Skip to content
Drug Law India
  • Home
  • Blog
  • Syllabus
  • All Lectures
  • LL.B. 3 Years Course Material
    • First Year (NEP)
      • Constitutional Law-1
    • Subject Browser
    • Subjectwise Syllabus Topic Browser
    • Model Questions
  • Bare Acts
    • Bare Acts (Domain wise)
    • Bare Acts List
    • Bare Acts List by Categories

Home » Mitakshara vs Dayabhaga Schools of Hindu Law

Bare Act

133
  • Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005
  • Special Marriage Act, 1954
  • Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019
  • Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986
  • Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939
  • Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937
  • Family Courts Act, 1984
  • Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act 1965
  • Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956
  • Hindu Succession Act, 1956
  • Hindu Marriage Act, 1956
  • Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (Prevention and Control) Act, 2017
  • Mental Healthcare Act, 2017
  • The Transplant of Human Organs and Tissues Act, 1994
  • Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994
  • Protection of Human Rights, 1993
  • General Clauses Act, 1897
  • Constitution of India
  • Maharashtra Land Revenue Code, 1966
  • Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act, 1960
  • Maharashtra Stamp Act, 1958
  • Maharashtra Regional and Town Planning Act, 1966
  • Maharashtra Municipal Corporations Act, 1949
  • Maharashtra Public Trusts Act, 1950
  • Maharashtra Rent Control Act, 1999
  • Public Liability Insurance Act, 1991
  • Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2015
  • Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981
  • Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974
  • Environment Protection Act, 1986
  • Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001
  • Biological Diversity Act, 2002
  • Designs Act, 2000
  • Copyright Act, 1957
  • The Patents Act, 1970
  • Trade Marks Act, 1999
  • Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules, 2011
  • Legal Metrology Act, 2009
  • Income Tax Act, 1961
  • Indian Partnership Act, 1932
  • Companies Act, 2013
  • Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008
  • Right to Information Act, 2005
  • Sales of Goods Act, 1930
  • Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881
  • Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
  • Commercial Courts Act, 2015
  • Indian Contract Act, 1872
  • Specific Relief Act, 1963
  • Limitation Act, 1963
  • Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
  • Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023
  • Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023
  • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023
  • Consumer Protection Act, 2019
  • Biomedical Waste Management Rules, 2016
  • Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 with Rules
  • Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act, 1954
  • Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
  • Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971
  • National Medical Comission Act, 2019
  • Clinical Establishment (Registration and Regulation) Act
  • Pharmacy Practice Regulations
  • The Pharmacy Act, 1948
  • Cosmetic Rules, 2020
  • Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 with Rules 1945
  • Drug, Pharmacy and Healthcare Laws
    • Human Immunodeficiency Virus and Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (Prevention and Control) Act, 2017
    • Mental Healthcare Act, 2017
    • The Transplant of Human Organs and Tissues Act, 1994
    • Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (Prohibition of Sex Selection) Act, 1994
    • Biomedical Waste Management Rules, 2016
    • Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985 with Rules
    • Drugs and Magic Remedies (Objectionable Advertisements) Act, 1954
    • Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006
    • Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act, 1971
    • National Medical Comission Act, 2019
    • Clinical Establishment (Registration and Regulation) Act
    • Pharmacy Practice Regulations
    • The Pharmacy Act, 1948
    • Cosmetic Rules, 2020
    • Drugs and Cosmetics Act, 1940 with Rules 1945
  • Consumer, Product Liability and Medical Negligence Laws
    • Consumer Protection Act, 2019
  • Criminal Laws
    • Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023
    • Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita, 2023
    • Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023
  • Civil Litigation and Procedural Laws
    • Sales of Goods Act, 1930
    • Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881
    • Arbitration and Conciliation Act, 1996
    • Commercial Courts Act, 2015
    • Indian Contract Act, 1872
    • Specific Relief Act, 1963
    • Limitation Act, 1963
    • Code of Civil Procedure, 1908
  • Constitutional and Administrative Law
    • Protection of Human Rights, 1993
    • General Clauses Act, 1897
    • Constitution of India
    • Right to Information Act, 2005
  • Intellectual Property and Pharmaceutical Innovation
    • Protection of Plant Varieties and Farmers’ Rights Act, 2001
    • Biological Diversity Act, 2002
    • Copyright Act, 1957
    • The Patents Act, 1970
    • Trade Marks Act, 1999
  • Business, Taxation and Compliance Laws
    • Designs Act, 2000
    • Legal Metrology (Packaged Commodities) Rules, 2011
    • Legal Metrology Act, 2009
    • Income Tax Act, 1961
    • Indian Partnership Act, 1932
    • Companies Act, 2013
    • Limited Liability Partnership Act, 2008
  • Environment, Public Health and Safety Laws
    • Public Liability Insurance Act, 1991
    • Hazardous and Other Wastes (Management and Transboundary Movement) Rules, 2015
    • Biomedical Waste Management Rules, 2016
    • Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1981
    • Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974
    • Environment Protection Act, 1986
  • Maharashtra State Laws
    • Maharashtra Land Revenue Code, 1966
    • Maharashtra Co-operative Societies Act, 1960
    • Maharashtra Stamp Act, 1958
    • Maharashtra Regional and Town Planning Act, 1966
    • Maharashtra Municipal Corporations Act, 1949
    • Maharashtra Public Trusts Act, 1950
    • Maharashtra Rent Control Act, 1999
  • Family and Personal Laws
    • Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005
    • Special Marriage Act, 1954
    • Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Marriage) Act, 2019
    • Muslim Women (Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act, 1986
    • Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939
    • Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act, 1937
    • Family Courts Act, 1984
    • Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act 1965
    • Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956
    • Hindu Succession Act, 1956
    • Hindu Marriage Act, 1956

Constitutional Law-1

26
  • List of Leading Cases in Constitutional Law-I
  • Historical Background to the Framing of the Indian Constitution
  • Preamble — Nature and Significance
  • Salient Features of the Constitution of India
  • Citizenship under the Indian Constitution [Part-II: Article 5-11]
  • State: Definition and Judicial Interpretation [Part-III: Article 12]
  • Judicial Review
  • Doctrine of Eclipse
  • Doctrine of Severability
  • Doctrine of Waiver (Rejected Doctrine)
  • Article 14: “Equality before law” vs “Equal protection of laws”
  • Arbitrariness
  • Reasonable Classification (Article 14) — Meaning and Test
  • Article 15 and Discrimination with Special Emphasis on Gender Discrimination
  • Freedom of Speech and its Resonable Restriction with special reference to Press and Media
  • Ex Post Facto Law, Its Prohibition and Rights of the Accused
  • Freedom of Movement: Meaning, Scope, and its Reasonable Restrictions
  • Right to Life and Liberty (Article 21)
  • Preventive Detention
  • Prohibition of Forced Labour and Child Labour
  • Secularism: A Indian Constitutional Law Perspective
  • Freedom of Religion (Articles 25–28)
  • Cultural Rights and Right to Minorities
  • Right to Education (RTE) in Indian Constitutional Law
  • Constitutional Remedies – Right to move Courts
  • Public Interest Litigation (PIL) in India — Origin, Scope, Purpose & Transformative Cases

Law of Torts

22
  • List of Leading Cases in Law of Torts
  • Evolution of Law of Torts, Common Law developments
  • Principles of Justice ,Equity and Good Conscience
  • Nature, Scope, Characteristics and Objects of Law of Torts
  • Distinction between Tort and Contract, Tort and Crime
  • Essential elements of Torts
  • Principles of Liability: Fault & No-fault Liability
  • Malfeasance, Misfeasance & Non-feasance
  • Motive, Intention, and Malice (Rea) in Tort Law
  • Justifications & General Defences In Tort
  • Extinguishment of Liability in the Law of Torts (Mechanisms of Discharge)
  • Capacity and Parties in Tort Law: Who May Sue and Who May Not Be Sued
  • The Tort of Defamation: Principles, Elements, and Defences
  • Trespass to Land and Trespass to Person: Principles, Elements, and Advanced Concepts
  • Negligence, Doctrine of Contributory Negligence, and Res Ipsa Loquitur
  • Nuisance: Public and Private: Principles, Elements, and Defences
  • State’s Liability and The Doctrine of Sovereign Immunity
  • Vicarious Liability
  • Strict Liability and Absolute Liability
  • The Doctrine of Causation
  • Remoteness of Damages
  • Judicial and Extra-Judicial Remedies in the Law of Torts

Law of Contract-1

21
  • List of Leading Cases covered in Law of Contract-I
  • Agreement vs Contract
  • What is Offer (Proposal)? What is Invitation to Treat / Invitation to Offer?
  • Acceptance and Essentials of Valid Acceptance
  • Consideration in a Contract
  • Competency to Contract
  • Consent and Free Consent
  • Unit-II
  • Contingent Contracts
  • Wagering Agreements
  • E-Contracts (Electronic Contracts)
  • Privity of Consideration
  • Doctrine of Privity of Contract
  • Privity of Contract vs Privity of Consideration
  • Legality of Object and Consideration
  • Agreement in Restraint of the Marriage
  • Performace and Discharge of Contract
  • Breach of Contract and Types of Breach
  • Remedies for Breach of Contract with Special Reference to Damage
  • Specific Performance as an Equitable Remedy
  • Injunctions

Family Law-1 (Hindu Law)

24
  • List of Leading Cases in Family Law-I (Hindu Law)
  • Who is a Hindu? Sources of Hindu Law
  • Mitakshara vs Dayabhaga Schools of Hindu Law
  • Doctrine of Pious Obligation in Ancient Hindu Law — Origin, Evolution, and Present Position
  • Key Sections of All 4 Hindu Acts
  • Registration of Hindu Marriages
  • Restitution of Conjugal Rights (RCR)
  • Judicial Separation (Section 9 – HMA)
  • Divorce under Hindu Law
  • Divorce by Mutual Consent (13B HMA)
  • Judicial Separation vs Divorce
  • Maintenance pendente lite under the Hindu Marriage Act (Section 24)
  • Permanent Alimony under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (Section 25)
  • Family Courts Act, 1984
  • Role of NGOs and Lok Adalats in matrimonial dispute resolution in India
  • Dependents under HAMA, 1956
  • Maintenance of a Widowed Daughter-in-Law under Hindu Law
  • Capacity to give and Capacity to take for Adotion as per HAMA
  • Gifts, Wills, and Testamentary Succession
  • Devolution of property when a Hindu male dies intestate
  • Devolution of property when a Hindu Male dies intestate (presentation)
  • Devolution of property when a Hindu female dies intestate
  • Types of guardians under the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956 (HMGA)
  • Uniform Civil Code: Constitutional Vision, Personal Laws and Judicial Discourse

Legal Language & Legal Writing

2
  • What is Law? Objectives of Law. Legal Terms and Legal Maxims. Model Synopsis (Q & A).
  • Legal Terms and Legal Maxims (Presentation)

Constitutional Law-2

4
  • Question and Answer Bank for Constitutional Law-II
  • Constitutional Law II notes
  • Summary of Articles in Constitutional Law-II for rapid revision
  • Comparison table of President and Governor for quick revision

Law of Crimes

4
  • Offences by and Against a Public Servant
  • BNS: Revision of important provisions
  • Law of crimes brief notes
  • Brief notes on Company Law

Family Law-2 (Muslim Law)

2
  • Notes on Muslim law
  • Question and Answers Bank for Muslim law

Law of Contract-2

1
  • Notes for Law of Contract II

Company Law

1
  • Company Law
View Categories

Mitakshara vs Dayabhaga Schools of Hindu Law

3 min read

Mitakshara School (Vijnaneshwara)Dayabhaga School (Jimutavahana)
Nature of text: Commentary on Yajnavalkya SmritiNature of text: Digest—collects, reconciles and systematises Smriti rules
Basis of inheritance: Apratibandha daya (unobstructed heritage)Basis of inheritance: Sapratibandha daya (obstructed heritage)
When right arises: By birthWhen right arises: On father’s death
Coparcenary: Arises by birth (traditionally male line; daughters coparceners after 2005)Coparcenary: Generally arises after death when heirs inherit jointly
Right to demand partition: Son can demand during father’s lifetimeSon cannot demand partition during father’s lifetime
Father’s power of alienation: Limited—only for legal necessity / benefit of estate / indispensable dutiesWide/near-absolute power of disposal (no birth-right of sons)
Survivorship: Applies to coparcenary property (subject to statutory changes)Not applied in the same way; property devolves mainly by succession
Ancestral vs separate property: Clear and strict distinctionDistinction less rigid; inheritance generally opens after death
Guiding principle of inheritance: Traditionally linked with spiritual benefit / religious efficacyBased more on blood relationship & propinquity
Mode of partition: Per stirpes (branch-wise)Per capita (equal shares to each heir)
Widow’s position (classical): Not a coparcener; no share by partition during husband’s lifetimeWidow can inherit husband’s share (succession-based)
Territorial application: Most of India (except Bengal-dominant regions)Mainly West Bengal and parts of Assam/Tripura (traditional position)
Sub-schools: Benaras, Mithila, Maharashtra, Dravida (Madras) etc.Broadly one main Bengal school (not like multiple Mitakshara sub-schools)

A. Mitakshara School – Key Case Laws #

1) Appovier (Seetaramier) v. Rama Subba Aiyan (1866) (Privy Council) #

Aspect: Partition / severance of status in Mitakshara coparcenary

  • Facts: A Hindu undivided family’s property was claimed to still be joint. The defence relied on a deed of division showing the family intended to hold property in defined shares.
  • Issue: What amounts to a valid partition under Mitakshara—does it require physical division, or is clear intention to separate enough?
  • Held: Intention to separate (division of status/rights) is the real test; partition can be effective even before metes-and-bounds division.

2) Musammat Girja Bai v. Sadashiv Dhundiraj (1916) (Privy Council) #

Aspect: Unilateral severance of coparcenary (Mitakshara)

  • Facts: A member of a Mitakshara joint family sought declaration of his share and partition. The question arose whether his conduct (notice/suit) created severance in status, affecting succession rights (including a widow’s claim).
  • Issue: Does an unequivocal declaration (including filing a partition suit) by one coparcener sever the joint status, even if others don’t agree?
  • Held: Yes. A coparcener can separate by a clear, communicated intention; institution of a partition suit is strong evidence of such intention and can bring severance in status.

3) Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) (Supreme Court) #

Aspect: Mitakshara coparcenary + daughter’s right “by birth” (Section 6, HSA as amended 2005)

  • Facts: A daughter claimed coparcenary rights in joint family property against male members; dispute involved how the 2005 amendment to Section 6 applies.
  • Issue: Whether a daughter becomes a coparcener by birth, and whether the 2005 amendment applies only prospectively or also to daughters born before 2005.
  • Held: Daughter is a coparcener by birth like a son; the amendment is retroactive (rights can be claimed after 9-9-2005, subject to statutory savings for past partitions/alienations).

4) CWT v. Chander Sen (1986) #

Aspect: Effect of Hindu Succession Act, 1956 on “ancestral/joint family” character (Mitakshara context)

  • Facts (Chander Sen): Question was whether property inherited by a son from his father after 1956 is HUF property (so assessable as HUF) or individual property.
  • Issue: Does inheritance under Section 8, HSA 1956 automatically create/continue Mitakshara coparcenary in the son’s hands (giving grandsons birth-right)?
  • Held: Under Section 8, the son takes as individual owner, not as karta of an HUF vis-à-vis his own children.

B. Dayabhaga School – Key Case Laws #

1) Jatindra Mohan Tagore v. Ganendra Mohan Tagore (Tagore v. Tagore) (1872) (Privy Council) #

Aspect: Dayabhaga + testamentary power: cannot create new line of succession / estates unknown to Hindu law

  • Facts: A Hindu (Bengal/Dayabhaga context) made a will attempting to create successive limited interests (life interests/“tail male”-type limitations), effectively trying to control inheritance in a way resembling English “estate tail”.
  • Issue: Can a Hindu, by will, create new forms of estate or alter the course of succession beyond what Hindu law recognises (e.g., “estate tail”, remote unborn lines, primogeniture-like limits)?
  • Held: Such “tail male”/non-Hindu law limitations are void; testamentary disposition cannot create an inheritance scheme unknown to Hindu law—succession must conform to Hindu law rules.

2) Moniram Kolita v. Keri Kolitani (1880) (Calcutta High Court) #

Aspect: Dayabhaga/Bengal school: widow’s estate and forfeiture for unchastity

  • Facts: A dispute under the Bengal (Dayabhaga) school on whether a widow who had inherited her husband’s estate would forfeit it due to alleged unchastity, and whether a statutory bar applied.
  • Issue: Under Bengal/Dayabhaga Hindu law, does unchastity divest a widow of the estate after she has once inherited?
  • Held: Once the widow has succeeded to the estate, unchastity does not forfeit/divest that inherited estate (as applied by the court in that Bengal-school context).
Updated on 20 January 2026
Dayabhaga School Family Law I (Hindu Law) Mitakshara School

What are your Feelings

  • Happy
  • Normal
  • Sad

Share This Article :

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
Who is a Hindu? Sources of Hindu LawDoctrine of Pious Obligation in Ancient Hindu Law — Origin, Evolution, and Present Position

Powered by BetterDocs

Leave a comment Cancel reply

Table of Contents
  • A. Mitakshara School – Key Case Laws
    • 1) Appovier (Seetaramier) v. Rama Subba Aiyan (1866) (Privy Council)
    • 2) Musammat Girja Bai v. Sadashiv Dhundiraj (1916) (Privy Council)
    • 3) Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) (Supreme Court)
    • 4) CWT v. Chander Sen (1986)
  • B. Dayabhaga School – Key Case Laws
    • 1) Jatindra Mohan Tagore v. Ganendra Mohan Tagore (Tagore v. Tagore) (1872) (Privy Council)
    • 2) Moniram Kolita v. Keri Kolitani (1880) (Calcutta High Court)

© 2026 Drug Law India. All rights reserved.

Drug Law India is an independent legal education platform providing information on Indian drug laws, pharmaceutical regulations, public health laws, case law, bare acts, and legal learning resources.
The content on this website is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice, medical advice, pharmaceutical advice, or regulatory consultancy.

About | Contact | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Terms of Use