01 December 1995
Supreme Court
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DR. MAHESH CHAND SHARMA Vs SMT RAJ KUMARI SHARMA AND ORS

Bench: JEEVAN REDDY,B.P. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 547 of 1991


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PETITIONER: DR. MAHESH CHAND SHARMA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT RAJ KUMARI SHARMA AND ORS

DATE OF JUDGMENT01/12/1995

BENCH: JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J) BENCH: JEEVAN REDDY, B.P. (J) MAJMUDAR S.B. (J)

CITATION:  1996 AIR  869            JT 1995 (8)   466  1995 SCALE  (6)809

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                       J U D G M E N T B.P. JEEVAN REDDY, J.      Third  defendant   is  the  appellant.  He  along  with defendant Nos.4  and 5 is the alienee of the house property, which  is   the  subject-matter  of  these  appeals.  Second defendant is  the brother  of third  defendant and father of Defendant is  the brother  of third  defendant and father of Defendant Nos.4 and 5. Defendant Nos.2, 4 and 5 are figuring as respondents is these appeals but are supporting the third defendant.      Plaintiff and Defendant Nos.6 to 8 are the daughters of late Ram  Nath Dewan while the first defendant is the son of Ram Nath  Dewan while  the first defendant is the son of Ram Nath  Dewan.  First  defendant  and  second  defendant  have married sisters.  First defendant was practically settled in U.S.A. along  with  his  family.  He  appointed  the  second defendant as  his General  Power of  Attorney. Acting as the General Power  of Attorney  of first  defendant, the  second defendant executed  a sale deed in respect of No.5, Doctor’s Lane, New  Delhi (the  house property  which is the subject- matter  of   these  appeals,  which  shall  be  referred  to hereinafter as  "Doctor’s Lane")  in favour  of his  brother (Defendant No.3) and sons (Defendant Nos.4 and 5).      The plaintiff,  daughter of late Ram Nath is seeking to avoid the  sale of  the said  house property  in the present suit for  partition and  separate possession  of  her  1/5th share. The  other  daughters,  Defendant  Nos.6  to  8,  are tacitly supporting  the plaintiff, though they have remained ex parte.  The first defendant too has remained ex parte. He did not  even file  a written statement. He died pending the suit. His  legal representative, all of whom are residing in U.S.A., have also not chosen to appear in the suits/appeals. Thus, the contest has been between plaintiff on one side and Defendant Nos.2 to 5 on the other. RELEVANT FACTS:

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---------------      Ram  Nath   Dewan  was   a  self-made  man.  He  earned substantial properties in Delhi. He married a little late in life. His  wife, Satyawati,  was younger  to him  by atleast fifteen years, if not more. They had a son (First defendant) and four daughters (plaintiff and Defendant Nos.6, 7 and 8). With a  view to  provide a secure life to his wife, Ram Nath made a  will on  10th  day  of  April,  1942  whereunder  he bequeathed one  of his properties, viz., No.5, Doctors Lane, New Delhi  to Satyawati  for life.  He provided  that  after Satyawati’s death,  the said  property shall go to his legal heirs. Ram Nath died in the year 1953.      Soon after  the  death  of  Ram  Nath,  disputes  arose between the  mother and  the son.  The son (first defendant) put forward  another Will  said to have been executed by Ram Nath on  September 26, 1950 superseding the earlier Will. As many as seven suits came to be instituted between the mother and the  son. In  January 1955,  a settlement was arrived at between them.  Under this settlement, the mother, Satyawati, was given  a right  to reside  in the  first  floor  of  the Doctor’s Lane  house. The  son was  to pay  her Rs.125/- per month as maintenance allowance. If the mother did not intend to reside  in the  said first  floor, the son was to pay her Rs.150/- per  month as  maintenance allowance. Provision was made for  the marriage  of the  youngest  daughter.  It  was affirmed that  No.58, Todar  Mal Road,  New  Delhi,  is  the exclusive property  of the  mother but  she undertook not to transfer the  property in  any manner  whatsoever. After her death, the  wife of  the first defendant was to be the owner of the  said property.  Certain jewellery and other articles were also  given to  the mother.  A joint  statement in  the above terms was submitted into the Court on January 27, 1955 and the  suits disposed of in terms of the settlement on the same day.      The first  defendant, Rajender  Nath,  was  practically settled in  U.S.A. along  with his  family. He appointed his co-son-in-law, Sri  G.C. Sharma  (second defendant)  as  his General Power  of Attorney  in respect  of his properties in India. On  March 4,  1971, the  second defendant  executed a sale deed in respect of the Doctor’s Lane house in favour of his  brother   (third  defendant)   and  his  own  two  sons (Defendant Nos.4  and 5).  Satyawati died  on July  2, 1972. Soon thereafter, the present suit for partition was filed in respect  of   all  the  properties  left  by  Ram  Nath  and Satyawati. The  plaintiff disputed  the validity of the sale deed executed  by the  second defendant  on  more  than  one ground. She  asked for  a declaration  to that  effect.  She claimed a  1/5th share  in all  the properties including the suit house.  According to  her, each  of the Defendant Nos.1 and 6 to 8 were entitled to 1/5th share.      The plaintiff’s  case in  brief,  as  set  out  in  the plaint, is  this: the Doctor’s Lane house was constructed by Ram Nath on the land obtained by him on perpetual lease from the Secretary of State for India in Council. Ram Nath made a Will on  April 10,  1942 bequeathing  the said  house to his wife, Satyawati,  for her  life. He  provided  that  on  her death, it  will devolve upon his "legal heirs". Ram Nath and Satyawati owned  certain other properties also in Delhi. All the  said   properties  are   liable  to  be  divided  among plaintiff, Defendant  No.1 and Defendant Nos.6 to 8 in equal shares. The  plaintiff is  in joint  possession of  the said properties along with Defendant Nos.1 and 6 to 9. Only after the death  of her  mother, has the plaintiff come to know of the  General   Power  of  Attorney  executed  by  the  first defendant in  favour of the second defendant and the sale of

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the Doctor’s Lane house by the second defendant to Defendant Nos.3  to   5.  When  she  demanded  partition  of  all  the properties including  the Doctor’s  Lane  house,  the  first defendant demurred.  He alleged that in the year 1955, there was a  settlement between  himself and  Satyawati whereunder she had  surrendered the  Doctor’s Lane  house in his favour retaining only  a right of residence in the first floor. The plaintiff does  not admit the truth and validity of the said settlement. In  any event,  the settlement,  if any,  cannot affect the  rights of the daughters (Plaintiff and Defendant Nos.6 to  8) in  the said  properties since  they  were  not parties to  the said  settlement. The first defendant had no right whatsoever  in the Doctor’s Lane house during the life time of  Satyawati. He  or his Power of Attorney holder had, therefore, no right to execute a sale deed in respect of the said Doctor’s Lane house. The Power of Attorney and the sale deed are both illegal, invalid, fictitious, sham, collusive, void and  without consideration and are not binding upon the plaintiff and  her sisters.  Pending the suit, the plaintiff asked for  an amendment  of the  plaint  seeking  relief  of possession of  her 1/5th  share in  the Doctor’s Lane house. The amendment  was  allowed  on  December  6,  1983  with  a direction that  the said  amendment shall  be effective only from the date of the said order.      The  second   defendant  filed   a  written   statement disputing the  several averments  in the  plaint insofar  as they concerned  him. Defendant  Nos.3 to  5  filed  a  joint written statement  defending the alienation in their favour. They submitted  that the  Will  dated  April  10,  1942  was revoked by another Will dated September 26, 1950 made by Ram Nath. In  any  event,  the  settlement  arrived  at  between Satyawati and  the first  defendant on  January 27,  1955 is binding upon all who claim through Satyawati. Under the said settlement, Satyawati  surrendered all  her right, title and interest (life  interest) in  the  Doctor’s  Lane  house  in favour of  the first  defendant, retaining  a mere  right of residence in  the first  floor.  The  first  defendant  thus became the  absolute owner  of the  Doctor’s Lane house and, therefore, the  sale deed  executed by his Power of Attorney is good  and valid.  As a  matter of fact, the Doctor’s Lane property was  resumed and  entered upon  by the President of India. At the intervention of Defendant Nos.3 to 5, however, a supplementary  lease deed  (perpetual lease) dated June 3, 1952 was  executed by  the President  of India  in favour of Defendant Nos.3 to 5.      The learned  Single Judge  of the Delhi High Court, who tried the  suit, dismissed  the suit insofar as the Doctor’s Lane house  is concerned  but decreed  it insofar  as  other properties are  concerned. The  learned Judge  held that  by virtue of  the settlement  dated January 27, 1955, Satyawati surrendered  all  her  right,  title  and  interest  in  the Doctor’s Lane  house in  favour of her son, first defendant, who was  the only  legal heir of Ram Nath on the date of the said  settlement.   The  first  defendant  thus  became  the absolute owner  of the  Doctor’s Lane house. Inasmuch as the first defendant has not disputed the correctness of the sale deed executed by the second defendant in favour of Defendant Nos.3 to 5, the sale of the Doctor’s Lane house in favour of the said defendants is good and valid.      Only the  plaintiff appealed under Clause 10 of Letters Patent against  the judgment  of the  learned Single Judge*. The Division  Bench allowed  the  appeal  on  the  following findings: (1)  The Will dated April 10, 1942 made by Ram Nath is true, valid and effective.

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------------------------------------------------------------ *The legal representatives of the first defendant also filed an appeal,  R.F.A.No. 15  of 1984 but that appeal related to some other  property and  hence has no relevance herein. The said appeal  was disposed  of by  the Division  Bench on the same day, i.e., March 25, 1984. The legal representatives of the first  defendant have  not preferred  any appeal to this Court. (2)  The Will  put forward  by Defendant Nos.2 to 5, said to have been  executed by  Ram Nath  on September  25, 1950  in favour of  the first  defendant is  not proved  to have been executed by Ram Nath. (3)  The interest  created in  Satyawati under the 1942 Will is a  life estate  and not a widow’s estate. While a widow’s estate  could  be  surrendered  in  favour  of  the  nearest reversioner(s), the life estate cannot be so surrendered. In any event,  since the alleged surrender under the settlement dated January 27, 1955 was not total and complete, it was no surrender in  law. As  a  matter  of  fact,  the  1942  Will expressly prohibited  Satyawati from  transferring the  said property during her life time. (4)  While it  is true  that in  the year 1942 when the Will was executed,  first defendant,  Rajender Nath, was the only "legal heir"  of Ram nath but the Will contemplates that the Doctor’s Lane  house shall  devolve upon  the legal heirs of the testator  on the  death of Satyawati. On the date of the death of  Satyawati, not  only the first defendant (the son) but the  daughters also  were the "legal heirs" by virtue of the Hindu  Secession Act,  1956. Each of them is entitled to 1/5th share in the disputed house. (5)  On the  language of  the 1942 Will, it is the exception to Section  111 of  the  Indian  Secession  Act,  1925  that applies and  not Section 119 or for that matter Section 120. Since it  was a  bequest to  a class,  the class  has to  be ascertained on  the death  of the interposer. "To the extent of the  application of  exception  to  Section  111  of  the Succession Act,  it (bequest  under the  Will in  favour  of legal heirs) was contingent".      On the  above findings,  the Division  Bench held  that Plaintiff, first  defendant and  Defendant Nos.6  to  8  are entitled to  1/5th share  each in  the Doctor’s  Lane house. Inasmuch as  the first  defendant or his legal heirs did not question the  sale deed dated March 4, 1971, Defendant Nos.3 to 5  will be  entitled only  to the  1/5th interest  of the first defendant  in the Doctor’s Lane house. The judgment of the Division  Bench is  questioned by the third defendant in these  appeals   who  is  supported,  as  stated  above,  by Defendant Nos.2 4 and 5. CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES: ---------------------------      Sri Arun  Mohan, learned  counsel  for  the  appellant, urged the following contentions: (i)  Even if  the Will  dated September 25, 1950 is held not established and  the 1942  Will is  taken to be the true and effective Will,  even then  the Doctor’s  Lane house must be held to  have become  the absolute  property  of  the  first defendant under  and  by  virtue  of  the  settlement  dated January 27,  1955. Satyawati  had only  a right to reside on the first  floor during  her life  time  and  no  more.  The plaintiff has  neither pleaded nor relied upon Section 14 of the Hindu  Secession Act, 1956 nor is it her contention that Satyawati became  the absolute  owner of  the first floor by virtue of  Section 14.  She cannot, therefore, be allowed to raise the  said plea for the first time in these appeals. As a matter of fact, the Doctor’s Lane house was resumed by the

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President of  India in  terms of the grant and later granted on perpetual  basis to  Defendant Nos.3  to 5 by order dated June 3, 1952. (ii) In  law,  succession  is  never  in  abeyance.  On  the language of  the Will, it is Section 119 - and in particular Illustration (iii)  thereto -  that applies.  It means  that while the  life estate  devolved upon Satyawati on the death of Ram Nath, the remainder interest vested simultaneously in the first  defendant, he  being the  only legal  heir on the date of  the death  of Ram  Nath. The  vesting of  remainder interest is  not postponed  till the  date of  death of  the interposer, Satyawati. (iii)     The Division  Bench of the High Court was in error in holding that the exception to Section 111 applies in this case. The said exception contemplates bequest to "a class of persons described  as standing  in a  particular  degree  of kindred to  a specified  individual". In  this case, neither the bequest is to a class of persons nor were the persons in whose favour  the bequest  was made  stood in  a  particular degree of  kindred to  a specified  individual. The words "a specified individual"  in the  said  exception  do  not  and cannot comprehend the testator. They refer to a person other than the  testator. The  High Court  was also  in  error  in holding that  Section 120  of the  Indian Succession  Act is attracted. That  section applies  only to a bequest which is contingent and here the bequest is certainly not contingent. (iv) Though Satyawati  was alive  for about  seventeen years after the  1955 settlement,  she never  questioned the  said settlement. On  the contrary,  by her  conduct,  she  always affirmed the  ownership of  the  first  defendant  over  the Doctor’s Lane  house. As  a matter of fact, she was not even living in  the first  floor wherein she was given a right to reside under  the said  settlement.  In  such  a  situation, Section 14  of the  Hindu Succession  Act has no application since she  was not possessed of the said property - not even of the  first floor, on the date of the coming into force of the said Act. (v)  The life  estate holder  is also  entitled to surrender his/her  interest   in  favour  of  the  remainder-men.  The requirement of  a total and complete surrender applicable in the case  of widow’s estate is not applicable in the case of a limited estate. (vi) The  suit  is  barred  by  limitation.  This  suit,  as originally  filed,   was  based   upon  the  plea  of  joint possession even  with respect  to the  Doctor’s  Lane  house which is  admittedly untrue  and untenable.  The  relief  of possession was added by amending the plaint only on December 6, 1983.  This date  is beyond twelve years from the date of sale in favour of Defendant Nos.3 to 5. Defendant Nos.3 to 5 have perfected  their title  by adverse  possession, in  any event.      On the  other hand,  Sri M.C. Bhandare, learned counsel for   the    respondent-plaintiff,   urged   the   following contentions while supporting the reasoning and conclusion of the Division Bench: (I)  The case of Defendant Nos.2 to 5 is not only unjust but is based  upon fraud.  The second defendant, who is a senior advocate practicing  at Delhi,  took unfair advantage of the faith reposed in him by the first respondent, his co-son-in- law, and cheated him out of his property by executing a sale deed for  a nominal  consideration  in  favour  of  his  own brother and sons. Because the first defendant was settled in America along  with his  family and  was not  taking  proper interest in  his properties and affairs in India, the second defendant got  an opportunity  which he made full use of for

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his own  unjust enrichment.  This factor is relevant because these  appeals   are  filed   under  Article   136  of   the Constitution of India. (II) The alleged family settlement arrived at on January 27, 1955 was  not a  voluntary one.  The defenceless  widow  was confronted by  her own son who put forward a rival but false Will said  to have  been executed  by Ram Nath whereunder he sought to  deprive Satyawati  of all  her  interest  in  the Doctor’s Lane  house under  the 1942  Will. As many as seven suits were  pending. There  was also  an arbitration  by one Chanan Ram,  referred to  in the said joint statement. Under the settlement, Satyawati was deprived of her life estate in the Doctor’s  Lane house  and she  was given a partly sum of Rs.125/- per  month along  with a mere right of residence in the first floor. It was further provided that if she did not choose to reside in the said first floor, she would be given extra Rs.25/-  per month.  The entire  settlement was unjust and unfair to the widow. (III)     That the  interest created  in Satyawati under the 1942 Will  is a  life estate  and not  a widow’s  estate  as rightly held  by the Division Bench. The 1942 Will placed an express prohibition  against transfer  of  her  interest  by Satyawati. The  so-called surrender is in reality a transfer of her  interest and hence barred by the Will. Once the said settlement goes,  the 1942  Will stands  in its full effect. Satyawati became  the absolute owner of the said property by operation of  law, viz.,  Section 14 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.  The sale of the Doctor’s Lane house by the first defendant or  his Power of Attorney holder is, therefore, of no effect and incompetent. (IV) On the  clear language  of the Will, Section 119 of the Indian Succession  Act is  not attracted.  The Will  clearly indicates that  the devolution  of interest  upon the  legal heirs of  the testator  was to  take place  on the  death of Satyawati. It  was a  case of  bequest to a class within the meaning of the exception to Section 111. Because of the said contrary intention  in the  Will, Section  119 is not at all attracted. It is the exception to Section 111 that applies. (V)  The duty of court in the case of construction of a Will is always  to give  effect to the intention of the testator. The intention  of Ram Nath is made clear beyond any doubt by the clear  words  used  in  the  Will,  according  to  which Satyawati was  to be  the life estate holder and that "after her (devise)  death" the  property was  to go  to the "legal heirs of  the testator". On the death of Satyawati (devise), the legal  heirs of  the testator  were  the  son  and  four daughters of  Ram Nath  and it  is they who succeeded to the said property in equal shares. (VI) Even if  the plaintiff  has not  expressly  pleaded  or relied upon  Section 14 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 in the plaint,  she is  yet entitled  to  rely  upon  the  said provision. The  plaintiff has made it clear at more than one place in  the plaint  that she  is claiming her right in the Doctor’s Lane house and other suit properties not only under her father,  Ram Nath, but also under her mother, Satyawati. In the light of the said specific pleading, the plaintiff is entitled to  rely upon  Section 14  of the  Hindu Succession Act. (VII)     The plea  of limitation  is wholly  untenable. The plaintiff and other legal heirs of Ram Nath succeeded to the Doctor’s Lane  house only  on the death of Satyawati who was the  limited   estate  holder.   During  the  life  time  of Satyawati, they  had no  right to, nor were they obliged to, challenge the alienation of the Doctor’s Lane house from the date of death of Satyawati. Even the amendment of the plaint

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including the  relief of  possession, granted on December 6, 1983 is within a period of twelve years. THE 1942 WILL AND THE 1955 SETTLEMENT: --------------------------------------      For a  proper appreciation  of the  contentions, it  is necessary to set out the 1942 Will as a whole:                        "DEED OF WILL           I, Mr.  Ram Nath Dewan S/o Pt. Mool      Raj  caste   Brahmin  resident  of  No.5      Doctors  Lane,   New  Delhi  hereinafter      called  the   testator  made  this  Will      without   any   persuasion   fraud   and      collusion in favour of my wife, Shrimati      Satya Vati  Dewan daughter  of Pt.  Atma      Ram Vedi  hereinafter called the Devise.      Now this deed witnesses as follows:           1.   That  the  testator  bequeaths           the use,  enjoyment and interest of           my house  on  part  plot  No.5,  in           block  No.88,   Doctors  Lane,  New           Delhi worth  Rs.50,000/- in my said           wife, the  devise during  her  life           after  his   (testator)  death  and           declares that  after  her  (devise)           death the  property will  go to the           legal heirs of the testator.           2.   That  the   said  devise  will           continue to  live in the said house           according to  her  sweet  will  and           shall also have a right to give the           said  property   on  rent   to  any           tenants.           3.   That  the  said  devise  shall           have  no   right  to  transfer  the           property in any way whatsoever.           4.   That the  said devise  will be           whole   and    sole   manager   and           beneficiary of  the  said  property           during her life and shall possess a           right to  make any  alteration  and           addition    in     the     building           accommodation in  accordance of her           sweet will  and  desire.  No  legal           heir of the testator shall have any           right to object to that.           5.   That the  devise will  realise           the rent  of the  said property  if           any and appropriate and spend it on           herself   or    anyone   else    in           accordance of  her sweet  will.  No           legal heir  of the  testator  shall           have  any  right  to  interfere  in           that.           6.   That  no  legal  heir  of  the           testator shall  be entitled to live           in   the    said   house    without           permission  of   the  said   devise           during her  life  and  said  devise           will have right to eject any person           living in  the house at the time of           the testator’s death.           7.   That the  said devise shall be           liable to pay the lease money (Land           Rent) to the Government either from           the income  derived from  the house

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         or from her own pocket.           8.   That the  repair of  the house           will depend  upon the sweet will of           the devise.      In witnesses  whereof, I,  Mr. Ram  Nath      Dewan,  the   testator   have   put   my      signature to  this my Will this 10th day      of  April   1942  in   present  of   the      attending witnesses:                           sd/- Ram Nath Dewan      We are  not setting  out the  1950 Will  put forward by Defendant Nos.3  to 5  inasmuch as  it is held not proved by both the  learned Single Judge and the Division Bench of the High Court and no effort was made before us to challenge the said concurrent  finding. It  is, however,  necessary to set out the  settlement arrived  at between  Satyawati  and  the first defendant on January 27, 1955. It reads:      "Joint statement  of Shri  Rajender Nath      Dewan  Plaintiff   and  Smt.   Satyavati      Defendant dated  27.1.1955  recorded  in      Suit  No.689/54  titled  ‘Rajender  Nath      Dewan  verses   Satyavati’  decided   on      27.1.1955  by   Shri  S.S.  Kalha,  SJIC      Delhi.              ENGLISH TRANSLATION           Statement  of  Shri  Rajender  Nath      Dewan  plaintiff   and  Smt.   Satyavati      Defendant  on  Solemn  affirmation:  The      parties have  compromised to  the effect      that  the   award  of  Shri  Chanan  Ram      Arbitrator be  set aside.  The defendant      will reside  on the  Ist floor  of No.5,      Doctors Lane,  New Delhi.  The plaintiff      will  pay  her  Rs.125/-  per  month  as      maintenance  allowances.  The  defendant      will arrange  for her food separately at      her own  expense. In  case the defendant      does  not   intend  to   reside  in  the      aforesaid portion,  the  plaintiff  will      pay   her    Rs.150/-   per   month   as      maintenance  allowance.   In  case   the      defendant resides at the aforesaid place      but takes  meal with  the plaintiff then      the plaintiff  will pay  her Rs.50/- per      month  as   maintenance  allowance.  The      defendant shall not sublet the aforesaid      property and  she will not keep Mayadevi      (and  another   person  whose   name  is      illegible) with  her. Dr.  Vidyavati  or      Shri Rishikesh  or their  family members      also will  not reside with the defendant      but they  will  be  free  to  visit  the      defendant at  the said  place. There are      Postal  Certificates  of  the  value  of      Rs.5000/- in  the name  of defendant and      the  deceased   Dewan  Ram   Nath  which      certificates are  lying in  safe custody      with the  Palai Central Bank, New Delhi.      The   defendant    will   encash   these      certificates at the time of the marriage      of Kumari  Ramakanta Dewan  and  utilise      the proceeds  for her marriage expenses.      Before that  the defendant  will not  be      entitled to  encash  these  certificates      nor will she be able to remove them from

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    the safe  custody of  the bank. There is      also a  fixed  deposit  receipt  of  the      Palai Central  Bank, New  Delhi  in  the      name  of   defendant  for   the  sum  of      Rs.3,139/15/-. The  defendant  shall  be      the owner  of this  deposit and she will      be free  to utilise  it as  per her  own      Will or  at the  time of  necessity. The      family  Jewellery  is  lying  in  Locker      No.664,  Type  C  with  Punjab  National      Bank, Tropical  Building, New Delhi. The      parties to  the suit will not remove the      Jewellery  from   the  Locker  and  this      Locker will be operated only at the time      of the  marriage of  Km Ramakanta. After      removing such  part of  the jewellery as      may be  considered proper to be given on      Ramakanta’s marriage  to Ramakanta,  the      locker  shall   be  re-sealed   and  the      remaining jewellery will be owned by the      plaintiff  after   the  death   of   the      defendant. There  is another locker with      Imperial Bank of India, New Delhi in the      name  of   the  defendant.   Shri  Shyam      Kishore and  Shri Sukhbir  Prasad  Jain,      Advocates  accompanied  by  the  parties      shall  prepare   an  inventory   of  the      articles in  the locker.  Those articles      which belong  to Thakur ji Maharaj (God)      will be handed over to the defendant and      shall be  placed by  her in  the Temple.      Out of  the contents  of the  locker the      Necklace, the  watch and one ring, which      belong  to   defendant  along  with  her      papers   including   a   fixed   deposit      receipt, will  be  handed  over  to  the      defendant. The  shares  scrips  and  the      other   articles   including   a   watch      belonging to the father of the plaintiff      shall be  handed over  to the plaintiff.      There   are   two   watches   with   the      defendants (one  gents and  one  ladies)      which shall be returned by the defendant      to the plaintiff. In case, the plaintiff      fails to  pay the above said maintenance      allowance to the defendant the defendant      shall be  entitled to  recover that from      the  rents  from  the  property  in  the      possession of  the plaintiff  over which      rents she shall have a first charge. The      following are  the  particulars  of  the      property:           1. 5. Doctors Lane, New Delhi;           2.  56-58,   Todar  Mal  Road,  New                Delhi;           3. Some land in Shahdara.      The rent  of the above property shall be      realised by the plaintiff. The defendant      is the  owner of  property No.58,  Todar      Mal  Road,  New  Delhi.  She  shall  not      transfer  the  property  in  any  manner      whatsoever. The  right to  realise  rent      and give the premises on rent shall vest      in Smt.  Vinodni Dewan.  After the death      of the  defendant,  Smt.  Vinodni  Dewan

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    shall be  the owner of the property. The      above statement  of the parties may also      be read as their statement in Civil Suit      Numbers 682  of 1954, 40 of 1954, 442 of      1954 and  683 of  1954, and by virtue of      this  statement   these  Suits   may  be      dismissed. The  Plaintiff shall have the      right to  withdraw all  rents which have      been deposited  in various Courts by the      tenants. Out  of this one-tenth proceeds      will be  paid over  by the  plaintiff to      the defendant.  Except  property  No.58,      Todar Mal  Road, the  plaintiff shall be      the owner of rest of the property.                                  R.O. &  A.C.      sd/- Satyavati Dewan sd/- Sukhbir Prasad                                         Advct      sd/- R.N. Dewan sd/- Shyam Kishore Advct                   27.1.1955                                     Sd/- SJIC           ORDER: In  terms of  the statements      of the  parties the  suit is  dismissed.      The parties  are left  to bear their own      costs. The parties shall remain bound by      the compromise  and by their statements.      Order announced.                               Sd/- S.S. Kalha                                    SJIC Delhi      27.1.1955."      In the above joint statement, plaintiff means the first defendant herein  and the  defendant means  Satyawati Dewan. Smt. Vinodni Dewan is the wife of the first defendant.)      The 1942 Will - its meaning and effect:      ---------------------------------------      We shall  first examine the effect of the Will executed by Ram  Nath in  the year  1942, the correctness or validity whereof is  not in  question  before  us.  On  the  date  he executed the  Will, he  had a son and four daughters. Out of the properties  held by  him, he  gave one  house  property, viz., No.5,  Doctors Lane, New Delhi to his wife, Satyawati, for her  life. He  declared that  during her  life time, she shall have  the exclusive  right to  reside therein but that she shall  not be  entitled to  transfer it  in any  manner. After her  death, he  declared, the property will go to "the legal heirs  of the  testator". On  the date of death of Ram Nath, it  is agreed  by all  the parties  before  us,  first defendant was  the only  "legal heir of the testator". It is equally not  in dispute  before us that on the date of death of Satyawati,  the "  legal heirs  of the  testator" are the first defendant,  the plaintiff  and Defendant Nos.6 to 8 by virtue of  the provisions  contained in the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.      The first  and  crucial  question  is  whether  on  the language of  the Will  and the  law governing the Wills, the vesting in  "the legal  heirs of the testator" took place on the  date   of  death  of  testator  (as  contended  by  the appellant)  or  on  the  date  of  death  of  Satyawati  (as contended by  the appellant)  or on  the date  of  death  of Satyawati as  contended  by  the  plaintiff-respondent).  In other words,  the question  is whether  it is Section 119 of the Indian Succession Act that is attracted or the exception to Section 111 of the said Act. If it is Section 119 that is attracted, the position would be that the remainder interest did vest  in the first defendant on the date of death of Ram Nath which  means that  the daughters  will have no right in

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the Doctor’s  Lane House.  On the  other hand,  if it is the exception to  Section 111  that applies,  the vesting  takes place on the date of death of Satyawati, which means son and four daughters  together will  be "the  legal heirs  of  the testator". Sections 119 and 111 read as follows:      "119. Date  of vesting  of  legacy  when      payment or possession postponed.-- Where      by the  terms of  bequest the legatee is      not entitled  to immediate possession of      the thing bequeathed, a right to receive      it at  the proper  time shall,  unless a      contrary intention  appears by the will,      become vested  in  the  legatee  on  the      testators death,  and shall  pass to the      legatee’s  representatives  if  he  dies      before  that  time  and  without  having      received the  legacy, and  in such cases      the legacy  is from the testator’s death      said to be vested interest.      Explanation.--An intention that a legacy      to any person shall not become vested in      interest in  him is  not to  be inferred      merely  from  a  provision  whereby  the      payment  or   possession  of  the  thing      bequeathed is  postponed, or  whereby  a      prior interest  therein is bequeathed to      some other person, or whereby the income      arising  from  the  fund  bequeathed  is      directed to  be  accumulated  until  the      time  of  payment  arrives,  or  from  a      provision that,  if a  particular  event      shall happen,  the legacy  shall go over      to another person.                 Illustrations      (i)  A bequeathed to B 100 rupees, to be      paid to  him at  the death  of C. On A’s      death  the   legacy  become   vested  in      interest in  B, and if he dies before C,      his representatives  are entitled to the      legacy.      (ii) A bequeaths  to B 100 rupees, to be      paid to  him upon  his attaining the age      of 18.  On A’s  death the legacy becomes      vested in interest in B.      (iii)     A fund  is bequeathed to A for      life, and  after his  death to B. On the      testator’s  death,   the  legacy   to  B      becomes vested in interest in B.      (iv) A fund  is bequeathed  to A until B      attains the age of 18 and then to B. The      legacy to  B is  vested in interest from      the testator’s death.      (v)  A  bequeaths   the  whole   of  his      property to  B upon trust to pay certain      debts out  of the  income, and  then  to      make over  the fund  to C.  At A’s death      the gift to C becomes vested in interest      in him.      (vi) A fund  is bequeathed to A, B and C      in equal  shares to  be paid  to them on      their   attaining   the   age   of   18,      respectively, with  a proviso  that,  if      all of them die under the age of 18, the      legacy shall  devolve  upon  D.  On  the      death of the testator, the shares vested

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    in interest  in A,B anc C, subject to be      divested in case A,B and C shall all die      under 18,  and, upon the death of any of      them (except  the last  survivor)  under      the  age  of  18,  his  vested  interest      passes    so     subject,     to     his      representatives.      111. Survivorship  in case of bequest to      described class.-- Where bequest is made      simply to  a described class of persons,      the thing  bequeathed shall  go only  to      such as  are  alive  at  the  testator’s      death.      Exception.--If property  bequeathed to a      class of  persons described  as standing      in a  particular degree  of kindred to a      specified    individual,    but    their      possession of  it is  deferred  until  a      time  later   than  the   death  of  the      testator by  reason of  a prior bequest,      or otherwise, the property shall at that      time go  to such  of them  as  are  then      alive, and to the representatives of any      of them who have died since the death of      the testator.                 Illustrations                 -------------      (i) A  bequeaths 1,000  rupees  to  ‘the      children of B’ without saying when it is      ‘to be  distributed among  them.  B  has      died previous  to the  date of the will,      leaving three  children C,  D and  E.  E      died after  the date  of the  will,  but      before the  death of A. C and D survives      A. The legacy will belong to C and D, to      the exclusion  of the representatives of      E.      (ii) A lease  for years  of a  house was      bequeathed to  A for his life, and after      his decease to the children of B. At the      death  of   the  testator,   B  had  two      children living,  C and  D, and he never      had any  other child.  Afterwards during      the lifetime  of A,  C dies,  leaving E,      his executor.  D has survived A, D and E      are jointly  entitled to  so much of the      leasehold term as remaining unexpired.      (iii)     A sum  of money was bequeathed      to  a   for  her  life,  and  after  her      decease, to  the children  of B.  At the      death  of   the  testator,   B  had  two      children living, C and D, and after that      event, two  children, E and F, were born      to B. C and E died in the lifetime of A,      C having  made a  will, E having made no      will.  A  has  died,  leaving  D  and  F      surviving  her.  The  legacy  is  to  be      divided into  four equal  parts, one  of      which is  to be  paid to the executor of      C, one to D, one to the administrator of      E and one to F.      (iv) A bequeaths  one-third of his lands      to b for his life, and after his decease      to the sisters of B. At the death of the      testator, B  had two  sisters living,  C

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    and D,  and  after  that  event  another      sister E  was born.  C died  during  the      life of B, D and E have survived B. One-      third of  A’s lands  belong to  D, E and      the  representatives   of  C,  in  equal      shares.      (v)  A bequeaths  1,000 rupees  to B for      life and  after his  death equally among      the children of C. Up to the death of B,      C had  not had  any child.  The  bequest      after the death of B is void.      (vi) A bequeaths  1,000 rupees  to  ‘all      the children born or to be born’ of B to      be divided among them at the death of C.      At the  death of the testator, B has two      children living D and E. After the death      of the  testator, but in the lifetime of      C two  other children, F and G, are born      to B. After the death of C another child      is born  to B.  The  legacy  belongs  to      D.E.F and  G, to  the exclusion  of  the      after-born child to B.      (vii)     A  bequeaths  a  fund  to  the      children of  B, to be divided among them      when the  eldest shall  attain majority.      At the testator’s death, B had one child      living, named  C. He  afterwards had two      other children  named D  and E.  E died,      but C and D were living, When C attained      majority. The  fund belongs  to C, D and      the  representatives   of  E,   to   the      exclusion of  any child  who may be born      to B after C’s attaining majority."      Let us first analyse Section 119 from the point of view of the  facts of  this  case  and  see  what  does  it  say. According to  it, unless  a contrary  intention appears from the Will,  a bequest  made to a legates, who is not entitled to immediate  possession of  bequest, gets  vested  in  such legatee  on   the  date   of  death  of  the  testator.  The Explanation appended  to the  section elucidates  the  words "unless a  contrary intention appears by the Will" occurring in the  main limb of the section. The Explanation says inter alia that  merely because a prior interest in the bequest is given to some other person, it does not mean that a contrary intention is indicated in the Will. Illustration (iii) is of crucial relevance.  It says  that where a fund is bequeathed to A  for life  and after  A’s death  to B,  the legacy to B becomes vested  in interest in B on the testator’s death. If we read  the principle  under lying the main limb of Section 119 along  with the  Explanation and  Illustration (iii), it becomes abundantly  clear that  the  present  case  squarely falls within  the four  corners of  this section. It fits in neatly into  Illustration (iii)  to Section  119. Here,  the Doctor’s Lane  house is bequeathed to Satyawati for life and after her  death to  the legal  heirs of  the testator. Once this is  so, the  legacy to  the legal heirs of the testator became vested  in such legal heir(s) on the date of death of the testator - and admittedly on that death, first defendant was the only legal heir of the testator. We may mention that merely because  a prior  interest in the bequest is given to Satyawati, it  cannot be  said that  the  Will  indicates  a contrary intention  within the  meaning of  the main limb of Section 119.  [See Chilanakuri  Pullappa v.  Guruka  Bayanna (A.I.R. 1962  A.P. 54)  and P.  Somasundaram v.  K. Rajammal (A.I.R. 1976 Mad.295) in this behalf.] Now, once the bequest

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to "the  legal heirs  of the  testator" provided by the Will got vested  in the  first defendant on the date of the death of the testator, there is no question of the first defendant being divested  therefrom. On  the death  of Satyawati,  the first  defendant   became  entitled  to  possession  of  the Doctor’s Lane house which had already vested in him.      Sri  Bhandare,  learned  counsel  for  the  respondent- plaintiff,   submitted    repeatedly    that    the    above interpretation would  be inconsistent  with the intention of the testator  as clearly expressed in the Will. He submitted that the  first and  the foremost  rule of  interpreting the Will is  to ascertain  the intention  of the testator and to give effect  to  it.  The  learned  counsel  submitted  that according to  the Will,  the Doctor’s  Lane  houses  was  to devolve upon  the legal  heirs of  the testator  only on the death of  Satyawati and not at any earlier point of time. He emphasised  the   words  "and   declares  that   after   her (devisee’s) death,  the property  will go to the legal heirs of the  testator" occurring in clause (i) of the Will. It is true that  that is  what the testator said but then the said Will has  to be understood and construed in the light of the statutory rules  governing the Will, viz., the provisions of the Indian  Succession Act,  1925. Section  119 of this Act, which applies  to the  Will in quest by its own force, says, to repeat, that where a property is bequeathed to A for life and after  his death to B, the legacy to B becomes vested in interest in  B on  the death of the testator. As pointed out earlier, the  bequest in  the Will squarely falls within the four  corners   of  Section   119  and   in  particular   of Illustration  (iii)  thereto.  It  may  be  remembered  that Illustrations to  the section  are parts  of the section and help to elucidate the principle of the section.      Now, let  us examine  whether the  exception to Section 111 of  the Indian  Succession Act is attracted herein - and not Section  119 -  as contended  by Sri  Bhandare. The main limb of  Section 111  says that where bequest is made simply to a  described class  of persons, the bequest shall devolve only upon such members of the class as are alive on the date of the  testator’s death.  The exception appended to Section 111 says  that if  property is  bequeathed  to  a  class  of persons/described as  standing in  a  particular  degree  of kindred/to a specified individual/but their possession of it is deferred  until a  time  later  than  the  death  of  the testator by  reason of  a prior  bequest,  or  otherwise/the property shall  at that time go to such of them as are alive and to  the representatives  of any  of them  who have  died since the death of the testator. For the exception to apply, it must  first be  shown that  the bequest  is to a class of persons. Then  it must  be shown  that  the  said  class  of persons is  described as  standing in a particular degree of kindred to  a specified individual. The third requirement is that the  possession of the bequest is deferred until a time later than  the death  of the  testator for one or the other reason. If  the above  ingredients are  satisfied  then  the property bequeathed  devolves upon such persons of the class as are  alive on  the date of death of the interposer (prior bequest) and  upon the  representatives of such of those who may have died after the death of the testator but before the death of the interposer. Now, let us assume in these appeals that bequest  is to a class of persons. The next question is whether the  said class of persons is "described as standing in  a   particular  degree   of  kindred   to  a   specified individual"? We  are  of  the  opinion  that  the  words  "a specified  individual"   cannot  refer   to  or   mean  "the testator".  The   very  Explanation   uses  both  the  words

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"testator" and " a specified individual". If the idea behind the exception  was to  refer to  testator, then it would not have employed  the words  "a specified  individual". Nothing was more simpler than using the words "the testator" instead of the said words actually used. This means that the words " a specified  individual" refer  to an  individual other than the testator.  This understanding  of ours is re-inforced if we  look  at  the  several  illustrations  appended  to  the section. In  each  of  those  illustrations,  the  class  of persons is  described as children or (or the relatives of) a person other  than the  testator. None  of them  speaks of a class of  persons related as aforesaid to the testator. Once this is  so, the  exception goes  out of the picture. In the case before  us, the legal heirs of testator - assuming that they constitute a class of persons within the meaning of the exception - are described as standing in a particular degree of kindred  to the  testator  -  and  not  to  "a  specified individual". Indeed,  there was a good amount of controversy before us  as to the meaning to the words "particular degree of kindred".  We need  not, however,  go  into  that  aspect because once  we come  to the  conclusion that  the words "a specified  individual"  cannot  and  do  not  refer  to  the testator, the exception becomes inapplicable.      Sri  Bhandare,  learned  counsel  for  the  respondent- plaintiff, put  forward an  alternative argument, viz., that it is Section 120 of the Indian Succession Act that applies. According to  him, it  is a  case of  a  contingent  bequest within the  meaning of  the said  section,  which  reads  as follows:      "120.     Date of  vesting  when  legacy      contingent  upon   specified   uncertain      event.-- (1) A legacy bequeathed in case      a specified uncertain event shall happen      does not vest until that event happens.      (2)  A  legacy   bequeathed  in  case  a      specified uncertain  event shall  happen      does not  vest until  the  happening  of      that event becomes impossible.      (3)  In either case, until the condition      has been  fulfilled, the interest of the      legatee is called contingent.      Explanation.--Where a fund is bequeathed      to  any  person  upon  his  attaining  a      particular are,  and the will also gives      to him  absolutely the  income to  arise      from the  fund before  he  reaches  that      age, or  directs the  income, or so much      of  it   as  may  be  necessary,  to  be      supplied for his benefit, the bequest of      the fund is not contingent."           [Illustrations      omitted      as      unnecessary]      A mere reading of Section 120 would indicate that it is not attracted  in the  present case.  The death of Satyawati was not  a specified  uncertain event.  The decision of this Court in  N. Krishnammal  v. R.  Ekambram &  Ors. (1979  (3) S.C.C. 273) is of no relevance herein. That was a clear case of contingent  bequest. In  the present case, the bequest is not a  contingent one.  If so,  the bequest is not postponed within the meaning of Section 120.      We are,  therefore, of the opinion that by operation of law, i.e., by virtue of Section 119 of the Indian Succession Act, the bequest to "the legal heirs of the testator" vested in the  first defendant  - he  alone being the legal heir of the testator on that date - on the date of death of Ram Nath

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(testator). The  vesting of  bequest to  "the legal heirs of the  testator"   was  not   postponed  till   the  death  of interposer, Satyawati.  The language  of clause  (i) of  the Will cannot be construed otherwise.      Sri Bhandare  then contended that the use of the plural "heirs" -  and not  the singular  "heir" -  in clause (i) is indicative of  the intention  of the  testator that  he  was referring to  his legal  heirs as may be in existence on the death of satyawati. In our opinion, this argument is plainly unacceptable. In  the year  1942, Ram  Nath could  not  have foreseen the enactment of Hindu Succession Act, 1956 or that in future  his daughters would also become his "legal heirs" by some  change in  law. The language of clause (i) does, no doubt, convey the intention of the testator, viz., immediate bequest  (for   life)  is  to  Satyawati  and  the  ultimate (absolute) bequest  is to his legal heirs after the death of Satyawati. But  this clause  has to  be read, understood and construed in  the light of the rule contained in Section 119 of the  Indian Succession  Act, as  explained hereinabove  - with the  necessary consequence,  which too has been set out hereinabove.      For the  above reasons, we disagree with the finding of the Division Bench of the High Court on this aspect. THE SETTLEMENT OF 1955 AND ITS EFFECT: --------------------------------------      The next  question is,  what happened  in the year 1955 when there  was a settlement between Satyawati and the first defendant and what is its effect? As mentioned hereinbefore, soon after  the death of Ram Nath in the year 1953, disputes arose between  Satyawati and the first defendant. As many as seven suits  were filed  by one against the other. The first defendant had  put forward  a rival  Will, said to have been executed by  Ram Nath  in  the  year  1950,  whereunder  the Doctor’s Lane  house was  given to  the first  defendant. It appears that  pending the  said suits, there was a reference to arbitration  and  an  award  was  also  rendered  by  the Arbitrator, one Sri Chanan Ram. Obviously, the award did not put an  end to  the disputes between the mother and the son. Only later  and evidently  at the  intercession  of  certain mutual well-wishers,  the parties  arrived at  a  settlement whereunder the  said award  was declared  ineffective and  a different arrangement arrived at. Under this settlement, the first defendant  (described as  ‘plaintiff’) was declared to be the  owner  of  all  the  properties  left  by  Ram  Nath including Doctor’s  Lane house  - except  No.58,  Todar  Mal Road, New  Delhi. At  the same time, Satyawati was given the right of  residence in  the first floor of the Doctor’s Lane house along  with case maintenance of Rs.125/- per month. It was stipulated  that if she resides in the said portion, the first defendant  shall pay her only a monthly maintenance of Rs.125/-. But  if she  did not  intend to reside in the said portion, the  first defendant  was to  pay her  Rs.150/- per month. Thus,  on the  plain language  of the settlement, the Doctor’s  Lane  house  became  the  property  of  the  first defendant  subject  to  the  right  of  residence  given  to Satyawati in  the first floor thereof. Sri Bhandare, learned counsel  for   the  respondent-plaintiff,   contended   that inasmuch as  the interest  given to Satyawati under the 1942 Will was a life estate and not a widow’s estate - with which proposition we  agree -  and because the Will prohibited her from transferring  the said property, the said settlement is incompetent and  void since it amounts to a transfer. We are not prepared  to agree.  One  must  look  at  the  situation obtaining  in  the  year  1955  and  not  to  the  situation obtaining, or findings recorded, in the present proceedings.

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Seven suits  were pending  between mother  and the  son. The validity of  1942 Will was in dispute because the son (first defendant) was  relying on another Will of Ram Nath, said to have been  executed in  the year  1950, superseding the 1942 Will. No Court had pronounced till then as to which Will was the last Will and testament of Ram Nath. In other words, the right given  to Satyawati  under the 1942 Will was itself in dispute in those suits. In such a situation, a compromise, a settlement was  arrived at  between the  parties, whereunder Satyawati acknowledged  and accepted  the first  defendant’s title to  the Doctor’s  Lane  house  in  lieu  of  right  of residence  in  the  first  floor  and  case  maintenance  of Rs.125/- per month. The settlement does not say which of the said two Wills is true and valid. The settlement was de hors the claims  and contentions  of both  the parties  including their claims  and contentions  under  the  respective  Wills espoused by  them. (It is only is this suit that it has been held by  the learned  Trial Judge  that the 1942 Will is the last Will  of Ram Nath inasmuch as Defendant Nos.2 to 5 have failed to  establish the  truth and  correctness of the 1950 Will put  forward by  their  first  defendant  in  the  said earlier suits  and by  them in the present suit. The finding of the  learned Single Judge on the issue was not challenged by Defendant Nos.3 to 5 in the appeal.) It may be remembered that under  the 1942  Will Satyawati was not entitled to any maintenance  amount  from  the  first  defendant.  The  said monthly maintenance  was provided  to her,  payable  by  the first defendant,  under and  as part of the said settlement. We are, therefore unable to agree with Sri Bhandare that the said  settlement  amounts  to  a  transfer  or  that  it  is incompetent and  ineffective for being inconsistent with the terms of the 1942 Will.      For the  same reasons,  The contention that a surrender by a  widow must  be total and complete is wholly beside the point. Neither the interest given to Satyawati was a widow’s estate (as rightly found by the Division Bench) nor was it a case of  surrender. It  was a  compromise, a  settlement, of conflicting claims. THE RELEVANCE AND EFFECT OF THE HINDU SUCCESSION ACT, 1956: -----------------------------------------------------------      Now, we  come to  the third  important event, viz., the enforcement of  the Hindu Succession Act and its effect. The Act came  into force  in June, 1956. By operation of Section 14 of  the  said  Act,  the  right  of  residence  given  to Satyawati in  the first  floor of  the Doctor’s  Lane  house ripened into  an absolute  title inasmuch  as the said right was given  to her  in recognition of a pre-existing right to maintenance inhering  in  her.  Even  under  the  Hindu  Law obtaining prior  to the  enforcement of  Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance  Act,   1956,  the  son  was  under  a  personal obligation to  maintain his  mother  and  he  was  bound  to maintain her  whether or  not he inherited property from his father. [See  Para 548  of Mulla’s  Hindu Law at P.552 (16th Edn.)]. Under  the settlement,  Satyawati was given not only the right  of residence in the first floor but also a sum of Rs.125/- per  month in  cash towards her maintenance. It was further provided  under the settlement that if Satyawati did not intend  to reside  in the  aforesaid portion,  the first defendant shall  pay her  Rs.150/- per  month as maintenance instead of  Rs.125/- per  month. This clearly indicates that the right  of residence  was given  to her in lieu of and in recognition of  her pre-existing  right to maintenance. Once this is so, it is sub-section (1) of Section 14 that applies and not  sub-section (2) vide V. Tulasamma v. V. Sesha Reddi (1977 (3)  S.C.C. 99).  It has recently been held by a Bench

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of this  Court (S.P.  Bharucha,  J.  and  one  of  us,  S.B. Majmudar, J.)  in Mangat  Mal v. Punni Devi (1995 (6) S.C.C. 88) that  a right  of residence  given for  life to a female Hindu in a property plus a sum of money in lieu of her right to maintenance ripens into full ownership on the coming into force of  the Act.  Accordingly, it must be held that on the date of coming into force of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, Satyawati became  the absolute  owner of  the first floor of the Doctor’s lane house property.      Sri Arun Mohan, learned counsel for the appellant-third defendant, submitted  that inasmuch as the plaintiff has not invoked or  relied upon  Section 14  of the Hindu Succession Act and  also because  no reference to the said provision is found in  the judgment  of the  learned Single  Judge or the Division Bench,  she should not now be allowed to invoke the said provision  for the first time in these appeals. Learned counsel submitted that neither in the plaint nor at any time during the arguments in the Courts below was this contention urged by  the plaintiff. Counsel also submitted that had the plaintiff  raised   this  contention   in  the  plaint,  the defendant-appellant  would   have  had   an  opportunity  of establishing that  Section 14  has no  application  for  the reason that  she was not "possessed" of the said first floor on the  date of  coming  into  force  of  the  Act.  Counsel submitted that  Satyawati was  never  living  in  the  first floor; she  was either  living with  the first  defendant or with  other   relatives.   We   have   given   our   anxious consideration to the said submission but are unable to agree with it.  In the  plaint, it  is repeatedly  stated that the plaintiff is  claiming the  suit property  both through  Ram Nath and  Satyawati. It  is true  that there  is no specific reference to  Section 14  of the Hindu Succession Act but we are of  the opinion,  having regard to the law applicable to pleadings (Order  6 Rule  2 of the Civil Procedure Code) and the decisions  of this Court in that behalf - [See Kedar Lal Seal &  Anr. v. Hari Lal Seal (A.I.R. 1952 S.C. 47)] that it would not  be just and proper not to give effect to the said highly salutary  provision on the above ground which, in the facts and circumstances of the case, is a mere technicality. Section  14  operates  on  its  own  force  once  the  facts requisite for attracting its application are established. It must be remembered that the settlement between Satyawati and the first  defendant was  arrived at  on  January  27,  1955 whereas the  Hindu Succession  Act came  into force in June, 1956, i.e.,  within less than seventeen months. Moreover, we are concerned  with right  to possession  and  not  physical possession. It  has been  repeatedly held by this Court [See the  several   decisions  referred   to  under  the  heading "possessed -  meaning of"  in Mulla’s  Hindu Law  (Sixteenth Edition  at  Page  810)]  while  construing  the  expression "possessed" in  Section 14(1) that the said expression means and refers  to a  right to  possession and  not  necessarily actual or physical possession. So long as she has a right to possession, the  mere fact  that the female Hindu was not in physical possession  matters very  little. Therefore,  it is immaterial whether  Satyawati was  physically occupying  the said first  floor or  not. So  long as  she had the right to possession over  the said  first  floor,  Section  14(1)  is attracted. There  has never been any suggestion by Defendant Nos.2 to  5 that  Satyawati had  given up the said right. On the contrary,  Exh. D-28 (a former statement of Satyawati in a suit),  filed and relied upon by the appellant, shows that Satyawati herself  was holding  a General  Power of Attorney from the  first defendant (executed in 1960 and in 1964) and was managing  all his  properties in India. This is also the

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testimony of  the plaintiff  in this  suit. She  has deposed (Page 47  of Vol.  II Paper  Book) that  till  three  months before her  death, Satyawati  was residing in the said house along with  a maid  servant and  her son. Nothing worthwhile has been  brought out in her cross-examination to doubt this statement of  hers.  We  accept  her  statement.  The  facts established herein  do clearly  attract Section  14  of  the Hindu Succession  Act. The  ends of  justice demand that the said provision  is given  effect to.  The plea  of  lack  of opportunity is  at best  a technical one, in the particulars facts and  circumstances of the case. We are, therefore, not inclined to  accept Sri Arun Mohan’s plea that Section 14(1) should not  be allowed  to be  invoked by  the respondent in these appeals.      We may  pause here and append a note of explanation. It is true  that under  the 1942 Will, the bequest to Satyawati was only for her life and the bequest to "the legal heirs of the testator’,  i.e., to  the first defendant, vested in him on the  death of  the testator,  as held  by us  and for the reasons assigned  hereinbefore. But  all this  is subject to the statutory  provisions contained  in Section 14(1) of the Hindu Succession  Act. This  statutory provision  supersedes the recitals  in the Will. By virtue of Section 14(1) of the said Act,  the limited  estate of  Satyawati (given  to  her under the 1942 Will) would have ripened into absolute estate if Satyawati  had been  "possessed" of  the entire  Doctor’s Lane  house  on  the  date  of  commencement  of  the  Hindu Succession Act.  But she  was not.  She  had  given  up  her possession and  right to  possession over  the  First  floor under the  1955 Settlement.  She was "possessed" of only the first floor  of the  house. Secondly,  and  more  important, first defendant  is basing  his title  to the  Doctor’s Lane house on  the 1955  settlement. As  stated hereinabove, both Satyawati and  the first  defendant arrived  at a particular settlement  notwithstanding   their  respective  claims  and contentions. Satyawati  never challenged the said settlement during her  life-time. The  settlement cannot, therefore, be held to  be involuntary  or inoperative. Satyawati, in fact, acted for a number of years as the General Power of Attorney of her son, the first defendant, and managing his properties in India.  Merely because in these proceeding, the 1942 Will is held  to be  the last  and valid  Will of  Ram Nath,  the settlement of 1955 cannot be ignored or brushed aside. It is also nobody’s  case that  the settlement was not bonafide or that it  was not  acted upon. For these reasons, it must be, and is,s  held that Satyawati became the absolute owner only of the  first floor  of the Doctor’s Lane house - and not of the whole house. THE PLEA OF LIMITATION: -----------------------      The sale  of the  Doctor’s  Lane  house  in  favour  of Defendant Nos.3,4  and 5  is dated  March 4,  1971. The sale deed was  executed by  the second  defendant acting  as  the General Power  of Attorney  of the first defendant. The sale deed pertains  to the  entire house  property,  viz.,  No.5, Doctors Lane,  New Delhi. On the date of sale, Satyawati was alive. She  died on July 2, 1972. On the death of Satyawati, her interest devolved upon her four daughters (plaintiff and Defendant Nos.6  to 8)  and the  son (first defendant) under Section 15 of the Hindu Succession Act. The present suit was instituted soon  after the death of Satyawati. The plaintiff claimed partition and separate possession of her 1/5th share in all the properties including the Doctor’s Lane house. The suit was originally filed on the basis of plaintiff being in joint possession  along with  other heirs  of Ram  Nath  and

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Satyawati of all the suit properties including Doctor’s Lane house. Later,  however, the  plaintiff applied for amendment of plaint  adding the  relief of  possession insofar  as the Doctor’s Lane  house is concerned. The amendment was granted on December 6, 1983 with a direction that the said amendment shall be effective only from the date of the said order.      The  plea   of  limitation  raised  by  the  defendant- appellant cannot  be upheld  for more  than one  reason. The reasons are the following: (a)  Among  the  issues  framed  in  the  suit,  Issue  No.5 pertains to  the plea of limitation put forward by Defendant Nos.2 to 5. The issue runs thus: "Whether the suit is within time?" On this issue, the learned Single Judge (Trial Judge) recorded a  finding in favour of the plaintiff. He found the suit within  limitation. The decision on the above issue was not contested  by the parties before the Division Bench. The Division Bench has expressly recorded that "the decisions on the above  issues (Issues  1, 2,  3, 4,  5, and  6) are  not contested by  the parties in this appeal and, therefore, the findings of  the learned  Single Judge are hereby affirmed". Once this  is so,  it is  not open  to the  third defendant- appellant in  these appeals  to seek  to re-agitate the said plea. We  cannot allow  him to do so. A party who abandons a particular plea  at a  particular stage cannot be allowed to re-agitate in appeal. (b)  The plea  of limitation  raised  in  Para  (8)  of  the defendant’s written  statement was  in the  following words: "8. It  is denied  that the  suit of the plaintiff is within limitation. The answering defendants and the predecessor-in- interest, Rajender  Nath, have  been in  any case in adverse possession of the property in suit since 1954". It is on the basis of  the said  plea that  Issue No.5 aforementioned was framed. Now, let us examine what does the said plea signify? The plea  has to be understood in the context of other pleas raised in their written statements. The defendant’s case was that the  1942 Will  is not true and that after the death of Ram Nath,  first defendant  came into  possession of all the properties including  the Doctor’s  Lane house  and  was  in adverse  possession   thereof  since   1954.  The   plea  of limitation was not based upon any other ground or fact. Once it is  held that  (a) the  1942 Will  is true,  and (b)  the remainder bequest vested in the first defendant on the death of Ram Nath (as held by us hereinabove accepting the plea of the appellant), the bottom gets knocked out of this plea. It is also  necessary to point out that there is no plea in the written statement  that the  adverse possession of the first defendant  commenced   under  and  by  virtue  of  the  1955 settlement.  There   is  also   no  plea  that  the  adverse possession of  the defendant commenced at any later point of time. It is well settled that the plea of adverse possession is not  a pure  question of law but a mixed question of fact and law. It is also well established that the party pleading adverse possession  must state with sufficient clarity as to when his  adverse possession commenced and the nature of its possession. In  this case,  the defendant’s plea is that the adverse possession of the predecessor-in-interest, i.e., the first defendant,  commenced in 1954. Once that plea falls to ground, as  held hereinabove, there is no alternate plea. To repeat, the defendants have not suggested that their adverse possession commenced at any later point of time.      Sri Arun  Mohan, learned  counsel  for  the  appellant, sought to  contend that  the adverse possession of Defendant Nos.3 to  5 commenced  under the  1955 settlement and in any event with  effect from the date of sale in their favour. In the first  instance, this  was not  the plea  in the written

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statement  and,  therefore,  we  cannot  allow  the  learned counsel to  raise such  a plea  for the  first time in these appeals,  more   particularly  in  view  of  the  fact  that Defendant Nos.3  to 5  did not  contest the  finding of  the learned Single  Judge on Issue No.5 as aforementioned. Event otherwise, we  are of the opinion that there is no substance in this  contention.  So  far  as  the  1955  settlement  is concerned, there can be no question of adverse possession by the first  defendant commencing thereunder or from its date. Under the  said settlement, the first defendant was declared to be the owner of the Doctor’s Lane house and Satyawati was given the  right of  residence in  the first  floor thereof. Once the  first defendant is declared to be the owner of the said property, there is no question of adverse possession by him. Yet another circumstance: Satyawati became the absolute owner of  the first  floor by  virtue of  the  operation  of Section 14  of the  Hindu Succession  Act,  as  held  by  us hereinabove. There  is no plea by the defendants that at any point of time after the commencement of the Hindu Succession Act, the  first defendant  dispossessed Satyawati and was in possession of the first floor also.      Now, coming  to the  submission of  Sri Arun Mohan that the adverse  possession commenced  on the  date of  sale  in their favour,  viz., March  6, 1971,  this again  is not the plea of the defendants. In any event, the sale deed does not expressly recite  that possession of the house was delivered by the  first defendant  to the  purchasers at  the time  of execution of  sale deed.*  Further, plaintiff  has stated in her deposition (See Page 47 of the Paper Book - Vol.II) that till three  months before her death, Satyawati was living in the house  along with  a maid  servant and  her son. Nothing worthwhile has  been brought out in her cross-examination to doubt her testimony on this aspect. We accept her statement. If so,  the suit  will be within twelve years, even assuming that the  suit is  deemed to  have been filed on December 6, 1983,  i.e.,   the  date   on  which   plaint  was   amended incorporating the relief of possession. ------------------------------------------------------------ *Clause (3)  of the  sale deed, which is the clause touching upon the possession of the property sold, reads: "The Vendor hereby convenants  with the  Vendees that  the said premises shall be  quietly entered into and upon and hold and enjoyed and the  rents and profits received therefrom by the Vendees without any interruption or disturbance by the Vendor or any person claiming  though or under him and, without any lawful disturbance   or   interruption   by   and   other   persons whomsoever." Clause (7) [which is wrongly numbered as clause (4)] entitles  the vendees to recover the rents due from the tenants. At  an earlier stage, the sale deed recites that "a portion of  the property"  had been  leased out to Defendant Nos.4 and  5  on  a  rent  of  Rs.300/-p.m.  But  for  these recitals, there  is  no  recital  relevant  to  delivery  of possession. [Satyawati died  on July  2, 1972.]  In this  behalf, we may mention that  the learned  Trial Judge had framed additional issues (See Page 46 of Vol.I Paper Book) with respect to the validity and legality of this sale deed.      There is yet another way of looking at this issue.      We have  found hereinabove  that  the  first  defendant became full owner of Doctor’s Lane house on the death of Ram Nath and  that pursuant  to the  1955 settlement  read  with Section 14  of the  Hindu Succession  Act. Satyawati  became full owner  of the first floor of the house which means that both of  them remained  as independent  owners of ground and first floors of the house respectively. Thereafter, when the

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entire house  was sold  to Defendant  Nos.3 to 5 on March 4, 1971, their  possession assuming  for the  sake of  argument that they  came into  possession of the house on the date of sale -  can be  treated to be adverse to Satyawati. however, the plaintiff who is found to be co-owner of the first floor along with  the first  defendant (who passed his interest in favour of  Defendant Nos.3  to 5)  filed  the  present  suit within twelve  years of  the date  of the sale deed. She had already joined  Defendant Nos.3  to 5 as parties to the suit and had  brought in  challenge the right of these defendants to occupy  the house  by virtue  of the  sale deed  in their favour. The  suit was  filed for  the relief of partition of the co-ownership  property on the basis of joint possession. So far as the first floor is concerned, it is covered by the main relief  in the  suit which was prayed for within twelve years from the date of the sale deed. Consequently, the suit cannot be  treated as  time barred  for the  said relief  of partition which is being confirmed by us.      In this  connection, we  may emphasise  that  a  person pleading adverse  possession has  no equities in his favour. Since he  is trying  to defeat the rights of the true owner, it is  for him  to clearly plead and establish all the facts necessary to  establish his  adverse possession. For all the above reasons,  the plea  of limitation  put forward  by the appellant, or by Defendant Nos.2 to 5 as the case may, be is rejected.      So far  as the plea of resumption of the plot (Doctor’s Lane house)  by the  President of  India and its re-grant to Defendant  Nos.3   to  5  is  concerned,  it  is  of  little consequence. The re-grant, if any, was in recognition and in continuation of  earlier grant.  We have  not been shown the documents relevant  in this  behalf nor any serious argument addressed on this score.      The result  of the  above discussion  is that  the sale deed executed  by the  second defendant as the General Power of Attorney  of the  first defendant  in favour of Defendant Nos.3 to 5 must be held to be valid and effective insofar as the ground  floor of  the house  property comprised in No.5, Doctors Lane,  New Delhi  is concerned.  (This is so because the first  defendant or  his legal  representatives have not chosen to  question or  impugn the said sale.) So far as the first floor of the said Doctor’s Lane house is concerned, it became the absolute property of Satyawati on the coming into force of  the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, i.e., by operation of Section  14(1) of  the said  Act. On  her death, the said first floor devolved upon her son (first defendant) and four daughters (plaintiff  and Defendant  Nos.6 to  8)  in  equal shares  under  Section  15  of  the  Hindu  Succession  Act. Defendant Nos.3  to 5  will be  entitled only  to the  1/5th share of  the  first  defendant  in  the  first  floor.  The remaining 4/5th  share in  the first  floor is  allotted  to plaintiff and  Defendant Nos.6  to 8, each 1/5th. The decree passed by  the Division  Bench of  the Delhi  High Court  is modified accordingly and is restricted to the first floor of the house  property comprised  in No.5,  Doctors  Lane,  New Delhi. All  other directions  given by the Division Bench in respect  of   the  Doctor’s  Lane  house  are  affirmed  but restricted to the first floor thereof.      The appeals  are allowed  in part accordingly. No order as to costs.