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Musammat Aziz-Un-Nissa Bibi vs Mr. O.M. Chiene, Official ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|14 May, 1920

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT
1. This is an appeal in an insolvency matter. The insolvents are father and son, Muhammad Murtaza and Muhammad Khalil. It is sufficient to say that they were declared insolvents in separate proceedings. Muhammad Murtaza's wife, Hajira Bibi, was possessed of some immoveable property. She died on the 1st of November 1918. The Receiver has taken possession, we are told, of certain shares in Mauza Serai Abdul Malik as having devolved upon the two insolvents by inheritance from this lady. There were one or two other properties of lesser consequence involved when the case was heard in the Court below, but, practically, we are concerned only with the shares in the village above referred to. The Receiver's action is challenged by Musammat Aziz-un-nissa Bibi, the daughter of Musammat Hajira Bibi, and, therefore, the daughter of one insolvent and sister of the other, She says that the whole of the properties in question have passed to her under a Will executed by her mother on the 27th of October 1918, that is to say, four days before her death. She further claims that, in any case, the whole of Mussammat Hajira Bibi's share in Mahal Bisheshar Dayal, one of the two mahals in question in the said village, is subject to a mortgage charge of Rs. 2,650 in her favour. The learned District Judge has found that there is no valid mortgage in favour of the objector. He has found that the deed of October the 27th, 1918, is proved but that it is on its terms a deed of gift inter vivos and not a Will; if a deed of gift, it is invalid for want of registration and delivery of possession. The findings of the District Judge on each of these points are challenged before us in appeal. The document is curiously drafted and it is not altogether easy to decide the meaning which ought to be attached to its various parts, As regards the property in Mahal Bisheshar Dayal we are clearly of opinion that the District Judge was right. The document recites the facts of a mortgage in favour of Musammat Aziz-un-nissa Bibi and purports to convey by gift the equity of redemption. It would undoubtedly operate, if at all, as a conveyance by way of gift, taking effect immediately, of whatever interest Musammat Jajira Bibi possessed in this mahal. We think, therefore, that nothing passed to Musammat Aziz-un-nissa Bibi in virtue of this part of the document and whatever rights her mother possessed in this mahal on the 1st of November 1918 have devolved upon her heirs, that is to say, one-fourth on her husband, Muhammad Murtaza, one-half on her son, Muhammad Khalil, and one-fourth on her daughter, the appellant, Aziz-un-nissa Bibi. With regard to Musammat Hajira Bibi's interests in the other mahal in the same village, we think we must interpret the document as testamentary in its character. Unless, therefore, it can be challenged on some other ground it would operate to pass this property to the legatee from the date of the testator's death. It has been contended before us that, considered as a testamentary disposition, the document is invalid, being a bequest to an heir. This point has been gone into on evidence and we are satisfied that it has been rightly found that the remaining heirs both consented beforehand to the making of the Will in these terms, and gave an effective consent after the death of the testatrix.
2. An ingenious argument has been pressed upon us on behalf of the respondent to the effect that the only consent which would make the bequest valid was the consent given after the death of the testatrix, and, inas much as the bequest was invalid until that consent was given, the provisions of Section 16, Clause 4, of the Insolvency Act came into operation and their shares under the Muhammadan Law vested in the two respondents, and therefore, in the Receiver, on the death of the widow, before the insolvents could possibly have validated the bequest by their consent. We think this argument ought not to prevail. It is an established principle of Muhammadan Law that, once the consent of the heirs has been signified the legatee takes from the testator, and that the consent does not operate as a transfer by the heirs of a right which has, in the meantime, vested in them. There may be, perhaps, some conflict between this principle of Muhammadan Law and the strict wording of Section 16(4) of the Insolvency Act, but we think the principle of Muhammadan Law ought to be applied and that, in view of the consent signified by the heirs, we must take it that the property in the other mahal passed to Mutammat Aziz-un-nissa Bibi as legatee of her mother on the death of that lady. There remains the question of the mortgage on the share in Mahal Bisheshar Dayal. We think it sufficient to say that the learned District Judge has fully discussed the very curious and involved proceedings leading up to the execution of the said mortgage-deed, and that, in our opinion, he has rightly inferred, on the evidence as a whole, that there was no genuine mortgage, that no consideration passed and that the whole translation was never intended to be anything but a fictitious transfer, made probably by way of precaution in view of the insolvency of the male heirs. The result of this is that, we partly allow and partly dismiss the appeal. We think the appellant is right in saying that it ought to be made quite clear that she takes her own share under the Muhammadan Law in the property in both Mahals of Sarai Abdul Malik. The learned District Judge probably intended this, but the point should be put beyond doubt. Our order is that the Receiver is entitled to take free of any mortgage charge one-half of the property in Mahal Bisheshar Dayal as that of the insolvent, Muhammad Khalil, and another one-fourth as that of the insolvent Mohammad Murtaza Husain, but that the share in the other mahal mast be released from the claim of the Receiver and left to Musammat Aziz-un-nissa Bibi as legatee under the Will. The appeal is therefore, partly decreed and partly dismissed. The parties should bear their own costs in this Court. The Receiver will be entitled to take his costs out of the estate.
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Title

Musammat Aziz-Un-Nissa Bibi vs Mr. O.M. Chiene, Official ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
14 May, 1920
Judges
  • Piggott
  • Walsh