Case ID: 4252

Judgment:
kes it clear that the family of Raja Dhrub Singh was governed by the Benaras School of Hindu Law and not by the Mithila School. Further	 the material on record is not sufficient to lead to the conclusion that the institution of putrika putra was in vogue during the relevant time even amongst persons governed by the Mithila School. Throughout India including the area governed by the Mithila School	 the practice of appointing a daughter to raise an issue (putrika putra) had become obsolete by the time Raja Dhrub Singh was alleged to have taken Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as putrika putra. In fact Raja Dhrub Singh as found by the High Court	 had not appointed his daughter as a putrika to beget a putrika putra for him. It follows that the appellants who claim the estate on the above basis cannot succeed. [62F G	 63F] The applicability of the above rule to Nambuderies of Kerala is however not decided. [62G H] 4 & CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 114 119 of 1976. From the Judgment and Decree dated 15 12 1972 of the Patna High Court in F.A. Nos. 130	 85	 86	 87	 131	 and 134 of 1966. D. V. Patel	 section section Johar and section N. Mishra for the Appellants in CA Nos. 114 119 of 1976. V. M. Tarkunde	 U. R. Lalit	 K. K. Jain	 D. Goburdhan and P. P. Singh for Respondents 5 22 in CA Nos. 114 115/76. L. M. Singhvi (Dr.)	 U. P. Singh and section section Jha for the Respondents in CA 114 119/76. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by VENKATARAMIAH	 J. The above six appeals by certificate and Civil Appeals Nos. 494 496 of 1975 arise out of a common judgment dated December 15	 1972 of the High Court of Judicature at Patna passed in First Appeals Nos. 85 to 87	 130	 131 and 134 of 1966. After the above six appeals and Civil Appeals Nos. 494 496 of 1975 were heard together for sometime	 we found that the above six appeals i.e. Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976 could be disposed of by a separate judgment. We	 therefore	 proceeded with the consent of the learned counsel for the parties to hear fully Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976. By this common judgment	 we propose to dispose of the above six appeals. The further hearing of Civil Appeals Nos. 494 496 of 1975 is deferred. The question which arises for our consideration in the above Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976 is whether the appellants and others either claiming under the appellants or alongwith them are entitled to an estate popularly known as 'Bettiah Raj ' which was under the management of the Court of Wards	 Bihar. The last male holder of the said estate	 Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh Bahadur died issueless on March 26	 1893 leaving behind him two widows	 Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer and Maharani Janki Kuer. Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer who succeeded to the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh on his death as his senior widow died on March 24	 1896 and on her death Maharani Janki Kuer became entitled to the possession of the estate. Since it was found that Maharani Janki Kuer was not able to administer the estate	 its management was taken over by the Court of Wards	 Bihar in the year 1897. Maharani Janki Kuer who was a limited holder of the estate died on November 27	 1954. On her death	 disputes arose amongst several persons who were parties to the suits 5 out of which the above appeals arise regarding the title to the 'Bettiah Raj ' estate. The State of Bihar	 however	 claimed that none of the claimants was the heir of the last male holder and that since there was no heir at law as such at the time when the limited estate of Maharani Janki Kuer came to an end on her death	 the entire estate alongwith the net income which the Court of Wards had realized from it became the property of the State of Bihar by virtue of the rule of escheat. We shall refer to the respective submissions of the parties at a later stage. It is not disputed that Raja Ugra Sen	 the founder of the 'Bettiah Raj ' was governed by the Benares School of Mitakshara law as his family had migrated from the South Western part of the present State of Uttar Pradesh to the State of Bihar although in the course of the pleadings	 there is a suggestion that the family was also being governed by the Mithila School of Mitakshara which was in force in the State of Bihar. The question for decision in the instant case may no doubt ultimately appear to be a simple one but in order to determine the said question	 it is necessary to relate the facts which spread over nearly three centuries and refer to a number of Smritis	 commentaries and decisions. The major part of the estate of 'Bettiah Raj ' is situated in Champaran District of the State of Bihar. Some of its properties are situated in the State of Uttar Pradesh also. The principality known as 'Bettiah Raj ' was established by Raja Ugrasen in or about the middle of the 17th century. It was then known as Reasut of Sirkar Champaran consisting of four pergunnahs known as Majhwa	 Simrown	 Babra and Maihsi. It was an impartible estate. Raja Ugrasen was succeeded by his son	 Raja Guz Singh in the year 1659. Raja Dalip Singh	 son of Raja Guz Singh came to the gaddi in the year 1694 and he was succeeded by his son	 Raja Dhrub Singh in the year 1715. Raja Dhrub Singh died in 1762 without a male issue but leaving a daughter by name Benga Babui	 who had married one Raghunath Singh	 a Bhumihar Brahmin of Gautam gotra. It is said that he had another daughter also	 but it is not necessary to investigate into that fact in these cases. On the death of Raja Dhrub Singh who was a Jethoria Brahmin of the Kashyap gotra	 his daughter 's son (Benga Babui 's son)	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh entered into possession of the estate of 'Bettiah Raj ' and was in possession thereof at the date when the East India Company assumed the Government of the province. On the assumption of the Government of Bengal by the East India Company	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh offered some resistance to their 6 authority and the Company 's troops were despatched to enforce his submission. Raja Jugal Kishore Singh fled into the neighbouring State of Bundelkhand and his estates were seized and placed under the management of the Company 's officers. During the absence of Raja Jugal Kishore Singh	 Sri Kishen Singh and Abdhoot Singh who were respectively sons of Prithi Singh and Satrajit Singh	 younger brothers of Raja Dalip Singh	 found favour with the East India Company. After some negotiations	 the Government decided to allot the zamindari of Majhwa and Simrown pergunnahs which formed part of 'Bettiah Raj ' estate to Raja Jugal Kishore Singh and to leave Babra and Maihsi in possession of Srikishen and Abdhoot Singh. On his return	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh accepted the decision of the East India Company which was formally announced on July 24	 1771 in the following terms: "The Committee of Revenue having approved of the reinstatement of Raja Jugal Kishore	 we have now granted to him the zamindari of Majhwa and Simrown pergunnahs	 and have settled his revenue as follows. " Accordingly	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh executed a kabulyat in accordance with the terms imposed by the Government under the grant and got into possession of pergunnahs Majhwa and Simrown. He was again dispossessed in the following year as he failed to pay the Government revenue. Srikishen and Abdhoot refused to execute a kabulyat for the two other pergunnahs alone and they were also dispossessed. The entire Sirkar thus passed into the possession of the Government and was held by farmers of revenue on temporary settlements until the year 1791. Raja Jugal Kishore Singh received an allowance for main tenance from the Government and died in or about the year 1783 leaving a son	 Bir Kishore Singh. Thereafter on October 10	 1789	 Mr. Montgomerie	 the then Collector	 initiated fresh proceedings regarding the settlement of Sirkar Champarun	 the estate in question	 and on September 22	 1790	 the Governor General in Council (Lord Cornwallis) addressed the following letter to the Board of Revenue: "It appearing from our proceedings that the late Raja Jugal Kishore was driven out of the country for acts of rebellion	 and upon his being allowed to return into the company 's dominions	 that the late President and Council thought proper to divide the zamindari of Champarun	 allotting to Jugal Kishore the districts of Majhwa and Simrown	 and to Srikishen Singh and Abdhoot Singh those of Maihsi and Babra	 we direct that the heirs of the late Raja Jugal Kishore and Srikishen Singh and Abdhoot Singh be respectively restored to the possession and management of the 7 above districts (with the exception of such parts thereof as may belong to other zamindars or taluqdars	 being the proprietors of the soil	 who are to pay their revenues immediately to the Collector of the district)	 and that the decennial settlement be concluded with them agreeably to the General Regulations. " All the parties were dissatisfied with the above decision. Bir Kishore Singh who claimed to be entitled to the entire Sirkar Champarun	 however	 in obedience to the orders of the Governor General took possession of the two pergunnahs Majhwa and Simrown allotted to him and gave in his agreements for the settlement of them and at the same time prayed that he might be put into possession of the other two pergunnahs also. Srikishen and Abdhoot also claimed the entire estate on the ground that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was not a member of the family and had no title to the estate as "by the Hindu Shastra the female branch is not entitled to a share of the estate	 much less the whole. " They accordingly at first refused to give in their kabulyats for the pergunnahs Maihsi and Babra; but on Mr. Montgomerie 's advice they ultimately did so under protest and were placed in possession of those two pergunnahs. Separate dowl settlements of Government revenue on the mahals in pergunnahs Majhwa and Simrown and on those in pergunnahs Maihsi and Babra were made with and accepted by Bir Kishore Singh and by Srikishen and Abdhut respectively. The Sirkar Champarun was thus divided de facto into distinct zamindaris to be held by the grantees at revenues allotted to each of them separately. Then started the first phase of judicial proceedings which even now continue to be devil the estate which Raja Bir Kishore Singh acquired pursuant to the orders of Governor General in Council. On the 6th day of May	 1808	 Ganga Prasad Singh	 the eldest son of Raja Srikishen Singh	 who had died by then	 instituted a suit in the Zila Court of Saran claiming upon a plea of title by inheritance to recover from Raja Bir Kishore Singh possession of pergunnahs Majhwa and Simrown and certain salt mahals all of which were formerly part of Sirkar Champarun on the following allegations; that in the year 1762 upon due consideration of right to succession as established in the family	 Raja Dhrub Singh had made over while he was still alive the rajgy of the Sirkar of Champarun to his father	 Raja Srikishen Singh	 son of Prithi Singh and at the same time executed in his favour a deed of conveyance of the rajgy and the milkeut of the estate comprising the whole of the Sirkar aforesaid and gave him entry into the zamindari. He further alleged that when in the year 1763 the British Government was established	 the lands comprised in the said Sirkar were attached but that Raja Srikishen Singh continued to receive the malikana and other rights annexed to 8 the zamindari upto 1770 and that in the following year	 the settlement of the whole Sirkar was made with him and from the year 1772 to 1790 although the business of the Sirkar was conducted by the Amins and Mootahdars appointed for the purpose and Commissioner appointed temporarily for the collection of the revenue and at other times	 his father	 Raja Srikishen received the malikana. He then proceeded to state the manner in which	 upon the formation of the decennial settlement in 1790	 Raja Srikishen was deprived of the possession of the pergunnahs which he claimed to recover and alleged certain fraudulent practices whereby possession had been obtained by Raja Bir Kishore Singh. The suit was transferred from the Zillah Court of Saran to the Provincial Court of Patna. The suit was contested by Raja Bir Kishore Singh. In the course of the written statement	 his counsel inter alia pleaded: "The whole of the above statement of plaintiff is both false and fraudulent for the real fact is that the Majhwa	 Simrown	 Maihsi and Babra pergunnahs forming the Champarun Sirkar were the rajgy	 the zamindary	 and the milkeut of Raja Dhrub Singh	 an ancestor of my client and the said Raja held the sole possession of them without foreign interference or participation. It is necessary to state that he had no son born to him; but Raja Jugal Kishore Singh	 the father of my client was his grandson and the issue of a daughter he had by his senior Rani	 Raja Dhrub Singh aforesaid having adopted Raja Jugal Kishore Singh	 the father of my client	 at the time of his birth	 conducted the ceremonies of his adoption and marriage in the usual manner	 and having after wards given him the tilak he established him upon the rajgy of the whole of the Champarun Sirkar". The Provincial Court dismissed the suit by its judgment dated December 29	 1812 solely on the ground of limitation whereupon Raja Dindayal Singh (the legal representative of the original plaintiff	 Raja Ganga Prasad Singh	 who died in the meanwhile) filed an appeal before the Sadar Diwani Adalat during the pendency of which Raja Bir Kishore Singh died (in 1816) and was succeeded by his elder son	 Raja Anand Kishore Singh. The appeal was dismissed on July 9	 1817. In its elaborate judgment	 the Sadar Diwani Adalat rejected the case of the plaintiff in that suit relating to the conveyance of the rajgy by Raja Dhrub Singh in favour of Raja Srikishen Singh holding that the document relied upon was a forgery. The above decision of the Sadar Diwani Adalat was affirmed by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Rajah Dundial Singh & Ors. vs Rajah Anand 9 Kishore Singh(1) by its judgment dated December 5 and 7	 1837. The Judicial Committee affirmed the judgment of the courts below on the sole ground of limitation. Raja Anand Kishore Singh continued on the Gaddi and in 1837	 the hereditary title of Maharaja Bahadur was conferred upon him. Upon his death in 1838	 without any issue	 he was succeeded by his younger brother	 Maharaja Bahadur Nawal Kishore Singh. Maharaja Bahadur Nawal Kishore Singh had two sons	 Rajendra Kishore Singh and Mahendra Kishore Singh and upon his death in the year 1855	 Maharaja Bahadur Rajendra Kishore Singh succeeded to the estate. Maharaja Bahadur Rajendra Kishore Singh died in 1883 and his brother Mahendra Kishore Singh having pre deceased him	 he was succeeded by Maharaja Bahadur Harendra Kishore Singh who as stated earlier was the last male holder of the estate and died issueless on March 26	 1893 leaving behind him two widows	 Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer and Maharani Janki Kuer. So great was the esteem in which Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh was held by the Government that the Lt. Governor of Bengal came to Bettiah personally to offer his condolence. The occasion was used by Raja Deoki Nandan Singh (one of the great grandsons of Raja Srikishen Singh) to put forward his claim to the Bettiah Raj. On April 11	 1893	 he presented a memorial to the Lt. Governor claiming that the late Maharaja was his "Gotra Sapinda". In the memorial	 he stated thus: "Raja Dhrub Singh had no issue. Therefore	 according to the provisions of the Hindu Law he converted his daughter 's son Jugal Kishore Singh who belonged to the Gautam Gotra to Kashyap Gotra and then adopting him as his son appointed him to be his successor. The Maharaja Bahadur was in the 5th lineal descent from Jugal Kishore Singh	 the petitioner is in the 4th lineal descent from Raja Srikishen Singh. That under the provisions of Kulachar law Your Honour 's humble petitioner is the legal heir and successor of the deceased Maharaja and. fully capable of managing the Raj." A reading of the above extract of the memorial shows that the case put forward by Raja Deoki Nandan Singh was directly contrary to the case put forward by his predecessor in the suit of 1808. Whereas in the earlier suit	 his predecessor had pleaded that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was the daughter 's son of Raja Dhrub Singh and was not	 therefore a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh	 Raja Bir Kishore Singh had pleaded that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh having been adopted by 10 Raja Dhrub Singh was a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh. In the above said memorial	 it was pleaded by the successor of the plaintiff in the suit of 1808 that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh who belonged to Gautam Gotra had been adopted by Raja Dhrub Singh who belonged to Kashyap Gotra and had been appointed by him as his successor. On the death of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh	 the estate came into the possession of his senior widow	 Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer. Within about two years from the date of the death of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh	 a suit was instituted in Title Suit No. 139 of 1895 on the file of the Subordinate Judge of Tirhoot by Ram Nandan Singh	 fifth in descent from Raja Ganga Prasad Singh (who was the plaintiff in the suit of 1808) against Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer claiming the estate of Raja Harendra Kishore Singh. The main pleas raised by him in the suit were that the succession to the Bettiah Raj was governed by the custom of male linear primogeniture; that females were excluded from succeeding to the Raj; that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had been adopted by Raja Dhrub Singh as his son and that he being an agnate was entitled to the possession of the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh. Another suit viz. Title Suit No. 108 of 1896 was filed by Girja Nandan Singh whose father Deo Nandan Singh had submitted the memorial to the Lt. Governor of Bengal on April 11	 1893. This Girja Nandan Singh was fourth in descent from Doostdaman Singh	 a younger brother of Raja Ganga Prasad Singh and while supporting the stand of the plaintiff	 Ram Nandan Singh in the Title Suit No. 139 of 1895 on the point of Raja Jugal Kishore 's adoption by Raja Dhrub Singh and exclusion of females from succession to the Raj	 he pleaded that he was entitled to succeed to the Raj by the rule of propinquity	 as all the branches of the family were joint in status	 there being no custom of male linear primogeniture as put forward in the suit of Ram Nandan Singh i.e. in the Title Suit No. 139 of 1895. Both the suits were contested by Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer. During the pendency of the two suits	 she died and Maharani Janki Kuer	 the second widow of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh was brought on record as the defendant in both the suits. Title Suit No. 139 of 1895 was decreed by the trial Court but on appeal by Maharani Janki Kuer	 the said decree was set aside and the suit was dismissed by the High Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal by its judgment dated April 14	 1889. Against the decree of the High Court	 Ram Nandan Singh filed an appeal before the Privy Council. The Privy Council affirmed the decree of the High Court in Ram Nandan Singh vs Janki Kuer(1) The Privy 11 Council held that the two pergunnahs Majhwa and Simrown which were granted pursuant to the orders of Lord Cornwallis to Raja Bir Kishore Singh became the separate property of Raja Bir Kishore Singh free from any coparcenery right of succession of the branches of the family then represented by Srikishen and Abdhoot. They held that from the letter of Lord Cornwalis dated September 22	 1790 extracted above	 it was clear that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had been driven out from the country for the acts of rebellion and that the Government was at liberty to divide the Sirkar into two portions and to grant one portion to Raja Bir Kishore Singh and another portion to Srikishen and Abdhoot in direct exercise of sovereign authority. It further held that the grants so made by the Government proceeded from grace and favour alone. It was further held that the estate which was granted in favour of Raja Bir Kishore Singh became his separate and self acquired property though with all the incidents of the family tenure of the old estate as an impartible Raj Consequently	 the plaintiff was not entitled to claim it on the basis of the custom of male linear primogeniture. The Privy Council also held that there was no inconsistency between a custom of impartibility and the rights of females to inherit and therefore	 Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer and after her Maharani Janki Kuer could succeed to the estate of their husband	 Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh and remain in possession thereof. The Privy Council	 however	 declined to decide the question whether Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had been adopted by his maternal grandfather	 Raja Dhrub Singh or became his son and a member of his family by some customary mode of affiliation i.e. as Putrika Putra and left the question open in the following terms: "There remains only the issue whether Raja Jugal Kishore was adopted by his maternal grandfather Raja Dhrub Singh	 or became his son and a member of his family by some customary mode of affiliation. The determination of this issue against the appellant would be fatal to his case	 because in that case he would not be able to prove that he was of the same family as the late Sir Harendra. The learned judges have not found it necessary for the decision of the present case to decide this issue	 and their Lordships agree with them in thinking that it is the better course not to do so	 because the same issue may hereafter arise for decision between different parties. " The other suit i.e. Title Suit No. 108 of 1896 which was filed by Girja Nandan Singh was dismissed by the trial court and the appeal filed by him before the High Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal (Calcutta) was also dismissed on April 14	 1889	 the same day on which the High Court had disposed of the appeal in the other suit. 12 A few years later	 one Bishun Prakash Narain Singh	 fifth in descent from Abdhoot Singh also filed a suit in Title Suit No. 34 of 1905 in the court of the Subordinate Judge of Chapra	 claiming title to the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh on the footing that his branch of the family was joint in status with Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh and so he was entitled to succeed to him under the rules of survivorship. That suit failed in all the courts including the Privy Council whose judgment is reported in Rajkumar Babu Bishun Prakash Maraain Singh vs Maharani Janki Kuer & Ors.(1) The genealogy of the family relied on in the above suit which is found at page 858 in 24 Cal. W. N. is given below to facilitate the understanding of the relationship amongst the parties: Raa Ugrasen Singh (died 1659) | Raja Gaj Singh (died 1694) | | | | Raja Daleep Singh Pirthi Singh Satrajit Singh (died 1715) (dead) (dead) | | | | | Bishun Prakash Raja Dhrub Singh Srikishen Singh Narayan Singh (died 1762) (dead) (Plaintiff) | | (Fifth in descent | | from Satrajit | | Singh) Daughter 's son (Putrika Putra) | | Raja Jugal Kishore Ram Nandan Girja Nandan Singh (died 1785) Singh Singh | (Defendant (Defendant | No. 2) No. 3) Raja Jugal Kishore (Fifth in (Fourth in Singh (died 1816) descent from descent from | Srikishen Singh) Srikishen Singh) | | | Maharaja Anand Maharaja Nawal Kishore Singh Kishore Singh (died 1838) (died 1855) | | | Maharaja Rajendra Mahendra Kishore Singh Kishore Singh (died 1883) (died before his | brother) | Maharaja Sir Harendra Kishore Singh	 who died childless on 26th March	 1893	 leaving (1) Rani Sheoratan Koer died (2) Rani Janki Koer Defendant No. 1 13 It should be mentioned here that in none of the suits Title Suit No. 139 of 1895	 Title Suit No. 108 of 1896 and Title Suit No. 34 of 1905 referred to above	 the question whether Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had become a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh either by virtue of adoption or as Putrika Putra (appointed daughter 's son) was decided even though the plaintiff in each of the above suits had raised such a plea. As mentioned earlier after Maharani Janki Kuer succeeded to the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh on the death of Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer	 the management of the estate was taken over by the Court of Wards	 Bihar in 1897	 a declaration being made that Maharani Janki Kuer was incompetent to manage the estate. Since the properties of the estate were spread over both in the State of Bihar and in the State of Uttar Pradesh	 the Bihar properties came to be managed by the Court of Wards	 Bihar while those in Uttar Pradesh were being managed by the State of Uttar Pradesh through the Collector of Gorakhpur. Maharani Janki Kuer took up her residence at Allahabad where she eventually died childless and intestate on November 27	 1954. Shortly after her death on December 6	 1954	 the State of Bihar made an application before the Board of Revenue	 Bihar praying that the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh which was held by Maharani Janki Kuer as a limited heir and managed by the Court of Wards and the Government of Uttar Pradesh	 as stated above should be released from the management of Court of Wards and handed over to the Bihar State Government since the State of Bihar had become entitled to the estate by virtue of the rule of escheat	 as there was no heir of the last male holder who could lay claim to it. Upon this application	 the Board of Revenue directed the issue of a Notification which was published in the Official Gazette calling upon interested parties to prefer their claims	 if any	 to the properties comprised in the estate. In pursuance of this Notification about one dozen persons came forward	 some of whom claimed to be entitled to the stridhana and personal properties of late Maharani	 such as cash	 jewellery etc.; some others claimed to be entitled to maintenance allowance out of the estate while some others claimed the entire estate on the footing that the title to the estate had passed to them by succession which opened upon the death of Maharani Janki Kuer. Amongst the persons who thus claimed title to the estate	 mention may be made of Bhagwati Prasad Singh of village Baraini	 in the District of Mirzapur (Uttar Pradesh) and Suresh Nandan Singh of Sheohar. The Board of Revenue	 however	 declined to release the estate in favour of any of the claimants and on January 18	 1955 passed an order to the effect that the Court of Wards would retain 14 charge of the properties comprised in the estate until the dispute as to its succession was determined by a competent civil court. Thereafter one Ram Bux Singh instituted a suit being Title Suit No. 3 of 1955 on the file of the Civil Judge at Varanasi claiming title to the estate. That suit was	 however	 allowed to be withdrawn with the permission of the court. Subsequently came to be instituted Title Suit No. 44 of 1955 on the file of the Subordinate Judge at Patna by Suresh Nandan Singh. On his death	 his son	 Davendra Nandan Singh and his widow Ram Surat Kuer were brought on record as plaintiffs. That suit was dismissed alongwith two other suits with which alone we are concerned in these appeals reference to which will be made hereafter. Since the plaintiffs in the above suit were also defendants in the said two other suits	 the plaintiffs therein filed three First Appeals Nos. 169	 170 and 171 of 1966 before the High Court of Patna against the decrees passed in the three suits. All the aforesaid three appeals were dismissed for non prosecution by the High Court. We are	 therefore	 not concerned with the claim of the plaintiffs in that suit in these appeals. The two other suits that were filed were Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 and Title Suit No. 5 of 1961. Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 was filed by Ambika Prasad Singh and others claiming the estate on the basis that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh succeeded to the gaddi of Sirkar Champarun as the adopted and affiliated son and successor of Raja Dhrub Singh and not as his daughter 's son as alleged subsequently by some others; that the last male holder of the estate was Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh	 the great grandson of the said Raja Jugal Kishore Singh and that plaintiff No. 1 in the suit	 Ambika Prasad Singh being nearest in degree among the reversioners to the last male holder to Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh as the descendent of Satrajit Singh	 the full brother of Raja Dalip Singh was the legal heir to the estate in question. It was pleaded that plaintiffs Nos. 2 and 4 to 8 and 10 to 13 being next in degree to the plaintiff No. 1 and plaintiff No. 14 being the wife of plaintiff No. 7 and plaintiff No. 9 being the mother of plaintiffs Nos. 10 to 13 had also joined the suit in order to avoid multiplicity of suits and conflict of interest. It was also alleged that there was an agreement amongst some of the plaintiffs entered into on September 22	 1955 to claim the estate jointly and that subsequently the said agreement had been repudiated and a fresh family arrangement had been entered into by the plaintiffs which was bonafide settling their claims to the estate. Under the said family arrangement	 it had been agreed that the estate in the event of their succeeding in the suit should be distributed amongst 15 them in accordance with the terms contained therein. They claimed that in any event	 the plaintiffs in the said suit alone were entitled to the estate and no others. The next suit with which we are concerned in these appeals is Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 which was filed by Radha Krishna Singh and others. The case of the plaintiffs in this suit was that Raja Dhrub Singh died leaving behind him two daughters viz. Benga Babui and Chinga Babui; that Benga Babui was married to Babu Raghunath Singh of Gautam Gotra who was by caste a Bhumihar; that Raja Dhrub Singh had become separated from his other agnatic relations	 namely the heirs of Prithvi Singh of village Sheohar and Satrajit Singh of village Madhubani; that on his death which took place in 1762	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh succeeded him as his daughter 's son and that plaintiffs 1 to 8	 sons of Bhagwati Prasad Singh who belonged to the family of Raghunath Singh were the nearest heirs of the last male holder	 Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh. In substance	 their case was that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh who succeeded to the estate of Raja Dhrub Singh continued to be a member of his natural father 's family and had not become either by adoption or by affiliation a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh. It was further alleged that plaintiffs 1 to 8 were men of poor means and could not arrange for money to fight out the litigation and they	 therefore	 had conveyed one half of their right in the suit estate under a registered sale deed dated December 12	 1958 in favour of plaintiffs 9 to 15. In view of the said deed	 according to the plaintiffs in the said suit	 plaintiffs 1 to 8 were entitled to one half of the estate and the other half belonged to plaintiffs 9 to 15. On the above basis	 Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 was filed by the plaintiffs therein for a declaration of their title. The plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 44 of 1955 were impleaded as defendants in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 and Title Suit No. 5 of 1961. The plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 were impleaded as defendants in the other suits. Similarly the plaintiffs in Title Suit. No. 5 of 1961 were impleaded as defendants in the two other suits. The State of Bihar which had preferred its claim on the basis of the rule of escheat was also impleaded as defendant in each of the three suits. The defendants in each of the suits other than the State of Bihar denied the claim of the plaintiffs in that suit. The State of Bihar pleaded in all the three suits that none of the plaintiffs was an heir of the last male holder. The Additional Subordinate Judge	 Patna who tried all the three suits together dismissed all of them by his judgment dated February 15	 1966. The principal issues which arose for decision before the trial court were: (1) Was Raja Jugal Kishore Singh the Putrika Putra of Raja Dhrub Singh by appointed daughter and affiliated as such as 16 alleged by the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 44 of 1955 and Title Suit No. 25 of 1958? (2) Was succession to Bettiah Estate governed by the Mithila or the Benares School of Hindu Law? (3) Was the Bettiah Estate self acquired or the joint property of Raja Jugal Kishore Singh? (4) Was the succession to the Bettiah estate governed by the rule of primogeniture? (5) Whether any of the plaintiffs was the heir of the last male holder; and (6) Has the Bettiah estate vested in the State of Bihar by escheat? At the conclusion of the trial	 the trial court held that the custom of taking a son as Putrika Putra had become obsolete by the time Raja Dhrub Singh was alleged to have taken Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as the Putrika Putra and	 therefore	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was not the Putrika putra of Raja Dhrub Singh; that the succession to the estate of Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh was governed by the Benares School of Hindu law; that the estate having been acquired by force of arms was the self acquired property of Raja Jugal Kishore Singh; that the succession of the Bettiah estate was not governed by the rule of primogeniture; that in view of the finding that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was neither putrika putra nor was he affiliated to of family of Raja Dhrub Singh by adoption in any form	 the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 and Title Suit No. 44 of 1955 could not claim to be the heirs of the last male holder: that the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 had not established that they were the reversioners to the estate and as none of the plaintiffs in the three suits had established that they were entitled to the estate it had vested in the State of Bihar by virtue of the rule of escheat. It is already stated that the three First Appeals Nos. 169 to 171 of 1966 filed on the file of the High Court by the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 44 of 1955 were dismissed for non prosecution. Aggrieved by the decree of the trial court	 the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 filed First Appeals Nos. 130	 131 and 134 of 1966 on the file of the High Court of Patna and the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 filed First Appeals Nos. 85	 86 and 87 of 1966 on the file of the said Court. The above said six appeals were heard by a Bench of three learned Judges of the High Court viz. G. N. Prasad	 J.	 A. N. Mukherji	 J. and Madan Mohan Prasad	 J.	 G. N. Prasad	 J. held that the custom of taking a son as Putrika Putra had become obsolete by the time Raja Dhrub Singh was alleged to have taken Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as putrika putra and so Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had 17 not become a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh and that the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 had not therefore established their claim to the estate. He agreed with the finding of A. N. Mukherji	 J. that the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 had established their title to the estate. A. N. Mukherji	 J. held that the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 were entitled to succeed in their action and agreed with the finding of G. N. Prasad	 J. that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had not become a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh either as a putrika putra or by adoption for the reasons given by G. N. Prasad	 J. Madan Mohan Prasad	 J. agreed with the opinions of G. N. Prasad and A. N. Mukherji	 JJ. that the institution of putrika putra had become obsolete during the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh and that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had not been taken as putrika putra or in adoption by Raja Dhrub Singh. He however	 did not agree with the opinion expressed by A. N. Mukherji	 J. which had the concurrence of G. N. Prasad. J. that the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 had established that the plaintiffs 1 to 8 in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 were the nearest reversioners entitled to the estate. In view of the aforesaid opinions	 the appeals filed by the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 were dismissed since all the three Judges were unanimously of opinion that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had not become a member of the family of Raja Dhrub Singh either as putrika putra or by adoption and all the appeals filed by the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 were allowed. In the result	 Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 was decreed as prayed for Consequently the claim of the State of Bihar was negatived. Aggrieved by the decree passed in the six appeals referred to above	 the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 applied to the High Court for the issue of a certificate to prefer appeals to this Court. The State of Bihar also made a similar application. It should be mentioned here that in the course of the hearing of the appeals before the High Court	 one of the contentions urged by the parties other than the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 was that the decision of the Privy Council in Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs Moparthi Chenchuramayya	 Minor & Ors.(1) was binding on the courts in India and that it was not open to the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 to urge that Raja Dhrub Singh could take Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as putrika putra. G. N. Prasad	 J. with whom A. N. Mukherji	 J. agreed had held relying on the above decision of the Privy Council that the institution of putrika putra had become obsolete during the relevant period. It was contended by the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 that the decision of the Privy Council in Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs 18 Moparthi Chenchuramayya	 Minor & Ors. (supra) was not binding on Indian courts after India became a Republic. The Division Bench which heard the applications for the issue of certificates being of opinion that the case of the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 involved a substantial question of law as to the interpretation of the Constitution viz. whether the decision of the Privy Council in Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs Moparthi Chenchuranayya	 Minors & Ors.(supra) was binding on the Indian Courts after India became a Republic issued a certificate in favour of the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 under Article 132(1) of the Constitution. On the applications filed by the State of Bihar	 the High Court issued a certificate under Article 133 of the Constitution certifying that the case involved substantial questions of law of general importance which in the opinion of the High Court needed to be decided by the Supreme Court. On the basis of the above certificates	 plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 filed Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976 and the State of Bihar filed Civil Appeals Nos. 494 496 of 1975. After the above appeals were filed the respondents in Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976 who had succeeded in the High Court filed a petition before this Court to revoke the certificate issued by the High Court under Article 132(1) of the Constitution. When the above appeals were taken up for hearing alongwith the petition for revocation of the certificate	 the appellants in Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976 filed a Special Leave Petition under Article 136 of the Constitution requesting this Court to grant them leave to canvass questions other than those relating to the interpretation of the Constitution in support of their case. We have heard the parties on the above Special Leave Petition also. As mentioned earlier	 we propose to dispose of by this Judgment Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1975 and the Special Leave Petition referred to above. At the outset it is to be noted that the appellants in Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1975 can succeed only if they establish that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had become the son of Raja Dhrub Singh in a manner known to law. In the instant case even though there was some amount of ambiguity at some early stages of these proceedings in the trial court as to the true case of the appellants	 finally they took the position that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh had become the son (putrika putra) of Raja Dhrub Singh as the latter had appointed his daughter i.e. the mother of the former as his putrika for the purpose of begetting a son who would be his (latter 's) putrika putra. The State of Bihar and the other contesting parties claimed that the practice of appointing a daughter to beget a son who would be putrika putra had become obsolete by the time such appointment was alleged to 19 have taken place in this case; that even if such a practice was in vogue	 Raja Dhrub Singh had in fact not made any such appointment and lastly the appellants who claimed on the above basis were not the nearest reversioners of the last male holder. From the pleadings relevant for the purpose of these appeals	 three questions arise for consideration: (1) Whether the practice of appointing a daughter as putrika for begetting a son who would be putrika putra was in vogue during the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh? (2) If the answer to question No. (1) is in the affirmative	 whether Raja Dhrub Singh had in fact appointed his daughter (the mother of Raja Jugal Kishore Singh) as his putrika? and (3) If the answers to questions Nos. (1) and (2) are in the affirmative	 whether the appellants were the nearest reversioners to the last male holder Maharaja Harendra Kishore Singh	 if he had lived till the date on which the limited estate ceased i.e. till the death of Maharani Janki Kuer which took place on November 27	 1954? From the points formulated above	 it is evident that if the appellants in these appeals i.e. plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 25 of 1958 establish that Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was the putrika putra of Raja Dhrub Singh	 the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 have to fail but if the appellants fail to establish that fact	 they fail irrespective of the result of the dispute between the plaintiffs in Title Suit No. 5 of 1961 and the State of Bihar. It is in these circumstances	 we proposed to dispose of these and the connected appeals in two parts. In order to determine whether the practice of taking a son as putrika putra was prevalent at the time when Raja Dhrub Singh is alleged to have taken Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as putrika putra	 we have to examine the several texts and practices prevailing in India at the relevant point of time. According to Yajnavalkya	 the sources of Hindu Dharma are those enumerated in the following text: Shruti smritih sadacharah swasya cha priyamatmanah samyakasankalpajah kamo dharmmoolmidang smrittam. (The sources of Dharma are described to be (1) the Vedas	 (2) the Smritis	 (3) the practices of good men	 (4) what is acceptable to one 's own soul	 and (5) the desire produced by a virtuous resolves). While interpreting the Smritis one difficulty which has to be encountered is the uncertainty about their chronology. Another difficulty felt by many jurists while interpreting them is the existence 20 of conflicting texts	 sometimes in the same Smriti. This appears to be on account of the successive changes in the views of society	 which may have taken place over several centuries. Very often the prevailing practices and customs at a given point of time might be quite different from those obtaining some centuries before that time Maxims which have long ceased to correspond with actual life are reproduced in subsequent treatises	 as pointed out by John. D. Mayne	 either without comment or with a non natural interpretation. "Extinct usages are detailed without a suggestion that they have become extinct from an idea that it is sacrilegious to omit anything that has once found a place in the Holy Writ. Another inference is also legitimate that while some Smritis modified their rules to provide for later usages and altered conditions of society	 other Smritis repeated the previous rules which had become obsolete	 side by side with the later rules. (See Mayne 's Treatise on 'Hindu law and Usage ' (1953 Edition) pp 20 21). Etymologically	 the word 'putrika ' means a daughter (especially a daughter appointed to raise male issue to be adopted by a father who has no sons)	 and 'putrika putra ' means a daughter 's son who by agreement or adoption becomes the son of her father (Vide Sanskrit English Dictionary by Sir M. Monier Williams). According to Hemadri	 the author of Chaturvarga Chintamani (13th Century)	 a 'Putrika putra ' can be of four descriptions. The following passage appearing at page 1046 in Volume II	 Part (4) of the Collection of Hindu Law Texts Yajnavalkya Smriti with the commentaries of the Mitakshara etc. (translated by J. R. Gharpure) refers to the four kinds of putrika putras: "The putrika putra is of four descriptions. (1) The first is the daughter appointed to be a son. (See Visishtha XVII. 15" Putrikaiveti ) (2) The next is her son. He is called "the son of an appointed daughter"	 without any special contract. He is	 how ever	 to be distinguished from the next i.e. the third class. He is not in the place of a son	 but in the place of a son 's son and is a daughter 's son. Accordingly he is described as a daughter 's son in the text of Sankha and Likhita: "An appointed daughter is like unto a son	 as Prachetasa has declared: her offspring is termed a son of an appointed daughter: he offers funeral oblations to the maternal grand father and to the paternal grandsire. There is no difference between a son 's son and a daughter 's son in respect of benefits conferred." (3) The third description of a son of an appointed daughter is the child born of a daughter who was given in marriage with an express stipulation as stated by Vasishtha 21 XVII.17. He appertains to his maternal grandfather as an adopted son. (4) The fourth is a child born of a daughter who was given in marriage with a stipulation in this form "the child who shall be born of her	 shall perform the obsequies of both." He belongs as a son to both grandfathers. But in the case where she was in thought selected for an appointed daughter	 she is so without a compact	 and merely by an act of the mind. (Manu Ch. IX 127 and 136)	 Hemadri quoted in Colebrocke. " It is well known that in the ancient Hindu law	 the right of a person to inherit the property of another depended principally on his right to offer pinda and udaka oblations to the other. The first person who was so entitled was the son. As time passed the concept of sonship was modified and by the time of Manu thirteen kinds of sons were known aurasa son who was begotten on a legally wedded wife and twelve others who were known as secondary sons (putra prathinidhis) and Manu omits any reference to putrika putra as such although in another place he observes : Aputroanen vidhina sutang kurvit putrikam Yadpatyam Bhavedasyah Samepoothro bhavedithi (He who has no son may make his daughter in the following manner an appointed daughter (Putrika saying to her husband) `the male child born of her shall be my son '). Another reading of the same sloka gives the second part of the above sloka as `yadupathaya bhavadasthaya thanmasthathu sadhukarma ' (The (male) child born of her shall perform my funeral rites). Yathaivathma thatha puthrah puthren duhithasma Thasyamatmani thishthanthyam kathmanyo dhananghareth Manu IX 130 (A son is even as one 's self	 a daughter is equal to a son	 how can another (heir) take the estate while (such daughter who is) one 's self lives). Yajnavalkya says that twelve sons including the legitimate son who is procreated on the lawfully wedded wife were recognized by law. Of them	 it is said	 the legitimate son is considered to be the primary son and others as secondary sons. The relevant text reads thus: Aursodharmmapatnija statsamah putrikasutah Kshetrajah kshetra jatastu sagotrerentaren wa grihe prachanna uttpanno goodhjastu sutah smritah kanin kanyakajato matamah sutomatah 22 Akshatayang kshatayamba jaatah paunarbhavah sutah Dadyanmata pita wa yang sa putro dattako bhaweta Kritashcha tabhyang veekritah kritrimah syataswa yangkritah dattatma tu swayang Datto garbevinah sahodhajah Utasristho grahyate yastu sopividhho bhawetsutah The above text is translated by section section Setlur in his book entitled `A complete Collection of Hindu law Books on Inheritance ' thus : "The legitimate son is one procreated on the lawful wedded wife. Equal to him is the son of an appointed daughter. The son of the wife is one begotten on a wife by a sagotra of her husband	 or by some other relative. One	 secretly produced in the house	 is son of hidden origin. A damsel 's child is one born of an unmarried woman : he is considered as son of his maternal grandsire. A child	 begotten on a woman whose first marriage had not been consummated	 or on one who had been deflowered before marriage	 is called the son of a twice married woman. He whom his father or his mother gives for adoption shall be considered as a son given. A son bought is one who was sold by his father and mother. A son made is one adopted by a man himself. One	 who gives himself	 is self given. A child accepted	 while yet in the womb	 is one received with a bride. He who is taken for adoption having been forsaken by his parents	 is a deserted son. " `Aurasa ' is the son procreated by a man himself on his wife married according to sacramental forms prescribed by Sastra. `Putrikaputra ' is the son of an appointed daughter. `Kshetraja ' is the son begotten on the wife of a person by another person sagotra or any other. `Gudhaja ' is the son secretly born in a man 's house when it is not certain who the father is. `Kanina ' is the son born on an unmarried girl in her father 's house before her marriage. `Paunarbhava ' is the son of a twice married woman. `Dattaka ' is the son given by his father or mother. `Krita ' is the son bought from his father and mother or from either of them. `Kritrima ' is the son made (adopted) by a person himself with the consent of the adoptee only. `Svayamdatta ' is a person who gives himself to a man as his son. `Sahodhaja ' is the son born of a woman who was pregnant at the time of his marriage. `Apavidha ' is a person who is received by another as his son after he has been abandoned by his parents or either of them. There is one other kind of son called `Nishada ' who is the son of a Brahmin by a Sudra who is not referred to in the above quoted text of Yajnavlkya. While commenting on the above text	 Vijnanesvara explains `putrika 23 putra ' in the Mitakshara (composed between 1070 1100 A.D.) as follows : Tatasamah putrikasutah tatsamah aurasasamah putrikayah sutah ataevoursasamah	 yathah vashisthah abhratrikang pradasyami tubhyang kanyamalangkritam asyang yo jayate putrah sah me putro bhawedititee athwa putrikaiv sutah putri kasutah sopyoursasamaev pitravayavanamalpatwata matravayavanang bahulyachha	 Yathas vashishthah tritiyah putrah putrikaivetyarthah (The son of an appointed daughter (putrika putra) is equal to him: that is equal to the legitimate son. The term signifies`son of a daughter '. Accordingly he is equal to the legitimate son as described by Vasishtha: "This damsel	 who has no brother	 I will give unto thee	 decked with ornaments: the son who may be born of her shall be my son."; Or that term may signify a daughter becoming by special appointment a son. Still she is only similar to a legitimate son; for she derives more from the mother than from the father. Accordingly she is mentioned by Vasishtha as a son	 but as third in rank. "The appointed daughter is considered to be the third class of sons.") (Vide section section Setlur on `A complete collection of Hindu Law Books on Inheritance ' p. 30). Proceeding further Vijnanesvara comments on the following text of Yajnavalkya : Pinddonshaharshchekshang poorvabhawe parah parah Among these	 the next in order is heir and presents funeral oblations on failure of the preceding) as under : Atekshang poorvoktanang putranang poorvasya poorvasyabhawe uttrah pindadhah shradhdong shaharo veditavyaah (Of these twelve sons abovementioned	 on failure of the first	 respectively	 the next in order	 as enumerated	 must be considered to be the giver of the funeral oblation or performer of obsequies	 and taker of a share or successor to the effects.). Then Vijnanesvara says with reference to what Manu Smritis has stated about the right of the primary and secondary sons to succeed to the estate of a person thus : "Manu	 having promised two sets of six sons	 declares the first six to be heirs and kinsmen; and the last to be not heirs	 but kinsmen : "the true legitimate issue	 the son of a wife	 a son given	 and one made by adoption	 a son of concealed origin	 and 24 one rejected are the six heirs and kinsmen. The son of an unmarried woman	 the son of a pregnant bride	 a son bought	 a son by a twice married woman	 a son self given	 and a son by a Sudra woman	 are six not heirs but kinsmen. " Thereafter he deals with the right of a woman to inherit the estate of one	 who leaves no male issue. He says "that sons	 principal and secondary	 take the heritage	 has been shown. The order of succession among all on failure of them	 is next declared. " And then quotes the following text of Yajnavalkya : Patni duhitharaschaiva pithrau bhratarastatha tata suta gotraja bandhuh shisya sabrahmacharinah akshamabhawe poorvasya dhanbhaguttarottarah swaryathsya hyaputrasya sarv varnekshwayan vidhih (The wife	 and the daughters also	 both parents	 brothers likewise	 and their sons	 gentiles	 cognates	 a pupil	 and a fellow student: on failure of the first among these	 the next in order is indeed heir to the estate of one who departed for heaven leaving no male issue. This rule extends to all classes). Commenting on the above text	 Vijnanesvara says: Mkhyagaunsutha dhay grihrantitee nirupitam tekshambhawe sarwekshang dayadakrama uchyate	 poorvokta dwadash putra yasyang na santi asavaputrah tashyaputrasya swaryatasya purlokang gatasya ghanbhaka ghangrahi akshang patnayadinamanukrantanang madhye poorvasya poorvashyabhawe uttara uttaro ghanbhagiti sambandhah (He	 who has no son of any of the twelve descriptions above stated is one having `no male issue '. Of a man	 thus leaving no male progeny	 and departing for another world	 the heir	 or successor	 is that person	 among such as have been here enumerated (the wife and the rest) who is next in order	 on failure of the first mentioned respectively. Such is the construction of the sentence). From the foregoing	 it is obvious that in the course of the passages extracted above	 Vijnanesvara was only commenting upon the relevant text of Yajnavalkya which laid down the practice prevalent in ancient times. He also notices that according to Manu only six of the twelve sons were entitled to succeed to the estate and the remaining six were not heirs but kinsmen. We have not been shown any Commentary of Vijnanesvara that at the time when the Mitakshara was written	 all the twelve kinds of sons described by Yajnavalkya were in fact entitled to succeed to the estate of the deceased and that the wife of the deceased succeeded to his estate only when none of the 25 twelve kinds of sons was existing. Certainly that has not been the practice for several centuries. In the absence of a son	 grandson or great grandson (aurasa or adopted) the wife succeeds to the estate of her husband. The other kinds of sons including putrika putra are not shown to have preceded the wife. Baudhayana who belonged to the Krishna Yajurveda School and who composed the Baudhayana Dharma Sutra long prior to the Mitakshara refers to the twelve kinds of sons and divides them into two classes one being entitled to share the inheritance and the other to be members of the family only: Aurasang putrikaputrang kshetrajang dattkritrimau goodhhajang chapvidhang cha rikthabhajah prachakchate Kanin cha sahodhang cha kritang pounarbhavang tatha swayangdatang nikshadang cha Gotrabhajah prachakchte In regard to this they quote also (the following verses): They call the legitimate son	 the son of an appointed daughter	 the son begotten on a wife	 the adopted son	 the son made	 the son born secretly	 and the son cast off	 entitled to share the inheritance. The spinster 's son	 the son taken with a bride	 the son bought	 the son of a twice married woman	 the self given son	 and the Nishada (these) they call members of (their father 's family) (Vide West & Buhler on `Hindu Law Inheritance ' at p. 317). That some of the secondary sons were not entitled to succeed according to Baudhayana may be noticed here and this statement does not agree with the Mitakshara 's Commentary that all the principal and secondary sons succeed before the wife. This shows that the statement in the Mitakshara refers partly to historical facts and partly to existing facts. Vishnu Dharmasastra which according to Dr. Jolly belongs to the third century A.D. describes `putrika putra ' as follows: Putrikaputrasthrithayah yastwasyaah putrah sa me putro bhawediti ya pithra datta sa puthrika putrikavidhinaapratipaditapi bhratrivihina puthrikaiv (The third is the son of an appointed daughter. She is called an appointed daughter	 who is given away by her father with the words	 `The son whom she bears	 be mine '. A girl who has no brother is 26 considered an appointed daughter	 though she be not given away according to the rule of an appointed daughter) (Vide West & Buhler on `Hindu Law Inheritance ' at p. 338). In this text what needs to be noticed is that a brotherless daughter becomes a putrika even if she is not given according to the prescribed procedure. Vasishtha who according to Dr. Jolly must have composed his Dharma Sutra several centuries before Christ describes `putrika ' as follows : Tritya puthrika	 vigyayate	 abhratrika pungsah pith rinbhyeti pratichhinang gachhati putratwama Abhrathrikang pradasyami tubhyang kanyamalangkritama Ashyang yo jayate puthrah sa me puthro bhawediti (The third is an appointed daughter. It is known that "the girl who has no brother comes back to the males of her own family	 to her father and the rest	 returning she becomes their son. " Here follows the verse to be spoken by the father when appointing a daughter	 "I shall give thee to the husband	 a brotherless damsel	 decked with ornaments; the son whom she may bear	 he be my son." (Vide West & Buhler on `Hindu Law Inheritance ' at p. 331). In the above text "the girl who has no brother comes back to the males of her own family	 to her father and the rest	 returning she becomes their son" apparently refers to the following Shloka in Rig Veda : Abhratew punsa aeti pratichi Gartarugiv sanye dhnanama jayew patya ushatee suvasa Uksha hashtreva nirirnite apshah Rig Veda	 I	 Sukta 124. Stanza 7. (She goes to the West	 as (a woman who has) no brother (repairs) to her male (relatives)	 and as one ascending the hall (of justice) for the recovery of property. (She mounts in the sky to claim her lustre) and like a wife desirous to please her husband	 Ushas puts on becoming attire	 and smiling as it were	 displays her charms). Apararka or Aparaditya was a king who ruled in the twelfth century. His commentary on the Yajnavalkya Smriti is considered to be of paramount authority and is referred to with respect in many of the 27 later Digests. After referring to the primary and secondary sons enumerated by Yajnavalkya	 Apararka observes : Puthrapratinidhinang madhye dattakah avang kaliyuge grahyah Athah aev kalou nivarthantha ityanuvrittau shaunkenoktam "dathoursetarekshang thu puthrathwen parigrahah " ithee. (Of the different kinds of substitutes for son	 only the Dattaka is valid during the Kaliyuga. Therefore Shaunaka says: "the acceptance of sons other than Datta and Aurasa" is prohibited in the Kaliyuga.) (Vide Ghose on 'Hindu Law ' Vol. II at p. 254.) The verse of Shaunaka quoted by Apararka is found in the verses on Kalivarjya collected and printed at page 1013 of Vol. III of P. V. Kane 's History of Dharmasastra. The 17th verse reads (The acceptance of sons other than datta or aurasa) is one of the acts not to be done in Kaliyuga. We find the following text in 'Parasara Madhava ' which is believed to have been written by Madhavacharya	 the prime minister of the Vijayanagara kings in or about the year 1350: Dattavyatiriktanang gounputrarnang rikthbhaktava Pratipadakani wakyani yugantaravikshyarni kalou yuge tekshang putratwen parigrahrnasya smrityantare nikshidhatwata " Dattourasetrekshantu puthrathwen parigrahah devarern sutotpattih wanaprashthashramagrahah kalou yugotwimana dharmana varjyanahurmanikshinah ithee (The texts establishing the right to inherit of the subsidiary sons other than the Dattaka or the adopted son were applicable in past ages (and have no force now) because in another Smriti their being taken as sons is prohibited in the Kali Yuga: 'The acceptance as sons of other than the Dattaka and Aurasa sons	 ' the procreation of a son by Niyoga by the husband 's younger brother and adopting the life of the Vanaprastha in old age are prohibited by the wise.) (Vide Ghose on 'Hindu Law ' Vol. II at p. 626). The quotation in the above Commentary is stated to be from Aditya Purana. The Smriti Chandrika of Devannabhatta according to Dr. Julius Jolly is a remarkable book on Hindu Dharmasastra for its originality and for its early date. Though following Mitakshara on most points of importance	 it introduces a great deal of new matter as well particularly with regard to the rights of woman over Stridhana	 relying upon 28 many Smriti texts not referred to in the Mitakshara. It is believed that the Smriti Chandrika was written in the thirteenth century for the author quotes Apararka (12th century) and he in his turn is quoted by Mitramisra (14th century). In the chapter entitled 'On partition of wealth received through secondary fathers"	 Smriti Chandrika states: Awang nirupitagournputhranang surwekshang yugantare puthratwen parigrah	 Kalou tu dattakasyaikasya "dattourasetarekshang tu putratwen parigrahah: itee	 Kaleradou dharmaguptyarthang mahatmabhirdattakourse tarekshang putratwen parigraha nivarrnata	 putrika karanmapyasmadev wakyatkalou nivaritama	 Dattoursetratwatputrikayah	 awang cha kalavoursaputrapouthrayorabhawe dattak aev gounputhro bhawati nanya ityanusandheyama. (The secondary sons thus enumerated had all been recognised as sons in former ages; but	 in the Kali age	 adopted son alone is recognized. By the text: "None is to be taken as a son except a son of the body or one who is adopted. " the learned have	 in the early period of the Kali age	 prohibited the recognition of any other son than the legitimate and the adopted	 with the view of maintaining virtue in the world. The appointment of a daughter to raise up a son to her father must also be considered by the same text to be prohibited in the Kali age	 such a son not being either one of the body or adopted. The conclusion hence is that	 in the Kali age	 in default of a legitimate son or grandson	 the adopted son alone and none else is recognised as a subsidiary son. (Vide Setlur on 'Hindu Law Books on Inheritance ' at page 272). It is no doubt true that in some earlier decisions to which a detailed reference at this stage is not necessary some statements found in Smriti Chandrika which were directly in conflict with the Mitakshara were not accepted and the Mitakshara was given the preference but still as observed by Mayne there can	 however	 be little doubt that its general authority is fairly high on points on which it does not come into conflict with the Mitakshara and that it is a work which is referred to throughout India with great respect by Nilakantha	 Mitramisra and others. Dattaka Chandrika which is a recognised treatise on the law of adoption declares in paragraphs Nos. 8 and 9 of section 1 thus: "8. A substitute. Now such is of eleven descriptions	 the son of the wife and the rest. Thus Manu (ordains): "Sages declare 29 these eleven sons (the son of the wife and the rest) as specified to be substitutes for the real legitimate son; for the sake of preventing a failure of obsequies. " Vrihaspati also. "Of the thirteen sons who have been enumerated	 by Manu in their order	 the legitimate son and appointed daughter are the cause of lineage. As oil is substituted by the virtuous for liquid butter; so are eleven sons by adoption substituted for the legitimate son and appointed daughter. Of these however in the present age	 all are not recognised. For a text recites: "Sons of many descriptions who were made by ancient saints cannot now be adopted by men	 by reason of their deficiency of power;" and against those other than the son given	 being substitutes	 there is a prohibition in a passage of law wherein after having been promised	 "The adoption	 as sons of those other than the legitimate son and son given	 it is subjoined, These rules sages pronounce to be avoided in the Kali age." (See 'Hindu Law Books ' edited by Whitley Stokes in 1865 at page 630). Dattaka Mimansa written by Nanda Pandita between 1595 1630 states. "64. "Sons of many descriptions who were made by ancient saints cannot now be adopted by men by reason	 of their deficiency of power etc."	 on account of this text of Vrihaspathi and because	 in this passage ("There is no adoption	 as sons	 of those other than the son given and the legitimate son etc.") other sons	 are forbidden by Saunaka	 in the Kali or present age	 amongst the sons however (who have been mentioned) the son given	 and the legitimate son only are admitted. " (See 'Hindu Law Books ' edited by Whitley Stokes in 1865 at page 547). In Bhagwan Singh vs Bhagwan Singh & Ors.(1) a Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court had to consider the authority of Dattaka Chandrika and Dattaka Mimansa as sources of Hindu Law. Since some doubts had been expressed about it by Mandlik	 Golapchandra Sarkar and Dr. Jolly who were themselves reputed writers on Hindu Law	 after an elaborate discussion about several earlier decisions and treatises on Hindu Law published by that time	 the majority of the Full Bench (Edge	 C.J.	 Knox	 Blair and Burkitt	 JJ.) expressed the 30 view that Dattaka Mimansa was not on questions of adoption an 'infallible guide ' in the Benares School of Hindu Law. But the minority (Banerji and Aikman	 JJ.) held that Dattaka Mimansa and Dattaka Chandrika were works of paramount authority on questions relating to adoption in the Benares School also. The Privy Council in the appeal filed against the judgment of the Full Bench observed in Bhagwan Singh & Ors. vs Bhagwan Singh (Minor)(1) & Ors. thus: "Their Lordships have mentioned in the prior adoption cases the views of Knox	 J. as to the authority of the two Dattaka treatises just quoted. In the present case the learned Chief Justice Edge takes even more disparaging views of their authority; denying	 if their Lordships rightly understand him	 that these works have been recognised as any authority at all in the Benares School of Law. If these were anything to show that in the Benares School of Law these works had been excluded or rejected	 that would have to be considered. But their authority has been affirmed as part of the general Hindu Law	 founded on the Smritis as the source from whence all Schools of Hindu Law derive their precepts. In Doctor Jolly 's Tagore Lecture of 1883	 that learned writer says: "The Dattaka Mimansa and Dattaka Chandrika have furnished almost exclusively the scanty basis on which the modern law of adoption has been based. " Both works have been received in courts of law	 including this Board	 as high authority. In Rangama vs Atchama (4 Moore 's Ind. Ap. 97) Lord Kingsdown says: "They enjoy	 as we understand	 the highest reputation throughout India." In 12 Moore	 p. 437	 Sir James Colvile quotes with assent the opinion of Sir William Macnaghten	 that both works are respected all over India	 that when they differ the Chandrika is adhered to in Bengal and by the Southern jurists	 while the Mimansa is held to be an infallible guide in the Provinces of Mithila and Benares. To call it infallible is too strong an expression	 and the estimates of Sutherland	 and of West and Buhler	 seem nearer the true mark; but it is clear that both works must be accepted as bearing high authority for so long a time that they become embedded in the general law. " The writings of Sir William Macnaghten	 Morley	 Colebrooke	 Sir Thomas Strange	 Babu Shyama Charan Sarkar and J. section Siromani supports the above view. In Rajendra Narain Lahoree vs Saroda Sonduree Dabee	(2) Uma Sunker Moitro vs Kali Komul Mozumdar(3)	 31 Lakshmappa vs Ramava(1)	 Waman Raghupati Bova vs Krishnaji Kashiraj Bova(2)	 Minakshi vs Ramanada(3)	 Tulshi Ram vs Behari Lal(4) & Beni Prasad vs Hardai Bibi(5)	 the Indian High Courts have accepted the authority of Dattaka Mimansa and Dattaka Chandrika. The Privy Council has also taken the same view in the Collector of Madura vs Moottoo Ramalinga Sethupathy(6). In Abhiraj Kuer vs Debendra Singh(7) this Court has dealt with the value to be attached to Dattaka Chandrika and Dattaka Mimansa as follows: "Learned Counsel has emphasised that great authority attaches to all statements of law as regards adoption that are contained in Dattak Mimansa. There is no doubt that for many years now the Dattak Chandrika of Kuvera and Dattak Mimansa of Nanda Pandit have been recognised to be of great authority on all questions of adoption. It is true that Prof. Jolly in his Tagore Law Lectures had in no uncertain terms characterised the latter to be of little value; and eminent scholars like Dr. Mandlik and Golap Chandra Sarkar while writing in the latter part of the last century subjected many of Nanda Pandit 's views to unfavourable criticism. Inspite of all this the Privy Council in Bhagwan Singh vs Bhagwan Singh (1899) L.R. 26 I.A. 153	 161 did recognise that both the Dattak Mimansa and Dattak Chandrika had been received in courts of law including the Privy Council as high authorities and after drawing attention to Lord Kingsdown 's statements as regards these in Rungama vs Atchama (1846) I.A. 1	 97 and Sir James Colvile 's statement in Collector of Madura vs Moottoo Ramlinga Sethupathy (1868) 12 M.I.A. 397	 437	 stated thus: "To call it (i.e. Dattak Mimansa) infallible is too strong an expression	 and the estimates of Sutherland and of West and Buhler	 seem nearer the true mark; but it is clear that both works must be accepted as bearing high authority for so long a time that they have become embedded in the general law." While saying this mention must also be made of the observations of the Privy Council in Sri Balusu Gurulingaswami vs Shri Balasu Ramalakshmamma (1899) L.R. 26 I.A. 113	 136 decided on the same date (March 11	 1899) but 32 immediately before Bhagwan Singh 's case	 was decided	 expressing their concurrence with the view that caution was required in accepting the glosses in Dattaka Mimansa and Dattak Chandrika where they deviate from or added to the Smrities. " Even when they are read with care it is not possible to disbelieve the statement of law with which we are concerned since they are in conformity with many other writings discussed above. A careful reading of the texts extracted above leads to an inference that the institution of putrika putra had become obsolete and not recognised by Hindu society for several centuries prior to the time when Smriti Chandrika or Dattaka Chandrika were written and these two. Commentaries belong to a period far behind the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh. Some of the decisions relied on by the parties may now be considered. The decision in Nursingh Narain & Ors. vs Bhuttun Loll & Ors.(1) (compiled by D. Sutherland) was not a case where the claim of a putrika putra as it was understood in Hindu Law was upheld. In that case	 the Court had to decide whether a sister 's daughter could become an appointed daughter and her son a putrika putra. The claim was rejected with the following observations: "There is no doubt that	 in ancient times	 there were many legal substitutes for the sons of the body (Auras). Manu (Chapter 9	 V	 180)	 and Yagnyavalkya (Mitakshara	 Chapter I	 Section 2) enumerate no less than twelve including the legitimate son of the body; and the latter authority ranks the son of an appointed daughter ("putrika putra") next to the legitimate son	 and equal to him. It is contended by the appellant in this case that a sister 's daughter may be adopted under this authority	 and become "an appointed daughter"	 and her son a "putrika putra"	 but we do not see the slightest resemblance between the two cases. The daughter appointed to raise up issue for her father must	 according to the old Hindoo Law books	 be a man 's own daughter	 the child of his own loins; and it is solely on the ground of this near relationship that the son of the daughter	 viz. the "putrika putra" is classed in the same rank with the lawful son of the body. It is true that	 in default of an "aurasa" daughter	 a daughter of the body	 that is	 a man could	 under the old Hindoo Law	 adopt a subsidiary daughter as a substitute for her; but these adoptions were "for the sake of obtaining the heaven procured by 33 the daughter 's son" (vide Dattaka Mimansa	 page 138	 section 18)	 and not for the purpose of obtaining a "putrika putra	 an adopted son by means of an appointed daughter. .We think, therefore, that the appellant in the present case is not a putrika putra	 that is, he is not the son of an appointed daughter in the proper sense of the term, and has, according to ancient Hindoo Law, no status in the family of Holas Narayan. Taking this view of the case, it is not necessary for us to enter at any great length into the second point. All the great authorities on Hindoo Law admit that, except the Dattaka and Kritrima, no other forms of adoption are allowable in the present age.  The last para of the above quotation is of some significance so far as these appeals are concerned. In Thakoor Jeebnath Singh vs The Court of Wards(1) the plaintiff laid claim to an impartible raj	 raj of Ramgarh on the ground that he being the father 's sister 's son of the last holder	 Rajah Trilokenath	 who died unmarried was entitled to the estate in preference to the defendant who was a distant agnate of the last holder. Ordinarily the plaintiff being a bandhu could not exclude the defendant who was a sagotra sapinda of the last holder. He therefore	 put forward the plea that as his mother was the appointed daughter of Maharaj Sidnath Singh	 the paternal grandfather of the last holder and he as putrikaputra should be treated as a son of Maharaj Sidnath Singh entitled to succeed to the estate. Two questions arose before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in that case as in the present appeals (1) whether the practice of taking a 'putrika putra ' was in vogue and (2) whether the mother of the plaintiff had in fact been an 'appointed daughter '. On the first question	 the Privy Council observed that it was not necessary to give a finding but on the other it held that the plaintiff had not shown that his mother was in fact an 'appointed daughter '. Even so after referring to the statements found in the books of Sir Thomas Strange and Sir William Macnaghten	 the Privy Council observed that it appeared that the practice of having a 'putrikaputra ' had become obsolete. In that connection	 it observed thus: "It is not necessary in this case to decide that this is so	 although there certainly does not appear to have arisen in modern times any instance in the courts where this custom had been considered." 34 Absence of cases before courts within living memory in which a claim had been preferred on the basis of affiliation in putrika putra form showed that the said practice had become obsolete. The contention based on the theory that a person could take a son as 'putrika putra ' was rejected by the Madras High Court in the year 1908 in Sri Raja Venkata Narasimha Appa Row Bahadur vs Sri Rajah Saraneni Venkata Purushothama Jaganadha Gopala Row Bahadur & Ors.(1) in the following words: "Mr. Seshagiri Ayyar on behalf of the appellant contended	 first	 that on a proper construction of the will the testator 's daughter was 'appointed ' by her father to raise a son for him in accordance with a practice which is now generally reputed to be obsolete. We need not determine whether in any event the language of the will could be made to bear this construction; it clearly could be so construed only if there were in existence a living custom to which the words can be referred. It is not such language as could be interpreted as indicating the testator 's intention to revive a dead custom	 or create a new kind of heir for himself	 unknown to the law of the present day	 supposing him to have the power to do either of those things." In Nagindas Bhagwandas vs Bachoo Hurkissaondas(2) while rejecting the contention that the position of an adopted son in the family of the adoptive father was not that of a coparcener	 the Privy Council observed: "It was endeavoured to establish that proposition by reference to the place which was assigned by Manu and other early authorities to the twelve then possible sons of a Hindu. As to this contention it is sufficient to say that	 whatever may have been the position and rights between themselves of such twelve sons in very remote times	 all of those twelve sons	 except the legitimately born and the adopted	 are long since obsolete." A Division Bench of the Patna High Court in Babui Rita Kuer vs Puran Mal(3) while holding that defendant No. 2 in that case who was alleged to have been appointed as putrika by her father had not in fact been so appointed	 observed (but without actually deciding): "However	 the case of Thakoor Jeebnath Singh vs Court of Wards (1874 75) 2 I.A. 163	 a Privy Council case	 is important in this connexion. The whole argument addressed to us is based 35 upon the effect of this custom of adoption of a daughter as putrika. Now the Privy Council have laid it down that all Hindu text writers unanimously concur in holding the appointment of a daughter as a son to raise up issue to a sonless father is now obsolete; and no recent authority can be found within modern times where the custom has received judicial sanction. In the Privy Council case referred to above a grave doubt is thrown upon the validity of such a custom	 and it is there distinctly stated that if this custom is ever to be revived	 it can only be on the clearest and most conclusive evidence. To a like effect is the case of Sri Rajah Venkata Narasimha Appa Row Bahadur vs Sri Raja Suraneni Venkata Purushothama Jaganadha Gopala Rao Bahadur 	 where the custom alleged is considered not to be a living custom. Mr. Mayne says at p. 93	 Edn. 8	 of his treatise on Hindu Law that the usage had become obsolete from time immemorial	 and was so decided by the Civil Courts. However	 if this custom or usage is relied on in any given case it must be conclusively and undeniably proved. I should be slow indeed to hold	 if this obsolete custom can be established	 that all the duties and obligations imposed on a Hindu son to discharge the debts of his father under Mitakshara Law would apply or attach to a daughter appointed as a putrika to raise issue to a sonless father the attention of the High Court. The above case is from the State of Bihar itself. If the practice of appointment of a putrika was in vogue	 it would not have missed the attention of the High Court It is true that some observations made in Lal Tribhawan Nath Singh vs Deputy Commissioner	 Fyzabad & Ors.(1) support the theory that the institution of putrika putra was in vogue even now. Two of the questions involved in that case were whether Sir Pratap Narain Singh was the Putrika putra of Sir Man Singh who was the former holder of an impartible estate	 known as taluka Ajudhia and whether the practice of appointing a daughter to bear a son to a Hindu was permitted by the Mitakshara and was enforceable. Stuart	 A.J.C. who delivered the leading judgment in that case with whom Kanhaiya Lal	 A.J.C. agreed held that Sri Pratap Narain Singh was not the putrika putra of Sir Man Singh although the practice of appointing a daughter bear a son to a Hindu was permitted by the Mitakshara and was enforceable. It is seen that the above case had a history. Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh himself had earlier instituted a suit which ultimately ended up in an appeal before the Privy Council in Maharajah 36 Pertab Narain Singh vs Maharanee Sudhao Kooer(1). In that case	 his plea was that he (who was also known as Dadwa Sahib) was the son of a daughter of Maharajah Man Singh; that he had been treated by Maharajah Man Singh 'in all respects as his own son ' within the meaning of clause 4 of section 22 of Act I of 1869; that a will made by Maharajah Man Singh on April 22	 1864 had been revoked orally on a subsequent date and that he had become entitled to the estate of Maharajah Man Singh. The Privy Council held that the will had been revoked and Maharajah had died intestate and that Maharajah Pratap Singh was the person who under clause 4 of section 22 of Act I of 1869 was entitled to succeed to the taluk	 and that he had made out his claim to a declaratory decree to that effect. The Privy Council further held that the declaration was limited to the taluk and what passed with it but it did not affect the succession to the personal property or property not properly the parcel of the talukdaree estate which was governed by the ordinary law of succession. It is significant that no claim had been preferred by Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh on the ground that he was a putrika putra of Maharaja of Man Singh. He merely claimed that he was a statutory heir under clause 4 of section 22 of Act I of 1869 which was passed at the request of Talukdars including Maharajah Man Singh as can be seen from the decision of the Privy Council in Maharajah Pertab Narain Singh 's case (supra) which observed thus: "So matters stood when the Maharajah	 as one of the leading members of the British India Association of Talukdars	 went down to Calcutta in order to take part in the discussions and negotiations which resulted in the passing of Act I of 1869. This must have been in the latter half of 1868. Imtiaz Ali	 the vakil concerned in the drafting and preparation of this Act on the part of the talukdars	 has sworn that clause 4 of the 22nd section originated with the Maharajah; that it was opposed by some of the talukdars	 but finally approved of by the Select Committee of the Governor General 's Legislative Council on the bill and passed into law. He also says that he was told by the Maharajah that his object in pressing this clause was to provide for the Dadwa Sahib." (NOTE : 'Maharajah ' referred to above is Maharajah Man Singh and 'Dadwa Sahib ' is Maharajah Pratap Narain Singh). If the practice of appointing a daughter to bear a son was in vogue then Maharajah Man Singh need not have taken the trouble to 37 request the British Government to get Act I of 1869 passed and if Maharajah Pratap Narain Singh was a putrika putra	 he would not have refrained from putting forward that case. Moreover the Privy Council also clarified the object of introducing clause 4 of section 22 of Act I of 1869 thus: "Their Lordships are disposed to think that the clause must be construed irrespectively of the spiritual and legal consequences of an adoption under the Hindu Law. They apprehended that a Hindu grandfather could not	 in the ordinary and proper sense of the term adopt his grandson as a son. Nor do they suppose that	 in passing the clause in question	 the Legislature intended to point to the practice (almost	 if not wholly	 obsolete) of constituting	 in the person of a daughter 's son	 a "putrika putra"	 or son of an appointed daughter. Such an act	 if it can now be done	 would be strong evidence of an intention to bring the grandson within the 4th clause	 but is not therefore essential in order to do so. Moreover	 it is to be observed that the 4th	 like every other clause in the 22nd section	 applied to all the talukdars whose names are included in the second or third of the lists prepared under the Act	 whether they are Hindus	 Mahommedans	 or of any other religion; and it is not until all the heirs defined by the ten first clauses are exhausted that	 under the 11th clause	 the person entitled to succeed becomes determinable by the law of his religion and tribe." Triloki Nath who failed before the Privy Council thereafter filed a review petition before it. That petition was dismissed in Pertab Narain Singh vs Subhao Kooer(1) but he was permitted if he so desired to reopen by suit in India the question whether he had been properly represented in the previous litigation in the Indian Courts. Accordingly a suit was filed in 1879. That ultimately was dismissed by the Privy Council in Perturbarain Singh vs Trilokinath Singh(2) holding that the previous proceedings were binding on Trilokinath Singh. Another suit which had been filed in the meanwhile in the year 1882 for possession of the estate by Trilokinath Singh was also dismissed finally by the Privy Council in Triloki Nath Singh vs Pertab Narain Singh(3) with the following observations: "Their Lordships	 therefore	 merely declared Pratap Narain Singh 's title to the taluks and whatever descended under Act I of 38 1869. As to other property which was not included in that Act	 Pratap Narain would not have been the heir to the Maharaja during the lifetime of the widow. She would have taken the widow 's estate in all property except that which was governed by Act 1 of 1869. " Thus ended the first series of litigation. Now reverting to the case of Lal Tribhawan Nath Singh (supra) it should be stated that the suit out of which the said appeal arose was instituted after the death of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh in 1906 by Tribhawan Nath Singh	 grandson of Ramadhin	 the eldest brother of Maharaja Man Singh in the year 1915 for a declaration that he was entitled to the estate as the heir of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh under clause 11 of section 22 of Act I of 1869 which provided that on the failure of persons referred to in the first ten clauses	 the ordinary heirs under personal law of the last holder of the taluk was entitled to succeed. He pleaded that the widows of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh were disentitled to the estate on the ground of unchastity and that he was the nearest heir living at that time. The above case was filed on the assumption that Maharaja Pratap Singh was the putrika putra of Maharaja Man Singh and hence the plaintiff being an agnate of Maharaja Man Singh was entitled to succeed. (Note: The claim was almost similar to the claim in these appeals). The defendants in that suit denied all allegations of the plaintiff set up in the case and pleaded that one Dukh Haran Nath Singh had been adopted by one of the widows of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh and that even if they were not entitled to the estate	 the estate had to go to the family of Narsingh Narain Singh i.e. the natural family of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh. The trial court dismissed the suit. In the appeal	 the oudh Judicial Commissioner 's Court after specifically recording a finding that Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh was not the putrika putra of Maharaja Man Singh held that the practice of appointing a daughter to bear a son to a Hindu was permitted by the Mitakshara and was enforceable. Reliance is now placed before us on the above decision of the Oudh Court to establish that even now it is possible to have a son in the putrika putra form. We have carefully read the two judgments of the two Additional Judicial Commissioners	 Stuart and Kanhaiya Lal. We feel that the question whether the practice of taking a son in putrika putra form was in vogue at the relevant time has not been considered in detail in the two judgments. The approach to this question appears to be bit casual even though the judgments on other material issues appear to be quite sound. Since they had held that no ceremony constituting the mother of Maharaja Pratap Narain Singh 39 had been performed	 they might not have gone into the question of law in depth. They just proceeded on the basis of some ancient texts including the Mitakshara without devoting attention to the practice having become obsolete. All that Kanhaiya Lal	 A.J.C. says on the above question at page 259 is "The case with which a son could be obtained by adoption has had the effect in course of time of rendering affiliation in the form of putrika putra more or less uncommon	 but it has by no means become obsolete	 for the Mitakshara gives the putrika putra the second or predominant position after the legitimate son and treats him in every respect as his substitute. " The learned Additional Judicial Commissioner treats	 we feel inappropriately	 the institution of an illatom son in law in vogue in Malabar or Khanadamad recognised in Punjab as but relics of the institution of putrika putra. We have dealt with elsewhere in this judgment some of the text books referred to by the learned Additional Judicial Commissioner. It is to be noticed that the Oudh Court did not refer to any specific case where a claim based on the putrika putra title had been upheld. The following remark made by Stuart	 A.J.C. at page 230 is significant: "What reason then could he have had to be the only person in Oudh known to history who employed a practice by which he set aside his daughter to bear him a male heir?" We feel for the reasons given by us elsewhere in this judgment that the view expressed by the Oudh Court on the question of prevalence of putrika putra form of affiliation cannot be accepted as correct. We shall now advert to some of the digests	 lectures and treatises on 'Hindu Law '. In Colebrooke 's Digest of Hindu Law (1874 Edition) Volume II	 page 416	 preface to the first edition of which was written in 1796	 it was observed thus: "Among the twelve descriptions of some begotten in lawful wedlock and the rest	 any others but the son of the body and the son given are forbidden in the Cali age. Thus the Aditya purana	 premising "the filiation of any but a son lawfully begotten or given in adoption by his parents"	 proceeds: "These parts of ancient law were abrogated by wise legislators	 as the cases arose at the beginning of the Cali age. . . In the like manner sufficient reasons may be assigned or the prohibition of appointing a daughter and so forth. Again	 by the term "powers" in the text of Vrihaspati is meant	 not only devotion	 but the consequence of it	 namely	 command over the senses. 40 Among these twelve descriptions of sons	 we must only now admit the rules concerning a son given in adoption and one legally begotten. The law concerning the rest has been inserted	 to complete that part of the Book	 as well as for the use of those who	 not having seen such prohibitory texts	 admit the filiation of other sons. Thus	 in the country of O 'dry (O 'risa)	 it is still the practice with some people to raise up issue on the wife of a brother." Sir F. W. Macnaghten who was a judge of the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William in Bengal writes in his book entitled Considerations on the Hindu Law	 as it is current in Bengal ' (1824 Edition) at page 129: "Vrihaspati speaks "of the thirteen sons	 who have been enumerated by Meru in their order". And with reference to this we find in the Dattaca Chandrika	 'of these however	 in the present lage	 all are not recognized. For a text recites	 'sons of many descriptions	 who were made by the ancient Saints	 cannot now be adopted by men	 by reason of their deficiency of power; ' and against those	 other than the son given	 being substitutes	 there is a prohibition in a passage of law	 wherein	 after having been premised "The adoption	 as sons of these other than the legitimate son	 and the son given	 it is subjoined. 'This rule, sages pronounce to be avoided in the Kali age. ' Upon the words	 "in a passage of law" there is the following note; This passage	 which is frequently cited	 is attributed to the Aditya purana	 and in its complete state is thus	 'The adoption	 as sons of those other than the legitimate son	 and son given; the procreation of issue by a brother in law; the assuming the state of an anchoret; these rules	 sages pronounce to be avoided in the Kali age. '" Sir Thomas Strange	 a former Chief Justice of Madras observes in his book on 'Hindu Law ' (published in 1830) Volume I at pages 74 75 as under: ". . whence the different sorts of sons enumerated by different authorities	 all resolving themselves	 with Menu	 into twelve; that is	 the legally begotten	 and eleven subsidiary ones	 reckoning the son of the appointed daughter (putrika putra) as the same in effect with the one legally begotten	 and therefore not to be separately accounted; all formerly	 in their turn and order	 capable of succession	 for the double purpose of obsequies	 and of inheritance; six (reckoning	 with Menu	 the legally begotton	 41 and the son of the appointed daughter as one)	 deriving their pretensions from birth	 six	 from distinct adoptions; the first of the twelve	 namely	 the issue male of the body lawfully begotten	 being the principal one of the whole as the son given in adoption was always the preferable one	 among those obtainable expressly in this mode. And now	 these two	 the son by birth	 emphatically so called	 (Aurasa)	 and (Dattaca) the son by adoption	 meaning always the son given	 are	 generally speaking	 the only subsisting ones	 allowed to be capable of answering the purpose of sons	 the rest	 and all concerning them	 being parts of ancient law	 understood to have been abrogated	 as the cases arose	 at the beginning of the present	 the Cali age. " Sir Ernest John Trevelyan	 a former Judge of the High Court of Calcutta in his book entitled "Hindu Law as administered in British India" (Third Edition) states at page 107 thus: "In ancient times the Hindu law recognised the following descriptions of sons as legitimate sons	 viz. 1. Aurasa	. . . 2. Kshetraja	. . . 3. Putrika putra	 or son of an appointed daughter. In ancient times a man could appoint his daughter to raise up issue to him. The practice is obsolete. Shastri Golap Chunder Sarkar	 without giving any instances of its application	 contends that there is no reason why it should not be now applied. (to) 13. . . . Of these the only sons that are now recognized by Hindu law are the Aurasa son and the Dattaka son. According to the Mithila school a Kritrima son can be taken in adoption. Adoption in this form is based upon	 recent works	 and is not referable to the ancient practice of taking Kritrima sons." Dr. Jullius Jolly in his Tagore Law lectures delivered in 1883 entitled "Outlines of an History of the Hindu Law of Partition	 Inheritance and Adoption" states in his Lecture VII at page 144 thus: "The early history of the Law of Adoption may be traced in those enumerations of subsidiary or secondary sons	 which occupy such a prominent place in the Indian Law books. Nearly all these substitutes for real sons are now long since obsolete	 but they are deserving of attention	 not only from a historical	 but from a practical point of view	 because the rules regarding 42 them	 being earlier in time	 have in a measure formed the basis on which adoption in the proper sense of the term has been framed by the writers of the medieval and modern Indian Digests. " That the enumeration of twelve or thirteen and even fifteen kinds of sons in ancient Smritis owes its origin to the tendency of ancient writers to deal with exhaustively all possible sons a man could conceive of irrespective of the fact that all of them might not have received legal sanction in the contemporary society is obvious from the inclusion in the list of fifteen sons of a son called Yatrakvachanotpadita (son produced in any other manner than the sons previously enumerated). Referring to such a son	 Dr. Jolly observes at page 146 thus: "Beginning with the son procreated anywhere	 who comes in as the last of all	 I may observe that the only other text in which this kind of son is referred to occurs in the Vishnusmriti; coming in	 as it does	 at the end of the whole list	 the term Yatrakvachanotpadita seems to mean produced in any other manner than the sons previously enumerated	 and may owe its origin to the systematizing spirit of a later age which wished to exhaust all sorts of sonship that might occur anyhow.  After referring to the relevant texts of Apararka	 Smriti Chandrika	 Battaka Chandrika	 Madhava	 Visvesvara Bhatta	 Vivada Chintamani	 Dayabhaga	 Dattaka Mimansa	 Nirnaya Sindhu of Kamalakara Vyavahara Mayukha of Nilkantha and the Dharma Sindhu of Kasi Natha	 Shri Rajkumar Sarvadhikari states in 'the Principles of the Hindu Law of Inheritance ' (Tagore Law Lectures	 1880) at pages 407 409 as follows: "This catena of texts will prove to you that the practice of affiliating different kinds of sons has become obsolete at the present day. The only exception is the dattaka	 or the son given by his parents. It may be said that the Mitakshara	 the Dayabhaga	 and the Vivada Chintamani the leading authorities in the Benares	 the Bengal	 and the Mithila Schools seem still to countenance the practice. That these schools do not recognise such a custom is proved beyond question by the other text writers of these schools	 who have followed the lead of Vijnanesvara	 Jimutavahana and Vachaspati Misra. The authority of Visvesvara Bhatta	 Madhava	 Kamalakara	 Nanda Pandita	 and Jagannatha is quite enough to 43 show that the ancient practice of affiliating different kinds of sons has fallen into desuetude in this age. The dictum of Jagannatha of the Bengal School establishes beyond question the fact that the practice of affiliating daughters in default of male issue	 and the other forms of adoption enumerated by Manu	 has become wholly obsolete in the present age. The same may be said also of the Benares School	 Visvesvara Bhatta	 Madhava	 Nirnaya Sindhu	 and Dharma Sindhu give plain and unequivocal answers on this point "the practice is forbidden in the present age". The authority of Visvesvara Bhatta is highly respected in the Mithila School. The words of Madhava and Kamalakara carry universal weight. The Dattaka Mimansa and the Dattaka Chandrika	 the two standard treatises on adoption	 are the reigning authorities in all the schools; and we have seen that both of them strongly denounce the practice. The Smriti Chandrika and the Vyavahara Mayukha have forbidden the practice in the Dravira and the Maharashtra Schools. It is plain	 therefore	 that the adopted son is the only secondary son recognised in the present age. It may reasonably be asked	 however	 "how is it	 if the practice of affiliating secondary sons be obsolete in the present age	 that Vijnanesvara	 Vachaspati Misra	 and Jimutavahana devote such a large space in their treatises in discussing the rights of subsidiary sons?" The question may be answered in the words of Jagannatha: "They did so to complete that part of the book. They did so simply to show the nature of the practice as it existed in former ages. They merely gave a historical review of the subject	 and did not enjoin the practice in the present age. The fact is	 the practice was still lingering in some parts of the country when the authors of the Mitakshara	 Chintamani	 and the Dayabhaga promulgated their laws. The discussion of the rights of secondary sons	 then was	 in the language of Jagannatha	 for the benefit of those who "not having seen the prohibitory texts still admitted the filiation of the subsidiary sons". We can by no means admit that the practice universally prevailed at the time of Vijnanesvara	 Vachaspati Misra	 and Jimutavahana. 44 It was strongly denounced by Vrihaspati and others. But it is not improbable that the custom was at its last gasp at the time of Vijnanesvara. Aprarka	 Devandara	 and Madhava	 coming after the author of the Mitakshara	 abolished it altogether. The custom might have partly revived in some parts of India at the time of Vachaspati Misra and Jimutavahana	 and that might have been partly the reason of their discussing the nature of the custom in their works. Apart from the question whether such a practice prevailed at the time of Vijnanesvara	 Vachaspati Misra	 and Jimutavahana	 there is not the shadow of a doubt that the practice is obsolete at the present days. Our authority for making this statement is the opinion of Devananda	 Kamalakara	 Nanda Pandita	 Nilakantha and Jagannatha. The last four authors are the most recent authorities on the subject	 and their evidence as to the non existence of the custom at the present day cannot be questioned. Their words authoritatively settle the point that the custom has been entirely abrogated in the present age." After quoting the text of Vrihaspati: Anekdhaah kritah puthra rikshibhiryeapratanah na shakyantedhuna karttoo shaktihinairidantanaih (Sons of many descriptions who were made by ancient saints cannot now be adopted by men	 by reason of their deficiency of power). Jogendra Smarta Siromani observes in his Commentary on the 'Hindu Law ' (1885 edition) at page 112 thus: "All the secondary sons	 with the exception of the Dattaka	 have not only become obsolete	 but according to the Shastras	 they are not sons at all in the present age. " At page 148 in the same book	 he further observes: "The Kritrima form of adoption prevails only in Mithila	 Nanda Pandita recognizes it as legal notwithstanding the text of Adita Purana which declares that in the present age all the secondary sons have become obsolete with the exception of the Dattaka (see Mimansa	 section II	 para 65)." John D. Mayne	 the author of 'Mayne 's Treatise on Hindu Law and Usage ' (11th Edition) states at page 114: "The truth is that there were only two kinds of sons	 the aurasa and the adopted son. The list of twelve or thirteen sons 45 was obviously due to the systematising habit of Sanskrit writers. " In 'Mulla 's Principles of Hindu Law ' (14th Edition)	 it is stated at page 115 thus: "The daughter 's son occupies a peculiar position in the Hindu law. He is a bhinna gotra sapinda or bandhu	 but he comes in before parents and other more remote gotraja sapindas. The reason is that according to the old practice it was competent to a Hindu who had no son to appoint a daughter to raise up issue to him. Such a daughter	 no doubt was the lawful wife of her husband	 but her son	 called putrika putra	 becomes the son of her father. Such a son was equal to an aurasa or legitimate son	 and took his rank	 according to several authorities	 as the highest among the secondary sons. Although the practice of appointing a daughter to raise up issue for her father became obsolete	 the daughter 's son continued to occupy the place that was assigned to him in the order of inheritance and even now he takes a place practically next after the male issue	 the widow and the daughters being simply interposed during their respective lives. " The portion underlined in the above extract is quoted with approval by the Privy Council in Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs Moparthi Chenchuramayya Minor & Ors. (supra). N. R. Raghavachariar on 'Hindu Law Principles & Precedents ' (5th Edition) writes at page 78: "But with the settlement of the society to peace and order and the recognition and enforcement by some superior power of the mutual rights of the people	 the idea of family relationship received a better refinement and definition	 and all the sons excepting the Aurasa	 the Dattaka and the son by a permanently and exclusively kept concubine (Dasiputra) have become obsolete. But the Putrika putra form of adoption	 perfectly natural and consistent with the feelings of affection which a Hindu has towards his daughter 's son	 is still prevalent in Malabar	 though in other parts of India it has become obsolete". We find a detailed discussion of the aurasa and eleven or twelve kinds of subsidiary sons mentioned by ancient smriti writers in 'History of Dharmasastra ' (Vol. III) by P. V. Kane at pages 643 to 661. At page 657	 the learned author writes 46 "In modern times the courts generally recognize only two kinds of sons	 viz. aurasa and dattaka	 the other kinds of sons being held to be long since obsolete. Vide Nagindas vs Bachoo (43 I.A. 56 at p. 67). But two more kinds of sons have been recognized in modern times in certain provinces only	 viz. the kritrima in Mithila (modern Tirhoot) and the putrikaputra among the Nambudri brahmanas of Malabar	 both of which will be dealt with below. " At page 659 in the same book	 Shri P. V. Kane says: "The putrikaputra is no longer recognised anywhere in India except among the Nambudri brahmanas of Malabar. " All the above digests	 lectures and treatises support the view that the practice of appointing a daughter as a putrika and of treating her son as putrika putra had become obsolete several centuries ago. Whereas passages in the text books referred to above point out that the practice of appointing a daughter to raise an issue had become obsolete	 we find the following passage in 'A Treatise on Hindu Law ' by Golapchandra Sarkar Sastri (Third Edition) at pages 124 125 striking a slightly different note: "Putrika putra: It is most natural that a person destitude of male issue	 should desire to give a grandson by daughter the position of male issue. The appointed daughter 's son is not regarded by Manu as a secondary son	 but is deemed by him as a kind of real son. This form of adoption appears to prevail in the North Western Provinces	 and neighbouring district. The Talukdars of Oudh submitted a petition to Government for recognising the appointed daughter 's son; and accordingly in the Oudh Estates Act "son of a daughter treated in all respects as one 's own son" is declared to be heir	 in default of male issue. This sort of affiliation appears to be most desirable and perfectly consistent with Hindu feelings and sentiments; there is no reason why it should not be held valid	 when actually made by a Hindu. The Dattaka Mimansa appears to have been written on purpose to invalidate the affiliation of a daughter 's son	 for the benefit of agnate relations. " We do not think that the above passage in any way supports the case of the appellants. The author of the above book appears to make a special plea for reintroducing the institution of putrika putra. He does not refer to any prevailing practice of affiliation of a putrika putra 47 in accordance with Hindu Sastras. The reference to the passing of the Oudh Estates Act instead of supporting the case of the appellants weakens it. We have dealt with this point in detail while dealing with the case of Lal Tribhawan Nath Singh (supra). Sir E. J. Trevelyan also does not approve of this statement of Golapchandra Sarkar Sastri. Jogendra Chunder Ghose in his book entitled 'The Principles of Hindu Law ' (1903 Edition) observes at pages 77 78: "It remains to record the changes in the Hindu Law brought about by the ingenuity of the Judges and lawyers of our modern Courts. The position of the son	 grandson	 and great grandson remains unchanged. The Putrika and the Putrika Putra are not recognized in spite of all the Rishis and all the Commentators. The daughter takes after the widow according to the text of Yajnavalkya	 but she is given a life interest against all authority	 and for reasons invented by the Bengal lawyers. The daughter 's sons come next	 and they are declared to take per capita against all the Rishis and all the Commentators who have dealt with that question. " From the above passage it is clear that the institutions of putrika and putrika putra have become obsolete. But the tirade against Bengal lawyers is uncharitable. They are not responsible for the change. In fact it is Hindu society which brought about such a change. We shall presently deal with the reasons which were responsible for such a change. In the course of the arguments learned counsel for the appellants strongly contended that there was no justification to deny the right to a Hindu to take a son in the putrika putra form when it had been sanctioned by Yajnavalkya in his Smriti and by Vijnanesvara in his Commentary	 the Mitakshara. It was contended that merely because there were no instances where the said practice was followed in the immediate past	 it could not be held that it had ceased to be a part of Hindu law. It is seen from the several texts of commentaries extracted in the course of this judgment that the practice of taking a son in putrika putra form had become obsolete in modern times and there are good reasons in support of that view. Before dealing with such reasons	 we should keep in our view one of the statements of Vrihaspati which says thus: Dharmapi loka vikrikshatang na kuryata loka virudhang nacharet (Even if a rule is propounded by the Smritis	 it should not be practised if it is rejected by the people or is opposed to their will). A 48 rule of interpretation lays down that if there is a clear usage to the contrary	 the Shastra has to yield. If there is divergence of opinion amongst the Smritis	 a Judge should consult the prevailing practice among the people while deciding a case. There is another injunction of Vrihaspati which is very salutary: Kewalang shastramashritya nakartvyo hi nirnayah yukti hine vicharetu dharma hanih prajayate (The decision (in a case) should not be given by merely relying on the Sastras	 for in the case of a decision devoid of reasoning loss of dharma results). We shall now examine the reason for the abandonment of the practice of appointing a daughter to raise a son by the Hindu society. Originally according to a vedic text cited by Lakshmidhara	 a daughter was like a son	 and a daughter 's son was like a son 's son. Manu prescribed that he who had no son might make his daughter in the following manner an appointed daughter (putrika) saying to her husband 'The (male) child born of her	 shall perform my funeral rites ' Aputronena vidihina sutang kurvit putrikam yadapatyang bhawedasyah tanmasyata swadhakarang According to Manu 'A son is even as one 's self	 daughter is equal to a son	 how can another (heir) take the estate	 while (such daughter who is) one 's self	 lives. The daughter 's son shall take the whole estate of his maternal grand father who leaves no male issue. Between a son 's son and the son of a daughter	 there is no difference according to law. But if	 after a daughter has been appointed	 a son be born (to her father) the division (of the inheritance) must in that (case) be equal	 for there is no right of primogeniture for a woman". Apastamba declared 'The daughter may take the inheritance of a sonless man '. Yajnavalkya said 'The son of a putrika is equal to him (the son). Narada stated 'in failure of a son	 the daughter succeeds because she continues the lineage just like a son '. From the above texts	 it is obvious that in ancient times	 the daughter and the daughter 's son were given preference over even the widow of a person in the matter of succession. It is said that ancient 49 commentators like Medha thi thi and Haradatta had declared that the widow was no heir and not withstanding some texts in her favour	 her right was not fully recognised till Yajnavalkya stated that the widow would succeed to the estate of a sonless person. In Yajnavalkya Smriti	 the order of succession to a male was indicated in the following order: (1) son	 grandson	 great grandson (2) putrika putra (3) other subsidiary or secondary sons	 (4) widow and (5) daughter. After daughter	 it was not expressly stated that daughter 's son would succeed	 but the parents were shown as the successors. Vijnanesvara	 however	 interpreted the word (cha)	 which meant 'also ' in (Duhitaraschaiva) in the text of Yajnavalkya laying down the compact series of heirs as referring to daughter 's son. The relevant text of Yajnavalkya has been quoted above. Vijnaneswara interpreted the word 'cha ' referred to above as follows: Cha shavdadaduhitrabhave douhitre dhanbhaka yathah vishnuh aputhra pouthra santhane douhithra dhanmanpuyuh	 poorvekshantu swadhaakare pouthra douhithraka mata" itee. manurapi akrita wakrita wapi yang vindeta sadhrisha sutang pouthri maathamahasthen dadynat pindang haredhanmiti (By the import of the particle	 'also '	 the daughter 's son succeeds to the estate on failure of daughters. Thus Vishnu says "If a man leaves neither son	 nor son 's son	 nor wife	 nor female issue	 the daughter 's son shall take his wealth. For in regard to the obsequies of the ancestors	 daughter 's sons are considered as son 's son. Manu likewise declares 'By that male child	 whom a daughter whether formally appointed or not shall produce from a husband of an equal class	 the maternal grandfather becomes the grandsire of a son 's son: let that son give the funeral oblation and possess the inheritance.) It may be noticed that but for the above interpretation of the word 'cha ' a daughter 's son would have come in as an heir after all agnates as the daughter 's son is only a cognate (Bandhu). As a result of the above interpretation	 the daughter 's son was promoted in rank next only to his maternal grand mother and his mother whose interest in the estate was only a limited one. Viewed from this situation	 the reason for abandoning the practice of appointing a daughter as putrika and treating her son as putrika putra becomes clear. When a person had two or more daughters	 the appointment of one of them would give her primacy over the wife and the other daughters (not so appointed) and her son (appointed daughter 's son) would succeed to the exclusion of the wife and other daughters and their sons and also to the exclusion of his own uterine brothers (i.e. the other sons of the appointed daughter). Whereas in the case of plurality of sons all sons would succeed equally	 in the case of appointment of a daughter	 other daughters and their sons alongwith the wife would get excluded. It is 50 probably to prevent this kind of inequality which would arise among the daughters and daughter 's sons	 the practice of appointing a single daughter as a putrika to raise an issue must have been abandoned when people were satisfied that their religious feelings were satisfied by the statement of Manu that all sons of daughters whether appointed or not had the right to offer oblations and their filial yearnings were satisfied by the promotion of the daughter 's sons in the order of succession next only to the son as the wife and daughters had been interposed only as limited holders. In Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs Moparthi Chenchuramayya	 Minor & Ors. (supra)	 the Privy Council after quoting with approval a passage in D.F. Mulla 's Book on Hindu Law (p. 40	 9th Edition) where it had been stated that although the practice of appointing daughter to raise up issue had become obsolete	 the daughter 's son continued to occupy the place that was assigned to him in the order of inheritance observed thus: "The daughter 's son owes much to Vignaneshwara for his place in the scheme of the law of inheritance for	 in the subjoined important text of Yajnavalkya	 which forms the entire basis of the Mitakshara law of succession the daughter 's son is not expressly mentioned. "The wife	 and the daughters also	 both parents	 brothers likewise and their sons	 cognates	 a pupil and a fellow student: on failure of the first among these	 the next in order is indeed heir to the estate of one	 who departed for heaven leaving no male issue. This rule extends to all persons and classes	 Colebrook, Mit. ii section 1, vs 2. By interpreting the particle also" in the above text	 Vignaneshwara gave the daughter 's son a place in the law of inheritance. "By the import of particle 'also ' (sects. 1 and 2) the daughter 's son succeeds to the estate on failure of daughters. Thus Vishnu says 'if a male leave neither son	 nor son 's son nor (wife nor female) issue the daughter 's son shall take his wealth for in regard to obsequies daughter 's sons are considered as son 's sons. '"	 Colebrook	 Mit. ii	 section 2	 vs 6. It is interesting to note the remark of Mandlik on the above interpretation by Vignaneshwara. He says: "After the word daughter 's son in the above text occurs the particle (Chaiva) 'also '	 to give some sense to which Vignaneshwara introduces here	 the daughter 's son in conformity with a text of Vishnu	 'the wealth of him ' who has neither sons nor grandsons goes to daughter 's son	 for . . '	 Compare Manu ch. IX; vs 136. (Mandlik 's translation, p. 221). By the above ingenious exposition, the famous compiler of the Mitakshara shaped the law into conformity with the needs of the day without appearing to make any change and 51 thus gave the daughter 's son his present place in the law of inheritance. Dr. Nares Chandra Sen Gupta in his Tagore Law Lectures	 1950 on 'Evolution of Ancient Indian Law ' also subscribes to the view that the institutions of putrika and putrika putra had become obsolete several centuries ago and observes at pages 146 148 thus: "In later Smritis	 the Putrika has lost all her importance. For already the daughter as such is mentioned by them as heir	 irrespective of her being a Putrika	 after the sons and the widow. Manu too	 while he begins by giving the formula by which a girl could be made a Putrika	 in the immediately following slokas	 says that a daughter and a daughter 's son as such inherit to a sonless person. In Yajnavalkya the Putrika is barely mentioned	 but the inheritance of the daughter after the widow is well settled. Obsolesence of Putrika Now if a daughter and her son inherit as such and if every daughter 's son	 and not merely the Putrika 's son inherits and	 as in Baudhayana	 offers oblations to the maternal grand father as such	 all practical utility of Putrika disappears	 and the institution naturally ceases to exist. The obsolescence of this custom in the time of Manu and Visnu and others appears from the absence of further details about this institution in any of these Smritis. Manu	 indeed	 true to its character as an encyclopedaeic digest of all texts gives us several texts relating to the Putrika	 which belong to different strata of the history of law. It is singular	 however	 that in his enumeration of the twelve kinds of secondary sons (IX	 159	160) he omits any reference to the Putrika or her son. In another place (IX	 123 et seq.) however he deals with the Putrika 's son	 but his treatment of the subject is mixed up with that of the daughter 's son generally. As already pointed out	 he lays down the law that a Putrika is made by a contract at the time of marriage (IX	 127)	 but	 immediately after that	 he follows with a text laying down that a daughter 's son as such inherits to a sonless person and offers pindas both to the father and the maternal grand father (IX	 132). This he emphasizes by saying that the son 's son and the daughter 's son (not Putrika 's son alone) are equal in all respects (IX	 133	 136	 139). In IX	 140 he lays down the order in which the Putrika 's son offers pindas to his maternal ancestors	 while in IX	 135 he says that on the Putrika dying sonless	 her husband inherits to her	 thus indicating 52 that a true husband wife relation for spiritual and legal purposes now exists between her and her husband. If we remember that the present text of the Manusamhita was essentially a compilation of all the texts of law which were current at the date of compilation in the name of Manu and that accordingly many texts are incorporated in it which had long become obsolete at that date	 we shall be able to assess these texts at their proper value. It will then be seen that these texts	 so far as the Putrika 's son goes	 do not lay down anything which was not already laid down by Gautama	 Vasistha and Baudhayana. The other texts	 however	 which give to the son of the daughter "akrita va krita va 'pi" "whether appointed or not" the same status as a Putrika 's son	 belong to a later stratum already indicated in Vishnu. These texts practically nullify the provisions about Putrika putra who had evidently ceased to be an institution of any practical utility	 so much so that he finds no place in Manu 's enumeration of the twelve secondary sons. Later Smritis	 beyond occasionally mentioning the Putrikaputra among the twelve kinds of sons do not speak of them at all. The zeal upon the obsolescence of the Putrika along with the various other kinds of secondary sons	 except the Dattaka	 was set by the text of the Adityapurana which gives an index expurgatorius of laws forbidden in the Kali Age and mentions among others the recognition of sons other than Aurasa and Dattaka. This text	 as the Smritichandrika	 Parasara	 Madhava and others observe	 makes the institution of Putrika void in the Kali Age. From the historical point of view we can only look upon this as a record of the contemporary fact	 that this practice had gone out of vogue. " We are broadly in agreement with the following passage occurring in Mayne 's Hindu Law (1953 Edition) at pages 181 182 which while dealing with the reason for putrika putra losing importance and the emergence of the adopted son as the only other son recognised by modern law states: "Apart from the exceptional kshetraja son	 the prominence of the putrika putra or the son of an appointed daughter is an indication of the prevailing usage which was all in his favour. His equality in status with the aurasa son both for spiritual and temporal purposes was established from the earliest times and he had to offer pindas both to his father and to his maternal grandfather and he took the estate of his own father if he left no other son. In many respects therefore	 he was like the son of two fathers and 53 it must have been increasingly felt that his father should not be deprived of the continuance of his own line. The son of the appointed daughter	 in offering pindas to his mother	 had to recite the gotra of his maternal grandfather	 as in the putrikakarana marriage the gift of the girl was not complete. For religious purpose	 this anomalous position of a son of two fathers must have been found to be unsatisfactory and	 as a consequence	 there was the repeated injunction not to marry brotherless maidens	 which would make it difficult to secure suitable bridegrooms if the institution of putrikaputra was insisted upon. There was also the injustice to his uterine brothers who were excluded by their appointed brother from the enjoyment of their maternal grandfather 's property. Besides	 the daughters other than the appointed daughter appear to have come into their own by the time of the Arthasastra of Kautilya. This must have led to the gradual recognition as heirs to the maternal grandfather of sons of daughters without any appointment	 while at the same time the putrikaputra 's duty to offer pinda to the maternal ancestors was imposed also on the daughter 's son. But as the daughter 's son was only a bhinnagotra sapinda	 it became necessary that an adoption of a son should be made whenever a continuation of the direct line was desired either for spiritual or temporal purposes. All these reasons must have powerfully operated to bring the adopted son into a new prominence. Accordingly	 Manu provided for the identity of the adopted son with the family into which he was adopted. " Now that the practice of appointment of a daughter as putrika has become obsolete	 all daughters and their sons stand in the same position. This perhaps is the reason as to why such practice was given up. It was in the alternative contended that when once it was established that at the time of the ancient Smritis	 a Hindu had the right to appoint a daughter for the purpose of raising a son for him that right would continue to be in existence until it was taken away by a competent legislature a law making body as we understand today. It is also argued that the theory of a practice once recognized by law becoming obsolete was unknown. In support of the above submission	 strong reliance was placed on the decision of the High Court of Madras in Pudiava Nadar vs Pavanasa Nadar & Ors.(1) In that case	 the question before the High Court was whether the rule of Hindu law which excluded a congenitally blind person from inheritance had 54 become obsolete or not. The case was referred to a Full Bench as there was an earlier ruling of that Court in Surayya vs Subbamma(1) which had taken the view that the said rule had become obsolete and doubts had been entertained about the correctness of that view. In Surayya 's case (supra) Sadasiva Ayyar	 J. observed: "I need not say that a rule becomes obsolete when the reason of the rule disappears through change of circumstances and environments in the society which was governed by that rule"	 while Napier	 J. who agreed with him said that owing to improved methods of education there was no reason why such a disqualification should still continue and that it was open to the Court to enunciate that rule by declaring it to be obsolete. Schwabe	 C.J. who presided over the Full Bench which decided Pudiava Nadar 's case (supra) after observing: "The next question is whether	 assuming a blind man 's exclusion to have been the law at the date of the Mitakshara	 it has since become obsolete. This	 in my judgment	 is a question of fact. A law does not cease to be operative because it is out of keeping with the times. A law does not become obsolete because it is an anachronism or because it is antiquated or because the reason why it originally became the law	 would be no reason for the introduction of such law at the present time. " proceeded to state "In considering whether the custom has become obsolete in the sense of its having ceased to exist	 the fact that it is an anachronism may be a proper matter to be taken into consideration	 if there were evidence both ways	 in weighing that evidence but otherwise it is of no importance. In this case	 in my judgment	 the evidence is all in favour of the custom having continued. There is no oral evidence before the Court and no statement of any text writer or any judgment to which our attention has been called that this custom has become obsolete in the sense of its having been discontinued. " Oldfield	 J. agreed with the Chief Justice. Courts Trotter	 J.	 the third Judge delivered a separate but concurring judgment in which he observed thus: "To my mind	 before allowing a mandate such as I conceive this to be	 to be disregarded	 it must either be proved by evidence to be actually disregarded in practice at the present time and as I have already said there is no such evidence in this case or it must be shown by an examination of the smritis and commentaries 55 to have been obsolete at the time they were written	 and that the authors thereof merely repeated parrot like the words of Manu and the Mitakshara as a maxim dignified by antiquity but not corresponding to the practice obtaining at the time either of the Mitakshara or of their own compilations. If it could be shown that commentators earlier than the Mitakshara had used language meaning or implying that the rule in this respect was obsolete	 that might be a legitimate ground for the conclusion that the Mitakshara was merely repeating the words of Manu without inquiring whether the rule survived in force when the Mitakshara was written. If a commentator later than the Mitakshara used similar language	 that might lead to a legitimate inference that	 though in force at the date of the Mitakshara	 the rule had subsequently become obsolete." Ultimately the Full Bench held that the rule which excluded a congenitally blind person from inheritance had not been shown to have become obsolete and that in the twentieth century any amendment to that rule could only be done by a legislature. It is stated that the ratio of this decision has been dissented from in two subsequent decisions of the Madras High Court in Amritammal vs Valli Mayil Ammal(1) and in Kesava vs Govindan(2). We are not concerned with the said subsequent opinions. But the fact remains that both Schwabe	 C.J. and Coutts Trotter	 J. who decided the Pudiava Nadar 's case (supra) did not state that a rule of Hindu law could not become unenforceable on the ground that it had become obsolete. The rule of desuetude or obsolescence has been applied by this Court while interpreting Hindu law texts. In Shiromani & Ors. vs Hem Kumar & Ors.(3) one of the questions which arose for consideration was whether the practice of allowing a larger share of property to the eldest son which was known as 'Jethansi ' or 'Jeshtbhagam ' had become obsolete and therefore unenforceable. The claim of a party to such larger share was negatived by this Court by applying the principle that the rule though founded in the Sastras had become obsolete. In doing so	 this Court relied on a passage in the Mitakshara	 which when rendered into English read thus: "Unequal division though found in the sastras (e.g. Manu IX	 105	 112	 116	 117	 Yaj. 114) should not be practised because it has come to be condemned by (or has become hateful to) the people	 since there is the prohibition (in Yaj. I. 156) that an 56 action	 though prescribed in the sastras	 should not be performed when it has come to be condemned by the people	 since such an action does not lead to the attainment of Heaven. For example	 though Yaj. I. 109 prescribes the offering of a big ox or a goat to a learned brahmana guest	 it is not now practised because people have come to hate it; or just as	 although there is a Vedic text laying down the sacrificing of a cow 'one should sacrifice a barren cow called anubandhya for Mitra and Varuna '	 still it is not done because people condemn it. And it has been said "just as the practice of niyoga or the killing of the anubandhya cow is not now in vogue	 so also division after giving a special share (to the eldest son) does not now exist". There is another instance where an ancient rule regarding a form of marriage has been held to have become obsolete by courts. Gandhava form of marriage had been permitted and recognised in ancient times. Apart from Manu and some other Smritis recognising it	 we have the following sloka in Kalidasa 's Abhijnana Sakuntalam: Gandhaverven vivahen bahwayo rajarshi kanyakah shruyante parirnitashtah pithrivischabhinanditah (Many daughters of royal sages are heard to have been married by the ceremony called Gandharva	 and (even) their fathers have approved them). But in Bhaoni vs Maharaj Singh(1) and Lalit Mohan vs Shyamapada Das(2) it was held that the Gandharva form of marriage could not be recognized as valid marriage as it had become obsolete. While interpreting the ancient texts of Smritis and Commentaries on Hindu Dharmasastra	 we should bear in mind the dynamic role played by learned commentators who were like Roman Juris Consults. The commentators tried to interpret the texts so as to bring them in conformity with the prevailing conditions in the contemporary society. That such was the role of a commentator is clear even from the Mitakshara itself at least in two places first	 on the point of allotment of a larger share at a partition to the eldest son which is discussed above and secondly on the question of right of inheritance of all agnates. The second point is elucidated by the Privy Council 57 in the following passage in Atmaram Abhimanji vs Bajirao Janrao & Ors.(1) "It was however	 recognized in course of time that the rule enunciated in the ancient texts	 giving the right of inheritance to all agnates	 however remote	 and placing the cognates after them	 was not in conformity with the feelings of the people; and Vijnaneswara	 when writing his commentary Mitakshara on the Smriti of Yajnavalkya	 probably found that a usage had grown up restricting the samanodaka relationships to the fourteenth degree. He accordingly refrained from endorsing the all embracing rule of Yajnavalkya	 and while mentioning it in the verse dealing with the subject	 he gave prominence to the restricted scope of the word	 and supported it by citing Vrihad Manu. It must be remembered that the commentators	 while professing to interpret the law as laid down in the Smritis	 introduced changes in order to bring it into harmony with the usage followed by the people governed by the law; and that it is the opinion of the commentators which prevails in the provinces where their authority is recognized. As observed by this Board in Collector of Madura vs Moottoo Ramalinga Shathupathy (1868) 12 Moo. I.A. 397	 436	 the duty of a judge "is not so much to inquire whether a disputed doctrine is fairly deducible from the earliest authorities as to ascertain whether it has been received by the particular school which governs the district with which he has to deal	 and has there been sanctioned by usage. For under the Hindoo system of law	 clear proof of usage will outweigh the written text of law." Indeed	 the Mitakshara "subordinates in more than one place the language of texts to custom and approved usage": Bhyah Ram Singh vs Bhyah Ugur Singh (1870)13 Moo. I.A. 373	 390. It is	 therefore	 clear that in the event of a conflict between the ancient text writers and the commentators	 the opinion of the latter must be accepted. " The importance of the role of the commentators is explained by P.B. Gajendragadkar	 J. (as he then was) in his article entitled "The Historical Background and Theoretic basis of Hindu Law ' in the 'Cultural Heritage of India ' (Vol. II) at page 427 published by the Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture thus: "In due course of time	 when the distance between the letter of the Smritis and the prevailing customs threatened to get wider	 commentators appeared on the scene	 and by adopting ingenious interpretations of the same ancient texts	 they achieved 58 the laudable object of bringing the provisions of the law into line with popular usages and customs. The part played by Vijnanesvara in this connection deserves special mention. The fiction of interpretation is seen in the three systems of jurisprudence known to us	 the Roman	 the English	 and the Hindu system. But as Mr. Sankararama Sastri points out	 there is an interesting distinction among the three systems on this point. Whereas the authority of the English case law is derived from the Bench	 that of the Roman Responsa Prudentium and the Sanskrit commentary is derived from the Bar. While in England the development of law is left entirely to the exigencies of disputes actually arising for adjudication	 in India and at Rome	 it was possible for the jurist to evolve and homogeneous body of Laws without reference to actually contested cases. In this connection	 it may be interesting to refer to the observations of Bentham that a legal fiction is a "willful falsehood having for its object the stealing of legislative power by and for hands which could not and durst not openly claim it and but for the delusion thus produced could not exercise it. Nevertheless	 the legal fiction of interpretation has played a very progressive part in the development of Hindu Law. It is because this process was arrested during the British rule in this country that Hindu Law came to be fossilized	 as judges relied mainly on the commentators without taking into account the changing customs and usages in the Hindu community. " It was next contended by the learned counsel for the appellants that the rule against the appointment of a daughter by a Hindu to beget an issue for himself in Kali age enunciated by Saunaka and others should be treated as only directory and if any person appointed a daughter for that purpose in contravention of that rule still her son would become putrika putra of the person so appointing	 with all the privileges of a putrika putra. In support of the above contention	 reliance was placed on the decision of the Privy Council in Sri Balusu Gurulingaswami vs Sri Balusu Ramalakshmamma & Ors.(1) in which it had been held that the adoption of an only son though prohibited	 having taken place in fact was not null and void under Hindu law. In that case	 the Privy Council was faced with divergent opinions of the Indian High Courts on the interpretation of the relevant texts and was also probably moved by the creation of a number of titles which had been done on the basis of the opinions of some High Courts which had taken the view that the textual prohibition was only directory and not mandatory by applying a rule of interpretation expound 59 ed by Jamini	 the author of 'Purva Mimansa ' that all texts	 supported by the assigning of a reason were to be deemed not as vidhi but as arthavada or recommendatory. The Privy Council had to reconcile in that case a number of inconsistent commentaries and judicial decisions. Ultimately it upheld the adoption with the following observations which were made with a lot of reservation: "But what says authority? Private commentators are at variance with one another; judicial tribunals are at variance with one another; and it has come to this	 that in one of the five great divisions of India the practice is established as a legal custom	 and of the four High Courts which preside over the other four great divisions	 two adopt one of the constructions and two the other. So far as mere official authority goes there is as much in favour of the law of free choice as of the law of restriction. The final judicial authority rests with the Queen in Council. In advising Her Majesty their Lordships have to weigh the several judicial ulterances. They find three leading ones in favour of the restrictive construction. The earliest of them (in Bengal	 1868) is grounded on a palpably unsound principle	 and loses its weight. The second in time (Bombay	 1875) is grounded in part on the first	 and to that extent shares its infirmity	 and in part on texts of the Mitakshara	 which are found to be misleading. So that it	 too	 loses its weight. The third (Bengal	 1878) is grounded partly on the first	 and to that extent shares its infirmity; but it rests in great measure on more solid ground	 namely	 an examination of commentators and of decided cases. It fails	 however	 to meet the difficulty of distinguishing between the injunction not to adopt an only son and other prohibitive injunctions concerning adoptions which are received as only recommendatory; the only discoverable grounds of distinction being the texts of the Mitakshara	 which are misleading	 and the greater amount of religious peril incurred by parting with an only son	 which is a very uncertain and unsafe subject of comparison. The judicial reasoning	 then	 in favour of the restrictive construction is far from convincing. That the earliest Madras decision rested in part on a misapprehension of previous authority has been pointed out; and the Madras reports do not supply and close examination of the old texts	 or any additional strength to the reasoning on them. The Allahabad Courts have bestowed the greatest care on the examination of those texts	 and the main lines of their arguments	 not necessarily all the by ways of them	 command their Lordships ' assent. Upon their own examination of the Smritis	 their Lordships find them by 60 no means equally balanced between the two constructions	 but with a decided preponderance in favour of that which treats the disputed injunctions as only monitory and as leaving individual freedom of choice. They find themselves able to say with as much confidence as is consistent with the consciousness that able and learned men think otherwise	 that the High Courts of Allahabad and Madras have rightly interpreted the law and rightly decided the cases under appeal." Proceeding further	 the Privy Council observed: "A Court of Justice	 which only declares the law and does not make it	 cannot	 as the Legislature can	 declare it with a reservation of titles acquired under a different view of it. But their Lordships are placed in the position of being forced to differ with one set of Courts or the other. And so far as the fear of disturbance can affect the question	 if it can rightly affect it at all	 it inclines in favour of the law which gives freedom of choice. People may be disturbed at finding themselves deprived of a power which they believed themselves to possess and may want to use. But they can hardly be disturbed at being told that they possess a power which they did not suspect and need not exercise unless they choose. And so with titles. If these appeals were allowed	 every adoption made in the North West Provinces and in Madras under the views of the law as there laid down may be invalidated	 and those cases must be numerous. Whereas	 in Bengal and Bombay the law now pronounced will only tend to invalidate those titles which have been acquired by the setting aside of completed adoptions of only sons	 and such cases are probably very few. Whether they demand statutory protection is a matter for the legislature	 and not for their Lordships to consider. It is a matter of some satisfaction to their Lordships that their interpretation of the law results in that course which causes the least amount of disturbance. " In these appeals we are not faced with the situation with which the Privy Council was confronted. No judicial decision of any court where a title had been upheld on the basis of putrika putra form of adoption has been brought to our notice. If really such a practice was prevailing in recent centuries	 persons with only daughters and no sons being not uncommon there should have arisen a number of cases. We may remember that the Privy Council while deciding the case of Thakoor Jeebnath Singh (supra) observed that it was not necessary to decide the validity of the practice of appointment of a daughter to raise an issue 'although there certainly does not appear to have arisen 61 in modern times any instance in the courts where this custom has been considered '. The only case where such a title was set but not established was the case of Lal Tribhuwan Nath Singh (supra) which has been dealt with separately by us. Moreover we are not concerned in this case with the eligibility of a person being taken in adoption but the existence of the very institution of putrika putra itself. When we have the predominant opinion of commentators supporting its non existence in the last few centuries extending to a period prior to the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh and there are good reasons for the Hindu society abandoning it	 it would be inappropriate to resurrect the said practice by placing reliance on the above argument of the learned counsel	 which in the circumstances appears to be highly tenuous. At this stage	 it should be stated that the High Court after considering in detail the evidence on record came to the conclusion that the family of Raja Dhrub Singh was governed by the Benaras School of Hindu law and not by the Mithila School (See para 64 of the judgment of G.N. Prasad	 J. and paras 229 and 230 of Madan Mohan Prasad	 J.). No ground was made out by the learned counsel for the appellants in these appeals to take a different view. We hold that the family of Raja Dhrub Singh was governed by the Benaras School of Hindu Law and there is no occasion to apply principles of the Mithila School of Hindu law to the present case. The question whether the family was governed by the Benaras School or by the Mithila School became relevant before the High Court as an attempt was made by the appellants herein relying on some commentaries which were considered as having local application to show that the practice of appointment of a daughter to raise an issue was in vogue amongst those governed by the Mithila School. The said commentaries on which reliance was placed by the appellants have been dealt with in detail by Madan Mohan Prasad	 J. in paragraphs 204 to 215 of his judgment. Summarizing his views on them	 Madan Mohan Prasad	 J. Observes at paragraphs 214 and 215 of his judgment thus: "214. It will thus appear that of all the other writers of Mithila School mentioned earlier	 Pandit Amarit Nath Jha is the only one who has unequivocally said that during the Kali age these four kinds of sons	 viz. Aurasa	 Dattaka	 Kritrima and Putrika putra	 can be made and recognised. It will	 however	 appear that he has taken no note of Saunaka and Adityapuran. Even though he has referred to Nanda Pandit and discarded the Kshetraj on account of the interpretation by Nanda Pandit	 he 62 has not referred to the prohibition of Saunaka and the acceptance thereof by Nanda Pandit and naturally	 therefore	 he has given no reasons for differing with Nanda Pandit and the several other commentators who have been discussed earlier and who accepted the prohibition of Saunaka so as to include the Putrika Putra. 215. The learned author of this book is a product of the 19th century. Whether the custom of Putrika Putra obtain in Mithila is a question which cannot be answered merely on the basis of the precept of this writer that even during the Kali age such sons should be made. It may be recalled that the Privy Council in the case of Thakur Jeebnath said that for more than a century not a single case of adoption in the form of Putrika Putra was brought to their Lordship 's notice. Barring the few cases of Narsing Narain	 Thakur Jeebnath and Babui Rita Kuer no other case was brought to our notice even today where the custom of Putrika Putra had been alleged or decided. Be that as it may	 nobody has claimed any authority for Pandit Amrit Nath Jha	 except with respect to the Mithila School. His authority will	 therefore	 lend support	 if at all	 to the case of the plaintiffs of Title Suit No. 25 of 1958	 only if they are abloe to establish that the Bettiah Raj family was governed by the Mithila School of Hindu law. I may state here that the conclusion which I have arrived at on this question is that the evidence in this case does not prove that the aforesaid family was governed by the Mithila School; on the other hand it is clear that it was governed by the Benares School of Hindu Law and in view of that the authority of Pandit Amrit Nath Jha is of no avail to the plaintiffs. " We are generally in agreement with his views and we add that the material placed before us is not sufficient to hold that the institution of putrika putra was in vogue during the relevant time even amongst persons governed by the Mithila School. On a consideration of the entire matter	 we hold that throughout India including the area governed by the Mithila School	 the practice of appointing a daughter to raise an issue (putrika putra) had become obsolete by the time Raja Dhrub Singh was alleged to have taken Raja Jugal Kishore Singh as putrika putra. We	 however	 do not express any opinion regarding the applicability of the above view to Nambudiris of Kerala. We should also record that the High Court has taken the view on a careful analysis and consideration of the entire material before it that Raja Dhrub Singh had in fact not appointed his daughter as a putrika to beget a putrika putra for him. Apart from the 63 evidence led in the case	 the case of the appellants has become very weak by the inconsistent positions taken up by the parties from stage to stage in the case as can be gathered from paragraphs 68 to 73 of the judgment of G.N. Prasad	 J. We find it appropriate to quote here paragraph 73 of the judgment of G.N. Prasad	 J	 which reads thus: "73. All these statements reveal a strange state of affairs. Ambika (plaintiff No. 1) thought the plea with regard to the Kritrim form of adoption to be correct	 but Kamleshwari (plaintiff No. 6) thought it to be incorrect. Ambika had no knowledge of any plea of Dattak form of adoption having been set up on his behalf. Kamleshwari not only characterised that plea to be wrong but even disclaimed to have any such plea having been taken on his behalf. In other words	 the plea of Dattak form of adoption was taken without the knowledge or authority of either of the two deposing plaintiffs	 namely Ambika (D.W. 15) and Kamleshwari (D.W. 27)	 and it was evidently done at the initiative of the Karpardaz of the legal adviser of the plaintiffs of the title suit No. 25	 who obviously could have no personal knowledge of the real facts	 although	 however	 the plea of Dattak form of adoption was also given up at a later stage. The multiplicity of the various pleas cannot be lost sight of while dealing with the surviving plea of Putrika Putra form of adoption	 particularly when this also was not taken in the first instance. It seems to me that the entire case of adoption put forward on behalf of the plaintiffs of Title Suit No. 25 is the product of imagination of their legal advisers	 having little relation with true facts." After giving our anxious consideration to all aspects of the case	 we hold that the practice of appointing a daughter as a putrika to beget a son who would become the putrika putra had become obsolete long before the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh and Raja Jugal Kishore Singh could not	 therefore	 in law be considered as putrika putra of Raja Dhrub Singh. It follows that the appellants who claim the estate on the above basis cannot succeed. In view of the foregoing	 it is not necessary for us to go into the question whether the decisions of the Privy Council rendered prior to the abolition of its jurisdiction over India were binding on the Indian Courts	 which is precisely the question formulated in the certificate issued by the High Court. For the foregoing reasons	 the appeals (Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976) alongwith the Special Leave Petition therefore fail and are dismissed. In the circumstances of the case	 we absolve the appellants from the liability to pay costs in all the courts. S.R. Appeals dismissed.

Summary:
Raja Ugra Sen	 who was governed by the Benaras School of Mitakshara law established "Bettiah Raj" in or about the middle of 17th century. It was known as Riyasat of Sirkar Champaran consisting of four Perghunnas known as Majhwa	 Simrown	 Babra and Maihsi and an impartible estate. After the death of his great grand son	 Raja Dhrub Singh dying issueless in 1762	 Raja Jugal Kishore Singh	 son of Raja Dhrub Singh 's daughter Benga Babui	 entered into possession of the estate of "Bettiah Raj". The East India Company officers seized the estate from him and later allotted only the zamindari of Majhwa and Simrown	 while those of Maihsi and Babra were allotted to Srikishen Singh and Abdhoot Singh. The last male holder of Raja Jugal Kishore Singh was Maharaja Bahadur Narendra Kishore Singh who died issueless on March 26	 1893	 leaving behind him two widows Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer and Maharani Janki Kuer	 who succeeded him one after the other. During the lifetime of Maharani Sheo Ratna Kuer	 two suits were filed claiming the estate but they were lost in all courts including the Privy Council. In 1897	 the management of the estate was taken over by the court of Wards Bihar and the Government of Uttar Pradesh in respect of the areas falling in these two States. Maharani Janki Kuer died on November 27	 1954. The State of Bihar	 therefore	 made an application before the Board of Revenue	 Bihar	 praying that the estate of Maharaja Narendra Singh which was held by late Maharani Janki Kuer as a limited owner but managed by the Court of Wards be handed over to the State of Bihar by virtue of the rule of escheat. The Board of Revenue published a Notification calling upon interested parties to prefer the claim	 if any	 to the properties comprised in the estate. Since there were several claimants taking inconsistent pleas	 the Board of Revenue declined to release the estate in favour of any of the claimants and as per its order dated January 18	 1955 directed that the properties would be retained by the Court of Wards until the dispute as to its succession was determined by competent Civil Court. The title suit having been lost. The appellants have come up in appeals by certificate. The State of Bihar which claimed title by the rule of escheat also preferred appeals. Dismissing Civil Appeals Nos. 114 119 of 1976	 the Court ^ HELD: (1) While interpreting the ancient texts of Smritis and commentaries on Hindu Dharmasastra	 it should be borne in mind the dynamic role played by learned commentators who were like Roman Juris Consults. The 2 commentators tried to interpret the texts so as to bring them in conformity with the prevailing conditions in the contemporary society. That such was the role of a commentator is clear even from the Mitakshara itself at least in two places first	 on the point of allotment of a larger share at a partition to the eldest son and secondly on the question of right of inheritance of all agnates. [56F H] (2) Etymologically	 the word 'putrika ' means a daughter (especially a daughter appointed to raise male issue to be adopted by a father who has no sons)	 and 'putrika putra ' means a daughter 's son who by agreement or adoption becomes the son of her father [20C D] A careful reading of the ancient texts Manu	 Yajnavalkya	 (Mitakshara) (Vijnanesvara) and Apararka (Aparaditya) Baudhayana Dharmasutra	 Vishnu Dharmasastra	 Vasishtha Dharmasutra	 Parasara Madhava	 Smriti Chandrika of Devannabhatta	 Dattaka Chandrika and Dattaka Mimansa by Nanda Pandita leads to the inference that the institution of "Putrika Putra" had become obsolete and not recognised by Hindu society for several centuries prior to the time when Smriti Chandrika or Dattaka Chandrika were written and these two commentaries belong to a period far behind the life time of Raja Dhrub Singh [32B C] Further	 absence of cases before courts within living memory in which a claim had been preferred on the basis of application in "Putrika Putra" form showed that the said practice had become obsolete. [34A] Thakoor Jeebnath Singh vs The Court of Wards	 (1875) 2 I.A. 163 (PC)	 quoted with approval. Sri Raja Venkata Narasimha Appa Row Bahadur vs Sri Rajesh Sraneni Venkata Purushotama Jaganadha Gopala Row Bahadur & Ors.	 I.L.R. Babui Rita Kuer vs Puran Mal	 A.I.R. 1916 Patna 8 approved. Tribhawan Nath Singh vs Deputy Commissioner	 Fyzabad & Ors	. 	 overruled. (3) All digests	 lectures and treatises support the view that the practice of appointing a daughter as a putrika and of treating her son as "putrika putra" had become obsolete several centuries ago. And	 the reason for the abandonment of the practice of appointing a daughter to raise a son by the Hindu society is clear from the following situation. [46C	 49F] In ancient times	 the daughter and daughter 's son were given preference over even the widow of a person in the matter of succession. Ancient commentators like Madhathithi and Haradatta had declared that the widow was no heir and notwithstanding some texts in her favour	 her right was not fully recognised till Yajnavalkya stated that the widow would succeed to the estate of a sonless person. In Yajnavalkya Smriti	 the order of succession to a male was indicated in the following order (1) son	 grandson	 great grandson	 (2) putrika putra	 (3) other subsidiary or secondary sons	 (4) widow and (5) daughter. It was not expressly stated that daughter 's son would succeed	 but the parents were shown as the successors. Vijnanesvara	 however	 interpreted the word "cha"	 which meant "also" in "Duhitaraschaiva" in the text of Yajnavalkya laying down the compact series of heirs as referring to daughter 's son. But for this interpretation a daughter 's son would have come in as an heir after all agnates (gotrajas)	 as the daughter 's son is only a cognate (Bandhu). As a result of this interpretation	 the daughter 's son was promoted in rank next only to his maternal grand mother and his mother whose interest in the estate was only a limited one. [48H	 49A C	 E F] 3 When a person had two or more daughters	 the appointment of one of them would give her primacy over the wife and the other daughters (not so appointed) and her son (appointed daughter 's son) would succeed to the exclusion of the wife and other daughters and their sons and also to the exclusion of his own uterine brothers (i.e. the other sons of the appointed daughter). Whereas in the case of plurality of sons all sons would succeed equally	 in the case of appointment of a daughter	 other daughters and their sons alongwith the wife would get excluded. To prevent this kind of inequality which would arise among the daughters and daughter 's sons	 the practice of appointing a single daughter as a putrika to raise an issue came to be abandoned in course of time when people were satisfied that their religious feelings were satisfied by the statement of Manu that all sons of daughters whether appointed or not had the right to offer oblations and their filial yearnings were satisfied by the promotion of the daughter 's sons in the order of succession next only to the son as the wife and daughters had been interposed only as limited holders. [49F H	 50A C] Ghanta Chinna Ramasubbayya & Anr. vs Moparthi Chenchuramayya	 74 I.A. 162	 followed. (4) It is incorrect to suggest that the theory of "a practice once recognised by law becoming obsolete" was unknown and that it would continue to be in existence until it was taken away by a competent legislature. The court can declare it to be so. [53G] Shiromani & Ors. vs Hem Kumar & Ors.	 [1968] 3 S.C.R. 639	 applied. (5) The contention that the rule against the appointment of a daughter by a Hindu to beget an issue for himself in Kali age enunciated by Saunaka and others should be treated as only directory and if any person appointed a daughter for that purpose in contravention of that rule still her son would become "putrika putra" of the person so appointing	 with all the privileges of a putrika putra is highly tenuous. Where there is predominant opinion of commentators supporting its non existence in the last few centuries extending to a period	 in the instant case	 prior to the life of Raja Dhrub Singh and there are good reasons for the Hindu Society abandoning it	 it would be inappropriate to resurrect the practice. [58E F	 61A C] Sri Balusu Gurulingaswami vs Sri Balusu Ramalakshmamma