DAUGHTE’S RIGHT IN
ANCESTORAL PROPERTY
The first question after the Supreme Court recent ruling in Prakash & Ors v. Phulavati & Ors, rendered on 16 October 2015
comes to everyone’s mind is whether the Supreme Court is right in giving the
ruling or not, but what matters now is not whether the Supreme Court is right
or not, but whether the daughters who have been waiting to get their right, can
still get their right in the ancestral property if their father have expired
before the date of the 2005 Amendment Act. The answer to it is a straight NO. Now let me throw
some light on what are the rights of the daughters in co-parcenary property
before and after the 2005 amendment.
Now the real
controversy arose because of the fact that those daughters who were sleeping
over their rights in claiming partition under an idea that after the 2005
amendment act there right exist even if their father had expired before 2005
Amendment Act and they can claim partition as and when they feel to claim the
share in the property, but the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Prakash & Ors v. Phulavati & Ors,
held that a plain reading of the statute (Amendment Act) itself suggests that a
daughter has a right in coparcenary property on and from the commencement of the
Amendment Act. The SC held that 'An
amendment of a substantive provision is always prospective unless either
expressly or by necessary intendment it is retrospective'. In the
instant case there was no express or intended stipulation which would make the
Amendment Act retrospective in its application and by virtue of the Amendment Act,
right to coparcenary property would be available only to 'living daughters' of 'living coparceners' on 9
September 2005.
This present ruling is
applicable only in the cases of ancestral property, therefore the daughters can
still claim the share in their predeceased father’s property if the same was
self acquired (self acquired will include a property acquired qua a Gift or a
Will).
Kapil
Chandna Advocate
Practicing
in the Supreme Court of India
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