βοΈ Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma
π Facts
The case concerned coparcenary rights of daughters in a Joint Hindu Family (Mitakshara system).
There was confusion due to conflicting judgments:
- Prakash v. Phulavati β required father to be alive on 9 Sept 2005
- Danamma v. Amar β gave rights even if father was not alive
π The issue was referred to a larger bench to settle the law.
βοΈ Issue
π Whether a daughter can claim coparcenary rights if:
- The father died before the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 came into force?
π§ββοΈ Judgment
β The Supreme Court held:
π A daughter is a coparcener by birth, just like a son
π Fatherβs existence on 9 Sept 2005 is NOT required
π§Ύ Reasoning
1. Birthright Principle
- Coparcenary rights are acquired by birth, not by the fatherβs status
2. Nature of Amendment (2005)
The amendment is:
- Retroactive in operation
It confers rights based on existing birth, even if earlier events occurred
3. Equality Principle
- Ensures gender equality under constitutional values
- Removes historical discrimination against daughters
4. Overruling Conflicting Judgments
Clarified and settled the law by:
- Disapproving restrictive interpretation in Prakash v. Phulavati
π Key Principles
π Daughter = Coparcener by birth π Equal rights and liabilities as son π Can:
- Demand partition
- Become Karta
- Dispose of her share
π Father need not be alive in 2005
β οΈ Important Limitation
Applies only if:
- Partition was not completed before 20 Dec 2004
π§ Quick Table
| Aspect | Rule |
|---|---|
| Daughterβs status | Coparcener by birth |
| Father alive in 2005 | β Not required |
| Nature of amendment | Retroactive |
| Rights | Equal to son |
| Partition before 2004 | Not reopened |
π Conclusion
This case is a landmark in gender justice:
π It firmly establishes equal property rights for daughters π Removes ambiguity in law π Strengthens constitutional equality in Hindu succession

