Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DATTATRAYA @ PRAKASH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KRISHNA RAO @ LALA SAHEB BAXI THROUGH L.RS.ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/08/1991
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 AIR 1972 1991 SCR (3) 644
1993 SCC Supl. (1) 32 JT 1991 (6) 160
1991 SCALE (2)368
ACT:
Hindu Law--Chandurpur Jagir--Grant--In perpetuity and
enjoyment from generation to generation--Succession to
impartible estate--Rule of governance--Consideration
of--Income of impartible estate--Nature of.
HEADNOTE:
One Yesaji-2, ancestor of the parties rendered meritori-
ous military service to Ranaji Scindia and in recognition
thereof, the Raja of Gwalior granted permanent jagir of
Chandurpura village together with the buildings situated in
100 Bighas of land and the residential Bada with right of
enjoyment and succession from generation to generation. By
virtue thereof, the ownership, possession and enjoyment was
continued successively for seven generations upto Dwarkanath
by rule of primogeniture. Dwarkanath was the nephew (broth-
er’s son) Of the respondent and father of appellant Nos. 1
and 2. Dwarkanath being minor at the time of his succession
to the estate, the court of wards took over the management
and the respondent was appointed as Superintendent and on
his death, since appellants 1 and 2 were minors Aruna Rai,
their mother, initially managed the estate with the assist-
ance of the respondent and subsequently the respondent came
into full control and management. The respondent filed a
suit for partition .in the year 1962 of the plaint schedule
1 to 3 properties in equal moiety and allotment of one such
share to him. He pleaded that the properties are coparcenary
joint family properties and he is entitled to a half share
therein. The respondent received maintenance from the jagir
income at the rate of Rs.125 per month. The appellants-
defendants disputed the nature of the properties as joint
family, status of the respondent and the appellants as
coparceners. They referred to various accretions made to the
jagir estate by their father and mother and pleaded that the
jagir being an impartible estate is the separate and self-
acquired properties of Dattatraya-1 Dwarkanath by rule of
primogeniture and the concept of coparcenary and joint
family status’ are inapplicable to it, and that the respond-
ent has thus no share therein, but has only a right of
maintenance as per the law and the Custom of Gwalior State.
It was also added that the respondent and his wife were
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given jewellery at. the time of their mar-
645
riage which belonged to the family of the appellants and
some of them are stridhana of the 3rd defendant; the re-
spondent had no share therein or in the utensils etc. The
trial court found that till the date of death of Ghanshyam-2
in 1909, he was jagirdar. Dattatraya-1 and Dwarkanath suc-
ceeded as Jagirdars by rule of primogeniture. After the
abolition of the Jagir, compensation was paid to Dwarkanath
during his life time as the eldest member of the family and
the appellant no. 1 also had been paid balance of compensa-
tion. If a joint family possesses property which was admit-
tedly joint, the presumption would he that the property
continued to be joint and the burden lies upon the member
who claims as separate property to plead and prove it as
separate or self-acquired property. On this reasoning, the
trim court granted preliminary decree for partition of half
share in schedule 1 and 2 and half share in the moveable
property viz., compensation amount jewellery and utensils.
The High Court substantially upheld the findings of the
trial court. It held that rule of primogeniture and survi-
vorship was introduced by the Manual of Jagirdars of the
Gwalior State (Qwaid Jagirdaram) in the year 1913 and with
the abolition of the Jagir in 1951 under the Madhya Bharat
Abolition of Jagir Act 28, 1951, the properties became the
ancestral Hindu Joint family properties and they are parti-
ble, irrespective of the fact in whose name it was entered
either as Bhumidar in revenue papers or Jagirdar. The High
Court while confirming the decree of the trial court, di-
rected the respondent to bring into hotch potch his jewel-
lery and the appellants to have a half share therein and
accordingly dismissed the appeal and the cross-objections.
Hence this appeal by the appellants-defendants by special
leave.
Partly allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: Liability to partition is an ordinary feature of
joint family property, but it must not be supposed that
joint property and partible property are mutually converti-
ble terms. [652F]
Succession to an impartible estate is governed by rule
of primogeniture and the eldest male member of the family
would succeed by survivorship to the impartible estate.
[653H-654A]
The impartible estate, though descends by rule of primo-
geniture and survivorship on the eldest male member of the
family, it must also be proved that the junior members gave
up expressly or by implication his right to a share
therein.[655G]
The income of an impartible estate is not income of the
undivided
646
family but is the income of the present holder, notwith-
standing that he has sons or brothers from whom he is not
divided. The fact that the son’s or brother’s right to
maintenance arises out of the eldest brother’s possession of
impartible estate and is a right to be maintained out of the
estate, do not make it a right of a unique or even excep-
tional character or involve the consequence at Hindu Law
that the income of the estate is not the holder’s income.
Income is not jointly enjoyed by the party entitled to
maintenance and the party chargeable nor can it be said that
the respective chances of each son to succeed by survivor-
ship make them all co-owners of the income with their father
or make the holder of the estate a manager on behalf of a
Hindu family of which he and they are the male members of
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the family. [658C-E]
The right of joint enjoyment which is ordinary incident
to a coparcenary, where the joint estate is partible, is
excluded by the rule of primogeniture and impartibility. The
income of an impartible estate and the accumulation of such
income are the absolute property of the holder. The immova-
ble properties would be incorporated with impartible estate.
It must be proved that the holder had impressed the immova-
ble properties as part of the estate. But the movable
properties will not. Movables are not an accretion to the
estate as in the case of an ordinary joint family estate.
[659E].
The grant of Chandurpur Jagir was in perpetuity and the
enjoyment is from generation to generation. Geneology ex-
tracted herein before establishes that devolution by survi-
vorship to the eldest male member continued till time of
Dwarkanath and the respondent received only maintenance from
the Jagir estate. What was implicit was made explicit by
Qwaid Jagirdaran issued in Samvat 1970 by Maharaja Scindia
of Gwalior State. [659F-G]
Thus it is indivisible and impartible and succeeded by
lineal eldest descendent of the family by rules of primogen-
iture. [659H]
Baijnath Prasad Singh v. Tej. Bali Singh, 48 Indian
Appeals 195 A.I.R. 1921 P.C. 62; Katama Natchiar v. Raja of
Shivganga, [1863] 9 Noore Indian Appeals, 588 (P.C.); Sartaj
Kuari & Anr. v. Deoraj Kuari, 15 Indian AppealS, 51; Pratap
Chandra Deo v. Jagdish Chandra Deo, 54 Indian Appeals 289
A.I.R. 1927 P.C. 159; Anant Shikkappa Patil v. Shankar
Ramchandra Patil, A.I.R. 1943 P.C. 196 at 201; Amrendra Man
Singh v. Sanatan Singh, 60. Indian Appeals 142 A.I.R. 1933
P.C. 155; Shiba Prasad Singh v. Rani Prayag Kumari Debi &
Ors., 59 Indian Appeals 351 A.I.R. 1932 P.C. 216; Chin-
647
nathayi @ Veeralakshmi v. Kulasekara Pandiya Naicker & Anr.,
[1952] S.C.R. 241; Smt. Rani Prabha Kumari Bibi v. Jagdish
Chunder Dhabal, 29 Indian Appeals 82=ILR 29 Calcutta 433
P.C.; Janki Pershad Singh v. Dwarka Pershad Singh, 40 Indian
Appeals 170=ILR 35 Allahabad 391 P.C.; Murtaza Husain Khan
v. Mohd. Yasin Ali Khan, 43 Indian Appeals 269=A.I.R. 1916
P.C. 89; Jagdamba Kumari v. Wazir Narain, 48 Indian Appeals
195=A.I.R. 1921 P.C. 62; Commissioner of Income-tax, Madras
v. Honble Sri Ravu Swetachalapati Ramakrishna Ranga Rao,
Rajah of Babbili, A.I.R. 1937 Madras 515; Commissioner of
Income-tax, Punjab v. DeWan Bahadur Dewan Krishna Kishore,
Rais, Lahore, A.I.R. 1941 P.C.120; Mirza Raja Shri Pushava-
thi Viziaram Gajapathi Raj Manne Sultan Bahadur & Ors. v.
Shri Pushavathi Visweswar Gajapathi Raj & Ors., [1964] 2
S.C.R. 403; Muttu Baduganadha Tevar v. Periasami @ Udayana
Tevar, 23 Indian appeals 128 P.C.; Ravi Janardhana Krishna
Ranga Rao v. State of Madras, A.I.R. 1953 Madras 185; Tha-
kore Shri Vinayasinghji v. Kumar Srinatwarsinghji & Ors.,
[1988] (Supp.) S.C.C. 133; Sri Raja Rao Venkata Mahipati
Gangadara Rama Rao Bahadur v. Raja of Pittapur, 47 Indian
Appeals 354=A.I.R. 1918 P.C. 81; Maharajah of Jeypore & Anr.
v. Vikrama Deo Garu, 52 Indian Cases 333=A.I.R. 1919 P.C.
126; Anant Kibe & Ors. v. Purushottam Rao & Ors., [1984]
(Suppl.) S.C.C. 175, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1072 of
1976.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 2.2.1973 of the
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Madhya Pradesh High Court in First Appeal No. 19 of 1966.
T.U. Mehta, S.N. Singh and T.N. Singh for the Appellants.
V.A. Bobde, Uday U. Lalit, S.K. Gambhir, A G. Rat-
naparkhi, Ms. Vandana Kakre and R.A. Roman for the Respond-
ents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K. RAMASWAMY, J. This appeal by special leave under Art.
136 of the Constitution of India arises against the decree
and judgment dated February 2, 1978 in First Appeal No. 10
of 1966 of the M.P. High Court at Gwalior Bench. Krishna Rao
@ Lala Saheb, for short "respondent" laid the Civil Suit
No..9-A of 1962 before the Addl. District Judge, Gwalior for
partition of the plaint schedule 1 to 3 properties in equal
moiety and allotment of one such share to him.
648
Pending this appeal he died and his legal representatives
are on record. The Trial Court by its judgment and decree
dated January 31, 1966 granted preliminary decree for parti-
tion of half share in schedule 1 and 2 and half share in the
movable property, namely compensation amount, jewellery and
utensils as found in the inventory prepared by the Nazir
except the stridhana property of 3rd defendant i.e. mother
of appellants Nos. 1 and 2. The High Court while confirming
the decree of the Trial Court directed the respondent to
bring into hotch potch his jewellery and the appellants to
have a half share therein and dismissed the appeal and the
cross objections.
The admitted facts are that one Ghanshyam Sadashiv Baxi
Saheb, for short ’Ghanshyam-1’ was the common ancestor. He
had two sons by name Yesaji-1 and Phatoji. Yesaji-1 had a
son by name Ramakrishna, whose son was Yesaji @ Baba Saheb
for short Yesadji2. Yesaji-2 rendered meritorious military
service to Ranaji Scindhia and in recognition thereof the
Raja of Gwalior granted permanent Jagir of Chandurpura
village under Ex. D-20, together with the buildings situated
in 100 Bighas of land and the residential Bada with right of
enjoyment and succession from generation to generation. By
virtue thereof the ownership, possession and enjoyment was
continued successively for seven generations upto Dwarkanath
by rule of primogeniture. Ghanshyam @Tatya Saheb for short
Ghanshyam-2 had two sons by name Dattatraya Rao @ Bapu Saheb
for short Dattatraya-1 and the respondent. Dwarkanath was
the son of Dattatraya-1. The appellant, Dattatraya @ Prakash
and Pradip @ Anil, appellants Nos. 1 and 2 are sons of
Dwarkanath Aruna Bai, third defendant is his widow. Ghansh-
yam-2 died on June 20, 1909. Dattatrya-1 died on February 6,
1926 and Dwarkanath died on May 19, 1956.
Dwarkanath being minor on his succession to the estate
the court of wards took over management and the respondent
was appointed as a Superintendent. On death Of Dwarkanath
since appellants 1 and 2 were minors Aruna Bai, their moth-
er, initially managed the estate with the assistance of the
respondent. Subsequently the respondent came into full
control and management till date of suit. The respondent
filed the suit for partition in the year 1962 pleading that
all the plaint schedule 1 to 3 properties are coparcenary
and he is entitled to a half share therein. The respondent
received maintenance from Jagir income at the rate of Rs.
125 per month.
In the written statement, the appellants, while admit-
ting the geneology, their residential house at Gwalior as
ancestral; they dis-
649
puted the nature of the properties as joint family, states
of the respondent and the appellant as coparceners. They
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admitted that till death of Ghanshyam-2 in 1909 the family
was joint and thereafter they were separated by mess-and
residence in the year 1929. The house M No. 626 Holka No.
101 at Gwalior was the residential old house but the Veran-
dah and two rooms on both sides were constructed by Datta-
traya-1. The shops in the back side of iron gate at Kampoo
Road were not existing during life time of Ghanshyam-2, but
the lands were purchased by Dattatraya-1 with the Jagir
income and the shops and .the rooms were constructed with
the Jagir income. It was also pleaded that four shops situ-
ated on eastern side of iron gate were constructed by the
appellants’ mother from the compensation of the Jagir lands
and the personal amount belonging to them.Jeherin Araji
lands were purchased by Dattatraya-1 from his personal
amounts. The rooms situated on eastern side of Shashikala
Ranglekar was purchased and constructed during the minority
of Dwarkanath from the income of the Jagir. The property
adjacent to the gate on the north of the Bada namely two
rooms, gate, the pucca house along with the well were con-
structed from the income of the Jagir by Dattatraya-1. The
pator on the south side of the stair case was constructed by
Dwarkanath from Jagir’s income, Pucca walls adjacent to the
quarters and the southern side of the main residential Bada
are estate properties and as per law and. custom of Gwalior
State Dwarkanath became the owner of the property. The
respondent has no right to a share but had only right to
maintenance..After the death of Ghanshyam-2 the respondent
continued to receive maintenance from his brother Datta-
traya-1 who continued in possession and enjoyment of the
Jagir as his personal property. The respondent had right to
share only in the private property. The residential house
except Verandah and two rooms shown as No. 1, 2 and 3 in the
enclosed map belong to the family and those three items
belong to Dattatraya-1. Accordingly it is their plea that
the Jagir being impartible estate is the separate and self-
acquired properties of Dattatraya-1 and Dwarkanath by rule
of primogeniture and the concept of coparcenary and joint
family status are inapplicable to it. The respondent has no
share therein, but has only right to maintenance as a junior
member of the family as per the law and custom of Gwalior
State. It was further pleaded that the respondent and his
wife were given jewellery at the time of their marriage. The
jewellery found by Nazir belong to the family of the appel-
lants and some of them are stridhana of 3rd defendant. The
respondent is not entitled to any share therein or in the
utensils.
The trial court found that till date of death of Ghanshyam-2
in
650
1909, he was Jagirdar. Dattatraya-1 and Dwarkanath succeeded
as Jagirdars by rule of primogeniture. After the abolition
of the Jagir compensation was paid to Dwarkanath during his
life time as the eldest member of the family, and the appel-
lant No. 1 also had been paid balance of the compensation.
If a joint family possesses property which was admittedly
joint the presumption would be that the property continued
to be joint and the burden lies upon the member who claims
and separate property to plead and prove it as separate or
self acquired property. The respondent was living jointly
with his brother Dattatraya-1. Number of sale-deeds show the
purchase made by Dattatraya-1. that old pators and two shops
were remodelled by the court of wards. The purchase of the
plots by Dattatraya-1 and constructions made thereon by him
on the ancestral lands are the joint family properties. The
Bada at Gwalior is the residential house and was not a part
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of the grant in Ex. D-20. Therefore, the residential Bada on
the Kampoo Road is an ancestral property of the family.
Whatever accretions were made therein must be deemed to be
incorporated for the benefit of the family unless it is
specifically shown that it was self-acquired and separate
property by Ghanshyam-2 or Dattatraya-1 or Dwarkanath. After
the abolition of the Jagir Dwarkanath received compensation.
The four shops constructed also form joint family property.
The properties given under Ex. D-20 in the village Chandupu-
ra are the Jagir properties. This is also ancestral and
impartible property. There is no evidence to show that out
of the Jagir income received, any property purchased or
constructed were kept as separate properties. Therefore,
whatever accretions made by Dattatraya-1 for Dwarkanath or
Aruna Bai are joint family properties. It was also found
that the respondent did not make any contribution, nor
improved the properties. As there is no evidence to show
that Dattatraya-1 treated the income of the property as his
separate income, the plaint schedule-1 properties are ances-
tral properties. The Jagir compensation received from time
to time also form the joint family properties. The relations
between the family was smooth and cordial till 1962. There
was no partition earlier thereto. Merely because succession
to the Jagir was governed by the rule of primogeniture, it
did not clothe the Jagir with the incidence of separate and
self-acquired property. Therefore, they are joint family
properties liable to partition. The jewellery except the
stridhana of third defendant are joint family properties.
The High Court substantially upheld the findings of the
trial court. It held that rule of primogeniture and survi-
vorship was introduced by the Manual of Jagirdars of the
Gwalior State (Qwaid Jagirdaran) in the year 1913 (Samwat
1970) and with the abolition of the Jagir in 1951 under the
Madhya Bharat Aboli-
651
tion of Jagir Act 28, 1951 (Samwat 2008) for short ’the
Act’,’ the properties became the ancestral Hindu Joint
Family properties and they are partible, irrespective of the
fact in whose name it was entered either as Bhumidar in
revenue papers or Jagirdar. The rooms constructed in the
ancestral Bada are accretions to the ancestral house and
became part and parcel of it. There is no evidence that the
money spent for construction came from separate or own funds
of the appellants. All the rooms became accretions to the
ancestral property and became joint family property. The
jewellery are joint family properties to the extent found by
the Trial Court and are liable to partition. The compensa-
tion paid under the Act also belongs to the joint family
property. It directed to bring into hotch potch the jewel-
lery of the respondent for partition in equal shares.
Shri T.U. Mehta, learned senior counsel for the appel-
lants, contended that the courts below erred in holding that
the properties are joint family properties, liable to parti-
tion. Since it is a Jagir grant, as per the custom and law,
the eldest male member succeeds by rule of primogeniture and
survivorship. Therefore, they are the separate properties of
the eldest descendant, subject to right of maintenance by
the junior members of the family. Despite they being members
of the undivided Hindu Joint Family, the concept of copar-
cenership cannot be applied to Jagir estate. The respondent
having had the benefit of maintenance right through, is not
entitled as coparcener to a partition of the plaint sched-
uled properties as the joint family properties. The jewel-
lery are the exclusive property of the appellants/defend-
ants-
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Shri Bobde, learned senior counsel for the respondent
argued that though the Jagir was granted tO the named indi-
vidual, the recitals therein unmistakably point to the fact
that, it is to be enjoyed by the family from generation to
generation. It would, therefore, be the coparcenary proper-
ty. Appellants and the respondent being governed by the
Mitakshara Law are entitled to equal moiety. The jewellery
is the joint family property. There is no partition at any
time. It was further contended that after the abolition of
the Jagir under the act, Dwarkanath or appellants received
compensation and the properties were acquired from the
income of the compensation. The properties therefore, are
impressed with joint family character and are partible. Thus
the decree for partition is not illegal.
The facts, as found or not disputed in the pleadings,
are thus: Admittedly, Chandurpura village was granted as
Jagir under Sanad (Ex. D-20) and thereafter the family lived
in Gwalior for several gen-
652
erations in the Bada. Certain accretions or incorporations
were made to the properties of the family from out of the
income derived from the estate or compensation received
under the Act. Dattatraya-1, Dwarakanath and 3rd defendant
improved the properties. The respondent, right through,
received maintenance from the estate and did not contribute
anything for the improvement of the estate. He had his
education from the maintenance granted from the estate and
became a Judicial Officer.After the abolition of the Jagir
under the Act compensation received also was used to build
shops. The Jagir remained indivisible and impartible and
devolved successively for seven generations on the eldest
male lineal descendant and it continued till Dwarkanath’s
death in 1956. They are governed by Mitakshara Hindu Law and
rule of primogeniture. Under the Act the Jagir lands were
resumed and Jagir was abolished. During the management of
the estate by the Court of Wards, the respondent admittedly
worked as Superintendent. The family remained undivided till
date of suit. There is no evidence that any Jagirdar in
particular, Dattatraya-1 or Dwarkanath treated the accre-
tions as separate or self acquired property.
From these facts the question emerges whether the plaint
schedule properties are coparcenary. In our view, the Courts
below fell in serious misconceptions of law. Qwaid Jagirda-
ran only recognised and reiterated the existing law or
custom of impartibility and indivisibility of Jagir, etc.
and succession by rule of primogeniture. High Court also
committed error in holding that impartibility came to an end
with the abolition of Jagir under the Act and that earlier
thereto and subsequent to the Act the properties were copar-
cenary. Neither court appreciated the correct legal posi-
tion.
In Chapter 25 of Mayen’s Hindu Law, 12th Edition, at page
1065, paragraph 744 it is stated that liability to partition
is an ordinary feature of joint family property, but it must
not be supposed that joint property and partible property
are mutually convertible terms. If it were so, an impartible
estate could never be joint property. There are estates
which by special law or custom descend to one member of the
family, generally the eldest, to the exclusion of the other
members and which are impartible, though they are joint
property, in the eye of the law, belonging equally to the
other members; and their rights are hedged in by a number of
restrictions or limitations. The common
instances of this class are the ancient zamindaries ....
or feudatory
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estates held on military service tenure such as ........
royal grants
....... services such as Jagirs ......
653
In Baijnath Prasad Singh v. Tej Bali Singh, 48 Indian
Appeals 195=AIR 1921 P.C. 62 the Judicial Committee held
that succession to impartible estate will be regulated
according to the ordinary rule of Mitakshara Law. and that
the respondent being a person who in joint family would,
being eldest of the senior branch, with head of the family,
is the person designated in this impartible estate to occupy
the gaddi. Accordingly it was held that rule of primogeni-
ture would apply and not the ordinary rule of Mitakshara Law
of survivorship that would be applicable to impartible
estate.
In Katama Natchiar v. Raja of Shivganga; [1863] 9 Moore
Indian Appeals, 588 (P.C.) the Board held that the Zamindari
is admitted to be in the nature of a principality .of im-
partible and capable of enjoyment by only one member of the
family at a time and that therefore Mitakshara law of suc-
cession of the eldest male member would be applicable. In
Sartai Kuari & Anr. v. Deoraj Kuari, 15 Indian Appeals, 51
the Board held that there was no co-parcenary in impartible
estate. Pratap Chandra Deo v. Jagdish Chandra Deo, 54 Indian
Appeals 289=AIR 1927 P.C. 159 ruled that there is no co-
ownership in an impartible estate and that, therefore, no
right of coparcenary. survivorship would arise in an impart-
ible estate.
In Anant Bhikkappa Patii v. Shankar Ramchandra Patii,
AIR 1943 P.C. 196 at 201 it was held that:
"Now an impartible estate is not held in
coparcenary, though it may be joint family
property. It may devolve as joint family
property as separate property of the last male
owner. In the former case, it goes by survi-
vorship to that individual, among those male
members who in fact and in law are undivided
in-respect of ’the ’estate, who is singled out
by the special custom. e.g., lineal male
primogeniture. In the latter case, jointness
and survivorship are not as such in point; the
estate devolves by inheritance from the last
male owner in the order prescribed by the
special Custom or according to the ordinary
law of inheritance as modified by the custom."
In Amrendra Man Singh v. Sanatan Singh, 60 Indian Appeals
242=AIR 1933 P.C. 155 it was held that the zamindari proper-
ty belonged to the adopted son as to the last male owner.
Thus it is settled law that succession to an impartible
estate is
654
governed by rule of primogeniture and the eldest male member
of the family would succeed by survivorship to the imparti-
ble estate. It is seen from the record and it is not contro-
verted even across the Bar that for seven successive genera-
tions, the Jagir estate descended on the eldest male member
of the family by rule of primogeniture.
The question then is whether the Jagir is partible as
Hindu Joint Family property. In Shiba Prasad Singh v. Rani
Prayag Kumari Debi & Ors., 59 Indian Appeals 351=AIR 1932
P.C. 216 relied on by Sri Mehta, Sir Dinshan Mulla, speaking
for the Board held that impartibility is essentially a
creation of custom. In .the case of ordinary joint family
property, the members of the family have (1) the right of
partition, (2) the right to restrain alienations by the head
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of the family except for necessity, (3) the right of mainte-
nance, and (4) the right of survivorship. The first of
these rights cannot exist in the case of an impartible
estate though ancestral, from the very nature of the estate.
The second and the third are incompatible with the custom of
impartibility. To this extent the general law of Mitakshara
has been superseded by custom and the impartible estate,
though ancestral, is clothed with the incidents of self-
acquired and separate property. But the right of survivor-
ship is not inconsistent with the custom of impartibility.
This right, therefore, sail retains its character of joint
family property, and its devolution is governed by the
general Mitakshara law applicable to such property. Though
the other rights which a co-parecener acquires by birth in
joint family property, no longer exist, the birth right of
the senior member to take by survivorship still remains.
(emphasis supplied) Nor is this right a mere succession is
similar to that of a reversioner succeeding on the death of
a Hindu widow to her husband’s estate. It is a right which
is capable of being renounced and surrendered. Therefore, it
follows that in order to establish that a family governed by
the Mitakshara in which there is an ancestral impartible
estate has ceased to be joint it is necessary to prove an
intention, express or implied, on the part of the junior
members of the family to renounce their right of succession
to the estate. It is not sufficient to show a separation
merely in food and worship.
In Chinnathayi @ Veeralakshmi v, Kulasekara Pandiya
Naicker & Anr. [1952] SCR 24 1 this Court held that the
right to bring about partition of an. impartible estate
cannot be inferred from the power of alienation that the
holder there of may possess. In the case of an impartible
estate the power to divide it amongst the members does not
exist, though the power in the holder to alienate it is
there. This Court further held that:
655
"To establish that an impartible estate has
ceased to be joint family property for pur-
poses of succession it is necessary to prove
an intention, express or implied, on the part
of the junior members of the family to give up
their chance of succeeding to the estate. In
each case, it is incumbent on the. plaintiff
to adduce satisfactory grounds for holding
that the joint ownership of the defendant’s
branch in the estate was determined so that it
became the separate property of the last
holder’s branch. The test to be applied is
whether the facts show a clear intention to
renounce or surrender any interest in the
impartible estate or a relinquishment of the
right of succession and intention to impress
upon the zamindari the character of separate
property."
In Shiba Prasad Singh’s case it was further
held thus:
"surely then the property will pass not as
his separat property,-but by survivorship as
joint property--devolu- tion by survivorship
being another incident of an impartible
estate. The .fact is that when self-acquired
property is incorporated with an ordinary
joint family estate the pro- perty so incorpo-
rated is impressed with all the incidents
whic attach to an ordinary joint family estate
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and when self-acquired property is
incorporated with an ancestral impartible
estate the property so incorporated is im-
presse with all the incidents which attach to
an ancestral impart ble estate.The mere possi-
bility therefore of the holder alienating
the property after incorporation is no reason
for denying to him the power which the
Hindu law gives him of changing the mode of
descent to his property. Nor is there
anything in that rule of law which is incon-
sistent with the custom of impartibility."
Accordingly it must be held that the impartible estate
though descends by rule of primogeniture and survivorship on
the eldest male member of the family, it must also be proved
that the junior members gave up expressly or by implication
his right to a share therein.
The further question is whether it is competent to the
holders ofan ancestral impartible estate to incorporate with
the estate other properties acquired or incorporated by him
or them with the income ofthe impartible estate. In Smt.
Rani Prabha Kumari Dibi v. Jagdish Chunder Dhabal, 29 Indian
Appeals 82=ILR 29 Calcutta 433 (P.C.)
656
the question was regarding succession to an ancestral im-
partible estate and four Mauzas that has been purchased on
behalf of the last holder out of the savings of the estate.
The Board held that there must be evidence to establish the
intention of the holder express Or implied to incorporate
the property as part of the estate. Though the collection of
the rents was by the estate servant and the papers were kept
in the estate, the Board held that the evidence was not
sufficient to hold that the Raja intended to incorporate the
four mauzas with ancestral estate for the purpose of his
succession. The 4 Mauzas must, therefore, follow the rule of
Mitakshara as to self-acquired property. In Janki Pershad
Singh v. Dwarka Pershad Singh, 40 Indian Appeals 170=ILR 35
Allahabad 391 P.C. the movable and immovable properties
acquired from the income of the estate and were incorporated
as part of the estate, yet the Board held that the question
whether the properties acquired by an owner becomes part of
the ancestral estate for the purpose of the succession would
be considered from the intention of the holder of the es-
tate. It was held, on facts, that no sufficient evidence was
adduced to establish such an intention. In Murtaza Husain
Khan v. Mohd. Yasin Ali Khan, 43 Indian Appeals 269=AIR 1916
P.C. 89 as regards immovable properties the same view. was
reiterated. In Jagdamba Kumari v. Wazir Narain, 48 Indian
Appeals 195=AIR 1921 P.C. 62 the Board held that the income
of ancestral impartible estate was the absolute properties
of the owner of the estate and not an accretion to the
estate as in the case of ordinary joint family estate. While
reversing the judgment of the High Court it held:
"It is possible that this confusion is due to
the consideration of the position with regard
to an ordinary joint family estate.In such a
case the income, equally with the corpus,
forms part of the family property, and if the
owner mixes his own moneys with the moneys of
the family--as, for example, by putting the
whole into one account at the bank, or by
treating them in his accounts as indistin-
guishable-his own earnings share with the
property with which they are mingled the
character of the joint family property; but no
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such considerations necessarily, apply to the
income from impartible property."
In Jagdamba Prasad’s case the Board held that the income
received is the absolute property of the owner of the im-
partible estate and it does not attach to the estate as does
the income of ordinary ancestral estate attaches to the
estate. While immovable property can be impressed with the
impartible estate "movable property cannot". It
657
was further held that the income received is the absolute
property of the owner of the estate it derives and in no way
from the property he might have by his own saving. It is
wrong assumption to make that the income of the property of
that nature is so effected’by the sources from which it came
that still retains itself original character. In Commission-
er of Income tax, Madras v. Honble Sri Ravu Swetachalapati
Ramakrishna Ranga Rao, Rajah of Babbili, AIR 1937 Madras 515
the full Bench held that the income received by the holder
of the impartible estate was not received as. a member of
the Hindu Undivided Family. The income is. his and the
junior members have no right therein. In Shiba Prasad’s case
(1932), the Board held that it is possible to incorporate
immovable property as a part of the estate, but movable
properties are the separate properties and they cannot be
incorporated and the doctrine of incorporation does not
apply in the words thus:
"The rule of succession in such a case.is
recognised by the State as part of the law of
family, though it is no more than the result
of a course of conduct of individual subjects
of the State constituting the family. "Under
the Hindu system of law, clear proof of
usage." even if it be a family usage "will
outweigh the written text of the law;"
In Commissioner of Income-tax, Punjab v. Dewan Bahadur
Dewan Krishna Kishore, Rais, Lahore, AIR 1941 P.C. 120
SirGeorge Rankin speaking, for the Board, held that when a
family governed by the Mitakshara, by custom the rule of
primogeniture controls the devolution of impartible proper-
ty, the custom of impartibility does not touch the succes-
sion since the right of survivorship is not inconsistent
with the custom; hence the estate retains its character. of
joint family property and devolves by the general law upon
the person who, being in fact and in law joint in respect of
the estate, is also the senior member in the senior line.
Hence a holder of the estate receiving income from house
property cannot be said to be the owner of such property. It
is the joint family that is the owner and, therefore, he
cannot be assessed as an individual in respect of such
income.
In Mirza Raja Shri Pushavathi Viziaram Gajapathi Raj
Manne Sultan Bahadur & Ors. v. Shri Pushavathi Visweswar
Gajapathi Raj & Ors [1964] 2 SCR 403 it was held that immov-
able property subsequently acquired also would become im-
partible and ceases to be partible and becomes impartible
but the theory of incorporation cannot apply to movable
property. In ease there is a family custom even in respect
of movable properties, as per the custom those movable pro-
658
perties also become part of impartible estate. Incorporation
is a matter of intention. It is only where evidence has been
adduced to show the intention of the acquirer to incorporate
the property aCquired by him with the impartible estate of
which he is the holder, then an inference can be drawn about
such incorporation. The question, therefore, is one of
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intention of acquirer. By custom in the family the jewellery
would be treated to form part of the regalia which belong to
the holder of the estate and then would form part of impart-
ible estate. In that case as per custom in the family cer-
tain jewellery were treated as part of impartible estate and
belonged to the estate.
The income of an impartible estate thus is not income
of the undivided family but is the income of the present
holder, notwithstanding that he has sons or brothers from
whom he is not divided. The fact that the son’s or brother’s
right to maintenance arises out of the eldest brother’s
possession of impartible estate and is .a right to .be
maintained out of the estate, do not make it a right of a
unique or even exceptional character or involve the conse-
quence at Hindu Law that the income of the estate is not the
holder’s income. Income is not. jointly enjoyed by the party
entitled to maintenance and the party chargeable nor can it
be said that the respective chances of each son to succeed
by survivorship make them all co-owners of the income with
their father or make the holder of the estate a manager on
behalf of a Hindu family of which he and they are the male
members of the family.
It is equally well settled law that the holder of im-
partible estate can incorporate other properties belonging
to him with that estate so as to make them also impartible
and descendable to a single heir by survivorship. It is one
of intentions to be proved as a fact whether the accretions
are his separate properties or incorporated as part of
impartible estate. The intention may be express or implied
by conduct or treatment of the properties. In Muttu Baduga-
nadha Tevar v. Periasami @ Udayana Tevar, 23 Indian Appeals
128 (P.C,) the Privy Council held that the doctrine of
representation between the father and his three lineal
descendants has been on the assumption that he is reborn in
them and the eldest to exclude his brother is continued to
his lineal male heirs. In Ravi Janardhana Krishna Ranga Rao
v. State of Madras, AIR 1953 Madras 185 relied on by Sri
Mehta, it was held that in the case of an estate to which
the incident of impartibility attaches. by custom, custom
supersedes the general Mithakshara law excepting in the
matter of devolution of the property by right of survivor-
ship. When an impartible estate was aCquired by the Govt.
under the
659
.
Madras Estates (Abolition and ConVersion into Ryotwari) Act
compensation received retains the incident of impartibility
attached to the estate and the principle that conversion
would not alter the nature ofthe estate is universal.
In Thakore Shri Vinayasinghji v. Kumar Srinatwarsinghji &
Ors.,[1988] (Supp.) SCC 133 relied on by the appellants,
this court held thatthere is no restraint on the power of
alienation of the holder of theimpartible estate. There is a
right of survivorship by birth to the seniormembers of the
family, but in all other respects it is clothed with thein-
cidents of self-acquired and separate property with the
holder ofimpartible estate and unlimited right of acquisi-
tion not only by transferbut by will. In Sri Raja Rao Venka-
ta Mahipati Gangadara Rama RaoBahadur v. Raja of Pittapur,
47 Indian Appeals 354=AIR 1918 P.C. 81(second Pittapur case)
and in Maharajah of Jeypore & Anr. v. VikramaDeo Garu, 52
Indian Cases 333=AIR 1919 P.C. 126 the Board alsoheld that
apart from custom and from near relationship to the
holder,the junior members of the family have no right to
maintenance out ofthe income of the impartible estate.
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It is also thus well settled law that the right of joint
enjoyment which is ordinary incident to a coparcenary, where
the joint estate is partible, is excluded by the rule of
primogeniture and impartibility. The income of an impartible
estate and the accumulation of such income are the
absolute .property of the holder. The immovable properties
would be incorporated with impartible estate. It must be
proved that the holder had impressed the immovable proper-
ties as part of the estate. But the movable properties will
not. Movables are not an accretion to the estate as in the
case of an ordinary joint family estate.
It is seen that the grant of Chandurpur Jagir was in
perpetuity and the enjoyment is from generation to genera-
tion- Geneology abstracted hereinbefore establishes that
devolution by survivorship to the eldest male member contin-
ued till time of Dwarakanath and the respondent received
only maintenance from the Jagir estate. What was implicit,
was made explicit by Quaid Jagirdaran issued in Samwat 1970
by the Maharaja Scindhia of Gwalior State. In paragraph 2
thereof it has been stated that Jagir grant shall be indi-
visible and impartible property. In paragraph 2 of the
preamble it is stated that the Jagir in its entirily would
continue in the family in which they were conferred. Thus it
is indivisible and impartible and succeeded by lineal eldest
descendent of the family by rules of primogeniture.
660
Chandarpura Jagir was granted under Ex. D-20 with 100
Bighas of lands and the buildings situated therein, accre-
tions made in such estate out of its income are impartible
estate governed by the rule of primogeniture and was suc-
ceeded by Dwarkanath as last eldest male descendant in the
family. Therefore, they were not the joint family properties
but are separate properties of Dwarkanath and the respondent
has no right to a share therein as a coparcener. The other
lands acquired from the income thereof stand incorporated as
part of the Jagir and are not partible. Section 9 of the Act
recognises the existing legal position and that the Junior
member has only right to maintenance and directs payment
thereof out of the compensation amount and creates a charge
thereon. Therefore, the properties enumerated in items 1 to
3 and 5 of schedule 2 are not partible.. The preliminary
decree in that regard is set aside. There appears to be
dispute regarding item 4. So it is left out to be decided in
separate proceedings.
Both the courts found as a fact that the accretions
were from out of the income of the Jagir. Schedule 1 ances-
tral residential Bada and other properties situated at
Gwalior are not covered by the sanad Ex. D-20. Admittedly,
all the, members of the joint family lived therein. The
prior partition in 1929 set up by the appellants was negated
by the courts below. Though Dattatraya-1 and Dwarkanath
improved the properties from the income of Jagir estate as
part of the joint estate, there is no evidence to establish
that either Dattatraya-1 or Dwarkanath treated those proper-
ties as their separate or self acquired properties. Both the
courts found as a fact that accretions formed part of. the
joint. family properties. Equally there is no evidence that
the respondent had given up his share therein either ex-
pressly or by implication by conduct. His assertion to be a
coparcener and the properties to be coparcenary shows that
he continued to claim to be a member of the joint family and
admittedly the properties are joint. The accretions stood
blended with ancestral joint family properties.
Under s. 3 of the Act what was resumed was only Jagir lands.
Resumption means taking back what was given; what was re-
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sumed are the lands and not the property of a person from
whom it was taken by the rightful owner. Therefore. what was
resumed is the right, title and interest in the Jagir lands
covered by the provisions of the Act and compensation was
paid in lieu thereof. Under s. 5(b)(i) notwithstanding the
vesting in the State under S. 4 thereof all Open enclosures
used for ........ domestic purposes and in continuous
possession for 12 years immediately before the date of the
resumption; (II) all open house sites purchased for valuable
consideration; (III) all private
661
buildings, places of worship, wells, etc. situated
in ...... house sitespecified in clause (I) and (II); (IV)
all groves wherever situated andlands appurtenant thereto
shall continue to belong to and be held by the Jagirdar and
be settled on him; (V) all ’tanks, trees, private wellsand
buildings in the occupied lands shall continue to belong to
or beheld by the family. Thus it is clear that all private
properties including buildings in the jagir belong to or
held by the Jagirdar remained to bethe property of the
Jagirdar. All private properties in the Jagir otherthan
impartible Jagir, therefore, rem’ained to be joint family
property.We, therefore, hold that schedule I properties are
partible. The pre-liminary decree for partition of them are
Upheld. ’
It is seen that 100 bighas of land in Chandurpura was
granted as Jagir. What had remained after the Act is hardly
5.41 bighas. So the rest of the lands, obviously, was re-
sumed by the Government, under the Act. By operation of s.
18 of the Act it is Jagirdar who is entitled toreceive
compensation money payable under the Act. Therefore, themon-
ey received towards compensation of Jagir lands also retains
thecharacter as impartible. Under the Act by operation of s.
19 of the Act the Jagirdar is declared to be pucca tenant of
Khudkhast lands of Dwarkanath. From the impugned judgment it
is clear that there are plethora of precedents of Madhya
Pradesh High Court that after the abolition of the estates
under the Act the lands became joint family properties which
received approval from Anant Kibe & Ors. v.Purushottam Rao &
Ors., [1984] (Suppl.) SCC 175 relied on by Sri Bobde. There-
in this court held that the combined effect of ss. 158(1)(b)
and 164 of the M.P. Land Revenue Code was that the incident
of impartibility and the special mode of Succession by the
rule of primogeniture which were granted in terms of the
grant of inam lands under the Jagir Manual stood extin-
guished. Bhumiswami right was conferred on the holder of the
land i.e. Dwarkanath- In Madhya Bharat Land Revenue and
Tenancy Act, 1950 by operation of ss. 54(7), 69 and 82 the
lands become the pucca tenancy of Bhumiswami i.e. Dwarka-
nath. Therefore, the devolution of the right of puccatenancy
is by succession opened to the appellants Nos. 1 and
2.Accordingly we hold that Item 2, 3 and 5 of schedule 2
lands become the properties of the appellants.
Cash grant of item 1 in schedule 3 of a sum of
Rs.6895.00 is to the family the respondent had already
received maintenance as a Junior member from the family and
so he is not entitled again to a share therein. The decree
is accordingly set aside. Regarding item 2 by operation of
s. 18 of the Act the Jagirdar is entitled to it and that,
662
therefore, the respondent had no share ’therein. The jewel-
lery and utensils being movable properties are separate and
personal propertiesbelonging to the appellants. Admittedly
the respondent was, given jewellery at his marriage etc.
Therefore, the jewellery and utensils are not liable to
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partition. The decree for partition of them is set aside.
The appeal is partly allowed. The judgment and decree of the
trial court as confirmed by the High Court to the extent of
all the items in schedule 1 for partition in two equal
shares and allotment of one such share to the respondent is
confirmed. The decree for partition of schedule 2 and 3 and
of the jewellery and utensils is set aside.
The appeal is allowed to the above extent, but parties
are directed to bear their own costs.
Y.L. Appeal patly
allowed.
663