ground that the erstwhile State of Patiala was an impartible estate and that this fund was being paid out of the income of the holder ... behalf of the appellant that the State of Patiala was an impartible estate of the property of the joint Hindu family of which the appellant
rule of primogeniture was abrogated, the impartibility of the property ceased to subsist and. thus, the impartible estate of the former ruler of Patiala ceased ... with the passing of the Hindu Succession Act , the impartibility of all the impartible estates has been done away with except those given in Section
succeed to the entire estate of her father Raja
Harinder Singh Brar even assuming (without admitting) that the
same is impartible. Since the plaintiff ... therefore, the plaintiff
claimed that she is entitled to succeed the entire estate of her
father. In alternative and without prejudice to the aforesaid
Singh and the Privy Purse received by him formed part of impartible estate
inherited by him and thus belonged to his Hindu Undivided Family ... immoveable property
of Maharaja Yadindra singh form part of the impartible estate inherited by
him and belong to his Hindu Undivided family. It was further
Singh and the Privy Purse received by him formed part of impartible estate
inherited by him and thus belonged to his Hindu Undivided Family ... immoveable property
of Maharaja Yadindra singh form part of the impartible estate inherited by
him and belong to his Hindu Undivided family. It was further
Singh and the Privy Purse received by him formed part of impartible estate
inherited by him and thus belonged to his Hindu Undivided Family ... immoveable property
of Maharaja Yadindra singh form part of the impartible estate inherited by
him and belong to his Hindu Undivided family. It was further
Singh and the Privy Purse received by him formed part of impartible estate
inherited by him and thus belonged to his Hindu Undivided Family ... immoveable property
of Maharaja Yadindra singh form part of the impartible estate inherited by
him and belong to his Hindu Undivided family. It was further
Bihar, AIR 1951 Pat 626 (Z4). That case
related to an impartible estate in Bihar under the management of the Court of
Wards ... that the petitioner had no reversionary or immediate
interest in the impartible estate. It was held that the proceeding in which the
above contentions were
Rangarao, the father of the appellant, was the holder of an impartible estate called the "Munogala Estate" in the Krishna District
four brothers, representing a zamindari which he alleged to be an impartible estate vested in him alone. He, however, joined his brothers as pro forma ... raised there that the appellant having not established that the zamindari was impartible, he could not recover more than the quarter share of the damages