
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suit or in execution proceedings, it
cannot be said that he has sued for
partition. The interpretation given by
Calcutta, Patna, Nagpur and Orissa
High Courts would result in nullifying
the express provisions of Section 4,
which only gives a right when the
transferee sues for partition. If that
interpretation were to be accepted then
in all cases, where there has been a
sale of a share to an outsider, a co-
sharer could simply file a suit for
partition and then claim a right to
purchase over that share. Thus even
though the outsider may have, at no
stage, asked for partition and for the
delivery of the share to him, he would
be forced to sell his share. It would
give to a co-sharer a right to pre-empt
and purchase whenever he/she so
desired by the simple expedient of filing
a suit for partition. This was not the
intent or purpose of Section 4. Thus
the view taken by Calcutta, Patna,
Nagpur and Orissa High Courts, in the
aforementioned cases, cannot be said
to be good law."
(Emphasis supplied)
In the case of Ghantesher Ghosh vs. Madan Mohan
Ghosh and others (1996) 11 SCC 446 this Court
interpreting Section 4 of the Partition Act made the
following observations :
"In order to answer this moot question,
it has to be kept in view what the
legislature intended while enacting the
Act and specially Section 4 thereof.
The legislative intent as reflected by the
Statement of Objects and Reasons, as
noted earlier, makes it clear that the
restriction imposed on a stranger
transferee of a share of one or more of
the co-owners in a dwelling house by
Section 44 of the T.P. Act is tried to be
further extended by Section 4 of the
Partition Act with a view to seeing that
such transferee washes his hands off
such a family dwelling house and gets
satisfied with the proper valuation of
his share which will be paid to him by
the pre-empting co-sharer or co-
sharers, as the case may be. This right
of pre-emption available to other co-
owners under Section 4 is obviously in
further fructification of the restriction
on such a transferee as imposed by
Section 44 of the T.P. Act."
This Court in the case of Babu Lal vs. Habibnoor
Khan (dead) by Lrs. And ors. 2000 (5) SCC 662 considering
the applicability of Section 4 of the Act observed:
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"Therefore, one of the basic conditions
for applicability of Section 4 as laid
down by the aforesaid decision and
also as expressly mentioned in the
section is that the stranger-transferee
must sue for partition and separate
possession of the undivided share
transferred to him by the co-owner
concerned. It is, of course, true that
in the said decision it was observed
that even though the stranger-
transferee of such undivided interest
moves an execution application for
separating his share by metes and
bounds it would be treated to be an
application for suing for partition and
it is not necessary that a separate suit
should be filed by such stranger-
transferee. All the same, however,
before Section 4 of the Act can be
pressed into service by any of the other
co-owners of the dwelling house, it has
to be shown that the occasion had
arisen for him to move under Section 4
of the Act because of the stranger-
transferee himself moving for partition
and separate possession of the share of
the other co-owner which he would
have purchased. This condition is
totally lacking in the present case. To
recapitulate, Respondent 1 decree-
holder himself, after getting the final
decree, had moved an application
under Section 4 of the Act. The
appellant, who was a stranger
purchaser, had not filed any
application for separating his share
from the dwelling house, either at the
stage of preliminary decree or final
decree or even thereafter in execution
proceedings."
At this stage it will be relevant to notice the
provisions of Section 23 of the Hindu Succession Act and
Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act, under which
preferential right to acquire property in certain cases
particularly in respect of the dwelling houses, is dealt with.
The said Sections are quoted hereunder:
"23. Special provisions respecting
dwelling-houses Where a Hindu
intestate has left surviving him or her
both male and female heirs specified in
Class I of the Schedule and his or her
property includes a dwelling-house
wholly occupied by members of his or
her family, then notwithstanding
anything contained in this Act, the
right of any such female heir to claim
partition of the dwelling-house shall
not arise until the male heirs choose to
divide their respective shares therein;
but the female heir shall be entitled to
a right of residence therein;
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Provided that where such female heir is
a daughter, she shall be entitled to a
right of residence in the dwelling
house only if she is unmarried or has
been deserted by or has separated from
her husband or is a widow."
Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act reads as
follows:
"Where one of two or more co-owners of
immovable property legally competent
in that behalf transfers his share of
such property or any interest therein,
the transferee acquires, as to such
share or interest, and in so far as is
necessary to give effect to the transfer,
the transferor’s right to joint
possession or other common or part
enjoyment of the property, and to
enforce a partition of the same, but
subject to the conditions and liabilities
affecting, at the date of the transfer,
the share or interest so transferred.
Where the transferee of a share of a
dwelling house belonging to an
undivided family is not a member of
the family, nothing in this Section shall
be deemed to entitle him to joint
possession or other common or part
enjoyment of the house."
Although the statutory provisions are not very
happily worded it is clear from Section 23 that it expressly
recognizes the right of a female heir to reside in the family
dwelling house. This is the position despite the restriction
statutorily placed on her right to claim partition of such
dwelling house.
In the case of Narashimaha Murthy vs. Susheelabai
(Smt.) & Ors, (1996) 3 SCC 644, this Court considering
the provisions of Section 23 of the Act in the light of
Section 4(1) of Partition Act and Section 44 of the Transfer
of Property Act made the following observations:
"Attention may now be invited to the
last sentence in the provision and the
proviso, for there lies the clue to get to
the heart of the matter. On first
impression the provision may appear
conflicting with the proviso but on
closer examination the conflict
disappears. A female heir’s right to
claim partition of the dwelling house
does not arise until the male heirs
choose to divide their respective shares
therein, but till that happens the
female heir is entitled to the right to
reside therein. The female heir already
residing in the dwelling house has a
right to its continuance but in case she
is not residing, she has a right to
enforce her entitlement of residence in
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a court of law. The proviso makes it
amply clear that where such female
heir is a daughter, she shall be entitled
to a right of residence in the dwelling
house only if she is unmarried or has
been deserted by or has separated from
her husband or is a widow. On first
impression, it appears that when the
female heir is the daughter, she is
entitled to a right of residence in the
dwelling house so long as she suffers
from any one of the four disabilities i.e.
(1)being unmarried; (2) being a
deserted wife; (3) being a separated
wife; and (4) being a widow. It may
appear that female heirs other than the
daughter are entitled without any
qualification to a right of residence, but
the daughter only if she suffers from
any of the aforementioned disabilities.
If this be the interpretation, as some of
the commentators on the subject have
thought it to be, it would lead to a
highly unjust result for a married
granddaughter as a Class I heir may
get the right of residence in the
dwelling house, and a married
daughter may not. This incongruous
result could never have been
postulated by the legislature.
Significantly, the proviso covered the
cases of all daughters, which means all
kinds of daughters, by employment of
the words "where such female heir is a
daughter" and not "where such female
heir is the daughter". The proviso thus
is meant to cover all daughters, the
description of which has been given in
the above table by arrangement. The
word ’daughter’ in the proviso is meant
to include daughter of a predeceased
son, daughter of a predeceased son of a
predeceased son and daughter of a
predeceased daughter. The right of
residence of the female heirs specified
in Class I of the Schedule, in order to
be real and enforceable, presupposes
that their entitlement cannot be
obstructed by any act of the male heirs
or rendered illusory such as in
creating third party rights therein in
favour of others or in tenanting it,
creating statutory rights against
dispossession or eviction. What is
meant to be covered in Section 23 is a
dwelling house or houses, (for the
singular would include the plural, as
the caption and the section is
suggestive to that effect) fully occupied
by the members of the intestate’s
family and not a house or houses let
out to tenants, for then it or those
would not be dwelling house/houses
but merely in description as residential
houses. The section protects only a
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dwelling house, which means a house
wholly inhabited by one or more
members of the family of the intestate,
where some or all of the family
members, even if absent for some
temporary reason, have the animus
revertendi. In our considered view, a
tenanted house therefore is not a
dwelling house, in the sense in which
the word is used in Section 23.
XXX XXX XXX
The second question does not
present much difficulty. On literal
interpretation the provision refers to
male heirs in the plural and unless
they choose to divide their respective
shares in the dwelling hose, female
heirs have no right to claim partition.
In that sense there cannot be a division
even when there is a single male. It
would always be necessary to have
more than one male heir. One way to
look at it is that if there is one male
heir, the section is inapplicable, which
means that a single male heir cannot
resist female heir’s claim to partition.
This would obviously bring unjust
results, an intendment least conceived
of as the underlying idea of
maintenance of status quo would go to
the winds. This does not seem to have
been desired while enacting the special
provision. It looks nebulous that if
there are two males, partition at the
instance of female heir could be
resisted, but if there is one male, it
would not. The emphasis on the
section is to preserve a dwelling house
as long as it is wholly occupied by
some or all members of the intestate’s
family which includes male or males.
Understood in this manner, the
language in plural with reference to
male heirs would have to be read in
singular with the aid of the provisions
of the General Clauses Act. It would
thus read to mean that when there is a
single male heir, unless he chooses to
take out his share from the dwelling
house, the female heirs cannot claim
partition against him. It cannot be
forgotten that in the Hindu male-
oriented society, where begetting of a
son was a religious obligation, for the
fulfillment of which Hindus have even
been resorting to adoptions, it could
not be visualized that it was intended
that the single male heir should be
worse off, unless he had a supportive
second male as a Class I heir. The
provision would have to be interpreted
in such manner that it carries forward
the spirit behind it. The second
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question would thus have to be
answered in favour of the proposition
holding that where a Hindu intestate
leaves surviving him a single male heir
and one or more female heirs specified
in Class I of the Schedule, the
provisions of Section 23 keep attracted
to maintain the dwelling house
impartible as in the case of more than
one male heir, subject to the right of
re-entry and residence of the female
heirs so entitled, till such time the
single male heir chooses to separate
his share; this right of his being
personal to him, neither transferable
nor heritable."
(Emphasis supplied)
Applying the ratio in the aforementioned decided
cases to the case in hand the position that emerges is that
the last owner of the suit property left one male heir (son)
and three female heirs (widow and two daughters) who
succeeded to the suit property. The widow transferred her
interest in the suit property by gift in favour of her two
daughters, who in course of time got married; the two
daughters filed the suit for partition of the suit property
which was a family dwelling house; the partition suit was
decreed preliminary; at the stage of execution proceedings
the petition has been filed by the male heir i.e. the brother
of the plaintiffs claiming right of pre-emption to purchase
the share of one of the sisters (plaintiff no.2). In stricto
senso the provision of Section 4 of the Partition Act has no
application in the case. Neither can the plaintiffs who are
daughters be said to be strangers to the family nor is there
any material to show that they have expressed their
intention not to reside in the suit property or to transfer
their interest in the same to a person who is a stranger to
the family. It is also to be kept in mind that the plaintiffs
have acquired interest in the property by gift from their
mother. Therefore they have stepped into the shoes of their
mother. Under the circumstances the petition filed by the
defendant under Section 4 of the Partition Act was not
maintainable and was liable to be dismissed as premature.
At the same time keeping in view the object and purpose of
preserving unity of the family dwelling house for
occupation of members of the family the plaintiffs cannot
be given a right to transfer their interest in the family
dwelling house in favour of a stranger. If they decide not
to reside in the suit dwelling house and desire to transfer
their interest then they must make an offer to the
defendant and if he is willing to purchase the interest of
the sisters then he will be entitled to do so on payment of
the consideration mutually agreed or fixed by the Court.
We are persuaded to pass this Order keeping in view
the interest of all the members of the family i.e. the son
and two daughters and their family members and the
importance of preserving the unity of the family dwelling
house which is meant for occupation of successors of the
original owner, Sailen Ghosh.
We are of the view that in the context of the facts and
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circumstances of the case the High Court was not right in
granting the petition filed by the respondent under Section
4 of the Act. Accordingly the order of the High Court under
challenge is modified in the manner and to the extent
noted above and the appeal is disposed of accordingly.
There will be no order for costs.