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Issues: Whether the probate prepared by the Registry could validly contain the words referring to Annexures 'A' and 'B' and whether the affidavit of valuation with those annexures could form part of the probate.
Analysis: The petition for probate under Section 276 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 requires disclosure of the value of assets for court-fee purposes, but that valuation is governed by the Court-fees Act and is distinct from the probate itself. Section 289 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 mandates that probate be granted strictly in the form set out in Schedule VI, which does not contemplate insertion of asset schedules or valuation annexures. The probate operates over the whole estate under Section 273, while the executor's duty to account for assets is separately secured by the obligation to file inventory and valuation statements under Sections 317 and 318. The affidavit of valuation and its annexures therefore serve only the court-fee requirement and do not belong to the probate instrument.
Conclusion: The words referring to Annexures 'A' and 'B' were ordered to be deleted from the probate, and the affidavit of valuation was held not to form part of the probate.
Final Conclusion: The probate was directed to be corrected in conformity with the statutory form, leaving valuation matters to be dealt with separately under the court-fee and inventory provisions.
Ratio Decidendi: Where a statute prescribes a mandatory form for probate, extraneous valuation material or asset schedules used only for court-fee assessment cannot be incorporated into the probate instrument itself.