The Kerala High Court ruled that a daughter born within four months of marriage is a legitimate child and entitled to an equal share in her father’s property. The Court relied on legal presumptions, conduct of the father, and strong documentary evidence to overturn a trial court decree.
Grants Equal Share to Daughter in Property: Kerala High Court ruled that a daughter born within four months of marriage is a legitimate child and cannot be denied inheritance. The Court relied on legal presumptions, conduct of the father, and documentary proof to grant her equal property rights.
The Kerala High Court has held that a daughter born within four months of her parents’ marriage is legally entitled to an equal share in her deceased father’s property. In its judgment dated 19.12.2025, the Court set aside a preliminary partition decree which had wrongly excluded the daughter from inheritance and reaffirmed that legitimacy cannot be denied merely because the child was born soon after marriage.
The Court clarified that statutory presumptions under the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, when read with oral and documentary evidence, are sufficient to establish legitimacy and paternity.
The Division Bench comprising Justice Sathish Ninan and Justice P. Krishna Kumar allowed a Regular First Appeal filed by the widow and children of a deceased man against a partition decree passed by the Sub Court, Chavakkad.
The dispute arose from a suit for partition of properties left behind by Krishnan, who died intestate in December 2012. The core issue was whether the second plaintiff, a daughter born on 12.05.2001 within four months of the marriage between her mother and Krishnan, could be treated as his legitimate child and thus entitled to a share in his estate.
While the widow and three children claimed equal rights as Class I heirs, Krishnan’s mother disputed the paternity of the second plaintiff, alleging that the child could not have been conceived within the marriage and denying any premarital relationship.
The trial court accepted the defence version and held that the plaintiffs had failed to prove paternity. As a result, it ordered partition only among the widow, two children, and Krishnan’s mother, completely excluding the second plaintiff. This finding was challenged before the High Court.
Before the High Court, the appellants relied on oral evidence, documentary records, and statutory presumptions. A key witness, the father of the first plaintiff, stated that Krishnan had accepted responsibility for the pregnancy even before the marriage and had always treated the second plaintiff as his daughter. He further testified that when objections were raised before the marriage, Krishnan openly acknowledged his paternity in the presence of his parents.
The High Court held that the trial court was wrong in rejecting this testimony on the ground that it was not “direct evidence“. The Bench explained that statements made by a deceased person regarding blood relationships are relevant and admissible under Section 32(5) of the Evidence Act if made before the dispute arose and if the person had special knowledge of the relationship. Since Krishnan had passed away, his acknowledgments could lawfully be proved through witnesses who had heard them.
The Court also relied on Section 50 of the Evidence Act, which makes conduct showing opinion about a relationship a relevant fact. It noted that Krishnan’s consistent conduct—acknowledging the child, supporting official documentation, and treating her as his daughter—clearly reflected his belief about paternity.
The Bench referred to settled principles laid down by the Supreme Court of India, holding that such conduct can be proved through witnesses who observed it.
Apart from oral evidence, the High Court examined documentary materials such as the child’s passport and Krishnan’s pension records, both of which recorded the second plaintiff as his daughter. Though these documents were only tentatively marked before the trial court, the High Court allowed production of the originals at the appellate stage, finding them directly relevant to deciding paternity.
Most importantly, the Court stressed the conclusive presumption under Section 112 of the Evidence Act. It clarified that a child born during the subsistence of a valid marriage is presumed to be legitimate unless non-access between the spouses at the relevant time is strictly proved.
The Bench made it clear that this presumption does not fail merely because conception may have taken place before marriage. To rebut it, the opposing party must prove that the spouses had no access to each other at any time when the child could have been begotten.
In the present case, the Court found that the defendants failed to discharge this heavy burden. The oral testimony of the first defendant was found to be a bare denial without any supporting evidence. In contrast, the plaintiffs had clearly established access between the spouses and consistent acknowledgment by the father. The Bench observed that the trial court committed a serious legal error by refusing to apply Section 112 solely on the ground that the child was conceived before marriage.
Holding that the second plaintiff was a legitimate daughter of Krishnan, the Kerala High Court ruled that she is entitled to an equal share in the property along with the other Class I heirs. The appeal was allowed, and the preliminary decree was modified to divide the properties into five equal shares, granting one share each to the widow, all three children, and Krishnan’s mother.
Explanatory Table: Laws and Sections Applied in This Case
| Law / Statute | Section | What the Law Says (Simple Explanation) | How the Court Used It |
| Indian Evidence Act, 1872 | Section 32(5) | Statements made by a deceased person about blood, marriage, or family relationships are relevant if made before the dispute and if the person had special knowledge | The Court accepted the deceased father’s statements acknowledging the child as his daughter, proved through a witness |
| Indian Evidence Act, 1872 | Section 50 | Opinion about a relationship, shown through conduct of a person having special knowledge, is relevant evidence | The father’s conduct of treating the child as his daughter, supporting documents, and defending the pregnancy proved paternity |
| Indian Evidence Act, 1872 | Section 60 | Oral evidence must be direct; facts seen or heard can be proved by the person who saw or heard them | Witness testimony about the father’s conduct and statements was held admissible |
| Indian Evidence Act, 1872 | Section 112 | A child born during a valid marriage is conclusively presumed legitimate unless non-access between spouses is strictly proved | The Court held that birth within four months of marriage does not defeat legitimacy |
| Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 | Order XLI Rule 27 | Allows additional evidence in appeal if necessary for justice | Original passport and pension records were allowed at appellate stage |
| Hindu Succession Act, 1956 | Class I Heirs (general principle) | Widow, children, and mother inherit equally when a person dies intestate | The daughter was held entitled to equal share as a Class I heir |
Case Sumamry
- Court: Kerala High Court
- Case Title: Sujatha Krishnan & Ors. vs Radha Mohandas & Ors.
- Case Number: R.F.A. No. 290 of 2019
- Date of Judgment: 19 December 2025
- Neutral Citation: 2025:KER:97956
- Bench: Justice Sathish Ninan and Justice P. Krishna Kumar
- Counsels:
- For Appellants (Plaintiffs):
- Sri. R. Sreehari
- Sri. Sachin Vyas
- Sri. P. B. Krishnan (Senior Advocate)
- For Respondents (Defendants):
- Sri. M. P. Ashok Kumar
- Smt. Bindu Sreedhar
- Sri. Asif N
- For Appellants (Plaintiffs):
Key Takeaways
- Law protects biological truth over social prejudice — a child born soon after marriage cannot be disowned merely on suspicion or family pressure.
- A father’s acknowledgment, conduct, and official records carry strong legal value and cannot be brushed aside by oral denials.
- Section 112 of the Evidence Act is conclusive — legitimacy stands unless strict proof of non-access is shown, not emotional allegations.
- Trial courts must not punish men’s families by ignoring settled evidence law and Supreme Court precedents.
- Equal inheritance rights must be decided by law and proof, not by stigma around premarital relationships.
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