Professional Documents
Culture Documents
BANGALORE
1 SEM 3 YRS LL.B AND 5TH SEM 5 YRS B.A.,LL.B
ST
Q.NO.1. Trace the history of the different schools of Hindu Law, pointing out
their distinguishing features.
Answer:-
INTRODUCTION
The Schools of Hindu Law came into being when different commentaries
appeared to interpret smritis with reference to different local customs in vogue in
different parts of India.
1. Mitakshara School
2. Dayabhaga School
1. Mitakshara School:-
2. Dayabhaga School :-
This School prevail in Bengal. It is not a commentary on any one code, but
purports to be a digest of all the codes. It was written by Jimutavahana. It was
written 2 centuries after mitakshara. It is supreme authority in Bengal. Here also
Mitakshara is supreme but if there is no conflict between this schools.
I. Banaras School
II. Mithila School
III. Bombay School
IV. Madras School
V. Punjab school also recognizes the authority of mitakshara.
Mitakshara School
It is divided into 5 Schools, they materially differed on the law of adoption and
inheritance. All these Schools acknowledge the supreme authority of the
Mitakshara, but give preference to certain treaties and to commentaries which
contain certain passages of the Miitakshara.
I. Benaras School:-
Except in Mithila and Punjab this school prevails in the whole of Northern India
including Orissa.
The following commentaries are also held in high esteem in this school.
1.Mitakshara.
2. Viramitrodaya
3. Dattaka Mimansa
4. Nirnayasindu
5. Vivada Tandava
6. Subodhini &
7. Balam Bhatti
It prevails in Tirhoot & Bihar. The following are the commentaries treated as
authoritative in this school.
1.Mitakshara.
2. Vivada Ratnakar
3. Vivada Chintamani
4.Smriti sara &
5. Madana Parijata
1.Mitakshara.
2.Vyavhar Mayukha
3. Viramitrodaya
4. Nirnayasindu
5. Vivada Tandava
6. Parasara Madhaviya
The whole Madras state is governed by the madras School of Hindu Law
This school was once sub-divided into Tamil, Karnataka and Andra school, but
there is no justification
1.Mitakshara.
2.Smriti Chandrika
3. Parasara Madhaviya
4.Saraswati Madhaviya
5. Viramitrodaya
6. Vyavhar Mayukha
7. Dattaka Chandrika
8.Daya Vibhaga
9. Vaiyayanti
10. Madhabi
11. Nirnay Sindu
12. Narada Rajya
13. Vivada Tandava
V. Punjab School
2. DAYABHAGA:-
1. Dayabhaga
2. Dayatatva
3. Daya-sangraha
4. Viramitrodaya
5. Dattaka Chandrika
Mitakshara Dayabhaga
As regards to joint property
1 Right to property arises by birth, Right to property by death (of the
hence the son is a co-owner with last owner). Hence son has no right
the father in ancestral property, to ancestral property during father’s
now even daughter lifetime
2 Father has a restricted power of Father has absolute power of
alienation and son can claim alienation and son cannot claim
partition even against the father partition or even maintenance
3 The interest of a member of the The interest of every person would
joint family would on his death on his death, pas by inheritance to
passed to the other member by his heirs, like widow or daughters.
survivorship (now it is abolished)
As regards Alienation
5 Members of joint family cannot Any member of joint family may sell
dispose of their shares while or give away his share even when
undivided undivided.
Inheritance
6 The principle of inheritance is The principle of inheritance is
consanguinity (blood spiritual efficacy (offering pindas)
relationship)
7 Doctrine of Factum Valet It is fully recognized.
The fact cannot be altered by
hundred texts . It is recognized to
a very limited extent
Conclusion :
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1. THE SRUTIS:-
the name (sruti) is derived from the root “sru” (to hear) and signifies “ ‘what is
heard’.
• By sruti or what was heard from above, it meant the veda.
• It is believed to contain the very words of the diety revealed to inspired
sages.
• Srutis are considered to be the primary and paramount sources of Hindu law.
• This is a supreme authority as it is considered to be divine source.
• But practically the srutis is of no legal significance.
• The srutis consists of the four Vedas and the Upanishads dealing chiefly
with religious rites and the means of attaining true knowledge and Moksha or
salvation.
The four vedas are as follows
1. Rig veda
2. Yajur veda
3. Sam veda
4. Atharva veda
1. The Rig Veda: it is the oldest text. It contains the eulogies of gods and laws of
sacrifices. It consists of 1028 hymns arranged into 10 groups (mandala) some of
which are sub-divided into smaller groups, the compilation of each group being
ascribed to some renowned saintly poet-priest (Rishi) of ancient times.
2. The Yajur Vedas :- it is liturgical arrangement of part of hymns of the Rig veda
with additions, for intoning in the appropriate manner at sacrificial ceremonies. It
is in prose containing explanations and directions, for the guidance of the priests.
2.Smritis:-
smritis means “what was remembered” and is of human origin and is believed to
be the recollections of Rishis handed down to us, constituting the principle sources
of Hindu Law.
The code of Manu has always been treated by Hindu sages and commentators, as a
being of paramount authority.
According to Brihaspati Manu holds the first place because he has expressed in his
code the whole sense of the vedas and no code is authoritative which contradicts
him.
The period of commentaries and digest is between 700 A.D. to 1700 A.D..
The commentaries and digests were also the records of the traditional customs
recorded in the Smritis as well as the new customs claiming for and found worthy
of recognition.
Because of incompleteness and frequent conflicts in the rules of the smritis and
desirability of interpretation of the injunctions of smritis in a manner so as to suit
prevalent custom and usages of different parts of the country, there was the
necessity to reconcile them on the points of difference. In this process there arose
this important source.
4. CUSTOM
WHAT IS A CUSTOM?
In section 3(a) of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955 the expression custom and
usage signify any rule which, having been continuously and uniformly observed
for a long time, has obtained the force of law among Hindus in any local area,
tribe, community, group or family; provided that the rule is certain and not
unreasonable or opposed to public policy; provided further that in the case of a rule
applicable only to a family it has not been discontinued by the family.
It often that custom and usage terms are used as synonym but there is
difference that is Custom must be of antiquity and usage is of recent origin.
So, the custom to have the force of law or rule of law, it is necessary for the party
claiming it to plead and thereafter prove that such custom is ancient, certain and
reasonable.
Kinds of custom.
a. Local custom
b. Class custom
c. Family custom.
a. Local custom:- such customs belong to some particular locality, or district and
they are binding on the inhabitants of such place.
Case Law
Smt.Subhani V. Nawab [AIR 1941 Lah 154]
That “it is undoubted that a custom observed in a particular district derives its force
from the fact it has from long usage obtained in that district the force of law. It
must be ancient; but it is not of the essence of this rule that its antiquity must in
every case be carried back to a period beyond the memory of man still less that it is
ancient in the English technical sense.
What is necessary to be proved is that the useage has been acted upon its
practice for such a long period and with such invariability as to show that it has
been acted upon in practice for such a long period and with such invariability as to
show that it has, by common consent, been submitted to as the established
governing rule of the particular district.
B. Class custom:-
such customs are of a caste, or a sect or of the followeres of a particular
profession or occupation, such as agriculture, trade, mechanical art and the
like.
C. Family customs:-
such customs relate to a particular family, particularly concerning succession
to an impartible Raj or succession to Maths or religious foundations.
ESSENTIALS OF CUSTOM
• In order that a custom to be valid, it must be-
• Ancient
• It must be ancient in India.
• It need not necessarily be from time immemorial in the english technical
sense.
• In India the Hindu lawyers have laid down a reasonable rule on this
question. One hundred years is the limit suggested by them.
• What ever is beyond a century is immemorial or out of mind of man whose
span of life according to the sruti extends to one hundred years only.
1. Ancient:-
A custom should be very old. It should have been accepted as law binding upon
them.
In India the Hindu lawyers have laid down a reasonable rule on this question.
One hundred years is the limit suggested by them.
• The Hon’ble supreme court held that a custom in order to be binding must
derive its force from the fact that by long usage it has obtained the force of
law but the English rule that a custom in order that it may be legal and
binding must have been used so long that the memory of men runneth not to
the contrary should not be strictly applied to Indian conditions.
• All that is necessary to prove is that the usage has been acted upon in
practice for such a long period and with such invariability as to show that it
has, by common consent been submitted to as the established governing rule
of a particular locality.
5. Reasonable :-
• Customs are not to be enlarged beyond the usage without the parity of
reason.
• It cannot be said that a custom is founded upon reason, though an
unreasonable custom is void.
In this case the Privy Council observed, under Hindu system of law, clear proof
of custom will outweigh the written text of law.
5. LEGISLATION
Except is cases of marriage, divorce and adoption, the age of majority has been
fixed on the completion of the 18th year.
It amended the Hindu Law relating to exclusion from inheritance of certain classes
of heirs on account of physical defects.
6. Judicial Decision :-
During the British regime, for administering law in India, the courts exercised the
old Smritis and their commentaries while deciding the legal issues applicable to
Hindus.
The English Judges administered Hindu law with the assistance of Hindu pandits,
later it was abolished.
The Judicial decision constitute an important source of law. A large number of
decision have now piled up on almost every point of law which have superseded
the law laid down in commentaries on several fronts.
The precedent is not merely an evidence of a law but also a source of law and the
courts are bound to follow the precedents.
The judicial decision have modified and supplemented the pure Hindu Law and
now they have emerged as important source of law.
There are numerous instances where the judges in administering the Hindu law
either modified or altered it.
When there is conflict between the rules of smritis that one should be
followed which is based on reasons, justice and principles of equity.
CASE LAW
The supreme court has observed that it is now well established that in
the absence of any rule of Hindu law, the courts have the authority to decide
cases on principles of equality, justice & good conscience unless is doing so, it
would be inconsistent with any doctrine or theory of hindu law.
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Q.No.3. Who is a Hindu? Explain the classes of person who come under the
preview of Hindu law.
Answer:-
1. Introduction:-
India remains one of the most religiously diverse nations in the world. Hindus,
Muslims, Jains, Buddhists, Sikhs, Jews, and Christians have a home in India. The
oldest and most widely practiced religion in India, Hinduism, has deep roots in the
subcontinent. Throughout the numerous political upheaval and foreign invasions,
Hinduism remained the sole constant throughout the region’s history.
Hindu beliefs developed over the centuries and include many influences,
including numerous sacred texts, thousands of deities, and holy sites that continue
to draw millions of pilgrims.
One more question need to be answered that is To whom hindu law is applicable?
Hindus are all those persons who profess Hindu religion either by birth, or
by conversion to the Hindu faith.
The supreme court accepted the working formula evolved by Tilak regarding
Hindu religion.
But the court did not give correct explanation about it.
In short, a person who carries a Hindu way of life and who is known by others to
be a Hindu can be said to be a Hindu.
➢ But this is not correct because a person who is born to Hindu parents may
cease his status Hindu by converting to another religion.
➢ “So Hindu are those born as Hindus and also those who become converts to
Hinduism”
➢ Hindus are therefore born as well as made and thus the applicability of
Hindu law is not restricted or confined to those persons only who are Hindus by
birth.
It’s application has been extended to those person also who have accepted the
Hindu religion or who convert to Hinduism
Methods of conversion
A non-Hindu may renounce his religion and become Hindu by conversion by any
of the three methods:-
a. If he performs the ceremony of conversion prescribed by the caste or
community to which he converts.
b. If he expresses an intention to become a Hindu and actually lives as a Hindu
and the community or caste into the fold of which he is ushered in accepts
him as a member of that community or caste.
If he declares that he is a Hindu and lives as a Hindu
Vii). Brahmos, Arya samajishts and santhals of chota Nagpur, and also Santhals
of Manbhum except so far as it is not varied by custom.
Viii). Hindu who made a declaration that they were not Hindus for the purpose of
the special marriage Act 1872; and
Ix). A person who is born Hindu and has not renounced the Hindu religion, does
not cease to be a Hindu merely because he departs from the standard of orthodoxy
in matters of diet and ceremonial observances.
Following persons are Hindus for the purpose of these codified laws.
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Q.NO.4. Discuss the important changes brought by the Hindu Marriage Act
1955 and marriage laws (Amendment) Act, 1976 to the Hindu Law.
Answer:-
Introduction
This enactment is exhaustive and it has brought important and dynamic changes in
Hindu matrimonial concept. It has not simply codified the Hindu law of marriage
but has introduced certain important changes in many respects.
The following changes were brought about by the Act in the law of marriage are
important,
1. Section 13-B now provides for divorce by mutual consent of the parties.
2. Divorce on the ground of adultery has made easy. Now a single instance
of adultery on the part of the other spouse entitles the spouse to seek
divorce.
3. Divorce on the ground of incurable unsoundness of mind, incurable
leprosy or venereal disease, formerly the party seeking divorce could not
file petition for 3 years had elapsed. Now the party seeking divorce on
this ground need not wait for 3 years.
4. Section 21 –B has been added which provides for the continuance of the
trial (day to day) until conclusion of the case.
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➢ INTRODUCTION.
➢ DEFINITION OF MARRIAGE
➢ ESSENTIAL REQUISITIES OF HINDU VALID MARRIAGE
➢ Section 5(I): Monogamy.
➢ Section 5(Ii):- Soundness Of Mind
➢ Section 5(Iii):- Age Of Marriage
➢ Section 5(Iv):- Beyond Prohibited Degrees
➢ Section 5(V):- Beyond Sapinda Relationship
➢ CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION
Under the ancient hindu law the object of marriage was sublime (means it has
wonderful quality that affects you deeply.
According Apasthamba “Marriage was meant for doing good deeds and for
attainment of moksha.
Under the old textual Hindu law three conditions were required for a valid
marriage, these conditions were:
Before the commencement of this act, a Hindu could marry any number of
wives, even if he had a wife or wives living, although this practice was always
looked with disfavor.
The condition laid down in this clause for a valid marriage is one of those
conditions, contravention of which would make the marriage void under section 11
of the Act.
Section 17:- this provision further states that the offending party liable for
prosecution under section 494 and 495 of Indian penal code. The marriage
between the two Hindus solemnized after the commencement of the act is void if at
the date of such marriage either party had a husband or wife living .
Example :- Mr. ‘A’ got married to Mrs. “B’ in the year 2000. In the year
2010 ‘Mr. ‘A’, again get marries to Mrs. ‘X’ when ‘Mrs. ‘B’ is alive and he has
not even given her any divorce. Hence the marriage between A and X is void and
also punishable.
Case law:-
In this supreme court held that the marriage becomes null and void where it
is in violation of the first condition of section 5 i.e Monogamy, It becomes void ab
initio and ipso facto.
The court further explained that the wife in void marriage cannot claim
maintenance under section 125 of the criminal procedure code. Thus a man whose
wife is alive and his marriage is valid and subsisting at the time, he cannot marry
another wife.
So, according to section 5(i) of this Act, a second marriage in the lifetime of
spouse of the first marriage, will be against law and void, even if the second
marriage was contracted outside India.
Case law
The supreme court held that the proof of the performance of ceremonies is
essential for a valid marriage.
In this case the only proof of re-marriage of a wife was the name in the
revenue record which was made by the wife herself.
There was no evidence to show that the wife had ever made any statement of
her re-marriage and the real brother of second husband also denied the marriage of
his brother with wife.
The supreme court held that on the basis of above facts, second marriage by
the wife could not be proved therefore, her re-marriage cannot be upheld.
The parties to the marriage are of sound mind and are not suffering from any
mental disability as to be unfit for giving a valid consent
AMINA ROY V.S PRABODH MOHAN ROY [AIR 1969 CAL 304]
• In this case the emphasis was upon the unsoundness of mind to a degree
which renders the marriage meaningless.
• Thus mental incapacity of any nature affecting the very purpose of marriage
has been ground of voidability of marriage.
• The onus of bringing a case under this clause lies heavily on the petitioner
who seeks annulment of the marriage on the ground of unsoundness of mind
or mental disorder.
Case law
The supreme court observed that a brand the wife as unfit for marriage and
procreation of children it needs to be established that the ailment suffered by her is
of such a kind or such an extent that it is impossible for her to lead a married life.
The marriage performed in contravention of section 5(2) is voidable and not void.
The words “at the time of marriage” in the clause are important.
Because the person where subsequent to the date of marriage becomes an idiot or
lunatic, the provision of this clause are not attracted.
CASE LAW
In this case it was laid down that if the condition in section 5(ii) is not fulfilled the
marriage is not a void marriage as provided in section 11 but a voidable marriage
under section 12.
3. Section 5(iii):- Age of Marriage:-
• Originally, according to Hindu marriage Act, 1955, the age provided for the
bridegroom was 18 years and for the bride was 15 yrs.
• Though where the bride was below 18, the consent of her guardian was
necessary.
• The child marriage restraint (Amendment)Act 1978, has raised the minimum
age fixed for marriage to 21 years in case of bridegroom and 18 years in case
of bride.
• Section 2(a) child:- means a person who, if a male has not completed 21 yrs
and if female has not completed 18 yrs.
• A petition under this section can be filed before the child filing the petition
completes 2 years of attaining majority.
• This clause prohibits marriage between persons who are within the
prohibited degrees of relationship with each other.
Here:- ‘P’is the lineal descendant of his ancestor FFFFF, in unbroken line of
descent. Marriage is prohibited with all ancestors or their wives.
To prevent-
1. Physical degeneracy (decline in good qualities) of the race which the marriage
between near relations would lead to;
2. Moral degeneracy and consequent evil results which are apt to affect a society
built on the deifice of joint family-system.
Smt. Shakuntala devi v/s amar nath [AIR 1982 P & H 22]
The Punjab high court has held that the validity of marriage under section
5(iv) is subject to customs and useage accepted in the particular Hindu
community. Consequence of marriage solemnized between persons coming within
the prohibited degree
According to ancient texts, the word has been used in two senses, firstly, it
means a relation connected through the same body, and secondly, it means, relation
connected through funeral obligation of food.
The Act under section 3(f) lays down its own rules to determine whether a
person is the ‘sapinda’ of another or not.
It says that:-
Relationship includes:-
This extends
1. The third generation (inclusive) in the line of the ascent through the mother
and
2. The fifth generation (inclusive) in the line of the ascent through the father.
CONCLUSION :-
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After the marriage the society of the husband and wife is entitled to each other.
Therefore a cause the action arises when one of the parties to the marriage
withdraws the society of the other.
The foundation of this section is that, one spouse is entitled to society and comfort-
consortium- of the other spouse and where either spouse has abandoned or
withdrawn from the society of the other without reasonable excuse or just cause
the court should grant a decree for restitution.
1. Either of the party has, without reasonable excuse, withdrawn from the society
of the other.
2. The court is satisfied of the truth of the statement made in the petition for
restitution of conjugal rights; and
The MP high court held that in order to sustain a petition for restitution of
conjugal rights, it is necessary to establish that the respondent has withdrawn
from the society of the petitioner.
It is for that person to prove the conditions which have necessitated such
course to be taken.
Thereafter the burden would shift to the other party to show that he or she
has withdrawn from the society of the other for a reasonable excuse.
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF SECTION 9 OF THE HINDU MARRIAGE
ACT
In this case Mrs. T. Sareetha a film actor leaves her husband house without
any reason.
Her husband files a case in the court for restitution of conjugal rights and the
court sanctions the same.
But again Sareetha moves the A.P High court validating the constitutionality
of section 9.
The A.P High court observes that this provision is a savage and barbarous
remedy violating the privacy and human dignity guaranteed by Art 21.
This provision denied the women a free choice, where, when and how her
body was to become the vehicle for procreation of another human being.
This rights deprived a women of control over her choice as and when and
by whom the various parts of her body should be allowed to be served .
It did not subserve any social good. It was arbitrary and void as offending
Article 14 of the constitution.
In this court the Delhi High court held that section 9 is not violative of Art
14 or 21 of the constitution.
The object of this right was to bring about cohabitation between the husband and
wife to live in matrimonial home in amity
The supreme court held that section 9 is not violative to Art 14 or 21 of the
constitution.
The society of the husband and wife together is not merely the creature of the
statute.
Such a right is inherent in the very institution of marriage itself. The term conjugal
rights may be viewed in its proper perspective.
Married persons are bound to live together and if either of them withdraws from
the society of the other without lawful excuse, the court may compel the parties to
return to cohabitation.
Withdrawal from the society of the other depends upon whether the conduct
complained is of a grave and weighty character.
Each case must depend on its facts and circumstances and it is not possible to
give an exhaustive statement of law what may or may not constitute “reasonable
excuse’.
And whether there is a reasonable cause or not in a given case shall be decided
only on the evidence and the particular circumstances of that case.
The right of the husband to require his wife to live with him is not unqualified,
where the wife is gainfully employed in a place away from the husband’s home.
The court held it to be a reasonable excuse to live apart and the restitution petition
of the husband was not granted.
In this court the Punjab High court granted restitution of conjugal rights to the
husband, even though the wife was gainfully employed away from the matrimonial
home where the husband lived on the consideration that the husband had the right
to determine the locus of the matrimonial home and that he had the means to
support his wife.
In this case the husband and the wife both were gainfully employed.
Both of them were highly qualified but unfortunately the husband was not so
well employed as his wife was and wife was gaining more salary than her
husband.
Both husband and wife quarreled on the issue that both shall resign and stay
with the other.
The court dismissed the petition and held that there is sufficient reasons for
the wife to stay separately and the petition must fail.
The matrimonial home must necessarily not be the house of husband or in-laws
house.
In this case the wife and husband were gainfully employed at different places and
decided to book a flat a Bombay.
The husband contributed initial amount and the wife paid the remaining balance.
It was held that this flat at Bombay was the matrimonial home of the parties.
SMT. SUSHIL KUMARI DANG V/S PREM KUMAR [AIR 1976 DEL 321]
Mere frivolity, falling short of adultery and giving no reasonable ground for
belief that it has been committed.
Mere frailty of temper and habits which are distasteful to the other spouse.
Habits of intemperance
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Answer:-
Introduction
Under the Amendment laws, now it has been replaced by a simple requirement of
adultery, that is, voluntary sexual intercourse with any person other than his or her
spouse.
Now even a single act of adultery may constitute a sufficient ground for obtaining
divorce.
In the present clause the expression ‘voluntary sexual intercourse’ has been used.
Therefore the sexual intercourse by either of the spouse with a person other than
his or her spouse must be a voluntary act. If one of the spouses is raped it cannot
be said that there is voluntary intercourse.
Case law:-
In this case the wife was seen in a semi-naked state in a hotel with a
stranger, the court did not consider it sufficient to conclude adulterous relation of
wife with the stranger.
The court held that so long the act of cohabitation is not proved beyond doubt.
STANDARD OF PROOF :-
Adultery from its very nature is a secret act. Direct evidence of an act of
adultery is extremely difficult. Direct evidence, even when produced, the court will
tend to look upon it with disfavor, as it is highly improbable that any person can be
a witness to such acts, as such acts are generally performed with utmost secrecy.
CASE LAW:-
The facts were that the wife used to be usually absent from the house and
found to be in company with strangers. She was also found in the room of the
strangers. She did not have any explainations for being in their company. On the
petition for divorce by the husband the court held that under the conditions the
wife’s living in adultery would be established and the petition would be decreed.
The court observed that it was no longer required that adultery must be
proved beyond all reasonable doubt. It could be established by preponderance of
probabilities.
The law relating to standard of proof is clear and simple. It is not necessary
that the charge of unchastity must be proved beyond all reasonable doubt. It could
be established by preponderance of probabilities.
2.CREUELTY (SECTION 13(1) (1-a) :- cruelty where the petitioner has been
treated with cruelty after the solemnization of marriage he would be entitled to get
a decree of divorce. Cruelty has become a ground of divorce as well.
Cruelty is not defined in the act but for the purposes of establishing an act of
cruelty it should be so serious and weighty that cohabitation becomes impossible.
It should be somewhat more serious than ordinary wear and tear of routine marital
life.
CASE LAW
In this case it was stated that only some misunderstanding between parties
was established. It was held that merely saying that parties are unhappy is not
enough not even unruly temper of a spouse or whimsical nature of a spouse is
enough.
Cruelty consists of acts which are dangerous to life, limb or health. Cruelty
for the purpose of the Act means where one spouse has so treated the other and
manifested such feelings towards her or him as to have inflicted bodily injury, or to
have caused reasonable apprehension of bodily injury, suffering or to have injured
health. Cruelty may be physical and mental.
Mental cruelty is the conduct of other spouse which causes mental suffering
or fear to the matrimonial life of the other.
CASE LAWS
In this case the wife did not allow the husband to consummate the marriage
for the first seven days and nights. The wife abused her mother-in-law , wrote a
nasty letter to her husband making illegal demand for clothes for her brother etc.,
and threatened to burn the whole house by putting gas cylinder on fire and also to
file a false dowry case against the family members. It was held that wife is guilty
of cruelty.
Where the petitioner has been deserted continuously for a period not less
than 2 years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition for judicial
separation or divorce, such petition may be granted.
Desertion by the other party to the marriage without reasonable cause and without
the consent or against the wish of such party and includes the willful neglect of the
petitioner by the other party to the marriage.
For the offence of desertion, so far as the deserting spouse is concerned two
essential conditions must be proved:-
a. Actual desertion
b. Constructive desertion
Case law:-
In this case the wife used to reside with the husband along with the parents.
Their marital life was happy and a son was born to them. Late the husband left for
England for a few months.
During his absence the wife developed intimacy with the old friend of the
husband, and one of the letters containing objectionable contents was intercepted
by the father-in-law of the wife.
On the return of the husband the father-in-law told him everything. When
the husband asked her to explain all this, she refused and on next day left for her
parents place.
Later the husband wrote a letter to her asking her to send the child, some
attempts to reach an understanding were made between them.
When the mother of the wife sent a telegram to the husband to receive his wife on
station, the reply sent back by the husband was that she should not be sent.
After sometime the husband filed a petition for divorce on the ground of
desertion by the wife. The defence of the wife was that it was petitioner who by
his treatment made her life unbearable and compelled her to leave matrimonial
home.
The supreme court held that the ‘question to be considered is whether her
leaving marital home is consistent with her having deserted her husband in the
sense that she had deliberately decided permanently to forsake all relationship with
him with intention of non-returning to consortium with our the consent of the
husband and against his wishes.
In this case the court concluded that even though the wife leaves
matrimonial home without any cause, she will not be guilty of desertion if
subsequently she shows an inclination to return and is prevented from doing so by
the petitioner.
CASE LAW
The Karnataka high court held that willful neglect by one spouse to the other
would come within the meaning of desertion. It is not necessary to prove that one
of the parties to marriage is living separately from the other.
CASE LAW
The Supreme Court elaborately described about the decree of mental disorder
which will enable an aggrieved party to a marriage to obtain a decree of divorce.
The court held that the context in which the idea of unsoundness of ‘mind’ and
mental disorder occur in the section as grounds for dissolution of a marriage,
require the assessment of the degree of the ‘mental disorder’. It degree must be
such as that the spouse seeking relief cannot reasonably be expected to live with
the other.
6.LEPROSY [SECTION 13(1) (iv) ]:- here the spouse presenting the petition
has to show that the other spouse has been suffering from a virulent and incurable
form of leprosy.
Case law
The Supreme Court held that lepromatous leprosy is virulent. This type of leprosy
is malignant and contiguous.
It also an incurable form of leprosy and entitles the other spouse to a decree for
divorce.
The petitioner brought the divorce petition against the respondent on the ground of
lepromatous and it was decreed.
it is essential for petitioner to prove that the opposite party is suffering from
venereal disease in a communicable form.
He or she must perform the ceremonies necessary for entering the class of sanyasi;
without such ceremonies he cannot be regarded dead for worldly purposes.
Either of the party may seek divorce on this ground if the other party has not been
heard of as being alive for a period of 7 years or more by those persons who would
naturally have heard of it , had that party been alive.
The aggrieved party may marry again and have legitimate children
10.NON-PRESUMPTION OF COHABITATION AFTER THE DECREE OF
JUDICIAL SEPARATION [SECTION 13(1-A )( 1)]:-
It provides that the either party to a marriage may present a petition for
dissolution of the marriage by a decree of divorce on the grounds that there has
been no resumption of cohabitation between the parties to the marriage for a period
of one year or more after the passing of a decree for judicial separation in the
proceeding to which they were parties.
A party will be entitled to a decree of divorce also when a decree for restitution
of conjugal rights has been passed and it has not been complied with within one
year of the passing of such a decree.
The spouse who fails to comply with it would do so at his or her risk and it
would not be necessary for the aggrieved spouse to prove that he or she had made
positive efforts to make the other party comply with the same and it would suffice
to show that there was no compliance with the decree.
1. Section 13(2) (1)- BIGAMY:- A wife may also present a petition for the
dissolution of marriage by a decree of divorce on the ground of second marriage
by husband which was solemnized after the commencement of the Act .
It is held that the 2nd marriage of the husband was void ab -initio and the 2nd
marriage of the husband amounted to adultery. The petitioner therefore is entitled
to a decree of divorce under section 13(1) (i) and not under section 13(2).
2. Section 13(2)(II)- Rape, sodomy or bestiality:- the expression rape and
sodomy have been defined in section 375 and 377 of the IPC simultaneously.
A man is said to commit rape who has sexual intercourse with a women.
Where the decree or order has been passed against the husband awarding
maintenance to the wife in a suit after passing of such decree or order,
cohabitation between the parties has not been resumed for one year or upwards,
decree of divorce would be granted.
Conclusion:-
Section 13 provides the circumstances in which the right to divorce accrues for
husband and wife together and special grounds for wife alone.
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Q.No.7. EXPLAIN VOID AND VOIDABLE MARRIAGE WITH
APPROPRIATE CASES
ANSWER:-
INTRODUTION
Under the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955 provisions for remedies for marriage is
provided section 11 and 12 of the act states about void and voidable marriages.
This provision says, “Any marriage solemnized at the commencement of this Act
shall be null and void and may, on a petition presented by either party thereto
against the other party be so declared by a decree of nullity if it contravenes any
one of the conditions specified in clauses (i), (iv) and (v) of section 5.
Section 5(1):- if any party to marriage has a spouse living at the time of the
marriage.
Sec 5(iv) :- if the parties are within the degree of prohibited relationship unless the
custom or usage governing each of them permits such a marriage.
Sec 5(v):- if the parties are ‘sapindas’ of each other, unless the custom or usage
governing each of them permits such a marriage.
Where any of the three conditions mentioned in the section exists the marriage
would automatically be null and void, and a decree of nullity may be passed by the
court at the instance of either party to the marriage.
A marriage which violates any of these 3 conditions is void ipso jure. It is open to
the parties to treat it a nullity without even asking for declaration from the court.
CASE LAW;-
A void marriage does not alter or affect the status of the parties nor does it create
any rights and obligations between the parties which normally arise from a valid
marriage.
The primary objet of marriage is procuring of issue and physical capacity potency
is an essential requirement.
It may arise from some incurable mental or moral disability the other spouse
resulting in inability to consummate the marriage.
Medical examination of the parties is essential to annul the marriage on the ground
of impotency
CASE LAW
The Delhi High court held that the petitioner would be entitled to a decree of
nullity of marriage if the marriage was not consummated due to impotence of the
respondent spouse.
Proof of Impotency
b. UNSOUNDNESS OF MIND
Marriage can be annulled when it contravenes section 5(ii) of the Act that is
neither the party shall suffer from unsoundness of mind at the time of marriage.
Section 12(1) (b) refers that any marriage shall be voidable and may be annulled if
the marriage is in contravention of the condition specified in section 5(ii)
it states that the marriage is voidable on the ground that the consent of the
petitioner or of the guardian has been obtained by force of fraud.
Child Marriage Act has given minimum age for marriage to male is 21 and female
is 18.
CASE LAW
NAND KISHORE VS. SMT. MUNNI BAI [ AIR 1979 MP. 45]
The High court of Madhya Pradesh has held that the terms force and fraud means
those condition in which there is absence of real consent
1. The force or fraud has been committed upon the petitioner himself or herself
2. Before the commencement of child marriage restraint act 1978 where the
guardian consent was much required if the such consent is acquired by fraud
or force, it may be ceremony material fact etc of the respondent.
Exception:-
No petition more than 1 yrs after the fraud or force marriage is discovered.
The petitioner has with his/ her full consent has agreed to live together even after
discovering the fraud/force.
The marriage can be annulled if the respondant was at the time of the marriage
pregnant by some person other than the petitioner.
CASE LAW
In this case the baby was born to Sushila after 171 days from the date of marriage
(5month 21 days) and the child was fully developed healthy child.
In this case there was no evidence of the husband and wife to meet before marriage
and the wife admitted her pergancy from before the solemnization of marriage,
when the husband had not met her.
1. That the petitioner was at the time of marriage ignorant of the facts alleged
2. The petition is filed within one year of such commencement of this Act.
3. The marital intercourse with the consent of the petitioner has not taken
place.
Section 16 of the Hindu Marriage Act protects the interest of the children
begotten or conceived before the decree is made in the case of void and
voidable marriage under section 12 of the Act
CASE LAW
If a person marries 2nd wife during the subsistence of 1st valid marriage the
children born of 2nd marriage would be legitimate under section 16 of the Act.
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ANSWER:-
SECTION 10(1):-
(2)where a decree for judicial separation has bee passed, it shall no longer be
obligatory for the petitioner to cohabit with the respondent, but the court may on
the application by petition of either party and on being satisfied of the truth of the
statements made in such petition rescind the decree if it considers it just and
reasonable to do so.
GROUNDS AVAILABE TO HUSBAND AND WIFE BOTH
1. ADULTERY:-
Where the other party has, after the solemnization of the marriage, had voluntary
sexual intercourse with any person other than his or her spouse.
A single act of adultery may be sufficient now for the relief under this head.
2. CRUELTY
Where the other party has treated the petitioner with cruelty.
3. DESERTION
Where the other party has deserted the petitioner for a continuous period of not less
than 2 years immediately preceding the presentation of the petition.
4. CONVERSION
Where the other party has ceased to be a hindu by conversion to another religion
5. UNSOUNDNESS OF MIND
Where the other party has been of incurable unsound mind, or has been suffering
continuously or intermittently from mental disorder of such a kind and to such a
extent that the petitioner cannot reasonably be excepted to live with the
respondent.
6. LEPROSY
Where the other party has been suffering from a virulent and an incurable form of
leprosy.
7. VENEREAL DISEASE
Where the other party has been suffering from venereal disease in a communicable
form.
8. Renunciation of world
Where the other party has renounced the world by entering any religious order.
9. Presumed death
Where the other party has not been heard of as being alive for a period of seven
years or more by the those persons who would naturally have heard of it had that
party been alive.
1. BIGAMY:-
That the husband has since the solemnization of the marriage, been guilty of rape
or sodomy or bestiality;
4. OPTION OF PUBERTY
That her marriage was solemnized before she attained the age of 15 yrs and she
has repudiated the marriage after attaining the age of 15 years but before attaining
the age of 18 years
2. the husband and wife are not bound to live together or dine together as judicial
separation is separation from bed and board.
3. it will not be obligatory for the parties to cohabit with each other.
4. it does not prevent the parties from subsequently resuming cohabitation and
living together as husband and wife as originally they did.
5. If either of the spouse marries during that period, he or she will be guilty of
bigamy and will be liable for punishment prescribed by sec 17 of the Act.
6. the petitioner, if she be the wife, becomes entitled to alimony from the husband,
and if he is the husband he can claim maintenance from wife under section 25 of
this Act.
7. the wife shall, from the date of the decree and till separation continues be
considered as a feme sole i.e ‘independent women’ with respect to property of
every description.
8. the mutual rights and obligations arising from the marriage are suspended and
the rights and duties prescribed by the decree are substituted therefor.
…………….xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx…………………….
Thus, if a person inherits property from his father, grandfather or great grandfather,
his sons, grandsons and great grandsons and daughters of a Mitakshara coparcener
acquire an interest in it by birth and then they become with him joint owners of the
coparcenary property with a right to demand partition of the same and all of them
are coparceners and constitute a coparcenary.
The Hon’ble Supreme court has laid down special feature of a Mitakshara
coparcenary given below.
FEATURES OF COPARCENARY
1. UNITY OF OWNERSHIP:-
2. INDETERMINABILITY OF SHARES:-
3. COMMUNITY OF INTEREST:-
5. Right by birth:-
1. By partition
2. By the death of the last surviving coparcener.
RIGHTS OF COPARCENERS
RIGHTS OF COPARCENERS
5. RIGHT OF ALIENATION
9. RIGHT TO MAINTENANCE
SYNOPSIS
• Introduction
• Modes Of Partition
• Effects Of Partition
• Suit For Partition
• Reopening Of Partition
• Conclusion
According to Mitakshara Law
Partition is the adjustment of diverse rights regarding the whole by distributing them or
particular portions of the aggregate.
CASE LAW
MODES OF PARTITION:-
2.Partition by notice
3.Partition by will
Marriage of a hindu under the Special Marriage Act causes severance between him
and the other members of the family.
6.Partition by agreement.
The agreement between the members of a joint family to hold and enjoy the property
in certain defined shares as separate owner operates as partition, although the property
itself has not been actually divided by metes and bounds.
7.Partition by arbitration:-
8.Partition by father:-
The father may also cause the severance of the sons without their consent.
Doctrine of patria potestas (paternal power)
• According to this doctrine father can get the shares of his sons fixes and also
get them separated.
• But he does not have the right to get the joint family property partitioned
through the will.
• Although he could do the same with their consent.
8.Partition by suits.
The institution of a suit for partition effects severance of joint family status and as
such the mere institution of such a suit effects immediate severance of joint status.
EFFECTS OF PARTITON
1. Every adult coparcener :- every coparcener [son/daughter] is entitled to sue for partition and is
entitled to have a share on partition.
SUIT BY MINOR:-
The Hindu law makes no distinction between a minor and major coparcener so far as their rights
to joint properties are concerned.
The court held that if a suit for partition by a minor, the court will direct partition only if
partition is in the interest of the minor but that limitation arises not because of any peculiarity in
the estate of the minor but is imposed for protection of his interest.
REOPENING OF PARTITION :-
The general rule is that partition once made cannot be re-opened. But there are certain
exceptions
1. A son conceived at the time of partition, though not born before partition can re-open it if
a share has not been reserved for him.
On the other hand if a son is begotten as well as born after partition and if a share has been
allotted to the father, such after born is not entitled to have the partition re-opened and same rule
to daughter.
2. A son begotten as well as born after partition can demand a re-opening of partition, if his
father entitled to a share has not reserved a share for himself.
3. A disqualified coparcener after the removal of disqualification or a missing coparcener on
his return can re-open the partition.
4. A partition re-opened be minor coparcener on attaining the majority if the partition made
during his minority was unfair or prejudicial to his interest.
5. If a coparcener has obtained an unfair advantage in the division the partition may be
reopened for the readjustment of shares.
Conclusion:-
The coparcener of the joint family can also go for re-union on certain conditions. For re-union
intent of the parties to reunite in estate and interest. There shall be an agreement with in the
members.
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--
INTRODUCTION
The affairs of a joint family, consisting of generally ladies and infants, cannot be
managed by all the members of it nor are they managed jointly by all the adult
male members, probably by reason of the inequality in their rank.
But ordinarily they are, by the consent of all managed by a singly male member
who is the head of the family by reasons of his seniority and superior rank.
The father, if living would generally be the manager or karta of the joint
family.
If father is not there the elder senior brother, if the senior brother is away in a
remote place and a junior member can act has a karta.
WHERTHER FEMALE CAN BE KARTA?
POWER OF KARTA:-
Relating to family business the karta is having the power to contract, give receipts,
compromising or discharging contracts.
The karta is having the power to refer matters of Hindu family to arbitration.
Coparcerners and minors are bound by the award.
6. Power of compromise:-
The karta is having the power to settle accounts with the debtors and to make a
reasonable reduction either towards principal in the interest of the family. But here
the karta is having no power to give up a debt due to the joint family and give up a
valuable item without any return or consideration.
7. Power to acknowledge debts:-
The karta has power to give a valid discharge for debt due to the joint family.
The karta may sue or be sued in respect of the transaction entered by him as the
karta of the family and joint family property.
The member are binding to the decree passed in favour or against them.
10.Power to alienation :-
It includes sale, gift, mortgage lease, or exchange. The karta can alienate for
value the Joint family property so as to bind the interest of the other coparcener
(minor/adults) provided it is made .
CASE LAW
The hon’ble Supreme court held that the father who is the karta can alienate
the Joint Family property for legal necessity no coparcener can restrain him from
doing so by filing a suit for injunctions.
If the coparcener thinks the sale is illegal he can challenge the same afterwards.
DUTIES AND LIABILITIES OF KARTA
Karta is bound to render accounts to the other coparceners regarding his dealing
with the joint family property & the income thereof. He is not responsible to show
the accounts of his past dealing unless there is proof of misappropriation. He is
liable to accounts at the time of partition only.
It is the duty of the Karta to make all possible efforts to realize the debts due
to the family.
Duty of the Karta to spend joint family funds reasonably and for the purpose of the
family.
4. Duty not to start new business without the consent of other coparceners.
It may impose risk upon minor and adults members so consent of all members is
required
The Karta shall not do so without the consent of the family members and it shall be
for legal necessity and for the benefit of the estate.
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Q.No. 11. NARRATE THE RULES AS TO THE SUCCESSION OF THE PROPERTY OF
A MALE DYING INTESTATE UNDER HINDU SUCCESSION ACT.
SECTION 8:- of the Act lays down general rules of succession in the case of male
dying intestate. Succession opens at the time of death of the person whose property
is to be succeeded, and is governed by the law in force at that time.
The section divides the heirs of a male for the purposes of inheriting the property
into four classes. These are:-
On the failure of the heirs qualified to succeed under the Act, the property of the
intestate shall devolve on the government according to section 29.
The property of a male Hindu dying intestate shall devolve according to the
provisions of this chapter-
Firstly, upon the heirs, being the relatives specified in class I of the schedule.
Secondly, if there is no heir of Class I, then upon the heirs, being the relative
specified in class II of the Schedule.
Thirdly, if there is no heir of any of the two classes, then upon the agnates of
the deceased;
Lastly, if there are no agnates, then upon the cognates of the deceased.”
For instance, if male dies intestate, leaving only a daughter surviving him, the
daughter shall succeed in preference to the father in entry I of class II
Section 9:-
Among the heirs specified in the schedule those in class I shall, take
simultaneously and to the exclusion of all other heirs; those in the first
entry in class II shall be preferred to those in the second entry; those in the
second entry shall be preferred to those in the third entry, and so on in
succession.
Son
Daughter
Widow
Mother
Son of pre-deceased son
Daughter of a pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter
Widow of pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased son of pre-deceased son
Daughter of a pre-deceased son of pre-deceased son
Widow of pre-deceased son of a pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased Daughter of pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased son of a pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter of a pre-deceased son.
“The property of an intestate shall be divided among the heirs in class-I of the
schedule in accordance with the following rules:-
Rule 1:- the Intestate’s widow or if there is more widows than one all the
widows together shall take one share.
Explanation:- widow is entitled to one share, if more than one widows that all
widows together are entitled to one share.
Rule2:- the surviving sons and daughters and the mother of the intestate
shall each take one share.
Explanation :- each surviving sons, daughters and mother get one share
each.
Rule 3 :- the heirs in the branch of each pre-deceased son or each pre-
deceased daughter of the intestate shall take between them one share.
Among the heirs in the branch of the pre-deceased son shall be so made that
his widow (or widows) and the surviving sons and daughters get equal
portion and the branch of his pre-deceased sons gets the same portion.
Among the heirs in the branch of the pre-deceased daughter shall be so made
that the surviving sons and daughters get equal portions”.
Explanation:- the heirs of pre-deceased son together shall get only one share
just as the branch of a pre-deceased son got only one share under Rule -3.
According to section 8(b) heirs in Class II in the Schedule, succeeded only in the
absence of any heirs in class-I.
Heirs in class II are divided into nine groups, each group is mentioned in a separate
entry in the schedule.
Section 9 lays:-
down that heir in the first entry is preferred to heirs in the second entry, and
heirs in the second entry are preferred to those in the third entry and so on in the
succession.
Thus when there is only heir in the entry preferred, he or she alone shall
take the whole of the estate but when there are more heirs than one, in the entry
preferred, then all such heirs shall take equally and the heirs related to the
intestate by full-blood shall be preferred to heirs related by half-blood.
List of heirs in class II in the schedule.
I. Father
II. (1) son’s daughter’s son (2) son’s daughter’s daughter (3) brother and
(4) sister.
III. (1) Daughter’s son’s son (2) daughter’s son’s daughter (3) daughter’s
daughter’s sons, (4) daughter’s daughter’s daughter.
IV. (1) Brother’s son (2) sister’s son (3) Brother’s daughter (4) sister’s
daughter.
V. (1) father’s father (2) father’s mother
VI. (1) father’s widow (2) Brother’s widow
VII. (1) father’s Brother (2) father’s sister
VIII. (1) mother’s Brother (2) mother’s mother
IX. (1) mother’s Brother (2) mother’s sister
Section 12:- of the Act lays down rules of preference determining the order of
succession among agnates and cognates.
The order of succession among agnates or cognates as the case may be, shall be
determined in accordance with the rules of preference laid down hereunder-
Rule 1- Of two heirs, the one, who has fewer or no degrees of ascent, is preferred.
Rule 2- where the number of degrees of ascent is the same or none, that heir is
preferred, who has fewer or no degrees of descent.
Rule 3- Where neither heir is entitled to be preferred to the other under Rule 1 or
Rule 2, they take simultaneously.
Rules in this section do not determine the order of priority between an agnate and a
cognate, for a nearest cognate relation of the intestate is excluded by his remotest
agnate relation.
ABSENCE OF HEIRS:-ESCHEAT:-
In absence of all heirs of the intestate, his or her property shall devolve on the
government. The government takes the property by escheat and not that it is
forfeited to the government.
The onus is on the Government to prove that the intestate dies without any heirs
qualified to succeed in accordance with the provisions of this Act.
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Q. No. 12. NARRATE THE RULES AS TO THE SUCCESSION OF THE PROPERTY
OF A FEMALE DYING INTESTATE UNDER HINDU SUCCESSION ACT.
Section 15(1):- 1. The property of a female Hindu dying intestate shall devolve
according to the rules set out in section 16-
a. Firstly, upon the sons and daughters (including the children of any
predeceased son or daughter) and the husband.
b. Secondly, upon the heirs of the husband.
c. Thirdly, upon the mother and father.
d. Fourthly, upon the heirs of the father; and
e. Lastly upon the heirs of the mother.
a. any property inherited by a female Hindu from her father or mother shall
devolve, in the absence of any son or daughter of the deceased (including the
children of any pre-deceased son or daughter) not upon the other heirs referred to
in sub-section (1) in the order specified therein, but upon the heirs of the father
and,
b. any property inherited by a female hindu from her husband or from her father-
in-law shall devolve, in the absence of any person or daughter of the deceased
(including the children of any pre-deceased son or daughter) not upon the other
heirs referred to in sub-section (1) in the order specified therein, but upon the heirs
of the husband.
The order of succession among the heirs referred to in section 15 shall be, and the
distribution of the intestate’s property among those heirs shall take place,
according to the following rules, namely-
Rule 1- among the heirs specified in sub-section (1) of section 15 those in one
entry shall be preferred to those in any succeeding entry, and those included in the
same entry shall take simultaneously.
Rule 2- if any son or daughter of the intestate had pre-deceased the intestate
leaving his or her own children alive at the time of the intestate’s death, the
children of such son or daughter shall take between them the share which such son
or daughter shall have taken if living at the intestate’s death.
Rule 3- the devolution of the property of the intestate on the heirs referred to in
clauses (b) (d) and (e) of sub-section (1) and in sub-section (2) of section 15 shall
be in the same order and according to the same rules as would have applied if the
property had been father’s or the mother’s or the husband’s as the case may be and
such person had died intestate in respect thereof immediately after the intestate’s
death”.
a. Sons
b. Daughters.
c. Children of predeceased son.
d. Children of pre-deceased daughter.
e. Husband.
The heirs of the husband of the female dying intestate come under second entry.
The heirs of the husband are:
Heirs of the father of the female dying intestate comes under this
entry. The heirs of the father are:
a) Heirs of the father specified in class I of the schedule.
b) Heirs of the father specified in class II of the schedule.
c) Agnates of the father.
d) Cognates of the father.
Property inherited from her father or mother shall devolve upon the heirs of father
provided the intestate died leaving no son or daughter or any children of any pre-
deceased son or daughter.
This excludes the heirs if alive, in the first entry, second entry, and the third entry.
Therefore it is excluded the husband who is in the first of entry and his heir in the
second entry.
Such property shall devolves upon the heirs of the husband, who came in as father,
or mother, or the heirs of the father or mother from inheriting such property.
Order of succession :-
The order of succession and manner of distribution among heirs of a female hindu
dying intestate are given in section 16 of the Act.
Rule-1:- heirs in the first entry of section 15(1) of the Act shall be preferred to
those in the second entry. In the absence of heirs in the first entry heirs in the
second entry shall be preferred to those in the third entry and so on. Where there
are more heirs than one, in the entry preferred, such heirs shall take
simultaneously.
Rule-2:- the children of pre-deceased son or daughter between them, get the share
which son or daughter would have taken if living at the intestate’s death i.e., the
division is per stripes.
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Q.NO.13. Explain the different types of guardians and their powers with
reference of Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956.
Introduction :-
This act has significantly made many changes in the position and status of the
mother as the natural guardian.
It defines the word minor as a person who has not completed the age of eighteen
years.
GUARDIAN - A Guardian means a person have the care of the person of another
or of his property, or of both.
Section 4(b):- Guardina means a person having the care of the person of a minor,
or of his property or of both his person and property and includes.
1. Natural guardian.
2. A guardian appointed by the will of the minor’s father or mother
3. A guardian appointed or declared by a court ; and
4. A person, empowered to act as such by or under any enactment relating to
any court of wards.
KINDS OF GUARDIAN
Section 4:- of the Act mention four kinds of guardians, these are:-
1. A natural guardian.
2. A guardian appointed by the will or the minor’s father or mothers
(testamentary guardian)
3. A guardian appointed or declared by a court, and
4. A person empowered to act as such by or under any enactment relating to
any court of wards.
Besides this, there are other types of guardians such as.
5. De facto guardian and
6. Ad hoc guardian.
The natural guardian of a Hindu minor, in respect of the minor’s person as well as
in respect of the minor’s property (excluding his or her undivided interest in joint
family property) are,
a. In case of a boy or an unmarried girl-the father, and after him, the mother;
provided that the custody of a minor who has not completed the age of 5
years shall ordinarily be with the mother.
b. In the case of an illegitimate boy or an illegitimate unmarried girl-the
mother, and after her, the father.
c. In the case of a married girl the husband.
Provided that no person shall be entitled to act as the natural guardian of
a minor under the provision of this section.
a. If he has ceased to be a Hindu, or
b. If he has completely and finally renounced the world by becoming a
hermit or an ascetic (sanyasi)
Among the Hindus, the father is the natural guardian of his children during their
minority and in the absence the mother during their minority. He may, in exercise
of his discretion as guardian entrust the custody and education of his children to
another, but the authority he thus confers is revocable authority.
The powers of the father to act as a natural guardian do not come to an end simply
because the child is being looked after by his aunt and is living with her.
The father is the natural guardian of the person and of the separate property of his
minor children.
Where the father was alive but had fallen out with the mother of the minor
daughter and was living separately for several years without taking any interest in
the affairs of the minor who was in the keeping and care of the mother, it was held
by the supreme court that in the peculiar circumstances, the father should be
treated non-existent and the mother could be considered as the natural guardian of
the minor’s person as well as property.
K.S. Mohan v. Sandhya Mohan [AIR 1993 MAD 59]
The Madras High Court has held that custody of a child below the age of five years
should be given to its mother and only in exceptional circumstances, the father
may claim the custody of that child.
In case of a illegitimate boy or girl the mother is the natural guardian, and in
absence of the mother the father will be the natural guardian.
Married girl.
The husband would be the guardian, unless he has ceased to be a Hindu or he has
completely and finally renounced the world by becoming a hermit or an ascetic.
DISABILITIES TO BE A GUARDIAN.
The fact that a father had changed his religion was of itself no reason for depriving
him of the custody of his child.
If the father voluntarily abandoned his parental rights and entrusted the custody of
the child to another person the court may not restore back the custody of the child
to the father if such a course is detrimental to the interest of the child.
The Madras High court held that where father converted to Islam and married a
muslim girl, he creases to be natural guardian as a matter of legal right.
It would not be in the interest of child that such convert should be allowed to
continue as a natural guardian and exercise the power as such.
2. CIVIL DEATH:-
Any person who has completely and finally renounced the world by becoming a
hermit or an ascetic forfeits his right to continue as the natural guardian of his
minor child or wife.
3. MINORITY:-
A Hindu widow does not, by her remarriage, lose her preferential rights of
guardianship over her minor children by the deceased husband whether such
marriage is permitted by custom or not.
Section 7:- that the natural guardian of an adopted son, who is a minor, passes on
adoption to the adoptive father and after him to the adoptive mother. The natural
father and mother do not have any right, after adoption.
After adoption the natural guardianship of the adopted child passes from his
natural father to his adoptive father.
SECTION 8:-
1. The natural guardian of hindu minor has power, subject to the powers
provision of this section, to do all acts which are necessary or reasonable
and proper for the benefit of the minor or for the realization, protection or
benefit of the minor’s estate:- but the guardian can in no case bind the
minor by a personal covenant.
2. The natural guardian shall not, without the previous permission of the
court
a. Mortgage or charge or transfer by sale, gift, exchange or otherwise
any part of the immovable property of the minor, or
b. Lease any part of such property for a term exceeding 5 years of for a
term extending more than one year beyond the date on which the
minor will attain majority.
3. Any disposal of immovable property by a natural guardian, in
contravention of sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) is voidable at the
instance of the minor of any person claiming under him.
4. No court shall grant permission to the natural guardian to do any of the
acts mention in sub-section (2) except in case of necessity or for an
evident advantage to the minor.
5. The guardians and wards Act. 1890 shall be applicable.
6. Court means city civil court
A natural guardian has the power to place such restraint on the minor in regard to
his upbringing, education and health as may be necessary or reasonable or proper
for the benefit of the minor.
The Supreme Court clearly laid down that, the natural guardian has been
empowered to do all such acts which are necessary for the welfare and benefit of
the child.
The Delhi High court has held that any contract executed by the guardian of the
minor can be specifically enforced by the minor or against the minor. Under the
law the natural guardian has been empowered to enter into the contract.
If the contract is in the welfare of the minor, it will be binding and will be
enforceable.
FAMILY ARRANGEMENT:-
The natural guardian has the power to enter into family settlement on behalf of the
minor provided it is the nature of a bona fide compromise of doubtful claims.
POWER OF ALIENATION:-
The natural guardian of a Hindu minor has power in the management of the estate
to sell or mortgage any part of the estate in case of necessity or for benefit of the
estate, provided the natural guardian has taken permission of th court prior to such
alienation.
Case law
The court held that a sale of minor’s property effected by his natural guardian
without obtaining the specific sanction of the court under section 8(2) is an act
which is prohibited by law and is, therefore invalid.
The natural guardian without the previous sanction of the court shall do no
transaction by sale, gift, exchange or otherwise of any part of the immovable
property of the minor and lease of any part of such property for a term exceeding 5
years of for a term extending more than one year beyond the date on which the
minor will attain majority.
1. Necessity, or
2. An evident advantage to the minor.
An alienation made with the permission of the court, cannot be impeached by the
minor or any other person except in a case of fraud of underhand dealing.
1. Procedure and principles which will govern grant of permission by the court
to a natural or his testamentary guardian to transfer the immovable property
are prescribed by sub-section (4) (5) and (6) of the section 8 of this Act.
2. The order granting the permission shall recite the necessity or advantage, as
the case may be, describe the property with respect to which the act
permitted is to be done, and specify such condition, if any as the court may
see fit to attach to the permission; and it shall be recorded, dated and signed
by the judge, of the court with his own hand, or when from any cause he is
prevented from recording the order with his own hand, shall be taken down
in writing from his dictation and be dated and signed by him.
3. The court may, in its discretion, impose the following among their
conditions namely;-
a. The sale shall not be completed without the sanction of the court;
b. That a sale be made to the highest bidder by public auction before the
court or some person specially appointed by the court for that purpose as
a time and place to be specified by the court.
c. That the whole or any of the proceeds of the sale permitted shall be paid
into the court by the guardian, to be disbursed therefrom or be invested
by the court on prescribed securities or to be otherwise disposed of as the
court directs.
4. Before granting the permission to a guardian to do an act , the court may
cause notice of the application for the permission to be given to any relative
or friend of the ward who should, in its opinion, receive notice thereof, and
shall hear and record statement of any person who appears in opposition to
the application.”
2. TESTAMENTARY GUARDIAN
Are those guardians who are appointed by a will of the natural guardian, entitled to
act as a guardian for the minor. It becomes effective only after the death of the
testator.
Section 9
1. A Hindu father entitled to act as the natural guardian of his minor legitimate
children may, by will appoint a guardian for any of them in respect of the
minor’s property (other than the undivided interest referred to section 12) or
in respect of both.
2. An appointment made under sub-section (1) shall have no effect if the father
pre-deceases the mother, but shall revive, if the mother dies without
appointing by will, any person as guardian.
3. A Hindu widow, entitled to act as the natural guardian of her minor
legitimate children, and a Hindu mother entitled to act as the natural
guardian of her minor legitimate children by reason of the fact that the
father has become disentitled to act as such, may, by will appoint a guardian
for any of them in respect of the minor’s person or in respect of the minor’s
property (other than the undivided interest referred to in section 12) or in
respect of both)
4. A Hindu mother entitled to act as the natural guardian of her minor
illegitimate children may, by will, appoint a guardian for any of them in
respect of the minor’s person or in respect of the minor’s person or in both.
5. The guardian so appointed by will has the power to act as the minor’s
guardian, after the death of the minor’s father or mother, as the case may be,
and to exercise all the powers of a natural guardian under this Act to such
extent and subject to such restrictions, if any, as are specified in this Act and
in the will.
6. The right of the guardian so appointed by will shall, where the minor is a
girl, cease on her marriage.
The Act recognizes the right of the following persons to appoint guardian of the
person and separate property of a Hindu minor.
The powers are the same as of the natural guardian or testamentary guardian.
3. DE-FACTO GUARDIAN
A person having the care of properties of a minor but who is neither a natural
guardian, testamentary guardian nor a guardian appointed by the court is only a de
facto guardian and the restriction under section 11 will apply to his acts.
According to section 11 of the Act the de facto guardian is not recognized and he
cannot deal with the property of a minor.
4. AD HOC GUARDIAN.
It means “for this purpose.” There must be some course of conduct in that capacity,
it implies some continuity of conduct, some management of the property beyond
the isolated act of alienation which is being challenged.
A guardian, who has been deprived of the custody of his ward, has the following
remedies open to him:-
1. Writ of habeas corpus within the original civil jurisdiction of a High court.
2. Application to a Magistrate under section 97 or sec 98 of the criminal
procedure code 1973.
3. Regular suit by guardian for custody of the ward.
4. Petition for the restoration of the custody of his ward under section 25 of the
guardians and wards act, 1890.
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Q.NO.14 . EXPLAIN THE POWERS AND LIABILITIES OF THE GUARDIAN OVER
THE PERSON AND PROPERTY OF A HINDU MINOR.
SECTION 8:-
The natural guardian of hindu minor has power, subject to the powers provision of this section,
to do all acts which are necessary or reasonable and proper for the benefit of the minor or for the
realization, protection or benefit of the minor’s estate:- but the guardian can in no case bind the
minor by a personal covenant.
The natural guardian shall not, without the previous permission of the court
c. Mortgage or charge or transfer by sale, gift, exchange or otherwise any part of the
immovable property of the minor, or
d. Lease any part of such property for a term exceeding 5 years of for a term
extending more than one year beyond the date on which the minor will attain
majority.
7. Any disposal of immovable property by a natural guardian, in contravention of sub-
section (1) or sub-section (2) is voidable at the instance of the minor of any person
claiming under him.
8. No court shall grant permission to the natural guardian to do any of the acts mention
in sub-section (2) except in case of necessity or for an evident advantage to the minor.
9. The guardians and wards Act. 1890 shall be applicable.
10. Court means city civil court
A natural guardian has the power to place such restraint on the minor in regard to his upbringing,
education and health as may be necessary or reasonable or proper for the benefit of the minor.
The Supreme court clearly laid down that, the natural guardian has been empowered to do all
such acts which are necessary for the welfare and benefit of the child.
The Delhi High court has held that any contract executed by the guardian of the minor can be
specifically enforced by the minor or against the minor. Under the law the natural guardian has
been empowered to enter into the contract.
If the contract is in the welfare of the minor, it will be binding and will be enforceable.
A natural guardian of a minor as well as a guardian appointed by the court or has power to
acknowledge a debt or to pay interest on a debt so as to extend the period of limitation provided
the act is for the protection or benefit of the minor’s property.
FAMILY ARRANGEMENT:-
The natural guardian has the power to enter into family settlement on behalf of the minor
provided it is the nature of a bona fide compromise of doubtful claims.
POWER OF ALIENATION:-
The natural guardian of a Hindu minor has power in the management of the estate to sell or
mortgage any part of the estate in case of necessity or for benefit of the estate, provided the
natural guardian has taken permission of th court prior to such alienation.
Case law
The court held that a sale of minor’s property effected by his natural guardian without obtaining
the specific sanction of the court under section 8(2) is an act which is prohibited by law and is,
therefore invalid.
The natural guardian without the previous sanction of the court shall do no transaction by sale,
gift, exchange or otherwise of any part of the immovable property of the minor and lease of any
part of such property for a term exceeding 5 years of for a term extending more than one year
beyond the date on which the minor will attain majority.
An alienation made with the permission of the court, cannot be impeached by the minor or any
other person except in a case of fraud of underhand dealing.
If any transfer is made in contravention of the Act, it would be voidable at the option of the
minor.
5. Procedure and principles which will govern grant of permission by the court to a natural
or his testamentary guardian to transfer the immovable property are prescribed by sub-
section (4) (5) and (6) of the section 8 of this Act.
6. The order granting the permission shall recite the necessity or advantage, as the case may
be, describe the property with respect to which the act permitted is to be done, and
specify such condition, if any as the court may see fit to attach to the permission; and it
shall be recorded, dated and signed by the judge, of the court with his own hand, or when
from any cause he is prevented from recording the order with his own hand, shall be
taken down in writing from his dictation and be dated and signed by him.
7. The court may, in its discretion, impose the following among their conditions namely;-
d. The sale shall not be completed without the sanction of the court;
e. That a sale be made to the highest bidder by public auction before the court or some
person specially appointed by the court for that purpose as a time and place to be
specified by the court.
f. That the whole or any of the proceeds of the sale permitted shall be paid into the court
by the guardian, to be disbursed therefrom or be invested by the court on prescribed
securities or to be otherwise disposed of as the court directs.
8. Before granting the permission to a guardian to do an act , the court may cause notice of
the application for the permission to be given to any relative or friend of the ward who
should, in its opinion, receive notice thereof, and shall hear and record statement of any
person who appears in opposition to the application.”
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INTRODUCTION :-
Manu defines an adopted son as follows:- “A son equal in caste and
affectionately disposed whom his mother or father (or both) give with water at time
of calamity is known as the Dattrima (Dattaka Son).
Thus adoption is the transplantation of son from the family in which he is born, to
another family where he is given by the natural parents by way of gift. The
adopted son is then taken as being born in the new family and acquired rights,
duties, and status there only and his ties with the old family comes to an end.
The powers of a male and female Hindu in adoption as per the Hindu Adoption
and Maintenance Act 1956.
Case Law
The supreme court has laid down that the consent of wife either should be in
writing or reflected by positive act voluntarily and willingly done by her.
If the person is having 1 or more wives consent of all the wives is necessary.
The consent of the wife will not be necessary if the wife whose consent is sought
has,
Any female
Has the capacity to take a son or daughter in adoption. Consent of the husband is
necessary if husband is alive.
1. If the adoption is son , the father or mother should not have son, son’s son, or
son’s son’s son living (whether legitimate or adoption) living at the time of
adoption.
2. If the adoption is of a daughter , the father and mother must not have a Hindu
daughter or son’s Daughter (Whether legitimate blood relationship or by adoption)
living at the time of adoption.
CASE LAW.
Section 9(1) prescribes the capacity of persons, who give the child in adoption to
another.
1. No person except the father or mother or the guardian of a child shall have the
capacity to give the child in adoption.
2. Subject to the provisions of sub-sec 4 , the father, or the mother, if alive, shall
have equal right to give a son or daughter in adoption.
3. Where both the father and mother are dead or have completely and finally
renounced the world, or have abandoned the child or have been declared by a court
of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind or where the parentage of the
child is not known, the guardian of a child may give the child in adoption with the
previous permission of the court to any person including the guardian himself.
4. Before granting permission to a guardian, the court shall be satisfied that the
adoption will be for the welfare of the child.
Who may be adopted?
Section 10:- No person shall be capable of being taken in adoption unless the
following conditions are fulfilled, namely,
i. He or she is a Hindu
ii. He or she has not already been adopted.
iii. He or she has not been married, unless there is a custom or
usage applicable to the parties which permits persons who are
married being taken in adoption.
iv. He or she has not completed the age of 15 yrs, unless there is a
custom or usage applicable to the parties which permits persons
who have completed the age of 15 yrs being taken in adoption.
Case law
In this case a person who was adopted when he was above the age of 15 yrs under
custom which permitted the adoption claimed the property of his adoptive father
on the ground that since the adoptive father died intestate, he being the adoptive
child was entitled to his property.
Adoption was made through a registered adoption deed that stated that the natural
parents of the claimant aged 18 had given him in adoption in presence of the
elders to Anne Seetharamaiah who was issueless in accordance with the Hindu
Adoption and Maintenance Act, 1956.
It also recited that the adoption was in accordance with the custom prevailing in
The court accepted the adoption as valid in view of the statutory exception made in
favour of custom to the contrary.
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INTRODUCTION
What is maintenance?
Section 3(b) of the Hindu Adoption and maintenance Act, 1956 defines
maintenance includes-
i) In all cases, provision for food, clothing, residence, education and medical
attendance and treatment
ii) In the case of an unmarried daughter, also the reasonable expenses of and
incident to her marriage.
(iv) his or her son or the son of his predeceased son or the son of predeceased son
of his predeceased son, so long as he is a minor:
PROVIDED and to the extent that he is unable to obtain maintenance, in the case
of a grandson from his father's or mother's estate, and in the case of a great grand-
son, from the estate of his father or mother or father's father or father's mother;
(v) his or her unmarried daughter, or the unmarried daughter of his predeceased
son or the unmarried daughter of a predeceased son of his predeceased son, so long
as she remains unmarried:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to obtain maintenance, in the case
of a grand-daughter from her father's or mother's estate and in the case of a great-
grand-daughter from the estate of her father or mother or father's father or father's
mother;
(c) from her father-in-law or his father or the estate of either of them;
(vii) any widow of his son or of a son of his predeceased son, so long as she does
not remarry:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to obtain maintenance from her
husband's estate, or from her son or daughter, if any, or his or her estate; or in the
case of a grandson's widow, also from her father-in-law's estate
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Introduction
The right of maintenance arises from the concept of an undivided family. The head of
the family is bound to maintain its members, their wives, and their children.
What is maintenance?
Section 3(b) of the Hindu Adoption and maintenance Act, 1956 defines maintenance includes-
i) In all cases, provision for food, clothing, residence, education and medical attendance and
treatment
ii) In the case of an unmarried daughter, also the reasonable expenses of and incident to her
marriage.
MAINTENANCE OF WIFE:-
1. MAINTENANCE
2. SEPARATE RESIDENCE.
1. MAINTENANCE:-
• It is a right of a wife for maintenance in an incidence of the status or state of
matrimony and a Hindu is under a legal obligation to maintain his wife.
• This right arises from the very existence of the relation between the parties.
Section 18:- 1. A Hindu wife, whether married before or after the commencement of his Act,
shall be entitled to be maintained by her husband during her lifetime.
2. A hindu wife shall be entitled to live separately from her husband without forfeiting
her claim to maintenance:
a. If he is guilty of desertion, that is to say, of abandoning her without reasonable
cause and without her consent or against her wish, or willfully neglecting her;
b. If he has treated her with such cruelty as to cause a reasonable apprehension in
her mind that it will be harmful or injurious to live with her husband.
c. If he is suffering from a virulent form of leprosy.
d. If he has any other wife living
e. If he keeps a concubine in the same house in which his wife is living or habitually
resides with a concubine elsewhere.
f. If he has ceased to be Hindu by conversion to another religion.
g. If there is any other cause justifying her living separately.
3. A Hindu wife shall not be entitled to separate residence and maintenance from her
husband if she is unchaste or ceases to be a Hindu by conversion to another religion.
This maintenance is dependent on her living with him and discharging the duties as wife.
The husband would not be absolved from his liability to maintain his wife simply because he has
ceased to be a Hindu.
The wife is not entitled to be maintained by the relatives of husband side unless they have the
possession of the property belonging to her husband.
The wife’s first duty to her husband is to submit herself obediently to his authority and to remain
under his roof and protection.
A wife is not entitled to separate residence from her husband, unless she proves that by reasons
of his misconduct or refusal to maintain her in his own place of residence or other justifying
cause, she is compelled to live apart from him.
According Section 18(2) (a) to (g) enumerates that the wife may live separately from her
husband without forfeiting her right to maintenance.
The grounds which will enable the wife to live separately claim maintenance from the husband
are as follows;
Section 24 of the Act deals with Maintenance Pendente lite during the proceedings between a
husband and wife.
Section 18(3):- When a wife not entitled to separate residence and maintenance.
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SHORT NOTES:-
a) Dharma
Dharma:- The Hindu shastrakaras have laid great emphasis on Dharma. Dharma
pervades throughout the Hindu philosophical thought, and the Hindu social
structure. Law is, in this sense considered as a branch of dharma.
The term Dharma is derived from the root word ‘dhri’ which means ‘to sustain’
‘uphold’. Dharma came to mean morally proper, ethical duty, religious virtue
ideal, absolute truth, universal law ,divine justice, conventional code of customs
and traditions.
Dharma signifies the sum total of religious, moral, social and legal duties . Hindu
sages and law givers have all along emphasized duties. Duties of individuals , of
all person in all walks of life. Duties of kings, priests, parents, warriors, peasants
servants etc. has been described in detail. Thus the duties are binding in character .
Hindu law refers to the system of personal laws (marriage, adoption, inheritance, etc.),
traditionally derived from Hindu texts and traditions, that shaped the social practice of
Hindu communities. In Vedic times, Hindu law was the legal system described and
imagined in Dharmaśāstra texts. Classical Hindu law, brings the realm of legal practice
together with the scholastic tradition of Dharmaśāstra by defining Hindu law as a usable
label for myriad localized legal systems of classical and medieval India that were influenced
by and in turn influenced the Dharmaśāstra tradition.
Hindu law has a very old ancestry. It was given by Hindu seers and sages who after their
long penance and meditation discovered certain rules of conduct which, according them,
are necessary for peaceful co-existence of society.
The hindu seers and sages regarded the law as revelation of god and therefore it was given
the highest respect in the society. The king and his subjects were equally subjected to law.
In order to bring certainty to them the laws were codified by the Dharmashastra writers.
Law was identified with Dharma and was supposed to have its origin from god itself.
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INTRODUCTION
Section 5(i) : when the spouse is living at the time of 2nd marriage
Section 5(iv):- if the parties to marriage are within prohibited degree relationship
CASE LAW;-
The supreme court has observed that the marriages covered under section 11
are void the very inception and have to be ignored as not existing in law at all.
VIODABLE MARRIAGES :-
Section 12(1)(a)
CASE LAW
The Delhi High court held that the petitioner would be entitled to a decree of
nullity of marriage if the marriage was not consummated due to impotence of the
respondent spouse.
Proof of Impotency
UNSOUNDNESS OF MIND
Marriage can be annulled when it contravenes section 5(ii) of the Act that is
neither the party shall suffer from unsoundness of mind at the time of marriage.
Section 12(1) (b) refers that any marriage shall be voidable and may be
annulled if the marriage is in contravention of the condition specified in section
5(ii)
Section 12(1) (c) consent obtained by force or fraud:- it states that the marriage
is voidable on the ground that the consent of the petitioner or of the guardian
has been obtained by force of fraud.
Child Marriage Act has given minimum age for marriage to male is 21 and
female is 18.
CASE LAW
NAND KISHORE VS. SMT. MUNNI BAI [ AIR 1979 MP. 45]
The High court of Madhya Pradesh has held that the terms force and fraud
means those condition in which there is absence of real consent
According to section 12(1) (c) a marriage brought about by force or fraud may
be declared invalid where:-
3. The force or fraud has been committed upon the petitioner himself or herself
4. Before the commencement of child marriage restraint act 1978 where the
guardian consent was much required if such consent is acquired by fraud or
force, it may be ceremony material fact etc of the respondent.
Exception :- No petition more than 1 yrs after the fraud or force marriage is
discovered.
The petitioner has with his/ her full consent has agreed to live together even
after discovering the fraud/force.
The marriage can be annulled if the respondent was at the time of the marriage
pregnant by some person other than the petitioner.
CASE LAW
In this case the baby was born to Sushila after 171 days from the date of
marriage (5month 21 days) and the child was fully developed healthy child.
In this case there was no evidence of the husband and wife to meet before
marriage and the wife admitted her pregnancy from before the solemnization of
marriage, when the husband had not met her.
5. That the petitioner was at the time of marriage ignorant of the facts alleged
6. The petition is filed within one year of such commencement of this Act.
7. The marital intercourse with the consent of the petitioner has not taken
place.
Section 16 of the Hindu Marriage Act protects the interest of the children
begotten or conceived before the decree is made in the case of void and
voidable marriage under section 12 of the Act
CASE LAW
If a person marries 2nd wife during the subsistence of 1st valid marriage the
children born of 2nd marriage would be legitimate under section 16 of the Act.
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c) GIFTS
GIFTS
Under this Act, a gift of immovable property can only be effected by a registered
instrument signed by or on behalf of the donor and attested by atleast two
witnesses.
The essentials of a valid gift are that there must be a donor, a done, a proper object
of gift and a transaction involving certain formalities.
The following property may validly be disposed of by gift even after the
commencement of the transfer of property Act 1882.
No gift is invalid by reason only that any person for whose benefit it may have
been made was not born at the time of the gift.
REVOCATION OF GIFT:-
A gift once completed cannot be revoked unless it was obtained by fraud or under
influence.
Gifts to trusts –
WILLS
DEFINITION:-
A will is the legal declaration of the intention of a testator with respect of to his
property.
Meaning of codicil:-
Every person of sound mind, not being a minor may dispose of his property by
will.
A mitakshara coparcener can dispose of by will his or her undivided interest in the
coparcenary property- according section 30 of Hindu succession act 1956.
A will or any part of a will, the making of which has been caused by fraud or
coercion or by such importunacy as takes away the free agency of the testator, is
void.
BEQUEST TO A CLASS.
No bequest is valid whereby the vesting of the thing bequeathed may be delayed
beyond the lifetime of one or more persons at the testator’s death and the minority
of some person who shall be in existence at the expiration of that period and to
whom, if he attains full age, the thing bequeathed will belong.
In construing a will the intention of the testator is to be looked to and the prime
duty of the court is to ascertain from the words of the will what the intention of the
testator was.
In ascertaining the intention of the testator, the following may be taken into
account.
1. The position of the testator;
2. His family relationship;
3. The probability that he would use words in a particular sense;
4. His race and religious opinions;
5. Ordinary notions and wishes of Hindus, with regard to the devolution of the
property.
“It may be taken to be quite settled that , when a grant of an immovable property is
made to a Hindu female, she does not get an absolute or alienable interest in such
property, unless such power is expressly conferred upon her.
Under the Mitakshara father had complete power of disposition of his self-
acquired property and if he made any deed of gift in favour of his son or some
other relation, there would be no presumption that the bequest was to confer the
nature of a joint family so that the property bequeathed became ancestral in the
hands of the legatee unless there were express words to indicate the same.
d) PIOUS OBLIGATION.
The doctrine of the pious obligation of the sons to pay their father’s debt has
been abolished by section 6(4) of the Hindu succession (Amendment), 2005.
Therefore, the law discussed in this respect below is the prior law as it stood
before the Hindu succession (Amendment) Act, 2005.
PIOUS OBLIGATION
The doctrine of the pious obligation is that obligation of the sons to pay
their father’s debts.
This doctrine was prevalent before the Hindu Succession (Amendment ) Act
2005.
The sons, grandsons, great-grandsons are liable to pay the debts of their
ancestors if there are not immoral debts or illegal purposes.
NATURE OF LIABILITIES
o Religious
o Moral
o Legal
The doctrine has its origin in Smritis. Non-payment of debt is a positive sin,
that evil consequences of which follow the undischarged debts even in the
world afterwards. An obligation is imposed upon the sons to pay their father’s
debts.
If the debts have been contracted by the father and they are no immoral
or irreligious the interest of the sons in the coparcenary property can always
be made liable for such debt.
The hindu son is not liable for debts contracted by his father, which is
Ayavaharika i.e, illegal, dishonest or immoral.
1. The son is under pious obligation to pay his father’s debt which is
“vyavharika” that is lawful and not avyavaharika” that is unlawfull,
illegal or immoral incurred before partition i.e, when they were joint.
2. The son is not liable for a debt contracted by father after partition.
Avyavaharika debts:-
There are many meaning to this word. Whether a debt is immoral or not
is to be judged with reference to the time when it originated and the rule is
not rigid but has to be applied with reference to the circumstances of each
case.
The sons, grandson and great grandson are not bound to pay
avyavahrika debt of the father.
CASE LAW
The supreme court observed that it is the pious duty of the sons to discharge
their father’s debt not tainted with immorality or illegality.
The liability for the debt contracted before partition may be sub-
divided as shown in the above diagram into the following classes;
Thus the son, grandson or great-grand son are liable only to the extent of their
share in the coparcenary property.
This liability of the sons exists today even after the Hindu succession
(Amendment) Act 2005.
If the debt is incurred by the father for his personal benefit, the son will be
liable of the payment of the debt provided the debt is not tainted will illegality
or immorality.
This liability is limited to the son’s interest in the coparcenary property and
the whole family property is not liable for the payment of the personal debts.
The sons after a partition with the father are under no legal liability to pay his
debts contracted after the partition.
The son is, however liable after partition for a debt contracted by the father
before partition but only to the extent of the share he has obtained on the
partition.
The Liability of a son to pay the debts of his father exists, whether the father
is alive or dead.
Thus, it is open for the father during his lifetime to effect a transfer of any
joint-family property including the interests of his sons in order to pay off the
“antecedent debt” provided it is not tainted with immorality.
For, when is such a case he alienates the property, which he may be taken to
exercise the power of alienation which the sons would have exercised in
discharge of their pious duty which they owed him; he is virtually alienating
the property for them and on their behalf, in discharge of the duty.
CASE LAW
The supreme court reiterated the well-established view that the father
may alienate the joint family property to pay off his antecedent untainted
debts and observed that he(the father) must act prudently and if
consideration in inadequate the sale will not be valid.
Any female
Has the capacity to take a son or daughter in adoption. Consent of the husband is
necessary if husband is alive.
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1. That both the parties have been living separately for a period
of one year or more;
2. That both the parties have not been able to live together
3. That both the parties have mutually agreed that their marriage
should be dissolved.
According to section 23(1)(bb) of the Act, the consent for petition of divorce
by mutual consent must not be obtained by force, fraud or undue influence. If
this elements are found in the agreement, the application will be rejected by
the court.
1. The parties to marriage are living separately for a period of one year or
more;
3. They have reached a compromise that they would dissolve the marriage;
and
4. That they have consented to divorce not under any force or fraud or under
undue influence.
In this case the court held that a party to the petition for divorce by
mutual consent, can unilaterally withdraw his consent at any time till passing
of the decree under this section.
The Supreme court has held that Sureshta devi’s decision that ‘consent can be
withdrawn at any time before decree is passed’ are too wide and requires
reconsideration.
In this case, the petition for divorce by mutual consent was pending for a
considerably long period and the wife had not withdrawn her consent within
18 months from the date of presentation of petition.
Civil and criminal proceedings were also filed by the spouse against each
other during pendency of the suit. In the view of the above facts, the supreme
court etc.
The court to meet the ends of justice, exercised its power under Art 142 of the
Indian constitution ‘decree for divorce was granted.
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SOLVED PROBLEMS
a. Kantimati refuses to live with her husband as long as he stayed with his aged parents.
She approaches the court against her husband seeking separate residence and
maintenance. Will she succeeded ? Decide.
Section 18:- of the Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act 1956 deals with the maintenance and
separate residence of a wife.
Section 18(1):-Subject to the provisions of the Act a hindu wife, whether married before or after
the commencement of this Act, shall be entitled to be maintained by her husband during her
lifetime.
Section 18(2):- A Hindu wife shall be entitled to live separately from her husband without
forfeiting her claim to maintenance.
1. If he is guilty of desertion,
2. If he has treated her with such cruelty.
3. Suffering from virulent form of leprosy.
4. If he has any wife living
5. If he keeps a concubine in the same house or habitually resides with her.
6. If he has converted to another religion.
7. If there is any other reason justifying her living separately?
Section 18 (3) A wife is not entitled if she is unchaste or converted to another religion.
The provisions of the Hindu Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act 1956 clearly states the
eligibility circumstances for a wife to claim maintenance and separate residence from her
husband.
In the above mentioned problem the wife wants maintenance and separate residence since she is
refuses to stay with her husband so long he stays with his aged parents.
This reason mentioned by kantimati is not mentioned in either of the clauses of section 18 of the
Act.
To claim it a grave and serious nature of grounds should be there which is not grave or serious
in the above mentioned problem.
b. Varun writes a will that if he dies, his child kiran should be taken care by his sister and
Varun’s wife srimati writes a will that in case of her death her brother should be the
guardian of her son. Both die in an accident. Who shall be the guardian of the son?
Solution :-
1. A Natural Guardian.
2. Testamentary Guardian (guardian oppointed by natural guardian by will)
3. Guardian appointed by court.
4. Guardian empowered to act as guardian under any enactment relating to any court of
wards.”
Besides this there are other types of guardians.
5. Defacto guardian
6. Ad hoc guardian.
Testamentary guardians of a minor are those guardians who are appointed by a will of the
natural guardian, entitled to act as a guardian for the minor. Needless to say that a will becomes
effective only after the death of the testator.
Section 9:-
1. A hindu father entitled to act as the natural guardian of his minor legitimate children may,
by will appoint a guardian for any of them in respect of the minor’s person or in respect
of the minor’s property (other than the undivided interest referred to in section 12) or in
respect of both.
2. An appointment made under sub-section (1) shall have no effect if the father pre-
deceases the mother, but shall revive, if the mother dies without appointing by will, any
person as guardian.
• So as per the provision a father can appoint a testamentary guardian only in absence
of minor’s mother.
• Appointment is of no value if mother is alive since she is a natural guardian. But the
appointment by father will continue if mother dies without appointed a testamentary
guardian for her children.
In the above mention problem father has appointed one testamentary guardian and even mother
has appointed one testamentary guardian and both died in accident. The appointment made by
the mother will be eligible to act as testamentary guardian for the child.
c. A Joint Hindu family consist of father ‘F’ and his son ‘S’. Partition takes place between
‘F’ and ‘S’. Two years after partition another son ‘T’ is born to ‘F’. Now state who all
coparceners are and what the share of property of each person is.
ANSWER :- In this problem the coparceners are the father (F), his son(S). The share of
property of each person is 1/2rd of the property.
The son ‘T’ who is born as well as begotten to ‘F’ after the partition is entitled to his father’s
share at the partition. He is not entitled to reopen the partition.
Coparceners are such persons who jointly inherit property, whereof they have unity of
possession, which, however may be served at any time by partition.
Partition of the joint hindu family property may take place at the instance of the following.
1. after born sons (and after born daughters of a coparceners. After born sons may be considered
in two sets.
Firstly, those born as well as begotten after the partition, and secondly, those born after partition
but begotten before it or those in their mother’s womb at the time of partition.
In case of a son born as well as begotten after the partition, if his father has taken a share for
himself and separated from the other sons, then the after-born son, is entitled to his father’s share
at the partition and also his separated property to the exclusion of the separated sons and is not
entitled to reopen the partition.
So in the above mentioned case the son born as well as begotten after the partition is entitled to
get the share of his father and not entitled to re-open the partition.
d. Father enters into an agreement to sell the minor’s property and delivers actual
possession of the same in pursuance of that agreement. Whether the agreement is
binding on the minor? Explain with reasons.
Answer:- In the above mentioned problem whether the agreement to sell the minor’s property by
father is binding on the minor, is subject to the prior permission taken by the court. If the father
has taken the prior permission of the court then the agreement is binding, if he has not taken it,
then the minor is not binding to the agreement entered by the father.
Section 8(2):- the natural guardian shall not, without the previous permission of the court
So it can be stated here that the father has power to sell the property in case of necessity or for
benefit of the estate, provided the father has taken permission of the court prior to such
agreement to sell as provided in section 8(2) of the Act.
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e. Father has incurred debt for personal benefit; son has self- acquired property. Is son
liable to discharge debt of his father? Decide
Answer:- No, the son is not liable to discharge debt of his father.
In the above mentioned problem the son will not be liable to discharge the debts of his father,
because according to pious obligation, the son’s liability is classified as,
a. Debt incurred by father as manager or ‘Karta’ of the joint family or for joint
family purposes.
Under the sub-head (b) , that is debt incurred by the father for his personal benefit, the son on
the basis of the doctrine of pious obligation will be liable for the payment of the debt provided
the debt is not tainted with illegality or immorality. And the liability is limited to the son’s
interest in the coparcenary property.
But in the above mentioned problem there is no coparcenary property and son has self- acquired
property hence, the son is under no obligation to pay the debts incurred by the father for his
personal benefit.
e. A dies intestate leaving behind his two Widows “Y” and “X” and two daughters “M” ,
“N” and one son “Z” and mother “K”. Distribute the property among them.
Answer:-
The distribution of the property among the members will be divided into 1/5.
Here the property among the following members will be divided as per the rules given under
Hindu Succession Act 1956.
Section 8 to 13 deals with rules of succession in connection with th separate property of a male
Hindu dying intestate.
Section 8 :- divides the heirs of a male for the purpose of inheriting the property into 4 classes.
These are,
Section 9:- states among the heirs specified in the schedule those in Class I shall take
simultaneously and to the exclusion of all other heirs.
Son
Daughter
Widow
Mother
Son of pre-deceased son
Daughter of a pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter
Widow of pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased son of pre-deceased son
Daughter of a pre-deceased son of pre-deceased son
Widow of pre-deceased son of a pre-deceased son
Son of pre-deceased Daughter of pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased son of a pre-deceased Daughter
Daughter of a pre-deceased Daughter of a pre-deceased son.
Distribution of property among heirs in Class-I of the schedule :- section 10 has given 4
rules regarding the distribution of property.
“The property of an intestate shall be divided among the heirs in class-I of the schedule in
accordance with the following rules:-
Rule 1:- the Intestate’s widow or if there is more widows than one all the widows
together shall take one share.
Explanation:- widow is entitled to one share, if more than one widows that all widows
together are entitled to one share.
Rule2:- the surviving sons and daughters and the mother of the intestate shall each take
one share.
Explanation :- each surviving sons, daughters and mother get one share each.
Rule 3 :- the heirs in the branch of each pre-deceased son or each pre-deceased daughter
of the intestate shall take between them one share.
Explanation:-the heirs of the deceased in the branches of predeceased sons and pre-
deceased daughters take not per-capita but per-stirpes.
Among the heirs in the branch of the pre-deceased daughter shall be so made that the
surviving sons and daughters get equal portions”.
Explanation:- the heirs of pre-deceased son together shall get only one share just as the
branch of a pre-deceased son got only one share under Rule -3.
f. A Hindu widow inherits property from her husband in 2003 and adopts a son in 2007.
Can the adopted boy inherit the property?
Answer:
Section 8 of Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act 1956 lays down the condition in which a
Hindu female can adopt.
Any female Hindu
b. Who is of sound mind
c. Who is not a minor
d. Who is not married, or
If married,-
i. Whose marriage has been dissolved.
ii. Whose husband is dead
iii. Has completely and finally renounced the world
iv. Has ceased to be a hindu
v. Has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound
mind,
In the above mentioned problem section 8 recognizes the right of a Hindu widow to adopt a son
or daughter to herself.
The effect of adoption by a widow of a son or daughter will be to clothe the adopted son or
daughter with all the rights of a natural born son or daughter in the adoptive family and to create
all the ties of the child in the family.
Hence the child adopted by the widow is having all the rights to inherit the properties of the
father.
(g) wife has moved to the court questioning the constitutional validity of Sec 9 of Hindu
Marriage Act 1955( Restitution of Conjugal Rights ) a ground of right to privacy. Discuss
Answer :- section 9 of the hindu marriage Act 1955 is not violating any provision of the
constitution that is section 14 and 21.
Section 9 of Hindu Marriage Act 1955( Restitution of Conjugal Rights ) is the
foundation of the right is the fundament rule of matrimonial law that one spouse is entitled to
society and comfort- consortium- of the other spouse and where either spouse has abandoned or
withdrawn from the society of the other without reasonable excuse or just cause the court should
grant a decree for restitution.
CASE LAW
The Andhra Pradesh High court has observed that a decree of restitution of conjugal
rights deprived a women of control over her choice as and when and by whom the various parts
of her body should be allowed to be served. She loses her control over her most intimate
decisions. It did not subserve any social good. It was arbitrary and void as offending Art 14 of
the constitution.
In this case the Supreme court observed that section 9 of the Act cannot be said to be
violative of Art 14 or Art 21 of the constitution if the purpose of decree of restitution of
conjugal rights in the Act is understood in its proper perspective and if the method of its
execution in cases of disobedience is kept in view.
In India conjugal rights, the right of the husband and wife to the society of other spouse
is not merely creature of the statute. Such a right is inherent in the very institution of marriage
itself. The term conjugal rights may be viewed in its proper perspective.
Solution :- hence it can be stated that the wife who has moved to the court questioning the
constitutional validity of Section 9 of Hindu Marriage Act 1955( Restitution of Conjugal Rights )
is valid and does violate Article 14 and Article 21.
g. Prabhakara aged 25 years & Kusuma aged 17 years are married with arrangement &
consent of their parents. Discuss the validity of their marriage .
According to section 5:- which states the conditions for a valid marriage under Hindu Marriage
Act 1955. Are as follows,
1. Monogamy
2. Soundness of mind
3. Age of marriage
4. Marriage between prohibited relationship
5. Marriage within sapinda relationship.
Section 5 (iii) state the 3rd condition is that the bridegroom must be completed the age of 21
years and the bride age of 18 years at the time of marriage.
The child marriage restraint (Amendment ) Act, 1978 has raised the minimum age fixed for
marriage to 21 yrs in case of bridegroom and 18 years in case of bride.
The Prohibition of child marriage Act 2006 : According to sec 2(b) of child means a person who
if a male has not completed 21 yrs of age and if a female has not completed 18 yrs of age.
According section 3 of the Act the child marriage is voidable at the option of the
contracting g party who was a child at the time of the marriage , but petition under this section
can be filed before the child filing the petition completes 2 years of attaining majority.
Solution:- hence the marriage between Prabhakara and Kusuma is void and Kusuma can
repudiate her marriage before attaining the age of 18 yrs and the girl can obtain a decree for
dissolution of marriage.
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Prepared by
Mrs. JAYALAKSHMI.V
ASST PROF
AL-AMEEN COLLEGE OF LAW
BANGALORE