07 September 1994
Supreme Court
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SMT. RADHIKA Vs AGHNU RAM MAHTO


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PETITIONER: SMT. RADHIKA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: AGHNU RAM MAHTO

DATE OF JUDGMENT07/09/1994

BENCH: K. RAMASWAMY & N. VENKATACHALA, JJ.

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT: ORDER 1.     The  appellant  is the  daughter  of  the  respondent through  second wife. Admittedly, her mother  inherited  the properties of her maternal grandfather. The appellant is the only  issue to her mother. When her mother  died  intestate, the  respondent-husband  filed the partition suit  No.39  of 1979 in the Court of Special Sub-Judge, Ranchi claiming half the  share  as  class-l heir of his wife.  The  trial  court dismissed  the Suit on the ground that during the life  time of  the  mother  of the appellant, she  had  bequeathed  the properties  to  the  appellant under a gift  deed  and  that therefore,  the decree cannot be granted as she  died  after she was divested of her possession. On appeal, the  District Judge  reversed  the decree and held that the  gift  is  not valid and that the appellant and respondent arc class1 heirs and  decreed  the  suit for partition in  equal  moiety.  In Second  Appeal  No.  1 71 82, by Judgment  of  Decree  dated 9.11.1983  the  High  Coral dismissed the  same.  Thus  this appeal by special leave. 2.     The facts are not in dispute, namely, the  mother  of the  appellant inherited the suit property from her  father. Section  15 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 regulates  the succession  to the estate of female Hindus. Sub-Section  (1) provides  that  "the  property  of  a  female  Hindu   dying intestate  shall devolve according to the rules set  out  in Section 16 "-               (a)  firstly,  upon  the  sons  and  daughters               (including  the children of  any  pre-deceased               son or daughter) and the husband;                    (b)  secondly,  upon  the  heirs  of  the               husband; and so on in the order specified. But  sub-section (2) with non-obstante clause  excludes  the applicability  of Subsection (1). Clause (a) of  Sub-Section (2) provides that;               "(a) any property inherited by a female  Hindu               from  her father or mother shall  devolve,  in               the  absence  of any son or  daughter  of  the               deceased  (including the children of any  pre-               deceased son of daughter), not upon the  other               heirs  referred to in sub-section (1)  in  the

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             order specified therein, but upon the heirs of               the father;"               (clause (b) is not relevant, hence omitted). 3.     A  reading  thereof clearly indicates  that  for  the property  inherited  by a female Hindu from  her  father  or mother,  in  other  words female’s  paternal  side,  in  the absence of her son, daughter or children of the pre-deceased son  or daughter, the succession opens to the heirs  of  the father  or  mother  and not to class-l heirs  in  the  order specified in sub-section (1) of Section l5 and in the  order of  Section  16.   In  other words,  the  children  and  the children  of the pre-deceased son or daughter of  the  Hindu female  alone  are  entitled to  get  such  property.  Thus, husband stands excluded from the succession to the  property inherited   by   female  Hindu  from  her   father’s   side, Accordingly, we hold that since the mother of the  appellant had  inherited the suit property from her  grandfather,  her husband-respondent stood excluded from intestate  succession to  the  estate left by her The courts below  obviously  had overlooked 20 the  provision in Section 15, in particular Sub-Section  (2) thereof, and illegally granted a decree. 4.     The appeal is accordingly allowed. The decree of  the High Court in the Second Appeal and that the appellate court in  the  First Appeal are set aside.  Though  for  different reasons, the decree of the trial court stands confirmed, but in the circumstances, without costs. 21