Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
M. K. BALAKRISHNAN MENON
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ASSTT. CONTROLLER OF ESTATE DUTY-cum-I.T.O.ERNAKULAM
DATE OF JUDGMENT05/10/1971
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1971 AIR 2392 1972 SCR (1) 961
ACT:
Marumkkattayam Law-Whether the entire estate passed in the
death of the sthanamdhar to his successors and if the entire
property is liable to Estate duty under Estate Duty Act,
1953-Interpretation of s. 7(3) of the Succession Act, 1956.
HEADNOTE:
One T who was the third Stanamdhar of a family, died in
1960. The sthanam owned several properties in his personal
capacity. After his death a suit for the partition of the
Sthanam was filed by various members of the Tarwad. The
appellant was appointed a receiver of the properties covered
by the third Sthanam of which the sthanamdar was the
deceased T.. The receiver was in these circumstances,
treated as an accountable person in respect of the sthanam
properties. Pursuant to a notice issued under s. 55 of the
Estate Duty Act, 1953, by the Assistant Controller of Estate
Duty, the appellant filed the necessary accounts. But he
raised the contention in the assessment proceedings that
according to s. 7(3) of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, the
deceased T was entitled only to 1/114th share in the sthanam
properties and therefore only that share could be taken into
account in determining the principal value, of the Estate
liable-to duty.
The respondent, however held that the entire estate passed
on the death of the deceased and was liable to duty. The
appellant filed a petition under Art. 226 challenging the
assessment order. A learned Single Judge allowed the
petition and quashed the assessment order. The respondent
filed an appeal before a divisional bench which was heard by
a full bench and negatived the contention of the appellant
and held that on the death of the Sthanamdar the whole of
the Sthanam property passed and was deemed to pass and the
Estate duty was payable on the whole of the property.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD : (i) In Marumakkattayam branch of the Hindu law, the
word ’Marumakkattayam’ is inheritance through nephews and
nieces. The essential difference between Marumakkattayam
and the other schools of Hindu law is that the former is
founded on the Matriarchate which the latter is founded upon
the agnatic family. In the Mitakshara joint family, the
members claim their descent from a common ancestor but in
Marumakkattayam family which is known as the tarwad, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
descent is from a common ancestress. Tarwad is the name
given to a joint family consisting of males and females who
have all descended in the family line from a common
ancestress. [964 E]
(ii)The legal fiction created by the words, "as if the
Sthanam property had been divided per capita immediately
before the death of the sthanamdar", in s. 7(3) of the
Succession Act, is meant for the purpose of gradually
liquidating the sthanams and distributing the sthanam pro-
perties amongst the members of the sthanees’ tarwad and his
personal heirs without infringing the provisions of the
Constitution. Neither the members of the Tarwad nor the
personal heirs of the sthanee had any
962
interest in the sthanam properties. The first part of s.
7(3) clearly provides that the property which passes on the
death of the sthanamdar is the whole of the sthanam property
held by him. The second part only deals with distribution
of that property. The Sthanam property held by the
sthanamdar has to pass from the sthanamdar to the members of
the family to which he belonged and his heirs. Legal
fiction in the words which have been set out, do not cut
down the sthanam property that passes on the death of
sthanamdar to a per capita share, the fiction having been
introduced only for determining the respective shares for
the purpose of distribution to the members of the family and
the heirs of the sthanamdar. [968 G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 1137 of
1969 and 1421 of 1971.
Appeals by certificate/special leave from the judgment and
order dated November 29, 1966 of the Kerala High Court in
Writ Appeal No. 119 of 1965.
M.C. Chagla and M. R. K. Pillai, for the appellant (in
both the appeals).
S.T. Desai, M. C. Bhandare and B. D. Sharma, for the
respondent (in both the appeals);
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. This is an appeal by special leave from a
judgment of the Kerala High Court in which a question of
substantial importance arises relating to the extent of the
property that attracts Estates Duty on the death of a
Sthanee or Sthanamdar in a Hindu family governed by the
Marumakkattayam law.
It may be mentioned that Civil Appeal No. 1137/69 was
brought to this Court by certificate against the same
judgment but the certificate is defective for want of
reasons and has therefore to be revoked.
One K. K. Thampan who was the third Sthanomdar of Kuthi-
ravattathu Family died on May 17, 1960. The Sthanam owned
several properties such as forest lands, agricultural lands,
buildings etc. The deceased also owned several properties
in his personal capacity. After his death a suit for the
paritition of the Sthanam was filed in a civil court by the
various members of the Tarwad. The appellant before us was
appointed a Receiver of the properties covered by the third
Sthanam on which the Sthanamdar was the deceased K. K.
Thampan. The Receiver was, in these circumstances, treated
as an accountable person in respect of the Sthanam
Properties. Pursuant to a notice issued under s. 55 of the
Estate Duty Act 1953, hereinafter called the ’Act", by the
Assistant Controller of Estate Duty (respondent herein) the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
appellant file the necessary accounts. But he raised a
contention in
963
the assessment proceedings that according to s. 7 (3) of the
Hindu Succession Act 1956, hereinafter called the
"Succession Act", ,the deceased Thampan was entitled only to
1/114th share in the properties in the Sthanam and therefore
that share could be taken into account in determining the
principal value of the estate liable to duty. The
respondent, however, held that the entire estate passed on
the death of the deceased and was liable to duty. The
appellant filed a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution challenging the assessment order. A learned
single judge of the High Court allowed the petition and
quashed the assessment order. The respondent filed an
appeal before a division bench of the High Court which was
heard by a full bench together with other appeals involving
a similar point. Before the High Court it was not disputed
by the appellant that if the Act stood alone the entire pro-
perties of the Sthanam were liable to estate duty under the
Act. The sole contention was that s. 7(3) of the Succession
Act made a difference inasmuch as by virtue of the partition
postulated under ,that provision immediately before the
death of the Sthanamdar the property that passed or should
be deemed to pass on the death of the Sthanamdar was only
his per capita share of the Sthanam property and not the
whole property of the Sthanam. The full bench negatived the
contention of the appellant and held that on the death of
the Sthanamdar the whole of the Sthanam property passed and
was deemed to pass and the Estate duty was payable on the
whole of the property.
The Act was enacted to provide for the levy and collection
of estate duty. Section 5(1) provides for levy of estate
duty and says, inter alia, that in the case of every person
dying after the commencement of the Act there shall, save as
expressly provided. be levied and paid upon the principal
value ascertained as provided of all property settled or not
settled which passes on the death of such person a duty
called "estate duty" at the rate fixed in accordance with s.
35. Section 7, to the extent it is material, is reproduced
below :-
"S. 7. Interests ceasing on death.-(1)
Subjects to the provisions of this section,
property in which the deceased or any other
person had an interest ceasing on the death of
the deceased shall be deemed to pass on the
deceased is death the extent to which a
benefit accrues or arises by the cesser of
such interest, including, in particular, a
coparcenary interest in the joint family
property of a Hindu family governed by the
Mitakshara, Marumakkattayam or A
liyasenthana law.
(2).............
(3) ............
964
(4)The provisions of sub-section (1) shall
not apply
to theproperty in which the deceased or
any other
personhad an interest only as holder of
an office or recipient of the benefits of a
charity, or as a corporation sole.
Explanation.-For the removal of doubts, it is
hereby declared that the holder of a Sthanam
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
is neither the holder of an office nor a
corporation sole within the meaning of this
sub-section".
In order to determine as to what property shall be deemed to
pass ,,on the death of Sthanamdar it is necessary to decide
the nature of the Sthanam property and the interest of
the Sthanamdar in that property. For this purpose. we have
to turn to the Marumakkattayam branch of Hindu law and then
consider what is the ,exact ambit and scope of the changes
which have been made under that law so far as succession is
concerned in the case of Sthanamdar by the Succession Act to
the extent it is material in the present case. As pointed
out in Mayne’s Hindu Law and Usage, 1950 Edn.
Marumakkattayam law is a body of customs :and usages which
have received judicial recognition. It prevails among a
considerable section of the people inhabiting the west coast
of south India. The literal meaning of the word "Maru-
makkattayam" is inheritance through nephews and nieces. The
,essential difference between Marumakkattayam and the other schoo
ls of Hindu Law is that the former is founded on the
matriarchate while the latter is founded upon the agnatic
family. In the Mitakshara joint family the members claim
their descent from a common ancestor but in a
Marumakkattayam family which is known as the tarwad the
descent is from a common ancestress. Tarwad is the name
given to a joint family consisting of males and females who
have all descended in the family line from a common
ancestress. Many compares a tarwad to a family
,corporation. Every member of a tarwad has equal rights in
the property by reason of his or her birth in the tarwad.
It was laid down in a course of judicial decisions in the
nineteenth century that one or more members of a tarwad
cannot claim partition and separate possession of his or
their share of the tarwad property without the consent or
concurrence of all the members of the tarwad. The Madras
legislature enacted certain statutes giving a right of
partition to the members of a tarwad to enforce partition of
a tarwad property. The shares on partition were to be on
per capita basis.
Now Sthanam and Sthanamdar emerged in this manner. Some of
the aristocratic Hindu families in the west coast had
attached to
965
their families an office called Sthanam meaning literally
"status, rank or dignity". The holder of Sthanam was called
a Sthanee or Sthanamdar. The, rulers granted Shanams to
their chieftains and important public officers which were
usually accompanied by a grant of land for the maintenance
of the dignity of the officer. In addition to the families
of princes and chieftains there were other families which
possessed Sthanams without any particular dignity attached
to them. The incidents of the institution were that the
senior most member of family became the Sthanamadar who was
usually the male member; but there were instances where the
senior most female member became The Sthanamdar. Separate
properties belonged to each Sthanam and they vested in the,
holder of the office for the time being and descended to the
successors in office. One important feature was that
Sthanamdar ceased to have any interest in the property of
his tarwad and the members of his tarwad had in their turn
only reversionary rights to the Sthanam properties. The
Sthanamdar had a limited estate in the sense that he could
encumber or alienate the Sthanam properties only for a legal
necessity like any limited owner but otherwise he was
absolutely entitled to the income accruing during his tenure
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
of office. His position was analogous to that of a holder
of an impartible estate. His successor had no interest in
it and the right of the successor was nothing more than a
spes successions. There is a good deal of discussion on
these matters in a judgment of this Court in Kavalappara
Kottarahil Kochuni & Others v. The State of Madras & Ors.
(1) which is on the same lines as above. In that case the
constitutionality of the provisions- of the Madras Maru-
makkattayam (Removal of Doubts) Act, 1955 passed by the
Madras Legislature soon after a decision of the Privy
Council declaring that the properties in possession of the
Sthanamdar were sthanam properties in which the members of
the tarwad had no interest had been challenged. By S. 2 of
that Act it had been provided that any sthanam in respect of
which there was or had been, at any time, an intermingling
of the properties of the sthanam and the properties of the
tarwad or the members of the tarwad had been receiving
maintenance from the properties of the sthanam or there had
been a vacancy caused by there being no male member of the
tarwad eligible to succeed to the sthanamdar, shall be
deemed to be a Marumakkattayam tarwad and the properties
appertaining to such sthanam shall be deemed to be pro-
perties belonging to the tarwad. It was held in the
majority judgment that the aforesaid provisions of the
Madras Act were a device to deprive the sthanam of its
properties and vest them in the tarwad and as such they were
directly hit by Art. 19(1) (f) and could not be saved by
Art. 19(5) of the Consititution.
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
966
Now all the sthanams would gradually get completely liqui-
dated by the provisions of the Succession Act. Section 7 of
the Succession Act deals with devolution of interest in the
property of a tarwad etc. Sub-sections (1) and (3) of that
section which are material for our purposes may be
reproduced
"7(1) When a Hindu to whom ,,he marumakkat-
tayam or nambudri law would have applied if
this Act had not been passed dies after
the commencement of this Act, having at the
time of his or her death an interest in the
property of a tarwad, tavazhi or illom, as
the case may be, his or her interest in the
property shall devolve by testamentary or
intestate succession, as the case may be,
under this Act and not according to the
marumakkattayam or nambudri law.
Explanation..............
1 (3) Notwithstanding anything contained in
subsection (1), when a sthanamdar dies after
the commencement of this Act, the sthanam
property held by him shall devolve upon the
members of the family to which the sthanamdar
belonged and the heirs of the sthanamdar as if
the sthanam property had been divided per
capita immediately before the death of the
Sthanamdar among himself and all the members
of his familythen living, and the shares
falling to the members of his family and the
heirs of the sthanamdar shall be held by them
as their separate property.
Explanation.-For the purposes of this sub-
section, the family _of a sthanamdar shall
include every branch of that family, whether
divided or undivided, the male members of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
which would have been entitled by any custom
or usage to succeed to the position of
sthanamdar if this Act had not been passed".
The result of the enactment of s. 7(3) of the Succession Act
is that the sthanams continued till the death of the
sthanamdar and thereafter the sthanam, property devolved
upon the members of the family to which the sthanamdar
belonged and the heirs of the sthanamdar (his personal
heirs). The division was to be per capita on the basis of a
notional partition having taken place immediately before the
death of the sthanamdar.
The points for consideration are
1.Whether the provisions of the Succession Act can affect
and arc relevant for the levy of estate duty under the Act ?
9 6 7
(2)What is the true, effect of the provisions of S. 7 (3)
of ,he Succession Act ?
(3)Whether the estate duty would be leviable on the entire
property which belonged to the sthanamdar or it, can be
levied only on 1/114th share in the sthanam properties to
which alone the deceased Thampan would have‘ been entitled
if a institution had taken place under s. 7(3) of the
Succession Act immediately before his death?
As regards the first point it has already been mentioned
that before the High Court there was no dispute that if the
court had to look to the provisions of the Act alone the
entire property of the sthanam was liable to estate duty.
On behalf of the appellant it has been contended before us
that in order to determine the interest in property which
ceases on the death of the deceased and which is deemed to
pass on his death and the benefit which accrues or arises by
the cesser of such interest within the meaning of S. 7 ( 1 )
of the Act it is essential to turn to the law by which the
deceased is governed for the purpose of ascertaining the the
extent of his interest in the property. The provisions of
s. 7 of the succession Act have to be read together with s.
7 of the Act for determining the interest which the deceased
had in the sthanam property on which the estate duty would
be leviable. This position is not controverted by the
counsel for the respondent. The controversy thus narrows
down to the true scope and ambit of the provisions of S.
7(3) of the Succession Act. On behalf of the appellant it
has been maintained that on a proper construction of the
language employed in S. 7(3) it should be held that before
the death of the sthanamdar which took place in accordance
with what is provided in sub-s.(3) of the sthanam property
and that on his death all that devolved on his heirs was the
share which the sthanamdar would have got in that partition.
It is pointed out that the legal fiction of partition or
division is created by subs.(3) for the definite purpose of
allotting a share in the sthanam properties to the personal
heirs of the sthanamdar which could not’ be done under the
general Marumakkattayam law. The partition thus had to be
real and effective and the sthanamdar should be considered
to have, died as a divided member. In other words the true
position, according to the learned counsel for the appel-
lant, is that the division per capita under s.7(3) took
place immediately before the death of the sthanamdar with
the result that the interest which he had in the sthanam
property was only to the extent of his share which alone
devolved upon his heirs. On the other hand the position
taken up on behalf of the respondent before the High Court,
which was accepted and which has-been reiterated before us,
is that s. 7(3) merely creates a legal fiction
968
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
for the purpose of distribution of the properties which is
to take place after the death of sthanamdar and that being
the sole, purpose for which the legal fiction was introduced
it could not be extended further so as to include an actual
division or partition having been effected in the lifetime
of the sthanamdar with the result that he became a divided
member for all purposes.
We have had occasion to notice in some detail the incidents
of the institution of sthanam and sthanamdar as also the
nature of the sthanam property held by the sthanamdar. It
has not been disputed before us on behalf of the appellant
that during his lifetime the sthanam property belonged to
the sthanamdar. Certain restrictions were placed on his
powers of alienation but that did not detract from the
nature of the estate held by him. The cesser of his
interest in the sthanam property would be of the whole of
that property and the benefit that would accrued or arise by
the cesser of such interest would also be, of the entire
sthanam property. Position would be different only if
s.7(3) of the Succession Act is so construed as to lead to
the result that a partition or division of the sthanam
property shall be deemed to have taken place during his
lifetime. In our judgment such an interpretation of S. 7(3)
of the Succession Act is likely to involve the
constitutionality of that provision in view of the decision
of this Court in K. K. Kochuni’s(l) case. In other words by
bringing about a statutory division or partition of the
sthanam property by which the sthanamdar will be deprived of
that property except to the extent of a per capita share
therein will be infringement of Art. 19(1) (f) of the
Constitution. The court ought not to interplet statutory
provisions unless compelled by their language in such a
manner as would involve its constitutionality because the
legislature is presumed to enact a law which does not
contravene or violate the constitutional provisions. The
other construction which has been accepted by the High Court
appears to be more in consonance with the background in
which S. 7 (3) of the Succession Act has been enacted. The
legal fiction also which has been introduced should only be
limited to that purpose and there can be no justification
for extending it. The legal fiction created by the words
"as if the sthanam property had been divided per capita
immediately before the death of the sthanamdar" appears to
be meant solely for the purpose of gradually liquidating the
sthanams and distributing the sthanam properties amongst the
members of the sthanee’s tarwad and his personal heirs
without infringing the provisions of the Constitution. It
may be pointed out that neither the members of the tarwad
nor the personal heirs of the sthanee had any interest in
the sthanam properties. The first part of s. 7(3)
clearly provides that the property which passes on the
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
969
death of the sthanamdar is the whole of the sthanam property
held by him. The second part only deals with distribution
of that Property. We have no doubt that the High Court was
right in saying that the word "devolve" as used in the first
part has the meaning given to it by Leach M. R. in Parr v.
Parr(1) of passing from a person dying to a person living.
Thus the sthanam property held by the sthanamdar has to pass
from the sthanamdar to the members of the family to which he
belonged and his heirs.. Legal fiction in the words which
have been set out do not cut down the sthanam property that
passes on the death of sthanamdar to a per capita share, the
fiction having been introduced only for determining the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
respective shares for the purpose of distribution to the
members of the family and the heirs of sthanamdar.
For all the reasons given above we affirm the decision of
the High Court and dismiss this appeal (C.A. 1421/71) but in
view of the entire circumstances make no order as to costs.
The other appeal (C.A. 1137 of 1969) is dismissed owing to
the certificate being defective for want of reasons.
S.N. Appeals,
dismissed.
-(1) 2 L.J. Ch. 167.
970