Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MADHU KISHWAR AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/10/1991
BENCH:
MISRA, RANGNATH (CJ)
BENCH:
MISRA, RANGNATH (CJ)
KULDIP SINGH (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR Supl. (1) 477 1992 SCC (1) 102
JT 1991 (4) 119 1991 SCALE (2)794
ACT:
Chhota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908:
S.s.7,8--Scheduled Tribes--Succession to property
--Confined to male in the male line---Inclusion of female
heirs-Necessity for.
HEADNOTE:
Chhota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908 confined succession to
property to descendants in the male line of Scheduled Tribes
covered by the Act.
The petitioners who were the ladies belonging to the
’Ho’ and ’Oraon’ Tribes of the Chhota Nagpur area contended
that the provisions of Sections 7 & 8 of the Act were dis-
criminatory against women and, therefore, ultra vires the
equality clause in the Constitution.
The Court at an earlier stage while hearing one of the
writ petitions, gave time to the respondent-State of Bihar
to consider the feasibility of carrying out an amendment in
the offending sections so as to clearly provide that succes-
sion was not confined in the male line. In pursuance there-
of, a Committee was set up by the State which came to the
conclusion that a custom prevailed among the Scheduled
Tribes that a female heir be excluded from succession, and
that if there was any change, and the property be allowed to
go into the hands of female heirs there would be agitation
and unrest.
Adjourning the hearing of the petitions, this Court,
HELD: Scheduled Tribe people are as much citizens as
others and they are entitled to the benefit of guarantees of
the Constitution. It may be that the law can provide
reasonable regulation in the matter of succession to proper-
ty with a view to maintaining cohesiveness in regard to
Scheduled Tribes and their properties. But exclusion from
inheritance would not be appropriate. Since this aspect of
the matter was not examined by the State, it should re-
examine the feasibility of permitting inheritance and simul-
taneously regulating such inheritance for the purpose of
ensuring
478
that the property does not go out of the family by way of
transfer or otherwise. [480 H; 481 AB]
Jitmohan Singh Munda v. Ramratan Singh & Anr., 1958 BLJR
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373, referred to.
In the circumstances, hearing of the matter be adjourned
for three months and the State of Bihar would immediately
take into consideration the order and undertake the exercise
indicated and report to the Court by way of an affidavit,
and along with that a copy of the report may be furnished by
the Committee to be set up by the State of Bihar. [481 B-C]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 5723 of 1982 &
219 of 1986.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India).
Mrs Pinky Anand and D.N. Goburdhan for the Petitioners.
B.B. Singh, Pramod Swarup, J.P. Verghese, LJ. Vadakare
and Ms. Kamini Jaiswal (N.P.) for the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered
These two petitions under Art. 32 of the Constitution
challenge the provisions of the Chhota Nagpur Tenancy Act
which confines succession to property to the male line by
contending that the provision is discriminatory against
women and, therefore, ultra vires the equality clause in the
Constitution. Petitioner no. 1 in the first writ petition is
the editor of a magazine while petitioners nos. 2 and 3 are
two ladies of the ’Ho’ tribe, admittedly one of the sched-
uled tribes residing in Singhbhum district of Bihar. The
petitioners in the other writ petition belong to the ’Oraon’
tribe of the Chhota Nagpur area. Challenge is essentially to
ss. 7 and 8 of the Chhota Nagpur Tenancy Act of 1908. Sec-
tions 7 and 8 of the Act provide:
"7.(1) Meaning of ’raiyat having khunt-khatti
rights’. -"Raiyat having khunt katti rights"
means a raiyat in occupation of, or having any
subsisting title to, land reclaimed from
jungle by the original founders of the village
or their descendants in the male line, when
such raiyat is a member of the family which
rounded the village or a descendant in the
male line of any member of such family:
Provided that no raiyat shall be deemed to
have khunt katti
479
rights in any land unless he and all his
predecessors-in-title have held such land or
obtained a title thereto by virtue of inheri-
tance from the original founders of the vil-
lage.
(2) Nothing in this Act shall prejudicially
affect the rights of any person who has law-
fully acquired a title to a khunt kattidari
tenancy before the commencement of this Act.
8. Meaning of Mundan Khunt-khattidar. -
"Mundari khuntkattidar" means a Mundari who
has acquired a right to hold jungle land for
the purpose of bringing suitable portions
thereof under cultivation by himself or by
male members of his family, and includes-
(a) the heirs male in the line of any such
Mundari, when they are in possession of such
land or have any subsisting title thereto;
and
(b) as regards any portions of such land which
have remained continuously in the possession
of any such Mundari and his descendants in the
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male line, such descendants."
Reliance has been placed on a Division Bench decision of
the Patna High court in the case of Jitmohan singh Munda v.
Ramaratan Singh & Anr., 1958 BLJR 373 in support of the
proposition that the Patna High Court had more than 30 years
back taken the view that the provision was not operative and
a widow was also entitled to inherit. When analysed the
judgment of the Patna High Court does not seem to provide
prop for the argument raised in the writ petitions. In
paragraph 4 of the judgment the High Court indicated:
"The contention based on section 8 also terminologically
cannot be accepted in the first place, in defining khunt-
kattidari interest. As quoted above, the word used is
"includes" whereafter occur clauses (a) and (b) containing
reference to the male in the male line of a Mundari. The
word "includes" cannot be taken to be exhaustive. It only
states that the heirs in the male line alone are in the
category of a Mundari khunt-kattidari in their possession,
but in implication it may well be that the heirs of the
deceased Mundari who are females will not be entitled to
succeed to it. That does not mean that the section is so
definite as to exclude the inclusion of the widow of the
deceased Mundari as a person who can hold the land during
480
her life time. Moreover, clause (a) refers to the heirs male
in the male fine. The word "line" is also significant be-
cause it evidently refers to a person who has descended from
the deceased Mundari whose interest may be in question.
Even, therefore, if these words "the heirs male in the male
line" were to be given exclusive meaning, then also it would
mean only the persons who are descended from him or repre-
sent another male line altogether. There is no reference
whatsoever to the exclusion of the widow of the particular
Mundari. In my opinion, the position in respect of the
interest of the widow of the deceased Mundari is the same in
respect of this property as it would be her position in
regard to the other properties of her late husband. Since
the court below has accepted that the family has followed
the Hindu rites and Hindu religion, the widow of Kartik
Singh would be entitled to be in possession. Section 8, as I
have discussed, is not inconsistent with this position of
the widow and, as such, the court below took the correct
view in holding that the plaintiff could not recover posses-
sion of the property during the life time of defendant no.
1, but he is entitled to a declaration that he will succeed
after the death of the widow."
The interpretation given of S. 8 in the Division Bench
decision, therefore, does not provide full support to the
point raised before us by the writ petitioners in the two
cases. It was a case confined to its own facts and the Court
proceeded to dispose of the case with reference to the widow
by bringing in the concept of Hindu law on the finding that
the family had adopted Hindu law and was not bound by its
own caste custom.
At an earlier stage while one of these writ petitions
was heard we had given time to the State of Bihar to consid-
er the feasibility of carrying out an amendment in the
offending sections and to clearly provide that succession
was not confined to the male in the male line. A committee
appears to have been set up by the State of Bihar to examine
this question and it has come to the conclusion that by
custom prevalent among the scheduled tribes a female heir is
excluded from succession and in case the law was otherwise
interpreted or changed and property was allowed to go into
the hands of female heirs, there would be great agitation
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and unrest in the area among the scheduled tribe people who
have custom-based living.
Scheduled tribe people are as much citizens as others
and they are entitled to the benefit of guarantees of the
Constitution. It may be that the
481
law can provide reasonable regulation in the matter of
succession to property with a view to maintaining cohesive-
ness in regard to Scheduled Tribes and their properties. But
exclusion from inheritance would not be appropriate. Since
this aspect of the matter has not been examined by the State
of Bihar and the feasibility of permitting inheritance and
simultaneously regulating such inheritance for the purpose
of ensuring that the property does not go out of the family
by way of transfer or otherwise we arc of the view that in
the peculiar facts of the case the State of Bihar should
re-examine the matter. In these circumstances, instead of
disposing of the two writ petitions by a final order we
adjourn the hearing thereof for three months and direct the
State of Bihar to immediately take into consideration our
order and undertake the exercise indicated and report to the
Court by way of an affidavit and along with that a copy of
the report may be furnished by the Committee to be set up by
the State of Bihar.
This matter shall not be considered as part-heard and
shall be next listed before a Bench where Justice Kuldip
Singh is one of the members.
R.P. Petitions
adjourned.
482