Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KELUKUTTY & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAMMAD & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/08/1972
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
BENCH:
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
PALEKAR, D.G.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2403 1973 SCR (1) 757
1972 SCC (2) 591
ACT:
Customary law-Makkathyam--Thiyya-Succession to self acquired
property.
HEADNOTE:
The Thiyyas of the former Calicut, Taluk are governed by the
customary law known as Makkathayam and as per the
Makkathayam rule of inheritance an undivided brother of a
deceased person succeeds to the self-acquired property of
the deceased in preference to the wife and daughter of the
deceased. Therefore, the daughter’s son who comes after
them under the general Hindu Law cannot have a superior
claim unless a custom to that effect is pleaded and proved.
[760C]
Parambarathial Pattukava Chakkutti and Ors. v. Kothembra
Chandukutti, A.I.R. 1927 Mad. 877 Paricham v. Perachi a Ors.
I.L.R. 15 Mad. 281 Rama Menon v. Chathunni I.L.R. 17 Mad.
184 Imbichi Kandan & Ors. v. Imbichi Pennu & Ors. I.L.R. 19
Mad. 1 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: C.A. No. 749 and 750 of 1967.
Appeals by certificate from the judgment and decree dated
19th October 1965 of the Kerala High Court at Ernakulam in
Second Appeal No. 400 of 1961.
S. T. Desai and A. Sridharan Nambiar for the appellants.
P. Ram Reddy and A. V. V. Nair for respondent No. 1.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hegde, J. In these appeals by certificate only one question
arises for decision and that is whether Chandu, the
undivided younger brother of Kelu or the grand-children of
Kelu through his daughter were the legal heirs of Kelu.
Before going into that question we may dispose, of the con-
tention advanced on behalf of the appellants that there is
no satisfactory evidence to show that Chandu was the
undivided brother of Kelu. The pleadings in this case
proceed on the footing that Chandu and Kelu were the members
of an undivided family. The evidence also discloses that
fact. The judgments of the courts below proceed on that
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basis. Hence the appellants cannot now be permitted to
raise the contention in this Court that Chandu is not proved
to be the undivided brother of Kelu. In considering the
question formulated above, we shall proceed on the basis
that Kelu and Chandu were the members of an undivided
family.
758
Kelu was a Thiyya resident of Calicut Taluk (at present
known as Kozhikode Taluk). He was governed by the customary
law known as Makkathayam. He died on November 15, 1935
leaving behind him besides his two brothers Chandu and
Chekku, his widow Manikka, daughter Ichira and Ichira’s son
and daughter who were the appellants before the High Court.
He left behind him three items of immovable property which
are the subject matter of the present appeals. Kelu’s widow
Manikka and his daughter Ichira as well as his brother
Chekku died prior to 1944 long before the institution of the
suits from which these appeals arise.
It is not necessary to go into the history of the long
litigation. As mentioned earlier, the only question for
decision is as to who were the legal heirs of Kelu. It is
now established that the suit properties are the self-
acquired properties of Kelu. There is no dispute about it
now. The High Court came to the conclusion that under the
Makkathayam rule, Chandu succeeded to the estate of Kelu in
preference to his wife, daughter and daughter’s children.
The said conclusion is challenged in these appeals.
The contesting parties are Hindus. As mentioned earlier,
they are governed by Makkathayam rule. If the Hindu law as
in force in South India had governed the succession with
which we are concerned, the wife of Kelu should have
succeeded to the estate of her husband in preference to the
other heirs. The claims of the son and daughter of Ichira
could come in only later. Therefore the principal question
that we have to decide is whether the wife of Kelu succeeded
to the estate of Kelu on his death.
Mr. S. T. Desai, appearing for the appellants contended that
Makkathayam rule being a rule of customary law can only
derogate the ordinary Hindu law to the extent it is
satisfactorily established; in other respects the ordinary
Hindu law should prevail; the contesting respondents having
not established by positive evidence the claim put forward
by them i. e. that Chandu was a preferential heir to Kelu,
they must fail. On the other hand it was contended by Mr.
Rama Reddy on behalf of the respondents that Kelu was
governed by a customary law i. e. Makkathayam law and not by
ordinary Hindu law. Hence all that we have to see is
whether the customary law pleaded is well established on the
basis of the decisions of courts. According to him the
custom pleaded is of a community and not of any family. He
urged that the custom in question to the extent relevant for
our present purpose is well settled.
The law relating to Thiyyas of the former Calicut taluk had
come up for decision before the Madras High Court in several
cases. The approach to be adopted in spelling out the same
is
759
laid down in the decision of the Madras High Court in
(Parambarathil) Pattukkayal Chakkutti and ors. v. Kothembra
Chandukutti(1). Therein the Court observed :
"We think the Makkathayam Thiyyas are governed
by what is called the customary law and that
when a question arises as to what is the rule
of law governing them on any particular matter
what we have to see is what is the rule of
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customary law obtaining amongst them in that
matter and in cases which are not sufficiently
governed by prior decisions, the question will
have to be determined with reference to the
evidence in the case."
In Parichan v. Perachi and ors.(2) the High Court of Madras
came to the conclusion that a community following
Makkathayam rule must not be taken to be necessarily
governed by the Hindu law of inheritance with all its
incidents. On the basis of the evidence in that case, the
court held that when a member of the Thiyya community in
Calicut following that rule alleged and proved a custom that
undivided brother succeeded to the selfacquired property in
preference to widow, the court must give effect to it.
Therein the competition was between the widow and the
brother of the deceased who was a member of an undivided
Tarwad and the property in dispute was the self-acquisition
of the deceased.
In Rama Menon v. Chathunni (3) the High Court of Madras held
that the ordinary rule of Marurnakatayam against compulsory
partition is equally applicable to Tiyans who follow
Makkatayam, no custom to the contrary having been made out.
In Imbichi Kandan and ors. v. Imbichi Pennu and ors.(4) the
High Court held that on the death of a Thiyya of South
Malabar following Makkathayam rule of inheritance, his
mother, widow and daughter are entitled to succeed to his
self-acquired properties in preference to his father’s
divided brothers. In the course of the judgment, this is
what the learned judges observed:
"The decision of the subordinate judge is
entirely in accordance with the principles
laid down in Parichan v. Perachi and Rama
Menon v. Chathunni (supra). it has been
decided that the rule of impartibility applies
to Makkatayam Tiyans of Calicut, and in
Parichan v. Perachi following the principle
that self-acquired property lapses to the
tarwad, it was held that the undivided brother
succeeded in preference to the widow.
(2) I.L.R. 15 Mad. 281.
(1) A.I.R. 1927 Mad. 877.
(3) I.L.R. 17 Mad. 184.
(4) I.L.R. 19 Mad. 1
760
But the case is quite, different when the
brothers are divided and have no community of
interest as in this case, Here it is found
that the only property in which plaintiffs and
Kelukutti ever had a common interest is in the
family burying place, which will certainly not
constitute then an undivided tarwad. That
being so, the mother, wife and daughter of
Changaran who certainly belong to his tarwad
are preferential heirs to his uncle who did
not belong to his tarwad at all and had no
community of interest with him."
From these decisions it is clear that Thiyyas of former
Calicut Taluk were governed by the customary law known as
Makkathayam. Further as per the Makkathayam rule of inheri-
tance an undivided brother of a deceased person succeeded to
the self-acquired property of the deceased in preference to
the wife and daughter of the deceased. If that is so the
daughter’s son who comes after them under the general Hindu
law cannot have a ’superior claim unless a custom to that
effect is pleaded and proved. Such a custom is neither
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pleaded nor proved.
No other contention was raised before us.
In the result these appeals fail and they are dismissed.
But in the circumstances of the case we direct the parties
to bear their own costs in this Court.
S.C. Appeals dismissed.
761