Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GURBACHAN SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PURAN SINGH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/03/1961
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1263 1962 SCR (1) 176
ACT:
Hindu law-Ancestral Property-Lands obtained in lieu of
ancestral lands in consolidation Proceedings Area
representing ancestral land, if ancestral.
HEADNOTE:
One ’M’ executed a will bequeathing the property in dispute.
suit was brought for declaration, inter alia, that the will
was effective and ’M’ had no power to bequeath the land in
dispute it was ancestral qua the defendants.
The question for decision was whether the portion of land
high had fallen to the share of ’M’ in consolidation
proceedings in lieu of his share in land held by him was
ancestral or not.
Held,’ that where land had been consolidated and in lieu of
ancestral lands and non-ancestral land a consolidated area
was given to a proprietor, then such of the portion of the
consolidated area which corresponds to the area of land
which was ancestral, will be ancestral land.
Where the possession by the immediate common ancestor is not
shown in the revenue records but that of a more remote
direct ancestor is shown, and the history of the land gives
no indication of its acquisition except by inheritance, the
land would be ancestral.
Attar Singh v. Thakar Singh, (1908) L.R. 35 I.A. 206,
referred to.
Haveldar Mihan Singh v. Piara Singh, (1946) 48 P.L.R. 536
and Gurdev Singh v. Desaundki, A.I.R. 1948 E.P. 22,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION. Civil Appeal No. 492 of
1958.
Appeal by: special leave from the, judgment and order dated
September 12, 1955, of the Punjab High Court, Chandigarh, in
Regular Second Appeal No. 747 of 1951.
Achhru Bam and K. L. Mehta, for the appellants.
I. M. Lal and Mohan Lal Aggarwal, for respondents Nos. 1 to
4.
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1961. March 6. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KAPUR, , J.-This appeal arises out of the judgment and order
of the High Court of the Punjab reversing
177
in second appeal the decree of the District Court and thus
dismissing the plaintiffs suit for declaration. In order to
understand the question in controversy it is necessary to
set out the following pedigree:
Milkhi
Himmat Singh
Gulab Singh Mehtab Singh Fattu
(dead) Leekar(dead)
Mangal Singh Lalu Sheru Nathu Singh
(testator) (dead) (dead)
Harnam Singh Sohel Singh Waryam Singh
(Plaintiff No. 1) (Plaintiff NO. 2)
Karnail Ajaib Amar Shiv Puran
Singh Singh Singh Singh Singh
(deft.NO.3) (deft.NO.2) (deft.No.1) (PHf.NO.3) (deft.NO.4)
On August, 11 1947 Mangal Singh executed a will bequeathing
the property in dispute to Amar Singh defendant No. 1. After
the death of Mangal Singh on October 25, 1947 the mutation
of his estate was effected in the name of Amar Singh on
April.10, 1948 by mutation No. 733. The plaintiffs Sohel
Singh, Waryam Singh and Shiv Singh brought a suit for dec-
laration that the will was ineffective against them and for
possession of certain parcels of land mutated in the name of
Amar Singh. The allegation was that the will was made under
undue influence, coercion and fraud and that Mangal Singh
had no power to make the will as the land in dispute was
ancestral qua the defendants. These allegations were denied
and requisite issues were raised. The suit was dismissed by
the trial court holding that it was not proved that the
execution of the will was procured by the exercise of undue
influence or coercion or fraud and that the land had not
been proved to be ancestral.
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An appeal was taken against this decree to the District
Judge who held that out of 66 Kanals, 2 Marlas of land in
dispute an area of 28 Kanals, 3 Marlas was ancestral as it
was held by Himmat Singh, father of Mehtab Singh the common
ancestor. The District Judge also held that Mehtab Singh
had predeceased Himmat Singh but of this there seems to be
no proof. On appeal the High Court reversed the judgment of
the District Judge ,nd restored that of the trial court and
the appellants have come in appeal to this court by special
leave.
The sole question for decision in this appeal is whether 28
Kanals 3 Marlas out of the land in suit by the appellant.-,
is proved to be ancestral qua them. Out of the land claimed
20 Kanals 19 Marlas described in Para A-2 had been proved to
have been acquired by Mangal Singh by preemption and another
portion was his self-acquired mortgagee land. Therefore the
dispute was confined to certain Khasra numbers which had
fallen-to the share of the testator in consolidation
proceedings in lieu of his share in land held by him. The
excerpt P.W. 6/1 prepared by the Special Kanugo shows that
some of those Khasra numbers were traced to the possession
of Himmat Singh s/o Milkhi in 1849 and some Khasra numbers
were traced to the possession of Himmat Singh and others and
the remaining were traced to strangers. The District Judge
held that only the land which was held in 1849 by Himmat
Singh could be ancestral qua the plaintiffs and therefore
decreed the suit in regard to that portion which was 28
Kanals and 3 Marlas and that is the area of the land which
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is now in dispute.
In order to come to this conclusion the learned District
Judge in an elaborate judgment has traced the history of
each Khasura number and decreed only those Khasras which
were held by Himmat Singh. The High Court did not accept
this finding but, in our opinion, the High Court was in
error in interfering with that finding. At the first
regular settlement the land decreed was held by Himmat Singh
and the revenue pedigree shows that in 1885 the three
branches
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descending from Himmat Singh, i.e., Gulab Singh who was
alive, sons of Mehtab Singh and Leekar son of Fattu held
khewat Nos. 34, 35 and 36 which were equal in area and each
branch was paying land revenue of Rs. 13. The excerpt Ex.
P. W. 6/1 prepared by the Kanungo further shows that the
land held by the sons of Mehtab Singh, i. e., Khata No. 34
was held by them jointly and in equal shares. On these
facts the finding in regard to the land decreed was held to
be ancestral.
It was argued on behalf of the respondents that the land was
not ancestral and that it cannot be ancestral unless it was
shown that it was held by the common ancestor, i. e., Mehtab
Singh and as there was no revenue entry showing the land to
have been held by him the land could not be said to be
ancestral. Support for this was sought from a judgment of
the Privy Council in Attar Singh, v. Thakar Singh(1) where
Lord Collins observed as follows:-
"It is through their father, as heir of the
abovenamed Dhanna Singh, that the plaintiffs
claimed, and unless the lands came to Dhanna
Singh by descent from a lineal male ancestor
in the male line through whom the plaintiffs
also in like manner claimed, they are no
t
deemed ancestral in Hindu law."
But this does not support the submission of counsel for the
respondents. It is true that in the present case the land
was hold by a remote ancestor and not by the immediate
common ancestor but the history of the land which has been
referred to above clearly shows the ancestral nature of the
land in the hand of the descendants, the parties to the
present appeal. It therefore is ancestral. The contention
of the respondents does not find support from decided cases
and it is an erroneous view to take that merely because the
possession by the common ancestor itself is not shown in the
revenue records but that of a more remote direct ancestor is
it is non-ancestral even though the history of the land
gives no indication of its acquisition by the descendants
except by inheritance.
(1) (1908) L.R. 35 I.A. 2o6,211.
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It was then argued that as the land claimed had been
consolidated and both ancestral and non-ancestral land had
got mixed up it cannot be said as to what portion is
ancestral and what is non-ancestral. This again is not a
correct approach to the question. Where land has been
consolidated and in lieu of ancestral lands and non-
ancestral land a consolidated area is given to a proprietor
then such of the portion of the consolidated area which
corresponds to the area of land which was ancestral will be
ancestral land. It was so held in Haveldar Mihan Singh v.
Piara Singh (1) which is a decision of Abdul Rashid and Mehr
Chand Mahajan, JJ. (as they then were). The same view was
taken in a later’ judgment of the East Punjab High Court in
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Gurdev Singh-v. Dasa. undhi (2) where it was observed:-
"However, where the ancestral portion of the
land so given or thrown was by no means
negligible and bore a definite proportion to
the whole of- the land there can be no
difficulty in apportioning the land acquired
according to the areas of the two classes of
such land, namely ancestral and non-
ancestral."
The District Judge in our view rightly held that 28 Kanals 1
and 3 Marlas were ancestral and he has rightly decreed the
suit qua that portion.
The appeal therefore succeeds and is allowed,. and the
decree of the District Judge is restored with costs in this
Court and in the High Court.
Appeal allowed.
(1) (1946) 48 P.I.R. 336. (2) A.I.R. 1948 E.P. 220 25.
181