23 November 1967
Supreme Court
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BODDU VENKATAKRISHNA RAO & ORS. Vs SHRIMATI BODDU SATYAVATHI & ORS.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 245 of 1965


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PETITIONER: BODDU VENKATAKRISHNA RAO & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SHRIMATI BODDU SATYAVATHI & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 23/11/1967

BENCH: MITTER, G.K. BENCH: MITTER, G.K. WANCHOO, K.N. (CJ) BACHAWAT, R.S.

CITATION:  1968 AIR  751            1968 SCR  (2) 395  CITATOR INFO :  E          1980 SC1173  (27)

ACT: Hindu   Law--Will   by   childless   testarix--Two    foster Children  to have life estate and their children to  inherit after  them--Foster  children  whether  inherit  as    joint tenants    or   tenant-in-common--Their   children   whether inherit per capita or per stirpes.

HEADNOTE:     A  childless Hindu lady brought up a boy B and a girl  K as foster children.  She made a will whereby after her death B and K were to get a life estate in her property and ’after their  death  the children that may be born to  them  should enjoy the same with powers of gift transfer and sale’. After the  lady’s  death  B and K divided the  property  in  equal shares by a partition deed.  B married K’s daughter and  had a  child  by  her. He then took another wife  and  had  four children by her.  The said four children filed a suit for  a declaration,  inter alia, that after the death of B  and  K, their children--namely, K’s daughter and B’s children--would be entitled to take the property in equal shares.  The trial court  as  well  as the High Court held that  B  and  K  had inherited  a  life  estate  as tenants in common  and  their descendants  would inherit per stirpes and not  per  capita. The   plaintiffs-appellants  came to this  Court.   It   was urged  on their behalf that B and K had inherited  as  joint tenants and not as tenants in common.     HELD:  A joint tenancy is unknown to Hindu law except in the case of a coparcenary between  members of an   undivided family.   The terms of the will also did not in the  present case  spell out a joint tenancy. As by the will  the  foster children  were  to  have  a  life  interest  with  a  vested remainder to their children, the latter could only take  per stirpes and not per capita. [398 G--399 A]     Jogeswar  Narain Deo v. Ram Chund Dutt & Ors.  23   I.A. 37   and  Babu  Rani v. Rajendra Baksh Singh,  60  I.A.  95, relied on.     In re Hutchinson’s Trusts, 21 Ch. D. 811, Errington,  In re:  Gibbs  v. Lassam. [1927] 1 Ch. D. 421 and  Mcdonnel  v. Neil.  [1951]  A.C.  342, referred to.

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   The donees of the life estate were minors at the date of the  will  and  there was no knowing  when  they  would  get married  and  how many children each would have.   It  would therefore be reasonable to expect that the testarix would so arrange her affairs that each of the foster children  should get  half of the income of the property  for life  and  that their children should succeed to the respective interests of their parents.  It is hardly likely that the testatrix would know  the  difference between joint tenants and  tenants  in common and she would naturally be eager to treat the  foster children as her own children so that the heirs of the foster children  would  take share and share alike  the  properties being divided per stirpes between them. 1398 A--B]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 245 of 1965. 396     Appeal  by  special leave from the  judgment  and  order dated  October 31, 1962 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court  in Appeal No. 563 of 1959. K.R. Chaudhuri, for the appellants. K. Sen and T. Satyanarayana, for respondents Nos. 1 to 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Mitter,  J.  This is an appeal by special leave  from  a judgment  and  decree of the High Court  of  Andhra  Pradesh confirming  the  decree passed by the Subordinate  Judge  at Eluru  in O.S. No. 112 of 1955.  The only question  involved in  this appeal is, whether, under the terms of the will  of one Boddu Adilakshmi, defendants 4 and 5 took her properties as joint tenants or tenants in common.     The  facts  leading to the litigation may be  stated  as follows.  The  testatrix,  Adilakshmi,  who  was   childless herself  brought  up defendants 4 and 5, Boddu  Ramarao  and Kosury  Lakshmamma, from their infancy.  At the date of  the will  executed on June 28, 1913 the girl (defendant  5)  had been with her for 15 years and the boy (defendant 4) for  10 years and both were minors at the time.  In order to provide for  them after her death she executed a will  covering  all her  properties, movable and immovable.  The translation  of the relevant portion of the will which was in vernacular  is as follows :--                     "   ........  my entire property  should               hereafter  my  lifetime pass  to.  both  these               minors,  Lakshmamma  and Ramarao,  that  until               their minority period is over, Banda Ramaswamy               Garu  should  act as their  guardian and  deal               with   all  the  affairs,  that  after   their               minority  period is over the  entire  property               should be in possession of both of them,  that               both  of  them should enjoy  throughout  their               lifetime   the said  property  without  powers               of gift transfer and sale and that after their               death  the children that  may be born to  them               should  enjoy  the same with powers  of  gift,               transfer and sale."     The testatrix died within a few days after the execution of  the  will.  Defendants 4 and 5  divided  the  properties left  by  the testatrix by a registered partition deed dated December 27, 1929’ by which those mentioned in Schedule A to the plaint fell to the share of the 4th defendant while  the others mentioned in Schedule B fell to the share of the  5th defendant.   The  4th defendant married the  1st  defendant, Boddu Satyavathi who is the ’daughter of the 5th  defendant.

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The 2nd defendant is the daughter born out of this  wedlock. Some  years thereafter, the 4th defendant married one  Boddu Manikyam.  the  plaintiffs 1 to 4 being the  issues  of  the marriage of the 4th defendant with her.  The 5th defendant 397 and  the 1st defendant mortgaged the B  schedule  properties with  the 3rd defendant who brought a suit on  the  mortgage and  obtained  a  decree.  The  plaintiffs  filed  the  suit against  all  the defendants in 1955. for a declaration that after  the  death  praying of defendants 4-and  5,  the  1st defendant  and the children of the 4th defendant or such  of them as may be alive at the time would be entitled to  share the  properties  in suit equally between them and  that  any alienation   made by  defendants 4 and 5 or their  assignees or  alienees would not bind the interests of  ’the  ultimate feversloners  beyond  their lifetime and  further  that  the mortgage  decree  mentioned  above was not  binding  on  the plaintiffs or the ultimate reversioners.  In the trial court a  ’number  of  issues were framed  but  the  only  question canvassed  before  the High Court on appeal related  to  the effect  of the will of Adilakshmi.  The trial court came  to the conclusion that defendants 4 and 5 were only the holders of life estate and that they had succeeded to the estate  of Adilakshmi as tenants in common.  The High Court  held that                       "the   right  of  ’the   children   of               defendants  4 and 5 to step into the shoes  of               the  parents has been expressly  mentioned  in               the instrument.  The residuary estate has been                             given to the children. that may be bor n to  the               legatees who. it is provided, should enjoy the               properties  with powers of gift. transfer  and               sale.   A  life  estate  has  been  given   to               defendants  4 and 5 and an absolute estate  to               their children.  On a fair construction of the               language.  it  is difficult to accede  to  the               contention of the appellants that the children               of  defendants   4 and 5 who may  be  actually               alive at the time of the death of defendants 4               and 5, would take the properties per capita." The  High  Court  further  held  that  the  conduct  of  the defendants  in partitioning the properties went  to  fortify the  above conclusion. The ultimate conclusion of  the  High Court was                       "the bequest in favour of defendants 4               and 5 was that of a life estate with a  vested               remainder in favour of their children and that               the children should take the vested  remainder               per stripes and not per capita."       In  our  view.  the High Court  came  to  the  correct conclusion. Before examining the principles of law involved, we may consider the intention of the testatrix in giving her properties to defendants 4 ,red 5.  She brought them up like her own children but she did not want them to have the power of  sale or alienation and desired  that the  properties  be preserved  for  the  benefit of  their  children.  would  be reasonable  therefore  for  her to make  provision  in  such way that the ’foster children would enjoy the income of  the properties  for their lives and that their  children  should inherit the Ip.C. l68   111 398 properties  as full owners  on the  death of their  parents. The donees of the life estate were minors at the date of the will  and there was no knowing when they would  get  married

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and  how many children each would have.  It would  therefore be reason able to expect that the testatrix would so arrange her affairs that each of the foster children should get half of  the  income  of the property for  life  and  that  their children should succeed to the respective interest of  their parents.  It is hardly likely that the testatrix would  know the  difference between joint tenants and tenants in  common and  she  would  naturally  be eager  to  treat  the  foster children as her own children so that the heirs of the foster children would take share and share alike the properties  be in divided per stirpes among them.     Let  us now consider the position in law.  The  law  has bee n summarised in Mulla’s Transfer of Property Act  (Fifth Edition  at page 226.  As early as 1896 it was held  by  the Judicial  Committee of the Privy Council in Jogeswar  Narain Deo v. Ram Chand Dutt & others(1) that                      "The principle of joint tenancy appears               to be unknown to Hindu law. except in the case               of  coparcenary  between  the  members  of  an               undivided family." and   that  it  was  not  right   to   import    into    the construction of a Hindu will an extremely technical rule  of English  conveyancing.  Many years later the  principle  was reiterated  in  the  case of Babu  Rani  v.  Rajendra  Baksh Singh(2).     It  was argued before us that there were indications  in the  will that the intention of the testatrix was  that  the foster  children should take as joint tenants and that  this was apparent from the clause in the will which provided that                      "the  entire  property  should  be   in               possession  of both of them and that  both  of               them  should enjoy throughout  their  lifetime               the  said  property  and   that   after  their               death the children  that may be  born  to them               should enjoy the same  ......  " We  do  not think that from this one can spell out  a  joint tenancy  which  is  unknown to Hindu  law  except  as  above stated.  The testatrix did not expressly mention that on the death  of one all the properties would pass to the other  by right  of  survivorship. We have no doubt on a  construction of  the will that ’the testatrix never intended  the  foster children to take the property as joint tenants.  The  foster children  who  became tenants  in   common  partitioned  the property in exercise of their right. (1)  23 I.A. 37 at 44. (2)  60 l.A.95 at 10 399     As  by the will the foster children were to have a  life interest  with  a vested remainder to  their  children,  the latter  could only take per stirpes and not per capita.   As Halsbury   points   out (Volume 39--Third Edition)  at  page 1106,   Art. 1638  that  a stirpital distribution  would  be adopted                     "where  the  gift  was to  a  number  of               parents   and their children in such a  manner               that  the  children were substituted  for,  or               took   on  the  death  of,  their   respective               parents; and gifts to several parents and  at,               or  after, their deaths to their children,  or               to    their   issue,   have   received    this               construction  as  meaning at  or  after  their               respective deaths." It  is  not  necessary to cite  many  instances  where  this construction   has   been  adopted.  In   re    Hutchinson’s Trusts(1)   the  testatrix bequeathed personality  in  trust

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for  A.B. for life and after his decease for his issue,  and on  failure of his issue to F.H.S. and R.S. share and  share alike,  and after the decease  of the  said F.H.S. and  R.S. to their children share and share alike, and to their  heirs for  ever.  Kay, J. felt that he was bound by  authority  to say that the words                      "after the decease of the said  Francis               Hutchinson Synge and his brother Robert  Synge               mean  after their respective deaths, or  after               the decease of each of them, and that there is               a  disposition of the share of each which  was               an  absolute  interest in the  first  instance               upon his death." (see at page 816). This  rule was further amplified by Romer. J. in  Errington, In re. Gibbs v. Lassam(1) where he said (at p. 425)                      "The  rule, stated in its simplest  way               is this: Where a testator gives the income  of               his estate to two people, A. and B., for their               lives  and  follows that gift by  a  direction               that at their death, or at their deaths, or at               or after the death or deaths of A. and B.  the               property  is to go to their issue,  the  Court               does  not construe the gift as a gift only  to               take effect on the death of both in favour  of               the issue of both, but construes it as a gift,               to  take effect on the death of each,  of  the               share to the income of which the deceased  was               entitled, to the issue of the deceased." (1) 21 Ch. D.  11. (2) 1927 1 Ch. D, 421 400 In  Mcdonnell v. Neil(1) the Judicial Committee referred  to the   dictum  of Kay, J. in re  Hutchinson’s  Trusts(2)  and observed that the construction was borne out by a long  line of authority.     In  the  result, the appeal will  stand  dismissed  with costs. appellant must pay the court fees. G.C.                    Appeal dismissed. (1) [1951] A.C.342 (2) 21 Ch. D. 811. 401