Court rules maintenance from ancestral estate to petitioner as member of Hindu undivided family. The court determined that the maintenance received by the petitioner from the ancestral impartible estate constituted a sum received as a member of a ...
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Court rules maintenance from ancestral estate to petitioner as member of Hindu undivided family.
The court determined that the maintenance received by the petitioner from the ancestral impartible estate constituted a sum received as a member of a Hindu undivided family under Section 14 of the Act. Emphasizing the right to maintenance as an incident of joint family property, the court rejected the argument that the absence of coparcenary negated the existence of an undivided family. Citing previous cases and aligning with a similar decision by the Allahabad High Court, the petitioner was deemed to have received the maintenance as a member of the undivided Hindu family. The Chief Justice and Justice Sundaram Chetty concurred, awarding costs and the return of a deposit to the petitioner.
Issues: Interpretation of Section 14 of the Act regarding maintenance received by a member of a Hindu undivided family from an ancestral impartible estate.
Analysis: 1. The case involved a dispute regarding whether the maintenance received by the petitioner, as a brother of the late Rajah of Kurupam, from the ancestral impartible estate of Kurupam constitutes a sum received by him as a member of a Hindu undivided family under Section 14 of the Act. 2. The judgment referred to a decision by the Allahabad High Court on a similar issue involving another zemindar in the same district. The nature of an impartible estate and the right to maintenance in such estates were discussed, citing various precedents by the Privy Council. 3. The judgment highlighted the observations of Lord Davey and Lord Dunedin in previous cases, emphasizing that the right to maintenance is an incident of ordinary joint family property, not solely based on custom, especially for sons of zemindars in impartible estates. 4. The court rejected the argument that since there was no coparcenary, there was no undivided family, stating that members of an undivided family can exist even without coparcenary rights, such as female members or disqualified heirs. 5. The judgment concluded that the petitioner received the maintenance as a member of the undivided Hindu family, based on the principles discussed in previous cases and in alignment with the decision of the Allahabad High Court on a similar matter. 6. The Chief Justice and Justice Sundaram Chetty concurred with the decision, and the petitioner was awarded costs and the return of a deposit.
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