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Showing posts with label Supreme Court Clears The Air On Daughter's Right In Coparcenary Property. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Supreme Court Clears The Air On Daughter's Right In Coparcenary Property. Show all posts

Wednesday, 24 August 2016

Supreme Court Clears The Air On Daughter's Right In Coparcenary Property


                                                         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  OF2011, 4217-4218 OF 2012,  1299-1300 OF 2013, 17577-17578 OF 2013,  19816  OF2014, 5619 OF 2015, 3805 OF 2008, 9390 OF 2015, 5680 OF 2015, 35209 OF  2011AND 15557-15558 OF 2015 AND  SLP. (C) ….15560 OF 2015

                                                                     J U D G M E N T
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.

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  AdditionalCivil  Judge  (Senior  Division),  Belgaum  for   partition   and   separatepossession 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’  inwhich the share sought was 1/28th.

4.    According to the case of  the  plaintiff,  the  suit  properties  wereacquired by her late father Yeshwanth  Chandrakant  Upadhye  by  inheritancefrom his adoptive mother Smt. Sunanda Bai.  After the death  of  her  fatheron 18th February, 1988, she acquired the share in the property  as  claimed.

5.    The suit was contested mainly with the plea that the  plaintiff  couldclaim share only in the self-acquired property of her  deceased  father  andnot in the entire property.  During pendency  of  the  suit,  the  plaintiffamended 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  1/28th  share  incertain properties on the basis of notional partition on the  death  of  herfather 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  inthe judgment of the trial court.

6.    The respondent-plaintiff preferred first appeal before the High  Courtwith the grievance that the plaintiff became coparcener under the  AmendmentAct 39 of 2005 and was entitled to inherit the  coparcenary  property  equalto her brothers, apart  from  contentions  based  on  individual  claims  in certain items of property.
7.    The stand of the defendants-appellants was that  the  plaintiff  couldnot claim any share in self acquired property of the members  of  the  jointfamily and that the claim of the plaintiff had to be dealt with  only  underSection 6 of the Hindu Succession  Act,  1956  as  it  stood  prior  to  theamendment by Act 39 of 2005.  The defendants relied upon  a  division  benchjudgment of the High Court in M. Prithviraj vs. Neelamma N.[1]  laying  downthat if father of a plaintiff had died prior to commencement of  Act  39  of2005, the  amended  provision  could  not  apply.    It  was  only  the  lawapplicable on the date of opening of succession which was to apply.
8.    The High Court framed following question  for  consideration  on  thisaspect :“(ii) Whether the plaintiff is entitled to a share in terms of Section 6  ofthe Hindu Succession Act as amended by Act No.39 of 2005?”


9.    It was held that the amendment was applicable to  pending  proceedingseven if it is taken to be prospective.  The High Court held that : “61. The law in this regard is too well settled in terms  of  the  judgmentof the Supreme Court in the case of G. Sekar Vs. Geetha and others  reportedin (2009) 6 SCC 99.  Any development of law inevitably applies to a  pendingproceeding and in fact it is  not  even  to  be  taken  as  a  retrospectiveapplicability of the law but only the law as it  stands  on  the  day  beingmade applicable.
62.         The suit, no doubt, might have been instituted in the year  1992and even assuming that it was four  years  after  the  demise  of  YeshwanthChandrakant Upadhye, the position so far as the parties  are  concerned  whoare all members of the joint family, in terms of Section  6  as  amended  byAct No.39 of 2005 is that a female member is, by a fiction  of  law  createdin terms of the amended provision also becomes a coparcener and has a  rightin joint family property by birth.  They are  also  sharer  members  of  thecoparcenary property at par with all male members.  When a  partition  takesplace, coparceners succeed to the property in equal measure.   Such  is  thelegal position in terms of Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act as  amendedby Act No.39 of 2005 and as declared by the Supreme Court  in  the  case  ofG.S. Sekar (supra).  The only exception carved out to the applicability  andoperation of Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act as amended by  Act  No.39of 2005 being a situation or a factual position where there was a  partitionwhich had been effected by a registered partition deed or  by  a  decree  ofthe 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,  theexception available under sub-section (5) to Section 6 cannot be  called  inaid by the defendants and therefore, the liability in terms of  the  amendedprovisions operates.  It is not necessary for us to  multiply  the  judgmentby going into details or discussing other judgments referred to  and  reliedupon by the learned counsel for the parties at the Bar as  one  judgment  ofthe Supreme Court if clinches the issue on the point, it is good enough  forus, as a binding authority to apply that law and  dispose  of  the  case  asdeclared in that judgment.”

10.   The respondent-plaintiff was accordingly held entitled to 1/7th  sharein all items in Schedules ‘A’ to ‘D’.   In respect of  Schedule  ‘F’,  firstitem was given up by the plaintiff.  Out of the other  two  items,  she  washeld entitled to 1/7th share in Item No.2 and 1/7th share in  40%  ownershipin Item No.3.
11.   The defendants-appellants have questioned the judgment  and  order  ofthe High Court with the contention that the amended provision of  Section  6has no application in the present case.  Father of  the  plaintiff  died  on18th  February,  1988and  was  thus,  not  a  coparcener  on  the  date   ofcommencement of the Amendment Act.  The plaintiff  could  not  claim  to  be“the daughter of a coparcener” at the time of commencement of the Act  whichwas the necessary condition for claiming  the  benefit.   On  the  death  ofplaintiff’s father on 18th February, 1988,  notional  partition  took  placeand shares of the heirs were crystallized which created vested right in  theparties.  Such vested right could not have been taken away by  a  subsequentamendment in absence of express provision or necessary  intendment  to  thateffect.  Moreover,the amending provision itself was expressly applicable  “on  and  from”  thecommencement of the Amendment Act, i.e.,  9th  September,  2005.   The  HighCourt held that even if the provision was prospective,  it  could  certainlyapply to pending proceedings as has been held  in  some  decisions  of  thisCourt.  It is  pointed  out  that  the  amendment  could  apply  to  pendingproceedings, only if the amendment was applicable at all.

12.   Learned counsel for the respondents would support the  view  taken  bythe High Court.

13.   We have heard learned counsel for the parties in  the  present  appealas well as in connected matters for the rival  view  points  which  will  benoticed hereinafter.

14.   The contention raised on behalf of the appellants  and  other  learnedcounsel supporting the  said  view  is  that  the  2005  Amendment  was  notapplicable to the claim of a daughter when her father who was  a  coparcenerin the  joint  hindu  family  died  prior  to  9th  September,  2005.   Thissubmission  is  based  on  the  plain  language  of  the  statute  and   theestablished principle that  in  absence  of  express  provision  or  impliedintention to the contrary, an amendment dealing with a substantive right  isprospective and does not affect the vested rights[2].  If such a  coparcenerhad died prior to the commencement of the Amendment  Act,  succession  opensout on the date of  the  death  as  per  the  prevailing  provision  of  thesuccession law  and  the  rights  of  the  heirs  get  crystalised  even  ifpartition by metes and bounds does not take place.  It was pointed out  thatapparently conflicting provision in Explanation  to  Section  6(5)  and  thesaid Section was required to be given harmonious construction with the  mainprovision.  The explanation could not be read  in  conflict  with  the  mainprovision.  Main provision of Section 6(1) confers right of coparcener on  adaughter only from commencement of the Act and not for any period  prior  tothat.  The proviso  to  Section  6(1)  also  applies  only  where  the  mainprovision of Section 6(5) applies. Since Section 6(5) applies  to  partitioneffected after 20th December, 2004, the said  proviso  and  the  Explanationalso applies only when Section 6(1) applies.  It is also submitted that  theExplanation was merely a rule of evidence and not  a  substantive  provisiondetermining the  rights  of  the  parties.   Date  of  a  daughter  becoming
coparcener is on and from the commencement of the Act.  Partitions  effectedbefore 20th December, 2004 remain  unaffected  as  expressly  provided.  TheExplanation defines partition, as partition made by  a  registered  deed  oreffected by decree of a court.  Its effect is not to wipe out  a  legal  andvalid partition prior to the said date, but to  place  burden  of  proof  ofgenuineness 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  theamendment  being  piece  of  social  legislation  to  remove  discriminationagainst women in the light of  174th  Report  of  the  Law  Commission,  theamendment should be read as being retrospective as interpreted by  the  HighCourt in the impugned judgment. A daughter acquired right by birth and  evenif her father, who was a coparcener, had died prior to coming into force  ofthe amendment, the shares of the parties were required to be redefined.   Itwas submitted that any partition which may have taken place  even  prior  to20th December, 2004 was liable to be ignored unless it was by  a  registereddeed of partition or by a decree of the Court.  If no  registered  partitionhad taken place, share of the daughter will stand enhanced by virtue of  theamendment.

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  stoodprior 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                       |6. Devolution of interest in    |
|of coparcenary property.                       |coparcenary property.-(1) On and|
|When a male Hindu dies                       |from the commencement of the    |
|after the commencement of                            |Hindu Succession (Amendment)    |
|this Act, having at the                          |Act, 2005, in a Joint Hindu     |
|time of his death an                             |family governed by the          |
|interest in a Mitakshara                       |Mitakshara law, the daughter of |
|coparcenary property, his                     |a coparcener shall,-            |
|interest in the property                        |(a) by birth become a coparcener|
|shall devolve by                                  |in her own right in the same    |
|survivorship upon the                          |manner as the son;              |
|surviving members of the                     |(b) have the same rights in the |
|coparcenary and not in                       |coparcenary property as she     |
|accordance with this Act:                    |would have had if she had been a|
|PROVIDED that, if the                        |son;                            |
|deceased had left him                        |(c) be subject to the same      |
|surviving a female relative                 |liabilities in respect of the   |
|specified in class I of the                   |said coparcenary property as    |
|Schedule or a male relative                  |that of a son,                  |
|specified in that class who                   |and any reference to a Hindu    |
|claims through such female                |Mitakshara coparcener shall be  |
|relative, the interest of                        |deemed to include a reference to|
|the deceased in the                                 |a daughter of a coparcener:     |
|Mitakshara coparcenary                        |Provided that nothing contained |
|property shall devolve by                       |in this sub-section shall affect|
|testamentary or intestate                                |or invalidate any disposition or|
|succession, as the case may                |alienation including any        |
|be, under this Act and not                 |partition or testamentary       |
|by survivorship.                                   |disposition of property which   |
|Explanation I: For the                         |had taken place before the 20th |
|purposes of this section,                      |day of December, 2004.          |
|the interest of a Hindu                         |(2) Any property to which a     |
|Mitakshara coparcener shall               |female Hindu becomes entitled by|
|be deemed to be the share                    |virtue of sub-section -(1) shall|
|in the property that would                 |be held by her with the         |
|have been allotted to him                   |incidents of coparcenary        |
|if a partition of the                               |ownership and shall be regarded,|
|property had taken place                      |notwithstanding anything        |
|immediately before his                          |contained in this Act, or any   |
|death, irrespective of                           |other law for the time being in |
|whether he was entitled to                             |force, as property capable of   |
|claim partition or not.                         |being disposed of by her by     |
|Explanation 2: Nothing                       |testamentary disposition.       |
|contained in the proviso to                 |(3) Where a Hindu dies after the|
|this section shall be                           |commencement of the Hindu       |
|construed as enabling a                       |Succession (Amendment) Act,     |
|person who has separated                   |2005, his interest in the       |
|himself from the                                   |property of a Joint Hindu family|
|coparcenary before the                         |governed by the Mitakshara law, |
|death of the deceased or                                  |shall devolve by testamentary or|
|any of his heirs to claim                         |intestate succession, as the    |
|on intestacy a share in the                  |case may be, under this Act and |
|interest referred to                             |not by survivorship, and the    |
|therein. 7. Devolution of                         |coparcenary property shall be   |
|interest in the property o                    |deemed to have been divided as  |
|a tarwad,                                            |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         |
|                                                  |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 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  rightconferred on a ‘daughter of a coparcener’ is ‘on and from  the  commencementof Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005’.  Section  6(3)  talks  of  deathafter the amendment for its applicability.  In view  of  plain  language  ofthe statute, there is no scope for a different interpretation than  the  onesuggested by the text of the amendment.    An  amendment  of  a  substantiveprovision is always prospective unless  either  expressly  or  by  necessaryintendment it is retrospective[3].  In the present case,  there  is  neitherany express  provision  for  giving  retrospective  effect  to  the  amendedprovision  nor  necessary  intendment  to  that  effect.    Requirement   ofpartition being registered can have no  application  to  statutory  notionalpartition on opening  of  succession  as  per  unamended  provision,  havingregard to nature of such partition  which  is  by  operation  of  law.   Theintent and effect of the Amendment will be considered a  little  later.   Onthis finding, the view of the High Court cannot be sustained.

18.   Contention of the respondents that the Amendment  should  be  read  asretrospective being a piece of social legislation cannot be  accepted.  Evena  social  legislation  cannot  be  given  retrospective  effect  unless  soprovided for or so intended by the legislature.  In the  present  case,  thelegislature has expressly made the Amendment  applicable  on  and  from  itscommencement and only if death of the coparcener in question  is  after  theAmendment.  Thus, no other interpretation is possible  in  view  of  expresslanguage of the statute.  The proviso keeping  dispositions  or  alienationsor partitions prior to 20th December, 2004 unaffected can also not  lead  tothe inference  that  the  daughter  could  be  a  coparcener  prior  to  thecommencement of the Act.  The proviso only means that the  transactions  notcovered thereby will not affect the extent  of  coparcenary  property  whichmay  be  available  when  the  main  provision  is  applicable.   Similarly,Explanation has to be read harmoniously with the  substantive  provision  ofSection 6(5) by being limited to a transaction of partition  effected  after20th December, 2004.   Notional  partition,  by  its  very  nature,  is  notcovered  either  under  proviso  or  under  sub-section  5  or   under   theExplanation.
19.   Interpretation of a provision depends on the text and the  context[4]. Normal rule is to read the words of a statute in ordinary sense.   In  caseof ambiguity, rational meaning has to be  given[5].   In  case  of  apparentconflict,  harmonious  meaning  to  advance  the  object  and  intention  oflegislature has to be given[6].
20.   There have been number of occasions when a proviso or  an  explanationcame up  for  interpretation.   Depending  on  the  text,  context  and  thepurpose, different rules of interpretation have been applied[7].
21.   Normal rule is that a proviso excepts something out of  the  enactmentwhich would otherwise be within the purview of  the  enactment  but  if  thetext, 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  thelanguage or purpose so require,  the  explanation  can  be  so  interpreted.Rules of interpretation  of  statutes  are  useful  servants  but  difficultmasters[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  transactionsreferred to therein which may have taken place prior to 20th December,  2004on which date the Bill was introduced.  Explanation cannot permit  reopeningof partitions which were valid when effected.  Object of giving finality  totransactions prior to 20th December, 2004 is not to make the main  provisionretrospective in any manner.   The  object  is  that  by  fake  transactionsavailable property at the introduction of the Bill is  not  taken  away  andremains available as  and  when  right  conferred  by  the  statute  becomesavailable and is to  be  enforced.   Main  provision  of  the  Amendment  inSection 6(1) and (3) is not in  any  manner  intended  to  be  affected  butstrengthened in this way.  Settled principles  governing  such  transactionsrelied upon by the appellants are not intended to  be  done  away  with  forperiod prior  to  20th  December,  2004.   In  no  case  statutory  notionalpartition  even  after  20th  December,  2004  could  be  covered   by   theExplanation or the proviso in question.
 23.   Accordingly,  we  hold  that  the  rights  under  the  amendment  areapplicable to living daughters of living coparceners as  on  9th  September,2005  irrespective  of  when  such  daughters  are  born.   Disposition   oralienation including partitions which  may  have  taken  place  before  20thDecember, 2004 as per law applicable prior to  the  said  date  will  remainunaffected.  Any  transaction  of  partition  effected  thereafter  will  begoverned 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  theHigh Court for a fresh decision in accordance with law.  All  other  mattersmay be listed for hearing separately for  consideration  on  24th  November,2015.

25.   The view which we have taken above  is  consistent  with  and  not  inconflict with any of the  earlier  decisions.   We  may  now  refer  to  thedecisions cited by the parties.  Main decisions  cited  by  the  respondentsare:  Prema  vs.  Nanje  Gowda[9],   Ganduri   Koteshwaramma   vs.   ChakiriYanadi[10], V.K. Surendra vs. V.K. Thimmaiah[11], Ram Sarup vs.  Munshi[12],Dayawati vs. Inderjit[13],  Amarjit  Kaur  vs.  Pritam  Singh[14],   LakshmiNarayan Guin vs. Niranjan Modak[15], S. Sai Reddy vs. S. Narayana  Reddy[16]and State of Maharashtra vs. Narayan Rao[17].  Many of these decisions  dealwith situations where change in law is held  to  be  applicable  to  pendingproceedings 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  aparticular amending law.  The decisions relied upon  do  not  apply  to  thepresent case to support the stand of the respondents.

25.1. In Ram Sarup case (supra),  the  question  for  consideration  was  ofamendment to the Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1930  by  Punjab  Act  10  of  1960restricting  the  pre-emption  right.    Section  31  inserted  by  way   ofamendment prohibited passing of a decree which  was  inconsistent  with  theamended provisions.  It was held that the amendment  was  retrospective  andhad retrospective operation  in  view  of  language  employed  in  the  saidprovision.
25.2.  In  Dayawati  case  (supra),  Section  6  of  the  Punjab  Relief  ofIndebtedness Act, 1956 expressly gave  retrospective  effect  and  made  thestatute applicable to all pending suits on  the  commencement  of  the  Act.The Act sought to reduce the rate of interest  in  certain  transactions  togive relief against indebtedness to certain specified persons.
25.3.  In  Lakshmi  Narayan  Guin  case  (supra),  the   question   was   ofapplicability of Section 13 of the West Bengal Premises  Tenancy  Act,  1956which expressly provided  that  no  order  could  be  passed  by  the  Courtcontrary to the scheme of the new law.

25.4. In Amarjit Kaur case (supra), Section 3 of the PunjabPre-emption (Repeal) Act, 1973 was  considered  which  expressly  prohibitedthe Court from passing any pre-emption decree after the commencement of  theAct.


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  ajoint family property and burden of proof being on the person claiming  suchproperty to be separate.  The  said  decision  only  lays  down  a  rule  ofevidence.

25.6.  In S. Sai Reddy case (supra),  the  question  for  consideration  waswhether even after a preliminary decree is passed determining the shares  inpartition, such shares could be varied on account of intervening  events  atthe time of passing of the final decree.  In the said case,  partition  suitwas filed by a son against his father in  which  a  preliminary  decree  waspassed determining share of the  parties.   Before  final  decree  could  bepassed, 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  shareswhich plea was upheld.  The said judgment  does  not  deal  with  the  issueinvolved in the present matter.   It was not a  case  where  the  coparcenerwhose daughter claimed right was not alive on the date of  the  commencementof the Act nor a case where shares of the parties stood already  crystalisedby operation of law to which the amending law had no application.   Same  isthe position in Prema and Ganduri cases (supra).

25.7. In Narayan Rao case (supra), it was observed that even after  notionalpartition, the joint family continues.  The proposition laid  down  in  thisjudgment is also not helpful in deciding the question involved herein.   Thetext of  the  Amendment  itself  shows  that  the  right  conferred  by  theAmendment is on a ‘daughter of a coparcener’ who is member of a  coparcenaryand alive on commencement of the Act.

25.8. We also do not find any relevance of decisions in State  of  Rajasthanvs. Mangilal Pindwal[18] and West U.P.  Sugar  Mills  Asson.  vs.  State  ofU.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  notthe issue of restrospectivity with which  the  Court  is  concerned  in  thepresent 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  whathas been said above.  It appears that this was a  binding  precedent  beforethe Bench of the High Court which passed the impugned  order  but  does  notappear to have been referred to in  the  impugned  judgment.   Judgments  ofthis Court in Sheela Devi vs. Lal Chand[20]  and  G.  Sekar  vs.  Geetha[21]and the judgment of Madras High Court  in  Bagirathi  vs.  S.  Manivanan[22]have been relied upon therein.  In Sheela  Devi  case  (supra),  this  Courtobserved:


21. The Act indisputably would prevail  over  the  old  Hindu  Law.  We  maynotice that the Parliament, with a view to  confer  right  upon  the  femaleheirs,  even  in  relation  to  the  joint  family  property,  enacted HinduSuccession Act, 2005. Such a provision was enacted as far back  in  1987  bythe  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  tosuccession on the death of a coparcener in the  event  the  heirs  are  onlymale descendants. But, the proviso appended to  Sub-section  (1)  of Section6 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.  Itwas, therefore, obligatory on the  part  of  the  respondents-plaintiffs  toshow that apart from Lal Chand, Sohan  Lal  will  also  derive  the  benefitthereof. So far as the Second son, Sohan Lal is concerned, no  evidence  hasbeen brought on records to show that he was born prior to coming into  forceof Hindu Succession Act, 1956.”

Full Bench judgment of Bombay High Court in  Badrinarayan  Shankar  BhandariVs. Ompraskash Shankar Bhandari[23]  also appears to be consistent with  theview taken hereinabove.

26.1. In Gurupad Khandappa Magdum vs. Hirabai Khandappa  Magdum[24],  ShyamaDevi vs. Manju Shukla[25] and  Anar  Devi  vs.  Parmeshwari  Devi[26]  casesthis Court interpreted the Explanation  1  to  Section  6   (prior  to  2005Amendment) of the Hindu Succession  Act.   It  was  held  that  the  deeming
provision referring to partition of  the  property  immediately  before  thedeath of the coparcener was to be given due  and  full  effect  in  view  ofsettled principle of interpretation of a provision incorporating  a  deemingfiction.   In Shyama Devi and Anar Devi cases, same view was followed.
26.2. In Vaishali Satish Ganorkar vs.  Satish  Keshaorao  Ganorkar[27],  theBombay High Court  held  that  the  amendment  will  not  apply  unless  thedaughter is born after the 2005 Amendment, but on this  aspect  a  differentview has been taken in the later larger Bench judgment.  We  are  unable  tofind any reason to hold that birth of the daughter after the  amendment  wasa necessary condition for its applicability.  All that is required  is  thatdaughter should be alive and her father should also be alive on the date  ofthe amendment.
26.3. Kale vs. Dy. Director of Consolidation[28] and  Digambar  Adhar  Patilvs. Devram Girdhar Patil[29] have been  cited  to  submit  that  the  familysettlement  was  not  required  to  be  registered.   Santosh   Hazari   vs.Purushottam Tiwari[30] lays down that the Appellate  Court  must  deal  withreasons of the trial court while reversing its findings.

26.4  Kannaiyan vs. The Assistant Collector of Central  Excise[31],   C.I.T.Gujarat vs. Keshavlal Lallubhai Patel[32], Umayal Achi vs. Lakshmi  Achi[33]and  Shivappa Laxman  vs.  Yellawa  Shivappa  Shivagannavar[34]   have  beencited to canvass that partition was recognition of pre-existing  rights  anddid not create new rights.
26.5  This would normally have ended  our  order  with  the  operative  partbeing in para 24 which disposes of Civil Appeal No.7217 of 2013 and  directslisting of other matters for being  dealt  with  separately.   However,  onemore aspect relating to gender discrimination  against  muslim  women  whichcame 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  directlyinvolved in this appeal, has been raised by some of the learned counsel  forthe parties which concerns rights to muslim women.   Discussions  on  genderdiscrimination led to this issue also.  It was pointed out that  inspite  ofguarantee   of   the   Constitution,   muslim   women   are   subjected   todiscrimination.  There is no safeguard against arbitrary divorce and  secondmarriage by her husband during currency of the first marriage, resulting  indenial of dignity and security  to  her.   Although  the  issue  was  raisedbefore this Court  in  Ahmedabad  Women  Action  Group(AWAG)  vs.  Union  ofIndia[35],  this Court did not go into  the  merits  of  the  discriminationwith the observation that the issue involved state policy  to be dealt  withby the legislature[36].  It was observed that challenge to the Muslim  Women(Protection  of  Rights  on  Divorce)  Act,  1986  was  pending  before  theConstitution Bench and there was no reason to multiply proceedings  on  suchan issue.

28.   It is pointed out that the matter needs consideration  by  this  Courtas the issue relates not merely  to  a  policy  matter  but  to  fundamentalrights of women under Articles 14, 15 and 21 and  international  conventionsand covenants.  One of the reasons for the court having not  gone  into  thematter was pendency of an issue before  the  Constitution  Bench  which  hassince been decided by this Court  in Danial Latifi vs. Union  of  India[37].The Constitution Bench did not address the said issue  but  the  Court  heldthat Article 21 included right to live with dignity[38] which  supports  theplea that a muslim woman could invoke fundamental rights  in  such  matters.In  Javed vs. State of Haryana[39], a Bench of three  judges  observed  thatpractice of polygamy is injurious to public morals  and  can  be  supersededby the State just as practice of ‘sati’ [40].  It was further observed  thatconduct rules providing for monogamy irrespective of religion are valid  andcould not be struck down on the ground  of  violation  of  personal  law  ofmuslims[41].  In John Vallamattom vs. UOI[42], it was observed that  Section118 of Indian Succession Act, 1925 restricting right of christians  to  makeWill  for  charitable  purpose  was  without   any   rational   basis,   wasdiscriminatory against christians and violated Article 14[43]. Laws  dealingwith marriage and succession are  not  part  of  religion[44].  Law  has  tochange  with  time[45].  International  covenants  and  treaties  could   bereferred to examine validity and reasonableness of a provision[46].


29.   In Charu Khurana vs. UOI[47],  this  Court  considered  the  issue  ofgender discrimination in  the  matter  of  denial  of  membership  of  “CineCostume 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  intoby separately registering the matter as Public  Interest  Litigation  (PIL).We are of the view that  the  suggestion  needs  consideration  in  view  ofearlier decisions of this Court. The issue  has  also  been  highlighted  inrecent Articles appearing in the press on this subject[48].
31.   For this purpose, a PIL be separately registered  and  put  up  beforethe appropriate Bench as per orders of Hon’ble the Chief Justice of India.
32.   Notice be issued  to  learned  Attorney  General  and  National  LegalServices Authority, New Delhi returnable on 23rd November, 2015.    We  giveliberty to learned counsel already appearing in this matter  to  assist  theCourt on this aspect of the matter, if they wish to  volunteer,  for  eitherview point.