Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GOGULA GURUMURTHY & ORS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KURIMETI AYYAPPA
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/03/1974
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1702 1974 SCR (3) 595
1975 SCC (4) 458
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1984 SC1683 (9)
ACT:
Hindu Law-Limited estate of a widow-Whether income from the
husband’s estate is an accretion to that estate.
HEADNOTE:
V, the father of the appellants had a brother R who died
childless leaving behind him his widow, N. After R’s death a
series of litigation started between V & N. V filed a suit
in 1913 against R. for waste committed by her husband’s
estate and was appointed a receiver in that suit. In that
suit, he got a decree, V as receiver filed 3 suits on the
foot of 3 mortgages in favour of R. In execution of the
decrees, 3 valuable properties were purchased. These three
properties are the subject matter of the present appeal.
V died in 1947 and N in 1951 after executing a will
bequeathing in favour of her brother S all her properties.
S filed the suit out of which this appeal arises, for pos-
session of the properties bequeathed to him under the will
and for mesne profits. The Sub-judge held that the said
properties became accretions to the main estate of R and
therefore, the plaintiff was entitled only to an account of
the income from these properties till the death of V. On
appeal, the High Court allowed the appeal in part. Before
this Court four points were raised by the appellants :-(I)
The High Court committed an err or in not hearing the whole
appeal but confining the hearing merely to the points on
which the finding was called for from the lower court. (2)
a portion of the properties which was lost to the estate due
to N’s negligence of not paying the land revenue, should be
debited against her share in them. (3) the cost incurred by
V in the suit and in the execution proceedings should have
been taken into account in allocating the properties between
the appellants and the respondents and (4) that the widow N,
bad treated the properties as accretion to the husband’s
estate and therefore, the appellants are entitled to the
whole of the property.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD : (1) When a finding is called for on the basis of
certain issues framed by the Appellate Court, the appeal is
not disposed of either in whole or in part. Therefore the
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parties cannot be barred from arguing the whole appeal after
the findings are received from the Court of first instance.
[597 E)
Gopi Nath Shukul v. Sal Narain Shukul, A.I.R. 1923 Allahabad
384, referred to.
(2) A Hindu widow is entitled to the full beneficial
enjoyment of the estate. So long as she is not guilty of
wilful waste, she is answerable to no one. In her lifetime,
the reversionary right is a mere possibility or spes
successionis. It cannot be predicted who would be the
nearest reversioner at the time of her death. It is, there-
, fore, impossible to contend that for any loss to the
estate due to the negligence on the part of the widow, he
should be compensated from out of the widow’s separate
properties. He is entitled only to the property left on the
date of the death of the widow. [599 C; FG]
(3) The income received by V and the amounts spent for the
suit and the execution proceeding were taken into account at
the time of settlement of accounts and it was open to V to
realise the excess amount from the estate of R. It is not
now open to the appellants to claim that these amounts
should be separated from the amount of the decree and
should be added to the amount of principal and interest
accrued during the lifetime of R. [600 A-C]
(4) From the evidence, it is clear that the widow did not
show any intention to treat the income from, the husband’s
estate as an accretion to that estate. [601D] Akkanna
v.Venkayya, I.L.R. 1902 25 Mad. 351, referred to.
The appeal was sent back to High Court for hearing afresh.
596
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1817 of 1967.
From the judgment and Decree dated the 21st September 1965
of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in A.S. No. 508 of 1959.
K. R. Choudhury and Veena Khanna, for the appellants.
M. K. Ramamurthi and J. Ramamurthi, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J.-Venkanna, the father of the appellants, had
a brother Ramamurti who died childless in the year 1908
leaving behind him his widow Narasimham. After Ramamurti’s
death a series of litigations started between Venkanna and
Narasimham and it is not over yet. Venkanna filed O.S. No.
14 of 1913 against the widow in respect of acts of waste
committed by her of Ramamurti’s estate and was appointed a
receiver in that suit. In that suit he got a decree against
Narasimham for a sum of Rs.13,539/- as she failed to furnish
security as originally decreed by the court. Venkanna as
receiver filed three suits on the foot of three mortgages in
favour of Ramamurti. One was O. S. No. 34 of 1916. In
execution of that decree item 1 of the ’A’ Schedule
properties was purchased in court auction. O.S. No. 443 of
1918 was filed on the, foot of another mortgage in favour of
Ramamurti executed in 1904 and items 2 and 5 of the plaint
schedule properties were purchased in execution of decree in
that suit. These three items of properties are the subject
matter of this appeal. It is unnecessary for the purpose of
this appeal to refer to the third suit.
Venkanna died in 1947 and Narasimham in 1951 after executing
a will bequeathing in favour of her brother Venkata Sattayya
all her properties. Venkata Sattayya filed the suit, out of
which this appeal arises, for possession of the properties
bequeathed to him under the will and for mesne profits. The
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Subordinate Judge who tried the suit held that items 1, 2
and 5 become accretions to the main estate of Ramamurti and
therefore the plaintiff was entitled only to an account of
the income from those properties till the death of Venkanna.
The appeal against the Subordinate Judge’s judgment came up
for hearing before Justice Satyanarayana Raju and Justice
Venkatesam of the Andhra Pradesh High Court. The learned
Judges called for a finding with regard to the interest on
the two mortgages in execution of the decrees in which items
1, 2 and 5 had been purchased, relating to *he period before
Ramamurti’s death and the period after Ramamurti’s death.
After that finding was received they allowed the appeal in
part and held that the plaintiff would be entitled to a
19/34th share of item 1, and 12/23rd share of items 2 and 5.
This appeal is filed in pursuance of a certificate granted
by the High Court.
Mr. Ramasesneya Chaudhri appearing on behalf of the
appellants raised four points which we shall deal with
seriatim.
1. The learned Judges of the High Court committed an error
in confining the appeal after receipt of the finding from
the Subordinate Judge’s court only to the question of the
share, which the appellants ,and the respondent were
entitled to, based on the calculation of the
597
interest due on the mortgages before and after the death of
Ramamurti. His contention was that as the High Court had
merely framed issues and referred them for trial to
the court of first instance under Order XLI Rule 25 of
the Code of Civil Procedure and not remanded the whole
case under Order XII Rule 23, they should have heard the
whole appeal and not confined the hearing merely to the
points on which the finding was called for. We think
that he is right in this contention. Before the High
Court the learned advocate for the appellants had
contended that Narasimham owed to the estate of Ramamurti a
sum of Rs.14,639/- and that when the decree was sought to
be executed by Venkanna, Narasimham claimed that the account
due to her by way of interest under the three mortgage bonds
should be set off and that the execution could
proceed only for the balance, that the set off claimed
by Narasimham was actually allowed and that therefore she
would not be entitled to any share in the properties
purchased in execution of the decrees obtained on the foot
of the mortgage bonds, in lieu of the interest
claimed. The learned Judges disallowed him from
raising that question on the ground that it was not
raised or argued at the time when the finding was called for
on the issues framed by them, and that if it had been
raised and accepted there would have been no need to
call for a finding or at any rate the finding called
for would have been different, and that the argument of
the learned counsel impugned the correctness of the
conclusions reached by the Court on the basis of
which the findings were called for.
We consider that when a finding is called for on the basis
of certain issues framed by the Appellate Court the appeal
is not disposed of either in whole or in part. Therefore,
the parties cannot be barred from arguing the whole appeal
after the findings are received from the court of first
instance. We find the same view taken in Gopi Nath Shukul
v. Sat Narain Shukul (AIR 1923 Allahabad 384) where it was
held that:
"Where an appellate Court at the first hearing
does not decide the case but merely remits
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certain specific issues, it is open to the
Court before which the case ultimately comes
to disregard the findings on those issues and
equally to form its own opinion on the whole
case irrespective of anything that is said in
the remand order."
It was also held that:
"An order remanding issues under Rule 25 is
not a final order. No appeal lies against it.
The responsibility for the decree ultimately
passed is entirely that of the Court before
which the case comes after remand.
It is quite otherwise with an order of remand
passed under order 41, Rule 23, for this is
an order which does finally determine, subject
to any right of appeal, the issues which it
decides. A similar view was taken by the
Nagpur High Court in Sultan
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Beg Al. chunilal (AIR 1918 Nagpur 193). In
Abinash Chandra Bidyanidhi Bhattacharjee v.
Dasarath Malo (XXXII (1927-28) Calcutta
’Weekly Notes 1233) it was sail:
An order of remand made under Or. 41, r. 25
decides nothing. The Court, either the same
or as differently constituted, has
jurisdiction, while finally hearing the
appeal, to go back on the reasons given or
views expressed in the order of remand and
must do so when those appear erroneous. "
We are, therefore, of opinion that the High Court should
have gone into this question and decided the matter, for if
it turns out that the interest due on the two mortgages
subsequent to the death of Ramamurti had been set off
against the amount due to Venkanna in the decree obtained by
him against Narasimham in O.S. 14 of 1913 there can be no
question of Narasimham being entitled to any share in the
properties purchased in court auction in execution of the
decree in the two mortgages and her brother getting those
properties by virtue of the will executed by her in his
favour.
In the Trial Court the plaintiff’s contention was that these
properties were purchased out of the accumulated interest on
the mortgages and the defendants asserted that they were
purchased out of the principal. That Court dismissed the
plaintiff’s claim on the ground that there was no proof of
his allegations. It was before the High Court apparently
that the attempt to split the interest due on the mortgages
into two portions, one before Ramamurti’s death and the
other after, was made and accepted by the High Court. It
was on that basis that the High Court called for findings.
After the findings were received the appellants raised the
question about the set-off. They raised the ,question
before the Trial Court when it was considering the appor-
tionment of the interest but that Court felt it had no power
to go into that question in view of the terms of the High
Court’s order calling for the finding. And the High Court
refused to allow the appellants to raise that question,
which as we have just held was not correct.
The decree in Venkanna’s suit appears to have directed
payment of interest to Narasimham [Para III (c) of the
plaint and judgment of the High Court, page 102 of the paper
book]. We find that Venkanna had submitted accounts to the
court in his capacity as receiver till 1940. We have also
evidence in this case that even When Venkanna died a sum of
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Rs.4,486/- was due.to him on the foot of the decree he
obtained against Narasimham. It is, therefore, highly
unlikely that any amount due to Narasimham was not given
credit to. We find from the finding submitted by the Trial
Court (Page 86 of the paper book) Narasimham claimed that
the amounts due to her should be set off and execution
should proceed only for the balance and from Ex. A-7 it
would appear that the claim was allowed. It seems therefore
unlikely, taking the direction in the decree and the order
evidenced by Ex. A-7 into account, that the interest due to
Narasimham, was not
599
one of the items set off. We do not want to express any
final opinion on the point but are of opinion that in the
circumstances the High Court should consider this aspect of
the matter and dispose of the appeal afresh.
2. Out of about 16 acres comprised in item 1, 5 acres had
been lost in revenue sale because of Narasimham’s failure to
pay the land revenue on those lands. It was urged before
the High Court and it has been urged again before us that in
allotting to the appellants a share of items 1, 2 and 5
these 5 acre-, which were lost to the estate as a result of
Narasimham’s negligence should be debited against her share
in them. We find ourselves unable to accept this contention
just as the High Court, though they gave no reason for their
conclusion. Neither on principle nor on authority could the
contention on behalf of the appellants be supported. A
Hindu widow is entitled to the full beneficial enjoyment of
the estate. So long as she is not guilty of willful waste,
she’ is answerable to no one. Her estate is not a life-
estate, because in certain circumstances she can give an
absolute and complete title. Nor is it in any sense an
estate held in trust for reversions. Within the limits
imposed upon her, the female holder has the most absolute
power of enjoyment and is accountable to no one. She fully
represents the estate, and, so long as she is alive, no one
has any vested interests in the succession. The limitations
upon her estate are the very substance of its nature and not
merely imposed upon her for the benefit of reversioners.
She is in no sense a trustee for those who may come after
her. She is not bound to save the income, nor to invest the
principal. If she makes savings, she can give them away as
she likes. During her lifetime she represents the whole in-
heritance and a decision in a suit by or against the widow
as representing the estate is binding on the reversionary
heirs. It is the death of the female owner that opens the
inheritance to the reversioners, and the one most nearly
related at the time to the last full owner becomes entitled
to possession. In her lifetime, however, the reversionary
right is a mere possibility or sues successions. It cannot
be predicted who would be the nearest reversioner at the
time of her death. It is, therefore, impossible for a
reversioner to contend that for any loss which the estate
might have sustained clue to the negligence on the part of
the widow he should be compensated from out of the widow’s
separate properties. He is entitled to get only the
property left on the date of the death of the widow. The
widow could have, during her lifetime, for necessity,
including her maintenance alienated the whole estate. The
reversioner’s right to institute a suit to prevent waste is
a different matter. If it could have been established that
in having allowed some part of the properties to be sold in
revenue sale she was guilty of willful waste if would have
been a different matter. It would still have been necessary
for the nevermore to have instituted a suit on that basis.
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It is doubtful whether such a suit can be instituted after
her death. In any case the necessary averments are not
available in this suit. We are, therefore, unable to accept
this contention
3. Another point urged before the High Court as well as
before us was that the cost incurred by Venkanna in the
suit and in the execution proceedings should have been
taken into account in allocating
600
items 1, 2 and 5 between the appellants and the respondent.
The High Court took the view that as the income received by
Venkanna and the amounts spent by him including the amounts
spent for the suit and the execution proceeding were taken
into account at the time of the settlement of the accounts
and there was an executable decree in favour of Venkanna for
a sum of Rs. 4,486/- as the amount due on settlement of
account, and it was peon to Venkanna to realise the amount
against the estate of Ramamurti in execution of the decree,
it is not now open to the appellants to claim that these
should be separated from the amount of the decree and should
be added on to the amount of principal and interest accrued
during the lifetime of Ramamurti. We agree with this view.
Incidentally it should be noticed that the conclusion of the
High Court on this point would seem to point to the same
conclusion in respect of the first point.
4. Lastly, it was argued that Narasimham, the widow, had
treated this property as accretion to the husband’s estate
and therefore the appellants are entitled to the whole of
the property. The facts on the basis of which this
contention is urged are :
(a) When Narasimham’s life interest in the
estate was sold in E.P. No. 93 of 1927 filed
by Venkanna she did not question the legality
of the sale on the ground that her interest in
the property was not a life interest but was a
full interest.
(b) In the order in E.A. 624 of 1935 passed
by the Subordinate Judge, Visakhapatnam the
widow treated items 1, 2 and 5 as part of the
estate of her husband and she had also
asserted therein that she had a right to enjoy
the same as representative of his estate.
(c) Life interest in the A-Schedule
properties was &old in E.P. 28 of 1940 in
execution of the decree in O.S. 14 of 1913 and
the widow did not object to the sale on the
ground that what was being sought to be sold
was a life interest but that she was entitled
to full interest.
We do not think anyone or all of these grounds are
sufficient to establish that the widow had treated this
property as accretion to the husband’s estate. As observed
by the Madras High Court in Akkanna v. Venkayya (I.L.R.
(1902) 25 Mad. 351) "the acquirer of property presumably
intends to retain dominion over it and in the case of a
Hindu widow the presumption is none the less so when the
fund with which the property is acquired is one which,
though derived from her husband’s property, was at her
absolute disposal. In the case of property inherited from
the husband, it is not by reason of her intention but by
reason of the limited nature of a widow’s estate under the
Hindu Law, that she has only a limited power of disposition.
But her absolute power of disposition over the income
derived from such limited estate being now fully recognised,
it is only reasonable that, in the absence of an indication
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of her intention to the contrary, she must be presumed to
retain the same control over the investment of such income.
The mere fact that properties thus acquired by her are
managed and en-
601
joyed by her without any distinction, along with properties
inherited from her husband, can in no way effect this
presumption. She is the sole and separate owner of the two
sets of properties so long as she enjoys the same, and is
absolutely entitled to the income derived from both sets of
properties." The fact that she wanted possession of those
properties or that when in execution of his decree Venkanna
bought what he alleged was her life interest in the
properties she did not object to it and assert that she had
full interest does not affect this question. It was to her
advantage to keep quiet. She was not there by estopped from
contending that she had an’ absolute interest in the
properties. It should, more over, be remembered that the
question that the items 2 and 5 may have to be divided as
between the reversioners and the widow in proportion to the
respective shares of the husband’s estate and the widow in
that property was really a later development. Before the
Trial Court both parties proceeded on a different footing
altogether as mentioned earlier. The widow was all along
doing everything to prevent her husband’s reversioners
getting anything from the estate. She had transferred quite
a good part of it to her brother, which was what enabled the
reversioner to file the suit against her for acts of waste.
She exhibited a very clear intention that whatever she
possessed should go to her brother. There is absolutely no
room on the facts of this case to hold that she exhibited
the least intention to treat the income from the husband’s
estate as an accretion to that estate.
In the result the appeal is allowed and the judgment of the
High Court set aside. The High Court will dispose of the
appeal afresh. The costs of this appeal will abide and be
provided in the fresh decree to be passed by the High Court.
C.M.P. No. 2016 of 1969 is dismissed.
S.C.
Appeal allowed.
602