Please fill out the form below and we will get back to you as soon as possible.

“Women constitute half the world’s population, perform nearly two-thirds of its hours, receive one-tenth of world’s income and less than one hundredth of the property.” United Nation’s report.
It’s a historical stigma that the Indian society had also been living with, i.e., the discrimination of its women against male siblings/relatives. Daughter’s parents, from times immemorial, had been forced to pay huge amounts in dowry, to marry off their daughters or they be killed by Religious preachers, on the eve of their widowhood, to snatch away all the property left by her husband, in the name of Religious ceremony ‘SATI’.
We should thank the Britishers for mitigating the agony of the widows, who eradicated this inhuman practice of ‘Sati’. However, even for many years after Independence, our constitution, which propagates equality, could not stop discrimination on the basis of gender, in respect of Laws of inheritance.
Through this article, I intend to take you along the historical development of the inheritance rights of women, before and after the Hindu Succession Act, 1995, which governs the devolution of property among Hindus, then after the amendment in 2005.
Before 1956, Hindus were governed by property laws which varied from region to region and in some cases within the same region, from caste to caste.
The Hindu inheritance law was governed by majorly two schools. The Mitakshara school of succession, which was prevalent in most of north India, believed in the exclusive domain of male heirs. In contrast, the Dayabhaga system did not recognize inheritance rights by birth and both sons and daughters did not have rights to the property during their father’s lifetime.
With the advent of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, there was no change in the rights of Indian women. Till September 09, 2005, this disparity continued, till the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 was amended in 2005, allowing daughters an equal share in ancestral property.
Despite resistance from orthodox sections of Hindus, the Hindu Succession Act was enacted which came into force on June 17, 1956.
Under the Hindu law, a Hindu Undivided Family (HUF) is a body comprising of more than one person, all lineal descendants of a common ancestor. A HUF can be formed by people of Hindu, Jain, Sikh or Buddhist faith. In this article we will be discussing about the inheritance of such property.
Under the Hindu law, the rights of inheritance of ancestral and self-acquired properties are different, which are discussed under two following heads:
In the case of a self-acquired property, i.e., where a father has bought a piece of land or house with his own money. In this case, the father has the option to gift the property or will it to anyone he wants, and a daughter will not be able to raise an objection.
The ancestral property is defined as one that is inherited up to four generations of male lineage and should have remained undivided throughout this period. It is the one that is inherited up to four generations of male lineage, by natural succession and not by any other way. So, by law, a father could not will away such property to anyone he wanted to, or deprive anyone of his share in it.
Before the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, the women of the family, including the widows and daughters had a right of limited estate in the ancestral properties. they, as a moral obligation, could be maintained out of the returns of the property, but they did not have the right of alienation, nor could they seek partition thereof.
Members of the HUF, like daughters and mothers, had the right of maintenance from HUF property, as well as to get a share in the property of the HUF if partition of the HUF took place. While sons had absolute right over their father’s property, daughters enjoyed this right only until they got married. After marriage, a daughter became part of her husband’s family property.
However, until the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, was amended in 2005, the inheritance rights of property of sons and daughters were different. According to Hindu Succession Amendment Act, 2005, every daughter, whether married or unmarried, is considered a member of her father’s HUF and can even be appointed as ‘karta’ (the manager) of his HUF property, if she is the eldest in the family. The amendment now gives daughters the same rights, duties, liabilities and disabilities which were earlier limited only to sons. So, in such situations, a father cannot will such property to anyone he wants to. Now by birth, daughters have a share in the ancestral property.
Rights of women in different situations:
You may have queries of sorts as to rights of women in different situations, some of which are discussed as follows: –