Outlook Business Desk
The Chhattisgarh High Court ruled that daughters cannot claim a share in their father’s property if succession opened before the Hindu Succession Act (HSA), 1956. Under the pre-1956 Mitakshara Law, property passed to male heirs. So, daughters had no inheritance rights then.
The judgment came in the case of Ragmania through legal representatives versus Jagmet and others. Ragmania sought a share in her late father’s ancestral property. But since her father died around 1950–51, before the Hindu Succession Act, the Court applied Mitakshara principles instead.
Justice Narendra Kumar Vyas dismissed the appeal, stating that succession had opened before 1956, making Mitakshara Law applicable. Under this law, only male heirs could inherit property, and daughters could claim a share only in the absence of a son. The Court upheld earlier rulings dismissing her claim.
Under the Mitakshara Law, property whether ancestral or self-acquired was passed on to male heirs by inheritance. Daughters could inherit only if no son was alive. This system, common across most of India before 1956, gave preference to male family members and denied daughters equal property rights.
The High Court cited Supreme Court rulings like Arshnoor Singh v. Harpal Kaur (2019) and Arunachala Gounder v. Ponnusamy (2022). Both judgments confirmed that pre-1956 successions are governed entirely by Mitakshara Law, meaning daughters’ rights under the Hindu Succession Act cannot apply retroactively to earlier deaths.
Legal experts explained that inheritance is decided by the law in force when the ancestor died, not when the claim is filed. Alay Razvi of Accord Juris said the Act is not retrospective, while Shashank Agarwal of Legum Solis noted that timing crucially determines a daughter’s inheritance rights.
On the other hand, The 1929 Hindu Law of Inheritance Amendment Act included a few female heirs, such as a son’s daughter or sister, but only if no male heir existed. These limited provisions did not alter the male’s dominant right to inherit property under the traditional Mitakshara system.
The Hindu Succession Act, 1956, codified inheritance for Hindus, allowing women to inherit property. Its 2005 amendment granted equal coparcenary rights to daughters. But these reforms apply only when the father’s death occurred after 1956; earlier successions remain governed by Mitakshara Law.
The ruling highlights that inheritance rights depend on the year of death. If a father died before 1956 and a son survived, daughters cannot reopen the claim. Families must verify timelines and documents before assuming equal rights apply under modern inheritance law.