SUPREME COURT
MANGAMMAL THULASI VS. T.B. RAJU - 19-04-2018
Summarised Judgement
(Scroll for Complete Judgement)
Hindu Succession Act, 1956 (HUF Law): U/s 29-A of the TN
Amendment, only daughters of a coparcener who were not married at the time of
commencement of the amendment of 1989 are is entitled to claim partition in the
Hindu Joint Family Property. Married daughters are not coparceners and are not
entitled to institute suit for partition and separate possession.
Any property inherited upto four generations of male lineage from
the father, father’s father or father’s father’s father i.e. father, grand
father etc., is termed as ancestral property. In other words, property
inherited from mother, grandmother, uncle and even brother is not ancestral
property. In ancestral property, the right of property accrues to the
coparcener on birth. The concept of ancestral property is in existence since
time immemorial.
In the State of Tamil Nadu, in order to give equal position to the
females in ancestral property, in the year 1989, the State Government enacted
the Hindu Succession (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1989 effective from March 25,
1989 which brought an amendment in the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 (for brevity
“the Act”) by adding Section 29-A vide Chapter II-A under the heading of
Succession by Survivorship.
---------------------------------------------------
Complete
Judgement
SUPREME COURT
MANGAMMAL THULASI VS. T.B. RAJU, Dated:
19-04-2018
Author:
R.K.Agrawal
REPORTABLE
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL
APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL
APPEAL NO. 1933 OF 2009
Mangammal
@ Thulasi and Anr.
….Appellant(s)
Versus
T.B.
Raju and Ors. ….
Respondent(s)
JUDGMENT
R.K.Agrawal,
J.
1)
This appeal is preferred against the impugned judgment and order dated
18.09.2006 passed by the High Court of Judicature at Madras in S.A. No. 780 of
2006 whereby learned single Judge of the High Court dismissed the appeal filed
by the appellants herein at the admission stage.
2) Brief facts:-
(a) The case of the appellants, in a
nutshell, is that the appellants
herein
are the daughters of Late Shri T.G. Basuvan (died on Signature Not Verified
29.12.1979) and Late Smt. Sundari (died on 22.07.1989) whereas Digitally signed
by ASHA SUNDRIYAL Date: 2018.04.19 17:26:40 IST Reason:
Respondent
No. 1 is the brother of the appellants herein. Late T.G. Basuvan left three
properties consisting of agriculture land (Item Nos. 1 & 2) and dwelling
house (Item No. 3)
(b)
Later on, due to the irresponsible behaviour of Respondent No. 1, suit
properties at Item Nos. 1 and 2 were leased out to Respondent Nos. 2 to 4
herein during the lifetime of the mother of the appellants herein.
(c)
During the lease period, the mother of the appellants died. On the expiry of
said lease deed, the appellants herein through legal notice approached the
Respondent Nos. 2 to 4 to deliver the vacant possession of Item Nos.1 and 2. In
reply, it has been stated that the lands were sold to them by Defendant No. 1.
(d)
Being aggrieved, the appellants instituted a suit being O.S. No. 202 of 2003
praying, inter-alia, for the partition and separate possession of the suit
properties which consisted of three items, namely, agriculture land (Item Nos.
1 and 2) and building site with constructed building (Item No. 3) and arrayed
the brother as Defendant No. 1 and lessees/subsequent buyers as Defendant Nos.
2 to 4. The appellants herein were the plaintiffs in the original suit (e) The
trial Court, after hearing the suit at length, dismissed the same, vide judgment
dated 28.09.2004 while holding, inter alia, that the plaint is the creature of
the Defendant No. 1 and the plaintiffs, who being the puppets in the hands of
Defendant No. 1, are not entitled to any partition.
(f)
Being dissatisfied, the appellants took the matter before the District Judge,
Udhagamandalam. Learned District Judge, vide judgment dated 14.12.2005,
dismissed the appeal while upholding the decision of the trial court.
(g)
Feeling aggrieved with the decision, the appellants herein preferred a Second
Appeal being No. 780 of 2006 before the High Court of Judicature at Madras.
Learned single Judge of the High Court, vide order dated 18.09.2006, dismissed
the appeal at the admission stage itself.
(h)
Consequently, this appeal has been filed before this Court by way of special
leave.
3)
We have given our solicitous consideration to the submissions of learned
counsel appearing for both the parties and perused the relevant material on
record.
Point(s)
for consideration:-
4)
The short question that arises before this Court is whether in the light of
present peculiar facts and circumstances of the case, any intervention of this
Court is required with the impugned decision of the High Court?
Rival
contentions:-
5)
At the outset, learned counsel for the appellants submitted that the High Court
failed to appreciate that no limitation has been prescribed for filing a suit
for partition by one or more co-sharers, hence, a suit for partition cannot be
dismissed as being barred by time. Further, it was submitted that dismissal of
a suit for partition by holding that the appellants herein have not filed the
suit within 12 years from the date of dispossession cannot be sustained in the
eyes of law specially when there is no proof to prove dispossession and the
respondents have failed to plead and prove ouster. Hence, the impugned judgment
of the High Court is liable to be set aside at the threshold.
6)
Per contra, learned counsel for Respondent No. 1 herein submitted that
Respondent No. 1 had never been a drunkard and the appellants made such
allegations in order to defeat the sale made in favour of Respondent Nos. 2 and
3 and that during the lifetime of their mother, the suit properties remained
un-partitioned and that the properties at Item Nos. 1 and 2 having been legally
sold to Respondent Nos. 2 and 3, hence, the question of seeking partition and
separate possession does not arise in any circumstance. Further, it was also
pointed out that the High Court rightly dismissed the case at admission case.
Hence, this appeal also deserves to be dismissed. Learned counsel appearing for
other respondents also submitted that they are the bona fide purchasers of the
suit property, hence, this appeal deserves to be dismissed being devoid of
merits.
Discussion:-
7)
Before proceeding further, it is apt to have an understanding of the concept of
ancestral property in a nutshell. Any property inherited upto four generations
of male lineage from the father, father’s father or father’s father’s father
i.e. father, grand father etc., is termed as ancestral property. In other
words, property inherited from mother, grandmother, uncle and even brother is
not ancestral property. In ancestral property, the right of property accrues to
the coparcener on birth. The concept of ancestral property is in existence
since time immemorial. In the State of Tamil Nadu, in order to give equal
position to the females in ancestral property, in the year 1989, the State
Government enacted the Hindu Succession (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1989
effective from March 25, 1989 which brought an amendment in the Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 (for brevity “the Act”) by adding Section 29-A vide
Chapter II-A under the heading of Succession by Survivorship. It is apt to
reproduce the said provision herein below.
29-A.
Equal rights to daughter in coparcenary property- Notwithstanding anything
contained in Section 6 of this Act,-
(i)
in a Joint Hindu Family governed by Mitakshara Law, the daughter of a
coparcener shall be birth become a coparcener in her own right in the same
manner as a son and have the same rights in the coparcener property as she
would have had if she had been a son, inclusive of the right to claim by
survivorship: and shall be subject to the same liabilities and disabilities in
respect thereto as the son:
(ii)
at a partition in such a Joint Family the coparcener property shall so divided
as to allot to a daughter the same share as is allotable to a son:
Provided
that the share which a pre-deceased son or a pre-deceased daughter would have
got at the partition if he or she had been alive at the time of the partition
shall be allotted to the surviving child of such pre-deceased son or of such
pre-deceased daughter:
Provided
further that the share allotable to the pre-deceased child of pre-deceased son
or pre-deceased daughter, if such child had been alive at the time of the
partition, shall be allotted to the child of such pre-deceased
child of the pre-deceased son or of the pre-deceased daughter, as the case may be:
child of the pre-deceased son or of the pre-deceased daughter, as the case may be:
(iii)
any property to which a female Hindu becomes entitled by virtue of the
provisions of clause (i) shall be held by her with the incidents of coparcenary
ownership and shall be regarded, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act
or any other law for the time being in force, as property capable of being
disposed of by her by will or other testamentary disposition:
(iv)
nothing in this Chapter shall apply to a daughter married before the date of
the commencement of the Hindu Succession (Tamil Nadu Amendment ) Act , 1989:
(v)
nothing in clause (ii) shall apply to a partition which had been effected
before the date of commencement of the Hindu Succession ( Tamil Nadu Amendment)
Act, 1989.
8)
At this juncture, it is to be examined as to whether the appellants were
entitled to claim partition in ancestral property in view of the amendment? If
the answer to this question is affirmative then only further determination of
dispute would arise. Prior to the amendment, it was only the male who would
have been coparcener and entitled to claim the partition and share from the
joint family property. On the other hand, daughter did not have any right to
partition and to claim share in the ancestral property since she was not a
coparcener. At the most, at the time of partition, she could only ask for
reasonable maintenance and marriage expenses.
9)
To cut a long story short, it is undisputed fact that Late T.G. Basuvan, father
of the appellants, had only ancestral properties and he did not left behind any
self acquired properties. On a plain reading of the newly added provision i.e.,
Section 29-A of the Act, it is evident that, inter-alia, daughter of a
coparcener ought not to have been married at the time of commencement of the
amendment of 1989. In other words, only un-married daughter of a coparcener is
entitled to claim partition in the Hindu Joint Family Property. In the instant
case, it is admitted position that both the appellants, namely, Mangammal, got
married in the year 1981 and Indira, got married in or about 1984 i.e., prior
to the commencement of the 1989 amendment. Therefore, in view of clause (iv) of
the Section 29-A of the Hindu Succession (Tamil Nadu Amendment) Act, 1989,
appellants could not institute the suit for partition and separate possession
at first instance as they were not the coparceners.
10)
Moreover, under Section 29-A of the Act, legislature has used the word “the
daughter of a coparcener”. Here, the implication of such wordings mean both the
coparcener as well as daughter should be alive to reap the benefits of this
provision at the time of commencement of the Amendment of 1989. The similar
issue came up for the consideration before this Court in Prakash & Ors. vs.
Phulavati & Ors., (2016) 2 SCC 36, this Court while dealing with the
identical matter held at Para 23 as under:-
23.
Accordingly, we hold that the rights under the amendment are applicable to
living daughters of living coparceners as on 9th September, 2005 irrespective
of when such daughters are born……” (emphasis supplied by us) It is pertinent to
note here that recently, this Court in Danamma @ Suman Surpur & Anr. Vs.
Amar & Ors, 2018 (1) Scale 657 dealt, inter-alia, with the dispute of
daughter’s right in the ancestral property. In the above case, father of the
daughter died in 2001, yet court permitted the daughter to claim the right in
ancestral property in view of the amendment in 2005. On a perusal of the
judgment and after having regard to the peculiar facts of the Danamma (supra),
it is evident that the Division Bench of this Court primarily did not deal with
the issue of death of the father rather it was mainly related to the question
of law whether daughter who born prior to 2005 amendment would be entitled to
claim a share in ancestral property or not? In such circumstances, in our view,
Prakash & Ors. (supra), would still hold precedent on the issue of death of
coparcener for the purpose of right of daughter in ancestral property. Shortly
put, only living daughters of living coparceners would be entitled to claim a
share in the ancestral property.
11)
Hence, without touching any other aspect in the present case, we are of the
view that the appellants were not the coparceners in the Hindu Joint Family Property
in view of the 1989 amendment, hence, they had not been entitled to claim
partition and separate possession at the very first instance. At the most, they
could claim maintenance and marriage expenses if situation warranted. Division
of the Property:-
12)
However, as appears from the record of the case and also in view of the
contention of the parties, the coparcener property in the hand of Late T.G.
Basuvan got divided between him and his son T.B.Raju-Respondent No. 1. In such
partition, Late T.G. Basuvan got ½ share and T.B.Raju also got ½ share. Now the
property left in the hand of Late T.G.Basuvan would be his separate property.
On his death, such separate property would devolve through succession by
applying the rules of Sections 8, 9 & 10 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956
in the following manner:
Widow
i.e. mother of the appellants would get ¼ of the half share which stands at
1/8.
Daughter
Mangammal-Appellant No. 1 would get ¼ of the half share which stands at 1/8.
Daughter
Indira-Appellant No. 2 would get the ¼ of the half share which stands at 1/8.
Son
T.B.Raju-Respondent No. 1 would get the ¼ of the half share which stands at
1/8. This 1/8 share would be in addition of ½ share which he got in partition.
13)
On the death of the widow i.e., mother of the appellants, her 1/8 share which
she got in succession, would devolve through succession by applying the rules
of Sections 15 & 16 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 in the following
manner:
Daughter
Mangammal-Appellant No. 1 would get the 1/3 of the 1/8 which stands at 1/24.
Daughter
Indira-Appellant No. 2 would get the 1/3 of the 1/8 which stands at 1/24.
Son
T.B.Raju-Respondent No. 1 would get the 1/3 of the 1/8 which stands at 1/24.
Final
Share of Each Person:-
1.
Daughter Mangammal-Appellant No .1, total share would be 1/8 + 1/24 = 4/24 or
1/6.
2.
Daughter Indira-Appellant No. 2, total share would be 1/8 + 1/24 = 4/24 or 1/6.
3.
Son T.B.-Respondent No. 1, total share would be ½ + 1/8 + 1/24 = 16/24 or 2/3.
14)
At this juncture, we would like to make it clear that any sale which made to
Respondent Nos. 2 & 3 in pursuance of two sale deeds dated 03.04.1996 and
24.08.1998 respectively shall not be disturbed anymore. In lieu of the same,
the appellants shall be entitled to their legitimate share, if any, which
belonged to them in such properties and which had been sold through sale deeds
from Respondent No. 1 by way of money or some other property of the same
amount. The price of the properties shall be calculated according to the rate
prevailing at the date of sale deeds respectively along with interest @ 9 per
cent per annum from the date of sale deeds till the payment of money or
transfer of property. Here, legitimate share means share which appellants have
got through the division of property as mentioned above in paragraph Nos. 12
and 13.
15)
To sum up the case, the appellants are not entitled to any share in coparcenary
property since they were not the coparceners in view of 1989 amendment.
However, on the death of their father and mother, appellants would get their
property through succession in the above manner.
16)
In view of above discussion, we, hereby, partially allow the appeal in the
above terms leaving the parties to bear their own cost.
...…………………………………J.
(R.K.
AGRAWAL) …………….………………………J.
(ABHAY
MANOHAR SAPRE) NEW DELHI;
APRIL
19, 2018.
--------------------------------------------------------
ABHISHEK
04012020
No comments:
Post a Comment