Hyderabad: In a landmark judgement on Tuesday, the Supreme Court ruled that daughters of the Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) will have equal right in the ancestral property like that of sons, even if their father died before 2005 when the amendment to the Hindu Succession Act came into force.
In the 121-page judgement, a three-judge bench headed by Justice Arun Mishra said: “The daughter shall remain a coparcener throughout life, irrespective of whether her father is alive or not.”
The verdict stressed on the retrospective nature of the law and clarified that equal rights can also be claimed by daughters who were born before 9 September 2005 – the day when the amendments to the succession law came into force.
To understand the Supreme Court’s verdict better, take a glance into what the current law means.
What is HUF?
Under the Hindu law, a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) is a group comprising more than one person, all lineal descendants of a common ancestor and includes wives and unmarried daughters. A HUF can be formed by people of Hindu, Jain, Sikh or Buddhist faith.
Who are coparceners?
Within the HUF, there are some coparceners. These are the people who have the capacity to assume a legal right in ancestral property by birth. Notably, coparcener heirs get right only by birth and no other contract. The only other method to be a coparcener is by way of adoption.
A coparcenary comprises the eldest member and three generations of a family. Before 2005, it included only those persons like sons, grandsons, and greatgrandsons. A married daughter could not be a coparcener, even if she was the member of the HUF. But in 2005, the Act was amended to give every married daughter equal rights, liabilities, and duties as the sons.
What are the rights of a coparcener?
Besides legal right in ancestral property, coparceners can also can file a suit demanding partition of the ancestral property. The daughter, as a coparcener, can now demand the partition of her father’s property which was not allowed before 2005.
What is included in a coparcenary property?
Both ancestral and self-acquired property can be a coparcenary property. While in case of ancestral property, it is equally shared by all members of the coparcenary, in case of self-acquired, the person is free to manage the property according to his own will.