16 April 1979
Supreme Court
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N.KRISHNAMMAL Vs R. EKAMBARAM & ORS.

Bench: SARKARIA,RANJIT SINGH
Case number: Appeal Civil 2085 of 1969


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PETITIONER: N.KRISHNAMMAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: R. EKAMBARAM & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT16/04/1979

BENCH: SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH BENCH: SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)

CITATION:  1979 AIR 1298            1979 SCR  (3) 700  1979 SCC  (3) 273

ACT:      Hindu Succession Act, 1956-Ss. 8 to 10- Scope of.      Testator’s will  stated  that  in  case  his  son  died sonless "my  heirs shall  take the properties" bequeathed to him-Testator’s son died without leaving behind a male issue- Expression "my heirs" meaning of-Testator whether created an artificial class  of heirs-Term  heirs used  in  a  will-How construed-The  point   of  time   when   heirs   should   be ascertained.

HEADNOTE:      By a will the testator bequeathed certain properties to each of  his three  sons. With  regard to his third son (NP) the testator provided in Clause 5 of the will that if he had no  male   issues  "my   heirs  shall   take  the  aforesaid properties" after his life time. NP died in 1957 without any male issue. His widow (plaintiff-appellant) filed a suit for declaration of  her title  to the  properties on  the ground that her husband got the same absolutely by way of partition and that  she, as  his heir,  inherited the properties or in the alternative  for a  declaration  of  her  right  to  the properties on  a true  construction of  the testator’s will. (Defendants 1  and 2  were the sons of the testator’s eldest son while defendants 3 to 7 were the daughters and defendant 8 the widowed daughter-in-law of the testator’s second son.)      The  trial   judge  of   the  High  Court  decreed  the plaintiff’s suit holding that on the termination of the life interest  given  to  NP  who  died  sonless  the  properties devolved on  the heirs  of the  testator as if on intestacy, that  the  plaintiff  was  entitled  to  1/3  share  of  the properties, and that the remaining 2/3 share should be share by the defendants.      Defendants 1  and 2 appealed to a Division Bench of the High Court,  claiming that as the only heirs of the testator they were  entitled to get the entire property of NP who had only a  life interest  in it.  Construing cl. 5 of the will, the Division  Bench held : (1) that by his will the testator had made  his heirs  as an  "artificial" class  of  ultimate residuary legatees;  (2) that  the mandate  implicit in  the words "if  there are  no male  issues as  aforesaid" is that such class  of legatees  or heirs  of the  testator would be ascertained and  worked out  at that  point of  time when NP

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died sonless  and at  no other; (3) that this class of heirs of the  testator was to be ascertained on the death of NP on the hypothesis  that the  testator had been upto the time of NP’s death,  but according  to orthodox Hindu Law prevailing at the  time of  the testator’s  death  in  1928;  (4)  that neither Hindu  Women’s Right  to Property Act, 1937, nor the Hindu  Succession  Act,  1956  was  applicable  because  the testator actually  died long before the coming into force of these two  enactments and he did not die intestate; (5) that according to  Hindu  Law  prevailing  at  the  time  of  the testator’s death  in 1928,  respondents 1 and 2 would be the only persons entitled to the property on the death of NP, to the exclusion of the latter’s widow, the plaintiff. 701      Allowing the appeal. ^      HELD: 1(a)  On a  proper construction  of the  will the testator could  not be said to have created or carved out an "artificial" class  of heirs and made a residuary bequest in their favour.  It is  well established that the term "heirs" used in a will must be construed in a legal sense and cannot normally be  limited to  "issues" only.  It  must  mean  all persons who  are entitled  to the  property of another under the law of inheritance. [705E-F]      Angurbala Mullick  v. Debabrata  Mullick, [1951]  2 SCR 1125 at p. 1144; referred to.      (b) The expression "my heirs" used in cl. 5 of the will must be  construed as  equivalent to  "my legal  heirs". The words "if  there are  no male issues my heirs shall take the aforesaid properties"  are not  words of  gift over  to  any artificial class of heirs. [705G]      2. Construction  of clause  5 of  the will  brings  out expressly or  by inevitable  implication, these instructions of the testator:      (a) In the event of NP’s death, without male issue, the property would devolve on the testator’s heir.      (b) Such  heirs of  the testator  would be  ascertained according to Hindu Law of intestate succession.      (c) Ascertainment  of these "heirs" of the testator, is to be  done at the time of NP’s death on the hypothesis that the testator lived up to and died a moment after NP’s death.      (d) It  logically follows  from (a),  (b) and  (c) that these heirs  of the  testator would be ascertained according to the Hindu Succession Act 1956, which was the law in force on 31-1-57  when NP  died sonless and succession opened out. [706 D-F]      3. On  the port  and scope  of cl.  5 of  the will,  as spelled out  above, ascertainment of the testator’s heirs on whom the property would devolve on NP’s death, is to be done according to  ss. 8  to 10  of the  Hindu Succession Act. At that point  of time,  the plaintiff (who would be assumed to be the  widow of  a "predeceased"  son) and  the  defendants would all  be the  heirs of the testator, falling in Class I of the  Schedule referred to in s. 8, and in accordance with Rules 3  and 4 in Section 10 of the Act, the plaintiff would be entitled  to 1/3rd  share, in  the  property,  while  the remaining 2/3rd  share shall  go equally  to the branches of Ramaswami and Vedivelu. [707 DE]

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2085 of 1969.      From the  Judgment and  Decree dated  15-11-68  of  the

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Madras High Court in Criminal Side Appeal No. 45/65.      M.  Natesan   and  Mrs.   S.  Gopalakrishnan   for  the Appellants.      V. S.  Desai, P.  G. Gokhale and S. R. Agarwala for the Respondents 1-2. 702      Ex parte for the Respondents 3.8.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      SARKARIA, J.-This  appeal by  certificate  is  directed against an Appellate Judgment and Decree, dated November 15, 1968, of the High Court of Madras.      The facts leading to this appeal are as follows:      The  following   pedigree  table  will  be  helpful  in understanding the relationships of the parties:                     Palaniandi Pillai                     (died on 19-5-1928)                          |                          |      ---------------------------------------------------      |                   |                             |      |                   |                             | Ramaswami Pillai      Vadovelu Pillai      Nataraja Pillai      |                (dies in 1953)       (died in 31-1-57)      |                Dharmambal      |                (died in 1940)      | ---------------          | |             |          | R.Ekambaram   R.Bala-    |               subramaniam| (1st Defdt.)  (2nd Defdt)|                          | ------------------------------------------------------------   | Rajamani   Kamala    Padma   Sarada   Laitha        Selvaraj (3rd       (4th      (5th    (6th     (7th    (died in 1952) Defdt.)    Defdt.)   Defdt.) Defdt.)  Defdt.) =Rajammal (8th                                               Defdt.)      Palaniandi Pillai,  shown in  the above pedigree-table, owned considerable  properties. On  December  12,  1927,  he executed a  Will whereby he bequeathed certain properties to each of  his three  sons. He  appointed his  sons, Ramaswami Pillai and  Vadivelu Pillai,  as Executors  of his  Will. In regard to  his third  son, Nataraja  Pillai, the testator in clause 5 of the Will stated:           "My third  son, Nataraja  Pillai, shall  take  the      income accruing  from the  properties, namely, my cast-      stand, house  and ground, situate in the Western Row of      Mint Street,  bearing Municipal Door No. 278, Re-survey      No. 600,  Collector’s Certificate  No. 750  and  the  5      Godowns, namely, 2 Godowns situate in Varadaraja Mudali      St., bearing  Municipal Door  No.  90  and  91,  and  3      Godowns  situate   in  3rd  North  Beach  Road  bearing      Municipal Door Nos. 5, 6 and 7 to 9, Re-survey No. 3158      and 3187,  Collector’s Certificate  No. 2550. After his      life-time, if he leaves any male issue, they shall take      the aforesaid properties, with 703      powers  of   alienations  such  as  gift,  usufructuary      mortgage and  sale. If  there  are  no  male  issue  as      aforesaid,  my   heirs   shall   take   the   aforesaid      properties."      Although the Will had not been probated, yet, by mutual arrangements between  the first  two  sons  who  were  named Executors in  the Will,  and the third son, Nataraja Pillai,

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the properties were distributed in consonance with the terms of the  Will and  the Executors conveyed and transferred the same to  the respective  legatees, and  mutual release deeds were, also, executed by the three sons.      Ramaswamy Pillai  died in  1954 and  Vadivelu Pillai in 1953, Nataraja  Pillai died  on January  31,  1957,  without leaving any  issue. His  widow, Krishnammal,  the  appellant herein, filed  the suit  (C. S.  No. 7 of 1959) out of which this appeal has arisen. She claimed-      (a) partition  and  separate  possession  of  one-third share  in  the  (plaint-schedule)  properties  left  by  her husband Palaniandi  Pillai, alleging  that  the  properties’ were in the possession of the joint family consisting of his sons, or  in the  alternative, (b)  for a declaration of her title and  for possession  of the  properties on  the ground that her  husband Nataraja Pillai got the same absolutely by way of  partition under  the deed,  dated July 14, 1928, and she,  as   his  heir,   inherited  the  properties;  in  the alternative, (c)  for a  declaration of  her rights  to  the properties on a true construction of the Will of her father- in-law,  Palaniandi   Pillai,  and  for  possession  of  the properties.      The sons  of Ramaswamy  Pillai,  respondents  1  and  2 herein, were  impleaded as  defendants  1  and  2,  and  the daughters of  Vadivelu Pillai,  respondents  3  to  7,  were defendants 3  to 7.  The daughter-in-law of Vadivelu Pillai, respondent 8 herein, was added as 8th defendant.      The findings  of the  learned trial Judge, material for our purpose, were as follows:      (i) Nataraja  Pillai got  only a  life  estate  in  the properties set  out in  Schedule I  of the  Plaint; (ii) the contingent interest  in favour  of the  heirs of  Palaniandi Pillai became  vested only  on the death of Nataraja Pillai, (iii) it  is not  open to  the  plaintiff,  Krishnammal,  to invoke Section  8 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956; (iv) on the termination  of the  life  interest  given  to  Nataraja Pillai, the gift over in favour of the male issues could not take effect  as he  did not  leave any  male issue, with the consequence, that the properties, in effect, became revested in Palaniandi  Pillai, but  devolved on  his heirs  as if on intestacy; (v)  Section 111  of the  Indian  succession  Act would be applicable. 704      In the  result, the appellants’ suit was decreed and it was held  that she  was  entitled  to  one-third  share  and separate possession  of the same by partition of the Plaint- Schedule 1  properties, and  defendants 3  to 8 were equally entitled to  one-third share  together  with  mesne  profits relating to  their shares  in  the  said  properties,  while defendants 1  and 2 were entitled to the remaining one-third share.      Aggrieved, defendants  1 and 2 preferred Letters Patent Appeal in  the High Court, contending that, according to the terms of  the Will  of Palaniandi Pillai, they were his only heirs and  entitled to  get the  entire properties  in which Nataraja Pillai  held only a life interest; and that neither the plaintiff  nor defendants  3 to  8 were  entitled to any share.      The Appellate  Bench of  the High  Court purporting  to proceed mainly  on the scope and construction of Clause 5 of the Will of Palaniandi Pillai, held:      (1) By  his Will  (Ex. P.  2) the testator had made "my heirs", i.e.  the testator’s  heirs as an "artificial" class of ultimate residuary legatees.      (2) This  class of  legatees  or  "my  heirs"  did  not

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acquire a  vested interest  in the  residuary bequest on the death of the testator.      (3) The  ultimate bequest  in their favour would become vested only in the event of Nataraja dying sonless.      (4) The  mandate implicit in the words "if there are no male issues  as aforesaid" occurring in Clause 5 of the Will (Ex. P.  2) is  that such  class of legatees or heirs of the testator would  be ascertained  and worked out at that point of time when Nataraja died sonless, and at no other.      (5) This  class of  "my heirs" of the testator would be ascertained with  reference to the point of Nataraja’s death (without a  son) on January 31, 1957, when succession opened out and the bequest became distributable, "on the hypothesis that Palaniandi  Pillai had  lived up  to  that  time"  i.e. January 31, 1957.      (6) Although  this class  of the  heirs of the testator was to  be ascertained on January 31, 1957 on the hypothesis that the  testator and  Nataraja died  simultaneously,  such ascertainment could  not be  done either by resorting to the Hindu Women’s  Rights to  Property Act, 1937 or to the Hindu Succession Act,  1956, because  Palaniandi  Pillai  actually died in 1928, long before the coming into force of these two enactments and he did not die intestate. 705      (7) Such  class of  heirs of  the testator  were to  be determined according to the orthodox Hindu Law prevailing at the time of the testator’s death on May 19, 1928.      (8) Section  111 of  the Indian  Succession Act was not applicable.      On the above reasoning, the Appellate Bench of the High Court reversing  the decree of the learned trial Judge, held that Respondents  1 and  2  herein  were  the  only  persons entitled to  the entire  Schedule 1 property on the death of Nataraja Pillai, to the exclusion of the latter’s widow, the plaintiff. Thus  the appeal  was allowed and the plaintiff’s suit dismissed.      After obtaining  a certificate under Article 133 of the Constitution   from   the   High   Court,   the   plaintiff, Krishnammal, has come in appeal before this Court.      Controversy in  this case  hinges around  the scope and construction of  Clause 5  of the  Will (Ex.  P-2). In  that connection, the first question that arises for consideration is: Did  the testator  by this Clause create or carve out an "artificial" class  of  his  heirs’  and  make  a  residuary bequest in their favour ?      In our  opinion, on  a proper construction of the Will, the answer to this question must be in the negative.      It is  well settled  that legal  terms such as "heirs", used in  a Will must be construed in the legal sense, unless a contrary  intention is  clearly expressed by the testator. The word  "heirs", as pointed out by this Court in Angurbala Mullick v.  Debabrata Mullick(1)  cannot normally be limited to "issues"  only. It must mean all persons who are entitled to the property of another under the law of inheritance.      There is  nothing in  the language  of Clause  5 of the Will which  compels the  construction that  by  use  of  the expression "my heirs" the testator meant something different from his  ’heirs under  the law.’  The expression "my heirs" has therefore  to be  construed as  equivalent to  "my legal heirs". Thus  considered, the  words used  in the  last  two sentences of Clause 5 of the Will are not words of gift over to any  ’artificial’ class of heirs. They only indicate that in the  event of  Nataraja’s death  without any  male issue, further devolution  of the estate that had been given to him for life,  would be  regulated in  favour of  the testator’s

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heirs ascertained  in accordance with Hindu Law of intestate succession. That  is to say, the testator did not specify or lay down  any line of heirs, deviating from the Hindu Law of intestate succession. 706      The ground is now clear to consider the second question which is  pivotal to the whole problem: Whether the heirs of the testator, on whom the estate was to devolve in the event of Nataraja  dying sonless, were to be ascertained according to Hindu  Law in  force at  the time  of Nataraja’s death or according to Hindu Law, prevailing in 1928 when the testator died. This  question, also,  is one  of reaching at the real intent of the testator.      In order  to expatiate, the true import of the last two sentences of Clause 5 of the Will (Ex. P 2), the same can be legitimately expanded, parenthesized and elucidated so as to read like this:           "After Nataraja’s life-time, if he leaves any male      issue, they  shall take  the aforesaid properties, with      powers  of   alienation...  If  Nataraja  dies  without      leaving any male issue, then my heirs, then ascertained      according  to   law  of  inheritance,  shall  take  the      aforesaid properties."      Thus amplified  and elucidated,  Clause 5  of the  Will brings out,  expressly or  by  inevitable  implication,  the intention and  instructions of the testator in regard to the following:      (a) In  the event of the termination of the life-estate of Nataraja  on his  death, without male issue, the property will devolve on "my heirs" i.e. the testator’s heirs.      (b) Such  heirs of  the testator  are to be ascertained according to the Hindu Law of intestate succession.      (c) Such  ascertainment of the heirs of the testator is to be  done on  the date  of Nataraja’s  death without  male issue, when  succession opens  out in favour of those heirs, and not  with reference to the date of the testator’s death. This necessarily implies that "my heirs" of the testator are required to  be  ascertained  on  the  hypothesis  that  the testator lived  upto and  died  a  moment  after  Nataraja’s death.      If what  is spelled out at (a), (b) and (c) be the true construction of  Clause 5  of the  Will,  it  logically  and inexorably follows  therefrom,  that  ascertainment  of  the heirs of  the testator, on whom the property was intended to devolve in  the event  of Nataraja  dying sonless, was to be made in accordance with Hindu Law of intestate Succession as in force  on the  date of  Nataraja’s death,  on January 31, 1957, when succession opened out, and not in accordance with the orthodox  Hindu Law  prevailing in  1928, which  on  the relevant  date,   January  31,  1957,  stood  abrogated  and superseded by the Hindu Succession Act. 1956. The conclusion is therefore  inescapable that "my heirs" referred to by the testator in  Clause 5 of his Will, have to be ascertained in accordance with the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. In so 707 doing,  we   are  only  giving  effect  to  the  import  and construction of the Will of the testator, and no question of giving retrospective operation to the statute is involved.      The learned  Judges of the High Court have said that at the  time  of  making  the  Will,  the  testator  could  not predicate that  at the  time  of  Nataraja’s  death  without leaving any  son, the  Hindu  Law  of  Succession  would  be different from  the one prevailing at the time of making the Will or the testator’s death. Nevertheless, the testator was definitely contemplating  the contingency  of Nataraja dying

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without any  male issue,  and the  necessity of ascertaining the testator’s  heirs at  that point  of  time  for  further devolution of  the property.  It cannot,  therefore, be said that ascertainment  of the testator’s heirs according to the law in  force at  the time  of happening of the contemplated contingency, was wholly beyond the ken of the testator.      In the view we take of the import and scope of Clause 5 of the  Will (Ex.  P.  2)  ascertainment  of  the  heirs  of Palaniandi Pillai  has to  be done on the assumption that he died intestate,  a moment  after  Nataraja  Pillai’s  death, according to Sections 8 to 10 of the Hindu Succession Act.      At that  point of  time, the  plaintiff (who  would  be assumed to  be the  widow of  a "predeceased"  son), and the defendants would  all be  heirs of  the testator, falling in Class I  of the Schedule referred to in Section 8. According to Section 9, all the heirs in Class I of the Schedule shall take simultaneously,  to the  exclusion of  all other heirs. The distribution  of the  property among  the plaintiff  and defendants will  be governed by Rules 3 and 4 in Section 10, which are as under:           "Rule  3.-The   heirs  in   the  branch   of  each      predeceased son  or each  predeceased daughter  of  the      intestate shall take between them one share."           "Rule 4.-The distribution of the share referred to      in Rule 3-           (i)  among  the   heirs  in   the  branch  of  the                predeceased son  shall be  so made  that  his                widow (or  widows together) and the surviving                sons and  daughters get  equal portions;  and                the branch  of predeceased sons gets the same                portion;           (ii)  among   the  heirs  in  the  branch  of  the                predeceased daughter  shall be  so made  that                the surviving  sons and  daughters get  equal                portions." 708      In accordance  with the  aforesaid  provisions  of  the Hindu Succession Act, the plaintiff would be entitled to get 1/3rd share  in Schedule I property in which her husband had a life-interest,  while the  remaining 2/3rd  share  in  the property shall be equally distributed among the two branches of the  defendants, the  branches of  Ramaswami and Vadivelu getting 1/3rd share each.      For the  foregoing reasons,  we allow  this appeal, set aside the  judgment of the High Court and pass a preliminary decree for  partition and  separate possession  in favour of the plaintiff  with respect  to her  1/3rd share in the suit property. In  the circumstances of the case, the parties are left to pay and bear their own costs. P.B.R.                                       Appeal allowed. 709