:1: IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY CIVIL APPELLATE SIDE CIVIL APPELLATE SIDE CIVIL APPELLATE SIDE APPEAL FROM ORDER NO.82 OF 2008 APPEAL FROM ORDER NO.82 OF 2008 APPEAL FROM ORDER NO.82 OF 2008 WITH WITH WITH CIVIL APPLICATION NO.94 OF 2008 CIVIL APPLICATION NO.94 OF 2008 CIVIL APPLICATION NO.94 OF 2008 Smt. Deepa Sreevalsan Age 41 years, Occ:Service, R/at Flat No.D4/4 Kubera Colony, NIBM Road, Kondhwa Khurd, Pune 411 048 ...Appellant. v. Smt. Kattali Nisha Manoj Age 38 years, Occ:Service, R/at 157 Cadles Road, Carrum Downs, Melbourne, Victoria 3201, Australia. ...Respondent. Mr.K.Babu Rajan a/w R.M.Thakur , adv. for the Appellant. CORAM: CORAM: CORAM: J.H.BHATIA,J. J.H.BHATIA,J. J.H.BHATIA,J. DATE: 18th February, 2008. DATE: 18th February, 2008. DATE: 18th February, 2008. ORAL JUDGMENT: ORAL JUDGMENT: ORAL JUDGMENT: 1. Heard the learned counsel for the appellant. Perused the copies of the pleadings and other documents filed by the appellant. 2. To state in brief, the appellant before this Court is the original plaintiff and the respondent is the original defendant no.2. Admittedly, plaintiff and defendant no.2 are daughters of the deceased defendant no.1 K.N.Narayanan. K.N.Narayanan died pending the suit leaving behind only two daughters. The defendant no.1 :2: made a gift of suit flat situated at Pune in favour of the defendant no.2 under registered gift deed dated 23-6-2006. Plaintiff filed the suit seeking declaration that the said gift deed is null and void and inoperative and she also sought partition of the property and one third share in the same. According to her, the defendant no.1 had inherited 1 H 43 Cents of land at Kannur in Kerala under a document no.1498 of 1980. That property was ancestral property of the defendant no.1. The defendant no.1 sold away the said property to Cannanore Co-operative House Construction Society Ltd. in the year 1980 itself and received Rs.2,50,000/- as consideration thereto. With that amount he purchased the flat no.31-A Munjal Nagar No.2, Co-operative Housing Society near Eastern Express Highway, Chembur (West), Mumbai in the year 1981. Defendant No.1 and both the daughters were residing in the said flat at Mumbai till 1993. Plaintiff got married on 29th August, 1993 and the defendant no.2 also got married in January, 1994 and she moved to Australia after her marriage. Plaintiff and defendant no.2 both are living with their husbands. In the year 1994 defendant no.1 without consent of the plaintiff and without any legal necessity sold away the flat at Mumbai for a consideration of Rs.7,50,000/-. Out of that consideration amount, he purchased the suit flat no.6, B/4 at Kubera Park Co-operative Housing Society, Lulla Nagar, Kondhava Road at Pune for Rs.4,10,000/-. It is contended that in the year :3: 1993-94, the defendant no.1 disposed off some other ancestral property as well as 10 Cents of land belonging to his wife, who was mother of the plaintiff. It is contended that the defendant no.1 illegally made a gift of suit flat at Pune in favour of the defendant no.2 on 23rd June, 2006. According to the plaintiff, in view of the above transactions, suit flat was the co-parcenary joint family property of the defendant no.1 and his both the daughters and, therefore, the defendant no.1 had no legal right to make a gift of whole of this property in favour of one daughter alone. With these contentions, she filed Special Civil Suit No.1896 of 2006 seeking partition of the said property and one third share in the same. She also sought declaration that the gift deed in favour of the defendant no.2 is null, void and inoperative. She also sought perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from selling or creating third party interest in the suit property. Plaintiff also filed Application Exhibit 5 seeking temporary injunction of the same nature. 3. The impugned order reveals that the defendant no.1 had filed his reply and resisted the application for temporary injunction. The same reply was also adopted by the defendant no.2. While relationship is not in dispute, they denied that the suit flat is ancestral property and that it has been purchased out of the consideration of the ancestral property. It was :4: contended that the defendant no.1, who was original resident of Kannur in Kerala had shifted to Mumbai as he was serving in Oriental Insurance Company. He retired from service in 1986. His wife had expired in the year 1983. He performed marriages of both the daughters in the years 1993 and 1994. Out of savings from his salary and other service funds, he purchased the said flat at Pune for a consideration of Rs.4,10,000/- According to the defendant no.1, he had also given an amount of Rs.85,000/- to the plaintiff by demand draft in the name of her husband as financial assistance to her for purchase of flat at Pune. It was contended that the defendant no.2 and her husband used to come to Pune from Australia and they used to help the defendant no.1. As the defendant no.2 had no house of her own in India, out of love and affection, the defendant no.1 had made a gift of the said house in favour of the defendant no.2 on 23rd June, 2006 by registered gift deed. It was contended that in view of these circumstances, the plaintiff had no right or title in the suit property and she is not entitled to temporary injunction. 4. After hearing the parties, the learned trial Court rejected the application Exhibit 5 for temporary injunction. Therefore, the plaintiff has filed the present appeal. 5. Heard the learned counsel for the :5: plaintiff/appellant. The learned counsel vehemently contended that the defendant no.1 had inherited some ancestral property at Kannur in Kerala and the plaintiff has documents to show that the said property was disposed off and thereafter out of consideration of that property, the defendant no.1 had purchased the flat in Mumbai and after sale of flat at Mumbai, he purchased the suit flat in Pune. In view of this, prima-facie, it may be held that the suit flat was a ancestral property. According to the learned counsel, it was a Joint Hindu Family Property in the hands of the defendant no.1 in which both the daughters have also got equal shares. Therefore, according to him, father could not make gift of the whole of the property in favour of one daughter and thereby deprive another daughter of her one third share in the suit flat. 6. For the sake of arguments even if it is assumed that the suit flat was purchased with the sale proceeds of the ancestral property which he had inherited, it is difficult to come to the conclusion that it was Joint Hindu Family property in the hands of the defendant no.1. Admittedly property in Kannur had come to the hands of the defendant no.1 sometimes in 1964 by way of partition of the ancestral property. After that in the family of the defendant no.1 besides himself only his wife and two daughters were members as he had no son. It is settled legal position that under the Hindu Laws, :6: there could be a Joint Hindu Family or co-parcenary only if there are two or more than two male members. If the defendant no.1 would have a son, the ancestral property in his hands would be Joint Hindu Family property and, therefore, his son and wife could claim equal share in the property in case of partition. In such circumstances, the defendant no.1 could be treated as a Manager or Karta of the Hindu Joint Family and he could not dispose off the property without legal necessity of the family nor he could make gift of whole of the suit property in favour of anybody except with consent of other members of the joint family. However, when a male Hindu receives certain property as his ancestral property and there is no other male member in his family, the male member receiving that ancestral property becomes exclusive owner of that property and he would not be a coparcener or member of the joint family. As long as he continues to be the only male member in his family, such property also continues to be his exclusive property he can deal with and dispose off the same as his self acquired property. But as soon as another male member, i.e., his son is born, his family becomes Joint Hindu Family and the ancestral in his hands property becomes Joint Family Property. 7. In the present case, as pointed out above the defendant no.1 had no son. Therefore, on receiving the :7: property at Kannur, though it was ancestral property, he would not become coparcener or member of the joint family. His wife and two daughters could not claim to be co-parcener or members of joint family with him neither they could claim any right in the said property nor they would be entitled to claim partition and separate share in that property. 8. The learned counsel for the plaintiff/appellant contended that by virtue of Section 29A incorporated in Hindu Succession Act by Hindu Succession (Maharashtra Amendment) Act, 1994, daughters are also entitled to equal share by birth in the coparcenary property just like a son. Relevant part of Section 29A reads as follows: 29-A. Equal rights to daughter in coparcenary Equal rights to daughter in coparcenary Equal rights to daughter in coparcenary property- property- property- Notwithstanding anything contained in section 6 of this Act- (i) in a joint Hindu family governed by the mitakshara law, the daughter of a coparcener shall by birth become a coparcener in her own right in the same manner as the son and have the same rights in the coparcenary property as she would have had if she had been a son, inclusive of the right to claim by survivorship; and shall be subject to the same liabilities and disabilities in respect thereto as the son; (ii) at a partition in such a joint Hindu family referred to in clause (i), the coparcenary property shall be so divided as to allot to a daughter the same share as is allotable to a son; (iii) any property to which a female Hindu becomes entitled by virtue of the provisions of :8: clause (i) shall be held by her with the incidents of coparcenary ownership and shall be regarded, notwithstanding anything contained in this Act or any other law for the time being in force, as property capable of being disposed of by her by Will or other testamentary disposition; (iv) nothing in this Chapter shall apply to a daughter married before the date of the commencement of the Hindu Succession (Maharashtra Amendment) Act, 1994; Thus, as per Clause (i) of Section 29A of Hindu Succession Act in a joint Hindu family governed by Mitakshara Law, the daughter of a coparcener shall, by birth, become a coparcener in her own right in the same manner as a son and have the same rights in the coparcenary property as she would have had if she had been a son inclusive of the right to claim by survivorship; and shall be subject to the same liabilities and disabilities in respect thereto as the son. This Act came into force with effect from 22nd June, 1994. In view of Clause (iv) of Section 29A, because the plaintiff and the defendant no.2 both were married prior to 22nd June, 1994, provisions of Section 29A would not be applicable to the parties in the present case. This amendment does not help the plaintiff in any manner. 9. Taking into consideration the facts and legal position noted above, I find no fault in the impugned order rejecting the prayer of the plaintiff for temporary injunction . 10. In the result, appeal stands dismissed. 11. As the appeal itself is dismissed, nothing survives in the civil application and stands disposed off accordingly. (J.H.BHATIA,J.) (J.H.BHATIA,J.) (J.H.BHATIA,J.)