Hindu Women's Rights To Property Act, 1937
3. Devolution of property
(1) When a Hindu governed by the Dayabhaga School of Hindu Law ... predeceased son. (2) When a Hindu governed by any school of Hindu law other than the Dayabhaga School or by customary law dies having
parties are governed by the Benares School and not by the Bombay School of Hindu law,
(2) The suit is barred by limitation ... Whether the parties are governed by the Benares School or by the Bombay School of Hindu law.
(5) Whether the plaintiffs suit is barred
that the parties
are governed by the Bombay School and not the Banaras School
,of Hindu Law and the plaintiff is the heir of Rajkhmaji ... that the parties are
governed by the Bombay School, and not the Banaras School,
of Hindu Law; the plaintiff is the heir of Rakhmaji
taking their personal law with them & that that personal law was the Hindu law according to the Bombay school, It may be
noted that ... them as also the Cts. of law administering the law unto them accepted the Bombay school of Hindu law as applicable to them, it would
held that the assessee was a Hindu governed by the Dayabhaga school of Hindu law and as such it could not be said that ... concept of a Hindu coparcenary, a Hindu joint joint family is a common feature of Hindu law of both the schools. .
14. By throwing
question there is no divergence between the Mitakshara School and the other schools of Hindu law, or between the different sections of the Mitakshara School ... different schools of Hindu law. The Mitakshara, which in these provinces regulates most questions of Hindu law, is itself only a commentary
Hindu Law, 1966 edition.
26. Joint Hindu family property as given in para. No. 220 of Mulla's Hindu Law, 1966 edition, means ... ancestral property under Hindu law as defined in para. 223 of Mulla's Hindu Law means property inherited by a male Hindu from his father
into four Schools, namely, (1) Banaras School; (2) Mithila School; and (3) Maharashtra or Bombay School; and (4) Dravida or Madras School ... preserve the texts, rules and interpretation of Hindu law as also customs and usages of Hindu law in this behalf intact and to make exceptions
dies intestate leaving any property, and when a Hindu governed by another school of Hindu law or by customary law dies intestate leaving separate property ... Hindu Women's Rights to Property Act applies to cases where a Hindu governed by the Dayabhaga school of Hindu law dies leaving
occurred very frequently in the Hindu Law. There are two Schools of Hindu Laws Mitakshara and Dayabhaga according to the former, co-parcenary property ... Principles of Hindu Law by D F Mulla, 12th Edition)
As under the Mitakshara Law so under Dayabhaga law co-parcenary property consists of ancestral