05 March 1974
Supreme Court
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DAYA SINGH (dead) THROUGH L.RS. & ANR. Vs DHAN KAUR

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1825 of 1967


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PETITIONER: DAYA SINGH (dead) THROUGH L.RS. & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: DHAN KAUR

DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1974

BENCH: ALAGIRISWAMI, A. BENCH: ALAGIRISWAMI, A. MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN

CITATION:  1974 AIR  665            1974 SCR  (3) 528  1974 SCC  (1) 700

ACT: Hindu Succession Act, 1956, sec. 8-Whether effects change in old  Hindu Law--Death of female limited owner  who  succeeds last male holder-Customary Law of Punjab whether applicable- Held,  succession opens on death of limited owner and  would be governed by law then in force-Interpretation of statutes.

HEADNOTE: The respondent’s father, W, who owned the suit property died in 1933.  His widow, who succeeded to the estate, gifted the property  to her daughter, the respondent.   The  appellants filed a suit as reversioners of W questioning the gift.  The "it  ’as  decreed and the decree was  confirmed  on  appeal. After coming into force of the Hindu Succession Act on 17-6- 1956, the widow again made a gift of the same, lands to  the respondent.   She died in 1963.  The appellants  then  filed the suit, out of which this appeal arose, for possession  of the  lands.  alleging that the second gift  was  void.   The trial court decreed their suit but on appeal the  respondent succeeded  in  the first Appellate Court as well as  in  the High Court on second appeal. On appeal by special leave to this Court, Dismissing the  appeal, HELD   (1) Following the decisions of the Privy  Council  in Moniram  Kolita v. Keri Kolitani, I.L.R. 5 Calcutta  776  at 789  and  Duni  Chand v. Anar Kali, A.I.R.  1946  P.C.  173, (infra) the words "dying intestate in Sec. 8 of the Act must be  interpreted as merely meaning "in the case of  intestacy of a Hindu male" and to place this interpretation on the Act is not to give retrospective effect to its provisions.   The reference  is only to the fact of ’intestacy.  The  material point of time is the date when the succession opens, namely, the  death of the widow.  Thus this propositions follow  (i) Succession opens on the death of the limited owner, and (ii) the   law  then  in  force  would  govern  the   succession. [532D-G] Moniram Kolita v. Keri Kolitani, I.L.R. 5, Calcutta 776  789 and Duni Chand v.   Anar   Kali,  A.I.R.  1946   P.C.   173, followed. Eramma  v. Verritpatina, (1966) 2 S.C.R. 626, explained  and distinguished. Banso  v.  Charan Singh, A.I.R. 1961, Punjab 45  and  Kuldip

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Sing v. Karnail Singh, A.I.R. 1961, Punjab, 573, approved. Kempiah v. Giriganima, A.I.R. 1966, Mysore 189, overruled. Renuka  Bala v. Aswini Kumar A.I.R. 1961, Patna 498 and  Sam pathkumari  N.  Lakshmi  Ammal,  A.I.R.  1963  Madras,   50, distinguished. (ii)Succession  to  W’s estate in the present  cage  opened when  his widow died and it would have to be decided on  the basis that W died in 1963 when his widow died. in that  case succession  to  his estate would have to be decided  on  the basis  of  s. 8 of the Hindu Succession Act.   The  accepted position  under the Hindu law is that where a limited  owner succeeds  to an estate the succession to the estate  on  her death  will  have to be decided on the basis that  the  last full  owner  died on that day.   If,  therefore,  succession opens  and  is to be decided on the basis of the  last  full owner dying on the date of the death of the limited owner it is  only  the law in force at the time of the death  of  the limited owner that should govern the case.  To hold that the old  Hindu  law  applies to such a case  is  to  allow  your imagination to boggle. [533-A-C, G-H] Eastend Dwellings Co. Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council, 1952 A.C. 109, 132, per Lord Acsquit and Venka tachalam v. Bombay Dyeing & Mfg.  Co. Ltd., (1959) S.C.R. 703, referred to. The reversioners’ right being a mere spes successions  there is no question of impairing existing rights by adopting  the interpretation we place on s. 8 apart from 529 the  fact  that it does not amount to  giving  retrospective operation  to s. 8. Of course,, if the property had  already vested  in  a person under the old Hindu Law, it  cannot  be divested.   We can see no reason either in principle  or  on authority why the principle consistently followed under  the earlier  Hindu  law that on the death of the  limited  owner succession opens and would be decided on the basis that  the last  male  owner died on that day, should  not  apply  even after  coming  into force of the Act.  In the view  we  have taken  it  is  s.  8 of the Act that  applies  and  not  the Customary Law.[534C-D,E-F.535G]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1825 of 1967. Appeal  by special leave from the judgment and  order  dated the  18th May, 1967 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court  in L.P.A. No. 158 of 1967. Naunit Lal- and Lalit Kohli, for the appellant O.P. Verma, for the respondent The Judgment of the Court was delivered by ALAGIRISWAMI,  J.-The  property in dispute  in  this  appeal belonged  to  Wadhawa Singh, the father of  the  respondent. After his death in the year 1933 his widow, who succeeded to the  estate,  made a gift of the property in favour  of  her daughter,  the respondent, in.April, 1933.   The  appellants filed a suit as reversioners to the estate of Wadhawa  Singh questioning  the gift.  The suit was decreed and the  decree was  confirmed  on appeal.  After coming into force  of  the Hindu  Succession  Act on 17-6-1956 the widow again  made  a gift of the same lands to the respondent.  She died in 1963. The appellants then filed the suit, out of which this appeal arises, for possession of the lands alleging that the second gift  was void.  The Trial Court decreed their suit  but  on appeal the respondent succeeded in the first Appellate Court as well as the High Court on-second appeal. There is no doubt that Wadhawa Singh’s widow had no right to

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male  a  gift of the property which she inherited  from  her husband  in 1933 and the decree obtained by the  appellants, who were reversioners to her husband’s estate would bind the respondent who was also a party, to that suit.  The question then   is-whether  the-coming  into  force,  of  the   Hindu succession Act and the subsequent gift made by the widow  in favour  of the respondent make any difference.  Had not  the widow  made  the gift to the respondent in 1933,  she  would have become an absolute owner of the property as a result of S.  14 of the Hindu Succession Act and the gift made by  her subsequently in favour of the respondent could not have been questioned.  But having made the gift in 1933 she was not in possession of the property inherited by her from her husband and, therefore, did not become a full owner, with the result that  the  subsequent  gift made by her  in  favour  of  the respondent  was  of no effect.  This point that  unless  the limited  owner is in possession of the property  section  14 does  not  apply has now been settled by decisions  of  this Court beyond dispute. What  then  is the effect of the provision of s.  8  of  the Hindu  Succession  Act in the circumstances  of  this  case. ’The Punjab High Court in its decisions in  Banso v.  Charan Singh  (AIR  1961 Punjab 45), and Kuldip  Singh  v.  Karnail Singh (AIR 1961 Punjab 573), where the facts 530 were  similar to the present case, has taken the  view  that when  a widow dies after the coming into force of the  Hindu Succession  Act  the  next  heir to her  husband  is  to  be determined in accordance with the law prevailing on the date of the death of the widow and not in accordance with the law prevailing at the time of the death of her husband and  held that   the   daughter  succeeded  in   preference   to   the reversioners.   The Mysore High Court on the other  hand  in Kempiah v. Girigamma (AIR 1966 Mysore 189) has held that  on the  death of the widow succession would be governed by  the Hindu  Law  which  was in force when the  last  mate  holder actually  died.   The  Patna High Court in  Renuka  Bala  v. Aswini  Kumar  (AIR 1961 Patna 498) was disposed to  take  a similar  view though the case before it was  concerned  with succession  to  the  property of a female  under  s.15.  The Madras  High  Court in Sampathkumari v. Lakshmi  Ammal  (AIR 1963   Madras   50)  also  took  the  view  that   in   such circumstances  s.  8 of the Hindu Succession Act  would  not apply.   But  the case before that Court was one  where  two widows who had succeeded to the estate of their husband were in possession, and therefore, s. 14 was applicable.  Lastly, we  have the decision of this Court in Eramma v.  Verrupanna (1966 2 SCR 626).. In that case this Court after setting out the provisions of s. 6 of the Hindu Succession Act observed:               "It is clear from the express language of  the               section  that it applies only  to  coparcenary               property  of the mate, Hindu holder  who  dies               after  the  commencement of the  Act.   It  is               manifest  that  the language of s. 8  must  be               construed  in the context of s. 6 of the  Act.               We accordingly hold that the provisions of  s.               8   of  the  Hindu  Succession  Act  are   not               retrospective  in operation and where  a  male               Hindu  died  before the Act  came  into  force               i.e.,  where succession opened before the  Act               s. 8 of the Act will have no application." Interpreted  literally  this dicision would seem  to  accord with  the decisions of all the other High Courts except  the Punjab  High  Court.   But it should  be  noticed  that  the problem  that we are faced within the present appeal and  in

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the  cases before the Punjab and Mysore High Courts did  not arise  before  this  Court on  the  earlier  occasion.   The decisions of the Madras High Court and the Patna High  Court are not directly in point. In  the  case  before  this Court  the  two  women  were  in possession of property whose last male holder, who had  died before  coming into force of the Hindu Succession  Act,  was their   step  son.   They  were  not,  therefore  in   legal possession  of the properties of the last male holder.   The question  that had to be decided was whether because of  the coming  into  force of the Hindu Succession  Act  they  were entitled  to  succeed under s. 8, and the  further  question whether  s. 14 would be attracted as they were  actually  in possession.   It was held that as they were not  legally  in possession  s,  14 would not apply, It was in  that  context that  it was said that where a male Hindu died  before  the; Act came into force i.e., where succession opened before the s.   8  of the Act will have no application, The point  that succession 531 might  open  not  only when the male  Hindu  died  but  also subsequently  again  when a limited owner who  succeeds  him dies  was not taken into account.  There was no need and  no occasion to consider such a contingency in that case.  There was the further fact that the last male holder was succeeded on his death by persons who were then. his nearest heirs and the  property  vested in them could not be divested  by  the Hindu Succession Act coming into force subsequently  thought this  fact was not adverted to in the judgment.  This  Court had,  therefore. also no occasion to consider the effect  of the  earlier  decisions on the question as to  what  happens when a female limited owner, whether she is a widow,  mother or daughter who succeeds the last male bolder, dies. That position may now be considered.  It was authoritatively laid  down by the Privy Council in its decision  in  Moniram Kolita v. Keri Kaliteni (ILR 5 Calcutta 776 at 789) that :               "According  to  the  Hindu Law,  a  widow  who               succeeds  to  the  estate of  her  husband  in               default  of male, issue, whether she  succeeds               by inheritance or survivorship-as to which see               the S hivagunga case (1)-does not take a  mere               life-estate in the property.  The whole estate               is  for the time vested in her absolutely  for               some  purposes,  though in some  respects  for               only  a qualified interest.  Her estate is  an               anomalous  one, and has been compared to  that               of  a  tenant-in-tail.  It would  perhaps,  be               more  correct to say that she holds an  estate               of inheritance to herself and the heirs of her               husband.   But whatever her estate is,  it  is               clear that, until the termination of it, it is               impossible to say who are the persons who will                             be entitled to succeed as heirs of the   husband               (2).   The  succession does not  open  to  the               heirs of the husband until the termination  of               the  widow’s estate.  Upon the termination  of               that estate the property descends to those who               would have been the heirs at the husband if he               had lived up ’to and died at the moment of her               death (3)." In the subsequent decision in Duni.  Chand v. Anar Kali (AIR 1946, PC 173) the Privy Council observed:               "....  during the lifetime of the  widow,  the               reversioners  in  Hindu  Law  have  no  vested

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             interest  in the estate but have a  mere  spes               succession  is or chance of succession,  which               is a purely contingent right which may or  may               not accrue,that the succession  would not open               out until the widow died, and that the  person               who would be the next reversioner at that time               would succeed to the estate and the alteration               in the rule of the Hindu Law brought about  by               the Act would then be in full force.               (1)   9 Moore’s I.A., 604.               (2) Id., 604               (3) Id., 601.               532               In   the  argument  before  their   Lordships,               reliance  was  placed upon  the  words  "dying               intestate" in the Act as connoting the  future               tense,  but  their Lordships  agree  with  the               ’view  of  the  Lahore High Court  in  17  Lah               356(1)  at  p.  367,  that  the  words  are  a               description of the status of the deceased  and               have no reference and are not intended to have               any  reference to the time of the death  of  a                             Hindu  male.  The expression merely  m eans  "in               the  case of intestacy of a Hindu  male".   To               place this interpretation on the Act is not to               give a retrospective effect to its provisions,               the  materials  point of time being  the  date               when the ,.succession opens, namely, the death               of the widow.               On the position of reversioners in Hindu  Law,               opinions  have  been expressed by  this  Board               from time to time with which the views of  the               learned  Chief  Justice  in  58  All.  1041(2)               mentioned  above,  are in agreement.   It  was               said, for instance, that until the termination               of the widow’s estate, it is impossible to say               who  are the persons who will be  entitled  to               succeed as heirs to her husband; 9 M.I.A.  539               (3)  at p. 604.  The succession does not  open               to   the  heirs  of  the  husband  until   the               termination  of the widow’s estate.  Upon  its               termination,  the property descends  to  those               who  would have been the heirs of the  husband               If  he had lived uP to and died at the  moment               of her death 7 I. A. 115 (4) at 154." It  would be noticed that the Privy Council interpreted  the words  "dying intestate" as merely meaning "in the  case  of intestacy  of  a  Hindu male" and said that  to  place  this interpretation  on  the  Act is not  to  give  retrospective effect to its provisions.  Those are the very words found in s. 8. These may be contrasted with the words of s. 6  "where a male Hindu dies after the commencement of this Act."  Here the  reference  is  clearly to the time of  the  death.   In section 8 it is only to the fact of intestacy.  The material point  of time, as pointed out by the Privy Council, is  the date  when  the succession opens, namely, the death  of  the widow.  It is interesting to note that the Privy Council was interpreting the provisions of the Hindu Law of Inheritance (Amendment) Act, 1929 where the two contrasting  expressions found in the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 are not found.’  The case  for the interpretation of the words "dying  intestate" under  the  Hindu  Succession Act is  stronger.   The  words "where a male Hindu dies after the commencement of this Act" in  section 6 and their absence in section 8, are  extremely

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significant.   Thus two propositions follow: (1)  Succession opens  on- the death of the limited owner. and (2)  the  law then in force would govern the succession. Now  if this proposition is correct, as we hold it is,  that where  a  female  heir succeeds to  an  estate,  the  person ’entitled to succeed on the basis as if the last male holder had lived up to and died at the (1)  Mt.  Rajpali Kunwer v. Surju Rai (58 All. 1041). (2)  Shakuntala Devi v. Kambsalya Devi (17 Lah 356). (3)  Katam Natchiar v. Rajah of Shiva Gunga (9 MIA 539), (4)  Monirain  Kolita  v. Kerry Kolitang (7 IA  115:  5  Cal 776). 533 death  of the limited owner, succession to  Wadhawa  Singh’s estate in the present case opened when his widow died and it would  have to, be decided on the basis that  Wadhawa  Singh had  died  in 1963 when his widow died.  In  that  case  the succession  to his estate would have to, be decided  on  the basis of s.8 of the Hindu Succession Act.  The various  High Courts  which have held otherwise seem to have  been  oppre- ssed-by   the   feeling  that  this   amounted   to   giving retrospective  effect  to s. 8 of the Hindu  Succession  Act whereas  it  is  only prospective.   As  the  Privy  Council pointed  out it means no such thing.  The accepted  position under  the Hindu Law is that where a limited owner  succeeds to an estate the succession to the estate on her death  will have  to  be decided on the basis that the last  full  owner died on that day.  It would be unreasonable to hold that  in such  a circumstance the law as it existed at the time  when the  last male holder actually died should be  given  effect to.   If the person who is likely to succeed at the time  of the  limited  owner’s death is not, as happens  very  often, likely  to  be the person who would have  succeeded  if  the limited   owner  had  not  intervened,  there   is   nothing unreasonable in holding that the law as to the person who is entitled  to succeed on the limited owner’s death should  be the  law then in force and not the law in force at the  time of the last full owner’s death. The Madras High Court thought that the decision of the Privy Council in Duni Chand v. Anar Kali (supra) was based upon  a legal  fiction  and that fiction cannot be given  effect  to except  for a limited purpose.  The Mysore High  Court  also thought  that  the death referred to in  section  is  actual death  and not fictional death.  In East end Dwellings  Co., Ltd. v. Finsbury Borough Council (1952 A.C. 109 132) lord Asquith of Bishopstone observed :.               "If you are bidden to treat an imaginary state               of  affairs as real, you must  surely,  unless               prohibited  from  doing so,. also  imagine  as               real the consequences and incidents which,  if               the  putative  state of affairs  had  in  fact               existed,  must inevitably have flowed from  or               accompanied it.  One of those in this case  is               emancipation  from  the 1939 level  of  rents.               The  statute  says  that you  must  imagine  a               certain state of affairs; it does not say that               having done so, you must cause or permit  your               imagination  to  boggle when it comes  to  the               inevitable   corollaries  of  that  state   of               affairs". This  observation was cited with approval by this  Court  in Venkatachalam v. Bombay Dyeing & Mfg.  Co., Ltd (1959 S.C.R. 703) If, therefore, succession opens and is to be decided on the basis of the last full owner dying on the date of  death of the limited owner the inevitable corollary is that it  is

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only  the  law  in force at the time of  the  death  of  the limited owner that should govern the case.  To hold that the old  Hindu  Law  applies to such a case  is  to  allow  your imagination  to  boggle.  In the case decided by  the  Privy Council in Duni Chand v. Anar Kali (supra) if this principle had been applied the new heirs 534 introduced by the Hindu Law of inheritance (Amendment)  Act, 1929 could not have then come in.  We are not impressed with the  reasoning  of  the Patna High Court  that  because  the change  brought  about  by that Act is  different  from  the change brought about by the Hindu Succession Act a different conclusion  follows.   We should consider that if  even  the limited  change  in the area of succession effected  by  the Hindu  Law  of Inheritance (Amendment) Act, 1929  is  to  be given  effect  to as the law applicable on the date  of  the death  of the limited owner, it is all the more  reason  why the  Hindu  Succession Act which makes a much  more  radical change  in  the Hindu Law should have  similar  application. The Mysore High Court thought that the Hindu Succession  Act not  being  a  mere declaratory  Act,  retrospective  effect should  not be given to it so as to impair  existing  rights and  obligations.  But the reversioners’ right being a  mere spes  succession  is  there  is  no  question  of  impairing existing  rights by adopting the interpretation we place  on section 8 apart from the fact that, as earlier pointed  out, the  interpretation does not amount to giving  retrospective effect to section 8. of course, if the property had  already vested  in  a person under the ,old Hindu Law it  cannot  be divested. We must also point out that the classes of cases where  such a  question  is likely to arise is very  limited.   Where  a widow, mother or daughter was in possession of the estate on the coming into force of the Hindu Succession Act she  would become  full owner under the provisions of the S. 14 of  the Act.   Even  if  a  widow was in  possession  of  the  share belonging  to her in the joint family estate tinder the  pro -visions  of the Hindu Women’s Right to property Act,  1937, she  would become a full owner under s. 14.  In  both  those cases  S.  8 would have no operation.  It is  only  in  rare cases,  like  the present, that the question  is  likely  to arise at all and we can see no reason either in principle or on  authority why the principle consistently followed  under the earlier Hindu Law that on the death of the limited owner succession opens and would be decided on the basis that  the last  male  owner died on that day, should  not  apply  even after coming into force of the Hindu ,Succession Act, Mr.  Naunit Lal appearing for the appellant argued that  the result  ,of  the  decision  of  this  Court  in  Eramma   v. Verrupanna  (supra) is that on the death of Wadhawa  Singh’s widow  it  is the old Hindu Law that applied  and  therefore under  the custom in force in Punjab under which a  daughter was not entitled to succeed to the ancestral property of the father  in preference to the reversioners should  apply  and the  appellants are entitled to succeed.  There is no  doubt about the position under the Customary Law of Punjab  before coming   into  force  of  the  Hindu  Succession  Act.    In Rattigan’s  Digest  of the Customary Law’ published  by  the University  Book Agency (14th Ed.), paragraph 23 at age  132 it is stated:               "    23.(1)  A daughter only succeeds  to  the               ancestral landed property of her father, if an               agriculturist, in default :-               (1)   Of the heirs mentioned in the  preceding               paragraph and

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             535               (2)   Of near male collaterals of her  father,               provided  that  a married  daughter  sometimes               excludes  near  male  collaterals,  especially               amongst Muhammadan tribes :               (a)   where she has married a near  collateral               descendant  from the same common  ancestor  as               her father; or               (b)   where   she   has,  with   her   husband               continuously  lived with her father since  her               marriage;  looking after his  domestic  wants,               and  assisting  him in the management  of  his               estate; or               (c)   where  being married to a collateral  of               the father’s family, she has been appointed by               her father as his heir.               (2) But in regard to the acquired property  of               her   father,the  daughter  is  preferred   to               collaterals." It  is  on  the  basis  of  this  Customary  Law  that   the reversioners succeeded in the suit filed by them questioning the  gift made by the respondent’s mother to her.  There  is no doubt that Rattigan’s work is an authoritative one on the subject  of  Customary Law in Punjab, This Court  in  Mahant Salig  Ram  v. Musammat Maya Devi (1955) SCR 1191  at  1196) said :-               "Customary  rights of succession of  daughters               as against the collaterals of the father  with               reference to ancestral and non-ancestral lands               are  stated  in paragraph  23  (if  Rattigan’s               Digest  of Customary Law. it is  categorically               stated in sub-paragraph (2) of that  paragraph               that   the  daughter  succeeds  to  the   self               acquired property of the father in  preference               to the collaterals even though they are within               the  fourth degree.  Rattigan’s work has  been               accepted  by the Privy Council as "a  book  of               unquestioned authority in the Punjab".  Indeed               the  correctness  of this  paragraph  was  not               disputed  before this Court in Gopal Singh  v.               Ujagar Singhi (1). It is not now open to the respondent to show whether any  of the   circumstances  mentioned  in  sub-paragraph   (2)   of paragraph  23  of  Rattigan’s Digest  of  Customary  Law  is present here as the previous decision is resjudicata between the parties and in any case it has not been attempted to  be shown  in this case.  But in the view we have taken that  it is s. 8 of the Hindu Succession Act that applies and not the Customary Law the appellants cannot succeed in this appeal. In the result the appeal is dismissed.  The appellants  will pay the respondent’s costs. S. B. W. Appeal dismissed. (1)  1955 S.C.R. 86. 536