Monday, September 5, 2016

GENERAL RULES OF INHERITANCE ACCORDING TO SUNNI LAW




Sasi K.G

01. INTRODUCTION

Islam is an Abrahamic monotheistic Semitic religion originated in Saudi Arabia in the seventh century AD. It accepts the books of Talmund and Thora as part of its common ancestry but upholds as the supreme book Quran as revealed by Allah, the Only God to his last prophet Muhammed, who lived between 29 August 570 AD and 8 June 632 AD in Saudi Arabia. The Torah, Nevi’im, Ketuvim and Talmud of the Jews and the Old Testament of the Christians are practically the same and these books along with the Gospels of Jesus Christ finds place in the Quran with minor though conspicuous differences. Being matters of belief these differences form the basis of the identity of these Religions. Bahaism is also considered as a Semitic Religion.

02. ISLAMIC LAW

Islam is derived from the Arabic root "Salema" which means peace, purity, submission and obedience. In the religious sense, Islam means submission to the will of God and obedience to His law.[i]  A believer of Islam is called a Muslim. The law particularly applicable to a Muslim is called Islamic Law, Muslim Law or Muhammedan Law. In many Islamic Countries both Criminal, Public and Personal Laws shall be according to the Islamic Law which is generally called Shari’a, Shari’ah or Shariat. In India Criminal or Public Shari’a Laws are not applicable but Shari’a Personal Law is applicable. However, they shall be subject to the legal principles of justice equity and good consciousness and shall also be under the various Constitutional provisions. However the Shari’a followed by different schools of Muslim thoughts are different and therefore there are many Schools of Islamic Laws prevailing in India. For a proper appreciation of the origin of these schools, the evolution of Quaran is also relevant.

03. EVOLUTION OF QURAN

According to tradition, the first Revelations of Allah was received by Muhammed on 22 December 609 AD. The attempts of Muhammed to attract some believers and to form a religion was successful but it attracted severe persecutions and the early Muslim had to flee from Mecca to Medina at the first year of Hijra i.e. in 622 AD. However at Medina Islam not only flourished, but also established an empire headed by Muhammed. When he died in the lap of one of his wives on 8 June 632 AD, he had assigned any successor neither to the State nor to his estates, but he had made it clear that people like him cannot be inherited but by charity. So the followers of Muhammed at his death chose Abu Bakr as their leader and he lead the State, but the followers of Muhammed practically were left poor. Abu Bakr however allowed the family of Muhammed to succeed whatever they wanted. He contineed as the first Caliph for two years and died in 634 AD. Soon after the demise of Muhammad a number of his companions who knew the Quran by heart were killed in a battle by Musaylimah, the first caliph Abu Bakr decided to collect the book in one volume so that it could be preserved. Zayd ibn Thabit (died in 655 AD) was the person to collect the Quran since "he used to write the Divine Inspiration for Allah's Apostle". Thus, a group of scribes, most importantly Zayd, collected the verses and produced a hand-written manuscript of the complete book. The manuscript according to Zayd remained with Abu Bakr until he died. After Abu Bakr, Hafsa bint Umar, Muhammad's widow, was entrusted with the manuscript. In about 650, the third Caliph Uthman ibn Affan (died in 656 AD) began noticing slight differences in pronunciation of the Quran as Islam expanded beyond the Arabian Peninsula into Persia, the Levant and North Africa. In order to preserve the sanctity of the text, he ordered a committee headed by Zayd to use Abu Bakr's copy and prepare a standard copy of the Quran. Thus, within 20 years of Muhammad's death, the Quran was committed to written form. That text became the model from which copies were made and promulgated throughout the urban centers of the Muslim world, and other versions are believed to have been destroyed. The present form of the Quran text is accepted by Muslim scholars to be the original version compiled by Abu Bakr.[ii]
Abu Bakr had attempted in the expansion of the Islamic State and Umar ibn al-Khattab and Uthman ibn Affan continued the policy with success. Ali ibn Abi Talib and Hasan ibn Ali succeeded him. The first four caliphs are known in Sunni Islam as al-khulafā' ar-rāshidūn ("Rightly Guided Caliphs").Under them, the territory under Muslim rule expanded deeply into the parts of the Persian and Byzantine territories.[iii]  
According to Shia, Ali ibn Abi Talib (died in 661 AD) compiled a complete version of the Quran shortly after Muhammad's death. The order of this text differed from that gathered later during Uthman's era in that this version had been collected in chronological order. Despite this, he made no objection against the standardized Quran and accepted the Quran in circulation. Other personal copies of the Quran might have existed including Ibn Mas’ud’s and Ubay ibn Ka’b’s codex, none of which exist today.[iv]

04. SUNNIS AND SHIAS

The election of Abu Bakr to the Caliphate led to turmoil and dissensions in the Muslim world, giving birth to two main factions of Muslims, the Sunnis and Shias. The Koreishi tribes split into the Ommayadas and the Hashimites. The latter were of the view that Ali was the legitimate successor to the Prophet by propinquity as well as by nomination by the Prophet himself. Abu Bakr died in 634 AD two years after his election. Then Umar was elected as the second Caliph. On Umar's assassination of 644 AD. Osman became the third Caliph. On Osman's assassination in 656 AD. Ali became the fourth Caliph. He too was assassinated in 661 AD.[v]
With the death of Ali, the fourth Caliph begins the third period in the development of Muslim Law and it extends to A.H. 300.  On All's death, his first son Hasan resigned in favour of Muavta, the founder of the Ommayad dynasty. All's second son. Hussain revolted and died fighting at Karbala. With this the division of the Muslim world between the Sunnis and the Shias became final and permanent.
Muavta became the temporal and spiritual head of the Arabs. After the death of Muavta, the hereditary principle of succession was introduced in the Caliphate. The Ommayad dynasty continued to rule till its fourteenth sovereign was overthrown by the Abbasides. During the Ommayadas dynasty the Muslim dominion extended far and wide. The Abbasides proclaimed themselves to be the spiritual head of the Muslims. During this period came into existence the schools of Sunnis and Shias. The Sunni schools are: (i) the Kufa School or the Hanafi School named after Imam Abu Hanifa (699 A.D.-766 A.D.). It is the oldest school and it lays emphasis on the kiyas as a source of law. (ii) The Madina or the Maliki School named after its founder. Malik ibn Anas (713-795 A.D.). It rejects the Idyas and emphasizes the traditions and the ijma. (iii) The Shafi School founded by Imam Muhammad ibn Idris ash-Shaft (767-820 A.D.) who was the protagonist and propounder of the classical theory of Islamic jurisprudence. He perfected the doctrine of ijma and founded the science of usul. (iv) The Hanbali School founded by Ahmed ibn Hanbal (780-855 A.D.) laid stress on the importance of the tradition or the sunna. He represents the extremists among the traditionalists.[vi]
The Shias also are split into three schools. The first split took place after the death of the fourth Imam, Zaynul-Abdin whose son Zayd, was accepted as the Imam by some of the Shias, and thus arose the Zaydi School. The majority followed Imam Muhammad al Baquir, who was succeeded by Imam Jafar as Sadiq. After the death of Imam Jafar another split took place among the Shias. The majority followed Imam Musa Kazim. His followers are known as the Twelvers or the Ithana Ashari School. The minority followed Ismail the elder brother of Imam Musa Kazim. Thus came into existence the third school, the Ismail School. The followers of this school are also known as the Seveners.

05. THE INDIAN SUNNIS AND SHIAS

In India the Mahomedans of India are divided into two sects namely Sunnis and Shias. The Motazilas form a third sect, however their legal status is not defined. Quadianis, Ahl-e-Hadit, Cutch Memons of Bombay and Halai Menons belong to the Sunni Sect.[vii]
The Sunnis are divided into four sub-sects. Namely the Hanafis, the Malikis, the Shafeis and the Hanbalis. The Sunni Mahomedans of India belong principally to the Hanafi School. In a series of cases it has been laid down by Indian Courts that there shall be a presumption that the parties to a suit or proceeding are Sunnis, unless it is shown that the parties belong to the Shia sect.[viii] But Shia law is not a Foreign Law, it is part of the law of the land.[ix] As most Sunnis are Hanafis the presumption is that a Sunni is governed by Hanafi Law.[x]  The Wahhabis are an off-sheet of the Hanbalis. Considerable groups of Mahornedans in the South of India, such as Kerala and Malabar, are Shafeis.[xi]
In India he Shias are divided into three main subnamely, the Athna-Asharias, the Ismailyas and the Zaidya. There are two divisions of Athna-Asharias, namely, (1) Akhbari, and (2) Usuli. As most Shias are Athna-Asnarias the presumption is that a Shia is governed by the Athna-Asharia exposition of the law.[xii] The Khojas and the Bohras of Bombay belong to the Ismailya sub- sect. The Aga Khan is the spiritual head of the lsmaili Khojas and he was once regarded the sole right of determining who shall or shall not remain a member of the community, but this right has been curtailed by the Bombay Prevention of Excommunication Act (XLII of 1949) All the offerings are the Aga Khan's absolute property and are not subject to any trust for the benefit of the community.[xiii]
The Mullaji is the spiritual head of the Daoodi Bohras[xiv] and in regard to properties vested in him and to offerings received by him for the benefit of the community it has been held in one case that he is a trustee.[xv] In another case the constitutional validity of the Bombay Prevention of Excommunication Act (XLII of 1949) has been upheld and an order of excommunication given by the Head Priest of the Daoodi Bohras set aside.[xvi] Also see Saifuddin Sahib v. Govt. of Bombay, 1962 A.S.C. 854. The Sulaimani Bohras follow their own religious leaders. Their secession from the Daoodis is mentioned in Mansoorally v. Taiyabally.[xvii]
The Mahomedan law applicable to each sect or sub-sect is to prevail as to litigants of that sect or sub-sect.[xviii] The Sunni law will therefore apply to Sunnis, and the Shia law to Shias, and the law peculiar to each sub-sect will apply to persons belonging to that sub-sect. A Mahomedan male or female who has attained the age of puberty, may renounce the doctrines of the sect or sub-sect to which he or she belongs, and adopt the tenets of the other sect or any other sub-sect, and he or she will thenceforth be subject to the law of the new sect or sub-sect.[xix] In a Marriage between Shia male and Sunni female wife's status is not affected. She does not thereby become subject to the Shia law.[xx] The same proposition holds good in the case of marriage of a Shia female with a Sunni male.

06. THE SUNNI LAW AND HANAFI SUNNI LAW

There are four sources of Mahomedan law, namely, (1) the Koran; (2) Hadis, that is, precepts, actions and sayings of the Prophet Mahomed, not written down during his lifetime, but preserved by tradition and handed down by authorized persons; (3) Ijmaa, that is, a concurrence of opinion of the companions of Mahomed and his disciples; and (4) Qiyas, being analogical deductions derived from a comparison of the first three sources when they did not apply to the particular case.[xxi]  Qiyas is reasoning by analogy. Abu Hanifa, the founder of the Hanafi section Sunnis, frequently preferred it to traditions of single authority. The founders of the other Sunni sects, however, seldom resorted to it.
The Courts, in administering Mahomedan law, should not, as a rule, attempt to put their own construction on the Koran in opposition to the express ruling of Mahomedan commentators of great antiquity and high authority. Thus where a passage of the Koran (Sura ii, vv, 241-242) was interpreted in a particular way Both in the Hedaya (a work on the Sunni law) and in the Imamia (a work on the Shia law), it was held by their Lordships of the Privy Council that it was not open to a Judge to construe it in a different manner.[xxii]
Neither the ancient texts nor the precepts of the Prophet Mahomed should be taken literally so as to deduce from them new rules of law, especially when such proposed rules do not conduce to substantial justice.[xxiii] New rules of law are not to be introduced because they seem to lawyers of the present day to follow logically from ancient texts however authoritative, when the ancient doctors of the law have not themselves drawn those conclusions.[xxiv]
The three great exponents of the Hanafi-Sunni law are Abu Hanifa, the founder of the Hanafi School, and his two disciples, Abu Yusuf and Imam Muhammad. It is a general ru1c of interpretation of the Hanafi law that where there is a difference of opinion between Abu Hanifa and his two disciples, Abu Yusuf and Imam Muhammad, the opinion of the disciples prevails.[xxv] Where there is a difference of opinion between Abu Hanifa and Imam Muhammad, that opinion is to be accepted which coincides with the opinion of Abu Yusuf.[xxvi] When the two disciples differ from their master and from each other, the authority of Abu Yusuf is generally preferred.[xxvii] But these rules are not inflexible; they are to be regarded as rules of preference adopted by ancient jurists for their own guidance, but the subsequent history of opinion and practice will generally be of greater importance.[xxviii]   Where there is a conflict of opinion, and no specific rule to guide the Court, the Court ought to follow that opinion which is most in accordance with justice, equity and good conscience.[xxix]
The rules of equity and equitable considerations commonly recognized in Courts of Equity in England are not foreign to the Mussulman system, but are in fact often referred to and invoked in the adjudication of cases under that system.[xxx]

07. SUCCESSION AND ADMINISTRATION IN SUNNI LAW

Long before the introduction of the Indian Succession Act, 1865 and the Probation and Administration Act, 1881, Islamic Law was prevalent in India during the Delhi Sultanate and Mugal periods. Even though the former Act was not applicable to the Muslims in India, the latter Act was applicable to them. However these Acts were repealed by the Indian Succession Act, 1925. Part I to Part VI of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 was not made applicable to Muslims, but Part VII to Part XI which deals with legal remedies and other procedural matters were made applicable to them. In other words, the provisions of the Probation and Administration Act, 1881 continued to operate among the Muslims through Part VII to Part XI of the Indian Succession Act, 1925. Cutchi Memons Act XLVI of 1920 and the Shariat Act, 1937 served greatly in the application of Shari’a Law among the Muslims of India.
01.Administration of the estate of a deceased Mahomedan:- The estate of a deceased Mahomedan is to be applied successively in payment of (1) his funeral expenses and death-bed charges; (2) expenses of obtaining probate, letters of administration, or succession certificate; (3) wages due for service rendered to the deceased within three months next preceding his death by any labourer, artisan or domestic servant; (4) other debts of the deceased according to their respective priorities (if any); and (5) legacies not exceeding one-third of what remains after all the above payments have been made. The residue is to be distributed among the heirs of the deceased according to the law of the sect to which he belonged at the time of his death[xxxi], and the heir has a right of contribution against his co-heirs, if by the action of the judgment creditor under a decree under sec. 52 of the Civil Procedure Code against all the heirs, he was left with less than his proper share of the net estate of the deceased.[xxxii] Under Mahomedan law, the payment of the debts of the deceased takes precedence over the legacies.[xxxiii]
If the deceased was a Sunni at the time of his death, his property would be distributed among his heirs according to the Sunni law, and if he was a Shia, it would be distributed according to the Shia law. In other words, succession to the estate of a deceased Mahomedan is governed by the law of the sect to which he belonged at the time of his death, and not by the law of the sect to which the persons claiming the estate as his heirs belong.[xxxiv] A deceased Mahomedan is presumed to have been a Sunni and the onus is on the person alleging him to have been a Shia.[xxxv]
The person primarily entitled to administer the estate of a deceased Mahomedan, that is, to apply it in the manner set forth in the section, is the executor appointed under his will. If the deceased left no will, the person entitled to administer his estate would be the person to whom letters of administration are granted. Such a person is called administrator. The persons primarily entitled to letters of administration are the heirs of the deceased. In the absence of an executor or administrator, the persons entitled to administer the estate are the heirs of the deceased.
02. Vesting of estate in executor and administrator:- The executor or administrator, as the case may be, of a deceased Mahomedan, is his legal representative for all purposes, and all the property of the deceased vests in him as such. The estate vests in the executor, though no probate has been obtained by him.[xxxvi]
But since a Mahomedan cannot dispose of by will more than one-third of what remains of his property after payment of his funeral expenses and debts, and since the remaining two-thirds must go to his heirs as on intestacy unless the heirs consent to the legacies exceeding the bequeathable third, the executor, when he has realized the estate, is a bare trustee for the heirs as to two-thirds, and an active trustee as to one-third for the purposes of the will; and of these trusts, one is created by the Act and the probate irrespective of the will, the other by the will established by the probate.[xxxvii]
An executor under the Mahomedan law is called wasi , derived from the same root as wasiyyat  which means a will. But though the Mahomedan law recognised a wasi , it did not recognise an administrator, there being nothing analogous in that law to "letters of administration". A wasi or executor under the Mahomedan law was merely a manager of the estate, and no part of the estate of the deceased vested in him as such. The will may provide for the remuneration of the executor, but if the executor is an heir the provision is not valid unless the other heirs consent.[xxxviii]
03. Devolution of inheritance:- Subject to the above provisions, the whole estate of a deceased Mahomedan if he has died intestate, or so much of it as has not been disposed of by will, if he has left a will, devolves on his heirs at the moment of his death , and the devolution is not suspended by reason merely of debts being due from the deceased.[xxxix] The heirs succeed to the estate as tenants-in-common in specific shares.[xl]
The estate of a deceased Mahomedan if he has died instestate, devolves on his heirs at the moment of his death. Under the Mahomedan Law, birth right is not recognised. The right of an heir apparent or presumptive comes into existence for the first time on the death of the ancestor, and he is not entitled until then to any interest in the property to which he would succeed as an heir if he survived the ancestor.[xli]
There is no joint tenancy in Mahomedan law and the heirs are only tenants-in-common. Therefore heir can claim partition in respect of one of the properties held in common without seeking partition of all the properties.[xlii] Possession of a co-sharer or co-heir is presumed to be that of other co-sharers or co-heirs. To start adverse possession there must be clear and complete evidence of an ouster.[xliii]
Representation of deceased's estate:- The theory of representation is not known to the Mahomedan law. Under its provisions, the estate of a deceased person devolves upon his heirs at the moment of his death. The estate vests immediately in each heir in proportion to the share ordained by Mahomedan law. As the interest of each heir is separate and distinct, one of a number of heirs cannot be treated as representing the others.[xliv] But an heir in possession of assets of an estate can be sued by a creditor of the deceased. There is no intermediate vesting in any one, such as an executor or administrator, as under the Indian Succession Act.[xlv] A suit for partition of his share by one of the heirs is maintainable even if the heirs who are not in possession are not impleaded since the shares of Mahomedan heirs are definite and specific.[xlvi] A Muslim woman acquired property at a time when her husband's estate was owned in common by her along with other heirs, her children. The properties were managed by her father. She was adult but the children were minors. Under Muslim Law she was not the guardian of the property of the minors, nor was her father. Held:--There is no presumption that acquisitions are made for the benefit of the family jointly. On the death of a Muslim, his property devolves on the heirs in specific shares and they take the estate as tenants-in-common. There is no principle of representation and the interest of each heir is separate and distinct.[xlvii]
Limitations for suit by an heir for recovery of his share:- The heirs succeed to the estate as tenants-in-common in specific shares. When the heirs continue to hold the estate as tenants-in-common without dividing it and one of them subsequently brings a suit for recovery of his share, the period of limitation for the suit does not run against him from the date of the death of the deceased, but from the date of express ouster or denial of title; in other words, it is Art. 144 of Sch. I to the Limitation Act, 1908 that applies, and not Art. 123.[xlviii]  The Privy Council has held that a suit for administration of the estate of a Mahomedan is governed as regards immovable property by Art. 144 and as regards movables by Art. 120.[xlix]
One of several co-sharers can be in possession and enjoyment of the common property to the exclusion of the other co-sharers without affecting their interest in the property and unless the co-sharer in possession does something which operates as an ouster of the interests of the other co-sharers, the latter's right cannot be destroyed. The Public Wakfs Extension of Limitation Act is of a very limited application. It is to be read as laid down in the statute.[l]
Parties to the suit by an heir:- In a suit by an heir for the recovery of his share the co-heirs are proper parties; but as the interests of the heirs are distinct, the omission to join a co-heir is not a good reason for dismissing the suit.[li] In other words the co-heir is not a necessary party, i.e a party in whose absence no decree can be passed. A co-owner suing a trespasser and not joining the other co-owners can get a decree only for his share in the property. The plea of just tertii is available to the defendant unless the suit is framed as a representative suit.[lii]
Partial partition:- The doctrine of partial partition is applicable only to a Hindu co-parcenary where the coparceners are joint in estate, and not to Muslims, who are only tenants-in-common; Under the Mahomedan law the heirs of a deceased Muslim succeed to a definite fraction of every part of his estate. Muslim sharers are not obliged to sue for partition of all the properties in which they are interested. There is nothing to preclude one of them from seeking a partition of some of the items of the properties.[liii]
Renunciation or relinquishment need not be expressly stated in the document. It can be inferred from the conduct of the parties. If a suit for partition in a Mohammedan family is brought after 12 years and the plaintiff fails to explain his or her inaction, renunciation can be inferred. If renunciation is pleaded in the document and renunciation is accepted by the parties, in that case, he or she must be estopped from claiming partition, as it is a part of family arrangement. Strictly speaking, such renunciation will not forbid her from claiming partition, but in order to maintain harmony and peace in the family, renunciation should be treated as estoppel to the party concerned.[liv] The relinquishment of a contingent right of inheritance by a Muslim heir is generally void under the Mahomedan Law, but if it is supported by consideration and forms part of a valid family settlement it is valid.  Where the mother claimed a share during the partition among her sons and herself and was allotted certain properties, a condition that she has to relinquish her share beyond her life time becomes void, where she has not done so for consideration. She gets the properties absolutely and could alienate the properties.[lv]
Administration suit:- Any heir or creditor of the deceased may bring a suit for the administration of the estate: he is not bound to bring a suit for partition.[lvi]  In an ordinary partition suit, the Court may, in working out its preliminary decree, instead of making an actual division of all the property, give one heir a charge over the share of another for any difference in favour of the former and any such charge imposed will bind the alienee pendente lite from that heir.[lvii]
Interim maintenance:-  In a suit brought by a Mahomedan widow for the administration of her deceased husband's estate and the payment to her of her l/8th share the Court can order interim maintenance.[lviii]
04. Alienation by heir of his share before payment of debts:- (1) Any heir may even before distribution of the estate, transfer his own share and pass a good title to a bona fide  transferee for value, notwithstanding any debts that might be due from the deceased.[lix]
The transfer must be one for value, that is, for a consideration, e.g., a sale or a mortgage, as distinguished from a gift. If partition has not been effected the heir can only sell his undivided share and cannot sell a particular plot.[lx]
The property of a common ancestor on his death devolves in well-defined shares upon his heirs. The presence of minor among the heirs does not bar the major heirs from transferring their share. Imambandi v. Mutsaddi[lxi] is applied here. One Habibullah entered into an agreement to sell property to defendant No. 1, but before receipt of consideration and execution of the sale-deed he died. The heirs served notices on defendant No. 1 to complete the transaction.[lxii] 34
Illustrations
(a) A Mahomedan dies leaving several heirs. After his death the whole body of heirs sell the whole of his estate without paying his debts. After the sale, a creditor of the deceased obtains a decree against the heirs for his debt, and applies for execution of the decree by an attachment and sale of the property in the hands of the purchaser. He is not entitled to do so. The reason is that a creditor of a deceased Mahomedan cannot follow his estate into the hands of a bona fide purchaser for value.[lxiii]
(b) A Mahomedan dies leaving a widow and a son. A large sum of money is due to the widow for her dower. [Dower is a debt, and the widow is to that extent a creditor of the estate of her deceased husband. She is not, however, a secured creditor. The son mortgages his share in the estate to A, without paying the dower debt. After the mortgage, the widow obtains a decree against the son, who is in possession of the whole estate for the dower debt, and attaches the son's share in execution of the decree. The mortgagee then obtains a decree against the son on the mortgage for sale of the son's share mortgaged to him. The share is sold in execution of the decree, and purchased by P. The mortgage having been made before the attachment, P is entitled to recover the son's share free from the attachment.[lxiv]
Note.--  In the cases in illustration (a), the sale was by all the heirs of their shares. In the case in illustration (b), the sale is only by one of the heirs.
(2) A sale of the share of heir in execution of a decree passed against him at the suit of his creditor amounts to a "transfer" within the meaning of (1) above, and will pass a good title to the purchaser in execution.
Illustration
(a) A Mahomedan dies leaving two sisters as his only heirs. After his death, C, a creditor of the deceased, obtains a decree against the sisters for his debt. Subsequently a creditor of the sisters obtains a decree against them for his debt, and the property of the deceased come to their hands is sold in execution of his decree to P. In this case, C is not entitled to attach the property in the hands of P in execution of his decree.[lxv]
Note. -- In the case in illustration (1) (a), the sale was by private treaty. In the case in illustration (2) (a), it was in execution of a decree. Both these sales stand on the same footing. In both the cases the purchaser was a bona fide purchaser for value.

(3) If the share transferred by an heir is a share in immovable property forming part of the estate of the deceased, and the transfer is made during the pendency of a suit by the widow of the deceased for her dower, in which a decree is passed creating a charge on the estate for the dower debt, the transferee will take the share of the heir subject to the charge[lxvi]  but if the widow's decree is a simple money decree, the transferee will not be affected.[lxvii]  Where a charge is created in favour of an heir in an administration suit on the share of another heir and the latter transfers his share pendente lite, the transferee will take the share subject to the charge.[lxviii]
Illustration
(a) A Mahomedan died leaving three widows and a son. He left considerable property both movable and immovable. After his death, the widows brought a suit against the son, who was in possession of the whole estate, for an administration of the estate of the deceased, and for payment of the dower debt out of the estate. A decree was passed in the suit directing the son to render an account of the properties of the deceased come to his hands, and providing for payment of the dower out of the properties. (This was not a simple money decree, but a decree creating a charge on the properties for the dower debt.) The widows then applied for execution of the decree. Pending execution (which is the same thing as pending the suit), the son mortgaged his share to M. M sued the son on the mortgage, and obtained a decree for sale of the share mortgaged to him. The share was sold in execution of the decree to P, who purchased with notice of the decree. Upon these facts the Privy Council held that P took the share subject to the decree in favour of the widows.[lxix]
Note:-  If the mortgage had been effected before  the suit, it would not have been affected by the decree.[lxx]  
05. Extent of liability of heirs for debts:- Each heir is liable for the debts of the deceased to the extent only of a share of the debts proportionate to his share of the estate.[lxxi]
Illustration
(a) A Mahomedan, who is indebted to C in the sum of Rs. 3,200, dies leaving a widow, a son and two daughters. The heirs divide the estate without paying the debt, the widow taking 1/8, the son taking 7/16, and each daughter 7/32. C then sues the widow and the son for the whole of the debt due to him from the deceased. The widow is liable to pay only (1/8 3,200) = Rs. 400, and the son (7/16 3,200) = Rs. 1,400; they are not liable for the whole debt.[lxxii]
(b) A co-heir who is not a guardian of a minor; has no power to alienate the minor's share in the property even to pay the debts of the deceased from whom they inherit. This is so even if there be a decree against the minor and the alienation is done to discharge the decree. The transaction is void and not merely voidable.[lxxiii]
The heirs of a Muslim dying intestate on whom falls the liability to discharge the debt, proportionate to their respective shares in the estate devolved, can hardly be classified as joint contractors, partners, executers or mortgages. They are by themselves independent debtors; the debt having been split by operation of law. They succeed to the estate as tenants in common in specific shares. Therefore, the acknowledgment of the debts only by one heir can be confined to himself and cannot be extended to the other heirs for their independent position. The payment made on account of debt by the only one heir as an independent debtor, and not as an agent, express or implied, on behalf of other co-heirs could not be said to be a payment on behalf of all so as to extend the period of limitation as against all. The fact that the heir acknowledging the debt by making the payment was in possession of entire estate and had not parted with it by means of partition to the coheirs, would not make him liable for entire debt.[lxxiv]
06. Distribution of estate:- Since the estate devolves on the heirs at the moment of the death of the deceased, they are at liberty to divide it at any time after the death of the deceased. The distribution is not liable to be suspended until payment of the debts. Where some of the co-sharers have paid the debts of the deceased, allowance should be made in regard to these payments at the time of partition.[lxxv]
It was stated in two Allahabad cases,[lxxvi] and also in a Calcutta case,[lxxvii] relying on some passages in the Heddya that the estate could not be distributed, if it was insolvent. In a later Allahabad case,[lxxviii] however, Mahmood, J., observed that the translation of the said passage was only a loose paraphrase of the original Arabic, and expressed the opinion that the estate may be distributed even if it is insolvent.
The Jharkhand High Court held that on the death of a Mohammedan, his property immediately devolves on his heirs separately to the extent of share they are entitled under the personal law.[lxxix] Thus, immediately on death of the Mohammedan, his each heir becomes absolute owner of the property proportionate to his share. Thus, there is no concept of jointness of ownership of properties of deceased under Islamic law. Mohammedan heirs are independent owners of their specific shares and their liability is also proportionate to the extent of their shares in estate. Under the said circumstances one shareholder has no right, title and interest to alienate property of another shareholder.
07. Suit by creditor against executor or administrator:- If the estate is represented by an executor or administrator, a suit by a creditor of the deceased should be instituted ag              ainst the executor or administrator, as the case may be.
08. Suit by creditor against heirs:- If there be no executor or administrator, the creditor may proceed against the heirs  of the deceased, and where the estate of the deceased has not been distributed between the heirs, he is entitled to execute the decree against the property as a whole without regard to the extent of the liability of the heirs inter se.[lxxx] There is, however, a conflict of opinion as to whether a decree obtained by a creditor against some of the heirs of the deceased is binding on the other heirs.
According to the decisions of the High Court of Calcutta, any creditor of the deceased may sue any one of the heirs who is in possession of the whole or any part of the estate, without joining the other heirs as defendants, to recover the entire debt, and the Court may in such a suit pass a decree for the sale, not only of the share of that particular heir in the estate, but of all the assets of the deceased that are in his possession. Where such a decree is passed, and a sale is effected in execution of the decree, the sale will pass to the purchaser not only the interest of that particular heir in the property, but the interests of the other heirs also (including minors) thought they were not parties to the suit,[lxxxi] unless the decree was obtained by fraud, or was taken by consent[lxxxii] [illustrations (a) and (b)]. These decisions proceed on the view that the proper principle was to treat the creditors' suit as an administration suit and as such heir in possession is bound to account for any assets that may have come into his hands and to that extent he is liable to pay the creditors before the residue, if any, is divided among the heirs. In a later case, however, the same High Court held that the above decisions could not apply if the heir who was sued was in possession of the estate on behalf of the other heirs, i.e., was in possession of more than his share of the inheritance, but not if he only held his own share of the inheritance.[lxxxiii]  
The High Court of Bombay in some cases[lxxxiv] took the same view as the Calcutta High Court did in its earlier decision, though on different grounds, but with this difference that a decree against heir in possession bound the other heirs only if he was in possession of the whole  estate [illustrations, (c) and (d)]. But this view has been disapproved in later cases, and it has been held that a sale in execution of a decree passed against an heir in possession in a creditor's suit does not pass to the purchaser the interest of those heirs in the estate who were not parties to the suit even if the heir against whom the decree was passed was in possession of the whole estate[lxxxv] [illustration (c)].This coincides with the view taken by the High Court of Allahabad.
In Pathummabi v. Vittil,[lxxxvi] the High Court of Madras followed the earlier rulings of the Bombay High Court, but this decision was subsequently dissented from if not expressly overruled by a Full Bench in Abdul Majeeth v. Krishnamachariar,[lxxxvii] adopting the view taken by the Allahabad High Court.
According to the rulings of the Allahabad High Court, a decree relative to his debts passed in a contentious or non-contentious suit against such heirs only of a deceased Mahomedan debtor as are in possession of the whole or part of his estate, binds each defendant to the extent of his share in the estate[lxxxviii] but it does not bind the other heirs who, by reason of absence or any other cause, are out of possession, so as to convey to the purchaser, in execution of such a decree, the interests of such heirs as were not parties to the decree. This is because under Mahomedan law each heir inherits a separate and definite share and as he has no interest in the share inherited by another heir he cannot be said to represent the estate that has devolved upon the other heir.[lxxxix] But if they sue for a declaration that the sale is not binding on them, and it is proved that the debts have been paid out of the proceeds of the sale, they ought to be put on terms as a matter of equity, and required to pay their proportionate share of the debt before they are granted the declaration sued for[xc]   [illustrations (f) and (g)].
The High Court of Nagpur[xci] and the Chief Court of Oudh[xcii] took the same view as that taken by the Allahabad High Court. The Lahore decisions were not consistent; one Judge of that High Court agreed with the Calcutta view,[xciii] while another followed the later Bombay decisions.[xciv] The Hyderabad High Court in the case of Mohd. Sulaiman v. Mohd. Ismail[xcv] followed the Calcutta view.
However, the Supreme Court has attempted to resolve this conflict in the manner described below.
In the Allahabad case of Jafri Begum v. Amir Mohammad Khan,[xcvi] Mahmood, J., had observed that "upon the death of a Mahomedan owner, his property... immediately devolves upon his heirs in specific shares, and if there are any claims against the estate, and they are litigated, the matter passes into the region of procedure and must be regulated according to the law which governs the action of the Court". The learned Judge therefore went on to hold that though in certain circumstances under the rules of the Mahomedan law of procedure, a decree could be binding on an absent heir, such rules did not apply in India; and that in accordance with the principles which governed the procedure in Indian courts, a decree obtained by a creditor would be ineffective as regards the share of those who were not parties to the litigation.
The observation quoted above was cited with approval by the Privy Council in its judgment in the case of Mohd. Kazim Ali Khan v. Sadiq Ali Khan[xcvii]   and the principle embodied in it has also been approved by the Supreme Court in its recent judgment in the appeal from the Hyderabad case of Mohd. Sulaiman v. Mohd. Ismail.[xcviii] However, the Supreme Court has now held that though ordinarily the court does not regard a decree binding on a person who is not impleaded eo nomine  in an action, there are certain recognized exceptions to this rule: and one of these is that where certain persons are impleaded after diligent and bona fide  enquiry in the genuine belief that they are the only persons interested in the estate, the whole estate of the deceased will be duly represented by the persons who are brought on the record or impleaded, and the decree will be binding on the entire estate. But this rule will not apply to cases where there has been fraud or collusion between the creditor and the heir impleaded or where there are other circumstances which indicate that there has not been a fair or real trial, or that the absent heir had a special defence which was not and could not be tried in the earlier proceeding [illustration (i)].
Illustrations
(a) A Mahomedan dies leaving a widow, a daughter, and two sisters. After his death a suit is brought by a creditor of the deceased against the widow and the daughter who alone are in possession of the whole  estate, and a decree is passed "against the assets of" the deceased. The decree and the sale in execution of the property left by the deceased are binding on the sisters though they were not parties to the suit.[xcix] (See note to illustration (b) below)
(b) A Mahomedan dies leaving a widow and other heirs. A suit is brought by a creditor of the deceased against the widow alone who is in possession of part of the estate. The other heirs are not necessary parties, and the creditor is entitled to a decree not only against the share of the widow in the estate, but the entire assets which have come into her hands and which have not been applied in the discharge of the liabilities to which the estate may be subject at her husband's death.[c]
Note.-- As to the cases cited in illustrations, (a) and (b), it was pointed out by the High Court of Calcutta that the defendants in those cases were in possession of the estate on behalf of all the heirs; otherwise the only decree that the creditor would be entitled to would be a decree for a proportionate  share of the debt.[ci]
(c) A Mahomedan woman, Khatiza, dies leaving a minor son and a daughter. After her death a suit is brought by a creditor of the deceased "against Khatiza, deceased, represented by her minor son represented by his guardian",[cii] and a decree is passed in that form. The deceased was entitled to a share in a Khoti Vatan and "the right, title, and interest of Khatiza" in that share is sold in execution of the decree. The purchaser acquires a title unimpeachable by the daughter, though she was not a party to the suit or to the subsequent proceedings in execution.[ciii] [No reference was made in the judgment to the Calcutta cases cited above nor to the Allahabad cases cited in illustration (f)].[civ]  
(d) A Mahomedan dies leaving a widow, a minor son, and two daughters. After his death a suit is brought by a mortgagee from the deceased against the son as represented by his guardian and mother, claiming possession of the land mortgaged to him as owner under a gahan lahan clause in the mortgage. The widow is in possession of the estate and a decree ex-parte is passed directing her to deliver possession of the land to the mortgagee, and he is accordingly put in possession. The decree binds the daughters though they were not parties to the suit, and they are not entitled to redeem the mortgage as against the mortgagee or a purchaser from him.[cv]  
(e) A Mahomedan dies leaving a widow and a daughter. After his death C, a creditor of the deceased, sues the widow for the recovery of a debt due to him and a decree is passed in his favour for Rs. 327 to be recovered out of the estate of the deceased. In execution of the decree, the right, title and interest of the deceased in a house is sold and it is purchased by P. The daughter, who was not a party to the suit, subsequently sues P to recover by partition her share in the house. Held, disapproving the cases cited in illustrations, (c) and (d), that the daughter, not being a party to C's suit , was not bound by the decree passed in the suit, and that the sale did not pass her interest in the house to P , and that she was entitled to recover her share in the house.[cvi]  
(f) A creditor of a deceased Mahomedan obtains a decree upon a hypothecation bond "for recovery of his debt by enforcement of lien" against one of the heirs of the deceased in possession of the estate. The whole estate is sold in execution of the decree, and it is purchased by the decreeholder. Subsequently another heir of the deceased, who was not a party to these proceedings, sues the decree-holder as purchaser for recovery of his share in the estate. According to the Allahabad High Court, he is entitled to possession of his share on payment of his proportionate share of the debts, if the sale proceeds were applied in payment of the debt.[cvii]
(g) A creditor of a deceased Mahomedan obtains a money decree against an heir of the deceased in possession of the estate, and attaches certain immovable property forming part of the estate in execution of the decree. The value of the immovable property exceeds the share of the defendant. According to the Allahabad High Court, the defendant is entitled to object to the attachment and sale of the right and interest of the other heirs who were not parties to the suit, upon the ground that as regards them he is in possession of the property as trustee.[cviii]  
(h) A creditor of a deceased Mahomedan filed a suit against his widow, without making his daughters parties to the suit. He obtained a decree and attached an immovable property which was in the joint possession of the widow and the two daughters. The daughters filed a suit for a declaration that the decree was not binding on their shares. It was held that the decree was not binding on their shares, and as there was no sale of the property, they could not be called upon to pay the proportionate share of the debt of the deceased before the grant of the declaration.[cix]  
(i) M, K and L mortgaged certain immovable properties in favour of R. A few years later, after M had died, R commenced an action for enforcement of the mortgage against K, L and three widows and a daughter of M. In execution of the decree passed in the action the properties were sold at a Court auction and purchased by R, who then transferred them to others. Thereafter, the plaintiff, claiming that he was the son of M, sued for a decree for partition of the mortgaged properties "by metes and bounds" and in the alternative for a declaration that he was entitled to redeem the mortgage or a portion thereof equal to his share in the mortgaged properties. The plaintiffs suit was resisted by R and the other alienees of the properties mainly on the ground that the decree obtained by R was binding on the plaintiff as the estate of M was fully represented in the suit by those who were in possession at the time; and that R had made full and bona fide enquiry and had learnt that the three widows and the daughter of M were the only surviving members of the latter's family. It was held that the plaintiff was bound by the decree of 1940 as the estate of M was fully represented in the suit.[cx]
09. Alienation by one of several heirs for payment of debts:- One of several heirs of the deceased Mahomedan, though he may be in possession of the whole estate of the deceased, has no power to alienate the shares of his co-heirs, not even for the purpose of discharging the debts of the deceased. If he sells or mortgages any property in his possession forming part of the estate of the deceased, though it may be for payment of the debts of the deceased, such sale or mortgage operates as a transfer only of his interest in the property. It is not binding on the other heirs or the other creditors of the deceased.[cxi] The transferor, of course, is, in his turn, entitled to obtain contribution from his co-heirs.
It has been so held by a Full Bench of the Madras High Court overruling Pathummabi v. Vittil,[cxii] an earlier decision of the same High Court, and dissenting from the Allahabad decision in Hasan Ali v. Mehdi Husain.[cxiii] The Madras Full Bench decision has been followed by the Bombay High Court[cxiv] and approved by the Privy Council.[cxv] In the under mentioned case, a single Judge of the Lahore High Court has held that if an heir who is in possession of the property seeks a declaration that the alienation effected in respect of that property without joining him in the transaction is illegal, he cannot be called upon to pay a proportionate share of the debts of the deceased as a condition precedent to the suit being decreed.[cxvi]
As to ostensible ownership, see Mubarak-un-Nissa v. Muhammad,[cxvii] a case under section 41 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882.
10. Recovery through Court of debts due to the deceased:- No Court shall pass a decree against a debtor of a deceased Mahomedan for payment of his debts to a person claiming on succession to be entitled to the effects of the deceased or to any part thereof, or proceed upon an application of a person claiming to be so entitled, to execute against such a debtor a decree or order for the payment of his debt, except on the production, by the person so claiming, of a probate or letters of administration evidencing the grant to him of administration to the estate of the deceased, or a certificate granted under  S. 31 or S. 32 of the Administrator-General's Act, 1913, and having the debt mentioned therein, or a succession certificate granted under Part X of the Indian Succession Act , 1925, and having the debt specified therein, or a certificate granted under the Succession Certificate Act, 1889 or a certificate granted under Bombay Regulation VIII of 1827, and, if granted after the first day of May, 1889, having the debt specified therein.
Explanation:-- The word "debt" in this section includes any debt except rent, revenue or profits payable in respect of land used for agricultural purposes.
The section reproduces the provisions of S. 214 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925.
Probate and letters of administration:- It is not necessary in the case of a Mahomedan will that the executor should obtain probate of the will to establish his right as such in a Court of justice [Indian Succession Act, 1925, S. 213(2)].[cxviii] Nor is it necessary, where a Mahomedan has died intestate that his heirs should obtain letters of administration to establish their right to any part of the property of the deceased in a Court of Justice [Indian Succession Act, 1925, S. 212(2)]. But where a suit is brought to recover a debt due to the deceased, the Court shall not pass a decree except on production of probate or of letters of administration or a certificate.
Recovery of debts through Court:- It must be observed that the rule laid down in the present section applies only where a debt due to the deceased is sought to be recovered through a Court . A debtor of a deceased person may pay his debt to the executor, though he may not have obtained probate, or, where he has died intestate, to his heirs even if they had not taken out letters of administration or a certificate and such payment will operate as a discharge to the debtor. But payment of a debt by a debtor to one of several heirs does not discharge the debt as to all.[cxix] Where a debt is sought to be recovered by legal proceedings, it is not necessary that the plaintiff should have obtained either probate or letters of administration or a certificate before the date of the institution of the suit . It is enough if he produces the grant before the passing of the decree.[cxx]
Debt:- A suit by one member of a family to recover his share of the family property from the other members is not a suit to recover a "debt".[cxxi] A suit asking for a personal decree against the mortgagor in respect of a mortgage is a suit for a "debt." But there is a conflict of opinion as to whether a suit for sale of the mortgaged property is a suit for a "debt." The High Court of Allahabad has held that it is.[cxxii] The High Courts of Calcutta,[cxxiii] Bombay[cxxiv] and Madras[cxxv] have held that it is not.
11. Alienation by co-sharer before partition:- Where one of two or more co-sharers mortgages his undivided share in some of the properties held jointly by them, the mortgagee takes the security subject to the right of the other co-sharers to enforce a partition and thereby to convert what was an undivided share of the whole into a defined portion held in severalty. If the mortgage, therefore, is followed by a partition, and the mortgaged properties are allotted to the other co-sharers, they take those properties in the absence of fraud, free from the mortgage, and the mortgagee can proceed only against the properties allotted to the mortgagor in substitution of his undivided share.[cxxvi]
The Chief Court of Sind has held that a co-sharer may file a suit for partial partition. Where a co-sharer alienates a part only of the property without authority from the other co-sharers, the purchaser is not entitled to adjustment of equities in respect of other properties held in co-ownership, which have not been alienated to the purchaser. If, however, a co-sharer, who has alienated specific property without the consent of the other co-sharers, files a suit for general partition, the question of adjustment of equities between the purchaser and the co-sharers may arise, but a purchaser cannot compel the co-sharer, who had alienated specific property, to file a suit for general partition.[cxxvii] This may be explained as follows. A, B and C are co-sharers of properties X, Y and Z. A without the consent of B and Q alienates property X. B and C may ask for the partition of property X only. They are not bound to ask for partition of properties X, Y and Z. If only property X' is being partitioned, the purchaser will get only the share of A in the property. If, however, there is a suit for the partition of all the properties, the Court may allot property X to A's share, if this is equitable to the other co-sharers. The purchaser cannot compel A to file a suit for properties X, Y and Z, as the purchaser has no legal interest in properties Y and Z. However, a Single Bench of the Madhya Pradesh High Court has held that when a co-owner has the right of claiming general partition of all the properties, the same right ought not to be denied to an alienee of the specific item of property from some of the co-owners. The alienee obtains a personal right which he is equitably entitled to enforce against the share of his vendors which can only be done by a general partition of the entire property.[cxxviii]
12. Enactment relating to administration:- In matters not herein before specifically mentioned, the administration of the estate of a deceased Mahomedan is governed by the provisions of the following Acts to the extent to which they are applicable to the case of Mahomedans, namely:--
(1) The Indian Succession Act, 1925;
(2) The Administrator-Generals Act, 1913; and
(3) Bombay Regulation VIII of 1827.
Such of the provisions of the Administrator-Generals Act as apply to Mahomedans come into operation when a Mahomedan dies leaving assets within the local limits of the ordinary original civil jurisdiction of the High Court of Calcutta, Madras or Bombay. In such a case, the Court may, upon the application of any person interested in the assets, direct the Administrator-General to apply for letters of administration of the effects of the deceased, if the application satisfies the Court that such grant is necessary for the protection of the assets (See  S. 10 of the Act, and also  S. 13  ).

08. GENERAL RULES OF INHERITANCE

Even though what is stated in last heading Succession and Administration are truly the basics of Sunni Law, another set of principles called General Rules of Inheritance are applicable for Indian Mohamedans.
01. Nature of the Heritable Property:- Heritable property is that property which is available to the legal heirs for inheritance. After the death of a Muslim, his properties are utilised for the payment of funeral expenses, debts and the legacies i.e. wills, if any. After these payments, the remaining property is called heritable property. For purposes of inheritance, Muslim law does not make any distinction between corpus and usufruct or, between movable and immovable, or, corporeal and incorporeal property. Under English law, there is some difference in the inheritance of movable and immovable property. But, under Muslim law there is no such distinction; any property, which was in the ownership of the deceased at the moment of his death, may be the subject-matter of inheritance. In a Mahomedan family there is a presumption that the cash and household furniture belong to the husband.[cxxix]
Shia Law:
Under the Shia law, a childless widow is entitled to get her share (1/4) in the inheritance only from the movable property left by her deceased husband.
02. Joint or Ancestral Property:- The concept of a joint family or of co-parcenaries’ property (as is recognised under Hindu law) is not known to Muslims. Whenever a Muslim dies, his properties devolve on his heirs in definite share of which each heir becomes an absolute owner. Subsequently, upon the death of such heir, his properties are again inherited by his legal heirs, and this process continues. Thus, unlike Hindu law, there is no provision for any ancestral or joint-family property. Accordingly, under Muslim law of inheritance, no distinction has been made between self-acquired and ancestral property. All properties, whether acquired by a Muslim himself or inherited by his ancestors, are regarded as an individual property and, may be inherited by his legal heirs. There is no such thing as a joint Mahomedan family nor does the law recognize a tenancy in common in a Mahomedan family.[cxxx]
In Sahul Hamid v. Sulthan[cxxxi] it was held by Rajmannar J. (as he then was): "The Mahomedan law does not recognize a joint family as a legal entity. In fact according to the rules of Mahomedan Law of Succession, heirship does not necessarily go with membership of the family. There are several males and females who have no interest in the heritage but may be members of the family. On the other hand there are several heirs like, for example, married daughters of a deceased male owner who take an interest in the estate but are no part of the family."[cxxxii]
However, if a custom of the family establishing joint holding as is common among Hindus is proved, it will be given effect. Additions to the joint estate by the managing member of a Mahomedan family will be presumed to have been made from the joint estate and will be for the benefit of all the members. But acquisition of property not attributable to the family assets will not be for the family. However, if all the members of the family live in commensality and are in joint possession of family properties, it will be for the person claiming property as his own to show that the source of the property was his own.[cxxxiii] The personal law of Muslims does not recognize a system of joint holding as is common amongst Hindus. There may be cases, however, where a custom may be set up in the matter of the holding of such properties by some of the members of a Muslim family, whereby it could be established that such possession and title in some of the members is customarily to be interpreted and understood as possession on behalf of all the members.
Acquisition of property independently by a member cannot automatically be said to be for the benefit of the family. If there is conclusive evidence that a member of the Muslim family, who acquired such properties gained an advantage to himself and caused prejudice to others and if such acquisition is traceable to surplus family assets or funds from and out of which the property could have been purchased, then matters would be different. Again it is also necessary to prove that the members were living jointly and enjoying the property jointly and in common.[cxxxiv]
"It was stated that where some of the members of the Muslim joint family who were in possession of certain property made subsequent acquisitions, additional acquisitions would belong to all the members of the joint family unless and until it is proved that the subsequent acquisitions were made by members in possession out of their independent income. In this view there is no necessity for other co-owners whatever to show that the income from the family properties yielded a surplus so as to enable the co-owners in possession to purchase the subsequent additional property".
Renunciation or relinquishment need not be expressly stated in the document. It can be inferred from the conduct of the parties. If a suit for partition in a Mohamedan family is brought after 12 years and the plaintiff fails to explain his or her inaction, renunciation can be inferred. If renunciation is pleaded in the document and renunciation is accepted by the parties in that case, he or she must be estopped from claiming partition, as it is a part of family arrangement. Strictly speaking such renunciation will not forbid her from claiming partition, but in order to maintain harmony and peace in the family renunciation should be treated as estoppel to the party concerned.[cxxxv]
Joint family and joint family business:- (1) When the members of a Mahomedan family live in commonsality, they do not form a joint family in the sense in which that expression is used in the Hindu Law.[cxxxvi] (z). Further, in the Mahomedan law, there is not as in the Hindu law, any presumption that the acquisitions of the several members of a family living and messing together are for the benefit of the family.[cxxxvii] But if during the continuance of the family properties are acquired in the name of the managing member of the family, and it is proved that they are possessed by all the members jointly, the presumption is that they are the properties of the family, and not the separate properties of the member in whose name they stand.[cxxxviii]
(2) If after the death of a Mahomedan his adult sons continue their father's business, and retain his assets in the business, they will he deemed to stand in a fiduciary relation to the other heirs of the deceased. and liable to account as such for the profit made by them in the business.[cxxxix] If after the death of the sons the business is continued by their sons or by other heirs, they also will be liable to account on the same footing.[cxl]
(3) Members of a Mahomedan family carrying on business jointly do not constitute a joint family firm in the sense in which that expression is used in the Hindu law so as to attract the legal incidents of such a firm.[cxli] Sons assisting a father in business are presumably his agents and not his partners unless an agreement of partnership is proved.[cxlii] A minor may be entitled to a benefit in the business, but this will not make him liable on a mortgage executed by him along with his adult brothers in the course of the business carried on by the latter. The managers of such a business in a Mahomedan family have no right to impose any liahility on the minor members of the family.[cxliii]
There is no provision of Mahomedan Law recognizing a joint family. In Andhra Pradesh Muslim families live together and do business together. Such business may he carried on for the benefit of the family including minors and females. Such arrangements have been upheld by Courts. In such a case the adult member or members stand in a fiduciary capacity and the Trust Act is applicable. When the co-owner dies his heirs take his place.[cxliv]
The burden of establishing that a property held by a member in Mahomedan family is his self-acquired property would arise only if the property is held commonly by the other members of the family and the entire family lives in commensality possessing the family property in common.[cxlv]
As the theory of representation is unknown to Mahomedan law, and as there is no presumption that acquisition of one or more of the properties of the family are to be presumed to be for the benefit of the family. Unless there is proof to the contrary and as children in a Mahomedan family are not co-owners in the sense that what is purchased by one person enures for the benefit of another.[cxlvi]
03.  No Birth-Right:- Inheritance opens only after the death of a Muslim. No person may be an heir of a living person (Nemoest haeres viventis). Therefore, unless a person dies, his heirs have no interest in his properties. Unlike Hindu law that preach the concept of ‘right by birth’ (Janmaswatvavad), Muslim law holds that an heir does not possess any right at all before the death of an ancestor. It is only the death of a Muslim which gives the right of inheritance to his legal heirs. Until a person dies, his relatives are not his legal heirs; but simply his heir-apparent and have merely a ‘chance of succession, (spes successions). If such an heir-apparent survives a Muslim, he becomes his legal heir and the right of inheritance accrues to him. If the heir-apparent does not survive a Muslim, he cannot be regarded an heir and has no right to inherit the property.
The right of an heir-apparent or presumptive comes into existence for the first time on the death of the ancestor and he is not entitled until then to any interest in the property to which he would succeed as an heir if he survived the ancestor.[cxlvii]
Illustration
A, who has a son B, makes a gift of his property to C. B, alleging that the gift was procured by undue influence, sues C in A 's lifetime on the strength of his right to succeed to A's property on A's death. The suit must be dismissed for B has no cause of action against C. B has no cause of action, for he is not entitled to any interest in A's property during A's lifetime.[cxlviii] But the gift would be liable to be set aside if the suit was brought after A’s death, provided it was brought within the period of limitation.[cxlix]
Such a right as that claimed by B in the above illustration is a mere spes successions, that is an expectation or hope of succeeding to A's property if B survived A.[cl] The Mahomedan law "does not recognize any... interest expectant on the death of another, and till that death occurs which by force of that law gives birth to the right as heir in the person entitled to it according to the rules of succession, he possesses no right at al.l"[cli]
04. Doctrine of Representation:- Doctrine of representation is a well known principle recognised by the Roman, English and Hindu laws of inheritance. Under the principle of representation, as is recognised by these systems of laws, the son of a predeceased son represents his father for purposes of inheritance. The doctrine of representation may be explained with the help of the diagram given below. P has two sons A and B. A has got two sons С and D and В has a son E.
During the life of P, his family members are his two sons (A and B), and three grandsons (C, D and E). Unfortunately, В pre-deceases P, i.e. В dies before the death of P. Subsequently, when P also dies, the sole surviving members of the family of P are A and three grandsons, C, D and E.
Under the doctrine of representation, E will represent his pre-deceased father В and would be entitled to inherit the properties of P in the same manner as В would have inherited had he been alive at the time of P’s death.
But, Muslim law does not recognise the doctrine of representation. Under Muslim law, the nearer excludes the remoter. Accordingly, in the illustration given above, E will be totally excluded from inheriting the properties of P. Both, under Shia as well as under Sunni law, E has no right to inherit the properties of P. The result is that E cannot take the plea that he represents his pre-deceased father (В) and should be substituted in his place.
Under Muslim law, the nearer heir totally excludes a remoter heir from inheritance. That is to say, if there are two heirs who claim inheritance from a common ancestor, the heir who is nearer (in degree) to the deceased, would exclude the heir who is remoter. Thus, between A and E, A will totally exclude E because A is nearer to P in degree whereas, E belongs to the second degree of generation. The Muslim jurists justify the reason for denying the right of representation on the ground that a person has not even an inchoate right to the property of his ancestor until the death of that ancestor.
Accordingly, they argue that there can be no claim through a deceased person in whom no right could have been vested by any possibility.
According to the Sunni Law, the expectant right of an heir-apparent cannot pass by succession to his heir, nor can it pass by bequest to a legatee under his will.[clii] According to the Shia law, it does pass by succession in some cases.
Illustration
A, a Sunni Mahomedan, has two sons, Band C, B dies in the lifetime of A, leaving a son D. A then dies leaving C, his son, and D, his grandson. The whole of A's property will pass to C to the entire exclusion of D. It is not open to D to contend that he is entitled to B's share as representing B.[cliii] In the case cited above their Lordships of the Privy Council observed: "It is a well-known principle of Mahomedan law that if any of the children of a man die before the opening of the succession to his estate, leaving children behind, these grand-Children are entirely excluded from the inheritance by their uncles and their aunts." The son of a predeceased son is therefore not an heir.[cliv]
If in the above case, B bequeathed any portion of his expectant share in A's property to X, the latter would take nothing under the will. "A mere possibility such as the expectant right of an heir-apparent, is not regarded as present or vested interest, and cannot pass by succession, bequest or transfer so long as the right has not actually come into existence by the death of the present owner."[clv]
05. Per Capita and Per- Strip Distribution:- Succession among the heirs of the same class but belonging to different branches may either be per-capita or per-strips. In a per-capita distribution, the succession is according to the ‘number of heirs’ (i.e. heads). Among them the estate is equally divided; therefore, each heir gets equal quantity of property from the heritable assets of the deceased.
On the other hand, in a per strip distribution, the several heirs who belong to different branches, get their share only from that property which is available to the branch to which they belong. In other words, in the stripital succession, the quantum of property available to each heir depends on the property available to his branch rather than the number of all the heirs.
Under Sunni law, the distribution of the assets is per-capita. That is to say an heir does not in any respect represent the branch from which he inherits. The per-capita distribution may be illustrated by the following diagram.
M has got two sons A and B. A has three sons, S1, S2 and S3. В has two sons S4 and S5. When M dies there are two branches of succession, one of A and the other of B. Suppose, A and В both die before the death of M so that the sole surviving heirs of M are his five grandsons.
Now, under the per-capita scheme of distribution (as recognized under Sunni law) the total number of claimants (heirs) is five and the heritable property would be equally divided among all of them irrespective of the branch to which an heir belongs.
Therefore, each of them would get 1/5 of the total assets of M. It may be noted that under Sunni law the principle of representation is recognized neither in the matter of determining the claim of an heir, nor in determining the quantum of share of each heir.
Shia Law:
Under the Shia law, if there are several heirs of the same class but they descend from different branches, the distribution among them is per strip. That is to say, the quantum of property inherited by each of them depends upon the property available to that particular branch to which they belong. In the above-mentioned illustration, A and В constitute two branches, each having 1/2 of M’s property. Both, A and В pre-decease M.
But, the quantum of property available to each of their branch would remain the same. Therefore, the surviving heirs of A namely, S1, S2, S3 would get equal shares out of 1/2 which is quantum of property available to the branch of A. Thus S1, S2 and S3 would get 1/6 each. Similarly, the quantum of property available to the branch of В is also 1/2 but the descendants from this branch are only two. Accordingly, the 1/2 property of В would be equally shared by S4 and S5.
Therefore, S4 and S5 would get 1/4 each. It is significant to note that for a limited purpose of calculating the share of each heir, the Shia law accepts the principle of representation. Moreover, under the Shia law this rule is applicable for determining the quantum of share also of the descendants of a pre-deceased daughter, pre-deceased brother, pre-deceased sister or that of a pre-deceased aunt.

06. Female’s Right of Inheritance:- Males and females have equal rights of inheritance. Upon the death of a Muslim, if his heirs include also the females then, male and female heirs inherit the properties simultaneously. Males have no preferential right of inheritance over the females, but normally the share of a male is double the share of a female.

In other words, although there is no difference between male and female heir in so far as their respective rights of inheritance is concerned but generally the quantum of property inherited by a female heir is half of the property given to a male of equal status (degree).
The principle that normally the share of a male is double the share of a female has some justification. Under Muslim law, while a female heir gets (or hopes to get in future) an additional money or property as her Mehr and maintenance from her husband, her male counterpart gets none of the two benefits. Moreover, the male heir is primarily liable for the maintenance of his children whereas, the female heir may have this liability only in an extraordinary case.
Daughters as a rule are entitled to inheritance. But sometimes they are excluded from inheritance by custom or statute. In such a case the shares of other heirs are calculated as if daughter did not exist.
Among the Gujars and Bakkerwals of Nunar of Punjab and Jammu and Kashmir, daughters are excluded from inheritance by custom. They succeed to the property only in default agnates.[clvi] Agnates mean grandfather's descendants in the male line.[clvii]
Illustration
Under the Bombay Watan Act, 1886, if a Muslim Watenndar died leaving a widow, a daughter and a paternal uncle; then the daughter had no right to share in watan land. In such a case the widow and uncle take the land as if the daughter did not exist. The widow will take 1/4, and the uncle the residue, 3/4. The widow will take only a life-interest in her share. If the daughter were not excluded, she would have taken 1/2, the widow 1/8, and the uncle the residue, 3/8.
Where daughters are excluded from inheritance either by custom[clviii] or by statute[clix] they should be treated as non-existent, and the shares of the other heirs should be calculated as they would be in default of daughters. There is no custom that daughter can inherit her father's property only as Khananishia daughter or not at all. Such custom has to be pleaded and proved by cogent evidence.[clx]
Under the Ithana Ashari law, a childless widow wiII not entitled to a share in her husband's land, both agricultural as well as urban. However, she is entitled to her share in the value of trees and buildings standing on the land as well as share in the movable property of her husband. Immovable property includes the debts due to her husband.[clxi] In Abdul Hammed Khan v. Peare Mirza[clxii]  it was held that a childless widow in the absence of other heirs was entitled to inherit not merely her share but also rest of the property including the land of her husband by the application of the doctrine of return.

07. A Child in the Womb:- A child in the womb of its mother is competent to inherit provided it is born alive. A child in embryo is regarded as a living person and, as such, the property vests immediately in that child. But, if such a child in the womb is not born alive, the share already vested in it is divested and, it is presumed as if there was no such heir (in the womb) at all.

A still-born child is treated as having been born alive if its mother was treated with violence as a consequence of which she gave birth to it. The law among the Shias and the Sunnis in this regard is the same.

08.  Primogeniture:- Primogeniture is a principle of inheritance under which the eldest son of the deceased enjoys certain special privileges. Muslim law does not recognize the rule of primogeniture and all sons are treated equally.

However, under the Shia law, the eldest son has an exclusive right to inherit his father’s garments, sword, ring and the copy of Quran, provided that such eldest son is of sound mind and the father has left certain other properties besides these articles.
A special rule of succession by primogeniture is enacted for the taluqdars of Oudh by the Oudh Estates Act I of 1869 and the Oudh Estates Amendment Act III of 1910. Succession is to the nearest male agnate according to the rules of lineal primogeniture. A daughter's son is not a male agnate and is therefore not entitled to succeed.[clxiii] As the Oudh Estates Act has laid down specific rules for devolution of taluqdari property and has in this respect displaced the Mahomedan law, such property should not be taken into consideration in determining the bequeathable one-third share of the entire assets of a Mahomedan testator.[clxiv]
Under the Ithana Ashart law, the eldest son who is of sound mind is exclusively entitled to wearing apparel of his father, his copy of Koran, his sword and his ring, provided the father had left some other property besides these.

09. Step-Children:- The step-children are not entitled to inherit the properties of their step-parents. Similarly, the step-parents too do not inherit from step-children. For example, where a Muslim H marries a widow W having a son from her previous husband, the son is a step­son of H, who is step-father of this son.

The step-father and step-son (or daughter) cannot inherit each other’s properties. That step-child is competent to inherit from its natural father or natural mother. Similarly, the natural father and natural mother can inherit from their natural sons or daughters.
However, the step-brothers (or sisters) can inherit each other’s properties. Thus, in the illustration given above, if a son (or daughter) is bom out of the marriage of H and W, the newly born child would be a step-brother (or sister) of the son from wife’s previous husband.
These sons or daughters are competent to inherit each other’s property. The step-brothers or sisters may either be, uterine or consanguine. Muslim law provides for mutual rights of inheritance between uterine and consanguine brothers or sisters.
Since stepparents are not related to their stepchildren they are not entitled to inherit the property of their stepchildren.

10. Simultaneous Death of two Heirs:- When two or more persons die in such a circumstance that it is not ascertainable as to who died first (i.e. who survived whom) then, both of them cease to be an heir for each other. In other words, where two or more heirs die simultaneously and, it is not possible to establish as to who died first then under Muslim law, all the heirs are presumed to have died just at one moment. The result is that such heirs are regarded as if they did not exist at all; the inheritance opens omitting these heirs.

For example, A and В are each other’s legal heirs in such a manner that after the death of any one of them, the surviving person would inherit the property of the deceased one. But, both A and В die simultaneously say, in an aero plane crash, and it could not be established as to who survived whom. Under Muslim law, neither A would inherit В nor В would inherit A.
Thus, the legal heirs of A would inherit A’s property as if there was no В at all. Similarly, the heirs of В would inherit B’s property as if A did not exist at all.

11.  Missing Persons:- According to the texts of Hanafi law, a missing person was supposed to have been dead only after ninety years from the date of his birth; till then the inheritance of his properties did not open. But, now this rule has been superseded by Sec. 108 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 which provides as under:

“When the question is whether a man is alive or dead, and it is proved that he has not been heard of for seven years by those who would naturally have heard of him if he had been alive, the burden of proving that he is alive is shifted to the person who affirms it”.
Accordingly, where a Muslim is missing for at least seven years and if it could not be proved that he (or she) was alive then, that person is legally presumed to be dead and the inheritance of his (or her) properties opens.
It has been held by the courts that Hanafi rule of ninety years of life of a missing person was only a rule of evidence and not any rule of succession; therefore, this Hanafi rule must be taken as superseded by the provisions of Indian Evidence Act 1872.
If an heir is absent at the time of the distribution of assets, then his share has to be kept apart for him until such time as he is presumed to be died.[clxv]

12.  Escheat:- Where a deceased Muslim has no legal heir under Muslim law, his properties are inherited by Government through the process of escheat. State is regarded as the ultimate heir of every deceased.

13. Marriage under the Special Marriage Act, 1954:- Where a Muslim contracts his marriage under the Special Marriage Act, 1954, he ceases to be a Muslim for purposes of inheritance. Accordingly, after the death of such a Muslim his (or her) properties do not devolve under Muslim law of inheritance. The inheritance of the properties of such Muslims is governed by the provisions of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 and Muslim law of inheritance is not applicable.

14. Transfer of spes Successionis: Renunciation of chance of succession:- The chance of a Mahomedan heir-apparent succeeding to an estate cannot be the subject of a valid transfer or release.[clxvi]
Illustration
A has a son B and a daughter C. A pays Rs. 1,000 to C and obtains from her a writing whereby in consideration of Rs. 1000 received by her from A, she renounces her right to inherit A’s property. A then dies and C sues B for her share (one-third) of the property left by A. B sets up a defence the release passed by C to her father. The release is no defence to the suit, and C is entitled to her share of the inheritance, as the transfer by her was a transfer merely of a spes successionis, and as such inoperative. But C is bound to bring into account the amount received by her from her father.[clxvii]
The rule of Mahomedan law that an heir cannot renounce his right to inherit is not different from the law under the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, Sec. 6 (a). That section provides that "the chance of an heir-apparent succeeding to an estate, the chance of a relation obtaining a legacy on the death of a kinsman, or any other mere possibility of a like nature, cannot be transferred."
It has been held by the Allahabad and Travancore-Cochin High Courts that a Mahomedan heir may by his conduct be estopped from claiming the inheritance he has agreed to relinquish if the release was part of a compromise or family settlement and if he has benefited by the transaction.[clxviii]
But this view has been expressly dissented from by the Madras and Kerala High Courts on the ground that not only can such a view not be justified in Mahomedan Law, but is also contrary to S. 6 (a) of the Transfer of Property Act and S. 23 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872.[clxix]
The conflict between the Madras and Kerala view on the one hand and the Allahabad and Travancore view on the other was resolved by approving the Allahabad view. It was observed “a bare renunciation of an expectation to inherit cannot bind the expectant heir's conduct in the future. But if the expectant heir goes further and receives consideration and so conducts himself as to mislead an owner into not making dispositions of his property, inter vivos, the expectant heir should be debarred from setting up his right when it does unquestionably vest in him. In other words the principle of estoppel remains untouched by this statement.
The question that arose were:
(1) A mere expectancy to succeed cannot be subject of transfer and such a transfer is void;
(2) Can such an expectancy be removed after receiving consideration?
(3) Will such a conduct create an estoppel in the future?
(4) Can a right be renounced even before it was vested?
These question may now be taken to have been settled.[clxx]
A husband gives immovable property to his wife in lieu of her dower, and agrees not to claim any share of it as her heir on her death. Is the agreement valid and binding on the husband? The
High Court of Allahabad has held that it is binding on the husband.[clxxi]
15. Life-estate and vested remainder:- (1) Sunni Law.- The Judicial Committee in Humeeda v. Budlun (1872) 17 W.R. 525 observed that "the creation of (such) a life estate does not seem to be consistent with Mahomedan usage and there ought to be very clear proof of so unusual a transaction"; and in Abdul Gafurv. Nizamuddin (1892) 19 I.A 170 referred to" life-rents" as a kind of estate which does not appear to be known to Mahomedan law". The difficulty arises out of the Mahomedan law of gift and does not appear to extend beyond cases of pure hiba whether inter vivos or by will. If a gift be made subject to a condition which derogates from the grant, the condition is void, e.g., a partial restraint on alienation; but a condition which does not affect the corpus of the thing given is not within the rule, e.g. when there is a reservation of income to the donor or a gift of usufruct to another donee. In the Hedaya, the principle is applied to amrees (gift for life). The Prophet approved of amrees but held the condition annexed to them by the grantor to be void the meaning of amree moreover is nothing but a gift and a condition; and the condition is invalid; but a gift is not rendered null by involving an invalid condition". Accordingly it was held in certain cases that a gift for life operates as an absolute gift.[clxxii]
The assumption underlying this doctrine however is that what is given is the corporeal thing itself; and as the refusal to permit gifts of life interests produces serious inconvenience and gives rise to some unprofitable distinctions, the assumption has not gone without challenge. Can it not be held that what is given is not the land but an interest therein; and that this is given unconditionally there being no intention to make a gift of the corpus? In Nawazish Ali Khan v. Ali Raza Khan (1948) 75 I.A. 62, (‘48) A.P.C. 134 which was a Shia case the Privy Council stated that there was no difference between the several schools of Muslim law in their fundamental conception of property and ownership. A limited interest takes effect out of the usufruct under any of the schools. The duty of the Court is to construe the gift. If "it is a gift of the corpus," their Lordships said, "then any condition which derogates from absolute dominion over the subject of the gift will be rejected as repugnant; but if upon construction the gift is held to be one of a limited interest the gift can take effect out of the usufruct, leaving the ownership of the corpus unaffected except to the extent to which its enjoyment is postponed for the duration of the limited interest".
In Amjad Khan v. Ashraf Khan[clxxiii] this question was raised in an acute form. The deed described the transaction as a gift without consideration. It recited that the donee and the heirs of the donor had consented. By it the donor gave to his wife his entire property as to one-third with power to alienate and
"as to the rest she shall not possess any power of alienation but she shall remain in possession thereof for her lifetime. After the death of the donee the entire property gifted away by this document shall revert to the donor's collaterals." On the question whether the interest given in the one-third was an absolute interest or was only a life interest plus a power to alienate, the Judicial Committee took the latter view. Their Lordships decided the case by asking, as matter of construction of the deed, what was the subject matter of the gift? Was it merely a life interest in the property together with a power of alienation over one-third thereof? Or was it an absolute interest in the property coupled with an inconsistent condition? Holding on the construction of the deed that the subject-matter of the gift was a life Interest only (together with the power of alienation as to one-third) they dismissed the appeal of the donee's heir: the gift of a life-estate was not given the effect of an absolute estate. On the argument that a life-estate could not be created by gift inter vivos their Lordships expressed no opinion, holding that, if right, it would only mean that the donee took nothing by the gift - a result which would carry no benefit to her heir.
It is not possible to read this decision as proceeding upon the ground that the case was not one of hiba pure and simple. It is direct authority against regarding a life interest as enlarged by the doctrine which invalidates a condition restrictive of a gift and the decision to that effect above noted[clxxiv] must be treated as overruled by it. Subsequent decisions have so interpreted the Board's judgment.[clxxv]
Both as regards life-estates and remainders there is considerable uncertainty as to the consequences of this decision. It does not decide that in Sunni law a life interest can be validly created by way of gift, but the doubt hitherto cast upon the matter has had reference to the validity of the limit in cases of gift. The validity of the grant was very old authority: the Hedaya discloses the tradition that the Prophet approved of amrees just as he disapproved of rikba (e.g., if I die before you then this house is yours). A life interest is not illegal: admittedly a Mahomedan can create such an interest by contract.
The Calcutta, Bombay, Nagpur and Travancore-Cochin High Courts have held that a gift of a life interest is valid.[clxxvi] The Chief Court of Oudh has held that the bequest of a life interest by will is valid.[clxxvii] In Nawazish Ali Khan v. Ali Raza Khan,[clxxviii], although a Shia case, the Privy Council have made observations which are sufficiently ample to cover Sunni cases. The effect of the decision is that a life estate as known to English law cannot be created by hiba whether inter vivos or by will. The question is always one of construction. In a case of gift to A for life and thereafter to B, the courts will presumably construe the gift as a gift of the corpus to B absolutely and of the usufruct of A for life. The gift, however, to A for life would be constructed as a gift of a interest to A, and the corpus would vest in the heirs.
It remains to consider whether under Sunni law a gift of a life-estate to A with remainder to B is a good gift to B and whether it amounts to a vested remainder so as to take effect even if B dies before A. By English law in such a case B takes a vested interest and can dispose of his interest by transfer inter vivos or by will. On his death intestate, his interest will pass to his heirs even if he predeceases A. In Abdul Wahid Khan v. Mt. Nuran Bibi (1885) 12 I.A. 91, 11 Cal. 597 [illustration (a)] the Judicial Committee held that such an interest as a vested remainder did not seem to be recognized by Mahomedan law, and this case has been accepted as an authority for the proposition that the remainderman cannot take unless he survives the tenant for life.[clxxix] The case of Umes Chunder Sircar v. Mt. Zahoor Fatima (1890) 17 I.A. 201; II Cal. 164 [illustration (b)] cannot be regarded as invalidating this conclusion since the point was not taken and the principles of Mahomedan law do not appear to have been discussed. The facts of the case sufficiently account for the omission, but they do not enable the case to be distinguished from Abdul Wahid Khan v. Nuran Bibi[clxxx] in point of law; neither was a case of hiba pure and simple.
In Abdul Wahid Khan's case the principle applied was as follows: "The arrangement contained in the compromise would be called by the Mahomedan lawyers 'a tauris' or 'making some stranger and heir' and cannot be regarded as creating a present or vested interest."[clxxxi]
The above authorities must now be read subject to the Privy Council decision in Nawazish AliKhan v. Ali Raza Khan.[clxxxii] Although this was, as stated above, a Shia case, the observations made apply to all schools of Muslim law Referring to the expression "life estate" and "vested remainder" their Lordships stated as follows:- "In their Lordships' opinion this view of the matter introduces into Muslim law legal terms and conceptions of ownership, familiar enough in English law, but wholly alien to Muslim law. In general, Muslim law draws no distinction between real and personal property, and their Lordships know of no authoritative work on Muslim law, whether the Hedaya, or Baillie or more modern works, and no decision of this Board which affirms that Muslim law recognizes the splitting up of ownership of land into estates, distinguished in point of quality like legal and equitable estates, or in point of duration like estates in fee simple, in tail, for life, or in remainder. What Muslim law does recognize and insists upon, is the distinction between the corpus or the property itself (ayn) and the usufruct in the property (manafi).  Over the corpus of property the law recognizes only absolute dominion, heritable, and unrestricted in point of time; and where a gift of the corpus seeks to impose a condition inconsistent with such absolute dominion the condition is rejected as repugnant: but interests limited in point of time can be created in the usufruct or the property, and the dominion over the corpus takes effect subject to any such limited interests ....This distinction runs through all the Muslim law of gifts - gifts of the corpus (hiba), gifts of the usufruct (ariyat) and usufructuary bequests. No doubt where the use of a house is given to a man for his life he may, not inaptly, be termed a tenant for life, and the owner of the house, waiting to enjoy it until the termination of the limited interest, may be said, not inaccurately, to possess a vested remainder. But though the same terms may be used in English and Muslim law, to describe much the same things, the two systems of law are based on quite different conceptions of ownership. English law recognizes ownership of land limited in duration; Muslim law admits only ownership unlimited in duration, but recognizes interests of limited duration in the use of property…….. Their Lordships think that there is no difference between the several schools of Muslim law in their fundamental conception of property and ownership. A limited interest takes effect out of the usufruct under any of the schools. Their Lordships feel no doubt that in dealing with a gift under Muslim law, the first duty of the court is to construe the gift. If it is a gift of the corpus, then any condition which derogates from absolute dominion over the subject or the gift will be rejected as repugnant; hut if upon construction the gift is held to be one of a limited interest the gift can take effect out of the usufruct, leaving the ownership of the corpus unaffected except to the extent to which its enjoyment is postponed for the duration of the limited interest."
(2) Family settlemenl:- A life-estate may be created by an agreement in the nature of a family settlement, whether such agreement is preceded by litigation or not, but "the creation of such a life-estate does not seem to be consistent with Mahornedan usage, and there ought to be very clear proof of so unusual a transaction"[clxxxiii] Such an agreement is from its very nature a transaction for a consideration, and it must be distinguished from a pure hiba or gift mentioned in sub-sec. (1) above.[clxxxiv]
(3) Hiba-bil-iwaz:- The rule stated in sub-sec. (I) above does not apply to Hiba-bil-iwaz. A Hiba-bil-iwaz, as distinquished from a hiba or simple gift, is a gift for consideration. It is in reality a sale, and has all the incidents of a contract for sale. Accordingly possession is not required to complete the transfer as it is in the case of a hiba, and an undivided share (mushaa) in property capable of division may be lawfully transferred by it.[clxxxv]
(4) Shia law.- It was at one time thought that the Shia law allowed the creation of a life-estate and a vested remainder, as held by Jenkins, C.J., and Heaton, J., in Banoo Begum's case [illustration (f)]. In two other cases however Beaman, J., expressed the opinion that the Arabic texts there relied upon did not support the conclusion reached, and observed that an estate for life and a vested remainder were known to the Shia law as much as to the Sunni law.[clxxxvi] In Nawazish Ali Khan v.Ali Raza Khan[clxxxvii]  the Privy Council took the view that a life-estate as known in English law is alien to Mahomedan law but if on the construction of a hiba, the gift is held to be one of a limited interest the gift can take effect out of the usufruct, leaving the ownership of the corpus unaffected except to the extent to which its enjoyment is postponed for the duration of the limited interest.
(5) Wakf.- Both under the Sunni and the Shia law life-estates may be created by wakf. According to Section 3 of the Mussalman Wakf Validating Act, VI of 1913, it is lawful for a person professing the Mussalman faith to create a wakf which is all other respects is in accordance with the provisions of the Mussalman law, for the following among other purposes:-
(a) for the maintenance and support wholly or partially of his family, children or descendants and
(b) where the person creating a wakf is a Hanafi Mussalman, also for his own maintenance and support during his lifetime or for the payment of his debts out of the rents and profits of the property dedicated.
Provided that the ultimate benefit is in such cases expressly or impliedly reserved for the poor or for any other purpose recognized by the Mussalman law as religious, pious or charitable purpose of a permanent character.
Illustrations
(a) One of two persons claiming to be the sons of Mouzzam Khan, a Sunni, sued Gauhar Bibi, his widow, who was in possession of the suit lands in Oudh under a Kabulyat and in pursuance of a summary settlement made by Government in 1858. The plaintiff claimed that Mouzzam Khan had made the estate over to him and his brother. The suit was compromised in terms contained in two petitions to the Court, namely, that the widow should during her life-time continue as before to possess and be mistress of the Talooka, but should not alienate so as to deprive the plaintiff of his right and that after her death the plaintiff and his brother should possess and enjoy it, "should become successors to and proprietors of the said talooka". The widow survived both. Held, that neither of them acquired any such right as would under Mahomedan law form the subject of inheritance. "Their Lordships think this is the reasonable construction of the compromise in this case, and that it would be opposed to Mahomedan law to hold that it created a vested interest as in Abdul Rahman and Abdul Subhan which passed to their heirs on their death in the life-time of Gauhar Bibi." Also: "To give the plaintiffs a title to the estate it must be a vested interest which, on the death of the sons, passed to their heirs and is similar to a vested remainder under the English law. Such an interest in an estate does not seem to be recognized by the Mahomedan law"[clxxxviii]
(b) By a deed of settlement in 1871 a Sunni leased lands to his second wife, Amani Begum at fixed rent of one rupee on condition that if she had a child by him the grant should be taken as a perpetual mokurruri: if no such child was born then it was only to be a life mokurruri and after her death the property was to go to the two sons of the settlor, Farzund and Farhut. Appellant and respondent both claimed to have taken title to one-half of the property as purchasers of Farzund's right, title and interest at execution sales. Appellant's sale was in 1879 and respondent's in 1881. At the time of appellants' attachment the settlor, his wife and sons were all alive but before the sale in 1897 the settlor had died. At all material times the widow and Farzund were alive. (Both were respondents to the Privy Council appeal: the latter died pending the hearing thereof in 1887). It could not have been contended at the trial in 1883 or in the High Court in 1885, and it was not contended in the Privy Council that the gift to Farzund had failed. Both auction purchasers had the same title save that (a) the appellant was first in time, (b) his attachment had been in the settlor's life-time. Respondent's argument concentrated on (b) during the settlor's life the birth of a child to him was a contingency: this contingency no longer remained in 1881.This is the only argument dealt with in the judgment on this part of the case: it was held on the construction of the deed of 1871 that the wife's estate was enlarged and the sons' interest defeated on the birth of a child: not that the son's interest failed to arise until either husband or wife had died. As presented to the Judicial Committee by the rival auction purchasers the case raised no point of Mahomedan law. The contention advanced in Rasoolbibi v. Usuf Ajam (1933) 57 Born. 737 at 766,148 I.C. 82, (‘33) A.B. 324 for the appellant with reference to this case cannot be accepted. There were two elements of contingency (a) the birth of a Child, and (b) the widow surviving Farzund. The former was relied on by the respondent: neither sought to profit by the latter.[clxxxix]
(c) A Sunni lady, Bai Aishabai, by her will left two properties to her daughter, Hafizabibi, for life without power of alienation and after her death to Ajam (testatrix's step-son) and his descendants as absolute owners. Aishabai died in 1897. Hafizabibi enjoyed the properties till her death in 1926. Ajam died in 1919. The plaintiff was a daughter of Ajam suing for administration of his estate. Held, that in the events which had happened Ajam took no interest under the will. Held further by Mirza, J., and Beaumont, C.J., (Rangnekar. J., dissenting) that Hafizabibi did not take an absolute estate.[cxc]
(d) One Nasiruddin, a Sunni, did having by his will left three villages to his wife, Mariarnbi, and declared that after the death of Mariambi, Abdul Kadar should become the owner thereof. Abdul Kadar died in 1899 and Mariambi in 1904.The plaintiff was a daughter of Abdul Kadar and the defendants were her mother and sister. If an absolute interest was created in favour of Mariambi the plaintiff’s suit failed: if on her death the property went to Abdul Kadar's heirs the plaintiff was entitled to a seven annas share thereof subject to a question whether Abdul Kadar had validly made a gift to his wife in lieu of dower. Held on reference to a Bench that Mariambi took a life-estate only. Thereafter the appeal was disposed of on the footing that Abdul Kadar's heirs took the reversionary interest.[cxci]
(e) By a deed of settlement the plaintiff's mother conveyed two properties to a trustee upon trust to pay taxes and repairs and out of the net rents and profits to pay to the settlor during her life such moneys as she should require and the balance as therein directed: on the settlor's death the net rents of one property were to be paid to the plaintiff: on the death of the survivor of the settlor and the plaintiff the property was to be held in trust for the plaintiffs son or sons and in default of sons for her daughters, with a gift over in the event of the plaintiff dying without issue. Held that assuming that the gift to the plaintiff was of a life interest in the property it did not by Sunni law confer an absolute estate upon her.[cxcii]
(f) It was provided by a consent decree in a suit to which the parties were Shia Mahomedans that a certain house should be held and enjoyed by A for her life, and that after her death it should be sold and the sale proceeds divided among her step-sons. It was held that A took a life interest in the house, and the step-sons took a definite interest like what is called in English law a vested remainder.[cxciii] The question whether a vested remainder is recognized by the Shia law was raised in Muhammad Raza v. Abbas Bandi Bib,[cxciv] but it was not decided as the document to be construed in that case was a compromise of a suit, and therefore one for a consideration.
(g) A Shia Mahomedan by his will purported to give an estate for life to A and thereafter to B for life, with a power to nominate his successor. It was held that A and B took a life interest and that the power of appointment was invalid under Mahomedan law. A and B had a life-interest in the usufruct and the testator's heirs were the owners of the property. Their Lordships said: "No doubt where the use of a house is given in a man for his life he may, not inaptly, be termed a tenant for life and the owner of the house, waiting to enjoy it until the termination of the limited interest, may be said, not inaccurately to possess a vested remainder. But though the same terms may he used in English and Muslim law, to describe much the same things, the two systems of law are based on quite different conceptions of ownerships. English law recognizes ownership of land limited in duration; Muslim law admits only ownership unlimited in duration but recognizes interests of limited duration in the use of property.”[cxcv]
(h) A makes a bequest in favour of B of certain land and provides that B shall have no right to transfer the property, but his male issue shall have the right to transfer the property. It was held that the corpus and not merely the usufruct was bequeathed to B and the condition that he should not transfer the property was void. B therefore took an absolute estate.[cxcvi]
(i) A Sunni Mahomedan settled property in favour of certain persons reserving a usufruct for himself for life. It was held that the deed of settlement was valid and the question whether the settlor reserved to himself a life-interest did not arise.[cxcvii]
(j) A Sunni Mahomedan made a settlement in the following terms, " I have settled upon you (my wife) for your maintenance the undermentioned Nanja land worth Rs. 2,000/-. Therefore this is a settlement deed executed by me consenting that you should enjoy for your lifetime the income alone from the said nanja land, that you should not make any gift, sale or hypothecation etc. of the said land, that if you should hereafter have issue by me, the said issue should enjoy the said land hereditarily and that if you should not have such issue the said property after your life-time shall go to me and to my heirs". It was held that only the usufruct was given to the wife.[cxcviii]
16. Vested Inheritance:- A " vested inheritance" is the share which vests in an heir at the moment of the ancestor's death. If the heir dies before distribution, the share of the inheritance which has vested in him will pass to such persons as are his heirs at the time of his death. The shares therefore are to be determined at each death.[cxcix]
Illustration
A dies leaving a son B, and a daughter C. B dies before the estate of A is distributed leaving a son D. In this case on the death of A, two-thirds of the inheritance vests in B, and one-third vests in C. On distribution of A’s estate, after B'sdeath the two-thirds which vested in B must be allotted to his son D.[cc]
17. Disqualifications and preferences for Inheritance:- The following classes of persons are generally disqualified or given preference  in heirship as the case may be.
01. Non-Muslim:- Under the Islamic law a non-Muslim was not entitled to inherit the property from a Muslim. In India this is not so. A Muslim who had renounced Islam or had in any manner ceased to be a Muslim will nonetheless be entitled to inheritance in the property of his deceased Muslim relation whose heir he is.[cci] But his non-Muslim descendants will not be entitled to inherit the property of the deceased Muslim. At the same time it should be noticed that the inheritance to the property of a convert to Islam is governed by Muslim law.[ccii] This should be read subject to certain Muslim communities who are in respect of testamentary succession are still governed by, their original personal law or customary law.
02. Murderer:- Under the Hanafi law an heir who has caused the death of the deceased intentionally, inadvertently by accident, mistake or negligence is excluded from inheritance. Under the Shia law the heir is disqualified only if the death is caused intentionally.[cciii] This is a principal of general policy and is followed in most systems of law that an heir who has caused the murder of the deceased is disqualified from Inheritance. In the pre-Islamic Arabia the inheritance was tagged with blood-wite and blood-feud and in that system a murderer could obviously not inherit. The principle was adopted in the Islamic law and is recognized in the Muslim countries.
Rumsey’s Al Sirajiyyah sets out four grounds of exclusion from inheritance, namely (1) Homicide, (2) Slavery, (3) difference of religion, and (4) difference of allegiance. The second impediment of slavery was removed by the enactment of Act V of 1843 abolishing slavery.[cciv] The third by the provisions of Act XXI of 1850 which abolished so much of any law or usage as affected by any right of inheritance of any person by reason of his renouncing his religion. The bar of difference of allegiance disappeared with the subversion of the Mahomedan supremacy.
A person incapable of inheriting by reason of any of the above disqualifications is considered as not existing, and the estate is divided accordingly. According to the Sirajiyyah, he does not exclude others from inheritance.[ccv] Thus if A dies leaving a son B, a grandson C by B, and a brother D and If B has caused the death of A, B is totally excluded from inheritance, but he does not exclude his son C. The inheritance will devolve as if B were dead, so that C, the grandson, will succeed to the whole estate, D being a remote heir. In the undermentioned case, a single Judge of the Lahore High Court, has expressed the view that the rule of public policy would exclude a murderer and his descendants from succession.[ccvi]
03. Illegitimate Children:-  Under the Hanafi law an illegitimate child is not entitled to inherit from its father, but it is allowed to inherit from its mother. The mother can also inherit the property of her illegitimate children. The illegitimate child inherits not merely the property of its mother but also the property of all other relations with whom it is related through the mother. Thus when a Hanafi female dies leaving behind her husband and an illegitimate son of her sister, the husband will take ½ as sharer and the residue will go to sister's son.[ccvii] Since the illegitimate child cannot inherit from its father, it cannot inherit from any other relative through the father.[ccviii] Under the Ithana Ashart School, an illegitimate child is treated as nullius filius and cannot inherit the property of any of its parents. The question of its inheriting the property from any other person through its parents does not arise.
04. Insanity and unchastity:- Insanity and unchastity are not disqualifications under the Muslim law and therefore an insane[ccix] or unchaste[ccx] heir is entitled to inherit.

09. CLASSES OF HEIRS AND DISTRIBUTION OF ESTATES

According to Sunni Hanafi Law, there are three classes of heirs namely-
1. Sharers:- Those who are entitled to a prescribed share of inheritance.
2. Residuaries : - Those who take no prescribed share, but succeed to the residue after the claims of the sharers are satisfied.
3. Distant Kindred:- Those relations by blood who are neither sharers or nor residuaries.
Tables showing the details of the above are given as appendices I and II and relevant quotations from Quran is also given as Appendix III.
As the Classes of Heirs and Distribution of Estates according to Mohammedan Law and Sunni Law in general are very complex and as they are not included in the General Rules of Inheritance, as per present classification, they are not dealt with in detail in this paper.

10. CONCLUSION

 The Sunni Law of Inheritance has a long history of evolution and practice. However, it is also kept outside the purview of additions, alterations, amendments, repeals and savings on the ground that these laws are God given. However, the liberty the early Islamic Jurists availed by way of authorities other than Quran is as a presumption prohibited now, even though the authority these jurists are acknowledged. Thus it may rightly termed as a static law of inheritance for a changing class of people living in a far speedily changing world. The only attempt to alter these complex laws are from the upholding of constitutional fundamental rights and the English concept of Justice Equity and Good Consciousness. However the mechanical interpretation and self-restraint of Judiciary are a matter of concern as the same shall only promote fundamentalist views only.



APPENDICISES

APPENDIX I TABLE OF SHARERS AS PER SUNNI LAW OF INHERITANCE

Sharers
Normal Share
Conditions under which the normal share is inherited
Variation of shares
When only one heir is present
When two or more heirs are present
Husband
1/4

In the presence of a child or child of a son how low so ever
1/2 in absence of a child or child of a son how low so ever
Wife
1/8
1/8
In the presence of a child or child of a son how low so ever
1/4 in absence of a child or child of a son how low so ever
Daughter
1/2
2/3
In the absence of a son.
In presence of a son she becomes a residuary
Father
1/6

In the presence of a child or child of a son how low so ever
In absence of a child or child of a son how low so ever the father inherits as a residuary.
Mother
1/6

In the presence of a child or a child of a son how low so ever, or two or more brothers or sisters, or even one full, consanguine or uterine brother and one such sister.
1/3 in the absence of a child or child of a son how low so ever, and not more than one brother or sister (if any); but if the wife or husband and the father, is also present, then only1/3 of what remains after deducting the share of the spouse.
True grandfather
1/6

In the presence of a child or child of a son how low so ever, and in absence of the father or a nearer true grandfather.
In absence of a child or child of a son how low so ever, the true grandfather inherits as a residuary, provided there is no father or nearer true grandfather.
True grandmother
1/6
1/6
A maternal true grandmother takes in absence of a mother, and a nearer true grandmother and a paternal true grandmother takes in absence of a mother, father, a nearer true grandmother and an intermediate true grandfather.

Son’s daughter how low soever
1/2
2/3
In absence of a son, daughter, a higher son’s son, higher son’s daughter, or an equal son’s son.
In absence of a son, higher son’s son, or an equal son’s son and when there is only one daughter, or higher son’s daughter the daughter or higher son’s daughter will take 1/2 and the son’s daughter how low so ever (whether one or more) will take 1/6.
Son’s daughter
1/2
2/3
In absence of a son, daughter, or son’s son
In absence of a son or son’s son and in presence of a only one daughter the son’s daughter (whether one or more) will take 1/6.  (In presence of a son’s son, she becomes a residuary.)
Son’s Son’s Daughter
1/2
2/3
In absence of a son, daughter, son’s son, son’s daughter, or a son’s son’s son.
In absence of a son, son’s son or son’s son’s son and in presence of only daughter or son’s daughter, the son’s son’s daughter (whether one or more) will take 1/6. (In presence of a son’s son’s son she becomes a residuary.)
Uterine brother Uterine sister
1/6
1/3
In absence of a child, child of a son how low so ever, father or true grandfather.

Full sister
1/2
2/3
In absence of a child, child of a son how low so ever, father, true grandfather, full brother.
In presence of a full brother she becomes a residuary.
Consanguine sister
1/2
2/3
In absence of a child, child of a son how low so ever, father, true grandfather, full brother, full sister, or consanguine brother.
When there is only one full sister and she succeeds as a sharer, the consanguine sister (whether one or more) will take 1/6, if she is not otherwise excluded. (With the consanguine brother she becomes a residuary).

Note:
1.   A true grandfather is a male ancestor between whom and the intestate no female intervenes.
2.   A true grandmother is a female ancestor, between whom and the intestate no false grandfather intervenes.



 APPENDIX II TABLE OF RESIDUARIS IN ORDER OF SUCCESSION AS PER SUNNI LAW OF INHERITANCE

I – DESCENDANTS
1. SON
Daughter takes as a residuary with the son, the son taking a double portion.
2. SON'S SON h.l.s, - The nearer in degree excluding the more remote. Two or more son's son inherit in equal shares.
Son's daughter h.l.s. takes as a residuary with an equal son's son. If there be no equal son's son, but there is a lower son's son, she takes as a residuary with him, provided she cannot inherit as a sharer.  In either case, each son's son h.l.s. takes double the share of each son's daughter h.l.s.
Note:- When the son's daughter h.l.s. becomes a residuary with a lower son's son, and there are son's daughters h.l.s. equal in degree with the lower son's son she shares equally with them, as if they were all of the same grade.
II - ASCENDANTS
3. FATHER.
4. TRUE GRANDFATHER h.h.s.- The nearer in degree excluding the more remote.
III. - DESCENDANTS OF FATHER
5. FULL BROTHER
FULL SISTER- Takes as a residuary with full brother, the brother taking a double portion.
6. FULL SISTER. - In default of full brother and the other residuaries above-named, the full sister takes the residue if any, if there be (1) a daughter or daughters, or (2) a son's daughter or daughters h.l.s., or even if there be (3) one daughter and a son's daughter or daughters h.l.s.
7. CONSANGUINE BROTHERS
CONSANGUINE SISTER - Takes as a residuary with consanguine brother, the brother, taking a double portion.
8. CONSANGUINE SISTER - In default of consanguine brother and the other residuaries above-named, the consanguine sister takes the residue, if any, if there be (1) a daughter or daughters or (2) a son's daughter or daughters h.l.s. or even if there be (3) one daughter and a son's daughter or daughters h.l.s.
9. FULL BROTHER'S SON
10. CONSANGUINE BROTHER'S SON
11. FULL BROTHER'S SON'S SON
12. CONSANGUINE BROTHER'S SON'S SON
Then come remoter male descendants of No. 11 and No. 12, that is, the son of No. 11, then the son of No. 12, then the son's son of No. 11, then the son's son of No. 12 and so on in like order.
IV. - DISCENDANTS OF TRUE GRANDFATHER h.h.s
13. FULL PATERNAL UNCLE
14. CONSANGUINE PATERNAL UNCLE
15. FULL PATERNAL UNCLE'S SON
16. CONSANGUINE PATERNAL UNCLE'S SON
17. FULL PATERNAL UNCLE'S SON'S SON
18. CONSANGUINE PATERNAL UNCLE'S SON'S SON
Then come remoter male descendants of Nos. 17 and 18, in like order and manner as descendants of Nos, 11 and 12
19. MALE DESCENDANTS OF MORE REMOTE TRUE GRANDFATHERS – In like order and manner as the deceased’s paternal uncles and their sons and son’s sons.


APPENDIX III RELEVANT QUOTATIONS FROM QURAN APPLICABLE IN SUNNI LAW OF INHERITANCE


4:2
To orphans restore their property (When they reach their age), nor substitute (your) worthless things for (their) good ones; and devour not their substance (by mixing it up) with your own. For this is indeed a great sin.

4:3
If ye fear that ye shall not be able to deal justly with the orphans, Marry women of your choice, Two or three or four; but if ye fear that ye shall not be able to deal justly (with them), then only one, or (a captive) that your right hands possess, that will be more suitable, to prevent you from doing injustice.
4:4
And give the women (on marriage) their dower as a free gift; but if they, of their own good pleasure, remit any part of it to you, Take it and enjoy it with right good cheer.
4:5
To those weak of understanding Make not over your property, which Allah hath made a means of support for you, but feed and clothe them therewith, and speak to them words of kindness and justice.
4:6
Make trial of orphans until they reach the age of marriage; if then ye find sound judgment in them, release their property to them; but consume it not wastefully, nor in haste against their growing up. If the guardian is well−off, Let him claim no remuneration, but if he is poor, let him have for himself what is just and reasonable. When ye release their property to them, take witnesses in their presence: But all−sufficient is Allah in taking account.
4:7
From what is left by parents and those nearest related there is a share for men and a share for women, whether the property be small or large,−a determinate share.
4:8
But if at the time of division other relatives, or orphans or poor, are present, feed them out of the (property), and speak to them words of kindness and justice.
4:9
Let those (disposing of an estate) have the same fear in their minds as they would have for their own if they had left a helpless family behind: Let them fear Allah, and speak words of appropriate (comfort).
4:10
Those who unjustly eat up the property of orphans, eat up a Fire into their own bodies: They will soon be enduring a Blazing Fire!
4:11

Allah (thus) directs you as regards your Children's (Inheritance): to the male, a portion equal to that of two females: if only daughters, two or more, their share is two−thirds of  the inheritance; if only one, her share is a half. For parents, a sixth share of the inheritance to each, if the deceased left children; if no children, and the parents are the (only) heirs, the mother has a third; if the deceased Left brothers (or sisters) the mother has a sixth. (The distribution in all cases ('s) after the payment of legacies and debts. Ye know not whether your parents or your children are nearest to you in benefit. These are settled portions ordained by Allah; and Allah is All−knowing, All−wise.

4:12
In what your wives leave, your share is a half, if they leave no child; but if they leave a child, ye get a fourth; after payment of legacies and debts. In what ye leave, their share is a fourth, if ye leave no child; but if ye leave a child, they get an eighth; after payment of legacies and debts. If the man or woman whose inheritance is in question, has left neither ascendants nor descendants, but has left a brother or a sister, each one of the two gets a sixth; but if more than two, they share in a third; after payment of legacies and debts; so that no loss is caused (to any one). Thus is it ordained by Allah; and Allah is All−knowing, Most Forbearing.

4:19
O ye who believe! Ye are forbidden to inherit women against their will. Nor should ye treat them with harshness, that ye may Take away part of the dower ye have given them,−except where they have been guilty of open lewdness; on the contrary live with them on a footing of kindness and equity. If ye take a dislike to them it may be that ye dislike a thing, and Allah brings about through it a great deal of good.
4:33
To (benefit) every one, We have appointed shares and heirs to property left by parents and relatives. To those, also, to whom your right hand was pledged, give their due portion. For truly Allah is witness to all things.

4:176
They ask thee for a legal decision. Say: Allah directs (thus) about those who leave no descendants or ascendants as heirs. If it is a man that dies, leaving a sister but no child, she shall have half the inheritance: If (such a deceased was) a woman, who left no child, Her brother takes her inheritance: If there are two sisters, they shall have two−thirds of the inheritance (between them): if there are brothers and sisters, (they share), the male having twice the share of the female. Thus doth Allah make clear to you (His law), lest ye err. And Allah hath knowledge of all things.
6:152
And come not nigh to the orphan's property, except to improve it, until he attain the age of full strength; give measure and weight with (full) justice;− no burden do We place on any soul, but that which it can bear;− whenever ye speak, speak justly, even if a near relative is concerned; and fulfil the covenant of Allah: thus doth He command you, that ye may remember.
17:34
Come not nigh to the orphan's property except to improve it, until he attains the age of full strength; and fulfil (every) engagement, for (every) engagement will be enquired into (on the Day of Reckoning).






BIBLIOGRAPHY

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NOTES



[i] http://www.barghouti.com/islam/meaning.html
[iii] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam#Muhammad_.28610.E2.80.93632.29
[iv] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quran#Text_and_arrangement
[v] Muslim Law in Modern India by Paras Diwan, Page 13
[vi] Ibid, Page 14
[vii] MULLA’s Principles of Mahomedan Law by M. Hidayatullah and Arshad Hidayatullah, Page 20
[viii] Bafatum v. Bilaiti Khanum (1903) 30 Cal. 683,686; Mt. Iqbal Begum v. Mt. Syed Begum (1933) 140 I.C. 829. (‘33) AL. 80; Akbarally v. Mahomedally (1932) 34 Bom. L.R. 655, 138 l.C. 810, (‘32) A.B. 356; Moosa Seethi v. Mariakutty (1954) Trav.-Co. -690, (‘54) A Trav.-Co. 432
[ix] Aziz Bano v.Muhammad (1925) 47 All. 823; 89 I.C. 690; ('25) AA 720
[x] Akbarally v. Mahomedally (1932) 34 Bom. L.R. 655,138 I.C. 810; ('32) A.B. 356; Abdullah Beary v. Alikunhi Beary (1957) Ker. LJ. 731, Presumption removed - Shafei law applied. Sardar Bibi v. Muhammad Bakhsh P.L.D. 1954 (W.P.) Lah 481. Mst. Sahib Bibi v. Muhammad and ors. P.L.D.1961 (W.P.) Lah. 1036; Khan Muhammad v. Gohar Banu P.L.D. 1965 (W.P.) Lah. 46. Kuttialikutty Marakkar v. Kandankutty (’67) A. Ker. 78
[xi] MULLA’s Principles of Mahomedan Law by M. Hidayatullah and Arshad Hidayatullah, Page 20
[xii] Akbarally v. Mahomedally (1932) 34 Bom. L.R. 655,138 I.C. 810; ('32) A.B. 356
[xiii] The Advocate-General ex relations Daya Muhammad v. Muhammad Husein (1879) 12 Bom. H.C. 323; Haji Bibi v. H.H. Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah, The Aga Khan (1909) 11 Bom. L.R. 409, 2 I.C. 874
[xiv] Hasanali v. Mansoorali (1949) 76 I.A. 1; (‘48) APC 66
[xv] Advocate-General of Bombay V. Yusufally Ebrahim (1922) 24 Bom. L.R.1060; 84 I.C. 759; (’21) A.B.338
[xvi] Sardar Syedna Saifuddin v. Tyebhai (1953) 55 Bom. L.R. 1.
[xvii] (35) A.N. 156
[xviii] Deedar Hossein v. Zuhoor-oon-Nissa (1841) 2 M.I.A 441, 477
[xix] Hayat-un-Nissa v. Muhammad (1890) 12 All. 290, 17 I.A 73 (change or sect); Muhammad v. Gulam (1864) 1 B.H.C. 236 (change from Shafeiism to Hanafism)
[xx] Nasrat v.Hamidan (1882) 4 All. 205
[xxi] MULLA’s Principles of Mahomedan Law by M. Hidayatullah and Arshad Hidayatullah, Page 22
[xxii] Aga Mahomed Jaffer v, Koolsom Beebee (1897) 25 Cal 9, 18; 24 I.A. 196, 204
[xxiii] Maulabux v. Charuk (’52) P. Sind. 54
[xxiv] Baqar Ali v.Anjuman (1902) 25 All. 236, 254; 30 I.A. 111; dissenting from Agha Ali Khan v. Altaf
Hasan Khan (1892) 14 All. 429, 448
[xxv] Agha Ali Khan v. Altaf Hasan Khan (1892) 14 All. 429,448; Abdul Kadir v, Salima (1886) 8 All.149, 166-167
[xxvi] (1886) 8 All. 149, p. 162, supra; Kutti Umma v. Negungadi Bank, LId. (1938) Mad. 148; 173 I.C. 699;
('37) AM. 731
[xxvii] Kulsom Bibee v, Golam Hoosein (1905) 10 C.W.N. 449, 488; Khajah Hoosein v. Shahazadee (1869) 12 W.R. 344, 346, Affmd. in Shahazadee v. Khaja Hossein (1869) 12 W.R. 498; Kutti Umma v. Nedungadi Bank, LId. (1938) Mad. 148; 173 I.C. 699; (‘37) AM. 731. See also sec. 151 below. In Muhammad v. The Legal Remembrancer (1893) 15 All. 321, 323, it was held that the opinion of Imam Muhammad should be preferred to that of Abu Yusuf, the Court thinking (though erroneously) that it was so laid down by the Full Bench in Bikani Mia v, Shuk Lal (1893) 20 Cal. 116.
[xxviii] Anis Begun v, Muhammad Istafa (1933) 55 All. 743,148 I.C.26, ('33) A.A. 634; Siddiq Ahmed v.Syed Ahmed (1945) 49 C.W.N. 311; (‘45) AC. 418; Mohamed Yasin v, Rahmat Ilahi ('47) A.A. 201 F.B.
[xxix] Aziz Bano v. Muhammad (1925) 47 All. 823, 837; 89 I.C. 690; ('25) A.A. 720 (difference in Shia. authorities); Ebrahim Allibhai v. Bai Asi (1933) 58 Bom. 254; 149 I.C. 225; (‘34) A.B. 21 (difference in Sunni authorities); Haji Mohd: v, Abdul Ghafoor ('55) A.A. 688
[xxx] Hamira Bibi v. Zuhaida Bibi (1915) 43 I.A. 294, 301-302; 38 All. 581, 582; 36 I.C. 87. See Hedayas Book XX, p. 334, "Of the Duties of the Kazee.”
[xxxi] Hayat-un-Nissa v. Muhammad (1890) 12 All. 190; 17 I.A. 73
[xxxii] Mahomed Kazim Ali Khan v. Sadiq Ali Khan (1938) (65) I.A. 218, 13 Luck. 494, 174 I.C. 977; (‘38) A.P.C. 169
[xxxiii] Abdul Aziz v. Dharamsey Jelha& Co. (‘40) A.I. 348
[xxxiv] Hayat-un-Nissa v. Muhammad (1890) 12 All. 190; 17 I.A. 73
[xxxv] Mt.Iqbal Begum v. Mt. Syed Begam (1933) 140 I.C. 829; (’33) A.I. 80
[xxxvi] Venkata Subhamma v. Ramayya (1932) 59 I.A. 112; 55 Mad. 443, 136 I.C. 111; (‘32) A.P.C. 92 (a case of a Hindu will, which applies also to a Mahomedan will); Shemail v. Ahmed Omer (1931) 33 Bom. L.R. 1056; 135 l.C. 817; ('31) A.B. 533; Mahomed Usuf v. Hargovandas (1923) 47 Born. 231; 70 I.C. 268; (‘22) A.B. 392; Sakina Bibee v. Mohomed Ishak (1910) 37 Cal. 839; 8 I.C. 655; is no longer good law. Mohammadi Begum v. Nawaz Jung (1955) Hyd. 743; Hakim Rehman v. Mohammad Mahmud Hasan (57) A.P. 559; Hasan Bokhari v. Venkayya (‘55) A. Andh. 87; (1957) Andh, W.R. 638.
[xxxvii] Kurrutulain v. Nuzat-ud-dowla (1905) 33 Cal. 116, 128; 32 I.A. 244, 257
[xxxviii] Mahomed Hussain v. Aishabai (1934) 36 Bom. L.R. 1155; 155 I.C. 334; (’35) A.B. 84 (a Sunni case.)
[xxxix] Jain Begum v. Amir Muhammad (1885) 7 All. 822; Muhammad Awais v. Har Sahai (1885) 7 All. 716; Biland Khan v. Mt. Begum Noor (‘43) A. Pesh. 62; Faizulla Khan v. Abdul Jabbar (‘43) A. Pesh. 65 Ebrahim Aboobaker v, Tek Chanf ('53) A.S.C. 298
[xl] Ahul Khader v. Chidambaram (1909) 32 Mad. 276, 278; 3 l.C. 876; Abdul Majeeth v. Krishnamchariar (1917) 40 Mad. 243, 245; 40 I.C. 210; Khatun Bai v. Abdul Wahab Sahib  (1939) M.W.N. 346; 184 I.C. 778; ('39) A.M. 306; Mt. Fardosiahan Begum v. Kazi Shafiuddin (1942) N.L.J. 261; (‘42) A.N. 75; Mohammad Sohail v, Ghulam Rasul (1949) Lah. 308: (’41) A.I. 152 (FB); Mahomedally Tyebally v. Safiabai (1940) 67 I.A. 406; 191 I.C. 113; (’40) A.P.C. 215
[xli] Imamul Hassan v. State of Bihar , A.I.R. 1982 Patna 89
[xlii] Mt. Haluman. v. Md Manir (1971) A. Pat. 386 (D.B.).
[xliii] Sabura Ammal v. Ali Mohammad Nachiar ('70) A.Mad. 411
[xliv] Sakina Begum v. Shahar Banoo (1935) 10 Luck. 433 at 458, 152 I.C. 42, ('35) A.O. 62, 67; Manni Gir v. Amar Jati (1936) 58 All. 594 , 160 I.C. 1030, ('36) A.A. 94
[xlv] Amir Dulhin v. Bhaij Nath (1894) 21 Cal. 311 , 315
[xlvi] Mohd. Subhan v. Misbahuddin Ahmad ('71) A. Raj 274
[xlvii] Maimun Bivi v. O. A. Khaja Mohideen (1970) I.M.L.J. 266 , ('70) A. Mad. 200
[xlviii] Ghulam Mohammad v. Ghulam Hussain (1932) 59 I.A., 74, 54 All. 98, 136 I.C. 454, ('32) A.P.C. 81; Kallangowda v. Bibishaya (1920) 44 Bom. 943, 58 I.C. 42; Nurdin v. Bu Umrao (1921) 45 Bom. 519, 59 I.C. 780, ('71) A.B. 56; Bai Jivi v. Bai Bibanboo (1929) 31 Bom. L.R. 199, 118 I.C. 785, ('29) A.B. 141; Mussammat Jano v. Narasingh Das (1930) 11 Lah. 29, 117 I.C. 803, ('29) A.L. 549; Ma Bi v. Ma Khatoon (1929) 7 Rang. 744, 121 I.C. 785, ('30) A.R. 72; Rustam Khan v. Janki (1929) 51 All. 101, 111 I.C. 809, ('28) A.A. 467; Ahmad Dar v. Mt. Mukhti, ('51) A.J. & K. 21. See also Mohd Kaliba v. Md. Abdullah ('63) A.M. 84.
[xlix] Mahomedally Tyebally v. Safibai (1940) 67 I.A. 406. 191 I.C. 113, ('40) A.P.C. 215
[l] T. Abdullah v. N. Abdul Samad Sahib (1970) II M.L.J. 510
[li] Zebaishi Begum v. Naziruddin Khan (1935) 57 All. 445, 152 I.C. 1008, ('35) A.A. 110
[lii] Jamahiddin v. Mosque Mashakganj ('73) A. All. 328
[liii] Khazir Bhat v. Ahmad Dar ('60) A.J. & K. 57; Mohd. Abdullah v. Mohd Rahiman ('64) A.M. 234
[liv] Mt Hashihan v. Jalaluddin 1982 B.L.J.R. 410: (1982) Pat. L.J.R. 463: A.I.R.1982 Pat.226 [B.P. Jha, J.].
[lv] Huchu Sab v. Sahajabi (1983) 1 Karn. LJ. 170 [G.N. Sabhahit, J.]
[lvi] Essafally v. Abdeali (1921) 45 Bom. 75, 59 I.C. 396, ('21) A.B. 424; Atorjan Bibi v. Sikandar Ali ('60) A.Ass. 183. See also Abdul Razack v. Mohd. Shah ('62) A.M. 346
[lvii] Khatun Bibi v. Abdul Wahib Sahib (1939) M.W.N. 346 , 184 I.C. 778, ('39) A.M. 306
[lviii] Bahadurkhanji v. Begum Mehrunnissa ('55) A. Sau. 72
[lix] Bazayet Hossein v. Dooli Chund (1878) 5 I.A. 211, 4 Cal. 402; Wahidunnissa v. Shubrattun  (1870) 6. Beng. L.R. 54; Land Mortgage Bank v. Bidyadhari (1880) 7 Cal. L.R. 460; Khatun Bibi v. Abdul Wahab Sahib (1939) M.W.N. 346, 184 I.C. 778. ('39) A.M. 306; Hasan Bokhari v. Venkayya ('55) A. Andh. 87
[lx] Mansab Ali v. Mt. Nabirunnissa (1934) 150 I.C. 443 , ('34) A.A. 702
[lxi] 45 I.A. 73
[lxii] Bhimadev Taria v. Radhakrishna Agarwalla ('68) A. Ori. 230
[lxiii] Land Mortgage Bank v. Bidyadhari (1880) 7 Cal. L.R. 460 (with facts somewhat altered)
[lxiv] Bazayet Hossein v. Dooli Chund (1878) 5 IA. 211 , 4 Cal. 402
[lxv] Wahidunnissa v. Shubrattun (1870) 6 Beng. L.R. 54 (with facts slightly altered)
[lxvi] Mahomed Wajid v. Bazayet Hossein (1878) 5 I.A. 211 , 223-224, 4 Cal. 402
[lxvii] Bhola Nath v. Maqbul-un-Nissa (1903) 26 All. 28; Abdul Rahman v. Inayati Bibi ('31) A.O. 63, 130 I.C. 113; Hasan Bokhari v. Venkayya ('55) A Andh. 87, (1957) Andh. W.R. 638
[lxviii] Khatun Bibi v. Abdul Wahab Sahib (1939) M.W.N. 346 , 184 I.C. 778, ('39) A.M. 306
[lxix] Mahomed Wajid v. Bazayet Hossein (1878) 5 I.A. 211 , 223-224, 4 Cal. 402
[lxx] Bazayet Hossein v. Dooli Chund (1878) 5I. A. 211, 4. Cal. 402
[lxxi] Pirthi Pal Singh v. Husaini Jan (1882) 4 All. 361; Ambashankar v. Sayad Ali (1894) 19 Bom. 273; Bassunteram v. Kamaluddin (1885) 11 Cal. 421, 428; Abbas Naskar v. Chairman, District Board, 24-Parganas (1932) 59 Cal. 691, 141. I.C. 871, ('33) AC. 81; Ramcharan v. Hanifa Khatun (1932) 54 All. 796, 138 I.C 746, ('32) AA. 591; Hakim Rehman v. Mohammad Mahmud Hasan ('57) A.P. 559; Imperial Bank, Gaya v.Bibi Sayeedan ('60) AP. 132
[lxxii] Pirthi Pal Singfi v. Husaini Jan (1882) 4 All. 361; Hamir Singh v. Zokia (1875) 1 All. 57, 59 (F.B.)
[lxxiii] Patel Parshottamdas Narasihbhai v. Bai Dhabu ('73) A. Guj. 88
[lxxiv] P.N. Veetil Narayani v. Pathummo Beevi A.I.R. 1991 SC 720
[lxxv] Sk Aftab Husain v. Smt. Tayebba Begum ('73) A. All. 54
[lxxvi] Hamir Singh v. Zaha (1875) 1 All. 57, 59 (F.B.); Pirthi Pal Singh v. Hussaini Jan (1882) 4 All. 361, 366
[lxxvii] Bassunteram v. Kamaluddim (1885) 11 Cal. 421 , 428
[lxxviii] Jafri Begum v. Amir Muhammad (1885) 7 All. 822, 838
[lxxix] Amar Ahmad Khan v. Shamim Ahmad Khan A.I.R. 2012 Jhar 39
[lxxx] Mamraj Maniram v. Muhamad Hashim (1941) 194 I.C. 727 , ('41) A.C 245
[lxxxi] Muttyjan v. Ahmad Ally  (1882) 8 Cal. 370; Amir Dulhin v. Baij Nath (1894) 21 Cal. 311
[lxxxii] Assamathem v. Roy Lutchmeeput Singh (1878) 4 Cal. 142 , 155
[lxxxiii] Abbas Naskar v. Chairman District Board , 24 Parganas (1932) 59 Cal. 691 , 141 I.C. 871, (33) AC. 81
[lxxxiv] Khurshetbibi v. Keso Vinayek (1887) 12 Bom. 101; Davalava v. Bhimaji (1895) 20 Bom. 338, followed in Virchand v. Kondu (1915) 39 Bom. 729, 31 I.C. 180 [mortgage-decree]
[lxxxv] Bhagirthibai v. Roshanbi (1919) 43 Bom. 412, 51 I.C. 18, dissenting from 12 Bom. 101 and 20 Bom. 338, supra Shahasaheb v. Sadashiv (1919) 43 Bom. 575, 581, 51 I.C. 223 [mortgage suit], dissenting from (1915) 39 Bom. 729, 31 I.C. I80 supra; Lala Miya v. Manubibi (l923) 47 Bom. 712, 73 I.C. 246, ('23) A.B. 411; Veerbhadrappa Shilwant v. Shekabai (1939) Bom. 232, 41 Bom. L.R. 249, 182 I.C. 539, ('39) A.B. 188
[lxxxvi] (1902) 26 Mad. 734 , 738
[lxxxvii] (1917) 40 Mad. 243 , 255, 257, 40 I.C. 210
[lxxxviii] Dallu Mal v. Hari Das (1901) 23 All. 263, 265
[lxxxix] Manni Gir. Amar Jati (1936) 58 All. 594, 160 I.C. 1030, ('36) A.A. 94
[xc] Jafri Begum v. Amir Muhammad Khan (1885) 7 All. 822; Muhammad Awais v. Har Sahai (1885) 7 All. 716; Hamir Singh v. Zakia (1875) 1 All. 57. See also Mahomad Alladad v. Muhammad Ismail (1888) 10 All. 239; and Chandu Lal v. Khaltemuneessa (1942) 2 Cal. 299, 205 I.C. 344, ('43) A.C. 76
[xci] Suleman v. Abdul Shakoor (1939) N.LJ. 577, 188 I.C. 292, ('40) A.N. 99; Laxminarayan v. Sadatali (1944) Nag. 97 , 212 I.C. 161, ('44) A.N. 99
[xcii] Amir Jahan v. Khadim Husain ('31) A.O. 253, 132 I.C. 75. See also Sakina Begum v. Shahar Banoo Begum (1935) 10 Luck. 443, 152 I.C. 42, ('35) A.O. 62, 67; Firm Bishambar Nath Gopi Nath v. Hashmi Begam (1949) 23 Luck. 3; ('49) A.O. 56
[xciii] Mt. Amir Begum v. Dr. Ahmad Jalal Din  ('35) A.L. 273
[xciv] Balak Ram. v. Ineyat Begum (1935) 160 I.C. 217 , ('35) A.L. 940
[xcv] (1959) 1 AWR 220
[xcvi] (1885) 7 All. 822
[xcvii] A.I.R. 1938 PC 169
[xcviii] Mohd Sulaiman v. Mohd Ismail and Ors. (1966) 1 S.C.R. 937. Following Daya Ram v. Shyam Sundari  ('65) A.S.C. 1049
[xcix] Muttyjan v. Ahmed Ally (1882) 8 Cal. 370
[c] Amir Dulhin v. Baij Nath (1894) 21 Cal. 311
[ci] Abbas Naskar v. Chairman, District Board, 24-Parganas (1932) 59 Cal. 691, 141 IC. 871, ('33) A.C. 81
[cii] This form of suit, which was at one time common in the Mofussil of Bombay, has been disapproved of by the Bombay High Court. See Rampratab v. Gavrishankar (1923) 25 Bom. L.R. 7, 85 I.C. 464. ('24) A.B. 109
[ciii] Khurshet Bibi v. Keso Vinayak (1887) 12 Bom. 101
[civ] In this case "no part of the Khoti was in actual possession of either of the heirs of the deceased.
[cv] Davalava v. Bhimaji (1895) 20 Bom. 238
[cvi] Bhagirthibai v. Roshanbi (1919) 43 Bom. 412, 51 I.C. 18. [In this case the widow against whom the decree was obtained was in possession of the whole house; see p. 427 of the report, lines 27-28]
[cvii] Muhammad Awais v. Har Sahai (1885) 1 All. 716, following Jafri Begam v. Amir Muhammad (1885) 7 All. 822
[cviii] Dallu Mal v. Hari Das (1901) 23 All. 263
[cix] Firm Bishambhar Nath Gopi Nath v. Hashim Begam (1947) 23 Luck. 3, ('49) AO. 56
[cx] Muhd. Sulaiman v. Mohd. Ismail (1966) 1 S.C.R. 937
[cxi] Abdul Majeeth v. Krishnamachariar (1917) 40 Mad. 243, 40 I.C. 210 (F.B.) Sukur v. Asmat (1923) 50 Cal. 978, 79 I.C. 491. ('24) AC. 384; Phul Chand v. Mantia (1938) All. 167, 174 I.C. 651, ('38) A.A. 182; Mt. Zubida Bibi v. Mt. Zenab Bibi (1942) 199 I.C. 604, ('42) A.L. 65; Ramachandrayya v. Abdul Kadar ('48) A.M. 37, dissenting from V.M.RV. Chiettiar Firm v. Asha Bibi (1929) 118 I.C. 407, ('29) A.R. 107. See Gulam Gose v. Shriram (1919) 43 Bom. 487, 51 I.C. 79 (sale of equity of redemption by one of the heirs--suit for redemption by other heirs--limitation); Jan Mohammad v. Karm Chand (1947) Lah. 399, 49 Bom. L.R. 577, ('47) A.P.C. 99
[cxii] (1902) 26 Mad. 734
[cxiii] (1877) 1 All. 533
[cxiv] Alisaheb v. Sesho Govind (1931) 33 Bom. L.R. 1238, 135 I.C. 489, ('31) A.B. 545
[cxv] Jan Mahommad v. Karm Chand (1947) Lah. 399, 49 Bom. L.R. 577, ('47) A.P.C. 99
[cxvi] Mt. Zubida Bibi v. Mt. Zenab Bibi (1942) 199 I.C. 604. ('42) A.L. 65
[cxvii] (1924) 46 All. 377, 79 I.C. 174, ('24) A.A. 384
[cxviii] Venkata Subamma v. Ramayya (1932) 59 I.A. 112, 55 Mad. 443, 136 I.C. 111, ('32) A.P.C. 92; Shaik Moosa v. Shaik Essa (1884) 8 Bom. 241, 255
[cxix] Pathummabi v. Vittil (1902) 26 Mad. 734, 739. Cf. Sitaram v. Shridhar (1903) 27 Bom. 292. See also Ahinsa Bibi v. Abdul Kader (1901) 25 Mad. 26, 39
[cxx] Chandra Kishore v. Prasanna Kumari (1910) 38 Cal. 327, 38 I.A. 7, 9 I.C. 122; Veerbhadrappa v. Shekabai (1939) Bom. 232, 41 Bom. L.R. 249, 182 I.C. 539, ('39) A.B. 188
[cxxi] Shaik Moosa v. Shaik Essa (1884) 8 Bom. 241, 255
[cxxii] Fateh Chand v. Muhammad (1894) 16 All. 259
[cxxiii] Mahomed Yusuf v. Abdur Rahim (1900) 26 Cal. 839
[cxxiv] Nanchand v. Yenawa (1904) 28 Bom. 630
[cxxv] Palaniyandi v. Veerammal (1905) 29 Mad. 77
[cxxvi] Mohammad Afzal Khan v. Abdul Rahman (1932) 59 I.A. 405 , ('32) A.P.C. 235
[cxxvii] Ghumanmal Lakumal v. Faiz Muhammad Haji Khan  ('48) A.S. 83
[cxxviii] Abdul Rahaman v. HamidAli  ('59) A.M.P. 190, relying on Pakkiri Kanni v. Manjoor Saheb  ('24) A.M. 124
[cxxix] Ma Khatun v. Ma Bibi (’33) A.R. 393; 149 I.C. 654
[cxxx] See Abdul Rashid v. Sirajuddin (1933) 145 I.C. 461; (’33) A.A. 206,209
[cxxxi] ('47) A Mad. 287
[cxxxii] Sahul Hamid v. Sulthan ('47) A Mad. 287. See also Maimoona Bivi v. D.A. Khaja Mohinuddin (,70) A Mad. 200
[cxxxiii] Mohammad Ibrahim v. Mohammad Abubakker (‘76) A Mad. 84
[cxxxiv] Mohammed Ibrahim v. Syed Mohammad Abubakker AI.R. 1976Mad. 84 L.W. 43. in Mohd. Ismail v. Khadirsa Rowther ALR. (1983) Mad. 123
[cxxxv] Mt. Hashihan v. Jalaluddin, A.I.R. 1982 Patna 226
[cxxxvi] Hakim Khan v. Gool Khan (1882) 8 Cal. 826; Suddurtonnesa v. Majada Khatoon (l878) 3 Cal. 694; Abdool Adood v. Mahomed Makmil (1884) 10 Cal. 562; Abdul Khader v. Chidambaram (1908) 32 Mad. 276; Abdul Samad v.Bibijan (1925) 49 Mad. L.J. 675, 91 I.C. 618 (’25) A.M. 1149; Abdul Rashid v. Sirajuddin (1933) 145 I.C. 461; (’33) A.A. 206; Sahul Hamid v. Sulthan (1947) 1 Mad. L.J. 20: (’47) A.M. 287
[cxxxvii] Abdul Kadar v. Bapubhai (1898) 23 Bom. 188; Mahamad Amin v. Hasan (1906) 31 Born. 143; Mohideen Bee v. Syed Meer (1915) 38 Mad. 1099, 1101; 32 I.C. 1102; See also Isap Ahmed v. Abramji (1917) 41 Bom. 588, 612-613; 41 I.C. 761; Safir Mohd. v. Bashir Mohd.  ('61) A. Or. 92; Md. Zafir v. Amiruddin ('63) A.P. 108
[cxxxviii] Aminaddin v. Tajjadin (1932) 59 Cal. 541; 138 I.C. 761; ('32) A.C. 538; Mst. Bibi Fatma v. Aftab Ahmed (‘63) A.P. 128
[cxxxix] Soudagar v. Soudagar (I931) 54 Mad. 543; 135 I.C. 357; ('31) A.M. 553 Durga Abdul Rawoof Sahib v. Quresha Bi Saheba (1959) 2 An. W.R. 557
[cxl] Shukrull v. Mt. Zuhra (1932) 54 All. 916; 143 I.C. 230; ('32) A.A. 512
[cxli] See Solema Bibi v Hafez Mahammad (1927) 54 Cal.657; 104 I.C. 833; ('27) A.C. 836; Durg Abdul Rawool Sahib v. Ouresha Bi Saheba (1959) 2 An. W.R. 557
[cxlii] Tarachand v, Mohideen (1935) 37 Bom. L.R. 654; 158 I.C. 701 ('35) A.B. 401
[cxliii] Ahmed Ibrahim Saheb v.Meyyappa Chettiar (1939) M.W.N. 976; (1940) Mad. 285; (‘40) A.M. 285; [Abdul Rahim v. Abdul Hakim ('32) A.M. 553; (1931) 54 Mad. 543 explained.]
[cxliv] D. Raja Ahmed v. Pacha Bai (1969) 1 An.W.R. 255
[cxlv] Mohammed Ibrahim v. Syed Muhammad Abbubakker A.I.R. 1976 Mad. 84 L.W. 43
[cxlvi] Mohammed Ibrahim v. Syed Muhammad Abbubakker A.I.R. 1976 Mad. L.W. 43
[cxlvii] Abdul Wahid v. Nuran Bibi (1885) 11 Cal. 597; 121 A. 91; Humeeda v. Budlum (1872) 17 W.R. 525; Hasan Ali v. Nazo (1889) 11 All. 456; Abdool v. Goolam (1905) 30 Born. 304
[cxlviii] Hasan Ali v. Nazo  (1889) 11 All. 456, 458
[cxlix] Kurrutulain v. Nuzhat-ud-dowla (1905) 33 Cal. 116, 321 A. 244
[cl] Abdool v. Goolam (1905) 30 Born. 304
[cli] Hasan Ali v. Nazo (1889) 11 All. 456, 458
[clii] Abdul Wahid v. Nuran Bibi (I885) 11 Cal. 597, 607; 12 I.A. 91; Macnaghten, p. 1, s. 9
[cliii] Moola Cassim v. Moolla Abdul (1905) 33 Cal. 173, 32 LA 177.
[cliv] Abdul Bari v. Nasir Ahmed ('33) A.O. 142; 150 I.C.330
[clv] Abdul Wahid v. Nuran Bibi (I885) 11 Cal. 597, 607; 12 I.A. 91
[clvi] Aziz Dor v. Fazil (1960) J & K 53
[clvii] Aziz Dar v. Mst. Fazli ('60) AJ. & K. 53
[clviii] Muhammad Kamil v.Imtiaz Fatima (1908) 36 I.A. 210; 31 All. 557; 4 I.C. 457
[clix] Aminabi v. Abasaheb (1931) 55 Bom. 401,132 I.C. 892; (’31) A.B. 266
[clx] AIR 1963 J.&K. 4, Foll.) Ghulam Hassan v. Mst. Saja, A.I.R. 1984 Jammu & Kashmir 26
[clxi] Mir AIi v. Sajuda Begum (1897) 21 Mad. 27; Umerdaraz v. Wilayat Khan. (1896)19 All. 696; Aga Md. v. Koolson Bebee (1897) 25 Cal. 9 (PC); Sayed Ali v. Sayed Md. 1928 Pat. 440
[clxii] Oudh 78
[clxiii] Adbul Latif Khan v. Mt. Abadi Begum (1934) 61 I.A. 322; 9 Luck. 421; 150 I.C.810; ('34) A.P.C.188
[clxiv] Mohammad Zia Ullah v. Rafiq Mohammad (1939 O.W.N. 581; 182 I.C. 190; (’39) A.O. 213
[clxv] Section 107, Evidence Act
[clxvi] Khanum Jan v. Jan Beebee (1827) 4 Beng. S.D.A. 210; Sumsuddin v. Abdul Husein (1906) 31 Bom. 165; Asa Beevi v. Karuppan (1918) 41 Mad 365; 46 l.C, 35; dissenting from Kunhi v. Kunhi (1896) 19 Mad. 176. See also Hurmut-ool-Nissa Begum v. Allahdia Khan (1871) 17 W.R. 108 (P.C.); Sulaiman Sahib v. Kader Ibrahim (1952) 2 Mad. L.J. 104, (’53) A.M. 161
[clxvii] Sumsuddin v. Abdul Hussein (1906) 31 Bom. 165; Banoo Begum v. Mir Abed Ali (1908) 32 Bom.172,174-175
[clxviii] Latafat Husain v. Hidayet Husain (1936) All.L.J. 342; 161 I.C. 851; (‘36) A.A. 573; Kochunni Kochu v. Kunju Pillai (1956) A Trav.-C. 276
[clxix] Abdul Kaffor v.Abdul Razak ('59) AM. 131; Kunhi Avulla v. Kunhi Avulla (‘64) A. Ker. 201
[clxx] Gulam Abbas v. Haji Kayyam Ali (‘73) AS.C. 554
[clxxi] Nasir-ul-Haq v. Faiyaz-ul-Rahman (1911) 33 All. 457, 9 I.C. 530
[clxxii] Nizamuddin v.Abdul Gufur (1888) 13 Bom. 264; Abdoola v. Mahomed (1948) 75 l.A. 62, ('48) APC. 134. (1905) 7 Bom. L.R. 306
[clxxiii] (1929) 56 I.A. 213, 4 Luck. 305, 116 I.C. 405, ('29) A.P.C. 149 affirming (1925) 87 I.C. 445, ('25) AO.568
[clxxiv] Nizamudin v. Abdul Gufur (l888) 13 Bom. 264; Abdoola v. Mahomed (1905) 7 Bom. L.R. 306
[clxxv] Abdul Khaleque v, Bepin Behan ('36) AC 456; Bai Saroobai v. Hussein Somji (1936) 38 Bom. L.R. 903; 165 I.C. 34; ('36) A.B. 330; Mt. Subhanbi v. Mt. Umraobi (1936) 161 I.C. 719; (‘36) A.N. 113; dissenting from Abdul v. Abdul (1929) 131 I.C. 35; (‘29) A.N. 313; Nawazish Ali Khan v. AIi Raza Khan
(1948) 75 I.A. 62; (‘48) A.P.C. 134
[clxxvi] Bai Saroobai v. Hussein Somji (1936) 38 Bom. L.R. 903; 165 I.C. 34; ('36) A.B. 330; Mt. Subhanbi v. Mt. Umraobi (1936) 161 I.C. 719; (‘36) A.N. 113; Achiruddin Ahmad v. Sakina Bewa (1946) 50 C.W.N. 59; 222 I.C. 585; (’46) A.C. 288; Maitheen Bivi Umma v. Ithappiri Varkey (1956) Trav.-C 292; ('56) A.Trav.-C. 268; Anjumanara Begum v, Nawab Asif Kadar (1955) 2 Cal. 109
[clxxvii] Naziruddin v.Khariat Ali (1938) 172 I.C. 384; ('38) A.O. 51
[clxxviii] (1948) 75 I.A. 62; (‘48) A.P.C. 134
[clxxix] Abdul Karim Khan v. Abdul Qayum Khan (1906) 28 All. 342; Harpal Singh v. Lekraj Kunwar (1908) 30 All. 406, 420; Abdool Husein v. Goolam Hoosein (1905) 30 Bom. 304, 317; Rasoolbibi v. Usuf Ajam (1933) 57 Bom. 737; 148 I.C. 82; ('33) A.B. 324
[clxxx] (1885) 11 Cal. 597; 121 A. 91
[clxxxi] 12 I.A. at p. 101
[clxxxii] (1948) 75 I.A. 62; (‘48) A.P.C. 134
[clxxxiii] Humeeda v. Budlun (1872) 17 W.R. 5251
[clxxxiv] Umjad Alli Khan v. Mohumdee Begum (1867) 11 M.I.A. 517 at 548; Khwajeh Solehman v. Nawab Sir Salimullah (1922 ) 49 I.A. 153; 49 Cal. 820; 69 I.C. 138; ('22) A.P.C. 107; Jagdish Narain v. Bande Ali Mian (1939) 20 P.L.T. 328; 183 I.C. 467; ('39) A.P. 406
[clxxxv] MULLA’s Principles of Mahomedan Law by M. Hidayatullah and Arshad Hidayatullah, Page 137, 138
[clxxxvi] Jainabai v. Sethna (1901) 34 Born. 604, 612, 613; 61 C. 513; Cassamally v. Currimbhoy (1911) 36 Bom. 214,253-254; 12 I.C. 225
[clxxxvii] (1948) 75 I.A. 62, ('48) A.P.C. 134
[clxxxviii] Abdul Wahid Khan v. Mt. Nuran Bibi (1885) 12 I.A. 91, 102, 100; 11 Cal. 597
[clxxxix] Umes Chunder Sircar v. Zahoor Fatima (1890) 17 I.A 201
[cxc] Rasoolbibi v. Usuf Ajam (1933) 57 Born. 737, 148 t.c, 82, (‘33) AB. 324.
[cxci] Mt. Subhanbi v. Mt. Umraobi (1936) 161 I.C. 719, ('36) AN. 113
[cxcii] Bai Saroobai v. Hussein Somji (1936) 38 Born. L.R. 903,165 I.C. 34, ('36) AB. 330
[cxciii] Banoo Begum v. Mir Abed Ali (1908) 32 Born. 172: Siraj Hussin v. Mushaf Hussin (1921) 21 O.C. 321; 49 I.C. 58
[cxciv] (1932) 59 I.A. 236, 7 Luck 257, 137 I.C. 321; ('32) A.P.C. 158
[cxcv] Nawazish Ali Khan v.Ali Raw Khan (1948) 75 I.A. 62; (‘48) A.P.C. 134
[cxcvi] Siddiq Ahmed v. Wilayat Ahmed ('52) AA 1
[cxcvii] Mahomed v. Kairum ('54) A. Mad.769. See also Shaikh Khatun Bibi v. Mohd. Zahina Bi (1956) An. W.R. 771; Khadija Beevi v. Maria Ummal (‘58) A.Ker. 264; Sk. Kabir v. Narayandas (1954) Cut. 513; Krishnamurthy Setty v. Adbul Khader (‘56) A. Mys. 14
[cxcviii] Nagoor Ammal  v. M.K. Meeran (‘54) A. Mad. 770
[cxcix] Mst. Jawai v. Hussain Baksh (1922) 3 Lah. 80; 67 I.C. 154; (’22) A.I. 298
[cc] Macnaghten, "Principles and Precedents". p. 27, sec.96; Rumsey's Mahomedan Law of Inheritance, Ch. IX; Rumsey's Al Sirajiyyah 43-44
[cci] Section 3, Caste Disabilities Removal Act 1850
[ccii] Miter Sen Singh v. Moqbul Hasan Khan (1930) 37 I.A. 313: Chandra Shekharappa v. Government of Mysore 1956 Mays
[cciii] Rumsey's Al Sirajiyyah, 14,Ballie, 266, 369
[cciv] Ujmudin Khan v. Zia-ul-Nissa (1879) 61 A. 137; 3 Bom. 422
[ccv] Al Sirajiyyah 22-28
[ccvi] Khan Khul Khan v. Karam Nishan (‘40) A.I. 172
[ccvii] Bafaten v. Bilaiti Khanum (1903) 30 Cal. 683
[ccviii] Pavitri v. Katheesumma 1929 Ker 319
[ccix] Md. Kahr Khan v. Salfulla Khan (1887) 22 PR 198
[ccx] Md.Bakhsh v. Hayat Khan (1888) 23 PR (No. 37) 98


TABLE OF CASE LAWS

Abbas Naskar v. Chairman District Board, 24 Parganas (1932) 59 Cal. 691, 141 I.C. 871, (33) AC. 81
Abdool Adood v. Mahomed Makmil (1884) 10 Cal. 562
Abdool Husein v. Goolam Hoosein (1905) 30 Bom. 304, 317
Abdool v. Goolam (1905) 30 Born. 304
Abdoola v. Mahomed (1948) 75 l.A. 62, ('48) APC. 134. (1905) 7 Bom. L.R. 306
Abdul Aziz v. Dharamsey Jelha& Co. (‘40) A.I. 348
Abdul Bari v. Nasir Ahmed ('33) A.O. 142; 150 I.C.330
Abdul Gafur v. Nizamuddin (1892) 19 I.A 170
Abdul Hammed Khan v. Peare Mirza Oudh 78
Abdul Kadar v. Bapubhai (1898) 23 Bom. 188
Abdul Kadir v. Salima (1886) 8 All.149, 166-167 (1886) 8 All. 149, p. 162
Abdul Kaffor v.Abdul Razak ('59) AM. 131; Kunhi Avulla v. Kunhi Avulla (‘64) A. Ker. 201
Abdul Karim Khan v. Abdul Qayum Khan (1906) 28 All. 342
Abdul Khader v. Chidambaram (1908) 32 Mad. 276
Abdul Khaleque v, Bepin Behan ('36) AC 456
Abdul Majeeth v. Krishnamachariar (1917) 40 Mad. 243, 40 I.C. 210 (F.B.)
Abdul Rahaman v. Hamid Ali  ('59) A.M.P. 190
Abdul Rahim v. Abdul Hakim ('32) A.M. 553; (1931) 54 Mad. 543
Abdul Rahman v. Inayati Bibi ('31) A.O. 63, 130 I.C. 113
Abdul Rashid v. Sirajuddin (1933) 145 I.C. 461; (’33) A.A. 206,209
Abdul Razack v. Mohd. Shah ('62) A.M. 346
Abdul Samad v.Bibijan (1925) 49 Mad. L.J. 675, 91 I.C. 618 (’25) A.M. 1149
Abdul v. Abdul (1929) 131 I.C. 35; (‘29) A.N. 313
Abdul Wahid Khan v. Mt. Nuran Bibi (1885) 12 I.A. 91, 102, 100; 11 Cal. 597
Abdullah Beary v. Alikunhi Beary (1957) Ker. LJ. 731
Achiruddin Ahmad v. Sakina Bewa (1946) 50 C.W.N. 59; 222 I.C. 585; (’46) A.C. 288
Adbul Latif Khan v. Mt. Abadi Begum (1934) 61 I.A. 322; 9 Luck. 421; 150 I.C.810; ('34) A.P.C.188
Advocate-General of Bombay V. Yusufally Ebrahim (1922) 24 Bom. L.R.1060; 84 I.C. 759; (’21) A.B.338
Aga Mahomed Jaffer v, Koolsom Beebee (1897) 25 Cal 9, 18; 24 I.A. 196, 204
Agha Ali Khan v. Altaf Hasan Khan (1892) 14 All. 429, 448
Ahinsa Bibi v. Abdul Kader (1901) 25 Mad. 26, 39
Ahmad Dar v. Mt. Mukhti ('51) A.J. & K. 21
Ahmed Ibrahim Saheb v.Meyyappa Chettiar (1939) M.W.N. 976; (1940) Mad. 285; (‘40) A.M. 285
Ahul Khader v. Chidambaram (1909) 32 Mad. 276, 278; 3 l.C. 876
Akbarally v. Mahomedally (1932) 34 Bom. L.R. 655, 138 l.C. 810, (‘32) A.B. 356
Alisaheb v. Sesho Govind (1931) 33 Bom. L.R. 1238, 135 I.C. 489, ('31) A.B. 545
Amar Ahmad Khan v. Shamim Ahmad Khan A.I.R. 2012 Jhar 39
Ambashankar v. Sayad Ali (1894) 19 Bom. 273
Aminabi v. Abasaheb (1931) 55 Bom. 401,132 I.C. 892; (’31) A.B. 266
Aminaddin v. Tajjadin (1932) 59 Cal. 541; 138 I.C. 761; ('32) A.C. 538
Amir Dulhin v. Baij Nath (1894) 21 Cal. 311
Amir Jahan v. Khadim Husain ('31) A.O. 253, 132 I.C. 75
Amjad Khan v. Ashraf Khan (1929) 56 I.A. 213, 4 Luck. 305, 116 I.C. 405, ('29) A.P.C.
Anis Begun v. Muhammad Istafa (1933) 55 All. 743,148 I.C.26, ('33) A.A. 634
Anjumanara Begum v. Nawab Asif Kadar (1955) 2 Cal. 109
Asa Beevi v. Karuppan (1918) 41 Mad 365; 46 l.C, 35
Assamathem v. Roy Lutchmeeput Singh (1878) 4 Cal. 142, 155
Atorjan Bibi v. Sikandar Ali ('60) A.Ass. 183.
Aziz Bano v. Muhammad (1925) 47 All. 823, 837; 89 I.C. 690; ('25) A.A. 720
Aziz Dar v. Mst. Fazli ('60) AJ. & K. 53
Aziz Dor v. Fazil (1960) J & K 53
Bafaten v. Bilaiti Khanum (1903) 30 Cal. 683
Bahadurkhanji v. Begum Mehrunnissa ('55) A. Sau. 72
Bai Jivi v. Bai Bibanboo (1929) 31 Bom. L.R. 199, 118 I.C. 785, ('29) A.B. 141
Bai Saroobai v. Hussein Somji (1936) 38 Bom. L.R. 903; 165 I.C. 34; ('36) A.B. 330
Balak Ram. v. Ineyat Begum (1935) 160 I.C. 217 , ('35) A.L. 940
Banoo Begum v. Mir Abed Ali (1908) 32 Born. 172
Baqar Ali v.Anjuman (1902) 25 All. 236, 254; 30 I.A. 111
Bassunteram v. Kamaluddim (1885) 11 Cal. 421, 428
Bazayet Hossein v. Dooli Chund (1878) 5I. A. 211, 4. Cal. 402
Bhagirthibai v. Roshanbi (1919) 43 Bom. 412, 51 I.C. 18
Bhimadev Taria v. Radhakrishna Agarwalla ('68) A. Ori. 230
Bhola Nath v. Maqbul-un-Nissa (1903) 26 All. 28
Bikani Mia v, Shuk Lal (1893) 20 Cal. 116
Biland Khan v. Mt. Begum Noor (‘43) A. Pesh. 62
Cassamally v. Currimbhoy (1911) 36 Bom. 214,253-254; 12 I.C. 225
Chandra Kishore v. Prasanna Kumari (1910) 38 Cal. 327, 38 I.A. 7, 9 I.C. 122
Chandra Shekharappa v. Government of Mysore 1956 Mays
Chandu Lal v. Khaltemuneessa (1942) 2 Cal. 299, 205 I.C. 344, ('43) A.C. 76
D. Raja Ahmed v. Pacha Bai (1969) 1 An.W.R. 255
Dallu Mal v. Hari Das (1901) 23 All. 263
Davalava v. Bhimaji (1895) 20 Bom. 238
Daya Ram v. Shyam Sundari ('65) A.S.C. 1049
Deedar Hossein v. Zuhoor-oon-Nissa (1841) 2 M.I.A 441, 477
Durga Abdul Rawoof Sahib v. Quresha Bi Saheba (1959) 2 An. W.R. 557
Ebrahim Aboobaker v, Tek Chanf ('53) A.S.C. 298
Ebrahim Allibhai v. Bai Asi (1933) 58 Bom. 254; 149 I.C. 225; (‘34) A.B. 21
Essafally v. Abdeali (1921) 45 Bom. 75, 59 I.C. 396, ('21) A.B. 424
Faizulla Khan v. Abdul Jabbar (‘43) A. Pesh. 65
Fateh Chand v. Muhammad (1894) 16 All. 259
Firm Bishambhar Nath Gopi Nath v. Hashim Begam (1947) 23 Luck. 3, ('49) AO. 56
Ghulam Hassan v. Mst. Saja, A.I.R. 1984 Jammu & Kashmir 26
Ghulam Mohammad v. Ghulam Hussain (1932) 59 I.A., 74, 54 All. 98, 136 I.C. 454, ('32) A.P.C. 81
Ghumanmal Lakumal v. Faiz Muhammad Haji Khan ('48) A.S. 83
Gulam Abbas v. Haji Kayyam Ali (‘73) AS.C. 554
Gulam Gose v. Shriram (1919) 43 Bom. 487, 51 I.C. 79
Haji Bibi v. H.H. Sir Sultan Mahomed Shah, the Aga Khan (1909) 11 Bom. L.R. 409, 2 I.C. 874
Haji Mohd: v, Abdul Ghafoor ('55) A.A. 688
Hakim Khan v. Gool Khan (1882) 8 Cal. 826
Hakim Rehman v. Mohammad Mahmud Hasan (‘57) A.P. 559
Hamir Singh v. Zakia (1875) 1 All. 57
Hamira Bibi v. Zuhaida Bibi (1915) 43 I.A. 294, 301-302; 38 All. 581, 582; 36 I.C. 87
Harpal Singh v. Lekraj Kunwar (1908) 30 All. 406, 420
Hasan Ali v. Mehdi Husain (1877) 1 All. 533
Hasan Ali v. Nazo (1889) 11 All. 456
Hasan Bokhari v. Venkayya (‘55) A. Andh. 87; (1957) Andh, W.R. 638
Hasanali v. Mansoorali (1949) 76 I.A. 1; (‘48) APC 66
Hayat-un-Nissa v. Muhammad (1890) 12 All. 190; 17 I.A. 73
Huchu Sab v. Sahajabi (1983) 1 Karn. LJ. 170
Humeeda v. Budlum (1872) 17 W.R. 525
Hurmut-ool-Nissa Begum v. Allahdia Khan (1871) 17 W.R. 108 (P.C.)
Imambandi v. Mutsaddi 45 I.A. 73
Imperial Bank, Gaya v.Bibi Sayeedan ('60) A.P. 132
Isap Ahmed v. Abramji (1917) 41 Bom. 588, 612-613; 41 I.C. 761
Jafri Begum v. Amir Mohammad Khan (1885) 7 All. 822
Jagdish Narain v. Bande Ali Mian (1939) 20 P.L.T. 328; 183 I.C. 467; ('39) A.P. 406
Jain Begum v. Amir Muhammad (1885) 7 All. 822
Jainabai v. Sethna (1901) 34 Born. 604, 612, 613; 61 C. 513
Jamahiddin v. Mosque Mashakganj ('73) A. All. 328
Jan Mohammad v. Karm Chand (1947) Lah. 399, 49 Bom. L.R. 577, ('47) A.P.C. 99
Kallangowda v. Bibishaya (1920) 44 Bom. 943, 58 I.C. 42
Khadija Beevi v. Maria Ummal (‘58) A.Ker. 264
Khajah Hoosein v. Shahazadee (1869) 12 W.R. 344, 346
Khan Khul Khan v. Karam Nishan (‘40) A.I. 172
Khan Muhammad v. Gohar Banu P.L.D. 1965 (W.P.) Lah. 46.
Khanum Jan v. Jan Beebee (1827) 4 Beng. S.D.A. 210
Khatun Bai v. Abdul Wahab Sahib (1939) M.W.N. 346; 184 I.C. 778; ('39) A.M. 306
Khazir Bhat v. Ahmad Dar ('60) A.J. & K. 57
Khurshet Bibi v. Keso Vinayak (1887) 12 Bom. 101
Khwajeh Solehman v. Nawab Sir Salimullah (1922) 49 I.A. 153; 49 Cal. 820; 69 I.C. 138; ('22) A.P.C. 107
Kochunni Kochu v. Kunju Pillai (1956) A Trav.-C. 276
Krishnamurthy Setty v. Adbul Khader (‘56) A. Mys. 14
Kulsom Bibee v, Golam Hoosein (1905) 10 C.W.N. 449, 488
Kunhi v. Kunhi (1896) 19 Mad. 176
Kurrutulain v. Nuzat-ud-dowla (1905) 33 Cal. 116, 128; 32 I.A. 244, 257
Kutti Umma v. Nedungadi Bank, LId. (1938) Mad. 148; 173 I.C. 699; (‘37) AM. 731
Kuttialikutty Marakkar v. Kandankutty (’67) A. Ker. 78
Lala Miya v. Manubibi (l923) 47 Bom. 712, 73 I.C. 246, ('23) A.B. 411
Land Mortgage Bank v. Bidyadhari (1880) 7 Cal. L.R. 460
Latafat Husain v. Hidayet Husain (1936) All.L.J. 342; 161 I.C. 851; (‘36) A.A. 573
Laxminarayan v. Sadatali (1944) Nag. 97, 212 I.C. 161, ('44) A.N. 99
Ma Bi v. Ma Khatoon (1929) 7 Rang. 744, 121 I.C. 785, ('30) A.R. 72
Ma Khatun v. Ma Bibi (’33) A.R. 393; 149 I.C. 654
Mahamad Amin v. Hasan (1906) 31 Born. 143
Mahomad Alladad v. Muhammad Ismail (1888) 10 All. 239
Mahomed Hussain v. Aishabai (1934) 36 Bom. L.R. 1155; 155 I.C. 334; (’35) A.B. 84
Mahomed Kazim Ali Khan v. Sadiq Ali Khan (1938) (65) I.A. 218, 13 Luck. 494, 174 I.C. 977; (‘38) A.P.C. 169
Mahomed Usuf v. Hargovandas (1923) 47 Born. 231; 70 I.C. 268; (‘22) A.B. 392
Mahomed v. Kairum ('54) A. Mad.769.
Mahomed Wajid v. Bazayet Hossein (1878) 5 I.A. 211 , 223-224, 4 Cal. 402
Mahomed Yusuf v. Abdur Rahim (1900) 26 Cal. 839
Mahomedally Tyebally v. Safiabai (1940) 67 I.A. 406; 191 I.C. 113; (’40) A.P.C. 215
Maimoona Bivi v. D.A. Khaja Mohinuddin (‘70) A Mad. 200
Maimun Bivi v. O. A. Khaja Mohideen (1970) I.M.L.J. 266, ('70) A. Mad. 200
Maitheen Bivi Umma v. Ithappiri Varkey (1956) Trav.-C 292; ('56) A.Trav.-C. 268
Mamraj Maniram v. Muhamad Hashim (1941) 194 I.C. 727, ('41) A.C 245
Manni Gir v. Amar Jati (1936) 58 All. 594, 160 I.C. 1030, ('36) A.A. 94
Mansab Ali v. Mt. Nabirunnissa (1934) 150 I.C. 443, ('34) A.A. 702
Mansoorally v. Taiyabally (‘35) A.N. 156
Maulabux v. Charuk (’52) P. Sind. 54
Md. Kahr Khan v. Salfulla Khan (1887) 22 PR 198
Md. Zafir v. Amiruddin ('63) A.P. 108
Md.Bakhsh v. Hayat Khan (1888) 23 PR (No. 37) 98
Mir AIi v. Sajuda Begum (1897) 21 Mad. 27
Miter Sen Singh v. Moqbul Hasan Khan (1930) 37 I.A. 313
Mohamed Yasin v, Rahmat Ilahi ('47) A.A. 201 F.B.
Mohammad Afzal Khan v. Abdul Rahman (1932) 59 I.A. 405, ('32) A.P.C. 235
Mohammad Ibrahim v. Mohammad Abubakker (‘76) A Mad. 84
Mohammad Sohail v, Ghulam Rasul (1949) Lah. 308: (’41) A.I. 152 (FB)
Mohammad Zia Ullah v. Rafiq Mohammad (1939 O.W.N. 581; 182 I.C. 190; (’39) A.O. 213
Mohammadi Begum v. Nawaz Jung (1955) Hyd. 743
Mohammed Ibrahim v. Syed Muhammad Abbubakker A.I.R. 1976 Mad. 84 L.W. 43
Mohd Kaliba v. Md. Abdullah ('63) A.M. 84
Mohd Sulaiman v. Mohd Ismail and Ors. (1966) 1 S.C.R. 937
Mohd. Abdullah v. Mohd Rahiman ('64) A.M. 234
Mohd. Ismail v. Khadirsa Rowther ALR. (1983) Mad. 123
Mohd. Kazim Ali Khan v. Sadiq Ali Khan A.I.R. 1938 PC 169
Mohd. Subhan v. Misbahuddin Ahmad ('71) A. Raj 274
Mohd. Sulaiman v. Mohd. Ismail (1959) 1 AWR 220
Mohideen Bee v. Syed Meer (1915) 38 Mad. 1099, 1101; 32 I.C. 1102
Moola Cassim v. Moolla Abdul (1905) 33 Cal. 173, 32 LA 177
Moosa Seethi v. Mariakutty (1954) Trav.-Co. -690, (‘54) A Trav.-Co. 432
Mst. Bibi Fatma v. Aftab Ahmed (‘63) A.P. 128
Mst. Jawai v. Hussain Baksh (1922) 3 Lah. 80; 67 I.C. 154; (’22) A.I. 298
Mst. Sahib Bibi v. Muhammad and Ors. P.L.D.1961 (W.P.) Lah. 1036
Mt Hashihan v. Jalaluddin 1982 B.L.J.R. 410: (1982) Pat. L.J.R. 463: A.I.R.1982 Pat.226
Mt. Amir Begum v. Dr. Ahmad Jalal Din ('35) A.L. 273
Mt. Fardosiahan Begum v. Kazi Shafiuddin (1942) N.L.J. 261; (‘42) A.N. 75
Mt. Haluman. v. Md Manir (1971) A. Pat. 386 (D.B.).
Mt. Hashihan v. Jalaluddin, A.I.R. 1982 Patna 226
Mt. Iqbal Begum v. Mt. Syed Begum (1933) 140 I.C. 829. (‘33) AL. 80
Mt. Subhanbi v. Mt. Umraobi (1936) 161 I.C. 719, ('36) AN. 113
Mt. Zubida Bibi v. Mt. Zenab Bibi (1942) 199 I.C. 604, ('42) A.L. 65
Mt.Iqbal Begum v. Mt. Syed Begam (1933) 140 I.C. 829; (’33) A.I. 80
Mubarak-un-Nissa v. Muhammad (1924) 46 All. 377, 79 I.C. 174, ('24) A.A. 384
Muhammad Awais v. Har Sahai (1885) 1 All. 716
Muhammad Kamil v.Imtiaz Fatima (1908) 36 I.A. 210; 31 All. 557; 4 I.C. 457
Muhammad v. Gulam (1864) 1 B.H.C. 236
Muhammad v. The Legal Remembrancer (1893) 15 All. 321, 323
Muhd. Sulaiman v. Mohd. Ismail (1966) 1 S.C.R. 937
Mussammat Jano v. Narasingh Das (1930) 11 Lah. 29, 117 I.C. 803, ('29) A.L. 549
Muttyjan v. Ahmed Ally (1882) 8 Cal. 370
Nagoor Ammal v. M.K. Meeran (‘54) A. Mad. 770
Nanchand v. Yenawa (1904) 28 Bom. 630
Nasir-ul-Haq v. Faiyaz-ul-Rahman (1911) 33 All. 457, 9 I.C. 530
Nasrat v.Hamidan (1882) 4 All. 205
Nawazish Ali Khan v. AIi Raza Khan (1948) 75 I.A. 62; (‘48) A.P.C. 134
Naziruddin v.Khariat Ali (1938) 172 I.C. 384; ('38) A.O. 51
Nizamuddin v.Abdul Gufur (1888) 13 Bom. 264
Nurdin v. Bu Umrao (1921) 45 Bom. 519, 59 I.C. 780, ('71) A.B. 56
P.N. Veetil Narayani v. Pathummo Beevi A.I.R. 1991 SC 720
Pakkiri Kanni v. Manjoor Saheb  ('24) A.M. 124
Palaniyandi v. Veerammal (1905) 29 Mad. 77
Patel Parshottamdas Narasihbhai v. Bai Dhabu ('73) A. Guj. 88
Pathummabi v. Vittil (1902) 26 Mad. 734
Pavitri v. Katheesumma 1929 Ker 319
Phul Chand v. Mantia (1938) All. 167, 174 I.C. 651, ('38) A.A. 182
Pirthi Pal Singfi v. Husaini Jan (1882) 4 All. 361
Pirthi Pal Singh v. Hussaini Jan (1882) 4 All. 361, 366
Ramachandrayya v. Abdul Kadar ('48) A.M. 37
Ramcharan v. Hanifa Khatun (1932) 54 All. 796, 138 I.C 746, ('32) A.A. 591
Rampratab v. Gavrishankar (1923) 25 Bom. L.R. 7, 85 I.C. 464. ('24) A.B. 109
Rasoolbibi v. Usuf Ajam (1933) 57 Bom. 737; 148 I.C. 82; ('33) A.B. 324
Rustam Khan v. Janki (1929) 51 All. 101, 111 I.C. 809, ('28) A.A. 467
Sabura Ammal v. Ali Mohammad Nachiar ('70) A.Mad. 411
Safir Mohd. v. Bashir Mohd.  ('61) A. Or. 92
Sahul Hamid v. Sulthan (1947) 1 Mad. L.J. 20: (’47) A.M. 287
Sahul Hamid v. Sulthan ('47) A Mad. 287
Saifuddin Sahib v. Govt. of Bombay, 1962 A.S.C. 854
Sakina Begum v. Shahar Banoo (1935) 10 Luck. 433 at 458, 152 I.C. 42, ('35) A.O. 62, 67
Sakina Bibee v. Mohomed Ishak (1910) 37 Cal. 839; 8 I.C. 655
Sardar Bibi v. Muhammad Bakhsh P.L.D. 1954 (W.P.) Lah 481
Sardar Syedna Saifuddin v. Tyebhai (1953) 55 Bom. L.R. 1.
Sayed Ali v. Sayed Md. 1928 Pat. 440
Shahasaheb v. Sadashiv (1919) 43 Bom. 575, 581, 51 I.C.
Shahazadee v. Khaja Hossein (1869) 12 W.R. 498
Shaik Moosa v. Shaik Essa (1884) 8 Bom. 241, 255
Shaikh Khatun Bibi v. Mohd. Zahina Bi (1956) An. W.R. 771
Shemail v. Ahmed Omer (1931) 33 Bom. L.R. 1056; 135 l.C. 817; ('31) A.B. 533
Shukrull v. Mt. Zuhra (1932) 54 All. 916; 143 I.C. 230; ('32) A.A. 512
Siddiq Ahmed v. Wilayat Ahmed ('52) AA 1
Siddiq Ahmed v.Syed Ahmed (1945) 49 C.W.N. 311; (‘45) AC. 418
Siraj Hussin v. Mushaf Hussin (1921) 21 O.C. 321; 49 I.C. 58
Sitaram v. Shridhar (1903) 27 Bom. 292
Sk Aftab Husain v. Smt. Tayebba Begum ('73) A. All. 54
Sk. Kabir v. Narayandas (1954) Cut. 513
Solema Bibi v Hafez Mahammad (1927) 54 Cal.657; 104 I.C. 833; ('27) A.C.
Soudagar v. Soudagar (I931) 54 Mad. 543; 135 I.C. 357; ('31) A.M. 553
Suddurtonnesa v. Majada Khatoon (l878) 3 Cal. 694
Sukur v. Asmat (1923) 50 Cal. 978, 79 I.C. 491. ('24) AC. 384
Sulaiman Sahib v. Kader Ibrahim (1952) 2 Mad. L.J. 104, (’53) A.M. 161
Suleman v. Abdul Shakoor (1939) N.LJ. 577, 188 I.C. 292, ('40) A.N. 99
Sumsuddin v. Abdul Husein (1906) 31 Bom. 165
T. Abdullah v. N. Abdul Samad Sahib (1970) II M.L.J. 510
Tarachand v, Mohideen (1935) 37 Bom. L.R. 654; 158 I.C. 701 ('35) A.B. 401
The Advocate-General ex relations Daya Muhammad v. Muhammad Husein (1879) 12 Bom. H.C. 323
Ujmudin Khan v. Zia-ul-Nissa (1879) 61 A. 137; 3 Bom. 422
Umerdaraz v. Wilayat Khan. (1896)19 All. 696
Umes Chunder Sircar v. Mt. Zahoor Fatima (1890) 17 I.A. 201; II Cal. 164
Umjad Alli Khan v. Mohumdee Begum (1867) 11 M.I.A. 517 at 548
V.M.RV. Chiettiar Firm v. Asha Bibi (1929) 118 I.C. 407, ('29) A.R. 107
Veerbhadrappa Shilwant v. Shekabai (1939) Bom. 232, 41 Bom. L.R. 249, 182 I.C. 539, ('39) A.B. 188
Venkata Subamma v. Ramayya (1932) 59 I.A. 112, 55 Mad. 443, 136 I.C. 111, ('32) A.P.C. 92
Virchand v. Kondu (1915) 39 Bom. 729, 31 I.C. 180
Wahidunnissa v. Shubrattun (1870) 6 Beng. L.R. 54
Zebaishi Begum v. Naziruddin Khan (1935) 57 All. 445, 152 I.C. 1008, ('35) A.A. 110

LIST OF ENACTMENTS AND RULES MENTIONED

Administrator-General's Act, 1913
Bombay Prevention of Excommunication Act (XLII of 1949)
Bombay Regulation VIII of 1827
Bombay Watan Act, 1886
Caste Disabilities Removal Act 1850
Cutchi Memons Act XLVI of 1920
Indian Contract Act, 1872
Indian Evidence Act, 1872
Indian Succession Act, 1865
Indian Succession Act, 1925
Limitation Act, 1908
Mussalman Wakf Validating Act, VI of 1913
Oudh Estates Act I of 1869
Oudh Estates Amendment Act III of 1910
Probation and Administration Act, 1881
Shariat Act, 1937
Succession Certificate Act,1889
Transfer of Property Act , 1882

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