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1964 DIGILAW 140 (KER)

Kanakambal v. Lakshmikutty Amma

1964-06-23

S.VELU PILLAI

body1964
JUDGMENT :- This second appeal is directed against a preliminary decree for partition of a half share of the suit properties for the plaintiff, passed by the District Judge, Palghat, reversing the decree of the Munsiff, Alathur, dismissing her suit. The properties belonged to one Subramanya Pattar, a brahmin, a non-marumakkathayee In the year 1082, he married the plaintiff's mother Kalliani Amma, a marumakkathayi woman who lived in Trichur to the former Cochin State, and the plaintiff was born in the year 1084. The properties are situated in Palghat district which formed part of the former Presidency of Madras, and later of the State of Madras as it was before the reorganisation of States. Subramanya Pattar's marriage with Kalliani Amma was dissolved in the year 1087 and afterwards he married the first defendant, a woman of his own caste. He died in the year 1129. The plaintiff's claim to a half share is based on S. 30 of the Madras marumakkathyam Act, 1932, the relevant part of which reads as follows : "30. (1) On the death intestate of a male not being a marumakkathayi (i) who - (a) has, before the date on which this Act comes into force, contracted a marriage with a marumakkathayi female which ii valid under Section 4; or * * * * and (ii) who has left surviving him by such marriage or marriages one or more of the following relations, namely : - (a) a widow or widows, (b) children, (c) lineal descendants in the female line through deceased daughters, such relation or relations shall be entitled, if the intestate has also left relations who are heirs according to the personal law by which he is governed, to one-half of his property which is separate or self-acquired and if the intestate has left no such heirs, to the whole of such property : Provided that the reasonable funeral expenses of the intestate shall first be deducted from such separate or self-acquired property. 2. The property devolving on the relations referred to in sub-cls. (a), (b) and (c) or Cl. (ii) of Sub-S. (1) shall be distributed among them in accordance with the rules contained in Cls. (i), (iii), (iv) and (v) of S. 20 and Explns. 2. The property devolving on the relations referred to in sub-cls. (a), (b) and (c) or Cl. (ii) of Sub-S. (1) shall be distributed among them in accordance with the rules contained in Cls. (i), (iii), (iv) and (v) of S. 20 and Explns. I and II to that section." Under S. 20, where the deceased has left a widow and a child, each is entitled to a half share of his properties. The question for decision depends on whether the Act, particularly S. 30, is applicable. Section 30 was contended to be inapplicable, for the reason that at the time the succession opened, the plaintiff was not a marumakkathayi, because she was then governed, not by the Marumakkathayam Law but by the Cochin Nair Act which was in force at the time, and that she was not in the State of Madras. The contention is palpably unsound. The Act has by S. 3(e) defined, marumakkathayam as "the system of inheritance in which descent is traced in the female line" and by S. 3(f) a marumakkathayi as "a person governed by the Marumakkathayam law of inheritance. The plaintiff fulfils this condition. The Cochin Nair Act of 1095 has, as the Madras Marumakkathayam Act also has done, only defined and amended in certain respects the law relating to marriage, intestate succession, partition etc., applicable to persons governed by the Marumakkathayam Law of inheritance and for that reason alone, it is futile to contend, that the plaintiff was not a marumakkathayi. The Cochin Nair Act of 1113 was enacted only to consolidate and amend the earlier enactment. There is nothing in S.30 which makes it necessary, that the marumakkathayi should also belong to the State of Madras and it is on S. 1(2) of the Act, that the decision of this part of the case depends. 3. Section 1(2) is in the following terms : "(2) It (the Act) shall apply- (a) to all Hindus in the Presidency of Madras who are governed by the Marumakkathayam law of inheritance ; (b) to all Hindus outside the said Presidency governed by the said law, in respect of properties within it ; and (c) to all Hindu males, whether governed by the said law or not, who have contracted or may contract marital alliances with Hindu females governed by the said law." Clause (a) is irrelevant, but in my view, Cls. (b) and (c) are both applicable. Clause (b) renders the Act applicable to a marumakkathayi outside the Presidency of Madras, so far as his or her properties within it are concerned, and Cl. (c) makes the Act applicable to a non-marumakkathayi male who has contracted marital alliance with a marumakkathayi woman wherever the latter is. Thus, by reason of Cl. (b), the plaintiff's tights to properties within the State of Madras are regulated by the Act and by reason of Cl. (c), S. 30 of the Act is made a part of the law by which the plaintiff's father is governed. The combined effect of Cls. (b) and (c) is, that S. 30 is applicable to the plaintiff's right to inherit the properties of her father which are situated within the Madras State. On the terms of S. 30, it is not open to doubt, that the plaintiff is so entitled, There was no question, that the marriage of her mother was valid under S. 4 of the Act, and the failure, if any, to notify the marriage under Sub-S. (3) of S. 4 was of no consequence, firstly because the marriage was before the date on which the Act came into force and secondly because, such failure did not concern or affect the validity of the marriage. 4. Learned counsel relied on Tefferys v. Boosey, (1854) 4 HLC 815 for the presumption against extra, territorial operation of legislative enactments. As Lord Brougham said in the case just cited. "generally we must assume that the Legislature confines its enactments to its own subjects over whom it has authority, and to whom it owes a duty in return for their obedience. Nothing is more clear than that it may also extend its provisions to foreigners in certain cases and may, without express words, make it appear that such is the intendment of those provisions. But the presumption is rather against the extension, and the proof of it is rather upon those who would maintain such to be the meaning of the enactments." This is only a presumption and where the legislature has enacted to the contrary, as by Cl. (b) of S. 1(2), the presumption has to yield. But the presumption is rather against the extension, and the proof of it is rather upon those who would maintain such to be the meaning of the enactments." This is only a presumption and where the legislature has enacted to the contrary, as by Cl. (b) of S. 1(2), the presumption has to yield. "A sovereign is supreme within his own territory, and, according to the universal maxim of Jurisprudence, he has exclusive jurisdiction over everybody and everything within that territory and over every transaction that is there effected." (Cheshire on Private International Law, Sixth Edn., p. 1). Learned counsel also relied on certain provisions in the Act, which according to their terms could not apply to those who are outside the State of Madras, but these have nothing to do with the provisions discussed above. So the plaintiff's claim to a half share of the properties is well-founded. 5. This second appeal is groundless and is dismissed with costs. Appeal dismissed.