26 August 1965
Supreme Court
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BHARAT SINGH AND ANR. Vs BHAGIRATHI

Case number: Appeal (civil) 423 of 1963


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PETITIONER: BHARAT SINGH AND ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BHAGIRATHI

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/08/1965

BENCH: DAYAL, RAGHUBAR BENCH: DAYAL, RAGHUBAR SARKAR, A.K. RAMASWAMI, V.

CITATION:  1966 AIR  405            1966 SCR  (1) 606  CITATOR INFO :  D          1971 SC1153  (23)  F          1974 SC 117  (8)  F          1977 SC 409  (21)  RF         1977 SC1712  (14)

ACT: Indian  Evidence  Act  (1  of  1872)-Admissions-Witness  not confronted   -Whether  admissible-Hindu   Law-Widow’s   name mutated-If sufficient to prove severance of joint family.

HEADNOTE: The appellants filed a suit for a declaration that the entry in  the  name of the respondent in the Jamabandi  papers  of certain  villages was incorrect and alleged that they  along with   their  brother,  the  husband  of   the   respondent, constituted a joint Hindu family, that their brother died as a member of the joint Hindu family and thereafter his widow- the  respondent--lived with the appellants who continued  to be owners and possessors of the property in suit, the  widow being entitled to maintenance only, and that by mistake  the respondent’s name was entered in village records in place of the  deceased  husband.  The respondent contested  the  suit alleging, inter alia, that her husband did not constitute  a joint  Hindu family with the appellants at the time  of  his death  and also that the suit was barred by time as she  had become  owner and possessor of the land in suit in  1925  on the death of her husband when the entries in her favour were made, and the suit was brought in 1951.  The respondent  had admitted  in  certain documents about the existence  of  the joint Hindu family or a joint Hindu family firm.  The  trial Court decreed the suit, which on appeal, the High Court  set aside.   The  High  Court  did not  use  the  admissions  of respondent  as  she,  when  in the  witness  box,  was  riot confronted with those admissions; and as those documents, if read as a whole did not contain any admissions on behalf  of the  respondent  that there was any joint  family  still  in existence.  In appeal by certificate to this Court. HELD : (i) There is a strong presumption in favour of  Hindu brothers constituting a joint family.  It is for the  person alleging  severance of joint Hindu family to  establish  it. The mere fact of the mutation entry being made in favour  of

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the  respondent  on the death of her husband  was  no  clear indication  that  there  was no joint Hindu  family  of  the appellant,  and the respondent’s husband at the time of  the latter’s death. [610 E. F-G] (ii) Admissions  have  to be clear if they are  to  be  used against the persons making them.  Admissions are substantive evidence  by  themselves  in view of ss. 17 and  21  of  the Indian Evidence Act, though they are not conclusive proof of the  matter  admitted.   The  admissions  duly  proved   or( admissible evidence irrespective of whether the party making them appear ad in witness box or not and whether that  party when appearing as wines was confronted with those statements in  case it made a statement contrary to  those  admissions. The purpose of contradicting the witness under s. 145 of the Evidence  Act  is very much different from  the  purpose  of proving the admission.  Admission is substantive evidence of the  fact  admitted  while  a  previous  statement  used  to contradict  a witness does not become  substantive  evidence and  merely  serves  the purpose of throwing  doubt  on  the veracity  of the witness.  What weight is to be attached  to in admission made by a party is a matter different from  its use as admissible evidence. 607 Therefore,  the admissions of the respondent which had  been duly  proved  could be used against her.  They  were  proved long  before she entered the witness box and it was for  her to offer any explanation for making admissions.  Her  simple statement  that her husband had separated from his  brothers even before her marriage was, by itself, neither an adequate explanation of those admission nor a clear cut denial of the facts admitted. [615 F-616 C] (iii)     The  suit  was clearly not barred  by  limitation. Admittedly  the dispute between "he par-ties arose  sometime in  1944.   Prior to that there could be no reason  for  the respondent   acting  adversely  to  the  interests  of   the appellants.  It was really in about 1950 that  she  asserted her title by leasing certain properties and by  transferring others, and in 1951 the appellants instituted the suit. [617 C-E]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 423 of 1963. Appeal  from the judgment and decree dated November 9,  1959 of the Punjab High Court in Regular First Appeal No. 151  of 1954. Bishan  Narain,  M.  V. Goswami and B.  C.  Misra,  for  the appellants. Mohan Behari Lal, for the respondent. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Raghubar  Dayal, J. This appeal, on certificate, is  against the  judgment and decree of the Punjab High Court  reversing the decree of the trial Court and dismissing the suit of the plaintiffs  for a declaration that the entry in the name  of the  defendant in the Jamabandi papers of  certain  villages was incorrect. The plaintiffs, Bharat Singh and Kirpa Ram, are the sons  of Ram  Narain.   They had another brother  Maha  Chand,  whose widow  is Bhagirti, the defendant.  The  plaintiffs  alleged that  they and Maha Chand constituted a joint Hindu  family, that  Maha Chand died as a member of the joint Hindu  family and  that  thereafter  Maha Chand’s  widow  lived  with  the plaintiffs who continued to be the owners and possessors  of the   property  in  suit,  the  widow  being   entitled   to

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maintenance only.  They also alleged that it was by  mistake that the defendant’s name was mutated in the village records in  place  of Maha Chand, who died on  September  16,  1925. They  further alleged that the defendant lost her  right  to maintenance  due  to  her leading an  unchaste  life.   This contention,  however, was not accepted by the  Courts  below and  is  no  more for consideration.  It was  on  the  other allegations  that the plaintiffs claimed a declaration  that the entry of the 608 defendant’s name in the column of ownership in the Jamabandi papers  was wrong, that they were the owners and  possessors of the property in suit and that the defendant had no  right therein.   They also claimed a permanent injunction  against the defendant restraining her from alienating or leasing any of  tile  properties  in favour of  any  person  or  causing interference   of  any  kind  in  the  possession   of   the plaintiffs. The  defendant contested the suit alleging that her  husband Maha Chand, along with the plaintiffs, did not constitute  a joint  Hindu  family at the time of his death, that  he  was separate  from  the  plaintiff’s  and  that  he  was  living separate  from them, that the property In suit  was  neither ancestral  property  nor  the property of  the  joint  Hindu family  that  the plaintiffs and Maha Chand were  owners  of agricultural land as co-sharers out of which one third share belonged to Malta Chand and that therefore the entry in  her favour  in  the  Jamabandi papers  was  correct.   She  also claimed right to Maha Chand’s share on tile basis of custom. This  contention,  however, was not accepted by  the  Courts below  and  is  not now open  for  consideration.   Bhagirti further  contended that the suit was not within time as  she had become owner and possessor of the land in suit in  1925. The suit was brought in 1951. By their replication, the plaintiffs stated that Maha  Chand had  never become separate from them and that the  defendant was  not  III  possession  of  the  property  in  suit,  the possession  being  with the plaintiffs of their  tenants  or lessees, The  trial Court ’II--Id that the parties were  governed  by the Hindu law unmodified by any custom, that the joint Hindu family  constituted  the plaintiffs and their  brother  Maha Chand  was  never disrupted and that Maha Chand  died  is  a member of the joint Hindu family, that the property in  suit was  co-parcenery  property  in  the  hands  of  the   three brothers,  that  the entry of the defendant’s  name  in  the Jamabandi was wrongly made and that the suit was  instituted within time as the earliest the defendant asserted her claim to the land in suit was in 1950.  The trial Court  therefore granted  the  plaintiffs  a decree for  declaration  in  the following terms               "1.  That  the entries in the  revenue  papers               showing  the defendant as owner of  one  third               share  in the suit land ire wrong and are  not               binding on the plaintiffs.               2.    That  the property in dispute  vests  in               the plaintiff as coparceners.               609        3.  That  the  defendant’s only  right  in  the  suit property  is one of maintenance and she is not  entitled  to alienate it in any way.        The  plaintiffs  are  further  granted  a   permanent injunction  restraining  the defendant from  alienating  the suit  property in any way .and from causing interference  in the plaintiffs’ possession of the property.

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      The   plaintiffs’  suit  for  declaration  that   the defendant  has  lost her right of maintenance  in  the  suit property by unchastity is dismissed  ....  "     The  defendant  appealed to the High Court. It  was  not contended on her behalf that the land was ancestral and  had descended from Ram Narain to the plaintiffs and Maha  Chand. What  was urged before the High Court was that the entry  in Maha  Chand’s  name  as  owner of  one-third  share  in  the Jarnabandi  and similar entry in defendants name  after  the death of Maha Chand was correct as irrespective of the  fact whether  the family was originally a joint Hindu  family  or not the joint Hindu family stood disrupted by the conduct of the  parties  and  therefore there was no  question  of  the plaintiffs’  getting  the entire property  by  survivorship. Reliance  was placed on the entries in the  revenue  records with  respect  to  Maha Chand and the  defendant  after  him owning  one-third  share in those properties and  about  her possession  upto  1946-47  and  on  the  defendant’s   being impleaded  in  several  suits by the  plaintiffs  as  a  co- plaintiff  and in one suit as a defendant.  The  High  Court considered  this evidence sufficient to prove disruption  of the  joint  family as the mutation entries  in  the  revenue records  could  not  have been  obtained  by  the  defendant surreptitiously or without the knowledge and consent of  the plaintiffs  and  as none of the plaintiffs objected  to  her being  entered as a co-sharer with them after the  death  of Maha Chand which showed that there was no joint Hindu family at the time of the death of Maha Chand.  The High Court also relied  on  the fact that the plaintiffs had  impleaded  the defendant as a plaintiff or defendant in the various  suits, as  Bharat  Singh  refused  or  did  not  care  to  give  an explanation why the defendant had been throughout shown as a co-sharer  in those proceedings when actually she was not  a co˜sharer and was merely entitled to maintenance.  The  High Court did not use the admissions of Bhagirti, defendant,  in certain  documents  about the existence of the  joint  Hindu family  or  a joint Hindu family firm as she, when  ’in  the witness box, was not confronted with those admissions and as those  documents,  if read as a whole, did not  contain  any admissions  on behalf of Bhagirti that there was  any  joint family stilt in               610 existence.   The  High  Court summed. up  its  view  on  the question of disruption in the family thus :               "These revenue entries normally do not furnish               a very strong evidence of severance of a Joint               Hindu  Family  but subsequent conduct  of  the               plaintiffs,  as  detailed  above,  leaves   no               manner  of doubt that there did not exist  any               Joint  Hindu  Family after the demise  of  Ram               Narain  and that Mst.  Bhagirati  was  rightly               shown as a co-sharer in the revenue records." The  High Court considered the case to have been  instituted after  the  expiry of the period of limitation but  did  not base  its  decision  on  this  finding.   The  High   Court, accordingly, allowed the appeal and set aside the decree  of the trial Court in favour of the plaintiffs. The sole question for determination in this Court is whether the  plaintiffs  and Maha Chand constituted  a  joint  Hindu family at the time of the latter’s death.  Having considered the evidence on record and the submissions made on behalf of the  parties, we are of opinion that the trial Court took  a correct view of the, evidence on record.  There is a  strong presumption in favour of Hindu brothers constituting a joint family.  It is for the person allying severance of the joint

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Hindu  family to establish it.  It is to be noticed  in  the present  case  that  the defendants did  not  state  in  the written  statement as to when disruption took place  in  the joint  family.  The High Court too has not given any  clear- cut  finding  with regard to the time when  disruption  took place in the joint family.  The way it has expressed  itself indicates that no joint Hindu family existed after the death of  Ram  Narain, father of the plaintiffs  and  Maha  Chand. There  is  nothing in the judgment of the High Court  as  to when  severance of the Hindu joint family took  place.   The mere fact that mutation entry after the death of Ram  Narain was made in favour of three brothers and indicated the share of each to be one-third, by itself can be no evidence of the severance of the joint family which, after the death of  Ram Narain,  consisted  of the three brothers who  were  minors. Ram  Narain  died in 1923.  Maha Chand died in 1925  and  is said  to  have been about 17 or 18 years of age  then.   The plaintiffs were of even less age at that time.  There was no reason  why  just after the death of Ram  Narain  the  three brothers should have separated. It is true, as the High Court observes, that Bhagirati could not have manipulated the mutation entries after the death of Maha 611 Chand surreptitiously.  It is not alleged by the  plaintiffs that she got the entries made wrongly in her favour by  some design  or able means.  There is however nothing  surprising if the mutation entry had been made without the knowledge of the appellants who were minors at the time.  Their  minority win  also  explain  the  absence of  any  objection  to  the mutation  being  made in her favour.  The way in  which  the mutation entry was made does not indicate that the  mutation entry  was  made  after notice to the  plaintiffs  or  their guardian,  whoever he might have been at the time, or  after any statement on their behalf that they had no objection  to the  entry.  Exhibits D-7 and D-8 are the extracts from  the Register of Mutations relating to mauza Asoda, Todran Jamnan Hadbast  No.  28,  Tehsil  Jhajjar,  District  Rohtak.   The entries  in column 15 show that the Patwari of  the  village reported  on November 30, 1925 that Munshi Lal  Mahajan  had informed  him  that  Maha  Chand  had  died  and  that  Mst. Bhagirati  was  in ion of the property of  the  deceased  as heir, that mutation by virtue of succession had been entered in  the  register and the papers were submitted  for  proper orders.  The Revenue Assistant passed  an  order  on  December 29, 1925  which  is  in  the following terms Bahadurgarh Public Assembly.                                   ORDER               Ramji Lai Lambardar, testified to the  factums               of the death of Maha Chand and the  succession               (to him) of Mst.  Bhagirati his widow.   There               is no objector.  Hence mutation in respect  of               the  heritage of Maha Chand in favour of  Mst.               Bhagirati. his widow is sanctioned.               Dated the 29th December, 1925.                                Signature of               The Revenue Assistant." The  shows  that  was made as a result  of  there  being  no objection  from  anybody  to the  statement  of  Ramji  Lal, Lambardar,  about  the  death of Maha  Chand  and  Bhagirati succeeding  him as widow.  The plaintiffs, who were  minors, may  not  have  attended the Public  Assembly.   They  being minors  could  not have understood the significance  of  any general  notice, if any, issued in that connection  and  the

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gathering of people.  It is not for 612 the  Revenue Authorities to make any regular  enquiry  about the  devolution  of title.  They make  entries  for  revenue purposes  about  the person who is  considered  prima  facie successor  of the deceased. A widow would be  considered  an ostensible successor to her husband unless it be known  that her  husband  was a member of a joint Hindu family  and  the property over which mutation was to be made was joint family property. We  are  therefore  of opinion that the  mere  fact  of  the mutation entry being made in favour of Bhagirti on the death of Maha Chand is no clear indication that there was no joint Hindu family of the plaintiffs and Maha Chand at the time of the latter’s death. Bharat Singh, appellant no. 1, instituted 5 suits on  behalf of himself Kirpa Ram and Bhagirati.  All these suits related to  agricultural  land.  DI, D2, D3 and D4, the  plaints  in four of these suits, were in the name of the plaintiffs  and Bhagirati and it was stated in them that the plaintiffs were the  proprietors  of the agricultural laid  in  suit.   With respect to the admission in these plaints that Bhagirti  was one  of  the proprietors, Bharat Singh stated that  lie  had been  including her name in the cases tiled against  tenants in  accordance  with the revenue papers.  This  is  a  sound explanation.   So long as an entry in the  defendant’s  name stood  in the revenue papers, suits in revenue  Court-,.  as these  suits were, had to ha filed in those names.   D-5  is the  plant  of  a  suit  by  Bharat  Singh  and  Kirpa  Ramn Instituted  on  April  6, 1943.  Bhagirti  is  implement  as defendant  no.  1. Para 1 of plaint stated  that  defendants nos.  2  to 5 were non-occupancy under  the  plaintiffs  and defendant  no.  1. and Para 3 stated that  defendant  no.  1 being absent, could not join the suit and that therefore she had been made a pro-forma defendants When Bharat Singh  made the  statement  on November 27, 1953 I do rot  remember  why Bhagirati was made defendants be does not to have been shown the  plaint Exhibit D-5.  There is nothing surprising if  be could  not remember the reason for making her  a  defendant. Earlier  he had already made a statement on October 3,  1953 that  they  had been including her name in the  cases  filed against  tenants in accordance with revenue papers and  that explanation,  together with what is entered in  the  plaint, sufficiently  explains  for  Bhagirti  being  impleaded   as defendant  in  D-5.   The High.   Court  was  not  factually correct in making the following observation -               "When Bharat Singh came into the  witness-box,               he  was  confronted with all  these  documents               but, strangely enough, he did not care to give               any explanation why               613               Mst.  Bhagirati had throughout been shown as a               cosharer with them in these proceedings if, in               fact, she was not a co-sharer and was entitled               only  to  maintenance.  As a matter  of  fact,               when  a  pointed question was asked  from  him               with  regard  to  Exhibit D-5,  he  stated  as               follows:-   ’I  do  not  remember   why   Mst.               Bhagirati was made a defendant.’ " Bharat Singh had given explanation with respect to her being impleaded in these suits.  The record does not show that  he was  referred  to Exhibit D-5 and a  pointed  question  with regard to what was stated in the plaint had been put to  him when  he  made  the  particular  statement  about  his   not remembering why Mst.  Bhagirati was made a defendant.  If he

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had  been referred to the plaint, he could have himself,  on reading  given the proper answer, or his counsel would  have reexamined him in that regard. We  are  of  opinion that the High Court  was  in  error  in relying  on  these admissions of Bharat Singh  when  he  had explained them reasonably. The  oral evidence adduced for the defendant to prove  sepa- ration  of  Maha Chand from his brothers, has  been  rightly described  to be worthless by the trial Court.  No  reliance on  that evidence was placed on behalf of the respondent  in the High Court.  The evidence consists of the statements  of three  persons.  Munshi Ram, D.W. 1, brother  of  defendant, who was about 10 years old when Maha Chand died, simply that time  of  Maha  Chand’s death, he-  was  separate  from  his admitted  in cross-examination that ’his he had learnt  from his father.  His evidence is hearsay and is of no value. Giani  Ram,  D.W.  3, stated that all  the  three  brothers, Bharat Singh, Kirpa Ram and Maha Chand had separated in 1923 during the life time of Ram Narain himself.  The finding  of the  High Court is that the disruption of the  joint  family took  place  after Ram Narain’s death.  Giani Ram  does  not belong  to the family.  No reason exists why  disruption  of family  should  have  taken place in the  life-time  of  Ram Narain.  The fact that Ram Narain or his mother are not said to  have  got  any  share  of  the  agricultural  land  when disruption  took  place,  does  not  stand  to  reason.   No mutation  entry  appears to have been made  in  the  village papers at the time of the alleged partition in the life-time of Ram Narain.  Giani Ram is much interested in the case  of the  defendant as he holds a decree against  her.   Further, firm  Shiv Prasad Giani Ram sued firm Jairam Das Ram  Narain (the  family firm of the parties herein)  through  Bhagirati for the recovery of the money 614 the  defendant firm owed to the plaintiff firm on the  basis of  bahikhatha accounts.  Giani Ram, through whom  the  suit was instituted, and Bhagirati entered into an agreement  for referring  this dispute to arbitration.  In  this  agreement signed  by  Giani Ram and Bhagirati, she  was  described  as proprietrix of the joint Hindu firm known as Jairam Das  Ram Narain.  The only explanation for such a statement occurring in  the  agreement is given by him to be that  the  petition writer  did  not  read  over the  agreement  to  him  or  to Bhagirati and got their signatures on it without making them read  the agreement.  No reliance could have been placed  on his statement. Bhagirati, defendant, as D.W. 4, simply stated that when her husband  died he and the plaintiffs were not joint and  that they  had  separated even before her marriage.   She  is  no witness of the disruption of the family. We  are therefore of opinion that the evidence relied on  by the  High Court for holding the disruption  proved  together with the oral evidence led by the defendant about disruption of the family is insufficient to prove disruption after  the death of Ram Narain and during the life time of Maha Chand. It  is  not  necessary  to  discuss  the  evidence  for  the plaintiffs  about  the family being joint  when  Maha  Chand died.   Suffice it to say that apart from the  statement  of Bharat  Singh, P.W. 7, there is other evidence to  establish it.   Shiv Narain, P.W. 4, deposed that when Ram Narain  was alive  he and his brothers constituted a joint Hindu  family upto  the  death  of Maha Chand and that  the  joint  family continued upto the date he gave evidence.  He was not cross- examined  with regard to his statements.  Jai Lal,  P.W.  5, deposed to the same effect.  In cross-exammination he stated

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that  had there been a son of Maha Chand, he would have  got one-third  share  of  Maha  Chand and  that  all  the  three brothers  had  one-third share each in the  property.   This statement  does not mean that there had been  disruption  in the  family.  We do not know in what form the  questions  to which  these  are  the answers were put.   The  answers  are consistent  with  the fact that had separation  taken  place during the life time of Maha Chand his share would have been one-third  and that his one-third share would have  gone  to his son or that the entries in the village papers would show Maha  Chand’s son being mutated over the one-third share  of Maha Chand just as Bhagirati’s name was mutated in place  of Maha Chand. 615 Reliance   was  also  placed  for  the  plaintiffs  on   the admissions of Bhagirati.  The High Court did not take  these admissions  into consideration as they were not put  to  her when  she was in the witness box and as in its  opinion  the documents  containing  the alleged admissions if read  as  a whole did not contain any admissions on behalf of  Bhagirati that there was any joint family still in existence. The legal objection to the consideration of these admissions was  based  on the Full Bench decision of  the  Punjab  High Court in Firm Malik Des Rai v. Firm Piara Lal(1).  The  view taken  in  ,hat  case  was differed to  by  the  Full  Bench decision of the Allahabad   High Court in Ayodhya Prasad  v. Bhawani Shanker (2) The punjab High Court based its decision on  the observations of the privy Council in  Bal  Gangadhar Tilak  v. Shrinivas Pandit(3). fiat case, however,  did  not directly  deal with the use of admissions which  are  proved but are not put to the person making the admissions when  he enters  the witness box.  The entire tenure of he  documents whose  certain contents were construed by the High Court  to discredit  the  persons  making  those  admissions  went  to support  their case and did not in any way support the  case of  the  other  party.  The  Privy  Council.  expressed  its disapproval  of  the  High  Court  minutely  examining   the contents  of  the documents and using     its own inferences from  those statements to discredit the oral  statements  of the  persons  responsible for making  those  documents  when those persons had not been confronted with those  statements in accordance with s. 145 of the Indian Evidence Act. Admissions  have to be clear if they are to be used  against the person making them.  Admissions are substantive evidence by  themselves,  in  view of ss. 17 and  21  of  the  Indian Evidence  Act, though they are not conclusive proof  of  the matters  admitted.  We are  of opinion that  the  admissions duly proved are admissible evidence irrespective of  whether the party making them appeared in the witness box or not and whether that party when appearing as witness was  confronted with  those statements in case it made a statement  contrary to  those  admissions.   The purpose  of  contradicting  the witness  under  s.  145 of the Evidence  Act  is  very  much different  from  the  purpose  of  proving  the   admission. Admission is substantive evidence of the fact admitted while a  previous statement used to contradict a witness does  not become substantive evidence and merely serves the purpose of throwing doubt on the veracity of the witness.  What  weight is to be attached to an. ad- (1) A.I.R. 1046 Lab. 65. (2) A.T.R.  1957 All. 1. (3) L.R. 42  I.A. 135. Sup.65-- -11 616 mission made by. a party is a matter different from its  use

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as admissible evidence. We   are  therefore  of  opinion  that  the  admissions   of Bhagirati. Which had been duly proved could be used  against her.   They were proved long before she entered the  witness box  and it was for her to offer any explanation for  making those  admissions.   The  Court could  have  considered  the effect  of  her  explanation.   She  preferred  to  make  no reference  to her admissions proved by the plaintiffs.   Her simple  statement  that her husband had separated  from  his brothers even before her marriage is, by itself, neither  an adequate  explanation  of those admissions nor  a  clear-cut denial of the facts admitted. We have already referred to her admissions in the  agreement executed  by her and Giani Ram for referring the dispute  in Giani Ram’s suit for arbitration in 1946.  She instituted  a suit earlier in 1944.  The plaint of that suit is Exhibit P. 2.  She instituted this suit against the present  plaintiffs and stated in para 1 of the plaint that those defendants and Maha  Chand,  her  husband, were members of  a  joint  Hindu family and in para 2 that in place of her husband Maha Chand she  was then the co-sharer and owner and possessor  of  the property of his share and that in this way the plaintiff and the  two defendants were members of the joint Hindu  family. In  para 3 she stated that the joint Hindu family  mentioned in  para  1  held the property mentioned  therein  and  this property  included residential property and the business  of two  firms.  She further stated in para 4 that defendants  1 and 2, the present plaintiffs, were running the business  of the  firms in the capacity of managers and that she did  not want to keep her share joint in future.  She had  instituted the  suit  for  partition  of the  property  and  the  firms mentioned in para 3. P.W.  2,  clerk of Shri Inder Singh Jain,  pleader,  scribed this  plaint and has deposed that the pleader  had  prepared the  brief in accordance with the instructions of  Bhagirati and that he had written out the petition and plaint and that it had been read out to her.  He denied that the thumb marks of  Bhagirati  were secured on a plain paper  and  that  the plaint was written later on.  This suit was withdrawn. Again,  in  1950, she instituted another  suit  against  the present  plaintiffs  and  one  Han  Narain,  for  a  certain declaration.  In para 1 of the plaint it was stated that the three  shops mentioned therein belonged to the  joint  Hindu family  firm  Jairam Das Ram Narain in Narela  Mandi,  Delhi State.  The plaint is Exhibit P.-1. Shri 617 M.   K. Madan, Advocate, P.W. 1, has deposed that the plaint was  got written by Bhagirti, that a portion of  the  plaint was in this handwriting and that it was read over to her and that  she  put her thumb mark on it after having  heard  and admitted  its  contents.  He also stated that the  suit  was subsequently withdrawn. We  are  of opinion that the evidence of the  plaintiffs  on record establishes that there had been no disruption between the plaintiffs and Maha Chand and that Maha Chand died as  a member  of  the  joint Hindu family.  It  follows  that  the entries in the Jamabandis showing Bhagirati as the owner  of one-third  share are wrong and that the decree of the  trial Court is right. The  question  of  limitation may be  briefly  disposed  of. There  is no good evidence on record to establish  that  the respondent,  prior to 1950, asserted that she had any  right adverse to the plaintiffs over the property in suit or  that she acted any manner which would amount to an ouster of  the plaintiffs.   Admittedly  the dispute  between  the  parties

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arose  sometime in 1944.  Prior to that there could.  be  no reason  for  her acting adversely to the  interests  of  the plaintiffs.   It  was really in about 1950 that  she  leased certain  properties and transferred certain plots  and  soon after  the  plaintiffs  instituted the suit.   The  suit  is clearly not barred by limitation. We  therefore allow the appeal, set aside the decree of  the Court  below and restore the decree of the trial Court.   We further  direct  the  respondent to pay  the  costs  of  the appellants in the High Court and this Court. Appeal allowed, 618