Tag: probate law

Supreme Court : Wife as Attesting Witness Does Not Invalidate a Will
Supreme Court

Supreme Court : Wife as Attesting Witness Does Not Invalidate a Will

The Supreme Court held that the High Court erred in framing an additional substantial question of law under Section 100(5) CPC without foundational pleadings, issues, or recorded reasons. A will, once duly executed and proved, must be given effect to, and succession cannot be reopened on a new legal case at the second appeal stage. The testamentary disposition was upheld. Facts Of The Case: The case concerns a dispute over the estate of C.R. Pius and Philomina Pius. The couple executed a registered joint will in 2003, bequeathing their properties to their son, C.P. Francis (the Appellant), subject to the condition that he pay specific monetary sums to his siblings. After the parents' deaths, the other children (Respondents) filed a suit for partition, claiming their parents died intestat...
How a Missing Detail in a Will Led to Its Rejection by the Supreme Court
Supreme Court

How a Missing Detail in a Will Led to Its Rejection by the Supreme Court

The Supreme Court ruled that a Will omitting the testator’s wife without justification raises suspicious circumstances, vitiating its validity under Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, and Section 68 of the Evidence Act, 1872. The Court emphasized that propounders must explain unnatural exclusions to prove the testator’s free will, failing which the Will becomes invalid. Suspicion arises from non-mention of a natural heir (wife) and lack of reasons for disinheritance, shifting the burden to the propounder to dispel doubts. Registration and signatures alone cannot override such irregularities if the disposition appears coerced or influenced. The judgment reaffirms judicial scrutiny of Wills to ensure genuine voluntary execution. Facts Of The Case: Maya Singh owned agricultural ...