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advocatemmmohan :23 june 2013
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Hindu Law-Gift of ancestral property by the father in favour of his daughters through registered settlement deed-Father later claiming that the settlement deed got executed by misrepresentation and fraud-Plea by father that his signature was obtained as a witness to a sale deed and not for execution of settlement deed and that he has no capacity to gift to his daughters the Joint family property-Suit by daughters for permanent injunction for restraining the father from interfering with peaceful possession-Trial Court dismissed the suit-
Confirmed by First Appellate Court and High Court Held, on facts and evidence, the gift was not vitiated by fraud and misrepresentation-Further, father has capacity to gift ancestral property to daughters to a reasonable extent.
The respondent, by a registered settlement deed, settled the suit property to his appellant-daughters out of natural love and affection for them. After 5 years, the respondent asked the appellants to vacate the property and tried to trespass into the property.
The appellants filed a suit for permanent injunction before trial court for restraining the respondent and his associates from interfering with the appellant’s peaceful possession and enjoyment of the suit property.
The respond-ent resisted the suit contending that the suit property was an ancestral property; that settlement deed was not executed in favour of the respondents; that the appellants misrepresented the respondent taking advantage of his addiction to liquor for signing the sale deed of the property purchased by the appellants as an attesting witness and instead got the settlement deed signed.
The trial court dismissed the suit of the appellants holding that the settlement deed was got executed by misrepresentation and that the respondent had no power to make a gift of a part of his ancestral properties in favour of his daughters.
This was confirmed by the first appellate court and the High Court. In appeal, the appellants contended that the finding of fact by the lower courts regarding execution of settlement deed is vitiated due to misreading of the statement of one of the attesting witnesses: that the respondent, being the karta of the Joint Hindu family had the authority to make a gift of ancestral immoveable property to a reasonable extent to his daughters.
The respondent contended that he had no authority to gift the only ancestral property possessed by the family in favour of his daughters.
Citation: 2004 AIR 1284,2003(6 )Suppl.SCR605 ,2004(1 )SCC295 ,2003(10 )SCALE600 ,2003(10 )JT289= Allowing the appeal, the Court HELD : 1.1. Finding recorded by the trial court clearly shows that the court misread and misconstrued the testimony of the attesting witness PW 2. In his deposition, PW 2 has clearly stated that he was invited by the respondent to be a witness.
He has nowhere stated that the respondent was taken for affixing signatures as witness. If respond-ent was to be a witness, then there was no need to ask PW2 and other witness to accompany the respondent or for them to sign the document. PW 2 also deposed that the respondent affixed his signatures on the settlement deed (Ex Al) after reading the same, that he has signed Exhibit Al as a witness and that he knew the respondent.
Suggestion put to him that signatures of the respondent on Exhibit Al were obtained by threat was denied. The trial court did not refer to this part of testimony of PW 2 at all. In the cross- examination, PW 2 has stated that the fact that the respondent had invited him for signing as a witness has been read to him as if PW 2 had stated that the respondent was taken for affixing signatures as a witness to some documents on the date when the deed of settlement Exhibit Al was executed. This is a clear misreading of the testimony of PW 2.
The trial court also failed to note that the evidence of respondent lacked total credibility especially in the light of his conduct in denying his signature on the settlement deed, vakalatnama as well as on the summons served on him. Projection made by the respondent in his testimony that the appellants taking advantage of the fact that he was a drunkard got the settlement deed signed fraudulently cannot be accepted. Respondent took no steps to get the settlement deed cancelled though, the appellants had been living in the house for five years after the execution of the settlement deed. In his statement he does not say that he did not know about the execution of the settlement deed.
Plea taken by him that he was taken to the Sub-Registrar’s office to be a witness to a sale deed by his son-in-law cannot be accepted as it has not been proved on record that the respondent’s son-in-law had in fact purchased any house site. Findings recorded by the trial court and upheld by the First appellate court and the High Court based on misreading of evidence are liable to be set aside.
The findings recorded on misreading of evidence being perverse cannot be sustained by law. [612-E-H; 613-A-D] 2.1. A father can make a gift of ancestral immoveable property within reasonable limits, keeping in view, the total extent of the property held by the family in favour of his, daughter at the time of her marriage or even long after her marriage. [617-E-F] 2.2. Question as to whether a particular gift is within reasonable limits or not has to be judged according to the status of the family at the time of making a gift, the extent of the immoveable property owned by the family and the extent of property gifted. No hard and fast rule prescribing quantitative limits of such a gift can be laid down.
The answer to such a question would vary from family to family. The question of reasonableness or otherwise of the gift made has to be assessed vis-a-vis the total value of the property held by the family. Simply because the gifted property is a house, it cannot be held that the gift made was not within the reasonable limits. It is basically a question of fact. If on facts, it is found that the gift was not within reasonable limits, such a gift would not be upheld. It was for the respondent to plead and prove that the gift made by the father was excessive and unreasonable keeping in view the total holding of the family. In the absence of any pleadings or proof on these points, it cannot be held that the gift made in this case was not within the reasonable limits of the property held by the family.
The respondent has failed to plead and prove that the gift made was to unreasonable extent keeping in view, the total holding of the family. The first appellate court and the High Court thus erred in non-suiting the appellants on this account. [617-G-H; 618-A-E] 2.3. The respondent had the capacity to make a gift to a reasonable extent of ancestral immoveable property in favour of his daughters. The gift was not vitiated by fraud of misrepresentation.
The appellants are held to be the absolute owners or the suit property and the respondent is injuncted from interfering with the peaceful possession and enjoyment of the suit property by the appellant perpetually.
[618-F-G] Kamala Devi v. Bachulal Gupta, [1957] SCR 452; Guramma Bhratar Chanbasappa Deshmukh AND ANOTHER v. Malappa, [1964] 4 SCR 497 and Ammathayee Ammal AND ANOTHER v. Kumaresan AND Ors., [1967] 1 SCR 353, referred to. Anivillah Sundararamaya v. Cherla Seethamma AND Ors., (1911) 21 MLJ 695; Pugalila Vettorammal AND ANOTHER v. Vettor Goundan, (1912) MLJ 321; Devalaktuni Sithamahalakshmamma AND Ors. v. Pamulpati Kotayya AND Ors., AIR (1936) Madras 825; Karuppa Gounder AND Ors. v. Palaniammal AND Ors., (1963) 1 MLJ 86; The Commissioner of Gift Tax v. Tej Nath, (1972) PLR (74) 1 and Tara Sabuani v. Raghunath, AIR (1963) Orissa 59, referred to. CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 16757 of 1996.
Full text Of Judgement :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7 CASE NO.:Appeal (civil) 16757 of 1996PETITIONER:R. Kuppayee & Anr.RESPONDENT:Raja GounderDATE OF JUDGMENT: 10/12/2003BENCH:R.C. Lahoti & Ashok Bhan.JUDGMENT:J U D G M E N TBHAN, J.Aggrieved by the judgment and decree passed by the courtsbelow in dismissing the suit filed by the plaintiff-appellants (hereinafterreferred to as the “appellants”), the appellants have come up in this appeal.Shortly stated the facts are:The appellants are the daughters of the defendant-respondent(hereinafter referred to as the “respondent”). By a registered settlementdeed, Exhibit A-1 dated 29th of August, 1985, the respondent hereinabovesettled an extent of 12 cents of land comprised in S.No.113/2, ThathagapattiVillage, Salem District in favour of the appellants. As per recitals in thesettlement deed, the settlement was made by the respondent out of naturallove and affection for the appellants and the possession of the property washanded over to them on the day the settlement deed was executed. Theschedule of settlement deed shows that the total extent of the propertyowned by the family was 3.16 acres. The gift was made of 12 cents alongwith Mangalore tiled house standing on the gifted land. It was also stated inthe settlement deed that in future neither the respondent nor any other maleor female heirs would have a right over the settled property.After nearly 5 years, on 22nd April, 1990, respondent and hisassociates asked the appellants to vacate the property and tried to trespassinto the property. Because of the attempt made by the respondent to trespassinto the property, the appellants filed the Original Suit No.451 of 1990 in theCourt of District Munsif, Salem seeking relief of restraining the respondentand his associates from interfering with the appellant’s peaceful possessionand enjoyment of the suit property in any way by way of a permanentinjunction, or, for grant of relief deemed fit in the circumstances of the case.Respondent resisted the suit and in the written statement filed by him, hetook the stand that he had not executed any settlement deed. That his son-inlaw i.e., husband of appellant No.1 had purchased a house site and therespondent was taken to the Registrar’s office to witness the sale deed. Thathe was used to taking liquor and taking advantage of his addiction to liquorthe appellants and their respective husbands fraudulently bymisrepresentation instead got the sale deed executed from him. The propertyin dispute being Joint Hindu Family property consisting of himself and hisson could not be gifted under any circumstances.In support of their respective pleas, the parties led theirevidences. The appellant No.1 stepped into the witness box as PW-1. Sheadmitted that the property was ancestral. That her father had settled theproperty on her and her sister of his own will out of nature love and affection http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7for them. PW-2, the attesting witness to Exhibit A-1 stated that he knew therespondent. While he was standing on the road and talking to some persons,he was called by the respondent to witness the document. He went to SubRegistrar’s office along with the respondent. Respondent put his signatureson Exhibit A-1 after reading the same. That he (himself) and Govindawamysigned Exhibit A-1 as witnesses. Govindawamy has died. In the crossexamination he stated that he did not know the contents of the document,Exhibit A-1. He showed his ignorance as to when, where or in whose namethe stamp papers were purchased. He denied having knowledge of the factas to whether the respondent was in the habit of drinking liquor. Respondentin order to prove his case stepped in the witness box as DW-1. He stated thatthe property was a Joint Hindu Family property as the same had beenpurchased with the sale proceeds of the ancestral property. That his son-inlaw who was working in TVS had purchased some property and he wastaken by his son-in-law to sign as a witness. He denied having executed thesettlement deed in favour of the appellants. He denied that he knew PW-2.It was stated that the possession of the appellants was permissive as theywere allowed to reside in the house to enable them to send their children tothe school. He denied his signatures on the settlement deed, on the’vakalatnama’ given by him to his counsel as well as on the summons sent tohim by the court. It was denied that he knew English. It was also stated byhim that his signatures were obtained fraudulently on the pretext of signingas a witness on the document by which his son-in-law had purchased a housesite. That the total extent of the family holding was 3.16 acres of land. Headmitted that his son was residing separately for the last 3 to 4 years butdenied that he was retracting from the settlement deed on the advise of hisson. That he was in the habit of drinking.No other evidence was led by any of the parties.The trial court believed the evidence of the respondent. It washeld that the respondent was taken to the Sub-Registrar’s office to witness adocument whereas a deed of settlement was got executed from him.Testimony of PW-2, the attesting witness was discarded. It was held that thedeposition of PW-2 in fact supported the case put forth by the respondent tothe effect that the respondent was taken to the Sub-Registrar’s office to signas a witness. The trial court further held that since the property in disputewas ancestral in nature, the respondent had no power/authority to make a giftof a part of the ancestral property in favour of his daughters. The suit wasdismissed. The order of the trial court was affirmed by the First AppellateCourt as well as by the High Court, aggrieved against which the presentappeal has been filed.It is submitted by the counsel for the appellant that the findingsrecorded by the courts below are wrong on facts as well as in law. Findingof fact regarding due execution of Exhibit A-1 is vitiated due to misreadingof the statement of the attesting witness, PW-2. That the father being theKarta had the authority to make a gift of ancestral immovable property to areasonable extent out of the Joint Hindu Family property in favour of hisdaughters. That such authority of the father is recognised in old Hindu TextBooks as well as by the courts in recent times. Counsel appearing for therespondent has controverted the submissions made by the counsel for theappellants. It was argued that there was no misreading of evidence and thatthe finding recorded by the courts below on facts could not be interferedwith by this Court at this stage of the proceedings. The respondent had noauthority to make a gift of part of the ancestral immovable property and inany case he could not have gifted the only residential house possessed by thefamily.The two points which arise for consideration in this appeal are:(i) whether the judgment of the courts below are vitiated becauseof the misreading of the evidence of PW-2, the attesting witnessto the settlement deed;(ii) whether the gift/settlement made by the father in favour of hismarried daughters of a reasonable extent of immovable property http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7out of the Joint Hindu Family property is valid.The trial court believed the evidence of the respondent anddismissed the suit. For arriving at this conclusion the trial court held that ifthe respondent had the intention of executing a deed of settlement in respectof the suit property in favour of the appellants, then at least he would havetaken his son Ramasamy for affixing his signatures as a witness to the deed.Since it was not done the document Exhibit A-1 could not be relied on. Thestatement of PW-2 was construed to mean as if he had stated that therespondent was taken for affixing his signatures as a witness on the datewhen the settlement deed, Exhibit A-1 was executed. We have carefullyperused the statements made by PW-2 as well as DW-1 and in our view thetrial court misread and misconstrued the testimony of PW-2. In the courseof cross-examination PW-2 had stated as follows:-“Only the defendant invited me for signing as witness.On the way Govindasamy was also invited while he wasfound standing there050505.. While going towards theSub-Registrar’s office, the Defendant saw and invited meto sign as witness.”The trial court in his judgment has misconstrued the abovestatement and recorded the following finding:-“PW-2 had given evidence that the Defendant was takenfor affixing signature as witness on the date when thedeed of settlement exhibit A1 was executed.”The trial court also held that:-“If only the Defendant had executed the deed ofsettlement in respect of the suit property in favour of hisdaughters i.e. the Plaintiffs, he would have atleast takenhis son Ramasamy for affixing his signature as witness.This factor is also not in consonance with the true natureand bona fides of exhibit A1.”Finding recorded by the trial court clearly shows that the courtmisread and misconstrued the testimony of PW-2. PW-2 in his depositionhas clearly stated that he was invited by the respondent to be a witness. Hehas no where stated that defendant (respondent herein) was taken foraffixing signatures as a witness. If respondent was to be a witness then therewas no need to ask PW-2 and Govindasamy to accompany the respondent orfor them to sign the document. He also deposed that respondent affixed hissignatures on Exhibit A1 after reading the same. That he (himself) hassigned Exhibit A1 as a witness. That he knew the respondent. Suggestionput to him that signatures of the respondent on Exhibit A1 were obtained bythreat was denied. The trial court did not refer to this part of testimony ofPW-2 at all. The question put to him in the cross- examination which hasbeen reproduced above wherein PW-2 has stated that the respondent hadinvited him for signing as a witness has been read to him as if PW-2 hadstated that the respondent was taken for affixing signatures as a witness tosome documents on the date when the deed of settlement Exhibit A-1 wasexecuted. This is a clear misreading of the testimony of PW-2. The trialcourt also failed to note that the evidence of respondent as DW-1 lackedtotal credibility especially in the light of his conduct in denying his signatureon the settlement deed, vakalatnama as well as on the summons served onhim. Projection made by the respondent in his testimony that the appellantstaking advantage of the fact that he was a drunkard got the settlement deed,Exhibit A-1 signed fraudulently cannot be accepted. Respondent took nosteps to get the settlement deed cancelled though, the appellants had beenliving in the house for five years after the execution of the settlement deed.In his statement he does not say that he did not know about the execution of http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7the settlement deed. Plea taken by him that he was taken to the SubRegistrar’s office to be a witness to a sale deed by his son-in-law cannot beaccepted as it has not been proved on record that the respondent’s son-in-lawhad in fact purchased any house site. Findings recorded by the trial courtand upheld by the First Appellate Court and the High Court based onmisreading of evidence are liable to be set aside. The findings recorded onmisreading of evidence being perverse cannot be sustained in law.Coming to the second point, the trial court held that since theproperty was ancestral in nature, the respondent had no authority/power tomake a gift of a portion of the ancestral property in favour of his daughters.In appeal the First Appellate Court accepted that the father could give awaya small portion of the ancestral property to his daughters out of the totalholding of the family property but since in this case the total extent ofproperty owned by the family had not been proved it could not be held thatthe property gifted by the father was of a reasonable portion of the totalholding of the family. The High Court affirmed the finding recorded by theFirst Appellate Court.The High Court of Madras in a series of judgments has takenthe view that father could make a gift within reasonable limits of ancestralimmovable property to his daughter as a part of his moral obligation at thetime of her marriage or even thereafter.In Anivillah Sundararamaya vs. Cherla Seethamma andothers [1911 (21) MLJ 695], it was held that a small portion of theancestral immovable property could be given to the daughter at the time ofher marriage or thereafter and such a gift would be a valid gift. In this case8 acres of ancestral immovable property out of 200 acres of land possessedby the family were given in gift by the father to his daughter after hermarriage. Upholding the gift it was observed:-“P. Narayana Murthi for 1st respondent:- The present case isstronger than Kudutumma v. Narasimhacharyulu, as it is thefather that has given the property and not the brothers. A giftmade to the son-in-law belongs also to the daughter 26 videGhose’s Hindu Law, 2nd Edn., p.313, Footnote. There is a textof Vyasa to that effect. Se Ghose, p.389, for translation; videp.360 also vice versa. A gift to the daughter would belong tothe son-in-law. If it is proper to make gifts at the time ofmarriage it would be equally proper if made afterwards.Though the texts do not require gifts to be made to daughters atthe time of marriage, if made they are not invalid. ChuramonSahu v. Gopi Sahu referred to, where Mookerji J. approves ofKudutamma v. Narasimhacharyulu; Bachoo v. Mankuvarhai.The same view was taken by the Madras High Court in PugaliaVettorammal and another vs. Vettor Goundan, [1912 (22) MLJ 321]. Inthis case it was held that a father could make gift to a reasonable extent ofthe ancestral immovable property to his daughter. Gift made of 1/6th of thetotal holding of the ancestral property was held to be a valid. The same viewhas later been taken by the Madras High Court in DevalaktuniSithamahalakshmamma and others vs. Pamulpati Kotayya and others[AIR 1936 (Madras) 825] and Karuppa Gounder and others vs.Palaniammal and others [1963 (1) MLJ 86]. A Full Bench of Punjab &Haryana High Court in The Commissioner of Gift Tax vs. Tej Nath [1972PLR (74) 1] and the High Court of Orissa in Tara Sabuani vs. Raghunath[AIR 1963 Ori. 59] have also taken the same view.The powers of the father or the managing member of the joint Hindufamily vis-‘-vis coparcenary property have been summarised in paragraphs225, 226 and 258 of Mulla’s Hindu Law which reads:-“225. Although sons acquire by birth rights equal to those of afather in ancestral property both movable and immovable, the http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7father has the power of making within reasonable limits gifts ofancestral movable property without the consent of his sons forthe purpose of performing ’indispensable acts of duty, and forpurposes prescribed by texts of law, as gifts through affection,support of the family, relief from distress and so forth’.226. A Hindu father or other managing member has power tomake a gift within reasonable limits of ancestral immovableproperty for ’pious purposes’. However, the alienation must beby an act inter vivos and not by will. A member of a jointfamily cannot dispose of by will a portion of the property evenfor charitable purposes and even if the portion bears a smallproportion to the entire estate. However, now see section 30 ofthe Hindu Succession Act, 1956.258. (1) According to Mitakshara law as applied in all theStates, no coparcener can dispose of his undivided interest incoparcenary property by gift. Such transaction being voidaltogether, there is no estoppel or other kind of personal barwhich precludes the donor from asserting his right to recoverthe transferred property. He may, however, make a gift of hisinterest with the consent of the other coparceners.(2) As to disposition by will after the coming into operation ofthe Hindu Succession Act, 1956, see section 30 of the Act.”Combined reading of these paragraphs shows that the positionin Hindu law is that whereas the father has the power to gift ancestralmovables within reasonable limits, he has no such power with regard to theancestral immovable property or coparcenary property. He can, howevermake a gift within reasonable limits of ancestral immovable property for“pious purposes”. However, the alienation must be by an act inter vivos,and not by will. This Court has extended the rule in paragraph 226 and heldthat the father was competent to make a gift of immovable property to adaughter, if the gift is of reasonable extent having regard to the propertiesheld by the family.This Court considered the question of extended meaning givenin numerous decisions for “pious purposes” in Kamla Devi vs. BachulalGupta [ 1957 SCR 452]. In the said case a Hindu widow in fulfilment of anante-nuptial promise made on the occasion of the settlement of the terms ofmarriage of her daughter, executed a registered deed of gift in respect of 4houses allotted to her share in a partition decree, in favour of her daughter asher marriage dowry, after two years of her marriage. The partition decreehad given her the right to the income from property but she had no right topart with the corpus of the property to the prejudice of the reversioners. Herstep sons brought a suit for declaration that the deed of gift was void andinoperative and could not bind the reversioners. The trial court and the HighCourt dismissed the suit holding that the gift was not valid. This Courtaccepted the appeal and held that the gift made in favour of the daughter wasvalid in law and binding on the reversioners.This point was again examined in depth by this Court inGuramma Bhratar Chanbasappa Deshmukh and another vs. Malappa1964 (4) SCR 497 and it was held:-“The legal position may be summarized thus: The Hindu lawtexts conferred a right upon a daughter or a sister, as the casemay be, to have a share in the family property at the time ofpartition. That right was lost by efflux of time. But it becamecrystallized into a moral obligation. The father or hisrepresentative can make a valid gift, by way of reasonableprovision for the maintenance of the daughter, regard being hadto the financial and other relevant circumstances of the family.By custom or by convenience, such gifts are made at the time ofmarriage, but the right of the father or his representative to http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7make such a gift is not confined to the marriage occasion. It isa moral obligation and it continues to subsist till it isdischarged. Marriage is only a customary occasion for such agift. But the obligation can be discharged at any time, eitherduring the lifetime of the father or thereafter. It is not possibleto lay down a hard and fast rule, prescribing the quantitativelimits of such a gift as that would depend on the facts of eachcase and it can only be decided by Courts, regard being had tothe overall picture of the extent of the family estate, the numberof daughters to be provided for and other paramount chargesand other similar circumstances. If the father is within hisrights to make a gift of a reasonable extent of the familyproperty for the maintenance of a daughter, it cannot be saidthat the said gift must be made only by one document or only ata single point of time. The validity or the reasonableness of agift does not depend upon the plurality of documents but on thepower of the father to make a gift and the reasonableness of thegift so made. If once the power is granted and thereasonableness of the gift is not disputed, the fact that two giftdeeds were executed instead of one, cannot make the giftanytheless a valid one.” (Emphasis supplied)Extended meaning given to the words “pious purposes”enabling the father to make a gift of ancestral immovable propertywithin reasonable limits to a daughter has not been extended to thegifts made in favour of other female members of the family. Rather ithas been held that husband could not make any such gift of ancestralproperty to his wife out of affection on the principle of “piouspurposes”. Reference may be made to Ammathayee Ammal &Another vs. Kumaresan & Others [1967 (1) SCR 353]. It wasobserved ’we see no reason to extend the scope of words “piouspurposes” beyond what has already been done in the two decisions ofthis Court’ and rejected the contention that a husband could make anysuch gift of ancestral property to his wife out of affection on theprinciple of pious purposes.On the authority of the judgements referred to above it cansafely be held that a father can make a gift of ancestral immovable propertywithin reasonable limits, keeping in view, the total extent of the propertyheld by the family in favour of his daughter at the time of her marriage oreven long after her marriage.The only other point, which remains for consideration, is as towhether a gift made in favour of the appellants was within the reasonablelimits, keeping in view, the total holding of the family. The total propertyheld by the family was 3.16 acres. 12 cents would be approximately 1/26thshare of the total holding. The share of each daughter would come to 1/52ndor 1/26th share of the total holding of the family which cannot be held to beeither unreasonable or excessive under any circumstances. Question as towhether a particular gift is within reasonable limits or not has to be judgedaccording to the status of the family at the time of making a gift, the extentof the immovable property owned by the family and the extent of propertygifted. No hard and fast rule prescribing quantitative limits of such a giftcan be laid down. The answer to such a question would vary from family tofamily.This apart, the question of reasonableness or otherwise of the giftmade has to be assessed vis-‘-vis the total value of the property held by thefamily. Simply because the gifted property is a house, it cannot be held thatthe gift made was not within the reasonable limits. As stated earlier, itwould depend upon a number of factors such as the status of the family, thetotal value of the property held by the family and the value of the giftedproperty and so on. It is basically a question of fact. However, on facts, if itis found that the gift was not within reasonable limits, such a gift would not http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7be upheld. It was for the respondent to plead and prove that the gift made bythe father was excessive or unreasonable, keeping in view, the total holdingof the family. In the absence of any pleadings or proof on these points, itcannot be held that the gift made in this case was not within the reasonablelimits of the property held by the family. The respondent has failed to pleadand prove that the gift made was to unreasonable extent, keeping in view,the total holding of the family. The first appellate court and the High Court,thus, erred in non-suiting the appellants on this account.For the reasons stated above we accept the appeal, set aside thejudgments and the decrees passed by the courts below. It is held that therespondent had the capacity to make a gift to a reasonable extent of ancestralimmovable property in favour of his daughters. The gift was not vitiated byfraud or misrepresentation. The appellants are held to be the absoluteowners of the suit property and the respondent is injuncted from interferingwith the peaceful possession and enjoyment of the suit property by theappellant perpetually. Parties shall bear their own costs.
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