Madgavkar, J.@mdashThe question in this appeal relates to the validity of the will made in 1917 by the Plaintiff-Appellant''s father, Raoji, under
which he purported to dispose of four properties--two properties, B and D, to his son the Plaintiff-Appellant, and two properties, A and C, to
Defendant No. 6, Dhondu, the sister of his deceased mistress, through whom the other Defendants-Respondents claim.
2. All the four properties in the will, along with a iifth,. belonged originally to Jagoji. In 1878 Jagoji passed a registered document (Exhibit 100) in
favour of his two illegitimate sons, Raoji and Sakharam. The Plaintiff-Appellant contended that Raoji obtained these properties of Jagoji by
survivorship and could not dispose of them by will. The Respondents contended that they were in law the self-acquired properties of Jagoji with
power in him to dispose of them by will. The parties, it is conceded, are Sudras.
3. It is a curious defect in the case that the pleadings and the evidence are silent as to the question of Sakharam''s interest in the properties and the
dates of Sakharam''s death and of the Plaintiff''s birth. Both the lower Courts have found that there was no partition in Raoji''s life-time between
Raoji and the Plaintiff-Appellant.
4. The argument for the Appellant is three-fold. First, that Jagoji and his two illegitimate sons, Raoji and Sakharam, constituted a joint Hindu family
such that ,Raoji had a co-parcenary interest from his birth in the properties. Secondly, if not, that Jagoji had the power to admit an illegitimate son
such as Raoji as a eo-parcener and is proved to have exercised his power.
5. Thirdly, that, whether Raoji obtained the properties after Jagoji''s death by survivorship or by inheritance, they became in Baoji''s hands
ancestral property, which could not be disposed of by will. For the Respondents it is contended that the document (Exhibit 100) is either a will or a
deed of gift and caused the properties to be self-acquired when they came into the possession of Raoji, whether during the life-time of Jagoji or
after his death, that no presumption of jointness can be made in the case, and that the properties must therefore be inferred to have been self-
acquired at the date of the will in 1917. It is also argued that the propositions of Hindu law set up for the Appellant are untenable and not
supported by either the text or cases and in fact are opposed to the fundamental notion of a Hindu co-parcenaxy which can only come into being
by birth with sapinda relationship as a test.
6. It is preferable clearly to decide the facts to which the law has to be applied. The document Exhibit 100 of 1878, before Raoji was born and
any dispute arose, was registered. The accuracy and truth of its contents are not questioned. The document runs as follows:
We have no legitimate son or daughter. We have kept your mother as a mistress since she was 12 or 13 years old and you have been born to her
and you are to us like our legitimate sons with right of heirship to our properties moveable and immoveable. But we have separated relatives who
have no claim whatever to our estate and perhaps after our death they might obstruct you and we therefore make this deed.
7. After enumerating and describing the properties the document proceeds:
Of all these properties above, you and I have been till now managing jointly and should so manage hereafter; and after my death both of you
should manage it in the same manner from generation to generation and from son to grandson.
8. This document is, in our opinion, clearly neither a will nor a deed of gift. It is a declaration of certain facts in regard to the properties and certain
rights both during the life-time of Jagoji and after. It is in fact a declaration that Jagoji''s other relatives have no claim on the properties, that Raoji
and Sakharam are his illegitimate sons by the mistress, whom he had kept for a long time, and have been treated by him exactly like his legitimate
sons living in a joint family, and that after his death these two alone are entitled to the properties.
9. Accordingly, the question arises as to what happened to the properties on his death. It is observable that there is no mention in the evidence that
the properties were ever actually divided by Raoji and Sakharam or that Sakharam ever lived separately from Raoji. On the contrary although
there is no evidence as to what happened to the fifth property, it appears that Raoji had been and was, until his death in 1917, in possession of four
out of the five properties. Coupling these facts with the facts recited in the deed, it appears to us a reasonable inference that Sakharam and Raoji in
fact lived together jointly after Jagoji''s death as they had been living before, and that they enjoyed the properties in exactly the same manner that
their father wished them to do.
10. As to the dates of Sakharam''s death and of the Plaintiff''s birth there is no evidence. In fairness to the Respondents and to take the most
favourable case from their point of view, it may be assumed that the Plaintiff was born after Sakharam died. The question arises as to the nature of
the properties, particularly, the properties A and C now in question, on the death of Jagoji.
11. In support of the proposition of law for the Appellants that a natural father and illegitimate sons could form and were a co-parcenary, there is
neither text nor case. The learned pleader for the Appellant relies on certain observations of Nanabhai Haridas J. in Sadu v. Baiza and Genu
(1878) 4 Bom. 37 at pp. 45, 46, 52. and argues that the proposition for which he contends is a logical inference from the proposition laid down in
that case. It has been frequently observed that no law is logical, least of all the Hindu law of succession and inheritance. The actual decision of the
Full Bench was merely that a legitimate and an illegitimate son who were joint and undivided in estate could succeed as co-parceners to their sudra
father''s property, the illegitimate son taking a half share of the legitimate son. On the other hand, the observations of their Lordships of the Privy
Council in Jogendro Bhupati Hurrochundra Mahapatra v. Nityanand Man Sing (1890) 18 Cal. 151 at p. 155, P.C. approving of the Bombay case
above, are opposed to the argument for the Appellant. After quoting the verses of the Mitakshara Ch. I, Section 12, their Lordships observe as
follows (p. 155):
Now it is observable that the first verse shows that during the life-time of the father, the law leaves the son to take a share by his father''s choice,
and it cannot be said that at his birth he acquires any right to share in the estate in the same way as a legitimate son would do.
12. If it is the essence of a co-parcenary that the right comes into existence with, from and because of birth, these observations are fatal to the
argument for the Appellant. In the Full Bench decision Ishwar Dadu v. Gajaibai (1925) 50 Bom. 468 at pp. 527-528. I have pointed out the
distinctions between, firstly, the principle of law, secondly, the ratio decidendi, and thirdly, the observations in the judgment, which last are not
binding. In any case, speaking for ourselves, we are not prepared to take the further step in law we are invited for the Appellant to take in this
appeal, and to hold that, because an illegitimate brother succeeds to the property in preference to the widow of the deceased legitimate brother
and in this sense forms a co-parcenary with the latter, therefore a father and his illegitimate sons living with him, such as Jagoji with Raoji and
Sakharam in the manner recited in Exhibit 100, are members of a joint Hindu family in the only legal sense in which the term is used, with all its
Jegal implications and consequences; or that Jagoji had such a power in law which he could exercise. But on the death of Jagoji the position was,
in our opinion, altered. Assuming that Raoji and Sakharam each took one-half, it is not proved that they separated or lived otherwise than they had
lived before in Jagoji''s life-time. The two brothers after Jagoji''s death formed, in our opinion, a joint Hindu family in regard to the properties in the
deed which they inherited from Jagoji; if so, whatever the date of the Appellant''s Tjirth, even if it was after the death of Sakharam, the properties
in suit were joint family properties in the life-time of Sakharam, and they remained so after Sakharam''s death; and even if the Plaintiff was born
afterwards, Raoji had no power to dispose of them by will.
13. In this view the decree of the trial Court was in our opinion right. The appeal is allowed, the decree of the lower appellate Court set aside, and
the decree of the trial Court restored with costs throughout against the Defendants-Respondents.