Principles of Hindu Law
A Hindu father or another managing member has the power to make a gift, within
reasonable limits, of ancestral immovable property for pious purposes. However,
such alienation must be an act inter vivos (between living persons) and not by
will. A member of a joint family cannot dispose of a portion of the property by
will, even for charitable purposes, regardless of how small that portion is
relative to the entire estate (as per Section 30 of the Hindu Succession Act,
1956).
In the case below, the Supreme Court examined this issue and held that a father
may make a gift of immovable property to a daughter, provided the gift is
reasonable in extent, given the total assets held by the family. The emphasis
here is on the gift being of reasonable extent.
If, based on the facts, it is found that the gift is unreasonable, the Supreme
Court considered the extended meaning given in numerous decisions to the
expression "pious purposes." In later cases, the Supreme Court observed, "We see
no reason to extend the scope of the words 'pious purposes' beyond what has
already been done in the two decisions of this Court," rejecting the argument
that a husband could make any such gift of ancestral property to his wife solely
out of affection under the guise of pious purposes.
The rationale behind certain restrictions on the disposition of coparcenary
properties is the protection of the interests of other members of the
coparcenary. When a gift is found to be invalid due to its impermissibility
under Hindu law, the consent of other coparceners cannot validate it. A gift to
a daughter, if challenged as invalid or unreasonable, must be proven by the
father to be both reasonable and bona fide.
The High Court of Madras has held that a father has no authority to gift
ancestral immovable property to his wife if it would prejudice his minor sons.
However, the same court and the High Court of Orissa have ruled that he may gift
a small portion of ancestral immovable property to his daughter at or after her
marriage, provided the gift is reasonable and particularly if she is in poor
circumstances.
In a case from Allahabad, the court declined to uphold a father's
gift of a share in a village to his daughter's father-in-law, even though it was
given as part of the daughter's marriage settlement. Similarly, a gift to a
stranger is equally invalid, and other family members, while in possession, need
not sue to annul it. A father has no power to gift even his undivided interest
in joint family property to his concubine, and such a gift would not be
validated by the subsequent division of the family. A son who is a coparcener
also cannot gift family property to his mother.
References:
- Puramma v. Chikkarangappa, AIR 1989 Kant 63 (gift by father's arishina kumkum not upheld).
- Kamla Devi v. Bachulal Gupta, AIR 1957 SC 434 (see ยง 181B, p. 235).
- Perunalakkal v. Kummaresan, AIR 1967 SC 569.
- Thimmaiah v. Ningamma, AIR 2000 SC 3529 (case involving a gift to a daughter).
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