Civil Appeal HSA 2015 SCC

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REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA


CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

CIVIL APPEAL NO.7217 OF 2013

PRAKASH & ORS. APPELLANTS


VERSUS
PHULAVATI & ORS. ...RESPONDENTS

WITH

SLP (C) NOS.21814 OF 2008, 18744 OF 2010,


28702-28703 OF 2010, 28471 OF 2011, 4217-4218
OF 2012, 1299-1300 OF 2013, 17577-17578 OF
2013, 19816 OF 2014, 5619 OF 2015, 3805 OF 2008,
9390 OF 2015, 5680 OF 2015, 35209 OF 2011 AND
15557-15558 OF 2015 AND SLP. (C) .15560 OF
2015

JUDGMENT

ADARSH KUMAR GOEL, J.

1. The only issue which has been raised in this batch of

matters is whether Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act,

2005 (the Amendment Act) will have retrospective effect.

In the impugned judgment (reported in AIR 2011 Kar. 78

Phulavati vs. Prakash), plea of restrospectivity has been

upheld in favour of the respondents by which the

appellants are aggrieved.

Page1
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

2. Connected matters have been entertained in this

Court mainly on account of the said legal issue particularly

when there are said to be differing views of High Courts

which makes it necessary that the issue is decided by this

Court. It is not necessary to go into the facts of the

individual case or the correctness of the findings recorded

by the courts below on various other issues. It was made

clear during the hearing that after deciding the legal issue,

all other aspects may be decided separately in the light of

the judgment of this Court.

3. Only for the purpose of deciding the above legal

question, we refer to the brief facts in Civil Appeal No.7217

of 2013. The respondent-plaintiff, Phulavati filed suit

being O.S. No.12/1992 before Additional Civil Judge (Senior

Division), Belgaum for partition and separate possession to

the extent of 1/7th share in the suit properties in Schedule

A to G except property bearing CTS No.3241 mentioned

in Schedule A in which the share sought was 1/28th.

4. According to the case of the plaintiff, the suit

properties were acquired by her late father Yeshwanth

Chandrakant Upadhye by inheritance from his adoptive

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Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

mother Smt. Sunanda Bai. After the death of her father on

18th February, 1988, she acquired the share in the property

as claimed.

5. The suit was contested mainly with the plea that the

plaintiff could claim share only in the self acquired

property of her deceased father and not in the entire

property. During pendency of the suit, the plaintiff

amended the plaint so as to claim share as per the

Amended Act 39 of 2005. The trial court partly decreed

the suit to the extent of 1/28 th share in certain properties

on the basis of notional partition on the death of her father

and in some of the items of property, no share was given,

while 1/7th share was given in some other properties as

mentioned in detail in the judgment of the trial court.

6. The respondent-plaintiff preferred first appeal before

the High Court with the grievance that the plaintiff became

coparcener under the Amendment Act 39 of 2005 and was

entitled to inherit the coparcenary property equal to her

brothers, apart from contentions based on individual

claims in certain items of property.

Page3
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

7. The stand of the defendants-appellants was that the

plaintiff could not claim any share in self acquired property

of the members of the joint family and that the claim of

the plaintiff had to be dealt with only under Section 6 of

the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 as it stood prior to the

amendment by Act 39 of 2005. The defendants relied

upon a division bench judgment of the High Court in M.

Prithviraj vs. Neelamma N.1 laying down that if father

of a plaintiff had died prior to commencement of Act 39 of

2005, the amended provision could not apply. It was only

the law applicable on the date of opening of succession

which was to apply.

8. The High Court framed following question for

consideration on this aspect :

(ii) Whether the plaintiff is entitled to a share


in terms of Section 6 of the Hindu Succession
Act as amended by Act No.39 of 2005?

9. It was held that the amendment was applicable to

pending proceedings even if it is taken to be prospective.

The High Court held that :

1
ILR 2009 Kar. 3612

Page4
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

61. The law in this regard is too well settled


in terms of the judgment of the Supreme Court
in the case of G. Sekar Vs. Geetha and others
reported in (2009) 6 SCC 99. Any development
of law inevitably applies to a pending
proceeding and in fact it is not even to be taken
as a retrospective applicability of the law but
only the law as it stands on the day being made
applicable.

62. The suit, no doubt, might have


been instituted in the year 1992 and even
assuming that it was four years after the demise
of Yeshwanth Chandrakant Upadhye, the
position so far as the parties are concerned who
are all members of the joint family, in terms of
Section 6 as amended by Act No.39 of 2005 is
that a female member is, by a fiction of law
created in terms of the amended provision also
becomes a coparcener and has a right in joint
family property by birth. They are also sharer
members of the coparcenary property at par
with all male members. When a partition takes
place, coparceners succeed to the property in
equal measure. Such is the legal position in
terms of Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act
as amended by Act No.39 of 2005 and as
declared by the Supreme Court in the case of
G.S. Sekar (supra). The only exception carved
out to the applicability and operation of Section
6 of the Hindu Succession Act as amended by
Act No.39 of 2005 being a situation or a factual
position where there was a partition which had
been effected by a registered partition deed or
by a decree of the court which has attained
finality prior to 20.12.2004 in terms of
sub-section (5) to Section 6.

63. In the present case such being


not the factual position, the exception available
under sub-section (5) to Section 6 cannot be
called in aid by the defendants and therefore,
the liability in terms of the amended provisions
operates. It is not necessary for us to multiply
the judgment by going into details or discussing
other judgments referred to and relied upon by

Page5
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

the learned counsel for the parties at the Bar as


one judgment of the Supreme Court if clinches
the issue on the point, it is good enough for us,
as a binding authority to apply that law and
dispose of the case as declared in that
judgment.

10. The respondent-plaintiff was accordingly held

entitled to 1/7th share in all items in Schedules A to D.

In respect of Schedule F, first item was given up by the

plaintiff. Out of the other two items, she was held entitled

to 1/7th share in Item No.2 and 1/7 th share in 40%

ownership in Item No.3.

11. The defendants-appellants have questioned the

judgment and order of the High Court with the contention

that the amended provision of Section 6 has no application

in the present case. Father of the plaintiff died on 18 th

February, 1988and was thus, not a coparcener on the date

of commencement of the Amendment Act. The plaintiff

could not claim to be the daughter of a coparcener at

the time of commencement of the Act which

was the necessary condition for claiming the benefit. On

the death of plaintiffs father on 18th February, 1988,

notional partition took place and shares of the heirs were

Page6
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

crystallized which created vested right in the parties.

Such vested right could not have been taken away by a

subsequent amendment in absence of express provision or

necessary intendment to that effect. Moreover,

the amending provision itself was expressly applicable on

and from the commencement of the Amendment Act, i.e.,

9th September, 2005. The High Court held that even if the

provision was prospective, it could certainly apply to

pending proceedings as has been held in some decisions

of this Court. It is pointed out that the amendment could

apply to pending proceedings, only if the amendment was

applicable at all.

12. Learned counsel for the respondents would support

the view taken by the High Court.

13. We have heard learned counsel for the parties in

the present appeal as well as in connected matters for

the rival view points which will be noticed hereinafter.

14. The contention raised on behalf of the appellants and

other learned counsel supporting the said view is that the

2005 Amendment was not applicable to the claim of a

Page7
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

daughter when her father who was a coparcener in the

joint hindu family died prior to 9th September, 2005. This

submission is based on the plain language of the statute

and the established principle that in absence of express

provision or implied intention to the contrary, an

amendment dealing with a substantive right is prospective

and does not affect the vested rights2. If such a

coparcener had died prior to the commencement of the

Amendment Act, succession opens out on the date of the

death as per the prevailing provision of the succession law

and the rights of the heirs get crystalised even if partition

by metes and bounds does not take place. It was pointed

out that apparently conflicting provision in Explanation to

Section 6(5) and the said Section was required to be given

harmonious construction with the main provision. The

explanation could not be read in conflict with the main

provision. Main provision of Section 6(1) confers right of

coparcener on a daughter only from commencement of

the Act and not for any period prior to that. The proviso to

Section 6(1) also applies only where the main provision of

Section 6(5) applies. Since Section 6(5) applies to partition


2
Shyam Sunder vs. Ram Kumar (2001) 8 SCC 24, Paras 22 to 27

Page8
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

effected after 20th December, 2004, the said proviso and

the Explanation also applies only when Section 6(1)

applies. It is also submitted that the Explanation was

merely a rule of evidence and not a substantive provision

determining the rights of the parties. Date of a daughter

becoming coparcener is on and from the commencement

of the Act. Partitions effected before 20 th December, 2004

remain unaffected as expressly provided. The Explanation

defines partition, as partition made by a registered deed or

effected by decree of a court. Its effect is not to wipe out

a legal and valid partition prior to the said date, but to

place burden of proof of genuineness of such partition on

the party alleging it. In any case, statutory notional

partition remains valid and effective.

15. On the contrary, stand on behalf of the respondents

is that the amendment being piece of social legislation to

remove discrimination against women in the light of 174 th

Report of the Law Commission, the amendment should be

read as being retrospective as interpreted by the High

Court in the impugned judgment. A daughter acquired

right by birth and even if her father, who was a

Page9
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

coparcener, had died prior to coming into force of the

amendment, the shares of the parties were required to be

redefined. It was submitted that any partition which may

have taken place even prior to 20th December, 2004 was

liable to be ignored unless it was by a registered deed of

partition or by a decree of the Court. If no registered

partition had taken place, share of the daughter will stand

enhanced by virtue of the amendment.

16. We have given due consideration to the rival

submissions. We may refer to the provision of Section 6

of the Hindu Succession Act as it stood prior to the 2005

Amendment and as amended :

Section 6 of the Hindu Section 6 on and from the


Succession Act commencement of the Hindu
Succession (Amendment) Act,
2005

6. Devolution of interest of 6. Devolution of interest in


coparcenary property. When coparcenary property.-(1) On and
a male Hindu dies after the from the commencement of the
commencement of this Act, Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act,
having at the time of his death 2005, in a Joint Hindu family
an interest in a Mitakshara governed by the Mitakshara law, the
coparcenary property, his daughter of a coparcener shall,-
interest in the property shall
devolve by survivorship upon (a) by birth become a coparcener in
the surviving members of the her own right in the same manner as
coparcenary and not in the son;
accordance with this Act:
(b) have the same rights in the
PROVIDED that, if the deceased coparcenary property as she would

10

Page10
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

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,-

(a) the daughter is allotted the same


share as is allotted to a son;

(b) the share of the pre-deceased


son or a pre-deceased daughter, as
they would have got had they been
alive at the time of partition, shall be
allotted to the surviving child of such

11

Page11
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

predeceased son or of such


pre-deceased daughter; and

(c) the share of the pre-deceased


child of a pre-deceased son or of a
pre-deceased daughter, as such child
would have got had he or she been
alive at the time of the partition,
shall be allotted to the child of such
pre-deceased child of the
pre-deceased son or a pre-deceased
daughter, as the case may be.

Explanation.- For the purposes of this


sub-section, the interest of a Hindu
Mitakshara coparcener shall be
deemed to be the share in the
property that would have been
allotted to him if a partition of the
property had taken place
immediately before his death,
irrespective of whether he was
entitled to claim partition or not.

(4) After the commencement of the


Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act,
2005, no court shall recognise any
right to proceed against a son,
grandson or great-grandson for the
recovery of any debt due from his
father, grandfather or
great-grandfather solely on the
ground of the pious obligation under
the Hindu law, of such son, grandson
or great-grandson to discharge any
such debt:

Provided that in the case of any debt


contracted before the
commencement of the Hindu
Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005,
nothing contained in this sub-section
shall affect-

(a) the right of any creditor to


proceed against the son, grandson or
great-grandson, as the case may be;
or

(b) any alienation made in respect of


or in satisfaction of, any such debt,
and any such right or alienation shall

12

Page12
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

be enforceable under the rule of


pious obligation in the same manner
and to the same extent as it would
have been enforceable as if the
Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act,
2005 had not been enacted.

Explanation.-For the purposes of


clause (a), the expression "son",
"grandson" or "great-grandson" shall
be deemed to refer to the son,
grandson or great-grandson, as the
case may be, who was born or
adopted prior to the commencement
of the Hindu Succession
(Amendment) Act, 2005.

(5) Nothing contained in this section


shall apply to a partition, which has
been effected before the 20th day of
December, 2004.

Explanation.- For the purposes of this


section "partition" means any
partition made by execution of a
deed of partition duly registered
under the Registration Act, 1908 (16
of 1908) or partition effected by a
decree of a court.'

17. The text of the amendment itself clearly provides that

the right conferred on a daughter of a coparcener is on

and from the commencement of Hindu Succession

(Amendment) Act, 2005. Section 6(3) talks of death after

the amendment for its applicability. In view of plain

language of the statute, there is no scope for a different

interpretation than the one suggested by the text of the

amendment. An amendment of a substantive provision is

13

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Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

always prospective unless either expressly or by necessary

intendment it is retrospective3. In the present case, there is

neither any express provision for giving retrospective effect

to the amended provision nor necessary intendment to that

effect. Requirement of partition being registered can have

no application to statutory notional partition on opening of

succession as per unamended provision, having regard to

nature of such partition which is by operation of law. The

intent and effect of the Amendment will be considered a

little later. On this finding, the view of the High Court

cannot be sustained.

18. Contention of the respondents that the Amendment

should be read as retrospective being a piece of social

legislation cannot be accepted. Even a social legislation

cannot be given retrospective effect unless so provided for

or so intended by the legislature. In the present case, the

legislature has expressly made the Amendment applicable

on and from its commencement and only if death of the

coparcener in question is after the Amendment. Thus, no

other interpretation is possible in view of express language

3
Shyam Sunder vs. Ram Kumar (2001) 8 SCC 24, Paras 22 to 27

14

Page14
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

of the statute. The proviso keeping dispositions or

alienations or partitions prior to 20 th December, 2004

unaffected can also not lead to the inference that the

daughter could be a coparcener prior to the

commencement of the Act. The proviso only means that

the transactions not covered thereby will not affect the

extent of coparcenary property which may be available

when the main provision is applicable. Similarly,

Explanation has to be read harmoniously with the

substantive provision of Section 6(5) by being limited to a

transaction of partition effected after 20 th December,

2004. Notional partition, by its very nature, is not covered

either under proviso or under sub-section 5 or under the

Explanation.

19. Interpretation of a provision depends on the text and

the context4. Normal rule is to read the words of a statute

in ordinary sense. In case of ambiguity, rational meaning

has to be given5. In case of apparent conflict, harmonious

meaning to advance the object and intention of legislature

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

Page15
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

20. There have been number of occasions when a

proviso or an explanation came up for interpretation.

Depending on the text, context and the purpose, different

rules of interpretation have been applied7.

21. Normal rule is that a proviso excepts something out

of the enactment which would otherwise be within the

purview of the enactment but if the text, context or

purpose so require a different rule may apply. Similarly, an

explanation is to explain the meaning of words of the

section but if the language or purpose so require, the

explanation can be so interpreted. Rules of interpretation

of statutes are useful servants but difficult masters 8.

Object of interpretation is to discover the intention of

legislature.

22. In this background, we find that the proviso to

Section 6(1) and sub-section (5) of Section 6 clearly intend

to exclude the transactions referred to therein which may

have taken place prior to 20th December, 2004 on which

date the Bill was introduced. Explanation cannot permit

reopening of partitions which were valid when effected.


7
S. Sundaram Pillai vs. R. Pattabiraman (1985) 1 SCC 591
8
Keshavji Ravji & Co. vs. CIT (1990) 2 SCC 231

16

Page16
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

Object of giving finality to transactions prior to 20 th

December, 2004 is not to make the main provision

retrospective in any manner. The object is that by fake

transactions available property at the introduction of the

Bill is not taken away and remains available as and when

right conferred by the statute becomes available and is to

be enforced. Main provision of the Amendment in Section

6(1) and (3) is not in any manner intended to be affected

but strengthened in this way. Settled principles governing

such transactions relied upon by the appellants are not

intended to be done away with for period prior to 20 th

December, 2004. In no case statutory notional partition

even after 20th December, 2004 could be covered by the

Explanation or the proviso in question.

23. Accordingly, we hold that the rights under the

amendment are applicable to living daughters of living

coparceners as on 9th September, 2005 irrespective of

when such daughters are born. Disposition or alienation

including partitions which may have taken place before

20th December, 2004 as per law applicable prior to the said

17

Page17
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

date will remain unaffected. Any transaction of partition

effected thereafter will be governed by the Explanation.

24. On above interpretation, Civil Appeal No.7217 of

2013 is allowed. The order of the High Court is set aside.

The matter is remanded to the High Court for a fresh

decision in accordance with law. All other matters may be

listed for hearing separately for consideration on 24 th

November, 2015.

25. The view which we have taken above is consistent

with and not in conflict with any of the earlier decisions.

We may now refer to the decisions cited by the parties.

Main decisions cited by the respondents are: Prema vs.

Nanje Gowda9, Ganduri Koteshwaramma vs. Chakiri

Yanadi10, V.K. Surendra vs. V.K. Thimmaiah11, Ram

Sarup vs. Munshi12, Dayawati vs. Inderjit13, Amarjit

Kaur vs. Pritam Singh14, Lakshmi Narayan Guin vs.

Niranjan Modak15, S. Sai Reddy vs. S. Narayana

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

Page18
Reddy16 and State of Maharashtra vs. Narayan Rao17.

Many of these decisions deal with situations where change

in law is held to be applicable to pending proceedings

having regard to intention of legislature in a particular law.

There is no dispute with the propositions laid down in the

said decisions. Question is of application of the said

principle in the light of a particular amending law. The

decisions relied upon do not apply to the present case to

support the stand of the respondents.

25.1. In Ram Sarup case (supra), the question for

consideration was of amendment to the Punjab

Pre-emption Act, 1930 by Punjab Act 10 of 1960 restricting

the pre-emption right. Section 31 inserted by way of

amendment prohibited passing of a decree which was

inconsistent with the amended provisions. It was held that

the amendment was retrospective and had retrospective

operation in view of language employed in the said

provision.

25.2. In Dayawati case (supra), Section 6 of the Punjab

Relief of Indebtedness Act, 1956 expressly gave


16
(1991) 3 SCC 647
17
(1985) 2 SCC 321, paras 8 to 10

Page19
retrospective effect and made the statute applicable to all

pending suits on the commencement of the Act. The Act

sought to reduce the rate of interest in certain

transactions to give relief against indebtedness to certain

specified persons.

25.3. In Lakshmi Narayan Guin case (supra), the

question was of applicability of Section 13 of the West

Bengal Premises Tenancy Act, 1956 which expressly

provided that no order could be passed by the Court

contrary to the scheme of the new law.

25.4. In Amarjit Kaur case (supra), Section 3 of the

Punjab

Pre-emption (Repeal) Act, 1973 was considered which

expressly prohibited the Court from passing any

pre-emption decree after the commencement of the Act.

25.5. There is also no conflict with the principle laid down

in V.K. Surendra case (supra) which deals with a

presumption about the nature of a joint family property

and burden of proof being on the person claiming such

Page20
property to be separate. The said decision only lays down

a rule of evidence.

25.6. In S. Sai Reddy case (supra), the question for

consideration was whether even after a preliminary decree

is passed determining the shares in partition, such shares

could be varied on account of intervening events at the

time of passing of the final decree. In the said case,

partition suit was filed by a son against his father in which

a preliminary decree was passed determining share of the

parties. Before final decree could be passed, there was an

amendment in the Hindu Succession Act (vide A.P.

Amendment Act, 1986) allowing share to the unmarried

daughters. Accordingly, the unmarried daughters applied

to the court for their shares which plea was upheld. The

said judgment does not deal with the issue involved in the

present matter. It was not a case where the coparcener

whose daughter claimed right was not alive on the date of

the commencement of the Act nor a case where shares of

the parties stood already crystalised by operation of law to

which the amending law had no application. Same is the

position in Prema and Ganduri cases (supra).

Page21
25.7. In Narayan Rao case (supra), it was observed that

even after notional partition, the joint family continues.

The proposition laid down in this judgment is also not

helpful in deciding the question involved herein. The text

of the Amendment itself shows that the right conferred by

the Amendment is on a daughter of a coparcener who is

member of a coparcenary and alive on commencement of

the Act.

25.8. We also do not find any relevance of decisions in

State of Rajasthan vs. Mangilal Pindwal 18 and West

U.P. Sugar Mills Asson. vs. State of U.P. 19 or other

similar decisions for deciding the issue involved herein.

The said decisions deal with the effect of repeal of a

provision and not the issue of restrospectivity with which

the Court is concerned in the present case.

26. We now come to the decisions relied upon by the

appellants. In M. Prithviraj case (supra), the view

taken appears to be consistent with what has been said

above. It appears that this was a binding precedent before

the Bench of the High Court which passed the impugned


18
(1996) 5 SCC 60
19
(2002) 2 SCC 645

Page22
order but does not appear to have been referred to in the

impugned judgment. Judgments of this Court in Sheela

Devi vs. Lal Chand20 and G. Sekar vs. Geetha21 and

the judgment of Madras High Court in Bagirathi vs. S.

Manivanan22 have been relied upon therein. In Sheela

Devi case (supra), this Court observed:

21. The Act indisputably would prevail over the


old Hindu Law. We may notice that the
Parliament, with a view to confer right upon the
female heirs, even in relation to the joint family
property, enacted Hindu Succession Act, 2005.
Such a provision was enacted as far back in
1987 by the State of Andhra Pradesh. The
succession having opened in 1989, evidently,
the provisions of Amendment Act, 2005 would
have no application. Sub-section (1) of Section
6 of the Act governs the law relating to
succession on the death of a coparcener in the
event the heirs are only male descendants. But,
the proviso appended to Sub-section (1)
of Section 6 of the Act creates an exception.
First son of Babu Lal, viz., Lal Chand, was, thus,
a coparcener. Section 6 is exception to the
general rules. It was, therefore, obligatory on
the part of the respondents-plaintiffs to show
that apart from Lal Chand, Sohan Lal will also
derive the benefit thereof. So far as the Second
son, Sohan Lal is concerned, no evidence has
been brought on records to show that he was
born prior to coming into force of Hindu
Succession Act, 1956.

20
(2006) 8 SCC 581
21
(2009) 6 SCC 99, para 30
22
AIR 2005 Mad 250 (DB)

Page23
Full Bench judgment of Bombay High Court in

Badrinarayan Shankar Bhandari Vs. Ompraskash

Shankar Bhandari23 also appears to be consistent with

the view taken hereinabove.

26.1. In Gurupad Khandappa Magdum vs. Hirabai

Khandappa Magdum24, Shyama Devi vs. Manju

Shukla25 and Anar Devi vs. Parmeshwari Devi 26

cases this Court interpreted the Explanation 1 to Section 6

(prior to 2005 Amendment) of the Hindu Succession Act. It

was held that the deeming provision referring to partition

of the property immediately before the death of the

coparcener was to be given due and full effect in view of

settled principle of interpretation of a provision

incorporating a deeming fiction. In Shyama Devi and

Anar Devi cases, same view was followed.

26.2. In Vaishali Satish Ganorkar vs. Satish

Keshaorao Ganorkar27, the Bombay High Court held that

the amendment will not apply unless the daughter is born

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

Page24
after the 2005 Amendment, but on this aspect a different

view has been taken in the later larger Bench judgment.

We are unable to find any reason to hold that birth of the

daughter after the amendment was a necessary condition

for its applicability. All that is required is that daughter

should be alive and her father should also be alive on the

date of the amendment.

26.3. Kale vs. Dy. Director of Consolidation 28 and

Digambar Adhar Patil vs. Devram Girdhar Patil 29

have been cited to submit that the family settlement was

not required to be registered. Santosh Hazari vs.

Purushottam Tiwari30 lays down that the Appellate Court

must deal with reasons of the trial court while reversing its

findings.

26.4 Kannaiyan vs. The Assistant Collector of

Central Excise31, C.I.T. Gujarat vs. Keshavlal

Lallubhai Patel32, Umayal Achi vs. Lakshmi Achi33 and

Shivappa Laxman vs. Yellawa Shivappa

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)

Page25
Shivagannavar34 have been cited to canvass that

partition was recognition of pre-existing rights and did not

create new rights.

26.5 This would normally have ended our order with the

operative part being in para 24 which disposes of Civil

Appeal No.7217 of 2013 and directs listing of other

matters for being dealt with separately. However, one

more aspect relating to gender discrimination against

muslim women which came up for consideration needs to

be gone into as Part II of this order.

Part II

27. An important issue of gender discrimination which

though not directly involved in this appeal, has been

raised by some of the learned counsel for the parties

which concerns rights to muslim women. Discussions on

gender discrimination led to this issue also. It was pointed

out that inspite of guarantee of the Constitution, muslim

women are subjected to discrimination. There is no

safeguard against arbitrary divorce and second marriage

by her husband during currency of the first marriage,


34
AIR 1954 BOM 47, para 4

Page26
resulting in denial of dignity and security to her. Although

the issue was raised before this Court in Ahmedabad

Women Action Group(AWAG) vs. Union of India 35,

this Court did not go into the merits of the discrimination

with the observation that the issue involved state policy

to be dealt with by the legislature36. It was observed that

challenge to the Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on

Divorce) Act, 1986 was pending before the Constitution

Bench and there was no reason to multiply proceedings on

such an issue.

28. It is pointed out that the matter needs consideration

by this Court as the issue relates not merely to a policy

matter but to fundamental rights of women under Articles

14, 15 and 21 and international conventions and

covenants. One of the reasons for the court having not

gone into the matter was pendency of an issue before the

Constitution Bench which has since been decided by this

Court in Danial Latifi vs. Union of India 37. The

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

Page27
Constitution Bench did not address the said issue but the

Court held that Article 21 included right to live with

dignity38 which supports the plea that a muslim woman

could invoke fundamental rights in such matters. In Javed

vs. State of Haryana39, a Bench of three judges

observed that practice of polygamy is injurious to public

morals and can be superseded by the State just as

practice of sati 40
. It was further observed that conduct

rules providing for monogamy irrespective of religion are

valid and could not be struck down on the ground of

violation of personal law of muslims 41. In John

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

Page28
Vallamattom vs. UOI42, it was observed that Section 118

of Indian Succession Act, 1925 restricting right of

christians to make Will for charitable purpose was without

any rational basis, was discriminatory against christians

and violated Article 1443. Laws dealing with marriage and

succession are not part of religion44. Law has to change

with time45. International covenants and treaties could be

referred to examine validity and reasonableness of a

provision46.

29. In Charu Khurana vs. UOI47, this Court considered

the issue of gender discrimination in the matter of denial

of membership of Cine Costume Make-up Artists and Hair

Dressers Association in film industry. It was held that

such discrimination violates basic constitutional rights.

30. It was thus submitted that this aspect of the matter

may be gone into by separately registering the matter as

Public Interest Litigation (PIL). We are of the view that the

suggestion needs consideration in view of earlier decisions

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

Page29
of this Court. The issue has also been highlighted in recent

Articles appearing in the press on this subject48.

31. For this purpose, a PIL be separately registered and

put up before the appropriate Bench as per orders of

Honble the Chief Justice of India.

32. Notice be issued to learned Attorney General and

National Legal Services Authority, New Delhi returnable on

23rd November, 2015. We give liberty to learned counsel

already appearing in this matter to assist the Court on this

aspect of the matter, if they wish to volunteer, for either

view point.

..J.
[ ANIL R. DAVE ]

..J.
[ ADARSH KUMAR GOEL ]

NEW DELHI
OCTOBER 16, 2015

48
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.

Page30
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

Civil Appeal No(s).7217/2013

PRAKASH & ORS.


Appellant(s)

VERSUS

PHULAVATI & ORS.


Respondent(s)

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)

Date : 16/10/2015 These appeals were called on for


pronouncement
of judgment today.

For Appellant(s) Mr. Anil C. Nishant,Adv.


Mr. S.N. Bhat,Adv.

Mr. A.K. Joseph,Adv.


Mrs. Sudha Gupta,Adv.
Mrs. S. Usha Reddy,Adv.

Mr. Nanda Kishore,Adv.


Mr. P.R.Kovilan,Adv.
Ms. Geetha Kovilan,Adv.

Page31
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

Mr. Shanth Kumar V. Mahale,Adv.


Mr. Amith J.,Adv.
Mr. Rajesh Mahale,Adv.

Mr. Raghavendra S. Srivatsa,Adv.

Mr. Charudatta Mohindrakar,Adv.


Mr. A. Selvin Raja,Adv.
Mr. Aniruddha P. Mayee,Adv.

Mr. P.R. Ramasesh,Adv.


Mr. Ankolekar Gurudatta,Adv.
Mr. K.N. Rai,Adv.
Mrs. Vaijayanthi Girish,Adv.
Mr. G. Balaji,Adv.

For Respondent(s)
for M/s. S.M. Jadhav & Company,Advs.
Mr. Rauf Rahim,Adv.
Mr. Sumeet Lall,Adv.

Mr. Balaji Srinivasan,Adv.


Mr. Mayank Kshirsagar,Adv.
Ms. Srishti Govil,Adv.
Ms. Vaishnavi Subrahmanyam,Adv.
Mr. Tushar Singh,Adv.
Mr. Virendra Sharma,Adv.

Mr. Manjunath Meled,Adv.


Mr. Vijaylaxmi,Adv.
Mr. Anil Kumar,Adv.

Mr. Somiran Sharma,Adv.

Mr. B. Subrahmanya Prasad,Adv.


Mr. Anirudh Sanganeria,Adv.
Mr. Chinmay Deshpande,Adv.
Mr. Amjid MaQBOOL,aDV.

Mr. Shashibhushan P. Adgaonkar,Adv.


Mr. T. Mahipal,Adv.
Mr. G.N. Reddy,Adv.
Mr. Rajinder Mathur,Adv.
Mr. Shankar Divate,Adv.

32

Page32
Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 etc.

Mrs. K. Sarada Devi,Adv.


Ms. Garima Prashad,Adv.

Hon'ble Mr. Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel


pronounced the reportable judgment of the Bench
comprising Hon'ble Mr. Justice Anil R. Dave and
His Lordship.
Civil appeal No.7217/2013 is allowed, all
the pending applications stand disposed of and
the connected Special Leave Petitions may be
listed for hearing separately for consideration
on 24th November, 2015, in terms of signed
Reportable Judgment.
All the pending applications stand disposed
of.

(Anita Malhotra) (Sneh Bala Mehra)


Court Master Assistant Registrar

(Signed Reportable judgment is placed on the file)

33

Page33

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