none-the-less not a co-parcener. She wants to blend her property with the co-parcenary property of the joint family ... co-parcener acquires an interest by birth. The co-parcenary interest is therefore fluctuating with births and deaths. The co-parcener who allows his property
Customary Law which entitled a wife to seek maintenance from
co-parcenary property was no longer available. The learned
Single Judge concluded that the question ... right to claim
maintenance against their grandfather as well as co-parcenary
property in the control of defendant No.2/respondent
alia ignores the existences of co-parcenary under Dayabhaga school of Hindu law that the expression 'co-parcenary property' not having been defined ... used in broadest sense as meaning property other than self-acquired property and thus ancestral property is co-parcenary property and that the trial Court
enforceable, as the land, in dispute, was the co-parcenary property, qua
them, and Gurdev Singh, defendant No. 1, had already wasted the co-
parcenary ... natural succession/descent,
is the co-parcenary property, and the other property, is non-ancestral
property. Similar principle of law, was laid down
properties as any property acquired wit the aid of
impartible estate would become joint property with
all the incidents of co-parcenary attached ... owner of the said property
exclusively and those properties have never become
joint Hindu family properties or co-parcenary
properties.
There was also the counter
grand-son constitutes ancestral co-parcenary property. Thus, it
was proved, that the property, in dispute, was the ancestral co-
parcenary property, in the hands ... co-parcenary, in the hands of the male
holder. It, therefore, could not be said, that the entire concept of the co-
parcenary property
same.
I. Whether the suit property was a self acquired property of Sh.
Janardhan Gupta or was a coparcenary property?
II. Whether the execution ... above.
I. Whether the suit property was a self acquired property of Sh.
Janardhan Gupta or was a coparcenary property
both plaint A and B schedule properties were
self acquired properties of Krishnayyan and hence not co-parcenary and
the plaintiff have no right ... co-parcenary property, it would be treated as a separate property. But
once a son is born, the concept of a property being co-parcenary
both plaint A and B schedule properties were
self acquired properties of Krishnayyan and hence not co-parcenary and
the plaintiff have no right ... co-parcenary property, it would be treated as a separate property. But
once a son is born, the concept of a property being co-parcenary
co-parceners has no right whatsoever to gift the co-parcenary
property without consent of other co-parceners. He relied upon the judgment ... daughters of a co-parcener by birth cannot become a
co-parcener or claim any right in the co-parcenary property. In the present
case