SC JUDGEMENT ON HSA-12-10-2011
14. The new Section 6 provides for parity of rights in the
coparcenary property among male and female members of a joint
Hindu family on and from September 9, 2005. The Legislature has
now conferred substantive right in favour of the daughters. According
to the new Section 6, the daughter of a coparcener becomes a
coparcener by birth in her own rights and liabilities in the same manner as the son. The declaration in Section 6 that the daughter of the coparcener shall have same rights and liabilities in the
coparcenary property as she would have been a son is unambiguous
and unequivocal. Thus, on and from September 9, 2005, the daughter
is entitled to a share in the ancestral property and is a coparcener as if
she had been a son.
15. The right accrued to a daughter in the property of a joint
Hindu family governed by the Mitakshara Law, by virtue of the 2005
Amendment Act, is absolute, except in the circumstances provided in
the proviso appended to sub-section (1) of Section 6. The excepted
categories to which new Section 6 of the 1956 Act is not applicable
are two, namely, (i) where the disposition or alienation including any
partition has taken place before December 20, 2004; and (ii) where
testamentary disposition of property has been made before
December 20, 2004. Sub- section (5) of Section 6 leaves no room for
doubt as it provides that this Section shall not apply to the partition
which has been effected before December 20, 2004. For the
purposes of new Section 6 it is explained that `partition’ means any
partition made by execution of a deed of partition duly registered
under the Registration Act 1908 or partition effected by a decree of a
court. In light of a clear provision contained in the Explanation
appended to sub-section (5) of Section 6, for determining the nonapplicability of the Section, what is relevant is to find out whether the
partition has been effected before December 20, 2004 by deed of
partition duly registered under the Registration Act, 1908 or by a
decree of a court. In the backdrop of the above legal position with
reference to Section 6 brought in the 1956 Act by the 2005
Amendment Act, the question that we have to answer is as to
whether the preliminary decree passed by the trial court on March 19,
1999 and amended on September 27, 2003 deprives the appellants
of the benefits of 2005 Amendment Act although final decree for
partition has not yet been passed.
One thought on “The daughter of a coparcener becomes a coparcener BY BIRTH in her own rights and liabilities in the same manner as the son. She will have rights over the ancestral property in the same manner as the son,(subject to the following conditions) if the property had not been partitioned through a registered partition deed or dispossessed due to alienation or by a decree of court or dispossessed through a testament before 20-12-2004.”
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