Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANGAL SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRIMATI RATTNO & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/04/1967
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
BENCH:
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
WANCHOO, K.N.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1786 1967 SCR (3) 454
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC1944 (32)
ACT:
Hindu Succession Act (30 of 1956), s. 14-Hindu widow
inheriting property from husband in 1917-Dispossessed by
husband’s collaterals in 1954-Suit for recovery of
possession filed by her-During pendency of suit Act 30 of
1956 passed-S. 14 of Act conferring rights of full ownership
to women holding as limited owners in respect of property
"possessed by" them-Dispossessed owner whether possesses
property within meaning of section.
HEADNOTE:
A Hindu widow in the Punjab came into possession of her
husband’s land on his death in 1917. She continued in
possession till 1954 when on an application made by certain
collaterals of her late husband the Naib Tehsildar effected
a mutation in favour of the collaterals. On the basis of
the Naib Tehsildar’s order the collaterals dispossessed the
widow. She filed a suit for recovery of possession of the
land. After the institution of the suit the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956, came into force. During the pendency
of the suit, in 1958, the widow died and her daughter was
substituted as legal representative. The defendants pleaded
that the widow had lost her right to the land because of her
karewa marriage with one of the collateral&,, and that the
daughter could not succeed to the land as she was not in
possession of the land on the coming into force of the Hindu
Succession Act so as to become full owner of the land under
s. 14 thereof. The trial court dismissed the suit but the
first appellate court decreed it, holding that there was no
karewa marriage as alleged by the defendants, and that s. 14
was applicable to the case. The High Court dismissed the
appeal filed by the defendants who came to this court by
special leave.
HELD : (i) The finding of fact by the first appellate court
that there was no karewa marriage was binding on the
defendants, and the High Court rightly accepted it. It was
not open to the defendants to challenge the finding in this
Court. [457H]
(ii) The use of the expression "possessed by" instead of the
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expression "in possession of" in s. 14(1) was intended to
enlarge the meaning of this expression to cover cases of ion
in law. On the language of s. 14(1) the provision will
become applicable to any property which is owned by a female
Hindu even though she is not in actual physical or
constructive possession of the property. [459C-D; 460D]
The section however will not apply to cases where the Hindu
female may have parted with her rights so as to place
herself in a position where she could in no manner exercise
her rights in that property any longer. [465C]
On the facts of the case the plaintiff widow had acquired
full rights of ownership of the land under s 14 of the Hindu
Succession Act. On her death in 1958 the property passed to
her daughter. The High. Court, rightly dismissed the
defendants, appeal. [465G]
Gimmalapura Taggina Matada Kotturuswami v. Setra Veerayya &
Ors, [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 968 and Brahmdeo Singh v.
Deomani Missir C.A. No. 130/1960 dated 15-10-1962,
distinguished.
455
S. S. Munna Lal v. S. S. Rajkumar, [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R.
418 and Eramma v. Veerupana, A.I.R. 1965 S.C. 1879, applied.
Gaddam Venkayamma v. Gaddanz Veerayya, A.I.R. 1957 A.P. 280,
Sansir Patelin & Anr. v. Satyabati Naikani & Anr. A.I.R.
1958 Orissa 75, Gajesh Mahanta v. Sukria Bewa, A.I.R. 1963
Orissa 167, Hapak Singh v. Kailash Singh & Anr. A.I.R. 1958
Patna 581, Ram Gulam Singh v. Palakdhari Singh, A.I.R. 1961
Patna 60.’ Nathuni Prasad Singh v. Mst. Kachnar Kuer, A.I.R.
1965 Patna 160 and Mst. Mukhtiar Kaur v. Mst. Kartar Kaur &
Ors., A.I.R. 1966 Pun. 31, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 51 of 1964.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
January 3, 1962 of the Punjab High Court in Regular Second
Appeal No. 1958 of 1959.
Bishan Narain and Sadhu Singh, for the appellant.
J. P. Goyal and Raghunath Singh, for respondents Nos. 1
(a) to 1 (d).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bhargava, J. This appeal arises out of a suit brought for
possession of some land which was admittedly owned at one
time by one Labhu. Labhu died in the year 1917 and, on his
death his widow, Smt. Harnam Kaur, who filed the suit as
plaintiff, came into possession of the land. She continued
in possession of the land until the year 1954 when, on an
application made by the collaterals of Labhu, the Naib
Tehsildar, by his order dated 26th June, 1954, effected
mutation in favour of these collaterals. These collaterals
were defendants 1 to 4, Mangal Singh, Amer Singh, Santa
Singh and Ishar Singh. These collaterals, on the basis of
the order of the Naib Tehsildar, dispossessed Smt. Harnam
Kaur. Harnam Kaur’s appeal against the order of the Naib
Tehsildar was dismissed by the Collector. The claim of
these collaterals was that Smt. Harnam Kaur had entered
into karewa marriage with one of these collaterals, Ishar
Singh. defendant No. 4 and, consequently, she had lost her
right to hold the land of her first husband Labhu. Smt.
Harnam Kaur denied that she had entered into any karewa
marriage with Ishar Singh and, on the basis of this denial,
instituted the suit claiming possession of that land. She
pleaded that the four defendants had no right to this land
and had wrongfully dispossessed her, so that they were mere
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trespassers. This suit was instituted on 1st March, 1956.
After the institution of the suit, the Hindu Succession Act,
1956 (No. 30 of 1956) hereinafter referred to as "the Act"
came into force on 17th June, 1956. The suit was, at that
time, pending and it continued to remain pending until the
year 1958 when Smt. Harnam Kaur died. Thereupon, Smt.
Rattno applied to be substituted as plaintiff in place of
Smt. Harnam Kaur as her legal representative. This
application was allowed,, though
456
it was opposed by defendants 1 to 3. In the trial of the
suit defendants 1 to 3 took the plea that Smt. Harnam Kaur,
the original plaintiff, had lost her right to the land
because of her karewa marriage with Ishar Singh, defendant
No. 4. Defendant No. 4, however, admitted the claim of Smt.
Hamarn Kaur in his written statement, denied that he had
dispossessed her and also denied the allegation of her
karewa marriage with him. In these circumstances, two main
questions came up for decision by the trial court. The first
question was whether Smt. Hamam Kaur had entered into a
karewa marriage with Ishar Singh, defendant No. 4, so as to
lose her right to the disputed land as widow of the previous mal
e
owner, Labhu ? The second question that arose was whether
Smt. Rattno, who was substituted as the legal
representative of Smt. Hamam Kaur, was entitled to succeed
to the property of Smt. Hamam Kaur ? This second question
depended on whether Smt. Harnam Kaur had, or had not,
become full owner of the land under S. 14 of the Act. The
trial court held that Smt. Hamam Kaur had contracted karewa
marriage with Ishar Singh, defendant No. 4, and had lost her
rights. The further finding of the trial court was that
Smt. Hamam Kaur had been dispossessed before the Act came
into force and, consequently, s. 14 of the Act did not
apply, with the result that Smt. Rattno could not claim
succession to Smt. Hamam Kaur under that provision of law.
On these findings, the trial court dismissed the suit.
On appeal, the Additional District Judge, Patiala, recorded
the finding that Smt. Hamam Kaur had not entered into
karewa marriage with Ishar Singh, defendant No. 4, and,
further, that s. 14 of the Act was applicable to the present
case, as the land in suit was possessed by Smt. Harnam Kaur
so as to make her full owner of this land under that
provision of law. On these findings, the first appellate
Court decreed the suit against defendants 1 to 3 with costs
in both courts, after making a comment that Ishar Singh ,
defendant No. 4, was a profoma defendant. Defendants 1 to
3, thereupon, came up in second appeal to-the High Court of
Punjab and impleaded as respondents Smt. Rattno as well as
Ishar Singh. The High Court dismissed the appeal and,
thereupon, defendants 1 to 3 have come up to this Court in
appeal under special leave granted to them. In this appeal
also, defendants 1 to 3 impleaded both Smt. Rattno and
Ishar Singh as respondents.
During the pendency of this appeal, one of the defendants-
appellants died and his legal representatives were brought
on the record as appellants. Smt. Rattno also died and her
legal representatives were impleaded as respondents.
Further, Ishar Singh,. defendant No. 4, who was a respondent
in this appeal, also died. The application to bring his
legal representatives on record was dismissed by the order
of this Court dated 14th September, 1965
457
in Civil Miscellaneous Petition No. 1589 of 1965. In view
of this order, a preliminary objection was raised at the
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time of hearing of this appeal by learned counsel for the
respondents, who had been impleaded as legal representatives
of Smt. Rattno, that the appeal had abated on account of
the failure of the appellants to implead the legal
representatives of Ishar Singh respondent. It, however,
appears that, on the pleadings of parties and the nature of
the dispute that came to be settled by the lower courts, it
cannot be held that this appeal must abate as a whole, or
must fail because of its abatement against Ishar Singh on
his death. We have already mentioned that, though the
plaintiff, Smt. Harnam Kaur, had come forward with the
allegation that she had been dispossessed by all the four
defendants 1 to 4, Ishar Singh, defendant No. 4, in his
written statement, repudiated this claim. He put forward
the plea that he had not dispossessed the plaintiff and,
further, supported the claim of the plaintiff by pleading
that there had been no karewa marriage between them. -’The
suit was dismissed by the trial court. It was decreed by
the first appellate Court only against defendants 1 to 3,
treating Ishar Singh as a profoma defendant. In these
circumstances, it is obvious that, when the case came up
before the High Court, the dispute was confined between Smt.
Rattno, legal representative of the original plaintiff on
the one side, and defendants 1 to 3 on the other.
Defendants 1 to 3 sought vacation of the decree for
possession which had been granted against them in favour of
Smt. Rattno. lshar Singh, against whom the suit had not
been decreed at all, thus became an unnecessary party. In
these circumstances even if Ishar Singh had not been
impleaded as respondent in the High Court, the relief
claimed by defendants 1 to 3 in that Court against Smt.
Rattno could have been granted, without bringing into effect
any contradictory decrees. In the appeal in this Court
also, in these circumstances, Ishar Singh was an unnecessary
party and, consequently, the failure to implead his legal
representatives as respondents in the appeal after his death
does not affect the right of defendants 1 to 3 to claim the
relief for which they have come up to this Court in appeal.
The preliminary objection, therefore, fails and is rejected.
On merits, we are of the opinion that the decision given by
the High Court against the defendant-appellants must be
upheld. The first appellate Court, which was the final
Court for deciding question of fact, clearly recorded a
finding that the karewa marriage alleged to have been
entered into by the plaintiff, Smt. Harnam Kaur, with Ishar
Singh, defendant No. 4, was not proved. That finding of
fact was binding on the High Court and was rightly accepted
by it. It is no longer open to the appellants to challenge
that finding of fact in this Court. On this finding, it has
to be held that the rights to the land, to which Smt. Hamam
Kaur had succeeded as widow of Labhu, were not lost by her
458
until her death, and that her dispossession by defendants 1
to 3 in the year 1954 was illegal. They had no right to
this land in’ preference to Smt. Hamam Kaur.
It was, however, urged on behalf of the appellants that,
when Smt. Hamam Kaur died, she was not in actual possession
of this land. She had been dispossessed in the year 1954
and, at the time of her death in 1958, this suit instituted
by her for possession of that land was still pending. In
the suit, her own pleading was there that the land was in
actual possession of defendants 1 to 3 as trespassers, and,
in such circumstances, it should be held that the land was
not possessed by Smt. Hamam Kaur at any time after the Act
came into force, so that S. 14 of the Act never became,
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applicable and she never became full owner of that land. It
may be mentioned that there was no dispute in the High
Court, nor was it disputed before us that, if it be held
that S. 14 of the Act had become applicable and Smt. Hamam
Kaur became full owner of this land, her rights would pass
on her death to Smt. Rattno and, subsequently, on the
latter’s death, to the present respondents in this appeal.
The only question for decision in this appeal, therefore, is
whether it can be held that this property was possessed by
Smt. Harnam Kaur as envisaged by S. 14 of the Act, so that
she became full owner of this land.
Section 14(1) of the Act is as follows
"14. (1) Any property possessed by a female
Hindu, whether acquired before or after the
commencement of this Act, shall be held by her
as full owner thereof and not as a limited
owner.
Explanation.-In this sub-section, "property"
includes both movable and immovable;
"property, acquired" includes both movable and
immovable property acquired by a female Hindu
by inheritance or devise, or at a partition,
or in lieu of maintenance or arrears of
maintenance, or by gift from any person,
whether a relative or not, before, at or after
her marriage, or by her own skill or exertion,
or by purchase or by prescription, or in any
other manner whatsoever, and also any such
property held by her as stridhana immediately
before the commencement of this Act."
The dispute in the case has arisen, because this section
confers the right of full ownership on a Hindu female only
in respect of property possessed by her, whether acquired
before or after the commencement of the Act; and, in the
present case, admittedly, the plaintiff had been
dispossessed in the year 1954 and was not able to recover
possession from the defendants-apppellants until her death
in the year 1958. It was urged on behalf of the appellants
that, in order to attract the provisions of S. 14 (1) of the
Act, it must be shown that the female Hindu was either in
actual
459
physical possession, or constructive possession of the
disputed property. On the other side, it was urged that,
even if a female Hindu be, in fact, out of actual
possession, the property must be held to be possessed by
her, if her ownership rights in that property still exist
and, in exercise of those ownership rights, she is capable
of obtaining actual possession of it. It appears to us
that, on the language used in s. 14(1) of the Act, the
latter interpretation must be accepted.
It is significant that the Legislature begins s. 14(1) with
the words "any property possessed by a female Hindu" and not
"any property in possession of a female Hindu". If the
expression used had been "in possession of" instead of
"possessed by", the proper interpretation would probably
have been to hold that, in order to apply this provision,
the property must be such as is either in actual possession
of the female Hindu or in her constructive possession. The
constructive possession may be through a lessee. mortgagee,
licensee, etc. The use of the expression "possessed by"
instead of the expression "in possession of’, in our
opinion, was intended to enlarge the meaning of this
expression. It is commonly known in English language that a
property is said to be possessed by a person, if he is its
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owner, even though he may, for the time being, be out of
actual possession or even constructive possession. The
expression "possessed by" is quite frequently used in
testamentary documents, where the method of expressing the
property, which is to pass to the legate, often adopted is
to say that "all property I die possessed of shall pass
to........... In such documents, wills, etc., where this
language is used, it is clear that whatever rights the
testator had in the property would pass to the legate, even
though, at the time when the will is executed or when the
will becomes effective, the testator might not be in actual,
physical or constructive possession of it. The legate will,
in such a case, succeed to the right to recover possession
of that property in the same manner in which the testator
could have done. Stroud in his Judicial Dictionary of Words
and Phrases, Vol. 3, at p. 2238, has brought out this aspect
when defining the scope of the words "possess" and
"Possessed". When dealing with the meaning of the word
"possession", Stroud defines " possession" as being in two
ways, either actual possession or possession in law. He
goes on to say that "actual possession is when a man enters
in deed into lands or tenements to him descended, or
otherwise. Possession in law is when lands or tenements are
descended to a man, and he has not as yet really, actually,
and in deed, entered into them." In Wharton’s Law Lexicon,
14th Edn., at p. 777, the word "possession" is defined as
being equivalent to ’the state of owning or having a thing
in one’s own hands or power." Thus, three different meanings
are given; one is the state of owning, the second is having
a thing in one’s own bands, and the third is having a thing
in one’s own
460
power. In case where property is in actual physical
possession, obviously it would be in one’s own hands. If it
is in constructive possession, it would be in one’s own
power. Then, there is the third case where there may not be
actual, physical or constructive possession and, yet, the
person still possesses the right to recover actual physical
possession or constructive possession; that would be a case
covered by the expression "the state of owning". In fact,
elaborating further the meaning of the word "possession’,
Wharton goes on to say that "it is either actual, where a
person enters into lands or tenements descended or conveyed
to him; apparent, which is a species of presumptive title
where land descended to the heir of an abator, intruder, or
disseisor, who died seised; in law, when lands, etc., have
descended to a man, and he has not actuary entered into
them, or naked, that is, more possession, without colour of
right." It appears to us that the expression used in s.
14(1) of the Act was intended to cover cases of possession
in law also, where lands may have descended to a female
Hindu and she has not actually entered into them. It would
of course, cover the other cases of actual or constructive
possession. On the language of s. 14(1), therefore, we hold
that this prorovision will become applicable to any property
which is owned by a female Hindu, even though she is not in
actual, physical or constructive possession of that
property.
Section 14(1) came up for interpretation in various cases
before a number of High Courts, and was considered by this
Court also in several cases. In none of those cases,
however, did the question directly arise as to whether s.
14(1) will be applicable, if the female Hindu is out of
actual, physical or constructive possession and the property
happens to have been wrongfully taken into possession by a
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trespasser. Most of those cases were cases where the female
Hindu had either alienated her rights by a, deed of transfer
or had made a gift, and it was only incidentally; that, in
some of those cases, comments were made on the question
whether s. 14(1) of the Act will be attracted or not in
cases the female Hindu bad been dispossessed by a
trespasser.
So far as this Court is concerned, the earliest case is that
of Gummalpura Taggina Matada Kotturuswami v. Setra Veeravva
and others(1). Dealing with the scope of S. 14(1) of the
Act in that case, this Court cited from a decision of
Viswanatha Sastri, J. in Gaddam Venkavamma v. Gaddam
Veerayya (2) , and noticed the fact that in that case it was
held that the word "possessed" is used in s. 14 in a broad
sense and, in the context, possession means the state of
owning or having in one’s bands or power. It was -also
noticed that the learned Judges of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court in that case had expressed the view that even if a
trespasser were in possession of the land belonging to a
female
(1) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 968.
(2) A. I.R. 1957 A.P. 280.
461
owner, it might conceivably be regarded as being in
possession of the female owner, provided the trespasser had
not perfected his, title. Since in that case this Court was
not concerned with a situation where a trespasser had
actually dispossessed the female owner, the Court went on to
hold: "We do not think that it is necessary in the present
case to go to the extent to which the learned Judges went.
It is sufficient to say that "possessed" in s. 14 is used in
a broad sense and, in the context, means the state of owning
or having in one’s hand or power." Thus, in that case
decided by this Court, the broad meaning of the word
"possessed’ was accepted as even including cases where the
state of owning the property exists. Learned counsel for
the appellants, when bringing to our notice the views
expressed by this Court in that case, also drew our
attention to another part of the judgment, where this Court
remarked: "Reference to property acquired before the
commencement of the Act certainly makes the provisions of
the section retrospective, but even in such a case, the
property must be possessed by a, female Hindu at the time
the Act came into force in order to make the provisions of
the section applicable. There is no question in the present
case that Veerawa acquired the property of her deceased
husband before the commencement of the Act. In order that
the provisions of s. 14 may apply to the present case, it
will have to be further established that the property was
possessed by her at the time the Act came into force."
Learned counsel, from these words, tried to draw an
inference that this Court had laid down that s. 14(1) will
only apply to cases where the property was possessed by the
Hindu female at the commencement of the Act. We do not
think that any such interpretation can be placed on the
words used by this Court. Section 14(1) covers any property
possessed by a female Hindu, whether acquired before or
after the commencement of the Act. On the face of it,
property acquired after the commencement of the Act by a
female Hindu could not possibly be possessed by her at the
commencement of the Act. This Court, when it made the
comments relied upon by learned counsel, was, in fact,
concerned with a case of a female Hindu, who had acquired
the right to the property before the commencement of the
Act, but was alleged to be no longer possessed of it because
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of having adopted a son before the commencement of the Act.
It was in these circumstances that the Court in that
particular case was concerned with the question whether the
female Hindu was possessed of the property in dispute or not
at the time the Act came into force. The Court was not
laying down any general principle that -s. 14(1) will not be
attracted at all to cases where the female Hindu was not
possessed of the property at the date of the commencement of
the Act. In fact, there are -no words used in s. 14(1)
which would lead to the interpretation that the property
must be possessed by the female Hindu at the date of the
462
-commencement of the Act. It appears to us that the
relevant date, on which the female Hindu should be possessed
of the property in dispute, must be, the date on which the
question of applying the provisions of S. 14(1) arises. If,
on that date, when the provisions of this section are sought
to be applied, the property is possessed by a female Hindu,
it would be held that she is full owner of it and not merely
a limited owner. Such a question may arise in her own life-
time or may arise subsequently when succession to her
property opens on her death. The case before us falls in
the second category, because Smt. Harnam Kaur was a limited
owner of the property before the commencement of the Act,
and the question that has arisen is whether Smt. Rattno was
entitled to succeed to her rights in this disputed property
on her death which took place in the year 1958 after the
commencement of the Act.
The next case in which s. 14 was considered by this Court
was Brahmdeo Singh and Another v. Deomani Missir and
Others(1) In that case, the female Hindu, who had succeeded
to the property as the widow of her husband, Ramdeo Singh,
had transferred the property under two sale-deeds. It was
held that the sale-deeds were not for legal necessity; and
the question arose whether, in those circumstances, when the
Act came into force, it could be held that the widow was
possessed of that property. This Court, after citing the
judgment in the case of Gummalapura Taggina Matada
Kotturuswami(2) held that the conflict of judicial opinion
-on this question had already been resolved in that earlier
case, where the Court had observed : "The provisions in S.
14 of the Act were not intended to benefit alienees who,
with their eyes open, purchased the property from a limited
owner without justifying necessity before the Act came into
force and at a time when the vendor had only a limited
interest of a Hindu woman." The ;Court further dealt with
the contention that the possession of the alienees is the
possession of the widow herself who is still alive, and held
: "We are unable to accept this contention as correct. It
is well settled that an alienation made by a widow or other
limited heir of property inherited by her, without legal
necessity and without the consent of the next reversioners,
though not binding on the reversioners, is, nevertheless,
binding on her so as to pass her own interest (i.e. life
interest) to the alienee." It was, thus, made clear in that
case that the property was held not to be possessed by the
widow, because, the alienation made by her being binding on
her, she had no longer any legal right left in that property
even in the sense of being in the state of owning it. The
case, thus, explains why, in cases of alienation or a gift
made by a widow, even though that alienation or gift may not
be bind-
(1) Civil Appeal No. 130 of 1960 decided on October 15,
1962.
(2) [1959] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 968.
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463
ing on a reversioner, the property will not be held to be
possessed by the widow, because the alienation or the gift
would be binding on her for her life-time and she, at least,
would not possess any such rights under which she could
obtain actual or constructive possession from her transferee
or donee. Having completely partted with her legal rights
in the property, she could not be said to be possessed of
that property any longer.
The third case of this Court brought to our notice is that
of S. S. Minna Lal v. S. S. Rajkumar and Others(1). In
that case, a Digamber Jain of the Porwal sect died in 1934
leaving behind his widow, his son and three grand-sons. His
son died in 1939. In 1952, a son of one of the grandsons
filed a suit for partition of the joint family properties,
while the widow was still alive. While the suit was still
pending, the widow died. Amongst other questions arising in
the partition suit, one question that arose was whether the
1/4th share of the widow declared in the preliminary decree
was possessed by her and whether, on her death, it descended
to her grandsons in accordance with the provisions of
sections 15 and 16 of the Act. Dealing with this question,
this Court explained the scope of s. 14(1) by stating that,
by s. 14(1), the Legislature sought to convert the interest
of a Hindu female which, under the Sastric Hindu law, would
have been regarded as a limited interest into an absolute
interest. It was held that, by S. 14(1), manifestly, it was
intended to convert the interest, which a Hindu female has
in property, however restricted the nature of that interest
under the Sastric Hindu law may be, into absolute estate.
It was also noticed that "under the Sastric Hindu law, the
share given to a Hindu widow on partition between her sons
or her grandsons was in lieu of her right to maintenance,
and she was not entitled to claim partition. But the
Legislature, by enacting the Hindu Women’s Right to Property
Act, 1937, made a significant departure in that branch of
the law; the Act gave a Hindu widow the same interest in the
property which her husband had at the time of his death, and
if the estate was partitioned, she became owner in severalty
of her share, subject, of course, to the restrictions on
disposition and the peculiar rule of extinction of the
estate on death actual or civil." Applying these principles
to the facts of that case, it was remarked : "In the light
of the scheme of the Act and its avowed purpose, it would be
difficult, without doing violence to the language used in
the enactment, to assume that a right declared in property
in favour of a person under a decree for partition is not a
right to property. If, under a preliminary decree, the
right in favour of a Hindu male be regarded as property, the
right declared in favour of a Hindu female must also be
regarded as property. The High Court was, therefore, in our
judgment, in error in holding that the right declared in
favour of Khilonabai
(1) [1962] Supp. 3 S.C.R. 418.
464
was not possessed by her, nor are we able to agree with the
submission of the learned counsel for Rajkumar that it was
not property within the meaning of S. 14 of the Act." In
that case, it will be noticed that the widow died, while the
suit for partition was still pending, and she was not in
actual, physical or constructive possession of the property
which was held to be possessed by her at the time of her
death. Only a preliminary decree declaring her right to the
share had been passed. That decree was passed before the
Act came into force and the widow died after the Act came
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into force. On these facts, the Court came to the finding
that the disputed property was possessed by the widow; and
this finding was given despite the circumstance that she was
not in actual possession or constructive possession of the
property, but had merely obtained the right to the property
under the preliminary decree. The principle laid down in
that case, thus, supports the broader meaning given to the
expression "possessed by" indicated by us earlier.
The last case of this Court brought to our notice is Eramma
v. Veerupana and Others(1). That was a converse case in
which the female Hindu, in fact, did not possess any legal
right or title to the property, though she was actually in
physical possession of it. It was held: "The property
possessed by a female Hindu, as contemplated in the section,
is clearly property to which she has acquired some kind of
title, whether before or after the commencement of the Act.
It may be noticed that the Explanation to s. 14(1) sets out
the various modes of acquisition of the property by a female
Hindu and indicated that the section applies only to
property to which the female Hindu has acquired some kind of
title, however restricted the nature of her interest may be.
The words "as full owner thereof and not as a limited owner"
as given in the last portion of sub-section (1) of s. 14
clearly suggest that the legislature intended that the
limited ownership of a Hindu female should be changed into
full ownership. In other words, s. 14 (1) of the Act
contemplates that a Hindu female who, in the absence of this
provision, would have been limited owner of the property,
will now become full owner of the same by virtue of this
section. The object of the section is to extinguish the
estate called "limited estate" or "widow’s estate" in Hindu
Law and to make a Hindu woman, who, under the old law, would
have been only a limited owner, a full owner of the property
with all powers of disposition and to make the estate
heritable by her own heirs and not revertible to the heirs
of the last male holder." In the concluding part, it was
held : "It follows, therefore, that the section cannot be
interpreted so as to validate the illegal possession of a
female Hindu and it does not confer any title on a mere
trespasser. In other words, the provisions of s. 14(1) of
the Act cannot be attracted in the case of a Hindu female
who is in possession of the property
(1) A.I.R. 1966 S.C. 1879.
465
of the last male holder on the date of the commencement of
the Act when she is only a trespasser without any right to
property." This case also, thus, clarifies that the
expression "possessed by" is not intended to apply to a case
of mere possession without title, and that the legislature
intended this provision for cases where the Hindu female
possesses the right of ownership of the property in
question. Even mere physical possession of the property
without the right of ownership will not attract the
provisions of this section. This case also, thus, supports
our view that the expression "possessed by" was used in the
sense of connoting state of ownership and, while the Hindu
female possesses the rights of ownership, she would become
full owner if the other conditions mentioned in the section
are fulfilled. The section will, however, not apply at all
to cases where the Hindu female may have parted with her
rights so as to place herself in a position where she could,
in no manner, exercise her rights of ownership in that
property any longer.
In this view that we have taken, it does not appear to be
necessary for us to refer to the decisions of the various
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High Courts which were cited before us by learned counsel
for the appellants. The cases mentioned were : Sansir
Patelin and Another v. Satyabatt Naikani and Another(1);
Ganesh Mahanta and Others v. Sukria Bewa and Others(2);
Harak Singh v. Kailash Singh and Another(3); Ram Gulam Singh
and others v. Palakdhari Singh and others(4) ; Nathuni
Prasad Singh and Another v. Mst. Kachnar Kuer & Others(5);
and Mst. Mukhtiar Kaur v. Mst. Kartar Kaur and Others(4).
All these were cases relating to situations where the widow
had made some alienation of her rights in the property and
none of them was concerned with a case where the female
Hindu might have been dispossessed by a trespasser. The
reasons given by the High Courts in those cases are,
therefore, of no assistance in deciding the applicability of
S. 14(1) of the Act to a case of the nature before us.
On the interpretation of S. 14(1) of the Act that we have
accepted above, it must be held that the property involved
in the present suit was possessed by Smt. Harnam Kaur when
she died in the year 1958 and, consequently, Smt. Rattno
and, after her, the present respondents must be deemed to
have succeeded to those rights. We have already mentioned
above that it was not disputed that, if it is held that Smt.
Hamam Kaur had become full owner of this property, it would
pass on her death to Smt. Rattno. As a result, the
decision given by the High Court must be upheld. The appeal
is dismissed with costs.
G. C.
(1) A.I.R. 1958 Orissa 75.
(3) A.I.R. 1958 Patna 581.
(5) A.I.R. 1965 Patna 160.
Appeal dismissed.
(2) A.I.R. 1963 Orissa 167.
(4) A.T.R. 1961 Patna 60.
(6) A.I.R. 1966 Pun. 3 1.
467