SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
MANGATHAI AMMAL (DIED)
VS RAJESWARI & OTHERS ON 09 MAY, 2019
(C) NO.29642 OF
2016)
Date: 09th May,
2019
C A No: 4805 of
2019
Leave granted.
Feeling
aggrieved and dissatisfied with the impugned Judgment and Order passed by the
High Court of Judicature at Madras dated 05.01.2016 passed in AS No.785 of 1992
dismissing the same and affirming the Judgment and Decree dated 05.08.1992
passed by the learned Subordinate Judge, Arni in O.S. No.124 of 1990 decreeing
the suit for partition by original plaintiff, the original defendant nos. 1 to
3 have preferred the present appeal.
The facts
leading to the present appeal in nutshell are as under :
That, one
Rajeswari and Othersoriginal plaintiffs instituted a suit bearing O.S. No.124
of 1990 for partition of the suit properties and separate possession. It was
the case on behalf of the plaintiffs that the first defendant is the wife of
one Narayanasamy Mudaliar. That, the said Narayanasamy Mudaliar and original
defendant no.1 had one son and three daughters namely Elumalai (son),
Ranganayaki (daughter), Nagabushanam (daughter) and Navaneetham (daughter).
That, the son Elumalai and daughter Ranganayaki had died.
The first
plaintiff is the wife of Elumalai, the second plaintiff and plaintiff nos. 3 to
8 are the husband and children of the deceased Ranganayaki. That, Elumalai and
the first plaintiff did not have issue. According to the original plaintiffs,
Narayanasamy Mudaliar sold the ancestral properties and purchased the suit
property in the name of first defendant Mangathai Ammal (wife of Narayanasamy
Mudaliar). Therefore, it was the case on behalf of the plaintiffs that
Narayanasamy Mudaliar and his son Elumalai are entitled to half share of the
ancestral properties.
That, it was the
case on behalf of the plaintiffs that the same Narayanasamy Mudaliar had died
twenty years back to the filing of the suit. His share in the properties was
inherited by Elumalai, defendant nos. 1 and 2 viz Nagabushanam Ammal and
Ranganayaki Ammal. That, the Ranganayaki died about six years before filing of
suit, therefore, her legal representatives viz original plaintiff nos.2 to 8
inherited her share in the properties. That, the Nagabushanam executed the
Release Deed dated 24.04.1990 in favour of the first defendant.
According to the
plaintiffs, the first plaintiff is entitled to 5/8th share, plaintiff nos. 2 to
8 are entitled to 1/8th share and the defendants are entitled to 1/4th share in
the suit properties. According to the plaintiffs, since the defendant tried to
claim the suit properties, the plaintiffs filed the present suit for partition.
The suit was resisted by the defendants. As per the case of the first
defendant, except item nos. 1 and 3 of the suit properties, the other
properties are selfacquired properties of the first defendant. According to
the first defendant, the first item of the suit property was purchased out of
the money provided by her in her name. According to the first defendant, the
suit properties are not the ancestral properties of Narayanasamy Mudaliar.
It was denied
that the suit properties were purchased by selling the ancestral properties. It
was the case on behalf of the defendant no.1 that except properties in item
nos. 1 and 3 of Schedule II, the properties were purchased by the defendant
no.1 out of the stridhana she received from her parents’ house and by selling
the gold jewellery. It was also the case on behalf of defendant no.1 that after
purchasing the property from Thangavel Gounder and others; she constructed a
house and is in possession and enjoyment of the said property.
According to the
defendant no.1, the deceased Narayanasamy Mudaliar was entitled to 47 cents in
Survey No. 218/1 and 8 cents in Survey No. 218/3 and the deceased Ranganayaki
Ammal is entitled to 1/5th share in the suit properties. It was also the case
on behalf of the first defendant that, similarly, the first plaintiff’s husband
is also entitled to 1/5th share, in which, first defendant and first plaintiff
are entitled to half share in the suit properties. According to the first
defendant, the first defendant’s daughter Nagabhushanam executed a Release Deed
in respect of her own share. It was also the case on behalf of the first
defendant that she never acted as a manager of the joint family. According to
her, she executed a Will dated 11.02.1987 in favour of plaintiff nos. 1 and 2
and Nagabhushanam Ammal. However, since the beneficiaries of the Will did not
take care of the first defendant, she revoked the Will on 11.06.1990. Defendant
nos. 2 and 3 supported defendant no.1.
According to
defendant nos. 2 and 3, defendant no.1 mortgaged the property with defendant
no. 3 for a valuable consideration, which was also known to the plaintiffs.
Defendant nos. 2 and 3 also adopted the written statement filed by defendant
no.1. That the learned Trial Court framed the following issues:
“1) Whether the
suit schedule properties are ancestral properties of husband of the 1st
plaintiff namely Elumalai and the deceased Narayansamy?
2) Whether it is
true that the 1st defendant had managed the suit schedule properties being the
Manager of the Family?
3) Whether it is
true that the Suit Schedule properties are jointly enjoyed by all the family
members as Joint Family Property?
4) Whether the
plaintiffs are entitled to claim partition in view of the Release Deed dated
24.04.90
executed by Nagabooshanam Ammal?
5) Whether it is
true that the 1st defendant had executed a Will on 11.2.87 to and in favour of
plaintiffs in respect of suit schedule property and revoked the said Will on
11.6.90?
6) Whether it is
true that the plaintiffs are in joint possession of the suit schedule
properties?
7) Whether the
plaintiffs are entitled to get 3/4th share over the suit schedule properties?
8) Whether the
present suit is not valued properly?
9) To what
relief the plaintiffs are entitled?
Before the Trial
Court, on the side of the plaintiffs, four witnesses were examined and three
documents Exh. A1 to A3 were marked. On the side of the defendants, two
witnesses were examined and 19 documents Exh. B1 to B19 were marked. That, the
learned Trial Court, after taking into consideration the oral and documentary
evidences of both the sides, passed a preliminary decree finding that the
plaintiffs are entitled to 3/4th share in the suit properties. Feeling
aggrieved and dissatisfied with the Judgment and Decree passed by the Trial
Court, the original defendant nos. 1 to 3 preferred appeal before the High
Court. That, by impugned Judgment and Order, the High Court has dismissed the
said appeal and has confirmed the Judgment and Decree passed by the Trial
Court. Feeling aggrieved and dissatisfied with the impugned Judgment and Order
passed by the High Court dismissing the appeal and confirming the Judgment and
Decree passed by the learned Trial Court, original defendant nos.1 to 3 have
preferred the present appeal.
Shri V. Prabhakar,
learned Counsel has appeared on behalf of the appellantsoriginal defendants
and Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel has appeared on behalf of the respondents
original plaintiffs. Shri V. Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of
the original defendant nos.1 to 3 has vehemently submitted that in the facts
and circumstances of the case, both, the learned Trial Court as well as the
High Court have committed a grave error in decreeing the suit and holding that
the original plaintiffs have 3/4th share in the suit properties. It is further
submitted by Shri V. Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellantsoriginal defendant nos.1 to 3 that the suit properties were
purchased by defendant no.1 out of the stridhana she received from her parents
and by selling the gold jewellery. It is submitted that, admittedly, the suit
properties were purchased in the name of original defendant no.1 and was in
possession of defendant no.1. It is submitted therefore, the finding that the
properties were purchased by Narayanasamy Mudaliar is erroneous. It is further
submitted by Shri V. Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellantsoriginal defendant nos.1 to 3 that if it was the case on behalf of
the original plaintiffs that the properties purchased in the name of defendant
no.1 were the benami transactions, in that case, the onus is/was upon the
plaintiffs to prove by leading cogent evidence
that the transactions were benami transactions.
It is submitted
that in the present case, the plaintiffs have failed to discharge the onus to
prove that the transactions were benami transactions. It is submitted that,
both, the Trial Court as well as the High Court had erroneously shifted the
burden upon the defendants to prove that the transactions/Sale Deeds in favour
of defendant no.1 were not benami transactions. It is submitted that the
aforesaid is contrary to the settled proposition of law laid down by this
Court. It is further submitted by Shri V. Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing
on behalf of the appellantsoriginal defendant nos.1 to 3 that in the present
case, solely on considering two documents, namely, Exh. B3, Sale Deed in
respect of one of the properties and Exh. B4, the Sale Deed with respect of two
properties, the Courts below have considered the entire suit properties as
ancestral properties and/or the same properties purchased from the funds raised
by selling the ancestral properties. It is further submitted by Shri V.
Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellantsoriginal
defendant nos.1 to 3 that merely because some consideration or part
consideration was paid by the husband at the time of purchase of property at
Exh. B3Sale Deed and/or merely purchasing the stamp papers while purchasing
the property at Exh. B4Sale Deed, it cannot be said that the same properties
as such were purchased from the funds raised by selling the ancestral
properties and/or the same were purchased for and on behalf of joint family.
It is further
submitted by Shri V. Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellantsoriginal defendant nos.1 to 3 that both the Courts below have
materially erred in misinterpreting the Release Deed at Exh. A1. It is
submitted that both the Courts below have materially erred in holding the suit
properties as joint family properties of Narayanasamy Mudaliar on the ground
that execution of Release Deed at Exh. A1 by Nagabhushanam on payment of
Rs.10,000/ to Nagabhushanam and on such payment Nagabhushanam released her
share in the property, was good to hold that the properties are the joint
family properties of Narayanasamy Mudaliar. It is further submitted by Shri V.
Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellantsoriginal
defendant nos.1 to 3 that even considering the documentary evidences on record,
more particularly, Exh. B3 to B7, it can be seen that the suit properties were
purchased in the name of defendant no.1 were purchased much prior to the sale
of some of the ancestral properties of Narayanasamy Mudaliar. It is submitted
that, therefore, the case on behalf of the plaintiffs that the suit properties
were purchased in the name of defendant no.1 out of the funds raised on selling
the ancestral properties of Narayanasamy Mudaliar, cannot be accepted. Relying
upon paragraph 10 of the decision of this Court in the case of Om Prakash
Sharma v. Rajendra Prasad Shewda, (2015) 15 SCC 556, it is submitted by Shri V.
Prabhakar, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellants that as the
transactions/Sale Deeds in favour of defendant no.1 were prior to the enactment
of the Hindu Succession Act and the amendments made thereto from time to time,
even it can be said that the intention of the Narayanasamy Mudaliar to purchase
the properties in the name of defendant no.1his wife was in order to provide
the wife with a secured life in the event of his death. Shri V. Prabhakar,
learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the appellantsoriginal defendant nos.1
to 3 submitted that even otherwise, the plaintiffs have failed to prove by leading
cogent evidence that the transactions of sale in favour of defendant no.1 were
benami transactions. It is submitted by Shri V. Prabhakar that even in the
plaint also there were no specific pleadings that the sale transactions of the
suit properties in favour of defendant no.1 were benami transactions. It is
submitted that even the learned Trial Court also did not frame any specific
issue with respect to benami transactions. It is submitted that even otherwise
on merits also and on considering the recent decision of this Court in the case
of P. Leelavathi v. V. Shankarnarayana Rao (2019) 6 SCALE 112, in which after
considering the earlier decisions of this Court in the case of Jaydayal Poddar
v. Bibi Hazra (Mst.) (1974) 1 SCC 3; Thakur Bhim Singh v. Thakur Kan Singh
(1980) 3 SCC 72; Binapani Paul v. Pratima Ghosh (2007) 6 SCC 100 and Valliammal
v. Subramaniam (2004) 7 SCC 233, it cannot be said that the Sale Deeds executed
in favour of defendant no.1 were benami transactions. Making above submissions
and relying upon above decisions it is prayed to allow the present appeal.
Present appeal is vehemently opposed by Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel
appearing on behalf of the respondents original plaintiffs. Shri G. Balaji,
learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the respondentsoriginal plaintiffs has
vehemently submitted that on appreciation of entire evidence on record, both,
learned Trial Court as well as the High Court, have rightly held that the
transactions of sale in favour of defendant no.1 were benami transactions as
the said properties were purchased by Narayanasamy Mudaliar in the name of
defendant no.1 out of the funds received from selling the ancestral properties.
It is submitted that on considering the documentary evidences Exh. B3, B4 and
even Exh. 3.
A1, the High
Court has rightly observed and held that the transactions/Sale Deeds in favour
of defendant no.1 were benami transactions and therefore the plaintiffs are
entitled to 3/4th share in the suit properties which were purchased in the name
of defendant no.1 but purchased out of the funds received from selling the
ancestral properties by Narayanasamy Mudaliar. It is further submitted by Shri
G. Balaji, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the respondentsoriginal
plaintiffs that in the present case, all the conditions to prove the
transactions as benami transactions as laid down by this Court in the case of
P. Leelavathi (Supra) have been satisfied.
It is vehemently
submitted by Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the respondentsoriginal
plaintiffs that in the present case, even from the intention and conduct of the
parties it is proved that though the properties were in the name of defendant
no.1, they were purchased and enjoyed as Joint Family Properties. It is
submitted that otherwise the Nagabhushanam would not have released her share in
favour of defendant no.1, if the daughter Nagabhushanam had no share. It is
submitted that execution of the Release Deed by Nagabhushanam in favour of
defendant no.1 suggests that defendant no.1 also considered the share of the
daughter Nagabhushanam by treating the suit properties as Joint Family
Properties. It is further submitted by Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel
appearing on behalf of the respondentsoriginal plaintiffs that the Will dated
11.02.1987, executed by defendant no.1, also included even the properties
exclusively belonging to Narayanasamy Mudaliar. It is submitted, therefore, the
intention can be gathered from Exh. B8 and Exh. B9 that the suit properties are
Joint Family Properties and therefore liable for partition and not exclusive
properties of defendant no.1.
It is further
submitted by Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondents original plaintiffs that the suit properties were purchased in the
name of defendant no.1 during the lifetime of Narayanasamy Mudaliar. It is
submitted that original defendant no.1 had no independent income. It is
submitted that Narayanasamy Mudaliar had ancestral properties/agricultural
lands which were generating income and he purchased all the properties in the
name of his wifedefendant no.1 from the income generated from the ancestral
properties and by selling some of the ancestral properties.
It is further
submitted by Shri G. Balaji, learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondentsoriginal plaintiffs that even the statutory presumption which was
rebuttable under Section 3 (2) of the Benami Transaction Act, 1988 has been
omitted by Benami Amendment Act of 2016. It is submitted that therefore as on
date, there is no such statutory presumption that the purchase made in the name
of wife or children is for their benefit. Making above submissions and relying
upon above decisions it is prayed to dismiss the present appeal. 7. Heard the
learned Counsel appearing on behalf of the respective parties at length. We
have gone through and considered in detail the findings recorded by the learned
Trial Court as well as the High Court. We have also considered in detail the
evidences on record both oral as well as documentary.
At the outset,
it is required to be noted that the original plaintiffs instituted the suit
before the learned Trial Court for partition of the suit properties and
claiming 3/4th share with the pleadings that the suit properties were ancestral
properties and that the Narayanasamy Mudaliar has purchased the suit properties
in the name of his wifedefendant no.1 out of the funds derived through selling
his share of the property acquired through ancestral nucleus to some other
person and that the suit properties were in absolute possession and enjoyment
of the Joint Family Property since the date of purchase. From the pleadings, it
appears that it was not specifically pleaded by the plaintiffs that the Sale
deeds/transactions in favour of defendant no.1 were benami transactions. It was
also not pleaded that the suit properties were purchased in the name of
defendant no.1 by Narayanasamy Mudaliar from the income derived out of the
ancestral properties. Even the learned Trial Court did not specifically frame
the issue that whether the transactions/Sale Deeds in favour of defendant no.1
are benami transactions or not? Despite the above, learned Trial Court and the
High Court have held that the transactions/Sale Deeds in favour of defendant
no.1 were benami transactions. The aforesaid findings recorded by the Trial
Court confirmed by the High Court and the consequent relief of partition
granted in favour of the plaintiffs is the subject matter of the present
appeal.
While
considering the issue involved in the present appeal viz. whether the
transactions/Sale Deeds in favour of defendant no.1 can be said to be benami
transactions or not, the law on the benami transactions is required to be
considered and few decisions of this Court on the aforesaid are required to be referred
to. In the case of Jaydayal Poddar (Supra) it is specifically observed and held
by this Court that the burden of proving that a particular sale is benami and
the apparent purchaser is not the real owner, always rests on the person
asserting it to be sold. It is further observed that this burden has to be
strictly discharged by adducing legal evidence of a definite character which
would either directly prove the fact of the benami transaction or establish
circumstances unerringly and reasonably raising an interference of that fact.
In paragraph 6 of the aforesaid decision, this Court has observed and held as
under : “6. “It is wellsettled that the burden of proving that a particular
sale is benami and the apparent purchaser is not the real owner, always rests
on the person serting it to be so. This burden has to be strictly discharged by
adducing legal evidence of a definite character which would either directly
prove the fact of benami or establish circumstances unerringly and reasonably
raising an inference of that fact.
The essence of a
benami is the intention of the party or parties concerned; and not unoften,
such intention is shrouded in a thick veil which cannot be easily pierced
through. But such difficulties do not relieve the person asserting the
transaction to be benami of any part of the serious onus that rests on him; nor
justify the acceptance of mere conjectures or surmises, as a substitute
for proof. The reason is that a deed is
a solemn document prepared and executed after considerable deliberation, and
the person expressly shown as the purchaser or transferee in the deed, starts
with the initial presumption in his favour that the apparent state of affairs
is the real state of affairs. Though the question whether a particular sale is benami
or not, is largely one of fact, and for
determining this question, no absolute formulae or acid tests, uniformly
applicable in all situations, can be laid down; yet in weighing the
probabilities and for gathering the relevant indicia, the courts are usually
guided by these circumstances:(1) the source from which the purchase money
came; (2) the nature and possession of the property, after the purchase; (3)
motive, if any, for giving the transaction a benami colour; (4) the position of
the parties and the relationship if any, between the claimant and the alleged
benamidar; (5) the custody of the title deeds after the sale and (6) the
conduct of the parties concerned in dealing with the property after the sale.
In the case of Thakur Bhim Singh (Supra) this Court in paragraph 18 observed
and held as under :
“18. The
principle governing the determination of the question whether a transfer is a
benami transaction or not may be summed up thus: (1) the burden of showing that
a transfer is a benami transaction lies on the person who asserts that it is
such a transaction; (2) it is proved that the purchase money came from a person
other than the person in whose favour the property is transferred, the purchase
is prima facie assumed to be for the benefit of the person who supplied the
purchase money, unless there is evidence to the contrary; (3) the true
character of the transaction is governed by the intention of the person who has
contributed the purchase money and (4) the question as to what his intention
was has to be decided on the basis of the surrounding circumstances, the
relationship of the parties, the motives governing their action in bringing
about the transaction and their conduct, etc.”In the case of P. Leelavathi
(Supra) this Court held as under : “9.2 In Binapani Paul case (Supra), this
Court again had an occasion to consider the nature of benami transactions.
After considering a catena of decisions of this Court on the point, this Court
in that judgment observed and held that the source of money had never been the
sole consideration. It is merely one of the relevant considerations but not
determinative in character. This Court ultimately concluded after considering
its earlier judgment in the case of VAlliAmmAl v. SuBRAmAniAm (2004) 7 SCC 233
that while considering whether a particular transaction is benami in nature,
the following six circumstances can be taken as a guide:
“(1) the source
from which the purchase money came;
(2) the nature
and possession of the property, after the purchase;
(3) motive, if
any, for giving the transaction a benami colour;
(4) the position
of the parties and the relationship, if any, between the claimant and the
alleged benamidar;
(5) the custody
of the title deeds after the sale; and
(6) the conduct
of the parties concerned in dealing with the property after the sale. (Jaydayal
Poddar v. Bibi Hazra (supra), SCC p. 7, para6)”
After
considering the aforesaid decision in the recent decision of this Court in the
case of P. Leelavathi (Supra), this Court has again reiterated that to hold
that a particular transaction is benami in nature the aforesaid six
circumstances can be taken as a guide. Applying law laid down by this Court in
the aforesaid decisions to the facts of the case on hand and the reasoning
given by the Trial Court confirmed by the High Court, it appears that both, the
learned Trial Court and the High Court have erred in shifting the burden on the
defendants to prove that the sale transactions were not benami transactions. As
held hereinabove in fact when the plaintiffs’ claim, though not specifically
pleaded in the plaint, that the Sale Deeds in respect of suit properties, which
are in the name of defendant no.1, were benami transactions, the plaintiffs
have failed to prove, by adducing cogent evidence, the intention of the
Narayanasamy Mudaliar topurchase the suit properties in the name of defendant
no.1 – his wife.
Even the
reasoning and the findings recorded by the Trial Court confirmed by the High
Court while holding the Sale Deeds/transactions in favour of defendant no.1 as
benami cannot be said to be germane and or fulfilling the circumstances as
carved out by this Court in the aforesaid decisions. The first reason which is
given by the learned Trial Court while holding the suit properties as benami
transactions is that part sale consideration was paid by Narayanasamy Mudaliar
at the time of the purchase of the property vide Sale Deed Exh. B3. As held by
this Court in catena of decisions referred to hereinabove, the payment of part
sale consideration cannot be the sole criteria to hold the sale/transaction as
benami. While considering a particular transaction as benami, the intention of
the person who contributed the purchase money is determinative of the nature of
transaction. The intention of the person, who contributed the purchase money,
has to be decided on the basis of the surrounding circumstances; the
relationship of the parties; the motives governing their action in bringing
about the transaction and their subsequent conduct etc. It is required to be noted
that Narayanasamy Mudaliar, who contributed part sale consideration by
purchasing property at Exh. B3, might have contributed being the husband and
therefore by mere contributing the part sale consideration, it cannot be
inferred that Sale Deed in favour of the defendant no.1wife was benami
transaction and for and at behalf of the joint family. Therefore, the Trial
Court as well as the High Court have committed a grave error in holding the
suit properties as benami transactions/ancestral properties on the basis of the
document at Exh. B3.
Similarly,
merely because of the stamp duty at the time of the execution of the Sale Deed
at Exh. B4 was purchased by Narayanasamy Mudaliar, by that itself it cannot be
said that the Sale Deed at Exh. B4 in favour of defendant no.1 was benami
transaction. It is required to be noted that except the aforesaid two
documentary evidences at Exh. B3 and B4, no other documentary
evidence/transaction/Sale Deed in favour of defendant no.1 have been considered
by the learned Trial Court and even by the High Court. Now, so far as the
findings recorded by the Trial Court and the High Court on considering the
Release Deed at Exh. A1 viz. the Release Deed executed by Nagabushanam in
favour of defendant no. 1 on payment of Rs.10,000/ and therefore inference
drawn by the learned Trial Court and the High Court that therefore even the
defendant no.1 also considered the share of the daughter and considered the
suit properties as joint family properties and therefore plaintiffs have also
share in the suit properties is concerned, the said finding is just a
misreading and misinterpretation of the evidence on record. In her
deposition, defendant no.1 has explained the payment of Rs.10,000/ to
Nagabushanam, daughter and the Release Deed executed by her.
It is
specifically stated by her that though she had no share in the suit properties,
with a view to avoid any further litigation in future and to be on safer side,
Rs.10,000/ is paid and the Release Deed was got executed by Nagabushanam in
favour of defendant no.1. Even in the Release Deed at Exh. A1, it is so
specifically stated. Therefore, merely because to avoid any further litigation
in future and though Nagabushanam had no share in the suit properties,
Rs.10,000/ was paid and the Release Deed was got executed in favour of
defendant no.1, by that itself, it cannot be said that defendant no.1 treated
the suit properties as ancestral properties and/or Joint Family Properties.
Even considering the Will executed by defendant no.1 dated 11.02.1987 and the
subsequent revocation of the Will is suggestive of the fact that defendant no.1
all throughout treated the suit property as her selfacquired property which
according to her were purchased from the Stridhana and selling of the jewellery.
5. It is
required to be noted that in the plaint the plaintiffs came out with the case
that the suit properties purchased in the name of defendant no.1 by
Narayanasamy Mudaliar from the funds raised by selling the ancestral properties
received by him. It was never the case on behalf of the plaintiffs that the
suit properties were purchased by Narayanasamy Mudaliar in the name of
defendant no.1 out of the income received from the ancestral properties.
However, considering the date of transactions with respect to the suit
properties and the ancestral properties sold by Narayanasamy Mudaliar, it can
be seen that all the suit properties purchased in the name of defendant no.1
were much prior to the sale of the ancestral properties by Narayanasamy
Mudaliar. The ancestral property was sold by the Narayanasamy Mudaliar (Exh.
A3) was on dated 11.11.1951.
However, the
Sale Deeds at Exh. B3, B4, B5, B6 and B7 which are in favour of defendant no.1
were much prior to the sale of the property at Exh. A3. Therefore, also it
cannot be said that the suit properties were purchased in the name of defendant
no.1 by Narayanasamy Mudaliar from the funds received by selling of the
ancestral properties. Even considering the observations made by this Court in
paragraph 10 in the case of Om Prakash Sharma (Supra) it can be said that
Narayanasamy Mudaliar might have purchased the properties in the name of
defendant no.1 in order to provide his wife with a secured life in the event of
his death. It is required to be noted that it was the specific case on behalf
of the defendant no.1 that the suit properties were purchased by her from the
Stridhana and on selling of the jewellery.
It is required
to be noted that the benami transaction came to be amended in the year 2016. As
per Section 3 of the Benami Transaction (Prohibition) Act 1988, there was a
presumption that the transaction made in the name of the wife and children is
for their benefit. By Benami Amendment Act, 2016, Section 3 (2) of the Benami
Transaction Act, 1988 the statutory presumption, which was rebuttable, has been
omitted. It is the case on behalf of the respondents that therefore in view of
omission of Section 3(2) of the Benami Transaction Act, the plea of statutory
transaction that the purchase made in the name of wife or children is for their
benefit would not be available in the present case. Aforesaid cannot be
accepted.
As held by this
Court in the case of Binapani Paul (Supra) the Benami Transaction (Prohibition)
Act would not be applicable retrospectively. Even otherwise and as observed
hereinabove, the plaintiff has miserably failed to discharge his onus to prove
that the Sale Deeds executed in favour of defendant no.1 were benami
transactions and the same properties were purchased in the name of defendant
no.1 by Narayanasamy Mudaliar from the amount received by him from the sale of
other ancestral properties.
Once it is held
that the Sale Deeds in favour of defendant no.1 were not benami transactions,
in that case, suit properties, except property nos. 1 and 3, which were
purchased in her name and the same can be said to be her selfacquired
properties and therefore cannot be said to be Joint Family Properties, the
plaintiffs cannot be said to have any share in the suit properties (except
property nos. 1 and 3). At this stage, it is required to be noted that the
learned Counsel appearing on behalf of defendant no.1 has specifically stated
and admitted that the suit property Item nos. 1 and 3 can be said to be the
ancestral properties and according to him even before the High Court also it
was the case on behalf of the defendant no.1 that item nos. 1 and 3 of the suit
properties are ancestral properties.
In view of the
above and for the reasons stated above, the present appeal is partly allowed.
The impugned judgement and order passed by the High Court as well as the Trial
Court holding that the plaintiffs have 3/4th share in the suit properties
(Except Item Nos. 1 and 3 of the suit properties) are hereby quashed and set
aside. It is observed and held that except Item Nos. 1 and 3 of the suit
properties, the plaintiffs have no share in other suit properties. Preliminary
Decree directed to be drawn by the learned Trial Court, confirmed by the High
Court, is hereby directed to be modified accordingly.
The present
appeal is partly allowed to the aforesaid extent. No costs.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
No comments:
Post a Comment