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Can an Oral Family Settlement Decide Property Rights? Delhi High Court Says Yes

Unregistered Memorandum Merely Recording Earlier Family Settlement Is Valid, Delhi High Court Restores Property Possession

Facts

Dhanpat Rai Gupta, Kashmiri Lal Gupta, Ram Gopal Gupta and Raghu Nath Gupta were four brothers who jointly purchased approximately 18 bighas and 6 biswas of land in Village Pipal Thala, Delhi, in 1954.

A substantial portion of the land was later developed into residential plots and sold. Approximately 1,300 square yards remained for the brothers’ personal use.

Dhanpat Rai claimed that the brothers entered into an oral family settlement under which each brother received a separate portion. The arrangement was later recorded in a memorandum in October 1986 and accompanied by a site plan identifying the shares of the four brothers.

According to Dhanpat Rai, the family settlement was acted upon through separate possession, construction, development-charge payments, house-tax assessments and electricity connections.

Dhanpat Rai claimed that two shops marked “A” and “B,” together with the adjoining area marked “AA,” fell to his share. His son used Shop B as a Chartered Accountant’s office, while Shop A remained vacant. Kashmiri Lal, being his brother, was occasionally permitted to use Shop A temporarily for storage.

Dhanpat Rai alleged that Kashmiri Lal later attempted to assert ownership over Shop A and, during the pendency of an injunction suit, forcibly dispossessed him from Shop A and the adjoining portion AA on the night of 20 February 1992.

He therefore filed a suit seeking possession, damages and injunction. In the alternative, he sought partition.

Ram Gopal Gupta and the legal heirs of Raghu Nath Gupta supported Dhanpat Rai’s case and admitted the family settlement. Kashmiri Lal denied it and claimed that the disputed portions had always belonged to him.

The Civil Judge accepted Dhanpat Rai’s case and decreed possession. However, the First Appellate Court reversed that decree, holding that the alleged family settlement and exclusive allotment of the disputed portions had not been sufficiently proved.

Dhanpat Rai then filed a Regular Second Appeal before the Delhi High Court.

Issues

  1. Whether the four brothers had partitioned the remaining property through an oral family settlement.
  2. Whether the memorandum executed in October 1986 merely recorded an earlier family arrangement or itself created rights in the property.
  3. Whether the memorandum required compulsory registration under the Registration Act, 1908.
  4. Whether the disputed Shop A and adjoining portion AA fell exclusively to Dhanpat Rai’s share.
  5. Whether the parties had acted upon the family settlement through separate possession, construction, electricity connections, development charges and municipal records.
  6. Whether Kashmiri Lal’s possession over the disputed portions was lawful or resulted from forcible dispossession.
  7. Whether the First Appellate Court ignored material evidence while reversing the Trial Court’s decree.
  8. Whether the findings of the First Appellate Court were perverse and gave rise to a substantial question of law under Section 100 CPC.

Petitioner’s Arguments

Dhanpat Rai Gupta, the appellant-plaintiff, argued that the First Appellate Court had wrongly reversed a well-reasoned decree based on substantial documentary and oral evidence.

He submitted that:

He sought restoration of the decree directing delivery of possession.

Respondent’s Arguments

The respondents supporting Kashmiri Lal’s case argued that Dhanpat Rai was attempting to reopen factual findings under the guise of substantial questions of law.

They contended that:

Analysis of the Law

Family Settlements Are Favoured in Law

The High Court emphasised that bona fide family arrangements are generally upheld because they preserve peace, avoid litigation and settle competing claims among relatives.

A family settlement may be valid even where the parties’ legal rights are disputed, doubtful or imperfectly understood, provided the arrangement is genuine and intended to resolve family differences.

The consideration for such an arrangement is the expectation of peace, goodwill and finality within the family.

Oral Family Settlement Does Not Require Registration

The Court distinguished between:

An oral family settlement does not require registration.

A later memorandum recording an already completed arrangement also does not require registration if it serves only as evidence of the earlier settlement and does not itself create the rights.

Registration becomes compulsory only where the written instrument is the operative document through which rights are created or transferred for the first time.

Nature of the 1986 Memorandum

The Court found that the October 1986 memorandum recorded an arrangement already implemented by the brothers.

It stated that the property had been divided by metes and bounds through their conduct and recorded the respective areas accepted by each brother.

The accompanying site plan identified the individual portions in different colours.

The memorandum was therefore treated as a record of a past oral family settlement rather than the instrument creating the partition.

It was consequently admissible despite not being registered.

Conduct of Parties as Proof of Partition

The Court held that family settlements may be proved through the conduct of the parties.

Relevant circumstances included:

These acts were inconsistent with the property remaining jointly and undivided.

Evidentiary Effect of Admissions

The admissions of Ram Gopal Gupta and the legal heirs of Raghu Nath Gupta supported the family settlement.

The Court also considered Kashmiri Lal’s own records and cross-examination, including his acknowledgment that the brothers occupied separate portions.

Admissions in pleadings and official documents constituted relevant evidence and could not be ignored merely because the admitting parties did not later lead oral evidence.

Scope of Second Appeal

Under Section 100 CPC, the High Court ordinarily does not interfere with findings of fact.

However, interference is justified where the First Appellate Court:

The Court found that the First Appellate Court had overlooked substantial documentary evidence and had incorrectly rejected the family settlement.

Precedent Analysis

Mathuri Pullaiah v. Maturi Narasimham, AIR 1966 SC 1836

The Supreme Court recognised that family arrangements are intended to resolve disputes and maintain harmony among family members.

Even doubtful or disputed claims may form a valid basis for such an arrangement.

Ram Charan Das v. Girjanandini Devi, (1965) 3 SCR 841

The Supreme Court held that the expectation of family peace and goodwill constitutes sufficient consideration for a family settlement.

Once family members mutually recognise each other’s rights, the arrangement should ordinarily not be disturbed.

S. Shanmugam Pillai v. K. Shanmugam Pillai, (1973) 2 SCR 312

This decision reiterated that courts should lean in favour of family arrangements made to preserve peace and resolve disputes.

A genuine arrangement acted upon by the parties should not be lightly unsettled.

Sahu Madho Das v. Mukand Ram, AIR 1955 SC 481

The Supreme Court explained that a family settlement proceeds on the basis of antecedent claims or titles.

Each participant recognises the rights of the others and relinquishes claims beyond the portion accepted under the arrangement. Therefore, no separate conveyance is necessarily required.

Ram Gopal v. Tulshi Ram, AIR 1928 All 641 (FB)

The Full Bench held that a family arrangement may be oral and, where oral, no question of registration arises.

A subsequent writing requires registration only if it embodies and creates the settlement, not where it merely records a past transaction.

Kale v. Deputy Director of Consolidation, (1976) 3 SCC 119

The Supreme Court laid down the leading principles governing family settlements.

It held that:

The Delhi High Court treated this decision as directly governing the dispute.

Lt. Col. Gaj Singh Yadav v. Satish Chander Yadav, 1999 (51) DRJ 240

This Court held that where parties already have antecedent rights, a family settlement recognising or adjusting those rights does not necessarily require registration.

Registration is required where rights are created for the first time through the document itself.

Korukonda Chalapathi Rao v. Korukonda Annapurna Sampath Kumar, 2021 SCC OnLine SC 847

The Supreme Court held that a document merely recording past transactions does not require registration if it does not itself create, extinguish or declare rights in immovable property.

The High Court applied this principle to the 1986 memorandum.

Ravinder Kaur Grewal v. Manjit Kaur

The Supreme Court recognised that even an unregistered family arrangement may bind parties through estoppel where they have acted upon its terms.

The High Court relied upon this principle because the brothers had independently dealt with their allotted portions for years.

L.N. Aswathama v. P. Prakash, (2009) 13 SCC 229

The appellant relied upon this decision to argue that a First Appellate Court reversing a reasoned Trial Court finding must independently and comprehensively assess the evidence.

The High Court found that the First Appellate Court had failed to properly consider crucial documents.

Court’s Reasoning

The High Court found that the property could not reasonably be treated as continuing in joint possession.

The brothers had separately sold portions of the jointly purchased land through individual sale deeds. This itself indicated an earlier division or understanding regarding their shares.

The remaining approximately 1,300 square yards were also separately occupied and developed.

The memorandum of October 1986 expressly recorded the areas accepted by the four brothers. The site plan annexed to it identified their portions. Its execution and the signatures of the brothers were not effectively disputed.

The Court also relied upon independent acts showing implementation of the arrangement:

Dhanpat Rai’s portion contained Shops A and B and the adjoining area shown in yellow on the site plan.

The Court accepted his explanation that Shop A had remained vacant and was occasionally given to Kashmiri Lal for temporary storage because of the family relationship.

The subsequent occupation of Shop A and portion AA by Kashmiri Lal was therefore not evidence of ownership.

The High Court held that the First Appellate Court had ignored the memorandum, site plan, admissions and consistent conduct of the parties. Its conclusion that no partition had been proved was contrary to the record.

The Civil Judge had correctly found that the family settlement existed, that the disputed portions fell to Dhanpat Rai’s share and that Kashmiri Lal had unlawfully dispossessed him.

Conclusion

The Delhi High Court allowed the Regular Second Appeal.

It held that:

The judgment dated 17 September 2013 of the First Appellate Court was set aside.

The Civil Judge’s decree directing restoration of possession of Shop A and portion AA to Dhanpat Rai Gupta was restored.

Case Details

Case: Shri Dhanpat Rai Gupta v. Shri Kashmiri Lal Gupta & Others
Court: High Court of Delhi at New Delhi
Case Number: RSA 266/2013
Judge: Hon’ble Ms. Justice Neena Bansal Krishna
Date: 29 June 2026
Result: Regular Second Appeal allowed; First Appellate Court judgment set aside; Trial Court decree restoring possession of Shop A and portion AA to the appellant revived.

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