Civil Appeal HSA 2015 SCC
Civil Appeal HSA 2015 SCC
Civil Appeal HSA 2015 SCC
WITH
JUDGMENT
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clear during the hearing that after deciding the legal issue,
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as claimed.
5. The suit was contested mainly with the plea that the
the High Court with the grievance that the plaintiff became
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1
ILR 2009 Kar. 3612
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plaintiff. Out of the other two items, she was held entitled
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9th September, 2005. The High Court held that even if the
applicable at all.
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the Act and not for any period prior to that. The proviso to
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had left him surviving a female have had if she had been a son;
relative specified in class I of
the Schedule or a male relative (c) be subject to the same liabilities
specified in that class who in respect of the said coparcenary
claims through such female property as that of a son,
relative, the interest of the
deceased in the Mitakshara and any reference to a Hindu
coparcenary property shall Mitakshara coparcener shall be
devolve by testamentary or deemed to include a reference to a
intestate succession, as the daughter of a coparcener:
case may be, under this Act
and not by survivorship. Provided that nothing contained in
this sub-section shall affect or
Explanation I: For the purposes invalidate any disposition or
of this section, the interest of a alienation including any partition or
Hindu Mitakshara coparcener testamentary disposition of property
shall be deemed to be the which had taken place before the
share in the property that 20th day of December, 2004.
would have been allotted to
him if a partition of the (2) Any property to which a female
property had taken place Hindu becomes entitled by virtue of
immediately before his death, sub-section -(1) shall be held by her
irrespective of whether he was with the incidents of coparcenary
entitled to claim partition or ownership and shall be regarded,
not. Explanation 2: Nothing notwithstanding anything contained
contained in the proviso to this in this Act, or any other law for the
section shall be construed as time being in force, as property
enabling a person who has capable of being disposed of by her
separated himself from the by testamentary disposition.
coparcenary before the death
of the deceased or any of his (3) Where a Hindu dies after the
heirs to claim on intestacy a commencement of the Hindu
share in the interest referred to Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005,
therein. 7. Devolution of his interest in the property of a Joint
interest in the property of a Hindu family governed by the
tarwad, Mitakshara law, shall devolve by
testamentary or intestate
succession, as the case may be,
under this Act and not by
survivorship, and the coparcenary
property shall be deemed to have
been divided as if a partition had
taken place and,-
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cannot be sustained.
3
Shyam Sunder vs. Ram Kumar (2001) 8 SCC 24, Paras 22 to 27
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Explanation.
has to be given6.
4
RBI vs. Peerless (1987) 1 SCC 424, para 33
5
Kehar Singh vs. State (1988) 3 SCC 609
6
District Mining Officer vs. Tata Iron and Steel Co. (2001) 7 SCC 358
15
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legislature.
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November, 2015.
9
(2011) 6 SCC 462
10
(2011) 9 SCC 788
11
(2013) 10 SCC 211, para 18
12
(1963) 3 SCR 858
13
(1966) 3 SCR 275
14
(1974) 2 SCC 363
15
(1985) 1 SCC 270
18
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Reddy16 and State of Maharashtra vs. Narayan Rao17.
provision.
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retrospective effect and made the statute applicable to all
specified persons.
Punjab
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property to be separate. The said decision only lays down
a rule of evidence.
to the court for their shares which plea was upheld. The
said judgment does not deal with the issue involved in the
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25.7. In Narayan Rao case (supra), it was observed that
the Act.
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order but does not appear to have been referred to in the
20
(2006) 8 SCC 581
21
(2009) 6 SCC 99, para 30
22
AIR 2005 Mad 250 (DB)
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Full Bench judgment of Bombay High Court in
23
AIR 2014, BOM 151. paras 40-57
24
(1978) 3 SCC 383, paras 6,11 and 13
25
(1994) 6 SCC 342, para 7
26
(2006) 8 SCC 656, paras 10,11
27
AIR 2012, BOM 101, paras 13 to 37
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after the 2005 Amendment, but on this aspect a different
must deal with reasons of the trial court while reversing its
findings.
28
(1976) 3 SCC 119, para 9
29
(1995) Supp. 2 SCC 428 at page 430
30
(2001) 3 SCC 179, para 15.
31
1969 (2) MLJ 277,
32
(1965) 2 SCR 100
33
AIR 1945 FC 25 at 31(d)
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Shivagannavar34 have been cited to canvass that
26.5 This would normally have ended our order with the
Part II
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resulting in denial of dignity and security to her. Although
such an issue.
35
(1997) 3 SCC 573
36
This Court referred to the observations of Sahai, J. in Sarla Mudgal vs. Union of India (1995) 3
SCC 635 that a climate was required to be built for a uniform civil code. Reference was also made to
observations in Madhu Kishwar vs. State of Bihar (1996 (5) SCC 125 to the effect that the court could
at best advise and focus attention to the problem instead of playing an activist role.
37
(2001) 7 SCC 740
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Constitution Bench did not address the said issue but the
practice of sati 40
. It was further observed that conduct
38
Para 33. This Court in Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal Corpn. [1985(3) SCC 545] and
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India [1978 (1) SCC 248] held that the concept of right to life and
personal liberty guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution would include the right to live with
dignity. Before the Act, a Muslim woman who was divorced by her husband was granted a right to
maintenance from her husband under the provisions of Section 125 CrPC until she may remarry and
such a right, if deprived, would not be reasonable, just and fair. Thus the provisions of the Act
depriving the divorced Muslim women of such a right to maintenance from her husband and providing
for her maintenance to be paid by the former husband only for the period of iddat and thereafter to
make her run from pillar to post in search of her relatives one after the other and ultimately to knock at
the doors of the Wakf Board does not appear to be reasonable and fair substitute of the provisions of
Section 125 CrPC. Such deprivation of the divorced Muslim women of their right to maintenance from
their former husbands under the beneficial provisions of the Code of Criminal Procedure which are
otherwise available to all other women in India cannot be stated to have been effected by a reasonable,
right, just and fair law and, if these provisions are less beneficial than the provisions of Chapter IX of
the Code of Criminal Procedure, a divorced Muslim woman has obviously been unreasonably
discriminated and got out of the protection of the provisions of the general law as indicated under the
Code which are available to Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, Parsi or Christian women or women belonging to
any other community. The provisions prima facie, therefore, appear to be violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution mandating equality and equal protection of law to all persons otherwise
similarly circumstanced and also violative of Article 15 of the Constitution which prohibits any
discrimination on the ground of religion as the Act would obviously apply to Muslim divorced
women only and solely on the ground of their belonging to the Muslim religion.
39
(2003) 8 SCC 369
40
Para 46
41
Paras 54 to 59
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Vallamattom vs. UOI42, it was observed that Section 118
provision46.
42
(2003) 6 SCC 611
43
Paras 28 and 29
44
Para 44
45
Paras 33 to 36
46
Paras 30 to 32
47
(2015) 1 SCC 192
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of this Court. The issue has also been highlighted in recent
view point.
..J.
[ ANIL R. DAVE ]
..J.
[ ADARSH KUMAR GOEL ]
NEW DELHI
OCTOBER 16, 2015
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The Tribune dated 24.09.2015 Muslim Womens quest for equality by Vandana Shukla and
Sunday Express Magazine dated 04.10.2015 In Her Court by Dipti Nagpaul DSouza.
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ITEM NO.1A COURT NO.3 SECTION IVA
(For judgment)
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A
RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
VERSUS
WITH
SLP(C)No.21814/2008
SLP(C)No.18744/2010
SLP(C)Nos.28702-28703/2010
SLP(C)No.28471/2011
SLP(C)Nos.4217-4218/2012
SLP(C)Nos.1299-1300/2013
SLP(C)Nos.17577-17578/2013
SLP(C)No.19816/2014
SLP(C)No.5619/2015
SLP(C)No.3805/2008
SLP(C)No.9390/2015
SLP(C)No.5680/2015
SLP(C)No.35209/2011
SLP(C)Nos.15557-15558/2015
S.L.P.(C)No......../2015 (CC No.15560/2015)
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For Respondent(s)
for M/s. S.M. Jadhav & Company,Advs.
Mr. Rauf Rahim,Adv.
Mr. Sumeet Lall,Adv.
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