14 September 1976
Supreme Court
Download

SETH BENI CHAND (SINCE DEAD) NOW BY L.RS. Vs SMT. KAMLA KUNWAR AND OTHERS

Bench: CHANDRACHUD,Y.V.
Case number: Appeal Civil 2269 of 1972


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8  

PETITIONER: SETH BENI CHAND (SINCE DEAD) NOW BY L.RS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT. KAMLA KUNWAR AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT14/09/1976

BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. BENCH: CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. KRISHNAIYER, V.R. UNTWALIA, N.L.

CITATION:  1977 AIR   63            1977 SCR  (1) 578  1976 SCC  (4) 554  CITATOR INFO :  F          1990 SC1888  (2)

ACT:         Indian  Succession  Act, 1975, S. 63(c),  Attesting  witness         defined.          Indian Evidence Act, S. 68--Discharge of onus probandi   by         propounder  when execution of will surrounded by  suspicious         circumstances.

HEADNOTE:            Three or four days before her death, Jaggo Bai executed a         will,  bequeathing  her Stridhana property to her  son  Beni         Chand’s second wife Kamla Kunwar and her children, and  also         to  the  progeny horn of his first wife.   Bern  Chand,  his         third  wife  and her children were excluded from  the  will.         Beni  Chand opposed the probate of the will contending  that         it  was a forgery and challenged the execution of the  will.         A single Judge of the High Court held that the propounder of         the will had failed to explain the suspicious  circumstances         surrounding its execution, but in appeal, the Division Bench         upheld the validity of the will.         Dismissing the appeal, the Court             HELD:  (1)  The  mere description of a  signatory  to  a         testamentary   document as an attesting witness cannot  take         the place of evidence showing due execution of the document.         An  attesting witness is one who signs the document  in  the         presence of the executant after seeing the execution of  the         document  or after receiving a personal acknowledgment  from         the  executant  as regards the execution  of  the  document.         [581H. 582A]             (2) The onus probandi lies in every case upon the  party         propounding  a will, and he must satisfy the  conscience  of         the Court that the instrument so propounded is the last will         of  a  free and capable testator.  Where  the  circumstances         surrounding the execution of the will are shrouded in suspi-         cion,  it  is  the duty and function of  the  propounder  to         remove that suspicion by leading satisfactory evidence,  and         by offering an explanation of auspicious circumstances which         can satisfy a prudent mind.  [582C, E-F]

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8  

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2269 of 1972.             (From  the  Judgment  and Order dated  9-5-1972  of  the         Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal No. 125/70).             J.P. Goyal, G.S. Chatterlee and Shree Pal Singh, for the         Appellants (Other than 2nd appellant).             S.M. Jain and S.K. Jain, for the Appellant No. 2.             V.M.  Tarkunde,  Yatindra Singh, Deepal  Gupta,  Najahad         Hussain, S.S. Khanduja, Urea Dutta and Miss Manik  Tarkunde,         for Respondents Nos. 1, 4, 5, 7 and 8.             S.K. Mehta, for Respondents Nos. 11--12.         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             CHANDRACHUD,  J.--This  appeal by certificate  raises  a         question  as regards the validity of a will executed  by  an         eighty year old woman         579         five  days before her death.  The testatrix Jaggo  Bai   had         a muchmarried son called Beni Chand, the last of whose three         marriages  has  given birth to this long  litigation.   Beni         Chand’s  first  wife, Chameli Bai, died leaving  behind  Re-         spondents  3,  5, 6, 7 and 8 as her heirs. His  second  wife         Kamla  Kunwar is Respondent 1. Respondent 4 is her  daughter         and  respondents  9 and 10 are  her  grand-daughters.   Beni         Chand had no male issue from his two wives and therefore, in         1928,  he  gambled for a ion by marrying  Ved  Kumari.  That         marriage  created dissensions in the family, partly  because         Ved  Kumari belonged to a different caste but more  substan-         tially because the entry of yet another woman in the  house-         hold  was like a last straw.  On October 26, 1961 Jaggo  Bai         made  a will disinheriting her son Beni Chand and the  chil-         dren  born  of  Ved Kumari, and  bequeathing  her  extensive         properties  to the progeny born of Chameli Bai and to  Kamla         Kunwar and her progeny.  Jaggo Bai died on October 31, 1961.             Kamla Kunwar who was appointed under Jaggo Bai’s will as         an  executrix filed a petition in the Allahabad  High  Court         for probate of the will.  Beni Chand filed a caveat contend-         ing  that the will was a forgery and was prepared in  collu-         sion with one Dwijendra Nigarm, an advocate, while Jaggo Bai         was lying in an unconscious state. A learned single Judge of         the High Court dismissed the petition on the ground that the         propounder of the will had failed to explain the  suspicious         circumstances  surrounding the execution of the will.   That         judgment  was reversed in appeal by a Division Bench of  the         High  Court,  which upheld the validity of the  will.   This         appeal  by  certificate is directed  against  the  appellate         judgment of the High Court.             There  is no gainsaying the fact that the  execution  of         the  will   is  shrouded in circumstances  which  require  a         cogent  explanation, particularly as the testatrix  was  ad-         vanced in age and the provisions of the will are prima facie         unnatural.   But, we do not see enough reason for  rejecting         the  conclusion  of the High Court that  the  executrix  who         propounded  the will has offered a satisfactory  explanation         of those circumstances. The relations between Jaggo Bai  and         her son Beni Chand were strained beyond words.  A long  span         of  over 30 years following upon Beni Chand’s marriage  with         Ved Kumari is littered with ,a spate of litigations  between         the  mother  and son. Beni Chand gave to his mother  a  good         look of law and law courts, civil and criminal.  Exasperated         by  his unfilial contumacy, Jaggo Bai executed a gifit  deed         of  her Stridhan properties excluding him scrupulously  from         her  bounty.  Later, she executed a document of a  testamen-         tary  nature  disinheriting him. These instruments  were  on         persuasion  cancelled but Beni Chand did not mend his  ways.

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8  

       On  October 26, 1961 when the impugned will was executed  by         Jaggo Bai, a litigation was still pending between the mother         and  son, and just 3 or 4 days before the execution  of  the         will,  the  eighty year old Jaggo Bai had to appear  in  the         Court.  In this background, the fact that Jaggo Bai did  not         give  any  part of her properties to Beni  Chand  cannot  be         described as unnatural.  Add to that the stark fact that the         testatrix  while  disinheriting Beni  Chand,  bequeated  the         entire property to his wife, Kamla Kunwar, the children born         of  her and to the progeny born of Beni Chand’s  first  wife         Chameli Bai.  Jaggo Bai.         580         never  reconciled  herself to Beni Chand’s   third  marriage         with  Ved Kumari and she excluded that branch from  the  be-         quest.             It  is alleged that Dwijendra Nigam, an  advocate,  con-         spired  with Jaggo Bai’s pro-deceased daughters’s son  Ratan         Lal  to  forge  the  will. But  from  the  long  and  varied         cross--examination of Nigam it is difficult to discover  any         reason  why he should do so.  He received no  benefit  under         the  will  and  had no interest either in  seeing  that  the         progeny born of Beni Chand’s first two wives should get  the         property  or   in ensuring that Beni Chand, Ved  Kumari  and         their  children should be left out.  It is significant  that         Beni  Chand  who alleged by his caveat that  Nigam  was  the         villain of the piece, did not file any affidavit  in support         of  his caveat and what is more important, he did not  enter         the witness-box to substantiate his accusation.  The  charge         that  Nigam  and Ratan Lal forged the will is thus  left  to         chance and guess-work. As for Ratan Lal, who is respondent 2         to this appeal, he admitted the execution of the will though         it was against his interest to do so.  If the    will is set         aside,  Beni Chand and Ratan Lal will each be   entitled  on         intestacy  to a moiety in Jaggo Bai’s estate, which was  her         Stridhana  property.  Ratan Lal gets nothing under the  will         of his grand-mother Jaggo Bai.         These features of the case dispel the suspicion arising  out         of the circumstances that the testatrix was at the threshold         of  death  when  she  made the will, that she  was  far  too         advanced in age to bring to bear an independent judgment  on         the  disposal of her property and that she disinherited  her         only  son  under  her will.  It has  to  be  mentioned  that         though  over eighty years of age, Jaggo Bai was not  an  in-         valid,  that  just a few days before her death she  had  ap-         peared  in the court in a case relating to  Zamindari  Bonds         between her and Beni Chand, that a criminal case launched by         Beni Chand against her was defended by her Zealously leading         to an order of composition  two or  three  months before her         death  and that in spite of the unkind cuts that Beni  Chand         had  inflicted on her she wanted to try and help him at  one         stage.   In  an old letter (Ex. 161-Ga) which she  wrote  to         him, she said plaintively: "Now  have a short span of  life.         I shall not be coming to see what happens hereafter.  Please         do not injure my heart.  Come back  at once  ....  ".  These         entreaties fell on deaf ears.  Beni Chand dragged his mother         from  pillar  to post over a course of twenty years  and  he         never  came back.  He lived separately from her and did  not         bother  to attend to her even when she was dying.  He  awoke         to  his son-ship only when it came to claiming the  mother’s         estate.         Two circumstances would appear to have influenced the judge-         ment  of the learned Single Judge in ho1ding that  the  will         was  not proved to be Last will and testament of Jaggo  Bai.         The  first circumstance is that the thumb-mark  which  Jaggo         Bai  is alleged to have made on the will does not  bear  the

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8  

       usual endorsement that it is of the left or the right  thumb         and secondly that neither of the two attesting witnesses was         examined to prove the formal execution of the will.             The Division Bench of the High Court, sitting in  appeal         against  the judgment of the learned Single Judge,  has  ac-         cepted the explanation         581         offered  by Shri Nigam that the endorsement  remained to  be         made  through inadvertence.  Nigam had no personal  interest         in the matter and the explanation, being unmotivated,  could         reasonably be accepted. The learned judges also accepted the         evidence of the Advocate that he himself held the right hand         of  Jaggo Bai and took the impression of that thumb  on  the         will.   That meets the argument that an impression  admitted         to be of Jaggo Bai’s left thumb does not tally with the  one         on  the will.  The two will not tally since the  two  thumbs         would have different characteristics.  The will was executed         in triplicate, one copy     of which was deposited with  the         District  Registrar on October 28, 1961, that is,  two  days         after  the  will was executed.  It is difficult  to  believe         that a practising advocate would run the risk of  depositing         a forged will with a public official while the testatrix was         still  alive.   Beni  Chand lived in the same  town  as  his         mother,  though separately from her and it is impossible  in         the very nature of things that as alleged by him, Nigam  and         Ratan  Lal took the thumb impression of Jaggo Bai while  she         was lying unconscious.  Jaggo Bai might lose her  conscious-         ness  but  she was possessed of a large estate  and  in  the         normal  course  of human affairs, she would,.  while  uncon-         scious, be  surrounded by a  large number of close relatives         of  which there were many in the town of Banda in which  she         lived.  To think that Nigam could steal a thumbimpression of         the  dying woman puts a strain on one’s credulity,  particu-         larly  when  he  stood to gain nothing and  Ratan  Lal,  the         alleged coconspirator, would be better off without the will.         It is a strange plea that Ratan Lal who, on intestacy, stood         to gain a one-half share in his grand-mother’s estate  chose         to  exclude himself by fabricating the will. There  is  some         evidence  that  a  portion of Jaggo Bai’s  right  thumb  was         mutilated but on examination of the relevant   circumstances         in  that  behalf, the Division Bench of the High  Court  has         rejected  the suggestion that the right thumb of the  testa-         trix was so badly damaged as to be incapable of producing an         impression.   With these plain findings of fact, we  see  no         reason  for interfering by going into minute details of  the         evidence.             There is no substance in the grievance that the proof of         the will in this case is incomplete for want of an attesting         witness’s  evidence.  Section 68 of the Evidence  Act  deals         with proof of the execution of documents required by law  to         be  attested.  It provides that such documents shall not  be         used  as evidence until at least one attesting  witness  has         been called to prove the execution, if there be an attesting         witness  alive and subject to the process of the  Court  and         capable  of  giving evidence.  Since by section  63  of  the         Succession  Act,  1975 a will has to be attested by  two  or         more  witnesses, section 68 of the Evidence Act  would  come         into  play and therefore it was incumbent on the  propounder         of  the  will to examine an attesting witness to  prove  due         execution  of the will.  But this argument   overlooks  that         Dwijendra Nigam is himself one of the three persons who made         their  signatures below the thumb impression of  Jaggo  Bai.         None  of the three is described in the will as an  attesting         witness  but such labelling is by no statute  necessary  and         the mere description of a signatory to a testamentary  docu-

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8  

       ment  as an attesting witness cannot take the place of  evi-         dence showing due execution of the document.  By attestation         is         582         meant the signing of a document to signify that the attestor         is  a witness to the execution of the document; and by  sec-         tion  63(c) of the Succession Act, an attesting  witness  is         one who signs the document in the presence of the  executant         after seeing the execution of the document or after  receiv-         ing  a personal acknowledgment from the  executant   regards         the execution of the document.  Nigam’s evidence shows  that         he  and the other two witnesses saw the  testatrix   putting         her thumb-mark on the will by way of execution and that they         all signed the will in token of attestation in the  presence         of  the testatrix, after she had affixed her  thumb-mark  on         the will.             The  question  which now arises  for  consideration,  on         which  the  Letters Patent Court differed from  the  learned         Single   Judge of  the High Court, is whether the  execution         of  the will by Jaggo Bai is proved satisfactorily.   It  is         well-settled that the onus probandi Iies in every case  upon         the  party propounding a will, and he must satisfy the  con-         science  of the Court that the instrument so  propounded  is         the  last will of a free and capable testator.(1)  By  "free         and capable testator"  is generally meant. that the testator         at the time when he made the will had a sound and  disposing         state of mind and memory.  Ordinarily, the burden of proving         the due execution of the will is discharged if the propound-         er leads evidence to show that the will bears the  signature         or mark of the testator and that the will is duly  attested.         For  proving attestation, the best evidence would  naturally         be  of  an attesting witness and indeed the will  cannot  be         used  as  evidence unless at least  one  attesting  witness,         depending  on availability, has been called for proving  its         execution  as  required by section 68 of the  Evidence  Act.         But  where, as in the instant case, the  circumstances  sur-         rounding  the execution of the will are shrouded  in  suspi-         cion,  it is the duty and the function of the propounder  to         remove that suspicion by leading satisfactory evidence.  The         testatrix  was  advanced in age being past eighty  years  of         age,  the  will contains provisions which  are  prima  facie         unnatural  since the only son is disinherited under  it  and         the  testatrix died five days after making the will.   There         can be no dispute that these are gravely suspicious  circum-         stances.  But the propounder has, in our opinion, offered an         explanation of these circumstances which ought to satisfy  a         prudent mind.  Ultimately, that is the test to adopt for one         cannot  insist on mathematical proof even where the  circum-         stances  attendant  on the execution of the   will  raise  a         suspicion  as  regards  its due execution.   The  burden  in         testamentary  cases  is of a different order than  in  other         cases in the sense that an attesting witness must be called,         wherever  possible, to prove execution, the propounder  must         remove the suspicion, if any, attaching to the execution  of         the will and if there be any doubt regarding the due  execu-         tion,  he must satisfy the conscience of the court that  the         testator had a sound and disposing state of mind and  memory         when he made the will. "Reasonable scepticism, not an  obdu-         rate persistence in disbelief nor a resolute and  impenetra-         ble incredulity" is demanded of the testamentary judge:  "He         is  never  required  to close his mind to  the  truth".  (2)         Gajendragadkar  J.  who  spoke for the  Court  in  Iyengar’s         case(3) noticed these             (1) See Jarrman on Wills (6th Ed., D- 50) and H.  Venka-         tachala  lyengar v.B.N. Thijmajamma & Ors. [1959]  Suppo.  1

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8  

       S.CR. 426.         (2)  See Harmes v. Hinksen (1946) 50 O.W.N. 895 per Lord  Du         Parcq. (3) [1959] Supp. 2 S.CR. 426. 446.         583         observations  of Lord Du Parcq with approval and  said:   It         would sound platitudinous to say so, but it is  nevertheless         true that in discovering truth even in such cases the  judi-         cial mind must always be open though vigilant, cautious  and         circumspect."             Bearing  these  principles  in  mind  and  giving  equal         weightage  to openness and vigilance, the position  emerging         from  the  evidence  may be briefly  summed  up  thus:  Beni         Chand’s  behaviour was far too unfilial and remorseless  for         him  to find a place in the affections of his  mother  Jaggo         Bai.  He had bruised her so badly that she could not  possi-         bly  reward him with a precious inheritance.  But  she  gave         her estate not to strangers but to his children born of  the         first  two wives and to the second wife Kamla  Kunwar.   She         also  gave him a personal right of residence in one  of  the         houses.  Shri Nigam, the advocate, had no personal motive or         bias to hatch a conspiracy to forge the will. He received no         benefit  under the will, directly or indirectly.  And  Ratan         Lal was the least suitable co-conspirator because, he  stood         to  lose under the will what he would have got  without  it.         He would have been an equal sharer with Beni Chand in  Jaggo         Bai’s estate under section 15(1)(a)) of the Hindu Succession         Act,  1956.  The entire property comprised in the  will  was         Jaggo  Bai’s Stridhana.  The will was read out to Jaggo  Bai         and in spite of her advanced years she was in a sound  state         of mind and body.  The chosen few do possess that privilege.         Thus the executrix has successfully discharged what, in  the         circumstances, was a heavy onus of proving the due execution         of  the will and of offering a satisfactory  explanation  of         the  suspicious circumstances surrounding the will.  We  are         in  agreement  with the Division Bench of  the  High  Court,         which was conscious of the special rules governing proof  of         testamentary  instruments, that the will propounded  by  the         executrix is the last will and testament of Jaggo Bai,  made         while  she  was in a sound and disposing state of  mind  and         memory.              Beni Chand who opposed the grant of probate to his wife         Kamla Kunwar died during the pendency of the appeal in  this         Court.   He is now represented by his legal  representatives         almost all of whom supported the grant of probate.  The  one         person  from  amongst the heirs of Beni  Chand  who  stoutly         pressed  this appeal is Vikram Chander, one of the  sons  of         Beni Chand, born of his third wife Ved Kumari.              While  Kamla  Kunwar’s appeal was  pending  before  the         Division Bench of the High Court, Beni Chand alienated  some         of  the properties included in the will to a  person  called         Sadhu  Prasad.  The alienation was purportedly made  on  the         basis  that the learned Single Judge of the High  Court  had         set  aside the will and had refused to grant the probate  to         the  executrix.  The alienee Sadhu Prasad is also an  appel-         lant  before  us,  having joined Beni Chand  in  filing  the         appeal. We have had the benefit of the arguments advanced by         Mr.  Jain on behalf of the alienee but nothing that  he  has         urged  is  enough to upset the view taken  by  the  Division         Bench of the High Court.              The only argument advanced by Mr. Jain to which  refer-         ence  need  be made is that even alienees  are  entitled  to         citations in probate proceedings and in the absence of  such         citations the grant of probate is         584         vitiated.  In support of this submission reliance is  placed

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8  

       on a judgement of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in  Banwari-         lal  Shriniwas v. Kumari Kusum Bai and Ors. C)  It was  held         in  that  case that  any interest, however slight, and  even         the bare possibility of an interest is sufficient to entitle         a party to oppose the grant of probate.  A purchaser, there-         fore, who acquires an interest in the estate of the testator         by reason of a transfer by his heirs must be cited in testa-         mentary proceedings.  We will assume without affirming  that         this is the true position in law but the important  distinc-         tion  is that the  alienee in the instant  case is a  trans-         feree  pendeme  lite who purchased some  of  the  properties         included in Jaggo Bai’s will while the Letters Patent Appeal         was pending in the Allahabad High Court.  In the very nature         of  things no citation could be issued to him prior  to  the         commencement  of the probate proceedings.  In fact, we  felt         that  the alienee had no right to be heard in  this  appeal.         Nevertheless, we heard his counsel on the point whether  the         executrix  has  established the will.  One   reason  why  we         heard the alienee is that he should not be able to raise any         objection  later that the decision in these  proceedings  is         for some reason or the other not binding upon him.             The property included in the will is for the time  being         in  the  possession of a Receiver appointed  by  the  Court.         Since  we have upheld the will, the Receiver shall  have  to         hand  over the property to the executrix, Kamla Kunwar,  who         is respondent 1 to this appeal.  We however direct that  the         Receiver shall continue in possession Of the property for  a         period of 4 months from today and hand it over to respondent         1  on the expiry of that period.  The alienee  Sadhu  Prasad         may, if so advised, file a suit within that period for  such         relief  as he is advised to seek and obtain interim  orders,         if  he may, within that period as regards the possession  of         the  property alienated to him.  Subject to such orders,  if         any, the Receiver shall hand over the property to   respond-         ent 1, Kamla Kunwar.             Mr. Tarkunde who appears on behalf of respondents 1,  4,         5,  7 and 8 made a statement before us on the conclusion  of         the  arguments  in  the appeal that even if  we  uphold  the         validity  of the will, his clients would be willing to  make         an ex-gratia payment to 4 out of the 5 children born to Beni         Chand  from  Ved Kumari.  Two  daughters Subhashni Seth  and         Chander Rekha and three sons, Pratap Chander, Vikram Chander         and  Khem Chander were born to Beni Chand from  Ved  Kumari.         Mr.  Tarkunde  has  given an undertaking to  this  Court  on         behalf  of  his  clients that they shall pay a  sum  of  Rs.         20,000/-  to each of the two daughters, Subhashni  Seth  and         Chander Rekha and a similar amount to each of the two  sons,         Pratap Chander and Khem Chander. Under this arrangement,  no         amount whatsoever shall be payable to Vikram Chander and not         certainly  to  the alienee Sadhu Prasad.  According  to  the         undertaking,  the  aforesaid amount totalling  Rs.  80,000/-         shall be paid to the four persons mentioned above within one         year  of the date on which respondent 1 obtains actual  pos-         session  of the properties included in the will, which  were         alienated  ,by  Beni Chand.  Mr. Tarkunde  also  agrees  and         undertakes on behalf of         1) A.I.R. 1973 M.P. 69.         585         clients  that in the event that the aforesaid amount or  any         part  of it is not paid as stipulated, the persons  to  whom         the amount is payable, or any one or more of them, shall  be         entitled  to recover it in execution of this judgment as  if         there were a decree in favour of each of them in the sum  of         Rs. 20,000/-.            In  the result, we dismiss the appeal and direct that  the

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8  

       costs of the appeal shall be paid equally by Vikram   Chand-         er, the son of  Beni Chand and by the alienee Sadhu Prasad.         M.R.                                   Appeal dismissed.         586