31 March 1977
Supreme Court
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LAKSHMI CHAND KHAJURIA & ORS. Vs SMT. ISHROO DEVI

Bench: KAILASAM,P.S.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2330 of 1968


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PETITIONER: LAKSHMI CHAND KHAJURIA & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT. ISHROO DEVI

DATE OF JUDGMENT31/03/1977

BENCH: KAILASAM, P.S. BENCH: KAILASAM, P.S. GUPTA, A.C.

CITATION:  1977 AIR 1694            1977 SCR  (3) 400  1977 SCC  (2) 501

ACT:             Testamentary Will disposing of the ancestral property to         a   far  relation, whether valid under s. 27 of the Jammu  &         Kashmir   Hindu  Succession  Act, 1956--Scope of s.  27  and         explanation thereto--Whether income of a hereditary  priest,         a  hereditary  Property--Mitakshara law as   applicable   to         Jammu   & Kashmir--Though a wife cannot demand  a  partition         she  is entitled to receive a share equal to that of  a  son         and  to hold and enjoy that share separately even  from  her         husband.

HEADNOTE:             On the strength of a Will dated 25th May 1959,  executed         in  her favour by one Purohit Mani Ram, the respondent  Smt.         Ishroo  Devi  filed  a suit for  recovery  of  the  schedule         property in the plaint.  It was alleged in the  plaint  that         the appellants (A-1, son; A-2, Wife; and A-3, grand-daughter         of  Purohit  Mani Ram) after the death of Purohit  Mani  Ram         wrongfully disposed her after getting the name of  appellant         No. 1 mutated in the records and that the three items of the         schedule property were the separate properties of the testa-         tor and that he was entitled to dispose them under the Will.         The  appellants averred in their written statement that  the         properties  belonged  to  the joint family  of   which   the         first appellant and his father Purohit Mani Ram were members         and  as  the properties were joint family  properties,  they         cannot he disposed of by Will.  It was further alleged  that         the  Will  was a forged one and is  fictitious.   The  trial         court,  accepting  the  evidence of PW1,  an  advocate,  who         advised in the preparation  of  the Will and also an attest-         ing  witness,  PW2 the scribe and PW3 who deposed  the  fact         that the properties were self-acquired ones of late  Purohit         Mani Ram, decreed the suit as regards item No. 1 (a) of  the         plaint  schedule  but dismissed the claim as  regards  items         l(b)  and 2 holding that they were ancestral  ones.  On  ap-         peal,  the  High Court accepted the findings  of  the  trial         court  and confirmed the decree as regards item l(a) of  the         property but  modified  the  order  as regards item l(b) and         2  by allowing the claim of the respondent to the extent  of         1/2  share  since under s. 27 of the Jammu &  Kashmir  Hindu         Succession   Act  Mani Ram was entitled to  dispose  of  his         interest in the joint family property by Will.

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           In  appeal by certificate to this Court,  the  appellant         contended: (i) The Will was not a valid one for the reasons,         namely, (a) it was ante dated in  order to escape the prohi-         bition against alienation introduced by Ordinance which came         into  force in July 1959; (b) the signature on the Will  was         forged;  (c) the Will is a most unnatural one as it had  not         provided  for the son or the wife or  any near relative  but         has  provided  to a distant relative and (d) in a  suit  for         partition filed by the son against Mani Ram, the latter gave         an undertaking in  the court not to alienate his  properties         which  would improbalise the  execution  of the Will;   (ii)         The  hereditary  profession  of Mani Ram being  that  of   a         priest  whatever he earned while practising that  profession         and  all his acquisitions should be held to be joint  family         property.  (iii) In view of the Mitakshara law applicable to         the estate when partition of the joint family property takes         place  during the father’s life time at the instance of  the         son, the mother also  has  a  share equal to him.             The Court confirmed the decree in respect of item 1  (a)         of  the property in favour of the respondent,  modified  the         decretal  order of the High Court in respect of  items  1(b)         and 2 of the schedule property as 1/3rd in favour of  appel-         lant No. 1, 1/3rd in favour of appellant No. 2 and 1/3rd  in         favour of respondent as entitled by the Will.  The Court,             HELD: (1) The plea that the Will was executed after July         1959 when there was a prohibition against the alienation and         that it was pre-dated and not executed         401         on  the day on which it purports to be is without  any  sub-         stance and against the evidence on record. [403 H, 404 A]             (2) The contention that the Will is an unnatural one  is         also  without  substance.  The non-disclosure of the  execu-         tion of the Will is understandable because Mani Ram did  not         want  anyone, particularly his son, to know about  his  pos-         sessing of the property by Will.  [404 B, D]             (3)  The findings of the two lower courts that the  Will         is  a  genuine one and was executed by Mani Ram by  his  own         free will cannot be assailed.  In  fact, there was no  chal-         lenge  to the gist of the Will noted by PW2, the scribe,  in         one of his regularly kept record; there was no denial by the         first  appellant,  the son of Mani Ram  that  the  signature         found in the Will was not that of  his  father and there  is         no  reason  why the cogent evidence of PW 1,  a  respectable         advocate who spoke of his advising in the preparation of the         Will having seen the executant sign the Will in his presence         be not accepted.  [405 A-C]             (4) The income from the practice of a hereditary profes-         sion will not be a joint family property.  Item 1 (a) of the         Property is the self-acquisition of Mani Ram and the  decree         of the appellate court so far as item No. 1 (a) is concerned         must be confirmed.  [406 A, D]             Hanso  Pathak  v. Harmandil Pathak and Anr.,  AIR   1934         Allahabad  851, approved.             Chalabhai Gaurishankar v. Hargowan Ramji & Ors.   I.L.R.         36  Born.  94, over-ruled.             (5)  Under the Mitakshara law excepting Madras,  in  the         other  states referred to in the decisions cited when  there         is a partition between the son and his father the mother  is         entitled  to a share equal to that of the son.  In  the  in-         stant  case  the case of the first appellant  was  that  the         joint  family  consisted of himself and  his  father  alone,         though  in  the  earlier partition suit  filed  by  him   he         claimed 1/3rd share conceding that his father and mother are         entitled  to the other 2/3rd share.  As no decision  in  re-         spect  of the interest of the male Hindu in Jammu &  Kashmir

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       was  cited  the question is remitted to the High  Court  for         decision as to what is the extent of the interest as regards         items  I(b) & 2 of  the  plaint Schedule  properties.   [406         E-F, 407 B-E]             Dular Koeri v. Dwarkanath Misser ILR 32 Cal. 234; Sumrun         Thakoor  v. Chunder Mun Misser & Ors., ILR 8 Cal. 17;   Hos-         banna  Devanna  Naik  v. Devanna Sannappa Naik and Ors.  ILR         48 Bom. 468 and Pratap Singh v. Dalip Singh ILR 52 All. 596,         approved.         (6) In view of s. 27 of the Jammu & Kashmir Hindu Succession         Act, 1956 which provides that any Hindu male may dispose  of         by Will any property which  capable of being disposed of  by         him in law and also explanation to that section which  makes         it clear that the interest of a male Hindu in  a  Mitakahara         coparcenary  property  be deemed to be property  capable  of         being  disposed  of by him within the meaning  of  the  sub-         section,  in the instant case Mani Ram  can dispose  of  his         share  under  a Will.  Admittedly the  respondent,  will  be         entitled to 1/3rd share in respect of item l(b) and 2 of the         plaint  schedule in addition to the decree in her favour  in         respect of item 1 (a).  [406 D-E, 407 E-F]             [The Court remitted the case back for the  determination         of  the  interest  which Mani Ram had in  the  joint  family         property  at the time of his death  which  he could  dispose         of by his Will and grant a decree accordingly.]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: C.A. No. 2330 of 1968         (From  the  Judgment and Order dated the  12th  March,  1968         of the Jammu & Kashmir High Court in Civil First Appeal  No.         9 of 1966.)              G.B. Pai, S.K. Bagga and Mrs. S. Bagga; for the  appel-         lants.         402           O. P. Malhotra, K.J. John and Shri Narain for the respond-         ent.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KAILASAM, J.---This appeal is preferred by the defendant         in  the suit on a certificate of fitness granted by the High         Court of Jammu & Kashmir under Article 133 of the  Constitu-         tion.             The  respondent, Ishroo Devi, filed a suit for a  decree         for possession of all the three items of property  mentioned         in  the plaint  and for future mesne profits.   It  was  al-         leged  that the three items of property mentioned  in  the’-         plaint  were  the self-acquired properties  of  one  Purohit         Mani  Ram.   He executed a will on 25th May,  1959,  out  of         his own free will in favour of the respondent.   The  origi-         nal  will  was attached to the plaint.   Purohit  Mani   Ram         died  on  24th  March, 1960, at  Jammu  and  the  respondent         claimed to be the sole owner of the properties.             The first appellant is the son, the second appellant  is         the   wife and the third appellant is the grand-daughter  of         Purohit  Mani   Ram. In the plaint it is  alleged  that  the         first  appellant  after the death  of Purohit Mani  Ram  got         rent deed executed in his favour and also recorded mutations         in his name and dispossessed the respondent.   The  respond-         ent also claimed that the three items of property were   the         separate  properties  of Purohit Mani Ram and  that  he  was         entitled  to dispose of them under a will.   In the  written         statement  the  appellants averred that the  properties  be-         longed to the joint family of which the first appellant  and         his  father,    Purohit Mani Ram, were members  and  as  the

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       properties  were  joint family properties, they  cannot   be         disposed of by will.   It was further alleged that the  will         was a forged one and is fictitious.             The  respondent examined Janak Lal Sehgal,  an  advocate         of   the Supreme Court, and the scribe of the will one  Bodh         Raj.   P.W.  1, the advocate, stated that Mani Ram  executed         the  will on 25th  May, 1959, in favour of  the  respondent.         He  saw Mani Ram affix his signature on the will  the  words         (in  vernacular) under which  Janak Lal had signed  as  wit-         ness,  were  under the words (in vernacular)  where  Purohit         Mani Ram had signed.   Janak Lal had given the date with his         own  hand where he had signed as witness.  The witness  also         testified that the mental condition of Purohit Mani Ram  was         good  and he executed the will of his own free will  and  no         pressure  or fraud was played on him.   P.W. 2 Bodh Raj,  is         the scribe of the will.  He stated that he wrote the will at         the  instance  of Mani Ram and after reading the.  will  and         explaining  it  to the testator, the  testator  affixed  his         signature and admitted it to be correct.   According to  the         witness the will was executed on 25th May, 1959, and on  the         same  date  the signature of the testator and those  of  the         witnesses were affixed.  At the time of the examination  the         witness stated that the physical and the mental condition of         the  testator  was good and he read  out  the  will  at  the         house  of  Janak Lal Sehgal and obtained the  signatures  of         Mani  Ram and that of P.W. 1, the advocate.   P.W. 3,  Lodra         Mani, stated that Mani Ram was the A.D.C. of Maharaja Pratap         Singh  and was in service for Maharaja’s Puja, and that  the         Maharaja was giving         403         lot  of money to Purohit Mani Ram as present.   The  witness         also stated that item 1 of the properties was constructed by         Mani Ram with his own income.             On behalf of the appellants a handwriting expert, Philip         Hardless,  and three witnesses were examined in addition  to         the first appellant.             The  trial  court accepted the evidence of P.W.  1,  the         advocate, and P.W. 2, the scribe and held that the will  was         proved.    Holding  that  items 1 (b) and 2  of  the  plaint         schedule  properties  were ancestral properties  found  that         Mani Ram had no authority to dispose   of these two items of         properties by will.   Therefore while decreeing the suit  as         regards  item No. (1)(a) of the plaint  schedule  properties         dismissed the claim as regards items 1 (b).and 2.             On  appeal  by  the appellants a Bench of  the  Jammu  &         Kashmir  High Court agreeing with the finding of  the  trial         court  and accepting the testimony of P.W. 1, the  advocate,         and  P.W. 2, the scribe of the will, found it to be  genuine         and  executed by Mani Ram.   The appellate court  also  con-         firmed the finding of the trial court that the  item l(a) of         the  property is self-acquired property of Mani  Ram   while         items  l(b)  and  2 are the  ancestral  properties.    While         confirming  the  decree of the trial court as  regards  item         l(a)  it allowed   the respondent’s claim regarding items  1         (b) and 2 to the extent of one.half share holding that under         section  27  of the Jammu &  Kashmir Hindu  Succession  Act,         Mani  Ram was entitled to dispose of   his interest  in  the         joint family property by will.   Aggrieved by   the decision         of the Bench of the Jammu & Kashmir High Court   the  appel-         lants have preferred this appeal.             Though  the Concurrent finding of both the courts  below         is   that the will was a valid one and was executed by  Mani         Ram  of  his  own free will and when possessed  of  all  his         faculties Mr. Pai, the Counsel for the appellants, strenous-         ly  contended that the finding should not be accepted.    He

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       submitted  that a look at the signature of Mani Ram  in  the         will  and his signatures in admitted documents  would  prove         that the signature in the will is not that of Mani Ram.   He         next  contended  that  the will was antedated  in  order  to         escape  the prohibition against alienation introduced by  an         Ordinance which came into force  in July, 1959, Thirdly,  he         submitted  that the will is a most unnatural one as  it  had         not provided for the son, or the wife’ or near relatives but         had  given  the  entire  property  to  a  distant  relation.         Fourthly, he submitted that in a suit which was filed by the         son  for  partition  against Mani Ram, the  latter  gave  an         undertaking  not to alienate his properties and taking  into         account  the proceedings it is most unlikely that  he  would         have executed the will at time which it purports to be as he         would have mentioned about his execution of the will in  the         proceedings.   We have examined all these points very  care-         fully and  we find that there is no substance in any one  of         them.             The  plea that the will was executed after  July,  1959,         when  there was a prohibition against the alienation and  it         was pre-dated is without any substance.   The will is  dated         25th  May,  1959, and a contemporaneous record of  the  sub-         stance of the will is made by P.W.  2         404         in  one  of his regularly kept books.   We see no  need  for         predating of the will and the basis of the argument that the         will was not executed on the day on which it purports to  be         is without substance.             Regarding the next contention that the will is an unnat-         ural one it has to be seen that the son had filed a suit for         partition and in  the written statement the father had  gone         so far as to disown his paternity. It is common ground  that         the  relationship between Mani Ram and his son  was  greatly         strained and it is not surprising that he has disowned  him,         in unmistakable terms  in  the  will.  The  submission  that         the  will would not have been executed in mid 1959 is  based         on the plea that he had made a statement in December,  1959,         that    he had not alienated any property.   The son in  the         suit  prayed for  an order against Mani Ram restraining  him         from alienating the  joint family properties except with the         permission  of the court.   A consent order was  passed  di-         recting  Mani Ram not to alienate joint  family  properties.         There  was no need for Mani Ram to mention  about  the  will         for  it is not an alienation and in any event the  will  ac-         cording  to Mani Ram did not relate to joint family  proper-         ties.     The nondisclosure of the execution of the will  is         understandable because Mani Ram did not want anyone particu-         larly his son to know about his dispossessing of the proper-         ty by will.   This ground also is without substance.             The main ground of attack was that on the face of it, it         is   apparent  that the signature is not that of  Mani  Ram.         The appellate court has found that Mani Ram was an  illiter-         ate  person  and  that he had no  standard  signature.   His         signature  is  not  well formed, but his  signature  in  the         Vakalatnama  and in the will bear striking, resemblance   as         found  by  the Bench of the High Court.   Though  there  are         certain  dissimilarities between the signature in  the  will         and in those of admitted documents we are unable to say that         the signature in the will is not that of Mani Ram.   In this         connection we have examined the evidence of the  handwriting         expert  who gave evidence on behalf of the appellants.    We         feel that his qualifications are not such as  to accept  him         as a handwriting expert.   He has hardly done any work as an         expert  after  1950 and we find in his  deposition  that  he         has  exceeded  the  limits as an expert  and  supported  the

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       appellants   in matters which were not within his  province.         We  have no hesitation in agreeing with the High  Court  and         rejecting  his  testimony.  A comment was made on  the  fact         that the date and endorsement in the will is in a  different         ink and probably was not written at the same  time. In  this         connection a discrepancy in the evidence of the scribe, P.W.         2, as to where actually the date was noted whether it was in         his house or that of the lawyer’s was made much of.   We  do         not  think that this discrepancy would affect the. truth  of         the matter.   It is  seen that P.W. 2 in his record  entered         summary of the will on the same day.  It is significant that         in  the cross examination no question was asked  challenging         the  genuineness.  The entry with  regard  to  the will  was         made  by P.W. 2 in the Register which is a  public  register         and on examination we find there is nothing suspicious about         it.  It                 405         may also be noted that the first appellant, the son of  Mani         Ram, has not stated that the signature found in the will  is         not  that of his father. Apart from all these  circumstances         we  find the evidence of P.W. 1 a respectable advocate,  who         speaks  of his advising in the preparation of the will,  his         seeing  the executant sign the will in his presence  can  be         safely accepted.   Excepting that a statement which he  made         as  a witness was rebutted by a District Judge nothing  else         has  been suggested against him.   We have no hesitation  in         accepting  the evidence of these two witnesses, as  the  two         lower  courts  have done.  There  is no ground  at  all  for         rejecting the evidence of P.W. 2, the scribe, whose evidence         has  been  accepted by both the courts.   The    scribe  had         immediately  noted the gist of the will in one of his  regu-         larly kept records which has not been challenged.   We have,         therefore, no hesitation in accepting the finding of the two         lower courts that the will is a genuine one. and was execut-         ed by Mani Ram of his own free will.            Mr.  Pai, counsel for the appellants, submitted that  the         High  Court was in error in holding that item 1 (a)  of  the         properties  is  the  self acquired  property  of  Mani  Ram.         According  to the learned counsel the hereditary  profession         of  Mani Ram was that of a priest   and whatever  he  earned         while  practising that profession and all  his  acquisisions         should  be held to be joint family property.   The  evidence         is  that Main Ram was not only a priest but worked in  three         posts.  He  was  a priest and at the same time  was  in  the         private office of the Maharaja and was also an A.D.C. of the         Maharaja and the Maharaja used to give presents to him.   It         is in evidence that the  Maharaja had  given. the  land  and         himself   constructed   the Kothi before giving it  to  Mani         Ram.   In   support  of  the  contention   that  the  income         derived  from practice of a hereditary profession should  be         construed  as  ancestral property, the learned  counsel  re-         ferred  us  to two decisions in  Ghelabhai  Gavrishankar  v.         Hargowan  Ramit & Others(1), and Hanso Pathak  v.  Harmandil         Pathak  and Another.(2).   Neither of the cases support  the         contention  of the learned counsel.   In the first case  the         question  that arose for consideration was about the  nature         of the office of a hereditary priest.   It was held that the         hereditary  right  of  the  priest  is  immovable  property.         Chandavarkar  J.  pointed  out  that  hereditary  priesthood         vested  in  particular  families is regarded  as  vritti  or         immoveable  property but we do not find any support for  the         contention  that  the income of the hereditary  priest  will         also  be hereditary property.   In fact in Hanso  Pathak  v.         Harmandil  Pathak  and Anr. (supra) it has been  made  clear         that in the United Provinces the income received as  amounts

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       paid by Yajamans at their discretion either by way of chari-         ty or by way of remuneration for personal services  rendered         by  the  priest, cannot be claimed as of right,  and  cannot         amount  to  a family property. Chief  Justice  Sulaiman  ex-         pressed his view that the income received as amounts paid by         people  at their discretion either by way of charity  or  by         way of remuneration for personal services rendered cannot be         claimed as of right amount to   family  property.   Mukerji,         J.in a concurring judgment after distinguishing          1. I.L.R. 36 Bom. 94.          2. A.I.R. 1934. All. 351.         406         Ghelabhai  Gavrishankar v. Hargowan RamIi &  Others  (supra)         held that the income is "Vidyadhana" which is the same thing         as "gains of science" or what has been acquired by  exercise         of learning cannot be divided by partition.   We agree  with         the view thus expressed by the Allahabad High Court and find         that the income from the practice of a hereditary profession         will not be joint family property.             Mani Ram was getting Rs. 100 as A.D.C. and was in  addi-         tion  drawing a salary of Rs. 140 a month as an employee  in         the private Department of the Maharaja.   Thus he had  ample         means  to acquire item 1 (a) of the property from his  self-         acquisition.    On the other  hand there is hardly any  evi-         dence  to  prove that he had any ancestral  nucleus.  It  is         stated  that the family had some jewels and cash which  were         kept  in  the safe of the Maharaja and there is  nothing  to         indicate  that  any thing out of the cash or  jewellery  was         used  in  purchasing  item  1 (a) of the property.    I  was         also  contended that the property that belonged to Mani  Ram         was  only the house and not the land attached to the  house.         We have no hesitation in rejecting this desperate plea.  The         result  is we confirm the findings of the courts below  that         item  1 (a) of the property is the self-acquisition and  the         decree  of  the   appellate court so far as item  1  (a)  is         concerned is confirmed.             Regarding  items  1 (b) and 2 the  appellate  court  has         found that they are joint family properties.   It is  admit-         ted by both the parties that under section 27 of the Jammu &         Kashmir  Hindu  Succession Act, 1956, the  interest  of  the         coparacener in a joint Hindu family property can be disposed         of  by  will.    Section 27 provides that  any    Hindu  may         dispose  of by will any property which is capable  of  being         disposed  by  him in law.   The EXplanation to  the  section         makes it clear that the interest of a male Hindu in a Mitak-         shara coparacenary  property be deemed to be property  capa-         ble  of being disposed of by him within the meaning  of  the         sub-section.  As the joint family consisted of Mani Ram  and         his  son,  the first appellant, the appellate court  gave  a         decree in favour of the respondent so far as one-half  share         of  items 1 (b) and 2 of the properties are concerned.   The         counsel for the appellant submitted that the appellate court         was in error in determining the interest of the testator  as         one-half  share in the two items of joint  family  property.         He  submitted  that according to Mitakshara  law  except  in         Madras  when  there is a partition between the son  and  his         father,  mother is entitled to a share equal to that of  the         son.   In  support  of his contention  the  learned  counsel         referred  to Mulla’s Hindu Law, 14th Ed.,  p.403,  paragraph         315, where it is stated that while the wife cannot demand  a         partition,  but if a partition does take place  between  her         husband  and  his sons, she is entitled to receive  a  share         equal  to  that of a son and to hold and  enjoy  that  share         separately even from her husband.  To the same effect is the         passage  in Mayne’s Hindu Law, 11th Ed., p.  534,  paragraph

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       434,  where it is stated "According to the  Mitakshara  law,         the  mother or the. grandmother is entitled to a share  when         sons  or  grandsons divide the family estate  between  them-         selves,  but she cannot be recognised as the owner  of  such         share  until  the division is actually made, as she  has  no         pre-existing  right in the estate except a right of  mainte-         nance."  Reference         407         was  also made to the decisions reported in Dular  Koeri  v.         Dwarkanath  Misser(1),  where  it was held  that  under  the         Mitakshara   law   when partition of joint  family  property         takes place during the father’s lifetime at the,instance  of         the son, the mother of the son is entitled to a share  equal         to  that  of her husband and her son and she is  entitled  o         have the share separately  allotted and to enjoy that  share         when so allotted.   In Sumrun Thakoor v. Chunder Mun  Misser         &  Others  ,(2) it was held that under  the  Mitakshara  law         where a paration takes place between a father and a son, the         wife  of  the  father is entitled to a  share.  In  Hosbanna         Devanna Naik v. Devenna Sannappa Naik and Others(3), it  was         held  that a step-mother is  entitled to a share on   parti-         tion  between the father and his sons.  In Partap  Singh  v.         Dalip  Singh, (4) in a partition between a Hindu father  and         his son it was held that the wife of the .father has a right         to  a  share equal to that of the father or the  sons.    In         Madras,  though Mitakshara law is applicable it    has  been         held  that on a partition between the sons and  the  father,         the  mother  is not entitled to any share.   (Mulla’s  Hindu         Law, 14th Ed., p.403--"Madras State.--In Southern India  the         practice  of allotting shares upon partition to females  has         long since become obsolete."). So far as Jammu & Kashmir  is         concerned there is no decisions regarding the interest of  a         male  Hindu  in property. This question as. to what  is  the         interest  of  Mani Ram in the joint family property  at  the         time of his death was not, raised before the High Court.  In         fact,  the  case first appellant was that the  joint  family         consisted  of himself and  his father alone, though  in  the         partition  suit filed by him he claimed onethird share  con-         ceding that his father and mother are entitled to the  other         two-third share.  Though the question was not raised in  any         of  the courts below, we feel that being a pure question  of         law,  interests  of  justice require that  the  question  be         decided.  The High Court will decide the interest which Mani         Ram  had  in the joint family property at the  time  of  his         death  which he could dispose of by his will.  In  remitting         this  question to the High Court, we decree he suit  of  the         respondent in respect of item 1 (a) one-third share in items         1  (b)  and 2 of the plaint schedule properties as  to  that         extent her share is not questioned.  The question as to what         is  the extent of the interest as regards items 1 (b) and  2         of the plaint schedule properties which can be bequeathed by         Mani Ram in favour of the respondent is remitted to the High         Court for its determination.   If the High Court finds  that         the respondent is entitled to one-third share it will decide         accordingly.  If  it comes to the conclusion that  Mani  Ram         was.  entitled to bequeath a greater share it will  grant  a         decree   accordingly.    There  will  be  no  order  as   to         costs--appeal disposed of accordingly.         S.R.                                       Decree granted.         (1) I.L.R. 32 Cal. 234.         (2)I.L.R. 8 Cal. 17.         (3) I.L.R. 48 Bom. 468.         (4)I.L.R. 52 All. 596.         408

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