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Family Law - Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma

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Himanshu SaxenaCreated: May 19, 2026Updated: May 19, 2026

βš–οΈ Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma


πŸ“Œ 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

πŸ‘‰ The issue was referred to a larger bench to settle the law.


βš–οΈ Issue

πŸ‘‰ Whether a daughter can claim coparcenary rights if:

  • The father died before the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 came into force?

πŸ§‘β€βš–οΈ Judgment

βœ” The Supreme Court held:

πŸ‘‰ A daughter is a coparcener by birth, just like a son

πŸ‘‰ Father’s existence on 9 Sept 2005 is NOT required


🧾 Reasoning

1. Birthright Principle

  • Coparcenary rights are acquired by birth, not by the father’s 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

πŸ“Œ Key Principles

πŸ‘‰ Daughter = Coparcener by birth πŸ‘‰ Equal rights and liabilities as son πŸ‘‰ Can:

  • Demand partition
  • Become Karta
  • Dispose of her share

πŸ‘‰ Father need not be alive in 2005


⚠️ Important Limitation

  • Applies only if:

    • Partition was not completed before 20 Dec 2004

🧠 Quick Table

Aspect Rule
Daughter’s status Coparcener by birth
Father alive in 2005 ❌ Not required
Nature of amendment Retroactive
Rights Equal to son
Partition before 2004 Not reopened

πŸ“Œ Conclusion

This case is a landmark in gender justice:

πŸ‘‰ It firmly establishes equal property rights for daughters πŸ‘‰ Removes ambiguity in law πŸ‘‰ Strengthens constitutional equality in Hindu succession