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Smt.Guro vs Atma Singh And Ors on 5 March, 1992

Smt.Guro vs Atma Singh And Ors on 5 March, 1992
Equivalent citations: 1992 SCR (2) 30, 1992 SCC (2) 507
Bench: Agrawal, S.C.

PETITIONER:SMT.GURO

Vs.

RESPONDENT:ATMA SINGH AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT05/03/1992

Bench:

AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)

Bench:

AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)

FATHIMA BEEVI, M. (J)

CITATION:

1992 SCR (2) 30 1992 SCC (2) 507

JT 1992 (2) 125 1992 SCALE (1)552

ACT:

Indian Succession Act,

1924-Section 63-Will-Mode of proving-Requirements prescribed to be fulfilled-Suspicious circumstances- Genuineness of will questioned-Onus on propounder to explain to court’s satisfaction-Onus-Nature of.

Constitution of India, 1950-Article 136-Appeal-Will- Mode of proving-Requirements-Genuineness of will questioned- Duty of propounder to explain the suspicious circumstances. Constitution of India, 1950-Article 136-Appeal-Will- Made of proving-Suspicious circumstances-High Court’s failure to appreciate-Will not proved to be genuine.

HEADNOTE:

Respondent No. 1’s grand father’s brother had two sons, Ganga and Ranga and daughter, Banti. Ranga and Banti died during the life time of Ganga. The appellant was Banti’s daughter.

On 2.10.1968 Ganga executed the will in question bequeathing his one-third share in the property to respondent No. 1.

On 10.10.1968 Ganga died. On his death proceedings regarding mutation of the lands were initiated. Respondent No 1. sought mutation in his favour on the basis of the will, whereas the appellant as the nearest heir claimed mutation in her favour.

The mutation was sanctioned in favour of the appellant on the ground that the will was not genuine. A suit for declaration was filed by the respondent No.1 claiming the one-third share of demised Ganga on the basis of the will.

The defendant-appellant questioned the genuineness of the will and the plaintiff-respondent disputed that the appellant was not the daughter of the sister of the testator.

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The suit was decreed in favour of the plaintiff- respondent No. 1 holding that the will was genuine and the appellant was the daughter of the sister of the testator. Ganga.

The appeal filed against the decree was allowed. The appellate court held that the will was not a genuine document executed by Ganga in as much as there were certain features which threw suspicion with regard to its valid execution.

The second appeal filed by the plaintiff-respondent No. 1 was allowed by the High Court, which restored the judgment of the trial court on the view that the will was executed validly.

This appeal by special leave was filed by the aggrieved defendant against the judgment of the High Court. Allowing the appeal filed by the defendant, this Court, HELD : 1.01. The mode of proving a will does not ordinarily differ from that of proving any other document as to the special requirement prescribed in the case of a will by Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act. [34F] 1.02. The onus of proving the will is on the circumstances surrounding the execution of the will, proof of testamentary capacity and signature of the testator as required by law is sufficient to discharge the onus. [34G] 1.03. Where, there were suspicious circumstances, the onus would be on the propounder to explain them to the satisfaction of the Court before the will could be accepted as genuine. Such suspicious circumstances may be a shaky signature, a feeble mind and unfair and unjust disposal of property or the propounder himself taking a leading part in the making of the will under which he receives a substantial benefit. The presence of suspicious circumstances makes the initial onus heavier and the propounder must remove all legitimates suspicion before the document can be accepted as the last will of the testator. [34H,35A]

H. Venkatachala Iyengar v. B.N. Thimmajamma and Ors., [1959] Supp.1 SCR 426; Rani Purnima Devi v. Kumar Khagendra Narayan Dev., [1962] 3 SCR 195 and Jaswant Kaur v. Amrit Kaur & Ors., [1977] 1 SCR 925 followed.

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2.01 The HIgh Court has failed to attach sufficient importance to the various suspicious features relating to execution of the will that were pointed out by the appellate court. The High Court has not even noticed the fact that the testator had died within eight days of the execution of the will and there is a recital in the will that the testator had been ill for a long time and was seriously ill at the time of execution of the will. In view of the said recital, it was necessary for the plaintiff-respondent no. 1 to adduce satisfactory evidence with regard to the nature of the illness of the testator and about his mental capacity to execute the will [37A-C]

2.02 The incorrect statements in the will with regard to testator having no sister and respondent no.1 being his real brother have to be considered. [37C] 2.03. The circumstances that the testator had not put his signature and had put only his thumb impression on the will, has been brushed aside by the High Court on the view that there is no evidence on record with regard to the literacy of the testator. The Scribe PW.1, has stated that Ganga Singh was literate person and had been writing receipts etc. even earlier. In the circumstances, it was necessary for the plaintiff-respondent to adduce satisfactory evidence to show why, instead of signatures, the thumb impression of the testator was obtained on the will. [37D-E]

2.04. Another significant feature which has been brushed aside by the High Court is about the role of respondent No. 1 in the execution of the will under which he is the sole legatee. The will was executed outside the residence of respondent No.1 on a bahi brought by Tara Singh the son of respondent No. 1. The respondent No.1 has made contradictory statements about his presence at the time of execution of the will. The High Court has ignored the contradictions in the statement of respondent No.1,by a simple observation that this lapse on the part of respondent No.1 may be due to faulty memory or may be he was trying to avoid the criticism that he has tried to exercise some influence to get the will executed in his favour. Only two of the five attesting witnesses have been examined. Both of them, viz.,P.W.2 and P.W. 3 have made an effort to deny the illness of the testator at the time of the execution of the will and have also departed from their earlier statements recorded during the mutation proceedings. In these circumstances, it was necessary that the other attesting witness should also have been examined by plaintiff- respondent No.1. [37E-38A]

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2.05. The High Court was not justified in reversing the findings of fact recorded by the Appellate Court that will is not proved to be genuine document executed by Ganga. [38B]

JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION ; Civil Appeal No. 3163 of 1983.

From the judgment and Order dated 28.10.1982 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Regular Second Appeal No. 1504 of 1973.

R. Satish for the Appellant.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by S.C. AGRAWAL, J. The question for consideration in this appeal relates to the genuineness of a will said to be executed by one Ganga Singh whereby he bequeathed all his property to his distant cousin, Atma Singh, respondent no. 1, the grandson of the brother of the grandfather of Ganga Singh. Ganga Singh had a brother Ranga Singh and a sister Banti. Both, RAnga Singh and Banti had died during the life time of Ganga Singh. Smt. Guro, the appellant herein, is the daughter of Banti. At the time of his death, on October 10, 1968, Ganga Singh was having one-third share in land measuring 148 kls. 11mls. in Village Dall, Tehsil Patti, District Amritsar. On October 2, 1968, Ganga Singh is said to have executed the will in question whereby he bequeathed
his entire property to respondent No. 1. After the death of Ganga Singh, proceedings regarding mutation of the lands in his share were initiated and in those proceedings Respondent No.1 sought mutation in his favour on the basis of the will. The appellant sought mutation as the nearest heir, being daughter of Ganga Singh’s sister. The Assistant Collector, I Grade, Patti sanctioned the mutation in favour of the appellant and did not accept the will on the ground that it was not beyond suspicion. Thereafter respondent no. 1 filed a suit for declaration wherein he claimed one-third share of Ganga Singh on the basis of the will dated October 2, 1968. The said suit was contested by the appellant who disputed the genuinesness of the will. Respondent no 1 did not accept the claim of the appellant and disputed that she is the daughter of the sister of the testator, Ganga Singh. The Sub-Judge, I Class, Patti by his judgment dated July 25, 1972 decreed the said suit of respondent no. 1 on the view that the execution of the will by Ganga Singh was duly proved and at the time of the said execution, the testator was in a sound state of mind. The

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Sub-Judge, however, found that the appellant is the daughter of Ganga Singh’s sister Banti. On appeal, the Additional District Judge, Amritsar, by his judgment dated September 22, 1973, reversed the decree of the Sub-Judge and dismissed the suit of respondent no.1, and found that the will was not proved to be a genuine document executed by Ganga Singh inasmuch as there were certain features which threw suspicion with regard to its valid execution. The High Court of Punjab and Haryana, by judgment dated October 28, 1982, allowed the second appeal filed by respondent No.1 and while setting aside the judgment and decree of the appellate court, restored the judgment of the trial court on the view that the will had been validly executed. Feeling aggrieved by the said decision of the High Court, the appellant has filed this appeal.

In the will, the testator, Ganga Singh has stated that he had no issue nor he had any sister and that he had one brother who also died and he is the owner of the property and the land situated in village Dall. The testator has further stated that he has been ill for a long time and has become blind and was now seriously ill and there is no hope for his survival. He has further stated that after his death, Atma Singh, son of Mangal Singh, son of Bahadur Singh would be the owner o his property because he was his real brother and he would be really entitled. The scribe of the will was Manohar Lal, a shopkeeper in Dall, and there is thumb impression of the testator. It has been arrested by five persons, namely, Kehar Singh, Sarpanch Lambardar, Dall, Surjan Singh, Chanan Singh, Sardara Singh and Hazara Singh. In order to prove the will respondent no.1 examined the scribe Manohar Lal (PW.1) and two attesting witnesses Kehar Singh (PW.2) and Surjan Singh (PW.3).

With regard to proof of a will, the law is well-settled that the mode of proving a will does not ordinarily differ from that of proving any other document except as to the special requirement prescribed in the case of a will by section 63 of the Indian Succession Act. The onus of proving the will is on the propounder and in the absence of suspicious circumstances surrounding the execution of the will, proof of testamentary capacity and signature of the testator as required by law is sufficient to discharge the onus. Where, however there were suspicious circumstances, the onus would be on the propounder to explain them to the satisfaction of the court before the will could be accepted as genuine. Such suspicious circumstances may be a shaky signature, a feeble mind and unfair and unjust disposal of 35

property or the propounder himself taking a leader part in the making of the will under which he receives a substantial benefit. The presence of suspicious circumstances makes the initial onus heavier and the propounder must remove all legitimate suspicion before the document can be accepted as the last will of the testator. H. Venkatachala Iyengar v. B.N. Thimmajamma and Ors., [1959] Supp. 1 SCR 426; Rani Purnima Devi v. Kumar Khagendra Narayan Dev., [1962] 3 SCR 195; Jaswant Kaur v. Amrit Kaur & Ors., [1977] 1 SCR 925. In the instant case, the appellate court noticed the following suspicious circumstances:

(1) The will mentions that the testator had been ill for a long time and was seriously ill at the time of execution of the will.

(2) While mentioning that he had one brother who had died the testator has stated that he did not have any sister, which was not correct.

(3) Respondent no. 1, Atma Singh the sole legatee, has been wrongly described as the real brother of the testator. (4) No reasons are mentioned in the will why the appellant, who was the natural heir of the testator was being ignored.

(5) Although the testator was literate, the will does not bear his signature and bears him thumb impression. (6) The will is an unregistered document not scribed by a regular deed writer and as such could be prepared at any time.

(7) The will was executed on October 2, 1968 and within eight days of the execution of the will the testator died on October 10, 1968.

The appellate court has found that respondent no. 1 had made contradictory statement with respect to his presence at the time of the execution of the will and that in his testimony he claimed that he was not present at the time of the execution of the will but in his statement before the revenue authorities in the mutation proceedings, respondent no.1 had stated that the will was executed in his presence and was thumb marked by Ganga Singh and when confronted with the said statement, respondent no. 1 did not deny the correctness of the record prepared but tried to 36

explain his earlier statement by stating that what he meant was that he had been informed by Ganga Singh about the execution of the will. The appellate court also found that the Scribe, Manoharlal had made contradictory statements about the illness of Ganga Singh and that he first stated that Ganga Singh was not ill at the time of the Execution of the will and had subsequently fallen ill and died of that illness but on further cross-examination, he stated that Ganga Singh had been lying ill since two years prior to the execution of the will. The appellate court has pointed out that Kehar Singh and respondent no.1, Atma Singh had contradicted the recital in the will with respect to the illness of Ganga Singh and have stated that he fell ill 7 or 8/10 days prior to his death. The appellate court was of the view that the recital in the will to the effect that Ganga Singh had been ill since long leads to the conclusion that due to that illness Ganga Singh was of feeble mind and it was, therefore, necessary for the plaintiff-respondent to prove that advice for ignoring the natural heir was available to Ganga Singh and the will was not the outcome of any undue influence on the part of the plaintiff who was the sole legatee. Keeping in view the aforesaid circumstances, the appellate court held that the will was not proved to be genuine document executed by Ganga

Singh.

The High Court, in second appeal, reversed the findings recorded by the Appellate Court and held that the incorrect statement in the will with regard to testator having no sisters and respondent no. 1 being his real brother could not cast any doubt on the contents of those part of the will by which specified property was bequeathed to the legatee and the legatee could not be made to suffer by some untruthfulness on the part of the testator. As regards, the thumb impression instead of signatures of the testators on the will, High Court observed that the extent of literacy of the testator is not apparent from the record and that it was not the case of the appellant that the thumb impression on the
will had been obtained after the testator had actually died and there is no evidence to show that he was not in his senses when the scribe asked him to put his thumb impression on the will. As regards the contradictory statements made by respondent no. I about his presence at the time of execution of the will the High Court observed that this lapse on the part of respondent no. I may be due to faulty memory or may be he was trying to avoid a criticism that he had tried to exercise some influence in getting the will executed in his favour.

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The High Court, in our opinion, was not justified in reversing the findings of fact recorded by the Appellate Court which were based on a proper appreciation of the evidence on record. In doing so, the High Court has failed to attach sufficient importance to the various suspicious features relating to execution of the will that were pointed out by the appellate court. The High Court has not even noticed the fact that the testator had died within eight days of the execution of the will and there is a recital in this will that the testator had been ill for a long time and was seriously ill at the time of execution of the will. In view of the said recital, it was necessary for the plaintiff-respondent no.1 to adduce satisfactory evidence with regard to the nature of the illness of the testator and about his mental capacity to execute the will. The incorrect statements in the will with regard to testator having no sister and respondent no. 1 being his real brother have to be considered in this background. The circumstance that the testator had not put his signature and had put only his thumb impression on the will, has been brushed aside by the High Court on the view that there is no evidence on record with regard to the literacy of the testator. We find that the Scribe, Manohar Lal, PW.1, has stated that Ganga Singh was literate person and had been writing receipts etc. even earlier. In the circumstances, it was necessary for the plaintiff-respondent to adduce satisfactory evidence to show why, instead of signatures, the thumb impression of the testator was obtained on the will. Another significant feature which has been brushed aside by the High Court is about the role of respondent no. 1 in the execution of the will under which he is the sole legatee. It has been stated by Manohar Lal, PW.1, that Tara Singh, the son of the respondent no. 1 had come to call him. To the same effect is the testimony of Kehar Singh, PW.2 and Surjan Singh, PW.3 the attesting witnesses. The will was executed outside the residence of respondent no. 1 on a bahi brought by Tara Singh the son of respondent no.1. The respondent no. 1 has made contradictory statements about his presence at the time of execution of the will. The High Court has ignored these contradictions in the statement of respondent no.1, by a simple observation that this lapse on the part of respondent no. 1 may be due to faulty memory or may be he was trying to avoid the criticism that he has tried to exercise some influence to get the will executed in his favour. Only two of the five attesting witnesses have been examined. Both of them, viz., Kehar Singh (PW 2) and Surjan Singh (PW 3) have made an effort to deny the illness of the testator 38

at the time of the execution of the will and have also departed from their earlier statements recorded during the mutation proceedings. In these circumstances, it was necessary that the other attesting witnesses should also have been examined by plaintiff-respondent no.1. Taking into consideration the aforesaid features, we are of the view that the High Court was not justified in reversing the findings of fact recorded by the Appellate Court that will is not proved to be a genuine document executed by Ganga Singh and in holding that the execution of the will had been satisfactorily proved by respondent no.1. The appeal is, therefore, allowed. The judgement and decree of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana dated October 28, 1982 in Regular Second Appeal No. 1504 of 1973 is set aside and judgment and decree of the Additional District Judge, Amritsar dated September 22, 1973 dismissing the suit respondent no.1 are restored. There will be no orders as to costs.

V.P.R. Appeal allowed

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