DULAMAI Vs. KEDAR
LAWS(ALL)-1996-2-140
HIGH COURT OF ALLAHABAD
Decided on February 28,1996

DULAMAI-PLAINTIFF Appellant
VERSUS
KCDAR Respondents

JUDGEMENT

S.K.Phaujdar - (1.) HEARD Sri S. K. Verma and Sri Shahid Masood, the learned counsel for the appellant and the respondents respectively. The only ;km;tion that arises for determination in this appeal is as follows : Whether Dulamai alone, being the heir of Jokhu, was entitled to the property in dispute.
(2.) THE confirmed facts behind this appeal may be stated in brief. Admittedly, Jokhu was the owner of the disputed property. Somaroo was son of Jokhu through his first wife. Jokhu married for a second time and this wife Gangia had a son named Algoo through her first husband Tukur. At the time of the death of Jokhu, Somaroo (his son) and Gangia (his second wife) were alive. Subsequently, Somaroo died leaving behind his widow Dulamai, the plaintiff- appellant. Gangia also died leaving Algoo, one of the defendants. THE other defendants are the sons of Algoo. Dulamai filed the present suit for an injunction for restraining Algoo and his sons not to disturb her possession over the suit property. The defendants laid a claim that Algoo was a son of Jokhu, but the two courts below consistently found that Algoo was born to Gangia, not through Jokhu. The fact remains that Algoo was a son of Gangia. The lower appellate court found that Gangia, being a widow of Jokhu, inherited to his property along with Somaroo (son of Jokhu) and on the death of Gangia her son Algoo inherited to her share in the suit property and the suit for injunction was, accordingly, not maintainable. The lower appellate court also found on facts that the plaintiff Algoo was in possession on a portion of the suit property and made a construction over the same which could not be demolished under the law.
(3.) THE learned counsel for the appellant read out the provisions of Sections 14 and 15 of the Hindu Succession Act before me and had relied on a decision of the Madras High Court in the case of Ay i Ammal v. Subramania Asari and another, AIR 1966 Mad 369. It was contended by him that in view of the provisions of Section 14 of the Hindu Succession Act a female Hindu became an absolute owner of the property inherited by her and Section 15(1) elaborately gave the line of succession on her death. It was contended that the purpose of law was not to bifurcate a family property and as such Section 15 (2) was enacted in the Hindu Succession Act so that the property of a woman received from the husband remains in the family of the husband and one received from her father is retained by that family only. THE learned counsel for the other side pointed out that the case law cited has no application in the present set of facts as it was a property of a female Hindu obtained on the strength of gift and it was not a property obtained on succession. Here was a case where a lady K was gifted certain property by her father. She sold certain Jewels and the cash so obtained was lent for interest. On her death as a childless widow her sister A prayed for issuance of a succession certificate. The court of first instance refused to grant a succession certificate to the sister A and held the heirs of the husband of the deceased as successors to K. The High Court was approached in a revision and the Court interpreted the term "inherited" and stated that K, having obtained the property by gift from her father, did not "inherit" to the father and the sister A, being an heir to her father, could not lay her hand on the property left by K. It may be reiterated that K had died as a childless widow.;


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