Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURENDRA PAL & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SARASWATI ARORA & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/08/1974
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BENCH:
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1999 1975 SCR (1) 687
1974 SCC (2) 600
ACT:
Will--Bequest of entire property in favour of second wife to
the exclusion of children by the first wife and mother of
testator--Presumption of undue influence, if can be drawn.
HEADNOTE:
In April,1959, the testator’s wife died leaving behind four
daughters and a son. Two of the daughters were married to
persons in affluent circumstances. The son was not living
with his father at the time of his death and the other two
daughters were living with the brother. The relations
between father on the one hand, and the son (the first
appellant) and the two daughters on the other, were strained
and bitter, and in fact,there was positive hostility between
them. The testator even apprehended danger to his life and
he filed criminal complaints against the son. In September,
1960, the testator advertised for a wife in a newspaper and
the mother of the first respondent replied to it, on behalf
of the 1st respondent, and asked for particulars. But even
before the testator and the 1st respondent met, the testator
entered into an agreement with the 1st appellant, in
October, 1960, and in that agreement, he made provision for
the maintenance and marriage of one daughter and also
provided for the maintenance and residence of the other
daughter though no mention was made about her marriage.
There was also no provision for the maintenance of the
mother of the testator who was then living with him. After
some correspondence between the testator and the relations
of the first respondent the parties met and the testator and
the first respondent were married on February 7, 1961. On
the very next day, the testator executed a will. by which he
bequeathed his entire property to his wife, the 1st
respondent. The will was-attested by the brother of the 1st
respondent and a friend. The testator did not make any
provision for the maintenance of his mother and the marriage
of his youngest daughter. The testator lived for three
years thereafter and died in January, 1964. The 1st
respondent filed an application for probate of the will and
the 1st appellant contested the application. The trial
court granted probate to the 1st respondent and the judgment
was confirmed in appeal by the High Court.
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Dismissing the appeal to this Court,
HELD : The will was genuine and all the formalities that
were required were fully satisfied as it was executed by the
testator in a sound disposing state of mind and was duly
attested as required by law.
(1) The propounder of a will has to show that the will was
signed by the testator, that he was at the relevant time in
a sound disposing state of mind, that he understood the
nature and effect of the dispositions, that he put his
signature to the testament of his free will and that he had
signed it in the presence of two witnesses who attested it
in his presence and in the presence of each other. once
these elements are established the onus resting on the
propounder is discharged. If the caveator alleges undue
influence, fraud and coercion the onus is on him to prove
the same. If the caveator does not discharge this burden
probate of the will must necessarily be granted if it is
established that the testator had full testamentary capacity
and had, in fact, executed it validly with a free will and
mind. A man may act foolishly and even heartlessly but if
he acts with full comprehension of what he is doing the
Court will not interfere with the exercise of his volition.
There may however be cases in which the execution of the
will is surrounded by suspicious circumstances such as where
the signature is doubtful, the testator is of feeble mind or
is overawed by powerful minds interested in getting his
property or where, in the light of the relevant
circumstances, the dispositions appear to be unnatural,
improbable t and unfair; or; where there are other reasons
for doubting that the dispositions in the will were not the
result of the testator’s free will and mind. In all such
cases the suspicious circumstances must be reviewed and
satisfactorily explained by the propounder before the will
is accepted as genuine. Again, in cases where the pro-
pounder has himself taken a prominent part in the execution
of the will which
688
confers on him a substantial benefit, that is itself a
suspicious circumstance which he must remove by clear and
satisfactory evidence.[692 C-E; 093 A-C]
H. Venkatachala Iyengar v. B. N. Thimmjamma & Ors; [1959]
Supp. 1 S.C.R. 426, and Rani Purnima Devi and Anr. v. Kumar
Khagendra Narayan Dev & Another [1962] 3 S.C.R. 195,
followed.
Motilal Hormusjee Kanga v. Jamsetjee Hormusjee Kanga, A.I.R.
1924 P.C. 28, applied.
(2) In the present case, the 1st respondent was merely
present at the time of the execution of the will and did not
have anything to do with its execution. In order to
understand what the testator intended and why he intended
so, one has to sit in his arm chair to ascertain his frame
of mind and the circumstances in which he de the will.
After the testator’s marriage with the 1st respondent and
before the 1st appellant and his two unmarried daughters
came to know about the will they had definitely behaved
shabbily and in a very hostile manner to the testator. The
testator was completely ignored at the time of the marriage
of one of the daughters and the son and daughters never came
to see him even when he was dying. The 1st appellant did
not take his son to see the grandfather even though the 1st
appellant admitted that his father was anxious to see his
grandson. With a family so hostile towards the 1st
respondent, it is but natural for the testator to provide
for his newly wed wife even without her asking him or
importuning him to do so. The 1st respondent was herself a
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doctor of 13 years standing and there is no evidence that
she was a gold digger. The correspondence shows that the
only consideration that prevailed between the parties was
companionship. There was no suggestion that the testator
was feeble minded or so completely deprived of his power of
independent thought and judgment as to faithfully carry out
the wishes of the 1st respondent to whom he became engaged
and got married. On the contrary, it appears that it was he
who offered the inducement voluntarily to her.
(3) The reason why he did not provide for the marriage of
the youngest daughter might be that he did not think that he
would die so soon. He must have thought that he would be
able to perform the marriage himself, or he never doubted
that the 1st respondent would not discharge that obligation.
The reason for not providing for his mother might have been
that he must have thought that he would survive her.
(4) If an objective and rational deduction of a principle
emerges from a decision of a foreign country rendered on
legislative provisions in pari materia with those of this
country and which is applicable to the conditions prevailing
in this country, such a decision will assist the court in
arriving at a proper conclusion. But it is dangerous to
apply blindly statements of law enunciated and propounded
for meeting the conditions existing in countries in which
they are applicable, without a critical examination of the
principles and their applicability to the conditions, social
norms, and attitudes existing in this country, and without
considering the background and various other considerations.
Apart from general considerations emerging from the nature
of a will and the circumstances which not infrequently
surround its execution there are other matters which are
peculiar to the times, the society and the person making the
will and his or her family. Inferences arising from
relationships between a testator and a legatee are so
dependent upon the peculiarities of the society or community
to which they belong, their habits and customs, their
values, their mores, their ways of thinking and feeling, and
their susceptibilities to particular kinds of pressures,
influences or inducements, that it is difficult to reduce
them to a general rule applicable at all times and
everywhere so as to raise a presumption of undue influence
from a particular type of relationships. In this country,
even to-day a marriage is an arranged affair and even in the
instant case when an advertisement was resorted to by the
testator it was the first respondent’s mother who replied.
Therefore whatever may be the position in England as to the
presumption of undue influence in the case of parties
engaged to be married (such a presumption is referred to in
Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol. 17, p. 681, Art. 31 1) it
would be hardly applicable to conditions in this country.
[697 D; 698 A-C, G; 699 H-700 B]
(5) Unlike the position in England at the time when the
courts recognised the presumption between a man and a woman
engaged to be married the law of evidence is codified in
this country in the Indian Evidence Act. Every presumption,
barring
689
some special ones created by other enactments, has to be
related to a provision of the Evidence Act. The only kinds
of relationship giving rise to such presumptions are those
contemplated in s. 1 1 1 of the Evidence Act. Any other
presumption from a relationship must, to be acceptable, be
capable of being raised under s. 114 of that Act. Such
presumptions are really optional inferences from proof of a
frequently recurring set of facts which make a particular
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inference from such facts reasonable and natural. The
instant case does not fall within s. 111. The plea of undue
influence is a special plea, and under s. 103 of the
Evidence Act, the burden of substantiating such a plea is on
the party who sets it up. [700 B-E]
(6) There is no proof that the will was executed before
marriage. Even if the date had been altered from 7th Feb.
to 8th Feb. it was altered by the testator and he must have
done so because he made a mistake. People often put a wrong
date and immediately correct it. Further the evidence of
the two attestors which has been accepted by both the
courts, shows that the execution and attestation of the will
was on the same day, namely 8th February. [700 F-G]
(7) Even if it was executed on 7th February there was
nothing to show that it was executed before the marriage on
that day. It is unlikely that the first respondent would
make a stipulation that the property should be bequeathed to
her, as she must have known that a will is ambulatory and a
marriage with such a condition would only beget dissension
between the parties. [701 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1153 of
1971.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment & Decree dated the
30th September, 1970 of the Calcutta High Court in Appeal
No. 78 of 1967.
B. Sen, M. K. Banerjee, and B. R. Agarwala, for the
appellant.
Y. S. Chitle and P. C. Bhartari, for the respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
JAGANMOHAN REDDY, J. This appeal is by special leave against
the grant of a probate of the will of Bhim Sain Arora dated
February 8, 1961 in favour of his wife Saraswati. The
deceased who had lost his first wife on April 14, 1959 had
advertised in September 1960 for a wife in the matrimonial,
column of Sunday Tribune of Ambala. The advertisement is as
follows:
"A widower, renowned merchant desires to marry
accomplished and liberal-minded Punjabi Hindu
unmarried or issueless widow from a
respectable family of above 30 years age.
Write confidentially to Box No. 47170 C/o
Tribune-, Ambala."
The respondent Saraswati aged 35 years a Doctor by medical
profession was also on a look-out for a husband replied on
October 4, 1960, not in her name but purporting to be in the
name of Mrs. Puri-her mother. in this letter a few
particulars were called for regarding "the gentleman in
question e.g. age, location, parentage, any issues out of
first wife, education etc." She also asked for clarification
of "the exact expectation by the words "liberal-minded,’."
This letter was replied to by one Amalendu Chaudhuri,
Personal Assistant to the deceased Bhim Sain on October 11,
1960. This letter was answered by Puri on December 26,
1960. The correspondence shows that both of them were
looking for partners who conformed to similar requirements.
We shall deal
690
with the purport Of the correspondence at the appropriate
place, but for the present it is sufficient to say that as a
result of this correspondence the respondent Saraswati came
to Calcutta with her mother on January 30, 1961 and stayed
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with her sister and her husband Colonel Harish Chandra Vigh.
After perusing the correspondence, Col. Vigh rang up Bhim
Sain and invited him to come over to his place. Bhim Sain
visited Col. Vigh’s place on three successive days, namely,
31st January, 1st February and 2nd February, 1961 and had
talks with Saraswati and her family members who were there.
On February 2, 1961, Bhim Sain invited Saraswati and her
people including Col. Vigh to have tea at his place on
February 3, 1961. At that meeting on the tea party on
February 3, 1961, Bhim Sain and the respondent agreed to get
married on February 7, 1961. Notice under the Special Mar-
riages Act was given to the Registrar, but since the time
was not sufficient to fulfil the requirements of that Act,
this notice was ante-dated and the marriage took place on
February 7, 1961. After the marriage, Saraswati went to
stay with her husband. On February 8, 1961, Bhim Sain rang
up Col. Vigh and informed him that he would like to go to
this place that evening for executing a will and asked him
to get a friend to witness ,It. Accordingly in the evening
of February 8, 1961, Bhim Sain went to Col. Vigh’s place
along with Saraswati. There he met one Nelson Das who was
introduced to him as the Purchase Officer of Bridge & Roof
Company. After that Bhim Sain took out the draft of a will
which he signed in the presence of Col. Vigh and Nelson Das
both of whom attested it thereafter.
After the will was executed Bhim Sain lived with Saraswati
for nearly 3 years before his death on January 18, 1964. It
may here be mentioned that Bhim Sain had by his first wife
four daughters and one son. Of them two daughters were
married to persons in affluent circumstances, the third
daughter Shanta 22 years old had not been married by the
time Bhim Sain got married and the fourth daughter Rita, a
minor of 13 years old, was studying in Loreto Convent School
at Simla. The son Surendra Pal Arora was not living with
his father .at that time. Both the courts have held that
the relationship between the son, Shanta and Rita on the one
hand and the father on the other were not good so much so
that the two daughters were in fact living ’with their
brother Surendra Pal-the first appellant.
After the death of his father the first appellant Surendra
Pal wrote .a letter to the respondent Saraswati in which he
said that the respondent had mentioned about a will made by
his father in her favour regarding which he expressed
ignorance and wanted to see it. If there was in fact no
will he wanted "an amicable partition of considerable
properties and assets" belonging to his father. Thereafter
correspondence took place between the solicitors of the
parties which ultimately resulted in the respondent filing
an application on September 14, 1964, for the issue of a
probate testimento-cum-annexo. A caveat had earlier been
filed by the first appellant and the matter was
691
contested. Rita, who was then unmarried and living with her
maternal uncle Sikri, who was also her guardian ad litem,
did not contest the will but she appears to have made an
attempt before the Appellate Court at a late stage to file
an appeal. Her application was, however, dismissed.
The grounds on which the will was contested were-(i) that it
was not a genuine document; (ii) that the signature of Bhim
Sain Arora on the will was not his real signature; (iii)
that at the time of the execution of the will Bhim Sain did
not know the contents of the will, nor did he give any
instructions to his solicitors nor did he consult them; (iv)
that the will had not been read over or explained to Bhim
Sain nor did he read it himself before it was executed, as
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such he was not aware of the nature and effect of the will;
(v) that even if the will had been written and executed by
Bhim Sain such execution of the will had been obtained by
fraud, coercion and undue influence or importunity of his
wife in collusion with her brother-in-law Col. Vigh; (vi)
and that after making the will, Bhim Sain was prevented by
force and threats from executing a further will prepared by
and under his instructions by which inter alia the property
would have been equitably divided and provisions made
particularly for the aged mother and the minor child.
The first appellant gave some particulars of the alleged
fraud, coercion, undue influence and importunity of the
respondent exercised upon Bhim Sain. Rita in her affidavit
supported the averments and allegations made by her brother.
The mother of the deceased Wazir Devi also filed an
affidavit denying any knowledge of the execution of the will
and complained that after Bhim Sain’s death the respondent
Saraswati made it impossible for her to live in the same
premises as a result of which she had to leave the house and
live with her grandson the first appellant. The Trial Judge
on the pleadings framed six issues-"(1) Has the will been
duly executed and attested ? Is the will genuine ? (2) Was
the testator aware of the nature and effect of the will ?
(3) Had the testator testamentary capacity at the; time of
signing the alleged will ? Was the execution of the will
obtained by fraud or coercion or undue influence or
importunity of the petitioner and others acting with her ?
(5) Was the deceased prevented by force and threats from
executing a further will by which his property would have
been equitably divided? (6) To what relief, if any, are the
other parties entitled?" All these issues were held against
the first appellant.
In appeal also the Division Bench of the High Court
confirmed the findings of the learned Trial Judge. It may,
however, be mentioned that there was no challenge to the
testamentary capacity of Bhim Sain though the affidavit of
the first appellant and the affidavits in support of the
first appellant’s case had contained such an averment. No
evidence was also led to suggest that Bhim Sain was lacking
in any manner of testamentary capacity. There was also no
contest that the will was executed by Bhim Sain nor were the
signatures of the aforesaid witnesses challenged. It
appears a feeble attempt was
692
made by the maternal uncle of the first appellant Sikri to
suggest that Bhim Sain tried to revoke the will. Both the
Courts have, however, held that no such attempt was ever
made. The will is, however, sought to be attacked on two
grounds : firstly, that it was executed originally by Bhim
Sain without any attestation, but subsequently the
attestation clause came into existence and the two attesting
witnesses subscribed their signatures; and secondly, the
will had been procured by undue influence exercised on Bhim
Sain by the first respondent as a condition for their
marriage. The Trial Court as well as the Appellate Court
have rejected both these contentions on an elaborate and
detailed consideration of each and every circumstance urged
before them.
The propounder has to show that the will was signed by the
testator : that he was at the relevant time in a sound
disposing state of mind, that he understood the nature and
effect of the dispositions, that he put his signature to the
testament of his own free will and that he has signed it in
the presence of the two witnesses who attested it in his
presence and in the presence of each other. once these
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elements are established, the onus which rests on the
propounder is discharged. But there may be cases in which
the execution of the will itself is surrounded by suspicious
circumstances, such as, where the signature is doubtful, the
testator is of feeble mind or is overawed by powerful minds
interested in getting his property, or where in the light of
the relevant circumstances the dispositions appear to be
unnatural, improbable and unfair, or where there are other
reasons for doubting that the dispositions of the will are
not the result of the testator’s free will and mind. In all
such cases where there may be legitimate suspicious
circumstances those must be reviewed and satisfactorily
explained before the will is accepted. Again in cases were
the propounder has himself taken a prominent part in the
execution of the will which confers on him substantial
benefit that is itself one of the suspicious circumstances
which he must remove by clear and satisfactory evidence.
After all, ultimately it is the conscience of the Court that
has to be satisfied, as such the nature and quality of proof
must be commensurate with the need to satisfy that
conscience and remove any suspicion which a reasonable man
may, in the relevant circumstances of the case, entertain.
See H. Venkatachala Iyengar v. B. N. Thimmajamma & Ors;(1)
and Rani Purnima Devi and Anr v. Kumar Khagendra Narayan Dep
& Another.(2) In the latter case this Court, after referring
to the principles stated in the former case emphasised that
where there are suspicious circumstances the onus will be on
the propounder to explain them to the satisfaction of the
Court before the will could be accepted as genuine; and
where the caveator alleges undue influence, fraud and
coercion the onus is on hi to prove the same. It has been
further pointed out that the suspicious circumstances may be
as to the genuineness of the signature of the testator, the
condition of the testator’s mind, the dispositions made in
the will which may be unnatural or unfair or improbable when
considered
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 426.
(2) [1962] 3 S.C.R. 195.
693
in the light of the relevant circumstances. if the caveator
does not discharge the burden which rests upon him in
establishing the circumstances which show that the will had
been obtained by fraud or undue influence a probate of the
will must necessarily be granted if it is established that
the testator had full testamentary capacity and had in fact
executed it validly with a free will and mind. The
observations of the Privy Council in Motibai Hormusjee Kanga
v. Jamsetjee Hormusjee Kanga(1) support the above
proposition. Mr. Ammer Ali observed at p. 33 "It is quite
clear that the onus of establishing capacity lay on the
petitioner. It is also clear that if the caveator impugned
the will on the ground that it was obtained by the exercise
of undue influences, excessive persuasion or moral coercion,
it lay upon him to establish that case." in the light of
what has been stated if the various requirements of a valid
will are established, then as observed by the Privy Council
in Motibai Hormusjee Kanga’s came at p. 33 ’A man may act
foolishly and even heartlessly; if he acts with full com-
prehension of what he is doing the Court will not interfere
with the exercise of his volition."
In the light of the above guide-lines, the contentions urged
against the grant of probate of the will will have to be
considered. Before the Appellate Court eight suspicious
circumstances were marshalled which were-(i) Saraswati Arora
who was the sole recipient of the entire benefit of the will
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herself took part in the execution of the will at the time
of execution; (ii) the dispositions in the will by the
testator were unnatural, improbable or unfair as was
apparent from the exclusion of the mother Wazir Debi, as
well as the exclusion of all the children of Bhim Sain,
particularly of Rita, the minor daughter and of Shanta who
was at that time unmarried; (iii) none of the attesting
witnesses was wholly disinterested; (ii) that no trained
lawyer appears to have been engaged in the drawing up or
execution of the will; (V) no special reason could be
adduced to explain the execution of the will on February 8.
1961 ; (vi) the evidence in support of the will, parti-
cularly the evidence of the propounder was unsatisfactory
and interested; (vii) there was evidence to show that some
alteration had been made in the date of the will; and (viii)
the attestation clause seems to have been typed in a
separate operation after the typed will had been taken out
of the typewriter and then reinserted.
The Appellate Court agreeing with the Trial Judge held that
the first respondent was merely present at the time of the
execution of the will and did not have anything to do with
its execution. The case of the first appellant was that as
a condition of the marriage arrangement, the will was
executed and because of that Bhim Sain made no provision for
the maintenance of his aged mother or for the maintenance
and marriage of his youngest daughter Rita who was then
studying. Instead he gave away the entire property to the
first respondent which is a suspicious circumstance and
raises an inference of undue influence. This submission was
clearly negatived, and on the
(1) A.I.R. 1924 P.C. 28. (3) (1973) 2 S.C.R. 541.
694
evidence there can be no gainsaying the fact that the
conclusion to which both the Courts have come to are
unassailable. It is not for us to fathom the motivations of
man. His actions and reactions are unpredictable as they
depend upon so many circumstances. There is, however,
always some dominant and impelling circumstance which
motivates a man’s action though in some cases even a trivial
and trifling cause impels him to act in a particular way
which a majority of others may not do. At times
psychological factors and the frame of mind in which he is,
may determine his action.
In this case, however, there is little or no difficulty in
finding out the probable reason why Bhim Sain while making
the will did not provide for his mother and his youngest
daughter. These reasons are elaborately set out in the
judgment of the Appellate Court. No doubt the learned Judge
who delivered the judgment of the Bench did say that the
exclusion of the mother as well as his children particularly
Rita the minor daughter and Shanta showed the disposition to
be unnatural, improbable and unfair and would give rise to
suspicious circumstances. in order to understand what the
testator intended and why he intended so, one has to get
into his arm-chair to ascertain his frame of mind and the
circumstances in which he made the will. As we have stated,
Bhim Sain lost his first wife on April 13, 1959. On August
16, 1960 just over a year after her death, Bhim Sain went to
the police station and made a complaint against his son
(Surendra Pal). This complaint as recorded in the general
diary showed that Surendra Pal had been "continuously
insulting, abusing and threatening to subject him to
violence and incapacitate him and deform him". According to
Bhim Sein his son was doing all these because he had been
found out in the act of removing jewelleries and cash from
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the vaults, safe and steel almirah. On August 25, 1960 nine
days after his first complaint, Bhim Sain went to the Court
of the Chief Presidency Magistrate and made a formal
complaint against the appellant unders.350of the Indian
Penal Code. The complaint which he lodged before the Court
shows that he had tried to bring up his son properly by
giving him a sound education and also by initiating him into
his own line of business. The son, however, picked up "high
ways of living and luxurious habits" and used to waste money
recklessly. in order to bring him back to the normal path of
life he thought of placing him in a responsible position so
that he might be cured and with this end in view Bhim Sain
made over his business ventures under the name and style of
Card Board Paper Products Company to his son. After the
death of his wife in April 1959 he thought that be would get
his son married to a respectable family and hoped that such
a marriage would induce him to settle down. Accordingly he
got him married to a girl from a highly respectable family.
But in spite of showering all his affection, his son (the
first appellant) was insulting him and making demands upon
him for moneys and putting him in fear of life. He then set
out the details as to how the first appellant had removed
jewelleries valued at about Rs. 25,774/- as also some cash
from the locker of a Godrej Steel Almirah which used to be
kept in the room of the first appellant, and how, when Bhim
Sain discovered this loss and asked him about this theft,
the first appellant flew into a
695
rage, used provoking language and tried to assault him.
Thereafter the first appellant was regularly threatening him
and he had even removed his double-barrel gun and cartridges
from his Almirah and kept it with him causing him constant
fear. It will be observed that these complaints against the
son, whatever may be the justification, were made long prior
to the advertisement in the matrimonial column of the Sunday
Tribune, Ambala. At this time Shanta the third daughter was
admittedly living not with her father but with her brother
the first appellant and so was Rita the youngest daughter.
Though some attempt was made to show that Rita and Bhim Sain
were on good terms, the evidence as pointed out by both the
Courts belies the assertion. Rita, though 13 years old came
back from the school even before the second marriage of her
father. However, she did not stay with her father but lived
with her brother. An attempt was made to show that the
father used to go and see her when she went back to school
and thereafter used to meet her at the Victoria Memorial.
All this has been negatived. In our view, one thing stands
out clearly and that is the relations between the father on
the one hand and the first appellant and the two daughters
on the other were strained and bitter. If at all, there was
positive hostility between them. The son and the daughters
never came to see Bhim Sain even when he was dying. The
appellant did not take his son to see his grandfather even
though the first appellant admitted that his father was
anxious to see his grandson. The evidence of Amalendu that
Bhim Sain had gone to see Rita in Simla has been
disbelieved. The Trial Judge called Amalendu a coward and a
liar. The Appellate Court considered his evidence to be
unsatisfactory and rejected it. The conclusion to which
both the Courts have arrived at is that Bhim Saint entered
into an agreement with the first appellant in October 1960
long before the meeting between the first respondent and the
deceased in answer to the advertisement had taken place. in
that agreement Bhim Sain made provision for the maintenance
and marriage of Shanta who was to reside with the first
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appellant. He had also provided for the maintenance and
residence of Rita though in that agreement no mention was
made about her marriage. The learned Advocate for the first
appellant made much of this omission as also the omission to
provide for the maintenance of his mother who was living
with him. But as the learned Judges of the Division Bench
of the Calcutta High Court pointed out, Bhim Sain was only
55 years of age when he married and made the will. He
perhaps did not expect to die so soon, nor did lie think
that he would not be able to perform the marriage of Rita,
nor provide for the maintenance of his mother during her
lifetime. Perhaps he did not entertain any doubt that the
first respondent in whose favour he had willed the
properties would not discharge the obligations which he
would have to discharge when he was alive. At the time of
the marriage, with a positively hostile family such as he
had, the thing that would be uppermost in Bhim Sain’s mind
is what would happen to his wife if she was left unprovided
for. Bhim Sain’s family would consider Saraswati a stranger
to the family and she would be regarded as an interloper
even after her :marriage and if anything were to happen to
him she would be left
696
to the mercy of his inimical children. It is but natural
for Bhim Sain in these circumstances to provide for his
newly wed wife even without that wife asking or importuning
her husband to do so. Apart from this thinking one
important circumstance is however ignored, and that is,
Saraswati was not a gold-digger as the expression goes. She
was an educated lady, came from a good family, had been a
medical practitioner for about 13 years, had her own status
in life and was as lonely and longing for a male companion
as Bhim Sain was for a woman companion. In the letter
written by Puri to Bhim Sain’s Personal Assistant giving
particulars of Saraswati’s education and family, she has
described herself as follows :
"The lady is healthy and in medical profession
Since 13 years She now wishes to settle down
in life only for companionship and not
interested in procreation. The preliminaries
suit both and the rest can be judged on
personal meeting only. The lady is particular
(keen) on a teetotaller and other sober habits
though quite high intellectually and quite
modern, though not ultra modern."
Bhim Sain was equally frank when he informed Puri through
his Personal Assistant that "His wife died here only last
year. His 2 daughters are married in a millionaire family.
His 3rd daughter has just passed B.A. and is living with her
brother. Seth Arora has only one son (who has recently
married) has got separate, independent, lucrative business
and is living separately. His youngest daughter is studying
in Loreto Convent School at Simla. Seth Arora is a wealthy
renowned merchant of Calcutta. He is of attractive and
"dignified personality. He is in perfect sound health,
stout and energetic. He is non-smoker and non-drinker. He
comes from West Punjab (Sialkot District) in 1930. Since
then he is carrying on with the business." Regarding what
was meant in the advertisement by "liberal-minded" the
letter explained that by it was meant that the person should
not be slave to the old customs and to orthodox views.
From this correspondence it is obvious that practical
consideration of companionship was the dominant feature of
the arrangement while the first respondent had no
attachment, Bhim Sain had. But there was no question of the
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first respondent feeling anxious about her future as it was
clear that Bhim Sain was impressing upon the lady who would
be his wife at the very outset that his having a family
would not cause any concern to her. Even during the talks
Bhim Sain seems to have mentioned to the first respondent
that he would make a will in her favour. As we have noticed
Bhim Sain was disgusted with the manner in which his
children had treated him and it was this attitude after the
death of his first wife that made him a lonely man longing
for a companion, He also knew that he had provided for his
children and that he had no further obligations, except for
providing for the marriage of his youngest daughter Rita and
for maintaining his aged mother. But, as we have already
said, he probably thought he would be able to discharge
these, two duties.
697
during his lifetime. His mother, it is said, was 75 years
old, while he himself was only 55 years old. On any
actuarial considerations he was likely to survive his mother
and perform the marriage of his youngest daughter Rita. In
our view, there is nothing suspicious about the will on this
score.
The learned Advocate for the appellants however cited a
passage from Halsbury’s Laws of England, Vol. 17, Art. 1311
at p. 681 (3rd Edn.) to persuade us to raise a presumption
of undue influence against Saraswati. That passage says :
"Of other relations from the existence of
which the Court will presume the exercise of
undue influence those which have perhaps led
to the avoidance of the greatest number of
conveyances are those of spiritual adviser and
devotees, medical attendant and patient,
principal and agent, and that of a man to a
woman to whom he is engaged to be married."
Whatever may be the position in England as to the
presumption of undue influence in the case of parties
engaged to be married, it does not, in our view, apply to
conditions in India. Even for that matter the conditions in
England today may not justify the validity of such a
presumption. We find that the cases relied upon in Halsbury
for the above statement are all of the 19th Century, and the
last of the cases is of the year 1931, and is with reference
to undue influence being exercised by a man over the woman
to whom he is engaged to be married. The tenacious
application of precedents may justify the statement in
Halsbury, but since the 19th Century and after 1931 much
water has flown under the bridges. The family law in
England has undergone a drastic change, recognised new
social relationship between man and woman. In our country,
however, even today a marriage is an arranged affair. We do
not say that there are no exceptions to this practice or
that there is no tendency, however imperceptible, for young
persons to choose their own spouses, but even in such cases
the consent of their parents is one of the desiderate which
is so Light for. Whether it is obtained in any given set of
circumstances is another matter. In such arranged marriages
in this country the question of two persons being engaged
for any appreciable time to enable each other to meet and be
in a position to exercise undue influence oil one another
very rarely arises. Even in the case of the marriage in the
instant case, an advertisement was resorted to by Bhim Sain.
The person who purports to reply is Saraswati’s mother and
the person who replied to her was Bhim Sain’s Personal
Assistant. But the social considerations prevailing in this
country and ethos even in such cases persist in determining
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the respective attitudes. That apart, as we said earlier,
the negotiations for marriage held in Saraswati’s sister’s
house have all the appearance of a business transaction. In
these circumstance that portion of the statement of the law
in Halsbury which refers to the presumption of the exercise
of undue influence in the case of a man to a woman to whom
he is engaged to be married would hardly be applicable to
conditions in this country. We have had occasion to point
out the danger of such statements of law enunciated and
propounded for meeting the conditions existing in the
698
countries in which they are applicable from being blindly
followed in this country without a critical examination of
those principles and their applicability to the conditions,
social norms and attitudes existing in this country. Often
statements of law applicable to foreign countries as stated
in compilations and learned treatises are cited without
making a critical examination of those principles in the
background of the conditions that existed or exist in those
countries. If we are not wakeful and circumspect, there is
every likelihood of their being simply applied to cases
requiring our adjudication, without consideration of the
background and various other conditions to which we have
referred. On several occasions merely because courts in
foreign countries have taken a different view than. that
taken by our courts or in adjudicating oil. any particular
matter we were asked to reconsider those decisions or to
consider them for the first time and to adopt them as the
law of this country. Only one instance will suffice to
illustrate this tendency. In Jagmohan Singh v. The State of
U.P.(1) in which the constitutional validity of awarding of
capital sentence permissible under s. 302 Indian Penal Code
was-challenged, because the American Supreme Court in Furman
v. State of Georgia decided on June 29, 1972, of which only
a copy seems to have been filed, took a particular view
regarding awarding of the capital sentence. The arguments
advanced before the U.S. Supreme Court were adopted in toto
before this Court and in support of the arguments that
capital sentence was unconstitutional substantial reliance
was placed on the social statistics and data prevailing in
foreign countries. This method and approach occasioned the
following comments from the Court to which one of us (Beg,
J.) was a party, Palekar, J., speaking for the Court
observed at p. 550 :
"We have grave doubts about the expediency of
transwestern planting experience in our
country. Social conditions are different and
so also the general intellectual level. In
the context of our criminal law which punishes
murder, one cannot ignore the fact that life
imprisonment works Out in most cases to a
dozen years of imprisonment and it may be
seriously questioned whether that sole
alternative will be an adequate substitute for
the death penalty. We have not been referred
to any large scale studies of crime statistics
compiled in this country with the object of
estimating the need of protection of the
society against murders."
No doubt an objective and rational deduction of a principle,
if it emerges from a decision of foreign country, rendered
on pari materia legislative provisions and which-can be
applicable to the conditions prevailing in this country will
assist the Court in arriving at a proper conclusion. While
we should seek light from whatever source we can get, we
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should however guard against being blinded by it. That
apart, unlike the position in England at the time when the
Courts recognised the presumption relied upon by the
appellant, cur law of evidence is codified in the Indian
Evidence Act. Every presumption,
(1) [1973] 2 S.C.R. 541.
699
barring some special ones created by other enactments. has
to be related to a provision of the Evidence Act.
It is true that Wills are. transactions of a nature which
give rise, to certain special considerations affecting their
validity irrespective of the time when or the country in
which they are made. Dispute over Wills invariably arise
after the testator’s death so that the alleged maker of the
Will is not before the Court to deny the execution or to
testify about the circumstances in which the alleged
disposition was made. There are such possibilities of fraud
and fabrication, particularly in cases of old and feeble
persons, that Courts have to be very circumspect in dealing
with: them and scrutinize the surrounding circumstances very
carefully. This is not less, if not much more, necessary in
a country like ours where misplaced confidence of un-
sophisticated persons is often abused by cunning and
unscrupulous individuals and perjury is not less frequent
than elsewhere. One of us, Beg., J., had occasion to
examine this aspect of the matter in Smt. Kamla Kunwar v.
Ratan Lal,(1) where it was observed, inter alia, at p. 307 :
" Unlike the ancient Romans, amongst whom
will-making became a widely prevalent custom,
so much so that it was considered practically
a hall-mark of respectability,’ people of this
country do not regard it- as an obloquy or a
departure from the norms of correct conduct
for an owner of property to fail to make a
will before dying. Testamentary disposition
of property is still the exception and not the
rule here. It is generally resorted to for
exceptional reasons such as the ones sought to
be made out in the will under consideration in
the instant case. The usual and ordinary
modes of thought and conduct of affairs by
property owners at a particular time in a
country are not irrelevant in considering the
circumstances in which an alleged will is said
to have been made. There is, of course, no
prejudice against will-making in this country.
But, the fact that it is generally made in
unusual or exceptional circumstances here is
worth remembering as it may place the burden
of proving those circumstances upon the
propounder of the will if its genuineness
becomes doubtful. The social context and the
possibilities of perpetrating fraud and of
exploiting the infirmities of mind and body of
the weak or the aged, which will-making,
offers to the unscrupulous. could also explain
the meticulousness and rigour with which
circumstances surrounding the alleged execu-
tion of a will are to be examined when
suspicious features are present."
Apart from general considerations emerging from the nature
of a Will and the circumstances which not infrequently
surround the execution of it, there are other matters which
are peculiar to the times and the society and perhaps even
to the person making the Will and his or her family.
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Inferences arising from relationships between a
(1) A.I.R. 1971 All. 304,307.
700
testator and a legatee are certainly so dependent upon the
peculiarities of the society or community to which the
testator and the legatee belong, their habits, and customs,
their values, their mores, their ways of making and feeling,
their susceptibilities to particular kinds of pressures,
influences, or inducements that it seems very difficult to
reduce them to a general rule applicable at all times and
everywhere so as to raise a presumption of undue influence
from a particular type of relationship. The only kinds of
relationship giving rise to such presumptions are those
contemplated in s. 11 of the Evidence Act. Any other
presumption from a relationship must, to be acceptable, be
capable of beeing raised only under s. 114 of the Evidence
Act. Such presumptions of fact are really optional
inferences from proof .of a frequently recurring set of
facts which make particular inference from such facts
reasonable and natural. If a particular situation arising
from a set of facts, which may raise a presumption
elsewhere, is exceptional or unusual here, there could be no
question here of applying a presumption arising from a
common or natural course of events. A suggested inference
of undue influence would then be a matter of proof on the
particular facts of the case before the Court. This, we
think is the correct legal position here.
The case before us could certainly not fall within s. 111 of
the Evidence Act. There is no presumption of law or fact in
this country that a woman to whom a man is engaged to be
married is in a position to dominate his will so as to over-
ride his own real intentions. It is not mere influence, but
undue influence, which has to be proved by the party which
sets up such a case. We think that a plea of undue
influence, where set up, is a special plea. Section 103 of
the Evidence Act places the burden of substantiating such a
plea on the party which sets it up.
Another reason why no presumption such as has been urged
before us can have any relevance to the facts of this case
is that the will was executed after the marriage. Perhaps
in order to get over this objection, expert evidence has
been adduced to prove that the date of the will has been
altered from 7th February to 8th February. Even if the date
has been altered, as the Judges of the Appellate Court have
held, it was altered by the testator himself in his own
hand. Nothing has been suggested nor is it the appellant’s
case that it was altered by any one else. If Bhim Sain
himself altered it either he could have altered it immedi-
ately he wrote the will from 7th February to 8th February on
discovering his mistake or he could have altered it long
after the document was executed. The first possibility is
more probable, because experience has shown that often
enough people have put a wrong date and immediately correct
it. Of course, in negotiable instruments etc. the Bankers
or drawees insist on the corrections being authenticated by
the maker of the instrument by appending his signature to
the correction. This was not that kind of instrument of
which any such course could be insisted upon Apart from
this, the clear and cogent evidence of Col. Vigh and Nelson
Das which has been accepted by all the Courts shows that the
document was signed on the 8th February. These witnesses
701
have themselves put 8th February as the date under their
signature. Even apart from this, there is no possible
motive for changing the date from 7th to 8th February. 7th
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February was the date of the marriage, and even if it was
executed on the 7th February, there was nothing to show that
it was executed before the marriage on that day. it could
have been executed after the marriage because when the
marriage was taking place on that date there could not have
been any great hurry unless Saraswati made it a condition of
the marriage that it should be executed before the marriage
takes place. No doubt some suggestion was made to her that
the making of the will was a condition of the marriage which
Saraswati denied. We do not think that Saraswati who must
have known that a will is ambulatory and speaks from the
date of the death could have insisted on such a document
being executed before her marriage when Bhim Sain could at
any time revoke it. A marriage with such a condition as was
suggested would certainly not have been propitious nor would
the chances of the marriage enduring be rosy. The seeds of
dissension would have been sown if such a stipulation was
insisted upon as a condition of the marriage.
In the instant case, there was no suggestion that the
testator was feeble minded or so completely deprived of his
power of independent thought and judgment as to faithfully
carry out the wishes of the lady to whom he became engaged
and then married. In fact, it appears that it was he who
might have offered the inducement Voluntarily to the lady
concerned to agree to share his life. Upon the facts of
such a case no presumption of the kind urged before us on
behalf of the appellant could, in our opinion reasonally
arise in any country, at any time, in any society.
To meet any possible objection an allegation That the will
could have been revoked the appellants have pleaded that
force and undue influence were exercised upon Bhim Sain to
prevent him from revoking the will and executing another
will by which he wanted to dispose of his properties
equitably among his children. As we have noticed earlier
the Appellate Court has rejected this extravagant
suggestion. On the other hand it has observed :
"It appears from evidence that after Bhim
Sain’s marriage with Saraswati and before the
children came to know about the Will they
definitely behaved shabbily with Bhim Sain"
The circumstances from which this conclusion was derived
were that Bhim Sain was completely ignored at the time of
Shanta’s marriage that none of the children appear to have
gone to Bhim Sain before his death and that Bhim Sain never
had an opportunity to see his grandson though the first
appellant tried to make out case that he could not do it
because of Saraswati. The Appellate Court however held that
there was nothing in the evidence to show that Saraswati
could possibly have prevented Bhim Sain from going to see
his grandson. On the other hand the first appellant said in
his evidence referring to his father’s desire to see his
son. "I know he was anxious to see him but I did not take
my son."
702
We have also considered the alleged suspicious circumstances
that the attestation was made subsequently after true will
was executed and as already pointed out both the Courts have
accepted the evidence of the attesting withnesses that the
will was attested on the same day and at the same time as
the execution of the will by the testator. The evidence
relating to the typing of the attestation matter
subsequently has been fully dealt with by both the Courts
and we have no hesitation in agreeing with their findings.
We have also no doubt that the Will was genuine. All the
formalities required were fully satisfied, it was executed
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by the testator in a sound disposing mind and It was duly
attested as required by law.
The appeal is, therefore dismissed with costs.
V. P. S. Appeal dismissed.
703