17 April 1984
Supreme Court
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ANANT KIBE & ORS. Vs PURUSHOTTAM RAO & ORS

Bench: SEN,A.P. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 497 of 1971


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PETITIONER: ANANT KIBE & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: PURUSHOTTAM RAO & ORS

DATE OF JUDGMENT17/04/1984

BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) BENCH: SEN, A.P. (J) DESAI, D.A. ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)

CITATION:  1984 AIR 1121            1984 SCR  (3) 484  1984 SCALE  (1)783  CITATOR INFO :  R          1991 SC1972  (31)

ACT:      Madhya  Pradesh  Land  Revenue  Code  1959,  s.  158(1) complete  extinction   of  inam   rights  and  conferral  of bhumiswami  rights-Inam   lands  became   bhumiswami  lands- Impartibility and  devolution by  survivorship  by  rule  of lineal primogeniture lost.      Words and  Phrases-"In respect  of land  held by  him"- Meaning of  S. 158  (1)(b) Madhya  Pradesh Land Revenue Code 1959.

HEADNOTE:      In 1837  the late  Maharaja Harihar  Rao Holkar  made a grant of  an inam  of a  garden to  the priest of the Holkar family. The  grant of  inam  was  on  Putra  Pautradi  Vansh Parampara condition by way of parvarish i.e., maintenance,      The three appellants in the appeal were the legal heirs and successors  of the grandson of the original inamdar, and the 1st  Respondent as  the sole survivor of the eldest male line of  the last  holder, the inamdar and as also the karta of the joint Hindu family.      The  appellants-plaintiffs   instituted  a   suit   for partition and separate possession of their half-share in the joint family  property alleging  that defendant No. 1 in his capacity as  the karta  of the  joint Hindu  family  was  in possession and  management of  the  joint  family  property, including  the  inam  lands.  The  claim  was  contested  by respondents-defendants  1  and  2  who  contended  that  the plaintiffs predecessor-in-interest  had separated  from  the family by taking his share in the year 1917-18 and therefore the plaintiffs  had no  kind of  right or  title in the suit property and that the inam lands and the properties acquired from and  out of  the inam  being impartible  in nature, the succession to  which was  governed by  the  rule  of  lineal primogeniture,  the   properties  exclusively   belonged  to defendant No.  1 and  that the conferral of bhumiswami right on defendant No. 1 under S. 158 (1)(b) of the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959 made the suit lands his separate and exclusive property  and it  was not part of the joint estate of the undivided family.

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    The Additional  District Judge held that the inam lands together with  the property  acquired from the income of the inam were  ancestral impartible  estate since  the same  had devolved by survivorship by the rule of linea 485 primogeniture  and   therefore  constituted   joint   family property and  that the rule of impartibility and the special mode of  succession by the rule of lineal primogeniture were nothing but  incidents of  the inam which stood extinguished by S.  158(1)(b) of  the Code.  The  plaintiff’s  claim  for partition and  separate possession  to the  extent of  their half-share in  the plaint  schedule properties  and to mesne profits were decreed.      On appeal,  the High Court reversed the judgment of the Additional District  Judge with regard to the inam lands and the houses  and other  property acquired  out  of  the  inam holding. The  High Court  held that  the plaintiffs who were the junior  members of  the family  had no  kind of right or title to  the inam lands except the right to maintenance and that defendant No. 1, the inamdar for the time being, became the bhumiswami  of the  suit lands under S. 158(1)(b) of the Code which constituted his separate property. The High Court however maintained  the decree  of the  Additional  District Judge  with  regard  to  partition  and  separation  of  the plaintiffs’ share of immovable property.      Allowing the appeal, ^      HELD: 1.  S. 158  (1)(b) of  the  Madhya  Pradesh  Land Revenue Code,  1959 effected  a complete  extinction of  the inam rights followed by simultaneous conferral of bhumiswami rights. Every  person, in respect of the land held by him in the Madhya  Bharat region, as an inamdar, at the time of the coming into  force of the Code, became a bhumiswami thereof, and acquired  all the  rights and  became subject to all the liabilities of a bhumiswami under the Code. [493B]      2. The words "in respect of land held by him" appearing in S.  (158)(1) (b) refer to the status and character of the tenure holder  in relation  to the  holding on the appointed day. The  accrual of the status of bhumiswami by such person was automatic  and he  acquired all  the rights  and  became subject to  all the  liabilities conferred or imposed upon a bhumiswami by or under the Code. [493C]      3. On  a combined reading of SS. 158(1) (b) and 164 the legal consequence  that ensued  was that the incident of the impartibility and the special mode of succession by the rule of primogeniture which were terms of the grant of inam lands under  the   Jagir.  Manual   of  the   Holkar  State  stood extinguished. After the conferment of bhumiswami rights, the incidents and character of the tenure became transformed the restrictions placed  thereon  disappeared,  and  such  lands became capable  of being  held in  joint ownership  like any other coparcenary-property. [493E]      4. The conferral of bhumiswami rights on the holder for the time  being under S. 158(1)(b) of the Code in respect of ancestral inam  lands necessarily  enures to  the benefit of all the members of the joint family. [493F]      5. Impartibility  is essentially  a creature of custom. Here it  is a  term of  the grant.  The junior  members of a family in the case of an ancient 486 impartible joint family estate take no right in the property by birth  and therefore  have no  right of  partition having regard  to  the  very  nature  of  the  estate  that  it  is imartible. The only incidence for joint property which still attaches to  the joint  family  property  is  the  right  of

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survivorship which,  of course, is not inconsistent with the custom of impartibility. [495D]      In the  instant case,  the  incident  of  impartibility attached to  inam lands,  no longer  exists by  reason of S. 158(1)(b) of  the Code  as they  have now  become bhumiswami lands. The  right  of  junior  members  of  the  family  for maintenance is  governed by  custom and  not based  upon any joint right or interest in the property as co-owners. [495E]      6.  To   establish  that   a  family  governed  by  the Mitakshara in which there is an impartible estate has ceased to be  joint, it is necessary to prove an intention, express or implied,  on the part of the junior members of the family to renounce their succession to the estate. [495H]      7. The  impartibility of  the tenure  governed  by  the Jagir Manual  of the  Holkar State  and the  rule of  lineal primogeniture governed  by the  Jagir  Manual,  Chapter  11, rules 2  and 3  did not  per se  destroy its nature as joint family property  or render  it the  separate property of the last holder  so as to destroy the right of survivorship; the estate its  character  of  joint  family  property  and  its devolution was  governed by  the devolution  was governed by the rule  of survivorship  as modified by the rule of lineal primogeniture. [495G]      Shiba Prasad  Singh v.  Rani Prayag Kumari Debi & Ors., LR (1931-32)  59 IA  331 and  Nagesk Bisto  Desai v.  Khando Tirmal Desai, (1982) 3 SCR 341, referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil  Appeal No. 497 of 1971.      Appeal by  certificate from  the  Judgment  and  Decree dated 2.5.1969  of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh, (Indore Bench) in Civil First Appeal No. 91 of 1962.      V.A. Bobde,  S.D. Mudaliar and A.G. Ratnaparkhi for the appellants.      G.L. Sanghi,  D.N.  Misra  and  S.  Sukumaran  for  the respondents.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      SEN, J.  This appeal on certificate is directed against a judgment and decree of the Madhya Pradesh High Court dated May 2,  1969 substantially reversing the judgment and decree passed by  the third Additional District Judge, Indore dated June 18/19,1962 487 and  dismissing  the  plaintiffs’  suit  for  partition  and separate  possession   of  their  half  share  of  the  suit properties detailed  in Schedule  ’A’ appended to the plaint except with respect to a house and the agricultural lands at Ujjain. During  the course  of the  hearing the parties have come to  a settlement  and the  terms of the compromise have been recorded. Nevertheless, the correctness of the judgment delivered by  the High Court is open to serious doubt and as it involves  a question of general importance, we proceed to record our views.      The facts giving rise to the appeal are as follows. The report of  the Inam  Commissioner discloses that in 1837 the late Maharaja  Harihar Rao Holkar made a grant of an inam of a garden  known as  Rambag in Kasba Indore admeasuring 15.62 acres to  Abaji Ballal,  the priest  of the Holkar family on his representation  that he  was in  service  of  the  Huzur Darbar for  a long  period but had no garden at Kasba Indore and was  therefore finding  it difficult  in  getting  tulsi leaves and  flowers for making offerings to the deities. The

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grant of  inam to  him was on Putra Pautradi Vansh Parampara condition by  way of  parvarish. It  appears from the report that Abaji  Ballai had only one son named Laxman and he also had only  one son  named Raghunath  Rao. After  the death of Abaji Ballal  be was  succeeded by  Laxman. It  appears that Laxman represented  in the year 1886 that he was entitled to hold as  inam an  area of  15.62 acres in Kasba Indore while the  land  in  his  possession  was  only  5.91  acres,  the remaining area having been acquired by the Durbar and prayed for a grant of an area of 9.72 acres in exchange. An inquiry was thereupon  held and  the claim  was found to be true. By Durbar Order  No. 9  dated December 14, 1888 the inamdar was given 9.72  acres of  land in  Mauja Palashiya Hana. It also appears that  the family  built residential houses at Indore presumably out  of the  income of the inam and also acquired immovable properties  at Ujjain  consisting of  a house  and some agricultural  lands. After the death of Laxman Rao, his son Raghunath Rao was recognized to be the inamdar.      The common  ancestor  Raghunath  Rao  had  three  sons, Madhav Rao, Sadashiv Rao and Gopal Rao. Of these, Madhav Rao and Sadashiv Rao had predeceased their father Raghunath Rao. Madhav Rao died without leaving an heir while Sadashiv 488 Rao left  a son  Purushottam Rao.  The third  son Gopal  Rao disappeared about  an year  before the  death of  his father Raghunath Rao  and his  whereabouts were  not known till the news of  his death in 1932 at the Secunderabad was received, after the  death of  Raghunath Rao  in 1928. On the death of Raghunath Rao,  the last  Purushottam  Rao  being  the  sole survivor of  the eldest  male  line  of  holder  became  the inamdar and also the karta of the joint Hindu family.      The suit out of which this appeal arises was instituted by the  three appellants Anant, Govind and their mother Smt. Laxmi Bai being the legal heirs and successors of Gopal Rao, as  plaintiffs  on  December  12,  1955  for  partition  and separate possession  of their half share in the joint family property described  in Schedule  ’A’ appended  to the plaint against respondents  1 and  2 Purushottam Rao and his mother Smt. Rama  Bai being  defendants 1 and 2, impleading Krishna Rao, the  eldest son  of Gopal Rao as defendant 3 because he failed to  join them as a plaintiff in the suit. The case of the plaintiffs  was that  defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao in his capacity  as the  karta of the joint Hindu family was in possession and  management of  the  joint  family  property, including the inam lands at Kasba Indore and Mauja Palashiya Hana. The  plaintiffs’ claim  was contested  by defendants 1 and 2  Purushottam Rao and Smt. Rama Bai. They pleaded inter alia that  the plaintiffs’ predecessor-in-interest Gopal Rao had separated  from the  family by  taking his  share in the year 1917-18  and therefore  the plaintiffs  had no  kind of right or  title in  the suit  properties that the inam lands and the  properties acquired  from out  of  the  inam  being impartible in  nature, the  succession to which was governed by  the   rule  of   lineal  primogeniture,  the  properties exclusively belonged to defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao; and that the  conferral of  bhumiswami rights  on  respondent  1 under s.  158(1)(b) of the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959 made the suit lands his separate and exclusive property and it  was not  part of  the joint  estate of the undivided family. Incidentally,  the Madhya Pradesh Land Revenue Code, 1959 was brought into force w.e.f. October 1, 1959 which had the effect of changing the nature of the tenure.      The point  in controversy in this appeal is now limited to the 489

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inam lands  and the  houses and  other properties built from out of  the income  of the  inam lands  at Kasba  Indore and Mauja Palashiya  Hana. The learned Additional District Judge held that  the  inam  lands  together  with  the  properties acquired  from   the  income  of  the  inam  were  ancestral impartible  estate   since  the   same   had   devolved   by survivorship  by   the  rule  of  lineal  primogeniture  and therefore constituted  joint family  property and  that  the rule of  impartibility and the special mode of succession by the rule  of lineal primogeniture were nothing but incidents of the  inam which stood extinguished by s. 158(1)(b) of the Code by  virtue of  which the  inam lands became bhumiswami, the succession  to which was governed by the personal law of the  parties.   The  learned   Additional   District   Judge accordingly held  that the  inam lands  at Kasba  Indore and Mauja Palashiya  Hana constituted  joint family  property of the parties  and decreed the plaintiffs’ claim for partition and separate possession to the extent of their half share in the properties  described in  Schedule ’A’ to the plaint and to mesne profits thereof. On appeal, the High Court reversed the judgment  of the  learned Additional District Judge with regard to  the inam  lands and the houses and other property acquired at  Indore out  of the  income of  the inam holding that they constituted a special grant regulated by the Jagir Manual of the Holkar State. According to the High Court, the plaintiffs who  were the junior members of the family had no kind of  right or title to the inam lands except perhaps the right of maintenance and that too up to a certain degree and subject to  its determination  by the State. Accordingly the High Court  held that  defendant No.  1 Purushottam Rao, the inamdar for  the time  being, became  the bhumiswami  of the suit lands under s. 158(1) (b) of the Code which constituted his separate property. The High Court however maintained the decree of  the learned Additional District Judge with regard to partition  and separation  of the  plaintiffs’  share  of immovable properties at Ujjain.      The short  and narrow  question involved in this appeal is whether  the inam  lands which  became  bhumiswami  lands under s.  158(1)(b)  of  the  Code  were  the  self-acquired property of  the inamdar and defendant No. 1 Purushottam Rao was entitled  to remain in full and exclusive possession and enjoyment thereof,  or the conferral of bhumiswami rights in respect of such inam 490 lands on him must enure to the benefit of the members of the joint Hindu  family and  therefore the bhumiswami lands were liable  to   be  partitioned   like  any  other  coparcenary property.      It  is   common  ground   that  the   inam  lands  were impartible, the succession to which was governed by the rule of lineal  primogeniture. That  must be so because the Jagir Manual of  the Holkar State by r. 134 provides that the rule which refers  to jagirs  will apply  to inams also except to the extent modified by any Darbar Order or circular. Chapter II, r. 2 provides:      "2. A  Jagir grant  shall be indivisible and impartible      property."      R. 3  provides for the rule of lineal primogeniture and it follows:      "3. Every Jagir grant, which is not a purely lifegrant,      shall descend in the order of primogeniture i.e. to the      eldest male  line of  the last holder e.g. If a grantee      has descendants  as shown  in  the  following  pedigree      table:                            A (Grantee)

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                             |                               |           -----------------------------------------           B                   C                   D           |                   |                   |      -----------        ------------              |      |         |        G    H     I              |      |         |                   |              J      E         F                   |              |      |                             N              |      |                                       ---------      K                                       L       M           The Jagir will after A’s death descend to B. After      B it will descend to E to K."      Proviso to  r.3 preserves  the right  of maintenance of the junior members of the family and it reads:           "Provided that the right of the members of the 491      junior branches,  claiming descent  from  the  original      grantee to  a share  in the  income  of  the  Jagir  or      maintenance according  to the  custom of  the family or      orders  of   the  Government,  shall  not  be  affected      thereby."      Although the  original sanad granted to Abaji Ballal in 1837 is not forthcoming, the report of the Inam Commissioner discloses that  the grant  of  inam  to  him  was  on  Putra Pautradi Vanash Parampara condition by way of parvarish i.e. maintenance. Thus  the grant  of  the  inam  lands  was  for maintenance of  the members of the joint family and was also heritable.      There is ample evidence on record to show that the inam lands although  impartible were always treated by members of the family  as part  of the  joint family properties and the succession to  the inam  was by  the rule of survivorship as modified by  the rule  of lineal  primogeniture. It  is also clear that the junior members were in joint enjoyment of the inam lands  and  that  was  because  the  proviso  to  r.  3 expressly recognized  their rights  of maintenance. Further, the evidence  shows that  the  properties  acquired  by  the inamdar for  the time  being from  out of  the income of the inam such  as the  two houses at Indore and other properties were always dealt with as part of the joint family property. There is  on record,  an application  for mutation  made  by defendant No.  1 Purushottam Rao on December 15, 1928 (Ex.P- 6) wherein  he had  stated that his grand-father had died on August 8,  1928 and  therefore he prayed for substitution of the names  of the  legal heirs  in the  inam  register,  the material portion of which reads:           "I am  his son’s son i.e. his grandson and as such      his heir.  (A) Besides me the sons of my uncle i.e. (1)      Krishna Rao  (2) Anant  Rao and (3) Govind Rao are also      his heirs, Besides us no other person is his heir (A)."      The prayer  was that  the names  of all  these heirs be substituted. There  is also  an affidavit of Purushottam Rao dated December  7, 1928 (Ex. P-5) regarding the death of his grand father Raghunath Rao and it mentions that he had three sons viz,  Madhav Rao,  Sadashiv Rao  and Gopal  Rao. It was averred that Madhav 492 Rao who  was the eldest had already expired leaving no issue and his wife had also died and that the whereabouts of Gopal Rao were  not known  since 3  1/2 or  4 years. It was stated that Gopal Rao had three sons viz. Krishna, Anant and Govind and all the three of them were minors. It then recites: "All the three  minor sons  of Gopal Rao were living jointly with

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me." Purushottam  Rao examined  as DW 24 has stated that the whereabouts of  Gopal Rao  were not  known when  his  grand- father Raghunath  Rao was  operated upon  resulting  in  his death in  the hospital.  When confronted with portion marked ’AA’ in  Ex. P-6 he unequivocally admitted that he could not deny the  statement made  therein. He  however  went  on  to assent  that   the  expenditure   incurred  by  him  on  the plaintiffs by  way of maintenance was not incurred by reason of their  being the  members of the joint family but because they had  no resources  of their own and it was necessary to give them  maintenance allowance under the Inam Rules. It is quite apparent  from the  course of  dealings that  the inam lands at  Kasba Indore  and Mauja  Palashiya Hana  and other inam  properties   in  the  hands  of  the  common  ancestor Raghunath  Rao   which  devolved   upon  defendant   No.   1 Purushottam Rao  were nothing  but an  ancestral  impartible estate.      Under the scheme of the Code there was a drastic change brought about  not only  in the nature of the tenure of inam lands but also in the mode of succession. S.158(1)(b) of the code provides:           "158. Bhumiswami-(1)  Every person who at the time      of coming  into force  of this  Code, belongs to any of      the following  classes shall be called a Bhumiswami and      shall have  all the  rights and  be subject  to all the      liabilities conferred  or imposed  upon a Bhumiswami by      or under this code, namely:      (a)  **       **         **         **        **      (b) every  person in respect of land held by him in the      Madhya  Bharat  region  as  a  Pakka  Tenant  or  as  a      Muafidar, Inamdar,  or Concessional  Holder, as defined      in the 493      Madhya Bharat  Land Revenue  and  Tenancy  Act,  Samvat      2007(66 of 1950)";      The plain  language of  s.158(1)(b) effected a complete extinction of  the  inam  rights  followed  by  simultaneous conferral of  bhumiswami rights. Every person, in respect of the land  hold by  him in  the Madhya  Bharat region  as  an inamdar, at  the time  of the coming into force of the code, became a bhumiswami thereof, and acquired all the rights and became subject  to all the liabilities of a bhumiswami under the Code.  The words  "in  respect  of  land  held  by  him" appearing in  s.158(1)(b) refer  to the status and character of the  tenure holder  in relation  to the  holding  on  the appointed day.  The accrual  of the  status of bhumiswami by such person was automatic and he acquired all the rights and became subject  to all  the liabilities conferred or imposed upon a  bhumiswami by  or under  the Code.  As  a  necessary corollary, he  became subject  to the  provisions of  s.164. S.164  provides  that  subject  to  his  personal  law,  the interests of  a Bhumiswami  shall, on  his  death,  pass  by inheritance, survivorship or bequest, as the case may be. On a combined  reading  of  ss.158(1)(b)  and  164,  the  legal consequence  that   ensued  was   that   the   incident   of impartibility and the special mode of succession by the rule of primogeniture which were terms of the grant of inam lands under  the   Jagir  Manual   of  the   Holkar  State,  stood extinguished. After the conferment of bhumiswami rights, the incidents and character of the tenure became transformed and the restrictions  placed thereon disappeared, and such lands became capable  of being  held in  joint ownership  like any other coparcenary  property. It  must logically  follow that the conferral  of bhumiswami  rights on  the holder  for the time being  under s.158(1)(b)  of the  Code  in  respect  of

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ancestral inam  lands must  necessarily enure to the benefit of all the members of the joint family.      In our  judgment, the  view expressed by the High Court that the inam lands and the two houses constructed at Indore and other  properties acquired from out of the income of the inam exclusively belonged to defendant No. 1 Purshottam Rao, the holder  for the time being at the time when the Code was brought into  force, can  hardly  be  sustained.  Since  the decision of  the Privy Council in Shiba Prasad Singh v. Rani Prayag Kumari Debi and ors(1). it must taken as well-settled that an  estate which is impartible by custom cannot be said to be the separate or exclusive 494 property of  the holder of the estate. Where the property is ancestral and  the holder  has succeeded  to it, it would be part of  the joint  estate of the undivided Hindu family. In the  following   illuminating  passage   Sir  Dinshaw  Mulla observes:           "The keynote  of the whole position, in their Lord      ships view,  is to be found in the following passage in      the judgment in the Tipperah(1) case:           "Where a  custom is proved to exist, it supersedes      the general  law, which  however, still  regulates  all      beyond the custom."           "Impartibility  is   essentially  a   creature  of      custom. In  the case of ordinary joint family property,      the members  of  the  family  have  (1)  the  right  of      partition; (2) the right to restrain alienations by the      head of  the family except for necessity, (3) the right      of maintenance  and (4)  the right of survivorship. The      first of  these rights  cannot exist  in the case of an      impartible edate, though ancestral from the very nature      of the  estate. The  second is  incompatible  with  the      custom of impartibility as laid down in Sartaj Kumari’s      case(2) and  the first Pittapur case(3) and so also the      third as  held in  the second Pittapur case(4). To this      extent the  general law  of  the  Mitakshara  has  been      superseded by  custom, and the impartible estate though      ancestral  is  clothed  with  the  incidents  of  self-      acquired  and  separate  property.  But  the  right  of      survivorship is  not inconsistent  with the  custom  of      impartibility. This right, therefore, still remains and      this is  what was  held in  Baijanth’s case(6). To this      extent the  estate still retains its character of joint      family property,  and its devolution is governed by the      general Mitakshara  law applicable  to  such  property.      Though the  other rights which a coparcener acquired by      birth in  joint family  property no  longer exist,  the      birthright of the senior member to take by survivorship      still remains,  Nor is  this right a mere succession-is      similar to  that of  a reversioner  succeeding  on  the      death 495      of a Hindu widow to her husband’s estate. It is a right      which is  capable of  being renounced  and surrendered.      Such being  their Lordship’s  view, it  follows that in      order to  establish  that  a  family  governed  by  the      Mitakshara in  which there  is an impartible estate has      ceased  to  be  joint  it  is  necessary  to  prove  an      intention, express  or implied,  on  the  part  of  the      junior members of the family to renounce their right of      succession to the estate."      The incidents  of impartible  estate laid down in Shiba Prasad Singh’s  case and  the law  there  stated  have  been reaffirmed in  the subsequent decisions of the Privy Council

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and of  this Court.  It is not necessary to refer to them as they have  all been  dealt with in a recent judgment of this Court in  Nagesh Bisto  Desai  v.  Khando  Tirmal  Desai(1). Impartibility is  essentially a  creature of custom. Here it is a term of the grant. The junior members of a joint family in the  case of  ancient impartible joint family estate take no right  in the  property by  birth and  therefore have  no right of  partition having  regard to the very nature of the estate that  it is  impartible. The only incidence for joint property which  still attaches  to the joint family property is the  right of  survivorship  which,  of  course,  is  not inconsistent with  the custom of impartibility. The incident of impartibility  attached to inam lands no longer exists by reason of  s.158(1)(b) of  the Code  aa they have now become bhumiswami lands.  The right of junior members of the family for maintenance is governed by custom and not based upon any joint right  or interest  in the property as owners. In case of inams  in  the  Holkar  State  such  right  was  again  a condition of  the grant. In view of the authorities cited in Nagesh Bisto  Desai’s case,  supra, it must be held that the inam lands  though impartible were nevertheless joint family properties of  the parties.  The impartibility of the tenure governed by  the Jagir  Manual of  the Holkar  State and the rule of  lineal primogeniture  governed by the Jagir Manual, Chapter II,  rr.2 and 3 did not per se destroy its nature as joint family  property or render it the separate property of the last  holder so as to destroy the right of survivorship; the estate  retained its  character of joint family property and its  devolution was  governed  by  the  rule  of  lineal primogeniture. To  establish that  a family  governed by the Mitakshara in which there is an impartible estate has ceased to be  joint, it is necessary to prove an intention, express or implied  on the  part of the junior members of the family to renounce their succession to the estate. 496 The learned  Additional District  Judge during the course of his judgment  has held on consideration of the evidence that there was  no partition  in the  joint family  as alleged by defendants 1 and 2 and that finding has not been reversed by the High Court in appeal.      The learned  Additional District  Judge has referred to several well-known  decisions of  the Privy  Council dealing with the  incidents of  an impartible estate, including that of Shiba  Prasad Singh’s  case, supra,  but the  High  Court surprisingly did  not refer  to any one of them. He has also particularly referred  to the  nature  and  incidence  of  a protected thekedari  under s.102  of the  C.P. Land  Revenue Act, 1917  and relied upon the decision of the Privy Council in Thakur  Bhagwan Singh  v. Darbar  Singh’(1) and  also  to several decisions  of the  Nagpur and  Madhya  Pradesh  High Courts and  in particular  to Mani  Ram v.  Ram Dayal(2) and Smt. Pilanoni  Janakram v.  Anandsingh Sakharam(3)  where  a similar question  arose. He further felt that the principles laid down by the Bombay High Court in Lingappa Rayappa Desai v.  Kadappa   Bapurao  Desai(4)   dealing  with  the  Bombay Hereditary Offices  Act, 1874 holding that watan lands stand in the  same footing  as ancestral  impartible estate  in  a joint Hindu  family passing by survivorship from one line to another according  to primogeniture,  must govern  the case. The High Court declined to follow the long line of decisions of the  Nagpur and  Madhya Pradesh  High Courts dealing with the protected  the kedari  tenure under  s. 109  of the C.P. Land Revenue Code, 1917 saying that they were "inapplicable" to the  case of  jagir and  inam properties which at no time were  considered   to  be   joint  family   properties   but

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constituted a ’special kind of grant’ regulated by the terms of the  grant or  the rules  governing  the  same.  It  also declined to  follow the decision of the Bombay High Court in Lingappa’s case,  supra, because  it did not "appeal" to the Court as  it distinguished  the decision  of the Madras High Court in  Sri Pavu  Janardhana Krishna  Ranga Rao Bahadur v. The State  of Madras "for reasons which did not appear to be sound". It  is difficult  to sustain  both on  principle and precedent the  view of  the High Court that inam lands being impartible in  nature, the  succession to which was governed by  the   rule  of  lineal  primogeniture,  the  two  houses constructed at Indore and other properties acquired 497 from out  of the  income of the inam exclusively belonged to defendant No.  1 Purushottam  Rao, the  holder for  the time being and constituted his separate property.      In the former State of Madhya Pradesh, the existence of such and  impartible tenure  was not unknown. The nature and incidence of a protected thekedari tenure under s.109 of the C.P. Land Revenue Act, 1977 came up for consideration before the Privy  Council in Bhagwan Singh’s case, supra. The Privy Council observed  that though  the  tenure  of  a  protected thekedari was  impartible and descended by primogeniture and was made  inalienable, and  it was  provided that  only  one person at  a time  shall be  entitled  to  succeed  to  such status, at the same time:           "The  Act  recognises  that  leasehold  interests,      though impartible,  may nevertheless  be  joint  family      property of the thekedar and his family."      This was  in consonance  with the view expressed by Sir Bipin Krishna  Bose, Addl.  J.C. in Fagwa v. Budhram(1) that the grant of a protected thekedari tenure to the eldest male member of  a family  did not  make the property his separate property. In  Narayan Prasad  v. Laxman Prasad(2) J. Sen, J. hold that  where protected  thekedari rights in respect of a village were acquired out of joint family funds, the village would be  joint family  property and  a member  of the joint family would  be entitled  to a share in the theka and to be maintained  out  of  it.  In  Chandanlal  v.  Pushkarraj(3), Kaushalendra Rao, J. speaking for the Court observed:           "It has  always been  the accepted  view that  the      grant of  protected status  to a  thekedar did not make      the theka  the exclusive property of the person on whom      the protected status is conferred."      The learned  Judge then referred to the decision of the Privy Council  in Bhagwan  Singh’s  case  and  rejected  the contention that the conferral of the protected status on one of the  members destroyed  the pre-existing  rights  of  the other members of the family.      In Sukhanboi  & Anr.  v. Ramsharan Doma Sao and Ors(4). Mudholkar, J.  tried  to  draw  a  distinction  between  the present tights  and future  rights of  the  members  of  the family and held that while the junior members have future or contingent rights such as 498 a right  of survivorship,  they have,  apart from  custom or relationship, no present rights as, for instance, a right to restrain alienation or to claim maintenance. The decision of Mudholkar  J.  in  Sukhambai’s  case  taking  a  narrow  and restricted view  of the  rights of  the members  of a  joint Hindu family  to participate  in the  present enjoyment  and management of  a  protected  thekedari  tenure  was  however reversed on  appeal by B.P. Sinha, C.J. and Hidayatullah, J. in Shiv  Prasad Sao v. Sukhan Bai (Letters Patent Appeal No. 19 of  1449 decided on December, 30, 1954) observing that if

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there was  a family  arrangement for  the joint enjoyment of the theka  in the past, it would bind not only the protected thekedar for the time being but the whole family and so long as the  family arrangement  is not  rescinded by  the family itself, it must continue. The learned Judges considering the implications of s.109(1)(a) of the Act observed:           "The  conferral   of  protected  status  does  not      disturb the  rights of the members inter se though they      may not  be recognised by the State. As between members      the  rights   of  any   particular  member   under  the      arrangement must continue."      As regards the validity of arrangements made by the co- sharers in  a theka dividing the property between themselves for beneficial enjoyment of the thekedar, they said:           "From the year 1881 when all existing arrangements      were  to  continue,  down  to  this  day  when  private      partitions and family arrangements have been recognised      as binding on the family, there is an underline/current      of recognition  of joint  family status.  Most of these      villages, when they were acquired, belonged, to a joint      family and  the intention  in conferring protection was      not to disturb arrangements but to recognise one member      as a  Thekedar and  to restrain  transfers  and  impose      impartibility and primogeniture. Even though the Act of      1917 enacted about private partitions and arrangements,      the law  was merely  declaratory of family custom as is      apparent from  a perusal  of  the  various  Settlements      Reports."      The learned Judges then added a word of caution:           "Under the  C.P. Land  Revenue  Act,  a  protected      status could be conferred not only upon Hindus but also      upon Muslims and others. The rules of impartible 499      estates as  understood in  Hindu law cannot, therefore,      be made  applicable  and  the  analogy  is  apt  to  be      misleading."      Similar question arose in Mani Ram v. Ram Dayal, supra, and Smt,  Pilanoni Janakram  v. Anandsingh  Sakharam, supra. The decision in Mani Ram’s case is of some importance. Here, T.C. Shrivastava,  J. had  to consider the impact of s.39(1) of the M.P. Abolition of Proprietary Rights (Estates Mahals, Alienated Lands)  Act, 1951  which provided  that where  the proprietary rights  held by a protected thekedar vest in the State under  s. 3,  the Deputy  Commissioner may  reserve to such proprietor  the rights  of an  occupancy tenant  in the whole or  part of the home-farm land and shall determine the rent thereon.  S. 39(2)  there of  provided that  any person becoming an  occupancy tenant  under  sub-s(1)  shall  be  a tenant of  the  State.  The  contention  on  behalf  of  the protected thekedar  who brought  the suit was that by virtue of such  settlement he  became the full and exclusive tenant thereof. The  learned Judge  after referring to the decision of the Privy Council in Bhagwan Singh’s case, supra, and the aforesaid decision  of the  High Court  in Shiv Prasad Sao’s case, supra,  reiterated that  although s.  109(1)(a) of the C.P.  Land   Revenue  Act,   1917  provided  that  protected thekedari rights  would descend by the rule of primogeniture and the  theka was  impartible in  nature, the rights of the other members  of  the  joint  Hindu  family  in  the  theka continued though  they could  not obtain  a partition of the lands in the theka or claim to be in possession of any lands pertaining to  the theka.  He referred  to the  observations made in  Shiv Prasad  Sao’s case  set out above and observed that it  was open  to the  protected thekedar  to come to an arrangement with his co-sharers to divide the lands attached

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to the  theka and such a family arrangement would be binding on the  co-sharers. Repelling  the contention based on s. 39 (1) of  that Act  he held  that after  the abolition  of the proprietary  rights   in  1950,   the  rights  of  protected thekedars had  completely disappeared  and the statutory bar of impartibility  and inalienability  removed and  therefore the lands which were joint family lands subject to statutory restrictions assumed  the character  of normal  joint family property free  from  the  statutory  restrictions.  In  Smt. Pilanoni’s case,  supra, K.L.  Pandey, J. held that although under cl.(5)  of the  Sarangarh State Wazib-ul-erz there was no right  of partition  given to  a thekedar gaontia, but it permitted joint  and divided  management of the bhogra lands attached to the theka 500 among the  members of  the family  and though  the State had reserved to  itself under  cl.(15) the right to induct a new thekedar who  became entitled  to the entire bhogra lands in the village,  the effect  of the two provisions was that the State could  not be  bound by a partition effected among the members of  the family by way or a family arrangement but it would be binding on the members or the family, including the new thekedar  who may  have succeeded  to the  status  of  a thekedar gaontia.  As to the settlement of such bhogra lands with the  thekedar in  raiyati rights  under s.54(1)  of the M.P.  Abolition  of  Proprietary  Rights  (Estates,  Mahals, Alienated  Lands)  Act,  1951,  the  Court  held  that  such settlement must  enure to  the benefit of the bhogra holders under a  family arrangement  since the lands continued to be impressed with the character of being joint family property.      The point in controversy really stands concluded by the recent decision  of this Court in Nagesh Bisto Desai’s case, supra. There,  the question  was whether the plaintiff being the holder  for the time being of the Kundgol Deshgat estate which was  an impartible estate, the succession to which was governed by  the rule  of lineal primogeniture, was entitled to remain  in full and exclusive possession and enjoyment of the watan  lands resumed under s. 3(4) of the Bombay Pargana & Kulkarni  Watans (Abolition)  Act, 1950  and s.  4 of  the Bombay   Merged    Territories   Miscellaneous   Alienations Abolition Act,  1955 which  had been  regranted to him as an occupant thereof under ss. 4 and 7 of the Acts respectively. It was  held that  the plaintiff’s contention ran counter to the scheme  of the  Bombay Hereditary  Offices Act, 1874 and was against  settled legal  principles, and  that the Watans Act was  designed to preserve the pre-existing rights of the members of  the joint  Hindu family. The submission based on the  alleged   impartibility  of   watan  property  and  the applicability of the rule of lineal primogeniture regulating succession to  the estate was rejected on the ground that it could not  prevail as  these being  nothing  more  than  the incidents of  the watans  stood abrogated  by s. 3(4) of the 1950 Act  and s.  4 of  the 1955  Act. It  was held that the effect of the non-obstante clause in s. 3(4) of the 1950 Act was to  bring about  a change  in the tenure or character of the holding  as watan  lands but  did not  affect the  other legal incidents  of the  property under the personal law and if the property belonged to the joint Hindu family, then the normal rights of the members 501 of the  family to  ask for  partition were  not in  any  way affected and  therefore the  re grant  of the  lands to  the watandar under  s. 4(1) of the 1959 Act and s. 7 of the 1955 Act must  ensure to  the benefit  of the  entire joint Hindu family. That  precisely is the position here. Although under

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the Bombay  Pargana &  Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950 and the  Bombay Merged Territories Miscellaneous Alienations Abolition Act,  1955 there  was at  first  an  abolition  of watans and  resumption of  watan lands, followed by re-grant of such  lands to  the watandar  as an  occupant  under  the Bombay  Land   Revenue  Code,  1879,  that  hardly  makes  a difference in  principle. The  only difference is that under s. 158(1)(b)  of the  M.P. Land  Revenue Code,  there was  a simultaneous extinction  of the inams resulting in conferral of bhumiswami  rights on  every person holding inam lands on the date on which the Code was brought into force.      The result  therefore is  that the  appeal must succeed and is  allowed. The  judgment and decree passed by the High Court are  reversed and  those  of  the  learned  Additional District Judge  decreeing the plaintiff’s suit for partition and  separate   possession  of   their  half  share  in  the properties described  in Schedule  ’A’  to  the  plaint  are restored.  The  decree  shall  be  drawn  in  terms  of  the compromise arrived at.      There shall be no order as to costs. N.V.K.                                       Appeal allowed. 502