Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 11069 of 1998
PETITIONER:
MOOL CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KEDAR (DECEASED) BY LRS. & ORS. ..
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/01/2000
BENCH:
A.P.Misra, M.J.Rao
JUDGMENT:
J U D G E M E N T
MISRA, J.
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Leave granted.
The short question which arises for our consideration
is, whether on the facts and circumstances of the case
inheritance, when female Hindu Bhumidhar dies, the situation
would be governed by Section 172(2)(a)(ii) or Section
172(2)(a)(i) of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land
Reforms Act, 1950 (hereinafter referred to as the U.P.Z.A.
Act). The appellants case is, even if Section 172(2)
applies, as held both by the Appellate Court and the High
Court, Section 172(2)(a)(ii) would apply, as Smt. Kaushalya
Devi (deceased wife of the Appellant) inherited the self
acquired property from her father, before the date of
vesting under the aforesaid Act. Submission is, Smt.
Kaushalya Devi, as aforesaid inherited the said property
from her father and became absolute owner and not limited
owner for life. Thus, on her death Section 172(a)(ii) would
apply, hence devolution would be governed by Section 174,
under which the property would devolve on the appellant who
is the husband of the deceased.
In order to appreciate the controversy, we hereby give
short essential facts. The present appeal confines its
dispute to Khata Nos. 31 and 35 of Village Vishunpur,
Phulvaria, Pargana Haveli, Tehsil Pharenda, District
Maharajganj in District Gorakhpur, U.P. Musai was the
father of Smt. Kaushalya Devi who acquired this property.
He died in the year 1944 when his daughter Smt. Kaushalya
Devi inherited this property. She was later married to the
appellant. She had 2/5th share each in the said two Khatas
along with other recorded co-tenure-holders who are
respondents before us. On the date of vesting, under
U.P.Z.A. Act, Smt. Kaushalya Devi became co-bhumidhar
along with the aforesaid other co-tenure-holders. However,
she died in the year 1953. Thereafter appellant got his
name mutated vide order dated 14.12.54.
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During consolidation of holdings proceedings the
appellant claimed his right as tenure holder in place of
Smt. Kaushalya Devi, to the extent of 2/5th share in the
said two Khatas and exclusive right in respect of Khata No.
37 to which we are not concerned in the present case. The
contesting respondents opposed this and claimed their right,
being co-sharer under Section 175 of the said Act as Smt.
Kaushalya Devi died leaving no heirs. For ready reference
Section 175 is quoted hereunder:-
Section 175
Passing of interest by survivorship: In the case of a
co- widow, or a co-tenure-holder, who dies leaving no heir
entitled to succeed under the provisions of this Act, the
interest in such holding shall pass by survivorship.
The Consolidation Officer accepted the claim of the
appellant and dismissed the objection of the contesting
respondents. Being aggrieved, the respondents filed an
appeal before the Assistant Settlement Officer
Consolidation. The Appellate Authority held that the
respondents being co- tenants were entitled to inherit the
share of Smt. Kaushalya Devi under Section 175 of U.P.
Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950. The
Appellant preferred revision before the Deputy Director
Consolidation. The Revisionary Authority applying Section
14 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 held that Smt.
Kaushalya Devi became full owner of the properties and hence
after her death her husband, namely, appellant inherits the
property. This order was challenged by the respondent
before the High Court through a writ petition, which was
dismissed but their special leave was allowed by which the
case was remanded back to the Deputy Director Consolidation.
After remand this Revision Authority applying Section 175
held that respondents being co-tenure-holder would be
entitled to inherit Khata Nos. 31 and 35. Thereafter the
appellant filed writ petition before the High Court which
was disposed of by means of the impugned order. The High
Court confirmed the finding of the Revisionary Authority and
dismissed the petition of the appellant. Being aggrieved,
the appellant has raised the aforesaid question for
consideration.
It is not in dispute that the disputed property
belonged to the father of Smt. Kaushalya Devi. He died
prior to the aforesaid U.P.Z.A Act, i.e., in 1944 and Smt.
Kaushalya Devi died after coming into force of the said Act,
in the year 1953. It is also not in dispute that this
disputed land was sir and khudkast of the father of Smt.
Kaushalya Devi. By virtue of Section 4 of the said Act, all
such estates situate in Uttar Pradesh vested in the State.
Consequently, by virtue of Section 6 all rights, title and
interest of all the intermediaries ceased and vested in the
State of Uttar Pradesh free from all encumbrances. Under
Section 18, all rights of the intermediaries in possession
of land as sir or khudkasht, immediately preceding the date
of vesting, are deemed to be settled by the State Government
with such intermediaries who hold such land and retain
possession subject to the provisions of the said Act as a
Bhumidhar. The first question for consideration is, whether
Smt. Kaushalya Devi had life estate or absolute right in
her Bhumidhari land under her personal law.
It is also relevant to refer, that Smt. Kaushalya
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Devi died prior to the coming into force the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 and Section 14 will not apply. Under
the customary Hindu Law, a female Hindu including daughter,
as in the present case, inheriting from a male, will own
property only as a limited owner, as this case is not
governed by Bombay School. Mulla Hindu Law, Seventeenth
Edition 9at page 238) states:-
SUCCESSION OF PROPERTY INHERITED BY FAMALES: 168.
Property inherited by females from males in territories
other than the Bombay State (1) According to the Bengal
school, the only females who can inherit the property of a
male are (1) the widow, (2) daughter, (3) mother, (4)
fathers mother, and (5) fathers fathers mother.
(4) According to the Bengal, Benares, Mithila and
Madras schools, every female, whether she be a widow,
daughter, mother, fathers mother or fathers fathers
mother, who succeeds as heir to the property of a male,
takes only a limited estate in the property inherited by
her, and at her death the property passes not to her heir,
but to the next heir of the male from whom she inherited
it.
The next question which arises for our consideration
is, whether after her death, the property would go to her
husband or to the co-share-holders by survivorship. The
appellant relies on Section 172(2)(a)(ii) while respondents
rely on Section 172(2)(a)(i). For ready reference the said
two sub-sections are quoted below:-
Section 172: Succession in the case of a woman
holding an interest inherited as a widow, mother, daughter,
etc.
(2)
(a)
(i) she was in accordance with the personal law
applicable to her entitled to a life estate only in the
holding, the holding shall devolve upon the nearest
surviving heir (such heir being ascertained in accordance
with the provisions of Section 171) of the last male
intermediary or tenant aforesaid; and if
(ii) she was in accordance with the personal law
applicable to her entitled to the holding absolutely the
holding shall devolve in accordance with the table mentioned
in Section 174.
[Emphasis supplied]
Smt. Kaushalya Devi being the daughter of Musai,
after his death inherited his property and after coming into
force, U.P.Z.A. Act, became Bhumidhar. When she died the
devolution would be governed by sub- Section (a) of Section
172(2). This sub-Section (a) is further split into two
clauses, clause (i), under which, if under the personal law
she had only life estate then her property would devolve
upon the nearest surviving heir in accordance with the
provisions of Section 171. On the other hand if it falls
under clause (ii) then if under the personal law she held
property absolutely, the devolution would be governed by the
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Table mentioned in Section 174.
Learned counsel for the appellant submits that Smt.
Kaushalya Devi inherited the exclusive estate of her father
as absolute owner, hence the devolution would be governed by
clause (ii) of the aforesaid section. It is also not in
dispute that in case the devolution is governed by (ii) the
appellant would succeed but if it is governed by (i) it
would go to the contesting respondents. Learned counsel for
the appellant also placed strong reliance in Ramji Dixit
(dead) by his L.Rs. and Anr. Vs. Bhirgunath and Ors., AIR
1968 SC 1058. In this case widow gave a gift of her
bhumidhar share to the respondent, which was challenged by
the revisioners of her deceased husband Raj Kishore, on the
ground that she had only life estate in it, hence had no
right to gift and thus such transfer was illegal. This
submission was rejected by this Court and it was held that
there is nothing in the Act which restricts female
Bhumidhari right to be for life only. In this Ramji Dixit
(supra), one Raj Kishore possessed the land as sir khudkasht
and on his death in 1923 it devolved upon his widow Sanwari.
On coming into force of the U.P.Z.A. Act, she acquired the
status of a Bhumidhar. Thereafter, on December 18, 1952 she
made the disputed gift in favour of respondents. Finally
she died in 1954. The revisioners of Raj Kishore challenged
this gift by filing a suit on the ground that Hindu Widow
even in the bhumidhari land had limited right hence she was
incompetent to create an interest to the transferee by gift,
which was to inure beyond her life time. In other words, a
female bhumidhar, holding land under the U.P.Z.A. Act had
no absolute right in such land. This submission was
rejected by this Court. It was held that there was nothing
in the Act which either put any embargo on a female
bhumidhar to transfer her holding nor any residuary interest
remained in such land in any other person. The right of a
female Bhumidhar was held to be absolute. With reference to
Section 152, which is a right of a bhumidhar to transfer,
the court held that there was no limitation under it. Thus
transfer by a female Bhumidhar by way of gift of her
bhumidhari right was held valid. The court held:
There is nothing in the Act which indicates that when
a female who inherits the rights of a bhumidhar, under
Section 171 or Section 172 or Section 172A, any residuary
interest remains vested in any other person. Under the Act
she is the owner of the property: the entire estate is
vested in her. It is a fundamental rule of our
jurisprudence that an estate does not remain in abeyance.
If it was intended by the Legislature that the interest
inherited by a female mentioned in Section 171 was to be a
life-interest, there would be some indication that the
reversionary or residuary interest remains vested in another
person designated for that purpose. But a search in that
behalf in the Act is fruitless.
On the careful review of the provisions of the Act, we
are unable to hold that it was intended by the Legislature
to enact by implication that the holding inherited by a
female heir belonging to one of the classes of female heirs
in Section 171 is not (sic) held as a life- estate.
Learned counsel for appellant relied on this decision
to submit that the right of a female Bhumidhar being
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absolute and unfettered, Section 172 (2)(a)(ii) would apply.
This submission is misconceived. This decision only
considered, whether a female Bhumidhar had any absolute
right to transfer her holding or not? It was while making
this scrutiny, it was held that she had an unrestricted
right to transfer. This case was not considering the
question of inheritance after her death. The former dealt
with her right to transfer, during her life time while the
present case is concerned with the succession of her
Bhumidhari right after her death. Thus this case renders no
help to the appellant. Thus the question for our
consideration is, when a female Bhumidhar dies, how her
property would devolve? Considering such inheritance under
Section 172 (2)(a), first it has to be ascertained what
would be her legal right under the personal law. Both
sub-sections of Sections 172 (2)(a), viz., (i) and (ii)
speak about the personal law. This personal law may be
different to different classes of females, viz., Hindu,
Muslim, Christians or Sikh, and even among Hindu females the
personal law would differ in accordance with the Bengal,
Banaras, Mithila, Bombay or Madras School. Varying
consequences will ensue in terms of their right under it.
Thus after applying the personal law to such female
Bhumidhar, it has to be ascertained whether she could have
hold the property as limited estate or absolute estate.
The decision of Gulab Devi (Smt.) Vs. Dy. Director
of Consolidation and Ors. 1996 (11) SCC 591, has no
application to the present case. The distinguishing
features as drawn by the said decision itself reveals that
it has no application: Section 172 provides succession in
the case of a woman holding an interest inherited as a
widow, mother, daughter etc. This provisions applies to the
case of a tenure-holder who dies after the date of vesting
having obtained the estate before the date of vesting while
the Abolition Act was in force.Since, instantly the
estate had vested in the two sisters prior to coming into
force of the Abolition Act and sequelly before the date of
vesting, Section 172, therefore, was out of applicability.
However, in the present case, Section 172 (2) squarely
applies as female Bhumidhar died after coming into force of
the aforesaid U.P.Z.A. Act.
Thus in this background the question is, whether
Section 172(2)(a)(ii) or 172(2)(a)(i) is applicable. The
distinction between the two clauses are that under (i)
inheritance would be governed by Section 171, if under the
personal law she was entitled to a life estate. If on the
other hand, under the personal law if she was entitled to
hold such estate absolutely, then inheritance would be
governed by the Table under Section 174. The Legislature
clearly spells out its intent. So to find the channel of
inheritance, one has to go to the personal law applicable to
her and then to steer to the provisions to find whether she
would have held the property as limited or absolute owner
before applying sub-clause (i) or (ii). So, first it has to
be examined, what would have been her right to such estate
under her personal law. This right has not to be seen
either under Tenancy Law, U.P.Z.A. Act or any other
statutory or other law but has to be seen only under her
Personal Law. The legal position, so far as personal law
viz. Hindu Law, of a female inheriting property from a male
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is what we have quoted above from Mullas Hindu Law. As
already stated any female including the daughter, as in the
present case, when she inherits the property from male gets
only life estate in as much as the case is not governed by
the Bombay School. In view of this legal position, Section
172(2)(a)(i) would apply, and not sub-clause (ii). May be,
after coming into force of the Hindu Succession Act of 1956,
within the ambit of Section 14, limited estate of Hindu
female is converted into absolute estate. In such cases,
inheritance would be governed by the Table under Section 174
in view of Section 172(2)(a)(ii). But in the present case
she died before the aforesaid Act of 1956.
It may look paradoxical that female Bhumidar having
absolute right to transfer, but for the purposes of
inheritance, one has to traverse to her personal law to
find, whether she would have held this property as limited
or absolute owner, and if she had limited right then in
spite of her absolute right under U.P.Z.A. Act, it had to
follow different course to be governed by Section 172
(2)(a)(i). But this is what legislature intends. That is
why law of inheritance varies for different properties under
different statute for the same person.
In view of our aforesaid finding, that Smt. Kaushalya
Devi held the land inherited from her father, under the
personal law as limited estate, after her death such
bhumidhari land would be governed by clause (i) of Section
172(2)(a) of U.P.Z.A. Act. Thus for inheritance Section
171 would apply under which husband is not a heir. In view
of this the appellant claim cannot succeed. The courts
below rightly held that the property would go to the
concerned respondents by survivorship by virtue of Section
175 as they were co-tenure holder.
So, we do not find any merit in this appeal.
Accordingly, it is dismissed. Costs on the parties.