Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MRS. MARY ROY ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KERALA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/02/1986
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N. (CJ)
PATHAK, R.S.
CITATION:
1986 AIR 1011 1986 SCR (1) 371
1986 SCC (2) 209 1986 SCALE (1)250
ACT:
Intestate Succession to the property of a member of the
Indian Christian Community IN the territories originally
forming part of the erstwhile State of Travancore - Merger
of State of Travancore with State of Cochin in July 1949 and
enactment of Part States (Laws) Act, 1951 providing for
extension of certain Parliamentary statutes to Part States
Consequential effect of the extension of Indian Succession
Act, 1925 - Whether the Indian Succession Act, 1925 or the
old Travancore Cochin Succession Act 1092 (Kollan Era) will
govern the intestate succession from the date of extension -
Indian Succession Act, section 29(2), scope of - Legislative
device of incorporation by reference, explained.
HEADNOTE:
Prior to July 1949, the State of Travancore was a
princely State and the law in force in the territories of
that State in regard to intestate succession to the property
of the members of the Indian Christian Community was the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 (Kollan Era).
Under the said Act, a widow or mother becoming entitled
under sections 16, 17, 21 & 22 shall have only life interest
terminable at death or on remarriage and a daughter shall
not be entitled to succeed to the property of the intestate
in the same share as the son but she will be entitled to
one-fourth the value of the share of the son or Rs. 5000
whichever is less and even this amount she will not be
entitled on intestacy, if Streedhanom was provided or
promised to her by the intestate or in the life time of the
intestate, either by his wife or husband or after the death
of such wife or husband by her or his heirs.
In or about July 1949, the former State of Travancore
merged with the former State of Cochin to form Part State of
Travancore-Cochin. With a view to bringing about uniforming
of legislation in the whole of India, including Part-B
States, Parliament enacted Part States (Laws) Act, 1951
providing
372
for extension to Part States certain Parliamentary Statutes
prevailing in rest of India, including the Indian Succession
Act, 1925. As to the impact of the extension of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925, that is to sag, whether it impliedly
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repealed the Travancore-Christian Succession Act, 1092,
divergent judicial opinions were handed over one by a Single
Judge of the Madras High Court and the contrary one by the
Division Bench of the Madras High Court and the former
Travancore Cochin High Court. The petitioners therefore,
have now challenged, under Article 32 of the Constitution,
Sections 24, 28 and 29 of the Travancore Christian Act, 1092
as unconstitutional and void.
Allowing the petitions, the Court,
^
HELD: 1.1 On the coming into force of Part-B States
(Laws) Act, 1951 the Travancore & succession Act, 1092 stood
repealed and Chapter II of Part V of the Indian Succession
Act, 1925 became applicable and intestate succession to the
property of members of the Indian Christian community in the
territories of the erstwhile State of Travancore was
thereafter governed by Chapter II of Part V of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925. [382 D-E]
1.2 The Indian Succession Act, 1925 was enacted by
Parliament with a view to consolidating the law applicable
to intestate and testant succession. This Act being a
consolidating Act replaced many enactments which were in
force at that time dealing with intestate and testant
succession including the Indian Succession Act, 1865. So far
as Indian Christians are concerned, Chapter II of Part V
contains rules relating to intestate succession and a
fortiori on the extension of the Indian & Succession Act,
1925 to Part State of Travancore Cochin, the rules relating
to intestate succession enacted in Chapter II of Part V
would be applicable equally to Indian Christians in the
territories of the former State of Travancore. [377 H, 378
A-B, F-G]
1.3 Sub-section 2 of section 29 of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 did not save the provisions of the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 and therefore, it
cannot be said that despite the extension of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 to Part State of Travancore-Cochin, the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 continued to apply
to Indian
373
Christians in the territories of the erstwhile State of
Travancore. [378 H; 379 A-B]
When the Indian Succession Act, 1925 was extended to
Part-B State of Travancore-Cochin every Part of that Act was
so extended including Chapter II of Part V and the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 was a law
corresponding to Chapter II of Part V, since both dealt with
the same subject matter, namely, intestate succession among
Indian Christians and covered the same field. me fact that
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 confined only to
laying down rules of intestate succession among the Indian
Christians while Indian Succession Act had a much wide
coverage cannot lead to the conclusion that the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 was not a law corresponding
to the Indian Succession Act. Further by Section 6 of Part
States (Laws) Act, 1951 the Travancore Christian Succession
Act, 1092 stood repealed in its entirety. When section 6 of
Part States (Laws) Act, 1951 provided in clear and
unequivocal terms that the Travancore Christian Succession
Act, 1092 which was a law in force in part States of
Travancore-Cochin corresponding to Chapter II of Part V of
the Indian Succession Act, 1925 shall stand repealed, it
would be nothing short of subversion of the legislative
intent to hold that the Travancore Christian Succession Act,
1092 did not stand repealed but was saved by section 29 sub-
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section (2) of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. [380 A-H;
381 A-B]
Solomon v. Muthiah [1974] 1 M.L.J. Page 53; D. Chelliah
v. G. Lalita Bai, A.I.R. 1978 (Madras) 66 (DB) referred to.
2. The legislative device of incorporation by reference
is a well known device where the legislature instead of
repeating the provisions of a particular statute in another
statute incorporates such provisions in the latter statute
by reference to the earlier statute. It is a legislative
device adopted for the sake of convenience in order to avoid
verbatim reproduction of the provisions of an earlier
statute in a later statute. But when the legislature intends
to adopt this legislative device the language used by it is
entirely distinct and different from the one employed in
section 29 sub-section (2) of the Indian Succession Act,
1925. The opening part of section 29 sub-section (2) is
intended to be a qualificatory or excepting provision and
not a provision for incorporation by reference. [381 H; 382
A-C]
374
Kurian Augusty v. Devasay Aley, A.I.R. 1957 Travancore
Cochin Page 1 distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition (Civil) No.8260
of 1983 etc.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.)
Ms. Indira Jai Singh, Ms. Kamini Jaiswal for the
Petitioners.
G. Viswanath Iyer, G.P. Pai, V.J. Francis, S.Sukumaran,
D.N. Misra, P.K. Pillai, C.S. Vaidyanathan, O.P. Sharma,
Hemant Sharma, R.N. Poddar and Madhu Moolchandani for the
Respondents.
Mandita Pandey, Mrs. K. Hingorani and Mrs. Rekha Pandey
for the Intervener.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, C.J. These Writ Petitions raise an
interesting question as to whether after the coming into
force of the Part States (Laws) Act 1951, the Travancore
Christian Succession Act 1092 continues to govern intestate
succession to the property of a member of the Indian
Christian Community in the territories originally forming
part of the erstwhile state of Travancore or is such
intestate succession governed by the Indian Succession Act
1925 and if it continues to be governed by the Travancore
Christian Succession Act 1092, whether sections 24, 28 and
29 of that Act are unconstitutional and void as being
violative of article 14 of the Constitution. This question
is of great importance because it affects the property
rights of women belonging to the Indian Christian Community
in the territories of the former State of Travancore. It is
not necessary for the purpose of deciding this question to
refer to the facts of any particular Writ Petition. It will
be sufficient to trace the history of the legislation in
regard to intestate succession to the property of members of
the Indian Christian Community in the territories forming
part of the erstwhile State of Travancore.
Prior to July 1949 the State of Travancore was a prince
b state and the law in force in the territories of that
state in regard to intestate succession to the property of
members of the Indian Christian community was the Travancore
375
Christian Succession Act 1092. m is Act was promulgated by
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His Highness the Maharaja of Travancore with a view to
consolidating and amending the rules of law applicable to
intestate succession among Indian Christians in Travancore.
The statement of objects and reasons for enactment of this
Act provided that "the usages of the various sections of the
Christian community do not agree in all respects. Separate
legislation for the various sections of Christians is
neither desirable nor practicable and is likely to lead to
much litigation and trouble. It is therefore thought
necessary to enact a common law for all the various sections
of Indian Christians." Section 2 of the Act accordingly
provided:
"Except as provided in this Act, or by any other
law for the time being in force, the rules herein
contained shall constitute the law of Travancore
applicable to all cases of intestate succession
among the members of the Indian Christian
community".
Sections 16 to 19 laid dawn the rules of law applicable to
intestate succession among Indian Christians. The contention
of the petitioners was that these rules discriminated
against women by providing inter-alia that so far as
succession to the immovable property of the intestate is
concerned, a widow or mother becoming entitled under secs.
16, 17, 21 and 22 shall have only life interest terminable
at death or on remarriage and that a daughter shall not be
entitled to succeed to the property of the intestate in the
same share as the son but that she will be entitled to one-
fourth the value of the share of the son or Rs. 5,000
whichever is less and even to this amount she will not be
entitled on intestacy, if Streedhanom was provided or
promised to her by the intestate or in the life time of the
intestate, either by his wife or husband or after the death
of such wife or husband, by his or her heirs and on account
of such discrimination these rules were unconstitutional and
void as being violative of article 14 of the Constitution.
On the view we are taking as regards the consequential
effect of the extension of the Indian Succession Act, 1925
to the territories of the former State of Travancore by
virtue of Part-B States (Laws) Act, 1951, it is not
necessary to examine this challenge to the constitutional
validity of the rules laid down in the Travancore Christian
376
Succession Act, 1092 and we do not therefore propose to
refer to them in detail, as that would be a futile exercise
and would unnecessarily burden the judgment. But it is
relevant to point out that sec. 30 of the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 specifically excluded the
applicability of the rules laid down in secs. 24, 28 and 29
to certain classes of Roman Catholic Christians of the Latin
Rite and also to certain Protestant Christians living in
certain specified Taluks, according to the customary usage
among whom, the male and female heirs of an intestate share
equally in the property of the intestate and proceeded to
add ex majori cautela that so far as these Christians are
concerned, nothing in secs. 24, 28 and 29 shall be deemed to
affect the said custom obtaining among them. This was the
law which governed intestate succession to the property of
members of the Indian Christian community in the territories
of the former State of Travancore.
In or about July 1949 the former State of Travancore
merged with the former State of Cochin to form Part-B State
of Travancore - Cochin. m ere were also other Part-B States
formed out of erstwhile princely States and they were
Hyderabad, Jammu & Kashmir, Madhya Bharat, Mysore, Pepsu,
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Rajasthan and Saurashtra. With a view to bringing about
uniformity of legislation in the whole of India including
Part-B States, Parliament enacted Part-B States (Laws) Act,
1951 providing for extension to Part-B States of certain
Parliamentary Statutes prevailing in rest of India. Two
sections of this Act are material, namely, sec.3 and 6 and
they provide inter-alia as follows :
"3. Extension and a t of certain Acts find
Ordinances
The Acts and Ordinances specified in the Schedule
shall be amended in the manner and to the extent
therein specified, and the territorial extent of
each of the said Acts and Ordinances shall, as
from the appointed day and in so far as any of the
said Acts or Ordinances or any of the provisions
contained therein relates to matters with respect
to which Parliament has power to make laws, be as
stated in the extent clause thereof as so amended.
377
xx xx xx
6. Repeals and Savings
If immediately before the appointed day, there is
in force in any Part State any law corresponding
to any of the Acts or Ordinances now extended to
that State, that law shall, save as otherwise
expressly provided in the Act, stand repealed:"
The Schedule to this Act referred to several statutes and
one of these statutes was the Indian Succession Act, 1925.
The expression "the States", whereever occurring in the
Indian Succession Act, 1925 was substituted by the word
’India" and a new definition was introduced in clause (cc)
of sec. 2 of that Act defining "India" to mean "the
territory of India excluding the State of Jammu & Kashmir".
The effect of sec. 3 read with the Schedule was to extend
the provisions of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 to all
Part-B States including the State of Travancore-Cochin with
effect from 1st April, 1951 which was the appointed date
under the Part-B States (Laws) Act, 1951. The question is as
to what was the impact of the extension of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 to the territories of the State of
Travancore - Cochin on the continuance of the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 in the territories forming
part of the erstwhile State of Travancore. Did the
introduction of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 have the
effect of repealing the Travancore Christian Succession Act,
1092 so that from and after 1st April, 1951, intestate
succession to the property of a member of the Indian
Christian community in the territories of the former State
of Travancore was governed by the Indian Succession Act,
1925 or did the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092
continue to govern such intestate succession despite the
introduction of the Indian Succession Act, 1925? This
question has evoked divergence of judicial opinion, a single
Judge of the Madras High Court taking one view while a
Division Bench of the Madras High Court as also the former
Travancore Cochin High Court taking other view. We shall
proceed to consider which view is correct .
The Indian Succession Act, 1925 was enacted by
Parliament with a view to consolidating the law applicable
to intestate
378
and testamentary succession. m is Act being a consolidating
act replaced many enactments which were in force at that
time dealing with intestate and testant succession including
the Indian succession Act, 1865. Part V of the Act relates
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to intestate succession and it consists of a fasciculus of
sections beginning with sec. 29 and going upto sec.56. The
rules relating to testate succession are to be found in Part
VI of the Act which comprised 23 Chapters commencing from
sec. 57 and ending with sec. 191. We are concerned here only
with intestate succession and hence we shall confine our
attention to Part V of the Act. Sec. 29 which is the first
section in Chapter I of Part V deals with the applicability
of the rules contained in that Part. This section is
material and hence it would be desirable to set it out in
extenso :
"29. Application of Part
(1) This part shall not apply to any intestacy
occurring before the first day of January, 1866,
or to the property of any Hindu, Muhammadan,
Buddhist, Sikh or Jaina.
(2) Save as provided in sub-section (1) or by any
other law for the time being in force, the
provisions of this Part shall constitute the law
of India in all cases of intestacy.
Chapter II of Part V lays down the rules governing intestate
succession in case of persons other than Parsis and that is
made clear by sec. 31 which delcares that nothing in Chapter
II shall apply to Parsis. Chapter III enacts special rules
for Parsi intestates and lays down what shall be the
principles relating to intestate succession among them. It
will thus be seen that so far as Indian Christians are
concerned, Chapter II of Part V contains rules relating to
intesate succession and a fortiori on the extension of the
Indian Succession Act, 1925 to Part State of Travancore
Cochin, the rules relating to intestate succession enacted
in Chapter II of Part V would be applicable equally to
Indian Christians in the territories of the former State of
Travancore. But the respondents sought to resist the
applicability of these rules on the ground that sec. 29 sub-
sec.(2) of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 saved the
provisions of the Travancore Christian Succession Act,
379
1092 and therefore despite the extension of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 to Part State of Travancore Cochin, the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 continued to apply
to Indian Christians in the territories of the erstwhile
State of Travancore. m is contention urged on behalf of the
respondents is plainly unsustainable and cannot be accepted.
The principal infirmity affecting this contention is
that it overlooks the repealing provision enacted in sec. 6
of the Part State (Laws) Act, 1951. This section provides
that if immediately before the appointed day, that is, 1st
April, 1951, there was in force in any Part State any law
corresponding to any of the Acts or Ordinances extended to
that State, that Law shall, save as otherwise expressly
provided in Part State (Laws) Act, 1951 stand repealed. Now
the Indian Succession Act, 1925 was extended to Part State
of Travancore-Cochin by virtue of sec. 3 of Part State
(Laws) Act, 1951 and if therefore, there was in force in
part State of Travancore-Cochin any law corresponding to the
Indian Succession Act, 1925 immediately prior to 1st April,
1951, such law would stand wholly repealed. The petitioners
contended that the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092
which was admittedly in force in Part State of Travancore
Cochin immediately prior to 1st April, 1951, was a law
corresponding to Chapter II of Part V of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 and this law, namely, the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 must consequently be held to
have been repealed in its entirety on the extension of the
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provisions of Chapter II of Part V to the Indian Succession
Act, 1925 to the territories of the former State of
Travancore and if that be so, the continuance of the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 could not possibly
be regarded as saved by sec.29 sub-sec.(2) of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925. me respondents made a faint attempt to
combat this argument by urging that the Travancore Christian
& Succession Act, 1092 was not a law corresponding to the
Indian Succession Act, 1925 since the latter Act had a much
wider coverage in that it dealt not only with rules relating
to intestate succession among Indian Christian but also laid
down rules of intestate succession among Parsis as also
rules relating to testate succession, while the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 was confined only to laying
down rules of intestate succession among Indian Christians.
This plea urged on behalf of the respon-
380
dents is wholly fallacious. It ignores the basic fact that
when the Indian Succession Act, 1925 was extended to Part-B
State of Travancore-Cochin every Part of that Act was so
extended including Chapter II of Part V and the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 was a law corresponding to
Chapter II of Part V, since both dealt with the same subject
matter, namely, intestate succession among Indian Christians
and covered the same field. We may point out that Mr.
Justice Ismail of the Madras High Court sitting as a Single
Judge of the Madras High Court recognised the validity of
this position in Solomon v. Muthiah; [1974] 1 Madras Law
Journal 53 and held that "the conclusion is irresistible
that the Travancore Christian Succession Regulation II of
1902 is a law corresponding to the provisions contained in
Part V of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 so far as
Christians are concerned". me learned Judge following upon
this view held that the Travancore Christian Succession Act,
1092 was wholly repealed by virtue of sec.6 of Part States
(Laws) Act, 1951 and it could not be held to have been saved
by sec.29 sub-sec. (2) of the Indian Succession Act, 1925.
This conclusion reached by the learned Single Jugde was
overruled by the Division Bench of the Madras High Court in
D. Chelliah v. G. Lalita Bai, A.I.R. 1978 (Mad.) 66, but
even this decision of the Division Bench while disagreeing
with the conclusion reached by the learned Single Judge
accepted the position that the Travancore Christian
Succession Act, 1092 was a law corresponding to Part V of
the Indian Succession Act, 1925. And if that be so, it is
difficult to resist the conclusion that by sec. 6 of Part
States (Laws) Act, 1951 the Travancore Christian Succession
Act, 1092 stood repealed in its entirety. When sec.6 of Part
States (Laws) Act, 1951 provided in clear and unequivocal
terms that the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092
which was a law force in Part States of Travancore-Cochin
corresponding to Chapter II of Part V of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925 shall stand repealed, it would be
nothing short of subversion of the legislative intent to
hold that the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 did
not stand repealed but was saved by sec.29 sub-sec.(2) of
the Indian Succession Act, 1925. Of course, if there were
any provision in Part States (Laws) Act 1951 expressly
providing that the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092
shall not stand repealed despite the extension of Chapter II
of Part V of the Indian Succession Act 1925 to the
territories of the former
381
State of Travancore, then undoubtedly the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 would not have stood repealed
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and would have been saved. But admittedly there 18 nothing
in Part States (Laws) Act, 1951 expressly saving the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092. The only argument
urged on behalf of the respondents was that sec.29 sub-sec.
(2) of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 had the effect of
saving the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 and the
latter Act therefore continued to govern Indian Christians
in the territories of the former State of Travancore. Now
this contention of the respondent might perhaps have
required some consideration if the Travancore Christian
Succession Act, 1092 had not been expressly repealed and an
argument had been raised that by reason of the extension of
the Indian Succession Act, 1925, there was implied repeal of
the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092. Then perhaps
an argument could have been advanced that though both
Chapter II of Part V of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 and
the Travancore Christian Succession Act, 1092 covered the
same field and dealt with the same subject matter, namely,
intestate succession among Indian Christians, there was no
implied repeal of the Travancore Christian Succession Act,
1092 by the extension of Chapter II of Part V of the Indian
Succession Act 1925 and the continued operation of the
Travancore Christian Succession Act 1092 was saved by sec.29
sub-sec. (2) of the Indian & Succession Act, 1925. We very
much doubt whether such an argument would have been tenable
but in any event in the present case there is no scope for
such an argument, since the Travancore Christian Succession
Act, 1092 stood expressly repealed by virtue of sec.6 of
Part States (Laws) Act, 1951.
It was then contended on behalf of the respondents,
though faintly, that by reason of section 29 sub-sec.(2),
the Indian Succession Act, 1925 must be deemed to have
adopted by reference all laws for the time being in force
relating to intestate succession including the Travancore
Christian Succession Act, 1092 so far as Indian Christian in
Travancore are concerned. This contention was sought to be
supported by reference to the decision of the Travancore-
Cochin High Court in Kurian Auggsty v. Devassy Aley, A.I.R.
1957 Travancore Cochin 1. We do not think this contention is
at all sustainable. The legislative device of incorporation
by reference is a well-known device where the legislature
instead
382
of repeating the provisions of a particular statute in
another statue incorporates such provision in the latter
statute by reference to the earlier statute. It is a
legislative device adopted for the sake of convenience in
order to avoid verbatim reproduction of the provisions of an
earlier statute in a latter statute. But when the
legislature intends to adopt this legislative device the
language used by it is entirely distinct and different from
the one employed in section 29 subsec.(2) of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925. The opening part of section 29 sub-
sec.(2) is intended to be a qualificatory or excepting
provision and not a provision for incorporation by
reference. We have no hesitation in rejecting this
contention urged on behalf of the respondents.
We are, therefore, of the view that on the coming into
force of Part-B States (Laws) Act, 1951 the Travancore
Cochin Succession Act, 1092 stood repealed and Chapter II of
Part V of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 became applicable
and intestate succession to the property of members of the
Indian Christian community in the territories of the
erstwhile State of Travancore was thereafter governed by
Chapter II of Part V of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. On
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this view, it becomes unnecessary to consider whether
sections 24, 28 and 29 of the Travancore Christian
Succession Act, 1092 are unconstitutional and void. We,
therefore, allow the writ petitions and declare that
intestate succession to the property of Indian Christians in
the territories of the former State of Travancore is
governed by the provisions contained in Chapter II of Part V
of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. There will be no order
as to costs.
S.R. Petitions allowed.
383