Inheritance of property, Hindu

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In a written statement, the mother pleaded the property was gifted to her by her husband as she had no independent source of income. Accordingly, the application for interim injunction was rejected by the trial court. HC, in its judgment dated Feb 15, held that such property prima facie becomes the property of the joint Hindu family.
 

In a written statement, the mother pleaded the property was gifted to her by her husband as she had no independent source of income. Accordingly, the application for interim injunction was rejected by the trial court. HC, in its judgment dated Feb 15, held that such property prima facie becomes the property of the joint Hindu family.
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=Widows=
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==‘No absolute right of Hindu widows to husband’s assets’==
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[https://epaper.indiatimes.com/article-share?article=26_04_2024_204_002_cap_TOI  Abhinav Garg, April 26, 2024: ''The Times of India'']
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New Delhi:Delhi High Court has held that a Hindu woman without any income has rights to enjoy the self-acquired property of a dead husband during her lifetime.
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However, she doesn’t have absolute rights to sell or transfer the property when there are competing claims by other legal heirs, including children, clarified the court in a recent order.
The court was hearing a matter where the husband (who died before the wife) made a detailed Will giving right to his wife to enjoy the property till her death and further laid down how the asset will devolve.
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“In the case of Hindu women, who may not have their own income, receiving a life estate given to them by their husbands who may predecease them is an essential safeguard for their financial security during their lifetime.
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Such security is essential to ensure that the woman is not dependent on her children, after the demise of the husband. Under such circumstances, the wife has complete rights to enjoy the property during her lifetime. She can also enjoy the income from the said property throughout her life. However, it cannot be held that the entire property should be construed as maintenance giving the wife absolute rights over the property, after the death of her husband,” noted Justice Prathiba M Singh.

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The court was hearing a case stemming from a property dispute where the civil court concluded that since there was a Will by the husband before his death, the wife became absolute owner of his property since she lived there for 23 years.
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But the verdict was challenged with multiple claims over the property by the dead man’s six children and a granddaughter. One party so- ught rights over the property as envisaged in the Will by the dead man while the other side argued that since mother had absolute ownership, fresh partition of property must devolve from that.

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“The Will categorically states that the wife has no right to sell, alienate, or transfer the subject property. Given this position, to assert that upon the death of her husband she became the absolute owner of the subject property and could have sold or alienated the property would contradict the clear intent expressed in the Will as also the intention of the deceased mother clearly expressed through her conduct that she did not execute a Will or sell the property during her lifetime,” the court observed.
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The court underlined that the wife did not ‘possess’ any rights in the property prior to her husband’s death and acquired them solely under the Will.
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[[Category:Economy-Industry-Resources|I
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INHERITANCE OF PROPERTY, HINDU]]
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[[Category:India|I
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INHERITANCE OF PROPERTY, HINDU]]
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[[Category:Religion|I
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INHERITANCE OF PROPERTY, HINDU]]

Latest revision as of 17:37, 4 May 2024

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Contents

[edit] Assets

[edit] Assets purchased in wife’s name are family property

Rajesh Kumar Pandey, February 24, 2024: The Times of India

Assets bought by man in wife’s name is family property: HC

Prayagraj : Allahabad HC has held that property purchased by a husband in the name of his wife who is a homemaker and has no independent source of income “will be the property of the family”, reports Rajesh Kumar Pandey.
While dealing with a son’s claim for declaration of coownership of his deceased father’s property, Justice Arun Kumar Singh Deshwal held it would be treated as family property “because in the common course of natural events, a Hindu husband purchases a property in the name of his wife… for the benefit of family”. Court observed that unless it was otherwise proved the property was purchased using income earned by the wife, it is deemed to have been purchased by the husband using his own income.


Appellant Saurabh Gupta had filed a civil suit seeking a declaration that he is the cosharer of a fourth of the property purchased by his father. He contended that since the property was purchased by his deceased father, he was a co-sharer in the same along with his mother, who is the defendant in the suit and respondent in the present appeal before HC. Since property was purchased in the name of his mother, i.e. wife of the deceased father, the appellant filed an application seeking an injunction against its transfer to a third party.


In a written statement, the mother pleaded the property was gifted to her by her husband as she had no independent source of income. Accordingly, the application for interim injunction was rejected by the trial court. HC, in its judgment dated Feb 15, held that such property prima facie becomes the property of the joint Hindu family.

[edit] Widows

[edit] ‘No absolute right of Hindu widows to husband’s assets’

Abhinav Garg, April 26, 2024: The Times of India


New Delhi:Delhi High Court has held that a Hindu woman without any income has rights to enjoy the self-acquired property of a dead husband during her lifetime.


However, she doesn’t have absolute rights to sell or transfer the property when there are competing claims by other legal heirs, including children, clarified the court in a recent order.
The court was hearing a matter where the husband (who died before the wife) made a detailed Will giving right to his wife to enjoy the property till her death and further laid down how the asset will devolve.


“In the case of Hindu women, who may not have their own income, receiving a life estate given to them by their husbands who may predecease them is an essential safeguard for their financial security during their lifetime.


Such security is essential to ensure that the woman is not dependent on her children, after the demise of the husband. Under such circumstances, the wife has complete rights to enjoy the property during her lifetime. She can also enjoy the income from the said property throughout her life. However, it cannot be held that the entire property should be construed as maintenance giving the wife absolute rights over the property, after the death of her husband,” noted Justice Prathiba M Singh.


The court was hearing a case stemming from a property dispute where the civil court concluded that since there was a Will by the husband before his death, the wife became absolute owner of his property since she lived there for 23 years.


But the verdict was challenged with multiple claims over the property by the dead man’s six children and a granddaughter. One party so- ught rights over the property as envisaged in the Will by the dead man while the other side argued that since mother had absolute ownership, fresh partition of property must devolve from that.


“The Will categorically states that the wife has no right to sell, alienate, or transfer the subject property. Given this position, to assert that upon the death of her husband she became the absolute owner of the subject property and could have sold or alienated the property would contradict the clear intent expressed in the Will as also the intention of the deceased mother clearly expressed through her conduct that she did not execute a Will or sell the property during her lifetime,” the court observed.


The court underlined that the wife did not ‘possess’ any rights in the property prior to her husband’s death and acquired them solely under the Will.

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