28 October 1969
Supreme Court
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RAJAH VELUGOTI KUMARA KRISHNA YACHENDRAVARU & ORS. Vs RAJAH VELUGOTI SARVAGNA KUMARA KRISHNAYACHENDRA VARU & ORS


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PETITIONER: RAJAH VELUGOTI KUMARA KRISHNA YACHENDRAVARU & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAJAH VELUGOTI SARVAGNA KUMARA KRISHNAYACHENDRA VARU & ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/10/1969

BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. BENCH: RAMASWAMI, V. SHAH, J.C. GROVER, A.N.

CITATION:  1970 AIR 1795            1970 SCR  (3)  88  1969 SCC  (3) 282  CITATOR INFO :  R          1973 SC2438  (4)  RF         1981 SC1937  (24,25)  D          1982 SC 887  (20,22,23,25)

ACT: lmpartible Estate-Venkatagiri Estate-linpartible by  custom- Impartible  Estates Act, 1904 including estate in  Schedule- Madras Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948  vesting  estate  in  Government-Whether  impartibility continues in respect of properties not to  vested-Impartible estate, incidents of.

HEADNOTE: The  appellants  filed a suit for partition  claiming  their share in certain properties of the Venkatagiri Estate  which did  not vest in the State by virtue of the  Madras  Estates (Abolition  and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948  and  in the  alternative  for maintenance in terms of  an  agreement entered  into  in  1899.   Their  contention  was  that  the Venkatagiri  Estate became an impartible estate  only  under the  agreement entered into in 1889 and became  a  statutory impartible estate by virtue of its inclusion in the schedule to  the  Impartible Estates Act, 1904 and on the  repeal  of that enactment by the Abolition Act, 1948, the estate became partible;  that the properties claimed in the  suit,  though outside  the territorial limits of the Zamindari, were  held impartible only as appurtenant to the main estate and  after the  impartible character of the main estate was lost  those properties  became partible.  The High Court held  that  the estate was impartible by custom and was not made  impartible for  the  first time under the agreement of 1889 or  by  the Acts  of  1902  or  1904 and the  claim  for  partition  was negatived.   As regards the claim for maintenance the  court held that a similar claim had been rejected by the  judicial committee as not tenable either under the agreement of  1889 or under Hindu law or on the basis of custom.  In appeal  to this Court, HELD : (i) There is no reason to differ from the finding  of the High Court that the estate of Venkatagiri was an ancient impartible estate by custom and was not made impartible  for

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the first time under the agreement of 1889 or by Madras Acts of 1902 or 1904. [100 A] Gopala Krishna v. Sarvarna Krishna, 1955 A.W.R. 590, Nargunt Lutchmedavanah  v.  Vengama Naidoo, 9 M.I.A.  66,  Raja  Ras Venkata Mahipathy Ramkrishna v. Court of Wards I.L.R. 2 Mad. 283 and Pushavathi Viziram Gajapathy Rai Maina v, Pushavathi Viseswar, [1964] 2 S.C.R. 403, (ii) In   relation  to  Venkatagiri  Zamindari  the   Madras Impartible Estates Act has been repealed so ’far as the  Act applied  to the Estate which by operation of s. 3(b) of  the Abolition Act got transferred and became vested in the State Government.   In  ’relation  to properties  which  have  not become  so  vested in the Government the  Madras  impartible Estates  Act,  1904  continues to be in  force.   Since  the Abolition  Act  did not affect the plaint  properties  these have  continued  to  be  what  they  were  at  the  time  of incorporation  with  the Zamindari, namely.  the  properties retain  their impartible character.  The principle  cossante ratione legis-                              89 cessat  ipsa lex has no application in the present case  for many  times  custom outlives the condition of  things  which give it birth.  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 nature, of the estate  which is impartible. [102 D-H, 103 H, 104 E-F] Rai Kishore Singh v. Mst.  Gahanabai, A.I.R. 1919 P.C.  100, C.  1. T. Punjab v. Dewan Krishna Kishore, 68 I.A.  155  and Raja Velugoti v. Raja Rajeshwara Rao, 68 I.A., 181, (iii)     The  agreement of 1889 in so far as it relates  to payment of maintenance continues to be in force in spite  of the  coming  into operation of the Abolition  Act.   In  the absence  of  express words to the effect, it  would  not  be right  to attribute to the legislature an intention to  free the  properties  not transferred to the  Government  by  the operation of s. 3(b) of the Act from liability to contribute towards the maintenance of the, junior members under such  a contract or family arrangement, and while leaving the  land- holder  in possession of those other properties, limit  the, maintenance   holders  to  a  share  of  a  fifth   of   the compensation amount. [109 C]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal  No.  2113  of 1966. Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 13, 1965 of the Madras High Court in O.S.A. Nos. 40 and 53 of 1961. C.   R. Pattabhiraman, V. Suresham and S. Balakrishnan,  for the appellants. V. Vedantachari -and K. Jayaram, for respondent No. 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Ramaswami,  J. This appeal arises out of a suit O.S. 351  of 1952 filed for partition by 7 plaintiffs viz. : (1) Sri Raja Venkata  Kumara  Krishna  Yachendra, (2)  Sri  Rajah  V.  V. Ramakrishna, (3) Sri Raja V. V. Rajagopala Krishna, (4)  Sri Raja V. V. Muvva.  Gopala Krishna, (5) Sri Raja V. Rajeswara Rao,  (6)  Sri Rajah V. Maheswara Rao and (7)  Sri  Raja  V. Madana Gopala Krishna, minor by next friend and mother  Smt. Sridevamma  in respect of the Venkatagiri Estate  and  other properties   as  accretions  to  this  estate.   The   first defendant in the suit was the holder of the zamindari  until

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it was notified and taken over by the State on September  7, 1949.  The 3rd and 4th defendants are brothers of the  first defendant.  The third defendant died during the pendency  of the suit and defendants 7 and 8 are his sons.  Defendants 4, 5 and 6 are the sons of the 4th defendant.  The 9th and 10th defendants  are  the  sons of the 1st  defendant.   The  4th plaintiff  Shri Raja V. V. Muvva Gopala Krishna died  during the  pendency  of the appeals against the suit in  the  High Court of Madras.  After the filing of the petition of appeal in this Court Sri Raja V. Maheswara Rao, L6Sup.  C.I./70--7 90 the  6th  plaintiff  also died.   The  relationship  of  the parties will appear from the following pedigree Sri Rajah Velugoti Kumara Yachendra Nayudu Bahadur  Raj Rajagopalakrishna    Muddu Krishna     Venkata                           (diedissueless   Krishna                              in1921 ) (died in 1916)                             Krishna                                            Bahadur Raja Govinda Krishna                       (plff.1) (died in 1937)                                          V. V.Rama                                          Krishna Raja V Sarvagna                           (plff.2) Krishna                                        V.V. Raja                                    GOPALAKRISHNA (deft)                              (DLFF NO.3) D-9                                    V.V. Morva D-10                               Gopalakrishna                                       (dlff.4)         Second prince    Third prince         D-7    D-8       D-4 D-5 D-6 (II) Venu Gopla Rajeswara Rao    Maheswara Rao (plff. 5)            (plff. 6)                    Madana Gopala (Minor)                    by next friend and                     mother Sreedevi                       (Plff. 7) (III) Rama Krishna Rao      Seshchala pathi  Vekata Lakshmana (adopted to            Ranga Rao          Rao Pithapur)             (adopted to      (adopted away)                          Bobbili) The  Venkatagiri Estate is an ancient impartible  estate  in Nellore  District included in the Schedule under the  Madras Impartible Estates Act (Act II of 1904).  In the year  1878, Raja Velugoti Kumara Yachema, who heads the above  pedigree, was 91 the  Zamindar.   He had seven sons of whom  three  had  been given  away  in  adoption.   The  eldest  of  the  sons  was Rajagopala  Krishna  to whom Raja  Velugoti  Kumara  Yachama handed  over the entire estate and certain other  properties with  a  view  to spend the rest of his life  in  piety  and meditation.  In 1889, Muddukrishna and Venkata Krishna,  two of  the sons, claimed a share in the estate contending  that the estate was partible and the four sons were each entitled to    a   fourth   share   in   the    family    properties. Rajagopalakrishna,   however,   asserted   its    impartible character.   Ultimately there was a settlement  between  the parties  wherein Muddu Krishna and Venkata Krishna  withdrew

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their  claim  to  partition and  recognised  the  impartible character  of  the Zamindari.  The settlement  involved  the payment of large sums of money by Rajagopala Krishna to  his three  younger brothers Muddu Krishna, Venkata  Krishna  and Venugopal.   Venugopal was then a minor and was  represented by  the  father Raja Velugoti Kumara Yachama  himself.   The terms of the settlement were embodied in a stamped  document bearing the date April 8, 1889.  Its terms may be summarised as  follows : (a) recognition by all the brothers  that  the Venkatagiri  estate-was  impartible with descent  along  the eldest  line,  that  is,  by  Rajagopala  Krishna  the  then Zamindar  and after him by his son, son’s son and so  on  in the  eldest  male line; (b) the three brothers of  the  then Rajah,  Muddukrishna, Venkata Krishna and Venugopal,  should each receive a sum of Rs. 5,81,252-11-10; (c) Muddu Krishna, Venkata  Krishna and Venugopal should also receive a sum  of Rs. 40,000 each for providing themselves with residence; (d) a provision for the marriage expenses of Venkata Krishna and Venugopal and (e) provision that Rajagopala Krishna and  his successors to the estate should pay to Muddukrishna, Venkata Krishna  and Venugopal a sum of Rs. 1,000/- each per  mensem for life -and on their death a similar amount to their  male descendants  (Purusha  Santhathi) by way of  allowance,  the amount payable to each branch being Rs. 1,000/- irrespective of the number of descendants. Venugopal, the last of the four brothers, never married  and plaintiffs  5 -and 6 to the suit are his illegitimate  sons. In  1932  plaintiffs 5 and 6 instituted a suit  against  the Estate (O.S. No. 30 of 1932) claiming maintenance  allowance and   relying  upon  the  agreement  of  1889  and  in   the alternative on custom and Hindu law.  The Subordinate  Judge found  that  custom was not proved and that  they  were  not entitled  to maintenance under the Hindu law.  But he  found that  the claimants were entitled to the  maintenance  under the  deed as Purusha Santhathi.  On ’appeal the  High  Court agreed  with the finding of the trial Court as  regards  the absence  of any custom but differed from the  interpretation of  Purusha Santhathi and held that the term was  applicable only 92 to  legitimate sons and not to illegitimate sons.  The  High Court,  however, took the view that the plaintiffs 5  and  6 were  entiled  to  maintenance under  the  Hindu  Law.   The judgment  of  the  High Court is  reported  in  Maharaja  of Venkatagiri v. Raja Rajeswara Rao(1).  The matter was  taken in  appeal  to  the Judicial  Cornmittee  and  the  Judicial Committee  allowed the appeal of the Rajah holding that  the illegitimate   sons  of  Venugopal  were  not  entitled   to maintenance either under the agreement of 1889 or under  the Hindu  law.   The  decision of  the  Judicial  Committee  is reported in Raja Krishna Yachendra v. Raja Rajeswara Rao(1). At  the  time of the notification. of the estate  under  the Madras Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948  (Act  26 of 1948) (hereinafter  called  the  Abolition Act),  the first defendant in the suit held the  estate  and was the principal landholder under the Act.  Under s. 66  of the Abolition Act, on and from the notified date, the Madras Impartible Estates Act, 1904 (Act 2 of 1904) shall be deemed to have been repealed in its application to the estate.  Out of the advance compensation first deposited, plaintiffs 1 to 4  had been paid a sum of Rs. 75,000/as maintenance  holders under s. 45 of the Abolition Act.  They were entitled  under the  Act  to  a further sum of Rs. 75,000/-  in  the  second instalment  of compensation and a share in  such  additional compensation  that  may  be given.   They  were  also  given

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interim payments at Rs. 9,000/- per year under s. 50 of  the Abolition  Act.   Under  s. 47 of the  Act  they  were  also entitled to ryotwari patta. The  case of the plaintiff was that the  Venkatagiri  Estate became an impartible estate only under the agreement of 1889 between the parties and became a statutory impartible estate by  virtue  of its inclusion in the Schedule to  the  Madras Impartible  Estate Act, 1904 and that on the repeal of  that enactment  by s. 66 of the Abolition Act the  Estate  became partible.   The  contention of the plaintiffs  was  that  as junior  members  of a joint family they were entitled  to  a share  in  the compensation amount and also to  a  share  in Schedule  B  properties which were not vested in  the  State Government.   So  far  as  the  claim  to  a  share  in  the compensation  amount  is concerned, there  were  proceedings under  the Abolition Act itself.  The suit  was  principally confined  to  the  claim  for a share,  in  the  B  Schedule properties and for -an alternative claim for maintenance  at Rs.  1,000/-  p.m. So far as the B Schedule  properties  are concerned,  the claim was confined to shares in three  items of immovable properties namely (1) Motimahal No. 187,  Mount Road,  Madras, (2) Venkatagiri Rajah’s Bungalow  at  Nellore and (3) Venkatagiri Rajah’s bungalow at (1) I.L.R. [1939] mad. 622. (2) I.L.R. [1942] mad. 419. 93 Kalahasti.  Out  of  the movable properties  the  claim  was confined to sub-item8 of item 8 of the B Schedule, that  is, a golden howdah.  It is the case of the plaintiffs that  the repeal  of  the  impartible Estates Act  by  virtue  of  the notification will have the effect of changing the  character of  the  properties  in  the  B  Schedule  and  making  them partible.  It was contended that even if for any reason  the plaintiffs are not granted a share in the properties of  the estate, they must be paid a sum of Rs. 1,000/- per mensem in terms of the original agreement of April 8, 1889. The  trial Judge, Subramaniam J., held that the  Venkatagiri Zamindari  was  impartible  by custom even  apart  from  the agreement of 1889 and the Impartible Estates Act of 1902 and 1904.   Even after the abolition of the  Venkatagiri  Estate the  character  of impartiability was found to  continue  in respect  of B Schedule properties which formed part  of  the Zamindari.  The learned Judge held that the plaintiffs 1  to 4  were not entitled to a share in the immovable  properties of  B schedule but were entitled to recover such sum as  may be needed to make up the monthly allowance for their  branch at  Rs.  1,000/- p.m. after taking into  consideration,  the amount  which  plaintiffs  1  to  4  were  given  under  the Abolition Act.  They were granted a charge for the amount on items 1, 14 and 16 of Plaint B Schedule.  Plaintiffs 1 to  4 were  also given a decree for one-third share sub-item 8  of item 8 of Schedule B properties, namely, the golden  howdah. So  far as plaintiffs 5 to 7 were concerned, they were  held not entitled to any relief.  The plaintiffs 1 to 7 preferred appeal, O.S.A. 53 of 1961 against the judgment of the  trial Judge  in O.S. 351 of 1952.  The first defendant also  filed OSA  40/61 against that portion of the judgment in O.S.  351 of  1952  whereby the trial judge held that even  after  the notification  of the Venkatagiri Estate under the  Abolition Act  and the payment of the compensation under that  Act  to plaintiffs  1  to 4 their claim for  maintenance  under  the agreement  of  April  8, 1889 continued in  force  and  that plaintiffs 1 to. 4 were entitled to a payment of Rs. 1,000/- p.m.  each after giving credit for payments made  under  the Abolition Act.  Both the appeals O.S.A. 53 of 191 and O.S.A.

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40 of 1961 were heard together and disposed of by a Division Bench consisting of Chandra Reddy, C.J. and Natesan, J.,  by a common judgment dated August 13, 1965.  The Division Bench held  that plaintiffs 1 to 4 having enjoyed the  benefit  of payment  under  s.  45  (5) of the  Abolition  Act  and  got capitalised  by the Tribunal of their maintenance rights  on the  basis  of the extinction of the Estate  cannot  make  a further  claim as if the agreement of 1889 was a  subsisting one  and  call  upon the 1st defendant to make  up  for  any deficiency  from the properties that had pot vested  in  the Government.  The Division Bench also disallowed the claim of plaintiffs  1  to 4 for a share in the value of  the  golden howdahs.  It was 94 pointed  out  that silver, and the golden  howdah  were  not treated as an impartible but were actually divided among the family members.  Accordingly the Division Bench allowed  the appeal  O.S.A.  40 of 1961 filed by the 1st  defendant.   In regard  to  C.S.A. 53 of 1961 the Division  Bench  held  the claim  that  the Venkatagiri Estate was  not  an  impartible estate  by custom was devoid of merit.  It was  pointed  out that before the Special Tribunal under the Abolition Act the plaintiffs  had  advanced the same, contention  but  it  was rejected.   Plaintiffs 1 to 4 filed an appeal to this  Court against the decision of the Special Tribunal.  The  decision of  this  Court  is reported  in  Raja  Muvva  Gopalakrishna Yachendra  and  others  v.  Raja  V.  V.  Sarvagana  Krishna Yachendra and others(1).  Before this Court plaintiff 1 to 4 did  not question the finding of the Special  Tribunal  that Venkatagiri  Estate was an impartible Estate.  On the  other hand the contention advanced by the plaintiffs was that  the Venkatagiri  Estate  was impartible by custom and  that  the impartibility continued under the Madras Impartible  Estates Act  but  ceased  when  the  estate  vested  in  the   State Government.   The Division Bench upon an examination of  the evidence  held  that Venkatagiri Estate  was  an  impartible estate  by custom and was not made impartible for the  first time under the-agreement of 1889 or by Acts of 1902 or 1904. The claim for partition made by plaintiffs in respect of the B  Schedule immovable properties was negatived.  As  regards the  claim  to  maintenance made by plaintiffs 5  to  7  the Division  Bench held that a similar claim had been  rejected previously  by the Judicial Committee as not tenable  either under  the  Agreement of 1889 or under Hindu Law or  on  the basis of custom.  In the result OSA 53 of 1961 filed by  the plaintiffs  was dismissed.  OSA 40 of 1961 preferred by  the 1st defendant was allowed and the suit was dismissed in  its entirety. The  first  question  to be considered  in  this  appeal  is whether the plaintiffs are entitled to claim a share in  the three  items of immovable properties of B  Schedule  already referred   to.   The  argument  on  their  behalf   may   be sumtnarised  as follows : Venkatagiri Estate  admittedly  an ancestral  estate was not impartible by custom but  for  the first  time  by the agreement of 1889  the  parties  thereto agreed to hold it as an impartible estate, succession  being governed  by the law of primogeniture.  The arrangement  was brought about to preserve the integrity of the Estate and to preserve  its past glory.  By reason of the notification  of the  Estate under the Abolition Act and the vesting  of  the Estate in the Government the purpose for which the agreement was  entered  into was frustrated.  The  agreement  of  1889 could therefore be no longer relied upon for preserving  the impartible  character of the Estate or what was left of  it. The three items of immovable

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(1)  [1963] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 280.                              95 properties  though  outside the territorial  limits  of  the Zamindari  ,were held impartible only as appurtenant to  the main  Estate and after the impartible character of the  main estate  was  lost, these properties became  partible.   Even though  the estate was treated as an impartible  estate,  it was an ancestral estate as there was joint ownership of  the Estate in the family members.  Plaintiffs 1 to 4, therefore, were  entitled  to one-third share of the  properties  of  B Schedule  which  are  not  vested  in  the  Government   and plaintiffs  5 to 7 were entitled similarly to  another  one- third share. In  our  opinion  the  contention  of  the  plaintiffs  that Venkatagiri   Estate  was  not  impartible  by   custom   is untenable.    The  ’early  history  of  the   Zamindari   is summarised in Gopalkrishna v. Sarvagna Krishna(") as follows :               The   estate  of  Venkatagiri  has   been   in               existence  since  Muhamadan  times.   On   the               disruption  of  the  Moghal  Empire,  it  owed               allegiance   to  the  Nawabs  of  Arcot.    In               addition  to the payment of peshkush they  had               to maintain an armed force ’for the assistance               of   Government  in  times  of   disorder   or               rebellion.  As a result of the treaty  between               the East India Company on the one side and the               Nawab of Arcot on the other the Administration               of   that  part  of  the  country  under   the               suzerainty of the latter was made over to  the               British.   Under this treaty the Zamindary  of               Venkatagiri  was recognised and the Rajah  had               to  pay to the East India Company what be  was               paying   before  to  the  Muhammadan   rulers.               Sometime   later,  in  accordance   with   the               arrangement entered into between the Zamindars               in  Western  Arcot and Lord  Olive,  the  East               India Company took over the responsibility for               the  preservation  of law and  order  and  the               Zamindars   were  relieved  of  the  task   of               maintaining armed forces and in its stead they               undertook  to  pay an  additional  revenue  on               their estate, which was added to the peshkush.               It  was assured that the fixed peshkush  would               remain  unalterable.   In  pursuance  of  this               agreement, a sanad was granted in 1802 to  the               Zamindar  of Venkatagiri and  other  Zamindars               embodying the terms agreed upon.  Ever  since,               successive  Zamindars held the  estate  paying               peshkush which has been invariable." The  Estate  is described in the official documents  in  the year  1801 as one of the Western palayama.  It was  observed by the Privy Council in Naragunty Lutchmeedavamah  v.Vengama Naidoo(1): (1) (1955) A.W.R. 590. (2) 9 M.I.A. 66. 96 .lm15 A Polliam is explained in Wilson’s Glossary to be a tract of country  subject  to  a petty  Chieftain."  In  speaking  of Polligars, he describes them as having been originally petty Chieftains  occupying  usually  tracts of  hill  or  forest, subject  to pay tribute and service to the paramount  State, but seldom paying either, and more or less independent,  but as having, at present, since the subjugation of the  country

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by   the  East  India  Company,  subsided   into   peaceable landholders.  This corresponds with the account read at  the Bar  from the Report of the Select Committee on the  affairs of India, in 1812.  A Polliam is in the nature of a Raj;  it may belong to an undivided family, but it is not the subject of  partition;  it  can be held by only one  member  of  the family  at  a time, who is styled the  Polligar,  the  other members  of  the family being entitled to a  maintenance  or allowance out of the estate. The  document  of  1889  also  negatives  the  case  of  the plaintiffs that the Estate was made impartible for the first time by that document.  The language of the document clearly shows that it only recognised the then subsisting impartible character  of  the  Estate.  In  other  words  the  document proceeds  on  the  assumption that the  Zamindari  was  made impartible by custom from the very beginning.  The  relevant portion  of  the  Agreement  of 1889  Ex.   A-1  is  to  the following effect :               "On the 18th April 1889, the Contract  entered               in writing by Raja Velugoti Rajagopala Krishna               Yachandra   Bahadur,  Rajah  of   Venkatagiri,               eldest son of Sri Raja Velugoti Kumara Yachama               Naidu and his three uterine brothers (1) Muddu               Krishna,  (2)  Venkatakrishna  and  (3)  Minor               Venugopala  by  his father and  guardian  Raja               Velugoti Kumara Yachama Naidu is as follows  :               Out of the sons of the said Sri Raja  Velugoti               Kumara Yachama Naidu, excluding the three ....               who, have been given in adoption .... while we               remaining four brothers comprising the parties               to this document are sons of the said Raja  V.               Kumara   Yachama  Naidu  and  members  of   an               undivided  family;  because  the   Venkatagiri               Estate is impartible and subject to the law of               Primogeniture  our father Sri Raja  V.  Kumara               Yachama  Naidu,  with  the  intention  of  his               seeing,  and approving of, the ruling  of  the               estate  by his eldest son the Raja  Rajagopala               Krishna, and with the intention of passing his               time thereafter in future in the meditation of               God,  as means to attain to the world  beyond,               transferred  on the 28th October, 1878 to  the               eldest of us four and the heir apparent to the               estate, namely, the               97               Raja Rajagopala Krishna, Raja of  Venkatagiri,               the   Venkatagiri  Zamindari,  the   immovable               Properties   relating   thereto,   the   other               immovable  properties which were acquired,  by               means of the income of the said Zamindari  and               all  his  ancestral  and  his  self   acquired               movable  properties, excepting the nine  lakhs               and   odd  rupees  and  all   the   properties               connected  therewith including its  accretions               which he retained for his charitable expenses.               Since,  then,  the aforesaid  Raja  Rajagopala               Krishna  Yachandra, Raja of Venkatagiri,  has,               been ruling the estate...... When the  matters               stood  thus,  on account of  ill-feeling  that               arose  between some of us, two of  us,  namely               Muddukrishna  Yachendrulu and Venkata  Krishna               Yachendrulu,  expressed  the desire  that  the               said  Venkatagiri  Zamindari,  the   immovable               properties  connected  therewith,  the   other               immovable properties acquired by means of  the

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             income  of the said Venkatagiri Zamindari  and               all  the movable properties should be  divided               into  four shares and their respective  shares               should be given to them.  The Raja Rajagopala-               krishna,  Raja of Venkatagiri, becoming  aware               of  this fact, contended that the  Venkatagiri               Zamindari,  the  other  immovable   properties               connected   therewith,  the  other   immovable               properties  which were acquired by his  father               out of the income of that Zamindari and trans-               ferred by him to him alongwith the estate  and               ancestral and sell acquired movable properties               of his father which the latter transferred  to               him  alongwith  the estate,  were  impartible.               "Thereupon, all of us brothers consulted about               the  aforementioned  points  of  dispute,  our               father   who  is  all-knowing  and   who   has               considerable  experience.   He  considered  it               well  and  positively  expressed  his  opinion               that,   regard  to  immovable   property   the               Venkatagiri Zamindari was originally earned by               our  ancestors  by reason; of velour  in  war,               that it was an ancient Zamindari, that it  was               an  impartible  estate  devolving  along   the               eldest  line  of  descendants,  that  it   was               permanently   settled,   that,   when   Sannad               Milikiyat   Istimirar  was  granted   to   the               ancestors,  who  was  then  the  Zamindar   of               Venkatagiri, the peshkush for this Venkatagiri               Estate was fixed with reference to the  amount               of   expenses  of  the  military  troops   and               servants which he (our ancestor) was supplying               and  with  reference  to  the  money  paid  as               tribute  to  the  former  Government,  namely,               Nawab, that therefore this Venkatagiri  estate               was   not   partible,   that   the   immovable               properties  connected  therewith,  and   other               immovable properties acquired by means of  the               income of the said estate were also, of               98               course, impartible-that, in regard to  movable               property,  his  ancestral  and   self-acquired               money   in  cash,  the  money  consisting   of               deposits kept in the firms of Arbuthnot & Co.,               and  Binny  & Co., all the  silver,  gold  and               precious  stones,  jewels, which were  on  the               26th October, 18’/8 transferred along with the               said  Venkatagiri Estate to this  eldest  son,               the   Raja   Rajagopala   Krishna,   Raja   of               Venkatagiri,  together  with  the   accretions               thereto  upto  now should be  divided  equally               ;among his four sons who are among the parties               to  this  document-that such would be  a  just               arrangement.    In  regard  to  our   father’s               opinion  _about the - immovable property,  the               three youngest of us brothers consulted  their               proper  friends and in regard to our  father’s               opinion   about  the  aforementioned   movable               properties   which  were  acquired   by   Raja               Velugoti Kumara Yachama and transferred  along               with  the  Venkatagiri Estate, the  eldest  of               these  four  brothers,  . .  .  consulted  his               proper  friends.  On  account  of  the  cogent               reasons  urged  by the respective  friends  of               these both parties, and for the reasons  urged

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             by  the  respective  friends  of  these   both                             parties,  and for the reason that  all   family               feuds would (thereby) end and compromised  the               opinions  of  one  of  the  parties  to   this               document, namely, Raja Velugoti Kumara Yachama               Naidu,  on  the two points referred  to  above               hAve been agreed in, as certainly correct  and               accepted, by the remaining parties, namely, we               four brothers.  Therefore, the parties to this               document,  namely, we four brothers,  and  our               father  Raja  Velugoti Kumara Yachama  do  now               jointly and severally hereby determine,  agree               and affirm as follows               "All  this  Venkatagiri Estate  is  impartible               descendible along the eldest line (of descent)               of the said Estate,  the immovable  properties               connected  therewith and the  other  immovable               properties acquired by means of the income  of               the  said  estate  should be  enjoyed  by  the               eldest of us four brothers and the heir of the               aforesaid Raja Velugoti Kumara Yachama  namely               the aforesaid Velugoti Rajagopala Krishna  and               after  him by his son, son’s son and so on  in               the eldest male line of descent......  subject               to the condition of paying allowances to other               members  of  our  family,  suitably  to  their               respective  status out of the income from  the               estate  and the properties.  And so we  divide               in  the  manner  shown below  all  the  money,               silver,  gold and precious stones, jewels  and               the accretions resulting thereto upto                                     99               this  day  which  formed  ancestral  and  self               acquisition of our father...... along with the               said estate......" Counsel for the plaintiffs has been unable to show any  term in this Agreement to support his contention that it was only by  virtue of that document that the parties agreed to  call the  Estate  impartible.   On  the  contrary  the   document indicates that there was clear recognition by the executable of  the  then  character  of the  Estate  as  an  impartible zamindari. We  shall  then deal with the inclusion of  the  Venkatagiri Zamindari in the Impartible Estates Act passed by the Madras Legislature  in 1902 and 1904.  These Acts became  necessary as  a result of the ruling of the Privy Council in Sri  Raja Rao  Venkata Mahipati Rama Krishna Rao Bahadur v. The  Court of.  Wards(1).  The decision of the Judicial  Committee  was given in 1889 and the Impartible -Estates Act was passed  in Madras  in  1902  with  a  view  to  preserve  the   ancient zamindaris  of  the  Madras Presidency.   Referring  to  the Schedule  to  the Act the statement of objects  and  reasons explained   that  the  schedule  contained  only   Permanent Settlement Estates in existence before the date of Permanent Settlement  Regulations and which have been declared by  the judicial decisions to be impartible or locally considered by ancient custom to be so impartible and had in fact descended without  partition since that date, The  Impartible  Estates Act, 1904 finally took the place of 1902 Act.  The Estate of Venkatagiri  has  been included in the schedule  annexed  to both the Impartible Estates Acts.  The obvious inference  is that  the Government had made enquiries and  were  satisfied that  the Estates included in the schedule to Act 2 of  1904 were impartible and the inclusion of the Estates therein  is

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a  legislative determination that they were impartible.   In Pushavathi  Viziaram  Gajapathi  Rai  Manne  v.  Pushpavathi Visweswar Gajapathi Rai(1) this Court observed               "Soon after these decisions were pronounced by               the  Privy  Council,  the  Madras  Legislature               stepped in because those decisions very rudely               disturbed  the view held in Madras  about  the               imitations   on  the  powers  of  holders   of               impartible  estates  in the matter  of  making               alienations of the said estates.  That led  to               the  passing of the Madras Impartible  Estates               Acts   II/1902,  11/1903  and  II/1904.    The               Legislature  took  the  precaution  of  making               necessary  enquiries in regard  to  impartible               estates  within  the State and made  what  the               legislature thought were necessary  provisions               in  respect  of the terms  and  conditions  on               which the said estates were held."               (1)   I.L.R. 22 Mad. 383,               (2) [1964] 2 S.C.R.  403.               100               In  these  circumstances we see no  reason  to               differ from the finding of the High Court that               the  Estate  of  Venkatagiri  was  an  ancient               impartible  Estate by custom and was not  made               impartible  for  the  first  time  under   the               agreement  of  1889 or by the Madras  Acts  of               1902 and 1904.               The next question for determination is what is               the effect of the Abolition Act on the  rights               and  obligations of the members of the  family               in  relation  to  the  Venkatagiri  Zamindari.               According  to  the  plaintiffs  the   property               described  in the B Schedule appended  to  the               plaint  did  not vest under s. 3  (b)  of  the               Abolition  Act.   The  properties  in  the   B               Schedule  include  a building in  Mount  Road,               Madras   a  bungalow  at  Kalahasti  and   the               District  Judge’s  bungalow at  Nellore  Town.               These  buildings  are  situated  outside   the               territorial limits of the Venkatagiri  Estate.               Section  3  (a) and (b) of the  Abolition  Act               states               "3. With effect on and from the notified  date               and  save as otherwise expressly  provided  in               this Act-               1 (a) [the Madras Estates] Land (Reduction  of               Rent) Act, 1947 (Madras Act XXX of 1947) 3 [in               so far as it relates to matters other than the               reduction  of  rents  and  the  collection  of               arrears  of  rent  and  the  Madras  Permanent               Settlement Regulation, 1802 (Madras Regulation               XXV  of  1802), the Madras Estates  Land  Act,               1908  (Madras  Act 1 of 1908), and  all  other               enactments  applicable to the estate  as  such               shall be deemed to have been repealed in their               application to the estate.]               (b)   the   entire  estate   (including   -all               communal  lands; porambokes;  other  non-ryoti               lands;  waste  lands;  pasture  lands;   lanka               lands; forests; mines and minerals;  quarries;               rivers  and  streams;  tanks  and   irrigation               works;  fisheries  and ferries),  shall  stand               transferred  to  the Government  and  vest  in               them, free of all encumbrances and the  Madras

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             Revenue   Recovery  Act,  1864,   the   Madras               Irrigation  Cess  Act,  1865,  and  all  other               enactments applicable to ryotwari areas  shall               apply to the estate;               Section 1(3), state               (3)   It applies to all estates as defined  in               section  3, clause (2), of the Madras  Estates               Land Act, 1908,                                    101               except  inam villages which became estates  by               virtue  of  the  Madras  Estates  Land  (Third               Amendment) Act, 1936.               Section 2 (3) defines "estate" to mean....               (3)   "estate"   means  a  Zamindari   on   an               undertenure or an inam estate;                Section 2(16) defines "Zamindari" as follows               (16)  "zamindari estate" means-               (i)   an estate within the meaning of  section               3, clause               (2)   (a),  of  the Estates  Land  Act,  after               excluding therefrom every portion  which  is               itself  an estate under section 3, clause               (2) (b) or (2) (e), of that Act; or               (ii)  an estate within the meaning of  section               3,  clause 2(b) or 2(c), of the  Estates  Land               Act,  after excluding therefrom every  portion               which  is  itself an estate under  section  3,               clause (2) (e), of that Act.               Section 3(2) of Estate Land Act (Madras Act  1               1908) defined an "estate" to mean :               (a)   any   permanently-settled   estate    or               temporarilysettled zamindari;               (b)   any portion of such  permanently-settled               estate or temporarily-settled zamindari  which               -is separately registered in the office of the               Collector;               (c)   any unsettled palaiyan or jagir;               x            x             x             x Section  2(2)  of the Madras Impartible  Estates  Act,  1904 (Madras Act 2 of 1904) defines an "impartible estate" as  an estate descendible to a single heir and subject to the other incidents  of  impartible  estates in  Southern  India.   In relation to the Venkatagiri Zamindari the expression  Estate in  s.  3(a) of the Abolition Act refers  obviously  to  the Venkatagiri  Estate  which  till then  was  subject  to  the operation of the Madras Permanent Settlement Regulation  and the   Madras  Estates  Lands  Act.   In  relation   to   the Venkatagiri Zamindari s. 66 of the Abolition Act enacts 102 that   with  effect  from  the  notified  date  the   Madras Impartible  Estates Act, 1904 shall be deemed to  have  been repealed  in  its application to the Estate.   The  question arises whether the word’ " estate" in s. 66 of the Abolition Act  denotes  the zamindari consisting of  properties  which stood transferred to the Government under the Abolition  Act and properties which are not so transferred, or whether  the expression  ’estate’ refers to only the  Venkatagiri  Estate which until the notification issued under the Abolition  Act took  effect  was the subject of  the  Permanent  Settlement Regulation and the Madras Estates Land Act.  The High  Court has given sufficient reasons in support of its view that the word  " estate" in s. 65 of the Abolition Act  denotes  only the estate, Governed by the Permanent Settlement  Regulation and  the  Estates  Land Act and not any other  part  of  the impartible zamindari.  In other words the Abolition Act  has

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no   application  to  properties  which  are   outside   the territorial  limits of the Venkatagiri Estate.  The  result, therefore, is that in relation to Venkatagiri Zamindari  the Madras  Impartible Estates Act has been repealed so  far  as the Act applied to the Estate which by operation of s. 3 (b) of  the Abolition Act has got transferred and became  vested in  the State Government.  In relation to  other  properties which have not become so vested in the Government the Madras Impartible Estates Act (1904) continues to be in force.   It is  the case of the plaintiffs that items 14, 15 and  16  of Schedule B did not vest in the Government under s. 3 (b)  of the  Act.   Item  14, 15 and 16 are  Motimahal,  Mount  Road Madras, the District Judge’s Bungalc Nellore and Vengatagiri Raja’s  bungalow,  Kalahasti.  It is conceded on  behalf  of defendant No. 1 that items 14, 15 and 16 did not vest in the Government  under  s.  3 (b) of the Abolition  Act.   It  is further  claimed on behalf of the plaintiffs that items  14, 15  and 16 have become partible properties after the  coming into  force  of the Abolition Act and plaintiffs  should  be granted their shares of these properties.  The contention of the plaintiffs is that the Zamindari was made impartible  by the  agreement entered into by the brothers in 1889 and  the properties which have not been taken over by the  Government should  ’be  divided  among the  family  members.   We  have already  given reasons for the view that the  Zamindari  was impartible  independently of the agreement of 1889 and  that the  agreement was no more than a conscious  affirmation  by the parties of what the position was previously in fact  and in law.  To put it differently the agreement of 1889  merely acknowledged  and defined antecedent rights  and  antecedent obligations.   It  is  therefore  difficult  to  accept  the contention  of  the  plaintiffs  that  the  three  items  of property  in  Schedule B have  become  partible  properties. Since  the  Abolition  Act did not affect  these  items  the properties have continued to be what they were ,at the  time of  incorporation with the zamindari, namely the  properties retain their impartible character.                             103 We  are also not impressed with the argument that  as  there was  incorporation  of  the  buildings  with  the  original. impartible estate the building ceased to have any impartible character  when the impartibility of the parent  estate  was gone.  ’It is true that the buildings which are outside  the geographical  limits of the Venkatagiri Zamindari cannot  be brought  within the definition of the Estate as  defined  in the Estates Lands Act and the Abolition Act cannot therefore be  made  applicable to such buildings.  But  the  buildings have acquired the character of impartibility as a result  of incorporation  with  the parent estate  and  that  character cannot be lost unless the statute intervenes.  Section 4  of the  Impartible Estates Act itself contemplates parts of  an Estate  being impartible. In Pushavathi  Viziaram  Gajapathi Rai  Manne  v.  Pushavathi Visweswar  Gajapathi  Raj(1)  the effect of integration is described as follows :               "In all such cases, the crucial test is one of               intention.   It  would  be  noticed  that  the               effect  of incorporation in such cases is  the               reverse  of  the  effect  of  blending   self-               acquired   property  with  the  joint   family               property.   In  the latter category  of  cases               where a person acquires separate property  and               blends  it  with  the property  of  the  joint               family  of  which  he is  a  co-parcener,  the               separate  property  loses its character  as  a               separate  acquisition and merges in the  joint

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             family   property,   with  the   result   that               devolution in respect of that property is then               governed   by   survivorship   and   not    by               succession.  On the other hand, if the  holder               of ’an impartible estate acquires property and               incorporates it with the impartible estate  he               makes it a part of the impartible estate  with               the  result that the acquisition ceases to  be               partible  and  becomes  impartible.   In  both               cases,  however, the essential test is one  of               intention   and  so,  wherever  intention   is               proved,  either  by conduct or  otherwise,  an               inference  as  to  blending  or  incorporation               would be drawn." It was urged on behalf of the plaintiffs that the effect  of the  Abolition  Act in regard to Venkatagiri Estate  was  to take  away  the character of impartibility  in  relation  to property  both inside and outside the territorial limits  of the  Estate.  It was also contended that the object  of  the Abolition Act was threefold : (1) to eliminate the class  of middlemen  (2)  to abolish permanent settlement and  (3)  to introduce  ryotwari  system.  The argument was that  in  the face of the avowed objects of the legislation it was  futile to  contend  that  the  character  of  impartibility   still continued in a truncated form.  It was said Cessante ratione legis, cassat et ipsa lex (reason is the soul of the law and when the reason for (1)  [1964] 2 S.C.R. 403. 104 any  particular law ceases, so does the law itself).  It  is not  possible to accept this principle in the present  case. For,  many  times custom outlives the  condition  of  things which  give it birth.  As observed by Lord Atkinson  in  Rai Kishore Singh v. Mst.  Gahenabai(1)               It is difficult to see why a family should not               similarly  agree  expressly  or  impliedly  to               continue  to observe a custom necessitated  by               the condition of things existing in  primitive               times after that condition had completely  al-               tered.   Therefore, the principle embodied  in               the expression ’cessat ratio cessat lex’  does               not  apply  where  the  custom  outlives   the               condition of things which gave it birth." We  accordingly  reject the contention of the  plaintiff  on this aspect of the case. We  are  also  unable  to  accept  the  contention  of   the plaintiffs  that the property of the impartible  estate  was held  in  coparcenary as joint family  property  and  became partible  amongst the members once it lost its character  of impartibility.   In  other  words the  contention  was  that junior  members  had a present interest  in  the  impartible estate  and  were  entitled to a share in  the  estate  once impartibility  was  removed.   In our opinion  there  is  no justification  for  this argument.  The law  regarding  ’the nature  and  incidents  of impartible  estate  is  now  well settled.  Impartibility is essentially a creature of custom. 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.   Secondly,  they  have no  right  to  interdict alienations  by the head of the family either for  necessity or  otherwise.  This, of course, is subject to s. 4  of  the Madras  Impartible  Estates Act in the  case  of  impartible estates governed by the Act.  The right of junior members of

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the family for maintenance is governed by custom and is  not based  upon any joint right or interest in the  property  as co-owners.  This is now made clear by the judicial committee in  C.I.T.  Punjab  v. Dewan  Krishna  Kishore(2)  and  Raja Velugoti  Sarvagna Kumara Krishna Yachendra Bahadur Varu  v. Raja  Rajeswara Rao (3) The income of the impartible  estate is the individual income of the holder of the estate and  is not the income of the joint family.  In the former case  Sir George Rankin observed :               "But  they find it necessary to say  that  the               law  as declared in the cases of Baijnath  (2)               and Shiba Prasad               (1)      A.T.R.      1919      P.C.       100.               (2) 68 I.A.  155.               (3)68 I.A. 181.               Singh  (3)  has  not  been  unsettled  by  the               Gorakhpur  case (1).  The  observation  itself               and its context show that the reference to the               other judgments of the Board is controlled  by               the reference to Baijnath’s case (2) as having               negatived  the view that an impartible  estate               could  not  be  in  any  sense  joint   family               property.  The issue in the Gorakhpur case (1)               was  Indarjit’s  right  to  succeed,  and  the               passage  cited  was  addressed  to  that.   It               appears  to  waive  aside,  as  no  longer  an               obstacle,  the extreme logic that as there  is               no  right  to a partition  the  junior  branch               could  have no right, actual  or  prospective,               which the enjoyment of maintenance could  evi-               dence.   It need not be taken as  swinging  to               the opposite extreme, indeed, it would be in a               high degree unreasonable, having regard to the               line of decisions, to interpret it as  meaning               that  there  is  no  reason  why  holders   of               impartible  estates  should not  now  be  told               that,  unless they can prove ’a custom to  the               contrary,  all  junior  male  members  of  the               family  have a claim for maintenance that  is,               all  who have not relinquished their right  of               succession.  The point made is only this, that               rights  of maintenance, out of  an  impartible               family estate however little they may be,  and               to whichever member they be extended-would not               be  enjoyed  or enjoyable by  anyone  who  had               ceased  to be joint in respect of the  estate.               In their Lordships’ opinion,, this should  not               be taken to affirm any disputable doctrine  as               to the origin of the right of maintenance,  or               any  other  doctrine which would  make  junior               members  "actual  co-owners" or  the  right  a               "real  right"  in the sense  negative  by  the               Board in Baijnath’s case (2)." To  this extent the general law of Mitakshara applicable  to joint  family  property has been modified by custom  and  an impartible  estate,  though  it may be  an  ancestral  joint family  estate,  is  clothed with  the  incidents  of  self- acquired  and  separate property to that extent.   The  only vestige  of the incidents of _joint family  property,  which still attaches to the joint family impartible estate is  the right of survivorship which, of course, is not  inconsistent with  the  custom  of impartibility.   For  the  purpose  of devolution of the property, the property is as I sumed to be joint  family property and the only right which a member  of the  joint family acquires by birth is to take the  property

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by survivorship but he does not acquire any interest in  the property   itself.   The  right  to  take  by   survivorship continues only so long as the joint family does not cease to exist   and  the  only  manner  by  which  this   right   of survivorship could be put an end to is by establishing  that the  estate  ceased  to be joint  family  property  for  the purpose of suc 6 Sup.  C.I./70-8 106 cession  by  proving an intention, express  or  implied,  on behalf  of the junior members of the family to  renounce  or surrender the right to succeed to the estate.  In the latest case  Anant Bhikappa v. Shankar Ramchandra(1)  the  judicial committee  clearly affirmed the principle that the  property )Was not held in coparcenary.               "Now  an  impartible  estate is  not  held  in               coparcenary (Rani Sartaj Kauri v. Rani  Deoraj               Kuari) though it may be joint family property.               It  may doolve as joint family property or  as               separate property of the last male owner.   In               the  former case, it goes by  survivorship  to               that individual, among those male members  who               in fact and in law are undivided in respect of               the estate, who is singled out by the  special               custom,  e.g., lineal male primogeniture.   In               the latter case jointness and survivorship are               not as such in -point; the estate devolves  by               inheritance  from the last male owner  in  the               order  prescribed  by the  special  custom  or               according  to the ordinary law of  inheritance               as modified by custom." We  proceed  to consider the next question arising  in  this appeal namely whether the agreement of 1889 in so far as  it related  to  payment of maintenance allowance of  Rs.  1,000 p.m.  to  plaintiffs 1 to 4 continues to be  in  force  even after  the abolition of the Estate -and the vesting  of  the Zamindari estate in the Government under the Abolition  Act. It  was argued on behalf of defendant No. 1 that  plaintiffs have  enjoyed the benefit of payment under s. 45 (5) of  the Abolition  Act  and  got capitalised  by  the  Tribunal  the maintenance  rights  on the basis of the extinction  of  the Estate.   Section  45(1), (4) and (5) of the  Abolition  Act states :               "45.  (1) In the case of an impartible  estate               which had to be regarded as the property of  a               joint   Hindu  family  for  the   purpose   of               ascertaining     the    succession     thereto               immediately  before  the  notified  date,  the               following provisions shall apply."               (4)   The    portion   of    the    ’aggregate               compensation   aforesaid   payable   to    the               maintenance-holders shall be determined by the               Tribunal  and notwithstanding any  arrangement               already made in respect of maintenance whether               by  a  decree or order of a  Court,  award  or               other  instrument  in writing or  contract  or               family  arrangement,  such portion  shall  not               exceed one-fifth of the remainder referred  to               in   sub-section  (3),  except  in  the   case               referred  to in the second proviso to  section               47, sub-section (2).               (1)   70 I.A. 232.                                    107               (.5)  (a)  The Tribunal shall, in  determining               the amount of the compensation payable to  the

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             maintenance  holders  - and  apportioning  the               same  among  them,  have  regard,  as  far  as               possible,  to  the  following  considerations,               namely :-               (i)   the  compensation payable in respect  of               the estate;               (ii)  the  number of persons to be  maintained               out of the estate;               (iii) the  nearness  of  relationship  of  the               person claiming to be maintained;               (iv)  the  other  sources  of  income  of  the               claimant; and               (v)   the  circumstances of the family of  the               claimants               (b)   For the purpose of securing (i) that the               amount   of   compensation  payable   to   the               maintenance-holders does not exceed the  limit               specified  in sub-section (4) -and  (ii)  that               the  same  is  apportioned among  them  on  an               equitable  basis,  the  Tribunal  shall   have               power,  wherever  necessary,  to  reopen   any               arrangement   already  made  in   respect   of               maintenance, whether by a decree or order of a               Court, award, or other instrument in  writing,               or contract or family arrangement." Under  the Agreement of 1889 plaintiffs 1 to 4 are  entitled to an allowance of Rs. 1,000/- if paid out of the income  of the Zamindari, that is to say, the income of the Venkatagiri Estate  strictly so called and the income of the  properties which  did not get transferred to the Government  under  the Abolition  Act.   The Madras Impartible  Estates  Act,  1904 provides  by  section 9 for the payment  of  maintenance  of junior members of an impartible Zamindari family.               "9. Where for the purpose of ascertaining  the               succession to an impartible estate, the estate               has to be regarded as the property of a  joint               Hindu family, the following persons shall have               a  right of maintenance out of the  impartible               estate and its income, namely :-               (a)   the son, grandson, or great-grandson, in               the  male  line,  born in  lawful  wedlock  or               adopted,  of the proprietor of the  impartible               estate or of any previous proprietor thereof.               Provided that where maintenance is payable  to               a  son or grandson, by or under any decree  or               order   of  court,  award,  contract,   family               arrangement or other instrument               108               in writing, and such instrument, expressly  or               by necessary implication, makes it clear  that               the  maintenance  is payable to  such  son  or               grandson  as  representing his branch  of  the               family,  it  shall  not be open to  a  son  or               grandson  of  such son, or to a  son  of  such               grandson,  as  the  case may  be,  during  the               period for which such maintenance is  payable,               to claim maintenance either in his  individual               right  or  as representing his branch  of  the               family;               (b)   the widow of any previous proprietor  of               the impartible estate so long as she does  not               remarry.               "(c) the widow of the son, grandson or  great-               grandson  of the proprietor of the  impartible               estate or of any previous proprietor  thereof,

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             so long as she does not remarry, provided  she               has no son or grandson living;               (d)   the  unmarried daughter born  in  lawful               wedlock  of the proprietor of  the  impartible               estate or any previous proprietor thereof; and               (e)   the  unmarried daughter, born in  lawful               wedlock,   of  a  son  or  grandson   of   the               proprietor of the impartible estate or of  any               previous proprietor thereof, provided she  has               neither  father  nor  mother  nor  a   brother               living.               Explanation.-Maintenance     shall,      where               necessary,  include a provision for  residence               and  in the case of an unmarried  daughter  of               the  proprietor or any previous proprietor,  a               provision for the expenses of her marriage  in               accordance  with  the scale customary  in  the               family." Where there is in force an agreement relating to payment  of maintenance  the  Act does not authorise  reduction  of  the quantum of maintenance provided by such agreement except  in the circumstances stated in s. 14(2)-circumstances which are not  applicable  to the present case.  It is  admitted  that junior  members  of the Venkatagiri  family  were  receiving maintenance,  under the Agreement of 1889 until  the  coming into force of the Abolition Act. Section  45  (2)  of  the Abolition  Act  provides  for  the ascertainment  of  the  amount  of  maintenance  payable  to persons  who,  before the notified.-date, were  entitled  to maintenance out of the estate and its income either under S. 9 or s. 12 of the Madras Impartible Estates Act or under any contract  or family arrangement.  The total sum  payable  to the  maintenance holders out of the compensation should  not under  S.  45 (4) exceed one-fifth of the remainder  of  the compensation  after the claims of creditors  are  satisfied. It is not possible to accept the argument of defendant No. 1 that S. 45                             109 should  be construed as extinguishing the right  secured  to junior  members under the provisions of contract  or  family arrangement  granting  a new right limited  to  the  measure stated  in  the  section.   It is manifest  that  s.  45  is concerned  only  with  the  ’apportionment  at  compensation amount.  ,  The  section is concerned with  the  rights  and liabilities in relation to properties which are  represented by the compensation. - There may be a case of an  impartable Zamindari  where the properties not transferred under s.,  3 (b)  ’are quite as valuable as the  properties  transferred. If,  in  such  a  case,  there  is  a  contract  or   family arrangement for the payment of maintenance, such contract or family  arrangement  would  as regards the  quantum  of  the allowance,  have  some relation to the total income  of  the properties  of  the Zamindari.  In the  absence  of  express words to that effect, it would riot be right in our  opinion to  attribute  to the Legislature an intention to  free  the properties   not  transferred  to  the  Government  by   the operation  of  s.  3  (b)  of  the  Act  from  liability  to contribute  towards  the maintenance of the  junior  members under  such  a contract or family  arrangement,  and,  while leaving   the  landholder  in  possession  of  those   other properties,  limit the maintenance holders to a share  of  a fifth  of the compensation amount.  We are therefore  unable to  accept the argument that ss. 45 to 47 of  the  Abolition Act  have the effect of extinguishing any rights  which  the junior  members of the zamindari family may have had  before

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the  notified date to receive maintenance out of the  entire income  of  the  zamindari  under  the  contract  or  family arrangement.   It follows that the agreement of 1889  in  so far  as it relates to payment of maintenance of Rs.  1,000/- p.m. to plaintiffs 1 to 4 continues to be in force in  spite of the coming into operation of the Abolition Act. Under  the Agreement of 1889 plaintiffs 1 to 4 are  entitled to  payment of Rs. 1,000/- per month from the income of  the Venkatagiri  Zamindari.   That part of the  zamindari  which consisted of the Venkatagiri Estate has been converted  into compensation deposited and to be deposited in the office  of the  Tribunal.   The first defendant and plaintiffs 1  to  4 would  also be entitled to ryotwari pattas under ss. 12  and 47 of the Abolition Act.  It is not disputed that plaintiffs 1  to  4  have  been  paid  Rs.  75,000/-  when  the  second instalment  of compensation is deposited by the  Government. If  additional compensation is allowed under s. 543  of  the Abolition  Act  plaintiffs 1 to 4 would get a part  of  such additional  compensation.  The trial Judge  calculated  that plaintiffs   1  to  4  have  been  paid  total   amount   of compensation  to the extent of Rs. 1,37,000/-.  Interest  on this  amount at 3 1/2 % p.a. works out to Rs.  4,795/-  p.a. The  trial  Judge directed that plaintiffs 1 to 4  would  be entitled  to payment of such additional sums which  together with  interest  would add up to Rs. 1,000/-  p.m.  In  other words  the plaintiffs 1 to 4 were held entitled  to  recover from defendant No. 1 the difference 110 between the interest payable on the compensation and the sum of Rs. 1,000/- p.m. and the difference was made a charge  on items  1,  14 and 16 of Schedule B  Properties.   The  trial Judge directed that interest should be calculated at 3  1/2% p.a. on the compensation amount.  In our opinion the  proper rate  of  interest  should be 5 1/2%  p.a.  Subject  to  the modification  we  consider that the decree  granted  by  the trial  Judge  should be restored if during any part  of  the period  subsequent  to September 7, 1949 plaintiffs 1  to  4 have  not been in receipt of the -amount of Rs. 1,000/-  per month  calculated  in  the above manner  they  would  be  at liberty to file an application for the recovery of such sums as  may be needed ‘ to make up the allowance to Rs.  1,000/- per month for that period.  For such decree as may be passed on  such application a charge is created on items 1, 14  and 16 of plaint Schedule B properties. We pass on to consider the question whether plaintiffs 5  to 7  are  also  entitled to maintenance at  the  rate  of  Rs. 1,000/- p.m. according to the agreement of 1889.  Plaintiffs 5  and  6  are  illegitimate sons  of  Raja  Venugopal,  the youngest   of  the  four  brothers  who  entered  into   the Agreement.   The  seventh plaintiff is the son  of  the  5th plaintiff.  The material part of the, document states               "After  the  life of the said  Sri  Venugopala               Krishna  Yachendrulu, his  purusha  santhathi,               shall,   in  perpetuity,  be  paid  the   same               allowance   amount,  that is, at the  rate  of               rupees one thousand (Rs. 1,000) per month,  in               the  aforesaid manner.  But, if, at any  time,               in  any  one of the branches of the  said  Sri               Muttukrishna  Yachendrulu, Sri  Venkatakrishna               Yachendrulu   and   Sri   Venugopala   Krishna               Yachendrulu  there  be  more  than  one   male               member,   much   males,  and   their   purusha               santhathi shall take the said allowance amount               of rupees one thousand in proportion to  their               respective shares, in the same manner as  they

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             would respectively take their other properties               separately by way of inheritance according  to               the Hindu Law." The  Subordinate Judge, Nellore held in O.S. No. 30 of  1932 that  plaintiffs 5 and 6 were not the Purusha  Santhathi  of Venugopal.  The decision was affirmed, by the High Court  in Maharajah  of  Venkatagiri v. Raja Rajeswara Rao(1)  and  on appeal against the judgment of the High Court was  dismissed by  the Judicial Committee.  That decision is  binding  upon the  plaintiffs 5 and 6 on the ground of res judicata.   The seventh plaintiff as the son of the 5th plaintiff can  claim no  higher rights than the 5th plaintiff.  It was  contended that plaintiffs 5 to 7 were entitled to claim that I L.R. 1933 Mad. 622.                             111 allowance  under certain other clauses of the  agreement  of 1889. Reference was made to the following clause :               "Moreover,  if in any of the  aforesaid  three               branches  of our family, viz., the  branch  of               Sri  Muttukrishna Yachendrulu, the  branch  of               Venkatakrishna Yachondrulu, and the branch  of               the minor Sri Venugopala Krishna  Yachendrulu,               any male should die without purusha  Santhathi               either by way of aurasa or by way of adoption,               the  allowance amount that was being  received               by  the  person who so  died  without  purusha               Santhathi shall go to the gratis (agnates) who               are nearest to him in his own branch according               to Hindu Law.  Should the aforesaid person who               dies without purusha santhathi leave any widow               or  widows and maintenance has to be  paid  to               them,  only  the nearest gnatis  who  get  the               allowance  of  such  deceased  person  in  the               manner   mentioned  above  shall   be   liable               therefor.   Further  should any  of  the  said               three branches of our family become extinct by               the total absence of purusha santhathi  either               by  way of aurasa or by way of  adoption,  the               allowance  being paid to that branch shall  be               stopped  subject  to the  condition  that,  if               there be then ’a widow or widows- left of  the               last male who died in that branch, one-half of               the  -allowance  of rupees one  thousand  (Rs.               1,000)  that  was  being paid  to  that  male,               namely, Rupees five hundred (Rs. 500),  shall,               be  paid to the widow or Widows of the  person               who  so  died without  purusha  santhathi  -as               maintenance for life". This  clause provides that on the death of any  male  member entitled  to  maintenance allowance under the  deed  without leaving  any  male issue either ’by birth  or  adoption  the -allowance  which  was  received by that  person  should  go according to Hindu Law to the Gnatis who in the same line as the   deceased   are  nearest  to  such   deceased   member. Plaintiffs 5 to 7 alternatively claimed to be the Gnatis  of Venugopal In our opinion it is not open to plaintiffs 5 to 7 to re-agitate the matter which should have been pressed as a ground  of  claim  in the previous suit.  In  any  case  the -argument  is without substance.  It is true that  the  word Gnati  in Sanskrit literally interpreted includes a  brother also.   But in the context of the particular passage in  the agreement  it  could  not have been  the  intention  of  the parties  that  when  there was a failure  of  legitimate  or adopted son, gnatis’ including illegitimate sons would  take

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the  allowance.  The question in reality is not  whether  an illegitimate  brother  is  a gnati or not  for  purposes  of succession,  but  whether the word is used in  that  unusual sense in the Agreement.  As pointed out in the previous case this clause has no application and the case is really 112 governed  by  the earlier clause already  referred  to.   We accordingly reject the argument of plaintiffs 5 to 7 on this aspect of the case. Lastly  was  contended on behalf of plaintiffs 1 to  4  that they  were entitled to one-third share of the golden  howdah sub-item  8 of item No. 8 of B schedule.  The only  evidence upon which plaintiffs relied was clauses 5 and 6 in the will of Rajagopalakrishna dated 22nd September, 1910 which states :               "Our Venkatagiri Samasthanam is an ancient and               impartable   estate.    It   has   also   been               established by the Madras Act II of 1902  that               it  is an impartible Zamindari.   The  Village               and other landed properties in the talukas  of               the  aforesaid ancient  Venkatagiri  Zamindari               acquired by my ancestors, and myself, as  well               as  the  houses,  bungalows,  forts,  gardens,               places,  etc.  possessed  by us  in  the  four               places, viz., Nellore, Kalahasthi, Madras  and               Banaras  those within and around  Venkatagiri,               and those in other taluses all these have been               included in the impartible estate.  All these,               as  well  as  elephants,  horses,   carriages,               ambaris (Howdahs, Honzas (seat) and  furniture               exclusive  of  those made of silver  and  gold               were  treated as such (impartible even in  the               partition between me and my youngest  brother.               They shall hereafter also remain as such." It  is  evident from this clause that what  was  treated  as impartible  were Ambaris Henzas, and furniture exclusive  of those  made of silver and gold.  In other words  silver  and gold  howdas  were not treated as  impartible.   Counsel  on behalf of defendant No. 1 referred to paragraphs 5 and 6  of the will which are to the following effect :               "Further,   as  many  matters  under   dispute               between  myself  and my brothers  have  to  be               settled,  the value of some  goldware,  silver               were  jewel of precious stones etc.  belonging               to the Estate Regalia was paid to my  brothers               from  out of myself acquired money and I  have               taken possession of these items at the time of               partition.  Besides these, some more jewels of               precious  stones, etc., which  were  acquired,               were paid for from my self-acquired money -and               have been received by-me."               Clause 6 runs thus               "The jewels made of precious stones as well as               gold  and  silverware which fell to  my  share               from  out of the aforesaid share inclusive  of               those  which have been improved and  converted               and  mentioned  in  detail  in  Schedule   ’A’               appended hereto.  The jewels set with precious               stones and gold and silver were got by me from               my                                    113               brothers  at the time of partition  of  paying               their  value  to them (brothers) from  out  of               self acquired money. . . . " These clauses make it cleat that the golden howdah had  been

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divided  and nothing was left for further division.  In  our opinion the Division Bench was right in taking the view that the  plaintiffs 1 to 4 are not entitled to division  of  the golden howdah. For  the reasons expressed we hold that the judgment of  the Division  Bench dated, August 13, 1965 should be set  aside. It is declared that plaintiffs 1 to 4 are entitled under the Agreement  of  1889 to be paid Rs. 1,000/- p.m. out  of  the income   of   the  Venkatagiri  Zamindari.    Out   of   the compensation  amounts so paid to plaintiffs 1 to 4  interest shall  be calculated at 51% per annum.  If the  interest  so calculated falls short of Rs. 1,000/- per month,’ plaintiffs 1  to 4 are entitled to the payment of such additional  sums -as would enable them to be in receipt of a total income  of Rs. 1,000,/- per month.  If for any period subsequent to 7th September,  1949  plaintiffs  1  to  4  have  not   received allowance  of Rs. 1,000/- p.m. they are granted  liberty  to file an application for the recovery of such sums as may  be needed  to  make up the allowance to Rs.  1,000/-  for  that period.    For  such  decree  as  may  be  passed  on   such application a charge would be created on items 1, 14 and  16 of  plaint B Schedule properties.  The suit is dismissed  so far  as  plaintiffs  5 to 9 are concerned.   The  appeal  is allowed  to  the extent indicated above  with  proportionate costs. R.K.P.S.                                     Appeal allowed. 114