Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
V.R. SADIE NAIDU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BAKTHAVATSALAM & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/12/1963
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
BENCH:
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1126 1964 SCR (5) 911
ACT:
Hindu Law-Intercaste marriage-Marriage before the Act-If the
Act has retrospective effect-The Hindu Marriages Validity
Act, 1949 (Act 21 of 1949), s. 3.
HEADNOTE:
The minor respondent no. I brought a suit for partition on
a claim that on his birth he became a member of the joint
Hindu family which his father Sadagopa Naidu, the first
defendant, in the suit, formed with the other nine persons
impleaded as defendants 2 to 10. His case was that
Padmavathi and Sada Gopa were validly married on June 24,
1948 and of that marriage he was born. The case of the
defendant was that the impugned marriage was not a valid
marriage as Padmavathi was a Brahmin girl and Sada Gopa a
Shudra. On these facts the Trial Court passed a preliminary
decree for partition in favour of the respondent no. 1. The
Trial Court was of opinion that the marriage would be
invalid according to the Hindu Law as it stood before the
Hindu Marriages Validity Act, 1949. It held however that
the position had been entirely changed by s. 3 of the Hindu
Marriages Validity Act, 1949 and that the marriage was
validated by the Act of 1949. On appeal by the defendants,
the High Court affirmed the judgment and decree passed by
the trial court. Hence this appeal.
Held: (i) The Hindu Marriages Validity Act, 1949 was however
in terms retrospective and validated marriages that had
taken place before the Act between parties belonging to
different
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castes, sub-castes and sects. It is idle to say that the
object of the legislature was only to regularise the status
of the Husband and the Wife. That certainly was part of the
object. But equally important, or perhaps more important
object was that the children of the marriages would become
legitimate.
On the facts of this case it was held that the impugned
marriage was a valid Hindu marriage and the respondent no.
1 a legitimate son of Sadagopa with all the rights of a
coparcener in regard to the joint family properties and
other matters.
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 316 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree dated
August 22, 1959 of the Madras High Court in Appeal No. 282
of 1952.
G.S. Pathak, B. Dutta, T.R. Ramchandra, J.B. Dadachanji,
O.C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the appellants.
H.N. Sanyal, Solicitor General of India, K. Jayaram and R.
Ganapathy Iyer, for respondent no. 1
N. Panchapagesa Iyer, M.P. Swami and R. Thiagarajan, for
respondent no. 2.
December 11, 1963. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
DAS GUPTA J.-Thirteen-month old Bhakthavathsalam brought
this suit for partition on a claim that on his birth he
became a member of the joint Hindu family which his father
V.R. Sadagopa Naidu, the first defendant, in the suit,
formed with the other nine persons impleaded as defendents 2
to 10. His case is that Padmavathi and Sadagopa were
validly married on June 24, 1948 and of that marriage he was
born. The main contention of the contesting defendants is
that there was never any marriage of Padmavathi and Sadagopa
and that Bhakthavathsalam is not Sadagopa’s son.
On both these points the Trial Court found the plaintiffs’
case proved and rejected the defence pleas. At the trial a
further point was raised that even if any marriage between
Padmavathi and Sadagopa
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did take place that was not a valid marriage as Padmavathi
was a Brahmin girl and Sadagopa a Shudra. The Trial Court
was of opinion that Padmavathi was a Brahmin, and as
admittedly Sadagopa was a Shudra, the marriage would be
invalid according to the Hindu Law as it stood before the
Hindu Marriages Validity Act, 1949. It held however that
the position had been entirely changed by section 3 of this
Act and that even if Padmavathi belonged to the Brahmin
caste and not to the caste to which Sadagopa belonged the
marriage is valid under the existing law. The validity of
the Act itself appears to have been challenged before the
Trial Court, but, this was rejected. In the result, the
Trial Court passed a preliminary decree for partition
providing for allotment to the plaintiff of 1/8th share of
the property set out in the plaint. Some other directions
were also given in the decree, with which however we are not
concerned.
On appeal by the defendants, the High Court of Judicature at
Madras agreed with the Trial Court that Padmavathi and
Sadagopa had been duly married and that the plaintiff
Bhakthavathasalam was the issue of that marriage, being born
of Padmavathi to Sadagopa. The High Court was however of
opinion that Padmavathi was a Shudra, the same as Sadagopa.
Assuming however for argument’s sake that Padmavathi was a
Brahmin the High Court agreed with the Trial Court that the
marriage was validated by the Hindu Marriages Validity Act,
1949, and so, the plaintiff would have all the rights of
legitimate son vis-a-vis the coparcenary to which his father
belonged. The validity of the Act was unsuccessfully
challenged. Accordingly, the High Court affirmed the
judgment and decree passed by the Trial Court and dismissed
the appeal. Against this decision of the High Court the
present appeal has been filed by the defendants with special
leave.
In support of the appeal, Mr. Pathak tried first to attack
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the concurrent findings of facts of the courts below as
regards the marriage between Sadagopa
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and Padmavathi and the fact of the plaintiff being born of
Padmavathi to Sadagopa in that marriage. Learned counsel
wanted to. say that the findings of the High Court on these
points were vitiated by misreading of important items of
evidence. He could not however point out any such
misreading nor any other error to justify our re-assessment
of the evidence
Having failed in this attempt Mr.. Pathak contended that as
a matter of law the plaintiff did not become a legitimate
son of Sadagopa inspite of the provisions of the Hindu
Marriages Validity Act, 1949. According to the learned
counsel the only effect of this Act is that the marriage
becomes valid and it has no effect as regards the legitimacy
of the child born before the date of the Act.
The relevant provisions of the Act is in s. 3 and is in
these words:-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force or in
any text, or interpretation of Hindu law, or
in any custom or usage, no marriage between
Hindus shall be deemed to be invalid or ever
to have been invalid by reason only of the
fact that the parties thereto belonged to
different religions, castes, sub-castes or
sects."
For his proposition the learned counsel could not cite any
authority; and that is natural because the contention raised
is entirely misconceived and can be characterised as
extravagant. He tried to persuade us however that a proper
construction of the words used in the section,justifies the
conclusion that it was the status of the parties to the
marriage that was only sought to be affected. He conceded
that in the case of every marriage celebrated after the date
of the Act, the result of the marriage being valid would be,
that the children born of the marriage would be legitimate,
’but argued that the same result would not follow in the
case of a marriage which having been celebrated before the
date of the Act was invalid at the time and the children
were illegiti-
915
mate then. The illegitimate children , he argues, were not
made legitimate by this Act. For that purpose an express
provision was necessary, according to the learned counsel.
In support of his arguments he has drawn our attention to
the wordings of s. 1 of the Hindu Widows’ Re-Marriage Act,
1856, which is in these words:-
"No marriage contracted between Hindus shall
be invalid, and the issue of no such marriage
shall be illegitimate, by reason of the women
having been previously married or betrothed to
another person who was dead at the time of
such marriage, any custom and any inter-
pretation of Hindu law to the contrary
notwithstanding."
The absence of any phrase similar to "the issue of no such
marriage shall be illegitimate" in the Hindu Marriages
Validity Act, 1949, is claimed by the learned counsel to
support his contention.
We cannot agree. In our opinion, the use of the words "the
issue of no such marriage shall be illegitimate" was not
really necessary in s. 1 of the Hindu Widows’ Re-Marriage
Act, and even without these words the effect of a marriage
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being valid would necessarily have been that the, issue of
the marriage was legitimate. These words were put in the
section., by the legislature in 1856 as a matter of
abundant, caution. The absence of such words in the Hindu
Marriages Validity Act, 1949 is of no consequence. If the
Act had not retrospectively validated marriages celebrated
before the date of the Act, the children of those marriages
could not have claimed to be legitimate. The Act was
however in terms retrospective and validated marriages that
had taken place before the Act between parties belonging to
different,, castes, sub-castes and sects. It is idle to
contend that the object of the legislature was only to regu-
larise the status of the husband and the wife. That’
certainly was part of the object. But equally important, or
perhaps more important object was that the children of the
marriages would become legitimate.
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We have therefore come to the conclusion that even if the
Trial Court was right in thinking that Padmavathi was a
Brahmin girl and not a Shudra, the position in law was, as
found by the courts below, viz., it was a valid Hindu
marriage and Bhakthavathasalam a legitimate son of Sadagopa
with all the rights of a coparcener in regard to the joint
family properties and other matters.
No other point was urged in appeal. The appeal is
accordingly dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.