In the Supreme Court, Civil Appellate
Civil Appeal No. 6659 of 2011
Arunachala Gounder (deceased)
& his Legal Representatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Appellants
Versus
Ponnusamy & Others . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Respondents
Inheritance of ancestral/parental property has been a common cause for litigation, more so prior to the enactment of The Hindu Succession Act in 1956 [Act]. The Hon’ble Supreme Court pronounced its verdict in one such case that has been fought by two generations.
Prior to the Act, litigation on inheritance was governed by two main concepts of Hindu Law:
Background and Facts
Issues involved in the case
Defendants’ Arguments
Appellants’ Arguments
Analysis & Judgment
Previous Case References: Supreme Court referred to the following previous cases during this case:
Judgement
Based on the above analysis, Supreme Court set aside the Trial Court’s as well as High Court’s orders which it felt did not apply the laws correctly. Supreme Court ordered that Karuppaayeeammal’s property, which she inherited from her father and which she left intestate and without her own children, would pass on to her father’s legal heirs i.e. her deceased brother Ramasamy’s son and daughters, each getting 1/5th share. Supreme Court thus upheld the Appellants’ appeal.
This case highlights the remedies provided by the 1956 Act to the limitations that hitherto prevailed on the inheritance rights of females in parental/ancestral property.
For full text of the judgement:
https://api.sci.gov.in/supremecourt/2009/15692/15692_2009_37_1502_32676_Judgement_20-Jan-2022.pdf