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    <title>1989 (12) TMI 348 - Supreme Court</title>
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    <description>A later title claim over community property cannot succeed against a subsisting earlier decree protecting the same property, even where the earlier proceeding was not shown to be a formal representative suit under Order 1 Rule 8 CPC. A testamentary claim will fail where the will is surrounded by suspicious circumstances, such as unnatural exclusion of the testator&#039;s spouse, unexplained delay in production, and lack of corroboration. A sale deed also cannot support title if only an ordinary copy is produced and neither primary evidence nor admissible secondary evidence is proved. On these principles, a title claim founded on an unproved will and an inadmissible copy of a sale deed is unsustainable.</description>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 1989 00:00:00 +0530</pubDate>
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      <title>1989 (12) TMI 348 - Supreme Court</title>
      <link>https://www.taxtmi.com/caselaws?id=178986</link>
      <description>A later title claim over community property cannot succeed against a subsisting earlier decree protecting the same property, even where the earlier proceeding was not shown to be a formal representative suit under Order 1 Rule 8 CPC. A testamentary claim will fail where the will is surrounded by suspicious circumstances, such as unnatural exclusion of the testator&#039;s spouse, unexplained delay in production, and lack of corroboration. A sale deed also cannot support title if only an ordinary copy is produced and neither primary evidence nor admissible secondary evidence is proved. On these principles, a title claim founded on an unproved will and an inadmissible copy of a sale deed is unsustainable.</description>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 01 Dec 1989 00:00:00 +0530</pubDate>
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