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NAME:RAJ VARDHAN AGARWAL

COURSE: BBA LLB(H)

BATCH:2017-2022

FAMILY LAW II

Introduction

The Hindu Succession Act, 1956 made a revolutionary change in the law for female Hindu. For
the first time, a Hindu female got the chance to become an absolute owner of the property. She
could inherit equally with a male counterpart and a window was also given importance regarding
the succession of her husband’s property as also to her father’s property. The Hindu Succession
(Amendment) Act, 2005 made the daughter, like son, a coparcener in a joint family. The
amendment was meant to ensure that women and men became equal heirs to ancestral property.

Though these measures have encouraged some marginal differences in property ownership, the
scenario remains largely unchanged as women are yet to assert their rights. For example, a
mother shares equally with the children and widow when a son predeceased her. But when a
married daughter dies, the mother gets the rank after her husband’s heirs. This is what the law
was enacted in 1955-1956. Further, in India, a woman’s property rights vary depending on her
religion, her marital status, the state she comes from and her tribal identity. This means there is
no single set of laws which govern the rights related to an Indian woman to property.

The misrepresented reality in which gender is positioned in the social, political, economic and
cultural transactions shows the fact that law is not gender-based, but is sometimes not even
gender-neutral. Gender neutrality will not be enough if it merely maintains the existing
conditions which is nothing but the guarding of gender discrimination. Women need and must
have confirmation of equality in society and under law. For example, Section 15 of the Hindu
Succession Act that determines the order of succession in the case of a Hindu woman who dies
intestate should be amended for it reflects a rooted system of oppression of women.

Intestate succession to Property of Hindu Female

The Hindu Succession Act 1956 deals with the succession to the property of a Hindu female
intestate. Pre 1956, there were varied rules under the uncodified Hindu laws. Section 15 and
Section 16 of Hindu Succession Act applies to the absolute property of a female ‘including an
undivided interest in a Mitakshara coparcenary property in which a female was a coparcener’
(2005 Amendment to the Act). Only the property which can be inherited and over which a
woman had full powers of disposal will be subject to the application of these sections. Thus, the
scheme of succession does not apply to any property held by a Hindu woman in the form of a
limited owner according to Section 14(2) or to which the Act does not apply. 

The order of succession to the property- the whole of it being separate from a Hindu female,
dying without making a will is not the same as in case of a Hindu male. The Hindu Succession
Act, 1956 agrees with the old Hindu law of succession in as much as that there is a difference
between succession to a male and that of a female. All other major succession laws in India lays
down a uniform scheme for all intestates. The reason for not providing a uniform scheme under
Hindu law is linked closely to the emphasis on the conversation and protection of the property in
the family of a male Hindu. A woman under the patriarchal arrangement is made to believe as
having no permanent family of her own. In contrast, there is no visible change in the husband’s
family when it comes to his marriage or remarriage.

Whilst the Hindu woman’s limited estate has been abolished and as long as the woman is alive
she will be having absolute power and right over all types of property. But still without making a
will, the succession of the ‘source of property’ is still material and under dilemma. For
succession, the property of a Hindu female is concerned about the following three heads: 

1. Property inherited by the female from her father or the mother.


2. Property inherited from her husband or father-in-law by the female. 
3. Property obtained from any other sources like by inheritance or otherwise.

It may be noted that if the female has her children then the first two heads would not be in
operation.

Section 15 talks about the succession of the property in respect with the Hindu female dying
without making a will after the initiation of the Act. According to Section 16, the property of a
female Hindu shall be decent as per the rules stated in this section. Section 15 and 16 of the Act
are imminent in their operation and do not govern the succession of the property concerned with
the Hindu female whose death took place before the Act came into existence. 

General Property (Section 15(1))


This section includes all those properties other than which were inherited by a Hindu female
from her parents, husband or father-in-law. That means a property received by the Hindu female
from her husband, parents or father-in-law not be in way of inheritance but instead should be
received through any other way like a gift, will, settlement, prescription, a transfer for
consideration i.e purchase will be covered under Section 15(1). The property which has been
gifted to the Hindu female even from her father will not be equal to inherited property, so
Section 15(2) instead of Section 15(1) will be applied here as held in the case Meyappa v.
Kannappa AIR 1976 Mad. 184.

Self-acquisitions are further covered under Section 15(1) which are made by a female. A female
has the right to receive property from any other source including a property inherited from any
other relation in the family, such as property inherited from her brother in the capacity of his
sister or her husband’s brother as his brother’s widow. This property would be considered as her
‘general property’ which has been covered in Section 15(1). The heirs mentioned are divided
into five different categories by the name of ‘entries’, as long as a single heir is present in the
earlier entry till then the property will not go to the next entry as per Section 16. The property
will be confiscated by the government by escheat if there are no heirs in any of the five entries
mentioned. 

Entry (a)- sons and daughters, sons and daughters of a predeceased son or daughter ie.
grandchildren, and the husband

These heirs shall succeed simultaneously by sharing equally to the exclusion of other heirs as per
Section 16. However, the children of a predeceased son/daughter will not be taking per capita
with the son or daughter or husband of the intestate but will be taken between them the share
which their father or mother would have taken if were alive at the time of the death of the
intestate i.e. they will take per stripe. In other words, such children will divide the share falling
under the share of their predeceased father or mother.

In a case, a Hindu Woman A dies, leaving behind a son S1 and a granddaughter D from her
second son S2. S2 married W2 and later got to discover that his consent had been obtained by
fraud. S2 filed a petition in court for obtaining a decree of nullity. D conceived before the
discovery of fraud by S2. The marriage was declared null and void. S2 died and D was brought
up by her grandmother A. Now A also dies. D could not inherit A’s property as children born of
annulled voidable marriages do not inherit the property of any relative of their parents. It may be
noted that children of a predeceased son/daughter will also be disqualified from inheriting the
property of the intestate if, before their birth, their parents had ceased to be Hindu by conversion.

In Ugre Gowda v. NageGowda, the Apex Court observed that an adoptive mother cannot be
deprived of her right to dispose of her separate property by transfer or will that she possesses if
she has adopted a son. Thus, such relief the widow or the adoptive mother of the suit property
which vested in her by succession on the death of her husband.

Entry (b)- Heir of husband

On the failure of heirs in entry (a), the property will be passed upon the heirs of the husband.
Since the property is deemed to be that of her husband, the inheritance will be determined by the
law regarding succession to the property of a Hindu male as per Section 8. Thus, the husband
shall be deemed to have died immediately after the female Hindu died as per Section 16. Heirs of
the husband do not mean ‘all persons who could have been the heirs of such husband’.

It may be noted that the date of the opening of the succession is not the date of the death of the
husband, but that of the deceased i.e. female Hindu (Seethalakshmi Ammal v. M. Iyengar AIR
1998 SC 1692). Thus, it has to be presumed that on the death of the intestate, it was her husband
who had died and the property also belonged to him. In such a situation, the ‘step-son of a
female’ who is a qualified heir can succeed as the ‘son of the husband’ who was born to him
from a previous marriage. Thus, where a Hindu woman, W, dies intestate, leaving behind her
step-son and her brother since brother is an heir in the later entry, the step-son will succeed to her
property.

The widow of a predeceased son, widow of the deceased brother of the husband, sister of the
husband, or even a remote cousin of the husband would fall in the category ‘heirs of the
husband’.

It is to be noted that the ‘heir of husband’ is considered ‘near in relation’ to a childless widow, in
comparison to her parents and brothers and sister which are placed in the later entry. Thus, a
woman’s blood relations are relegated to an inferior placement in comparison to the category of
‘heirs of husband’ (relations by marriage). No other succession law, including Muslim law, gives
statutory preference to the in-laws over a woman’s blood relatives. This is so when a Hindu male
dies, none of the wife’s relatives can ever inherit his property.

Entry (c)- Father and mother of the deceased female (proposita)

Father/Mother does not include a step-father/mother, but adoptive mother/father is included.


However, step-father/mother could succeed as ‘heir of mother’ and the latter as ‘heir of a
father’. 

Where the marriage of the parents was a void marriage or an annulled voidable marriage, the
parents inherit from such children. Even if the deceased female (proposita) was an illegitimate
daughter of the mother, a mother will inherit, however, a putative father will not inherit.

Entry (d)- Heir of the father

Since the property is deemed to be that of her father, the inheritance will be determined by the
law regarding ‘succession to the property of a Hindu male’ as per Section 8. Thus, the father
shall be deemed to have died immediately after the female Hindu died as per Section 16. Heirs of
the father do not mean ‘all persons who could have been the heirs of such father.’

The category will include brothers and sisters including half-blood brothers/sisters and their
descendants, grandparents and other natal relations.

Entry (e)- Heir of the mother

Since the property is deemed to be that of her father, the inheritance will be determined by the
law regarding ‘succession to the property of a Hindu female’ under Section 15 and Section 16.
Thus, the mother shall be deemed to have died immediately after the female Hindu died as per
Section 16. Heirs of the mother do not mean ‘all persons who could have been the heirs of such
mother.’ The category will include the uterine brother/sister and their descendants.

Property inherited from mother or father (Section 15(2)(a))


This section provides notwithstanding anything contained in Sub-section(1). Any property
inherited by a female Hindu from her father or mother shall descend, if there is no son or
daughter of the deceased present including the children of any predeceased son or daughter not
upon the heirs cited in subsection(1) in the order described but on the father’s heirs. Thus,
Section 15(2)(a) is an exception to Section 15(1). 

Section 15(2) governs only that property which was acquired by the intestate by ‘inheritance’ as
an heir and not received from parents through gift or will. It may be taken into consideration that
a gifted property is not equal to the inherited property. Any property gifted at the time of
marriage is her Stridhan and succession to it is governed by Section 15(1) (Meyappa v.
Kannappa AIR 1976 Mad. 184). Similarly. If she has converted the property she inherited from
her parents into some other property, succession will not be governed under Section 15 (2)
(Emana v. Gudiseva AIR 1976 A.P. 337).

Likewise, the inherited property should be available at the time of her death. If the identity of the
property is changed or it is substantially altered and improved or if it is substituted then Section
15(2) has no application. Thus, if she inherits property from father then sells it and out of sale
proceeds, purchases another property, this property again would be her general property and
Section Section 15(1) will apply as held in Veera Raghavamma v. G Subbarao (AIR 1976 A.P.
377).

If a Hindu female had inherited property from ‘father or mother’ not from the father’s or
mother’s side the heirs fall under the two categories: 

Category (1): Sons, daughters, sons and daughters of predeceased son or daughter

In the time of non-existence of any of the preferential heirs like sons, daughters, etc, the property
passes upon the heirs of the next category intestate’s father. In other words, the property
inherited by a female from her parents, in the absence of her children, will revert to her father’s
heirs. The ‘husband’ is excluded here. 

Thus, where a Hindu female died leaving behind her daughter from a previous marriage and the
second husband and property that she had inherited from her father, it was held that since the
deceased had inherited the property from her parent, her daughter alone will be entitled to
succeed and the husband here cannot succeed as said in case Radhika v. Anguram (1994) 5 SCC
761.

A ‘step-son’ is not an issue and cannot inherit the property of a woman that she inherited from
her parents as held in case Lachman Singh v. Kirpa Singh AIR 1987 SC 1616.

Category (2): Heirs of the father

Thus, the father shall be deemed to have died immediately after the female Hindu died under
Section 16. Here it seems to be a defect in the drafting of the Act. Even if a father is still alive,
his property will not go to him but to his heirs. The clause should be read, ‘upon the father and in
default of the father, upon his heirs’. 
There is another anomaly i.e, whether the property is inherited from the father or mother, in both
the cases, the devolution will be upon the ‘heirs of the father’. Thus, even if she inherits from her
mother, the ‘heirs of mother’ cannot succeed. However, if the intestate (female) dies survived by
her mother, she would count as an heir along with the other heirs of the father.

In a case, A dies leaving behind her husband H, her full brother B and her uterine sister S (her
mother having remarried after the death of her father). A had inherited property from her mother.
The property will not devolve upon H but upon B (heir of A’s father). S is not entitled to succeed
as she is not an heir of A’s father but A’s mother.

Property inherited from husband or father-in-law (Section


15(2)(b))
Section 15(2)(b) provides that the husband shall be deemed to have died immediately after the
female Hindu died. It may be noted that a woman inherits the property of her husband on his
demise, as his widow. She also inherits from her father-in-law as the widow of his predeceased
son (provided she does not remain before the date of the opening of the succession).

Here, if the female had been married more than once, the properties inherited by her from her
respective husbands and their fathers should go to heirs of respective husbands. However, if she
remarried after inheriting property from her deceased husband and died leaving behind issues
from her second husband, she has not died issueless and her children and second husband will
succeed to the property. But if she dies issueless, the second husband will not succeed and the
property will revert to the first husband’s heirs. Likewise, where a woman inherited property
from her second husband and died leaving behind a son from the first husband, a son would take
the property (Chintaram v. Rushibai, 2000 AIHC 1308 M.P.).

In a recent case, a woman died leaving behind a son and a daughter, born to her from the
husband whose property she had inherited. From her previous marriage, she already had a son.
The Gauhati High Court held that the son born of the previous marriage was not entitled to get
the property, as it was the property that was inherited by the woman from her second husband
and he was not the heir of that husband. The expression ‘son and daughter’ would mean the son
and daughter of that husband from whom or from whose father, she had inherited the property.
The court reasoned that if such property is allowed to be drifted away from the source through
which the deceased female had inherited the property, the object of Section 15(2) would be
defeated. The purpose of Section 15(2) is to ensure that the property left by a Hindu female does
not lose the real source from which the deceased female had inherited the property as held in
case Dhanistha Kalita v Ramakanta Kalita AIR 2001 Gau 92.

It is submitted that the expression that the legislature has used in Section 15(2)(b) is in absence
of ‘any son or daughter of the deceased’. The expression is without any qualification and the
words ‘any son or daughter’ means any son or daughter and not the son/daughters- legitimate,
illegitimate, etc. these are the only relations that are described concerning her and not regarding
her father/husband/mother. All children have equal rights over the property of their mother. 
It has been held that where the ‘heirs of husband’ are not present and a female Hindu dies
issueless, leaving behind property ‘inherited by husband/father-in-law’, the property would be
treated as the general property and devolve as per Section 15(1) if any of heirs (her brother’s
grandson, in the present case) is present. In other words, this would not be treated as a case of
‘failure of heirs’ and the property would not go to the government under the application of the
doctrine of escheat. The intention behind Section 15(2) was not to eliminate the other heirs
specified in Section 15(1) but to give an order of preference (State of Punjab v. Balwant Singh
AIR 1991 SC 2301). It was held that it is important to remember that a female Hindu being the
full owner of the property becomes a new heritage of descent. If she leaves behind any heir as
per sub-section(1) or sub-section(2) of Section 15, her property cannot be escheated. 

Coparcenary interest acquired by Female as per Section 15(1) and not by


Section 15(2)

After the 2005 Amendment to the Hindu Succession Act (1956), a daughter (married or
unmarried) has become a coparcener like a son with occasions of coparcenary ownership. As
noted earlier, a coparcenary interest is acquired by a daughter by birth and though it comes from
the family of her father it is not an interest that she has ‘inherited’ from her parents. under such a
situation, her heirs would be her husband, her children and children of predeceased children.
These heirs would succeed to her property whether she dies without seeking partition or she dies
after partition. 

Thus, in case of a female dying intestate, her interest as determined under Section 6(3) will be
succeeded to her heirs following Section 15(1). Section 15(2) cannot apply here because the
interest calculated under Section 6(3) is not a share which she inherits from her father.

Succession to a property by a Hindu female (Example)

A Hindu joint family consisting of Father(F), his Wife(W), his Son(S) having two children i.e,
grandchildren S1 and D1, his Daughter(D) having a daughter, ie.granddaughter D4 and a
predeceased Daughter D3 having a son(S2) and a daughter(D2). In the aforesaid example, the
succession to the property of predeceased daughter D3 survived by her husband(H) and son(S2)
and a daughter(D2) will be as follows:

D3’s share in the coparcenary property was 1/5th. This share of hers is ‘coparcenary property’
even against her son and daughter because Section 6(2) provides that any property to which a
female Hindu becomes entitled by Section 6(1) shall be held by her with the incidents of
coparcenary ownership. Thus, her interest in coparcenary property will be divided as per notional
partition between her and her son S2 and her daughter D2. Thus, D3, S2 and D2 each will get
1/15th.

This 1/15th will go by intestate succession to her heirs under Section 15(1), as provided in
Section 6(3) that ‘his interest in the property of a joint Hindu family governed by the Mitakshara,
shall devolve by testamentary or intestate succession and not by survivorship’. Here, a portion of
Section 6(1) which provides ‘any reference to a Hindu Mitakshara coparcener shall be deemed to
include a reference to a daughter of a coparcener’ becomes important. Thus, the expression ‘his’
applies to ‘her’ too. Therefore, this 1/15th is treated at par with her ‘separate property’ which
thus, her ‘absolute property’. According to Section 15(1), this 1/15th will be divided into three
parts equally between her husband H, her son S2 and her daughter D2, each getting 1/45th share.

The shares will be as follows:

F- ⅕

W- ⅕

S- ⅕

D- ⅕

D2- 1/15 + 1/45

S2- 1/15 + 1/45

H- 1/45 

Special rules for females governed by matrilineal system

The Marumakkatayam system practised among the Nairs of Kerala, the Aliyasantana observed
by the Bunts in Karnataka, and the Marumakkal Vazhi followed by the Pillai’s of Tamil Nadu
are some of the eminent matrilineal systems of inheriting property in India. Although, the Hindu
Succession Act (1956) applies to all Hindus, Section 17 of the Act makes some exceptions for
these practices.

Thus, when a woman who follows the matrilineal customs dies intestate, her ‘general property’
would first devolve upon the children and the mother and not the children as well as the husband.
Then it would devolve upon father and husband in the same category. ‘Heirs of the mother’ gain
precedence over the heirs of the husband, an order that is inverted in the case of other Hindus.

Case Laws

Om Prakash v. Radhacharan
In the Om Prakash v. Radhacharan case, A woman’s self-acquired property covered by Section
15(1) and not by Section 15(2).

In this case, a Hindu girl Narayani Devi, aged 15 years, became a widow within three months of
her marriage. She was driven out of her matrimonial home immediately after her husband’s
death. She never returned there and also her in-laws did not bother to inquire about her. She
came to her parent’s house and was educated by them. She then took a job. She died without
making a valid will 42 years later, leaving behind huge sums in various bank accounts besides
provident fund and substantial property. There is no doubt or dispute that the properties of the
deceased were ‘self-acquired’ ones and were not inherited from her parents. 

The deceased’s property was claimed by her mother and brother (appellants) on the one side and
by the heirs (brothers) of the husband (respondents) on the other side. The appellants affirmed
that in a case of this nature where the husband of the deceased or her in-laws had made no
contribution towards her education or had lent any support during her lifetime, Section 15(2)(a)
of the Hindu Succession Act should be held to be applicable. It was negatived by the Supreme
Court in the favour of her husband’s heirs on the ground that as per the provisions of the Hindu
Succession Act (1956), its is the heirs of the husband who have a legal right to inherit the
property of an issueless married Hindu woman and her parents of heirs of parents cannot inherit
in their presence. The Apex Court observed that Section 15(1) lays down the ordinary rules of
succession. Section 15(2) providing for an obstante clause, which however carves out an
exception that when the property is passed upon the deceased from her father or mother on her
deathbed without any children, that property will relate to her parent’s family and not to her
husband’s family under Section 15(2)(b).

The law is silent on the self-acquired property of a Hindu female. Section 15(1), only deals with
‘general property’, however apart from the exceptions specified in sub-section (2) and does not
make any distinction between a self-acquired property and the property which she inherited from
any other relation. The property which has been vested in the deceased absolutely or which is of
her own is referred to here. The ‘self-acquired property’ of a Hindu female would be her absolute
property and not the property which she has inherited from her parents. 

The basis of the inheritance of a female Hindu’s property who dies intestate would thus be the
source from which such a female Hindu came into possession of the property and the manner of
inheritance which would further decide the manner of devolution. In the case of ‘self-acquired
property’, Section 15(1) will apply and not Section 15(2). The Hindu Succession Act does not
put an embargo on a female to execute a will. Section 15(1) would apply only in a case where a
female Hindu dies intestate i.e., without making a will. In such a situation normal rules of
succession as provided for in the statute will apply.

The court further observed that It is now an ingrained principle of law that sentiments or
sympathy alone would not be a guiding force in determining the rights of the parties which are
otherwise clear and obvious under the Hindu Succession Act. This court cannot issue a direction
only on sympathy or sentiments. If the contention of the appellants is to be accepted, we will
have to interpret Section 15(1) in a manner which was not contemplated by the Parliament. The
Parliament has bestowed equality for married and unmarried Hindu women in the matter of
property. The golden rule of interpretation must be applied. 

The court finally held that only because a case appears to be hard would not lead us to invoke
different apprehensions of statutory provisions which are otherwise impermissible. In that view
of the matter, we believe that Section 15(1) of the Act would apply instead of Section 15(2).
Accordingly, the appeal was dismissed.

Bhagat Ram v. Teja Singh


In this Bhagat Ram v. Teja Singh case, Succession to property of a Female Hindu (originally
Inherited from her mother).

In this case, a female Hindu along with her sister inherited property from their mother on her
death. After inheriting the property one sister died issueless. The other sister took the property as
her ‘father’s heir’ under Section 15(2)(a) and agreed to sell the same to person A. The deceased
sister’s husband’s brother challenged the validity of this sale and claimed the property as an heir
under Section 15(1)(b).

The question emerged whether the said property would pass on to the legal heirs of the father
(her sister) or on to the heirs of predeceased husband (husband’s brother). The court held that
under Section 15(1)(b) of the Hindu Succession Act, if a female Hindu dies without making the
will and issueless, the devolution of the property has to be based on the source from which
property was inherited by females. If the property held by a female was inherited from her father
or mother in nonexistence of any children of the deceased and it would only devolve upon the
heirs of the father. And in this case, her sister who was the only legal heir of the father of the
deceased certainly inherited the property because the intent of the legislature is clear that the
property if belonged to the parents of the deceased female originally should go to the father’s
legal heirs. Thus, a sale of such property by the sister of the female Hindu is valid.

The learned counsel for the respondents i.e., heirs of the husband contended that the deceased
female acquired the property from her mother who died. And at that time the deceased female
had only limited rights over this property but by Section 14(1) of the Hindu Succession Act, she
became the full owner of the property. Therefore, on her death, the property kept by her would
be inherited by her legal heirs as per the rules mentioned in Section 15(1). He also confronted
that Section 15 of the Hindu Succession Act will have only eventual operation according to the
words used in the Section15(2)(a) that is ‘any property inherited by a female Hindu is to be
considered as property inherited by her after the commencement of the Act.

The court, however, observed that it is not necessary that such inheritance should have been after
the commencement of the Act. The intent of the legislature is clear that the property if belonged
to the parents of the deceased female originally should go to the father’s legal heirs. So also
under Section 15(2)(b), the property inherited by a female Hindu from her husband or her father-
in-law, shall also devolve upon the heirs of the husband under similar circumstances. It is the
source from which the property was inherited by the female, which is more essential for
devolution of her property. We do not think the fact that a female Hindu originally had limited
rights and later acquired the full right in any way would turn the rules of succession given in
Section 15(2). 

The source is always important from which the female inherits the property and which would
further control the situation. Otherwise, persons who are not even slightly related to the person
who held the property originally would acquire rights to inherit that property. That would defeat
the intent and purpose of Section 15(2), which gives a special pattern of succession. Properties
inherited by her father revert to the family of the father in the absence of issue. Property inherited
from her husband or father-in-law reverts to heirs of the husband in the absence of issue
similarly. Such a provision would restrict the properties passing into the hands of persons to
whom justice would demand not to pass. 

The current position In law for self-acquired property Of Hindu female


dying Intestate 

The Succession Act and the amendment


The Hindu Succession Act 1956, also applies to Jains, Buddhists and Sikhs, which have provided
women of India with conditional inheritance rights of the property. Dayabhaga and Mitakshara
are the two schools under which patrilineal Hindu Law is divided across India. According to
Mitakshara school, there is a clear distinction made between a man’s personal property and
property belonging to ancestors. He has full discretion and right over his personal property to
will away and automatically has his sons acting as coparceners under the Succession Act.
Daughters only had the rights to claim in the personal property of their father’s and in the
father’s share of the ancestral property. Women were not given the status of coparceners.
Women could only ask for a right to sustenance from a joint Hindu family in India, and nothing
more. 

There was an amendment in 2005 which tried correcting this but struggled with confusions over
it due to the conflicting judgements of the court. There was a lack of clarity in the judgements
provided. Bombay High Court ruled that benefits of the new provisions do not extend to the
daughters born after the law was amended. Later in the other case, High Courts in Delhi,
Karnataka and Orissa passed a contradictory ruling that the amendment will be applied to the
daughters alive in 2005. The Supreme Court of India in 2015 also said that the daughter would
not get property rights if the father died before the amendment came into force. So the very latest
judgment passed clarifies that the law is applicable to all the disputes regarding property filed
before 2005 and pending when the law was enacted. The children of the daughter will be the
coparceners if the daughter had died before 2005. 

Women born before 1956 gets Act’s benefits

The Supreme Court in a case came out with the recent judgement challenging the women’s right
to inherit property on two grounds. The Man named Amar claimed that her aunt was born before
1956, so consequently, she was not eligible for rights that had been provided by the Succession
Act, nor was the amendment of 2005 was applicable on her. The lower court and the high court
upheld the opinion that: However, the Supreme Court cited previous judgements to rule that two
women were eligible to inherit the property as per the Act as well as the amendment of 2005 as it
stood before the Act.
Inheritance of Agricultural Land

The inheritance of agricultural land is another issue which has inclined in the favour of men.
Succession of agricultural land is under the governance of state laws and in many cases
daughters are not provided with the inheritance rights of the property under a reason that it will
result in the fragmentation of the holdings. Across India, only 13% of farmland is owned by
women according to the census data. This is because of the increasing migration of men to cities
and agricultural land is left to women. Not having ownership of the land means that they can not
have access to institutional credits or take advantage of government schemes and offers of
subsidised seeds, fertilisers etc.  

Through Section 4(2), the Succession Act 1956 kept agricultural land out of its extent. In 2014,
while the Section was repealed by 2005 amendment, the Allahabad High Court ruled that the
agricultural land lies under absolute governance of the State Legislature and Parliament has no
land power to enact any law for the same. 

The Supreme Court in its latest judgement does not mention agricultural land. It has also been
found in the reports that despite existing laws, women are often made to sign away their
inheritance rights of property under family pressure. The latest judgement hopefully will result in
providing a boost to women’s fight for equality.

On 2 February, the Supreme Court ruled that under the Hindu Succession Act, daughters were
legally entitled to hold the equal share of the property in her ancestral property, irrespective of
the year they were born in. It was a judgement that attempted to mend decades of imbalance in
Hindu inheritance rights over the property. In this case, a man had contended that his aunt has no
legal entitlement to rights in his grandfather’s property. A bench of Justice AK Sikri and Ashok
Bhushan held that the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 holds that a daughter would be a coparcener
(holding an equal share in the undivided property) in the family’s ancestral property since birth,
having the same rights and liabilities as of a son as amended in 2005 amendment.

Conclusion

Should a Hindu Female make a will? We still remain under the impression that it is always too
early to make a will and the right time would be when old age sets in due to our conditioning. So,
according to me, based on the current position in law, it is preferable that a Hindu female should
protect her assets i.e. property, and after her death pass it on to the person she desires. Otherwise,
in the event of intestacy, the law will take its own course and Hindu female’s property will end
up in the possession of a person whom she never had the intention to transfer it to or even had
any remote relations during her lifetime, as evident from the case of Smt. Narayani Devi. Thus,
the answer to the question that ‘should I make a Will?’ will be ‘Yes’.

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