execution of agreement to sell and purchase
TRANSCRIPT
EXECUTION OF AGREEMENT TO SELL AND PURCHASE, SALE
DEED, PARTNERSHIP DEED AND WILL
Subject: Clinic- II
Submitted To: Prof. Jagbir Singh Dahiya
Submitted By: Sameer Dawar (2008-55)
Sarvjeet Singh (2008-56)
IV Year-VIII Semester
B.A., LL.B (Hons.)
National Law University, Delhi
Table of Contents
Page(s)
List of Statues i
List of Cases ii
Chapter-I: Introduction 1-2
Chapter-II: Agreement to Sell 3-12
Chapter-III: Sale Deed 13-26
Chapter-IV: Partnership Deed 27-
41
Chapter-V: Will 42-52
Chapter- VI: Conclusion
Bibliography iii-iv
i
List of Statues
Hindu Wills Act, 1870
Transfer of Property Act, 1882
Indian Registration Act, 1908
Indian Succession Act, 1925
Indian Partnership Act, 1932
Constitution of India 1950
Companies Act, 1956
Income Tax Act, 1961
ii
List of Cases
Azeemur Rehman v Union of India AIR 1995 SC 1316
Ishwari Devi v Sarla Devi (1995) 2 SCC 86 (Supp.)
Jodha Lal v Comissioner of Income Tax AIR 1972 SC 126
Mir Osman Ali Khan v Commissioner of Wealth Tax AIR 1987 SC 522
Ram Gopal v Baij Nath AIR 1937 Cal 396
Sohal Lal v Swaran Kaur (2003) 2 RCR 408 (P&H)
1
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Overview of the Project
The research project provides the theoretical and practical understanding of the law of
conveyancing with regard to execution of agreement to sell and purchase, sale deed,
partnership deed and will.
Conveyancing is either the act of transfer of property or title to property by one or
more living person to another or it refers to the deed by which one or more living person
transfers his or their rights, both present and future in or upon any immoveable property to
one or more living person1.
A deed is a document or a legal instrument that authorizes transfer of rights through
affixation of signatures. The parties concur, admit and reduce to writing certain terms and
assurances in the deed. The deed writers or scribes are not bearers of any particular
professional degree; however, they must possess minimal knowledge in statutes, like the
Transfer of Property Act, the Stamp Act and the Registration Act2. Earlier, it was only the
solicitors from the Presidency towns who were potent to prepare such documents; however,
copying sample forms simply became the norm. This gave rise to several problems:
Firstly, the obsolete English words got inducted in the forms which were
incomprehensible to common folk. This as Prof. Baxi puts it has been one of the
ramifications of the tragedy of ‘thoughtless transplant’ of the Westminster justice delivery
model.
Secondly, because of indisputable working of the present legal architecture, the
legislature has unfortunately not framed a consolidated legislation on the norms to be abided
while preparing the forms which mainly must be supplemented with the fact that extra
legalities must wane off.
However, because of the growing complexities in the commercial transactions today, big
law firms are often hired to draft deeds for the big corporate houses.
1 Bryan A Garner, Black’s Law Dictionary, (9th ed., 2009) WEST; Avner O, ‘Lawyers and Land Law Revisited’, (1994) 14(2) Oxford Journal of Legal Studies 272.2 JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book Company.
2
1.2 Research objective:
The objective of the researchers is to explore the understanding of both the theoretical
and practical aspects of deeds dealing with, sale, partnership and will.
1.3 Research Methodology
The methodology that has been adopted for this study is a doctrinal research, the
resources accessed to being statutes, law reports, scholarly opinion, newspaper articles and a
few previous studies undertaken in the area. Primary source would be books available in the
library of the National Law University, Delhi and secondary source would be online articles
and cases.
1.4 Research Plan:
1.4.1 Period of time intended to cover: No specific time period.
1.4.2 Sources: Secondary sources of data is used and utilized in carrying out the research
work. The sources of data include reports and textbooks, etc. on the relevant topic.
1.4.3 Research Techniques for Data Collection: Research technique of analysis, critique,
and review of the theories is employed.
1.4.4 Footnoting Style to be adopted: National Law University, Delhi standard style of
footnoting is followed throughout the project.
1.5 Chapterization
For clarity in thoughts and better comprehension of the project, it is divided into
several chapters. First chapter deals with the introduction. The second chapter focuses on the
general rules of interpretation and other basic concepts which further understanding of the
agreement to sell and purchase. In its next part is it enumerates the agreement to sell. The
third chapter enumerates the law of sale deeds followed by sample sale deeds. The fourth
chapter discusses the concept of partnership followed by the sample partnership deeds. The
fifth chapter describes the law of will followed by sample forms of will deed.
CHAPTER II
3
AGREEMENT TO SELL
2.1. Agreement to Sell:
The sale and purchase of immovable property requires considerable time for
completion of process and compliance of various obligations, since the stakes are high.
Hence both the parties have to come to an agreement regarding the consideration amount,
mode of payment and time duration. The terms agreed are put in writing in the form of an
agreement, which is known as Agreement to Sell. The Agreement to Sell is governed by the
provisions of the Indian Contract Act 1872 and the Transfer of Property Act 1882.
To attract the provisions of the Transfer of Property Act 1882, a legally valid contract
between the parties as per the provisions of Indian Contract Act, 1872, is mandatory. This
contract may be oral or written. Further it may be exhaustive or open. An open contract is just
a skeleton, referring to the names of parties to the contract, property to be sold and the
consideration amount.
An exhaustive contract is a detailed one referring to the title, modes of payment, time
duration to complete the transactions, obligations to be complied with etc. In immovable
property dealings, it is not advisable to go for oral open type of contracts, as the stakes are
generally high and consequences are grave. Such contracts need to be diligently prepared
referring to minute details. The services of an expert advocate in property matters should be
availed.3
2.2. Section 54 of the Transfer of Property Act refers to the Contract of Sale /
Agreement to Sell:
It defines the agreement to sell as a contract that a sale of such property takes place on
terms settled between the parties. It further specifies that the agreement to sell does not create
any interest in property or charge on such property. The purchaser who has entered into an
agreement to sell with the owner of the immovable property is not entitled to any
compensation if the property is acquired by the government. Further in case of suit of
injunction against the owner the purchaser who has entered into an agreement with the owner
3 JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book Company 415.
4
does not have any right to be impleaded in the suit and heard on the basis of the agreement to
sell.4
2.3. Execution of agreement to sell:
The execution of agreement to sell needs to be witnessed by two persons capable of
entering into contract. According to the Indian Registration Act 1908, the registration of the
agreement to sell is only optional. If registered it helps in establishing the bonafides of the
transaction. Further, encumbrance certificate discloses the subsistence of such an agreement,
which deters any further agreements, unless the existing one is cancelled.
2.4. The rights and liabilities of the purchaser and seller:
Section 55 of the Transfer of property Act deals with the rights and liabilities of seller
and purchaser. If the agreement to sell does not specifically refer to the rights and liabilities
of seller and purchaser; the provisions of section 55 are enforceable.5
It is cautioned against the use of words like ‘as is where is basis’, since in such
circumstances, the purchaser has to specifically perform the contract irrespective of the
material defect in the title of property. There is no prescribed format of agreement to sell in
respect of an immovable property. It is to be ensured that the agreement is legally enforceable
and binding on the parties and it is not a mere formality.6
2.5. Persons entering into the agreement:
Persons must be competent to enter into a contract. They must be major, of sound
mind and not disqualified from contracting. The names of the parties to the contract, their
age. father’s name, in case of married women husband’s name and places of their residence
should be mentioned. Care should be taken to make all the owners as parties to the contract.
In case any of the joint owners is not available to execute the agreement, a clause is added to
the agreement that all persons having interest in the property shall execute the conveyance
deed. A partnership firm is not a legal person and as such all the partners should sign the
agreement.
4 Azeemur Rehman v Union of India AIR 1995 SC 1316.5 s 55, Transfer of Property Act,1882.6 JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book Company, (14th ed., 2009) 529.
5
2.6. Title to property:
Nature of the title held by the seller, including any encumbrance such as lease,
mortgage, charges on the property should, find a place in the agreement. If the executant of
the agreement is not the owner, then his status and his authority under which the agreement is
executed should be mentioned. A CPA holder can execute a sale on behalf of the owner if he
has the power to do so. However, he is accountable for the money received from the
purchaser. Any material defect in the property, defect in the title disclosed by the seller, or
advantages, benefits which have come to the notice of the purchaser, could be detailed.
2.7. Exact location and description of the property agreed to he sold:
Location and description should contain the roads on which they front, i.e. existing
and former occupancies, the municipal number, street, road, with complete boundaries, and
properties surrounding the property greed to be sold. It should also include the area of the
site, built up area, floors, type of constructions, materials used. The details should be
exhaustive to identify the property.7
2.8. Agreed consideration amount and mode of payment:
Consideration mount, the price at which the property was agreed to be transferred is
very important and an essential portion of the agreement. If the consideration amount is not
mentioned, the contract becomes void. The consideration disclosed should be in money
value, and it does not attract the provisions of exchange of property as detailed in Sec 118 of
the Transfer of Property Act.
Whether the consideration amount is adequate or not is material. The agreement
should disclose any part payment of Consideration or earnest money, the mode, place and
time of payment of balance money.
2.9. Production and scrutiny of documents of title:
The agreement should contain a clause that the seller should produce the documents
of title n his possession for scrutiny by the purchaser and his advocate. Sec 55 (1) of Transfer
of Property Act makes it mandatory to produce the Documents for scrutiny.
7 Sections 21 & 22, the Indian Registration Act, 1908.
6
2.10. Possession:
Possession is the most important ingredient of the sale transaction. The mode and time
of possession should be clearly and specifically mentioned. It may please be noted that the
seller need not have possession of the property to the purchaser on execution of agreement
and on part payment. Possession has to be given on Completion of the sale process and
receipt of full consideration amount after execution of the conveyance deed.8
If the possession is given on part payment of the consideration, section 53 A of the
Transfer of Property Act operates. In such an event the seller shall never be in a position to
get back the possession. The only recourse available to the seller is to recover the balance
amount due.
The agreement should also refer to the mode of possession of the property and
whether it is vacant or not. If the property is let out, the seller may give a letter of allotment to
the tenants, to acknowledge the purchaser as the doqator. In such cases, a clause regarding
token delivery of possession by the purchaser, and issue of allotment letters should be
included.
2.11. Period of completion of sale process:
The sale agreement should contain a clause stipulating the time within which the
purchaser will pay the full consideration amount and get the sale deed executed and
registered by the seller. In the absence of such a time stipulation, the sale process may be
unduly delayed. As such a clause stating that the time is the essence of contract is to be
included.
In the absence of such clause, if the purchaser delays the completion of the process,
the seller may issue a notice to the purchaser to complete the process within a reasonable time
by fixing a deadline. Alternatively, the purchaser may pay off the consideration amount to the
seller and a draft of the conveyance for execution.
2.12. Conditions and obligations to be complied with:
There may be local laws and other statutory obligations to be complied with for
completion of sale. Permissions may have to be procured from certain institutions. Any such
8 AN Chaturvedi, Principles & Forms of Pleadings & Conveyancing, (10th ed, 2007), Allahabad Law Agency.
7
obligations to be completed and the time for such acts are to be incorporated in the
agreement.
2.13. Expenses to be met:
Sale process includes various expenses like legal fee, stamp duty, brokerage and
expenses towards statutory clearances. Terms of agreement should be clear as to who has to
meet these expenses.
2.14. Miscellaneous requirements in agreement to sell and purchase:
The agreement should also contain penalties for non- performance of the terms of the
agreement. The onus on the seller is that Se shall during the period between the date of
agreement to sell and actual handing over of the property to the purchaser, he shall not create
any charges on the property and at the same time maintain the property.
2.15. Remedy to parties:
If any of the parties fails to perform, parties may sue the other party for specific performance
as per the terms of the agreement. The limitation available is three years and it starts from the
date on which the act is to be performed. For example, a sale agreement is dated 1-4-2002,
where it is mentioned the purchaser should pay the final installment of consideration and get
the conveyance completed by the seller on 31-05-2002 and the limitation started from that
date. The Agreement to Sell is to be executed on a requisite stamp paper as prescribed by the
state.9
9 AN Chaturvedi, Principles & Forms of Pleadings & Conveyancing, (10th ed, 2007), Allahabad Law Agency.
8
AGREEMENT TO SELL AND PURCHASE
Note: This format has been prepared as applicable to flats. The word "flat" can be substituted
with the type of property for which this document is being executed. Similarly, the name of
the concerned authority can also be changed as applicable.
THIS AGREEMENT is executed at Delhi, on this __________ day of __________ 20__
between Shri/Smt./Kumari __________ __________ __________ __________ resident of
__________ __________ __________ __________ hereinafter called the First Party/Vendor
and
__________ Shri/Smt./Kumari __________ son/daughter of Shri__________and Smt.
__________ __________ resident of __________ __________ __________ __________
hereinafter called the Second Party/Vendee.
The expression of first and second party shall mean and include their representatives, heirs,
successors, legal representative, administrators, nominees and assigns etc.
WHEREAS THE FIRST PARTY is the absolute owner / lessee / allottee and in physical and
lawful possession of Flat No. __________,situated at __________ (hereinafter called the said
Flat) category __________, comprising of __________ __________ __________
__________ __________ __________ __________ __________ duly fitted with
__________ duly connected by __________ and allotted by the __________ CO-
OPERATIVE GROUP HOUSING SOCIETY LTD. Built on Plot No. __________ (a Co-
operative Group Housing Society registered with Registrar of Co-operative Society,
Delhi/New Delhi) (hereinafter referred to as Society) and by virtue of Membership No.
__________ of the said society with the Lease Hold Rights of the Land under the said Flat.
WHEREAS A PIECE OF LAND was allotted to the said society by the Delhi Development
Authority for the construction of Co-operative Group Housing Society Flats for its member at
Plot No. __________, and allotment to First party was confirmed by Delhi Development
Authority.
AND WHEREAS THE aforesaid flat is self acquired property of the first party in which his /
her / their predecessors, heirs, successors, family members or any one else has no right, title
9
or interest and as such the first party is fully competent to execute this Agreement and to
transfer the aforesaid flat.
AND WHEREAS the First Party has paid the entire amount of the aforesaid flat towards the
cost of land to the DDA and cost of construction to the society concerned.
AND WHEREAS THE total deal has been finalized for a sum of Rs. __________/- (Rupees
__________ __________ __________) and the said sum have been received by the First
Party from the Second Party with the following break up.
1. Rs. __________/- (Rupees ____________________ __________) vide cheque/draft/pay
order/__________ dtd __________.
2. Rs. __________/- (Rupees ____________________ __________) vide cheque/draft/pay
order/__________ dtd __________.
3. Rs. __________/- (Rupees ____________________ __________) vide cheque/draft/pay
order/__________ dtd __________.
Total consideration has been received by the First party from the Second party at the time of
execution of transfer document/sale deed.
NOW THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSESTH AS UNDER:-
1. That the aforesaid amount has been received by the First Party due to urgent needs and to
fulfill the bonafide requirements, from the Second Party.
2. That the physical and vacant peaceful possession of the said Flat has been delivered by the
First Party to the Second party on the spot along with water and electricity connection and
electric fittings etc.
3. That henceforth the first party admits and acknowledges that he/she has not been left with
any right, title and interest in the said Flat and the second party has become its sole and
absolute owner from the date of execution of this agreement.
4. That the Second Party shall realize all the rents and profits of the said flat have been
handed over to the Second party by the First Party.
10
5. That the Second party or its nominee on behalf of the First Party shall apply to the DDA
and/or such other authority such as the aforesaid Co-operative Group Housing Society
Limited for the transfer/conversion of the said flat in favour of the Second Party and shall
obtain all the necessary permission/approvals subject to the purchaser paying/providing the
unearned increase if any payable to the DDA on account of such transfer/conversion which
shall be in addition to the aforesaid agreed sale consideration and hence the First Party will
execute proper sale deed(s) for his/her/their nominee within a period of one month from the
date of grant of sale permission/approval and get the same registered on the office of Sub-
Registrar Delhi/New Delhi or such other authority or authorities that may be empowered in
this regard.
6. That the First Party assures the Second party that the aforesaid flat/property is free from all
sorts of encumbrances such as prior sale, gift, mortgage, litigation and dispute, previous
contact, power of attorney, will etc., and if this fact is found otherwise, then the First Party
will be liable and responsible to indemnify the losses thus suffered by the Second Party.
7. That the Second Party will pay all the lease money, house tax, bills or any other dues and
demands of the concerned authority(s) as and when demanded by the authorities concerned
after the execution of this Agreement.
8. That the second Party shall obtain all the permissions, necessary approvals to complete the
sale transaction including the following:-
9. Permissions from the DDA to transfer the aforesaid flat/property in favour of the Second
party or his/her/their nominee (s) at the cost and expenses of the Second party.
10. Permissions from the Competent Authority under the Urban Land (Ceiling &
Regulations) Act, 1976 if required or in the alternative the First Party shall produce the
necessary affidavit (s), declarations or prescribed performas.
11. Or any other permission that may be required to transfer the said Flat/Property in favour
of the Second party at the time of the registration of the sale deed at his/her/their own cost
except that the unearned increase, stamp duty, registration charges, conveyancing etc. shall be
paid and borne by the Second Party and in that event the First Party shall not make any
further claim, demand and objection whatsoever. But the First Party would provide necessary
11
help, would provide necessary information and sign and execute required papers/documents
if so required by the concerned authority to do all or any of the acts mentioned in point no.9.
12. That if in case the aforesaid flat is transferred/ registered in favour of the Second Party or
the lease hold rights in respect of the aforesaid flat are declared as freehold due to change of
Government policy, then the First Party shall have no right to object and shall not make any
further claim, demand etc.
13. That the First party has also executed and have registered General Power of Attorney and
special power of attorney(s) in favour of Shri./Smt./Kumari ____________________
Son/Daughter of Shri. __________ & (2) Smt. __________ & Resident of __________
__________ and all the aforesaid documents shall not be revoked or cancelled by First Party
any circumstances whatsoever.
14. That the First Party shall also be entitled to transfer the aforesaid flat/property to anybody
else and First Party shall have no objection.
15. That till this date, no lease deed/sub-lease deed has been executed by the DDA and if in
any case such document is to be executed then the Second Party will get it registered through
attorney on behalf of the First Party who shall sign all the necessary documents and shall
obtain the documents for his/her/their own use.
16. That in case the First Party does not perform its part of the Contract then the Second Party
shall be entitled to enforce this contract by way of specific performance the appropriate court
at the risk and cost of the First party.
17. That all the dues, demands and outgoings prior to the date of execution of this agreement
shall be paid and borne by the First Party and thereafter by the Second Party.
18. That it has been agreed upon by the parties that the First Party shall keep the Second
Party indemnified and free from all losses/damages which may be suffered, incurred,
undergone and/or sustained by the Second Party due to any act done in past or in future by
the First Party in respect of the said membership/flat/property and the leasehold right of the
land underneath it, and if the title of the property is found to be defective one.
12
19. That the Second Party shall have the full right of conversion of the said Flat from the
lease hold to freehold and to make application, indemnity bond, undertaking, affidavit etc. to
the concerned authorities for the same.
20. IN WITNESS WHEREOF BOTH THE PARTIES have subscribed their respective hands
on these presence on the place, date, month and year first above mentioned in the presence of
the following witnesses.
WITNESSES:
1. FIRST PARTY
2. SECOND PARTY
13
CHAPTER- III
SALE DEED
Sale ordinarily means transferring of property voluntarily at a price. Sale of
immovable property has been defined under Transfer of Property Act 1882 as under: ‘Sale’ is
a transfer of ownership in exchange for a price paid or promised or part-paid and part-
promised. Such transfer, in case of tangible immovable property of the value of one hundred
rupees and upwards, or in the case of a reversion or other intangible things, can be made only
by a registered instrument10.
Every person who is entitled to transferable property or is authorised to dispose of such
property and is competent to contract can transfer the property in whole or in part either absolutely or
conditionally. Minors and lunatics are not competent to contract; however, such persons can transfer the
property through their guardian appointed by a Court of competent Jurisdiction with the prior consent
and permission of the Court Execution, Attestation, Registration and Stamp Duty.11 Sale deeds are
executed and attested like bonds. Where by the sale deed a tangible immovable property of the value of
one hundred rupees or upwards is transferred it must be attested by two witnesses and must be
registered, the stamp-duty varies from State to State. Roughly the stamp-duty is at the rate of about 10%
of the price.
An assignment is a transfer of some right either by operation of law or contract. Here, the
purpose to deal with the assignment is only by operation contract. A debt, a decree, an actionable claim
and goodwill of business may' transferred by a deed of assignment. In the deed of assignment, the
transferor ailed assignor, and the transferee is called assignee. Assignments are executed and attested
like bonds. Its registration is compulsory if the assignment is of the value of rupees one hundred or
upwards id as incident to the assignment some intangible property stands transferred, otherwise
registration is optional12.
In the case of tangible immovable property, of a value less than hundred rupees, such
transfer maybe made either by a registered instrument or by delivery of the property.
10 S 54, Transfer of Property Act, 1882.11 SP Aggarwal, Drafting and Conveyancing, (1st ed., 2005), Lexis Nexis Butterworths Wadhwa. 12 AN Chaturvedi, Principles & Forms of Pleadings & Conveyancing, (10th ed, 2007), Allahabad Law Agency.
14
Delivery of the tangible immovable property takes place when the seller places the buyer, or
such person as he directs, in possession of the property.
Sale includes transfer and the Income Tax Act defines transfer of capital assets as under13:
Transfer, in relation to capital assets includes:
1. The sale, exchange or relinquishment of an assets, or
2. The extinguishment of rights therein, or
3. The compulsory acquisition thereof under any law, or
4. In case where the asset is converted by the owner thereof into, or is treated by him as,
stock in trade of a business carried on by him, such conversion or treatment, or
5. Any transaction involving the allowing of the possession of any immovable property
to be taken or retained in part performance of a contract of a nature referred to in S.
53A of the Transfer of Property Act 1882, or
6. Any transaction (whether by way by becoming a member of, or acquiring share in a
cooperative society, company or other association of persons or by way of any
agreement of any arrangement or in other manner whatsoever) which has an effect of
transferring or enabling the enjoyment of any immovable property.
The definition of transfer is an inclusive definition and not exhaustive. Transfer
includes sale and a sale maybe defines as a contact founded on money consideration by
which the absolute or general property in the subject of sale is transferred from the seller to
the buyer and the essential of the sales are:
1. Mutual Agreements
2. Competent Parties
3. Money Consideration
The most essential ingredient of a sale is right to sell or alienate or in other words, one
must be owner of a thing and only then he can sell it, as the basic law is one can sell only
13 S 2(47), The Income Tax Act, 1961.
15
what he owns14.
In Jodha Lal v Comissioner of Income Tax15 the Supreme Court while considering the
question as to who is the owner referred to in section 9(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1922
observed that Section 9 bring to tax the income from property and not the interest of the
person in the property.
A property cannot be owned by two persons, each having one independent and exclusive
right over it… the word ‘owner’ has different meanings in different contexts. In Nawab Sir
Mir Osman Ali Khan v Commissioner of Wealth Tax16, the Supreme Court referred to
Salmond's definition of 'ownership’:
(a) the owner will have a right to possess the thing which he owns
(b) the owner normally has the right to use and enjoy the thing owned, the right to manage it,
i.e. the right to decide how it shall be used and the right to the Income from it
(c) the owner has the right to consume, destroy or alienate the thing
(d) ownership has the characteristic of being indeterminate in duration
(e) ownership has a residuary character. Legal ownership is that which has its origin in the
rules of the common law, while equitable ownership is that which proceeds from rules of
equity different from the common law.
In constructing a sale deed the words used by the vendor cannot be ignored on any
supposition or presumption. Where the property has been specifically identified in a deed any
ambiguity or inconsistency arising out of it has to be disregarded. In a case before the
Supreme Court the vendor, who was the owner of the building, intended without any
reservation, to transfer the two-storied building called Anand Bhavan in favour of the vendee.
With the execution and registration of the sale deed the vendee became the owner of the
entire Anand Bhavan. The erroneous recital in the sale deed about the area of the building
would not in any manner affect the title of the vendee.17
SALE DEED OF LAND WITH BUILDINGS
14 Sohal Lal v Swaran Kaur (2003) 2 RCR 408 (P&H).15 AIR 1972 SC 126.16 AIR 1987 SC 522.17 Ishwari Devi v Sarla Devi (1995) 2 SCC 86 (Supp.).
16
THIS DEED OF SALE is made at ............ this .................. day of......................,
2000, between Shri ...............................son of ............................................. residing
at ............................... hereinafter referred to as 'Vendor No. 1' (which expression shall unless
the context or meaning be otherwise repugnant mean and include his heirs, legal
representatives, executors, administrators, assigns) of the FIRST PART and Smt. A, wife of
Shri ...................................... residing at .............................. hereinafter referred to as
"Vendor No. 2" (which expression shall unless the context or meaning be otherwise
repugnant mean and include her heirs, legal representatives, executors, administrators,
assigns) of the SECOND PART and M/s. ………………………, a firm registered under the
Indian Partnership Act, 1932 and carrying out its business at ....................................
represented by the two partners.
(i) Shri M residing at ................................... (ii) Shri N residing
at, ................................................ hereinafter referred to as "Vendor No. 3" (which
expression shall unless the context or meaning thereof be otherwise repugnant mean and
include the heirs, legal representatives, executors, administrators, assigns) of the deceased
partners and the partners and the partners for the time being of the THIRD PART in favour of
the …………………. a company incorporated under the Companies Act, 1956 and having its
registered office at ............................ hereinafter referred to as "the Purchaser" (which
expression shall unless the context or meaning thereof be otherwise repugnant mean and
include its successors and assigns).
WHEREAS the Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 are absolutely seized and possessed of or
otherwise well and sufficiently entitled to the piece and portion of land in plot No.................
admeasuring .................. sq. metres (.................. sq. fts) or thereabout comprising plot area of
................ sq. mts. ( .................. sq. fts.) and the area under approach road
admeasuring ........... sq. mts. (....................... sq. fts.) in the layout bearing ....................
dated ............... sanctioned -by the .................... Municipal Corporation and comprised in
Survey No .................... at ............... .................... more particularly described in the
First Schedule hereunder written and delineated on the plan hereto annexed and thereon
shown surrounded by a red coloured boundary line (which piece of land is hereinafter
referred to as the said land).
AND WHEREAS the Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 party as the owners of the said land made
an application to the Government of ........................................ under section 21 of the Urban
17
land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (hereinafter referred to as "the Said Act") for the
exemption of plots of land admeasuring ...................... sq. mts. from the provisions of
Chapter Ill of the said Act and granting permission for its sale.
AND WHEREAS an order No. ULC ................ dated ......................... was passed
by the Government of .................. under section 21 of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 and modified vide letter No ...................... dated ................
exempting the land described in the Recital B from the provisions of Chapter Ill of UL
(C&R) Act, 1976 and permitting the Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 to sell the said land with buildings
to the ……………………... Ltd. the purchaser herein subject to the conditions mentioned
therein.
AND WHEREAS by an Agreement for sale dated .................. made
between the purchaser and the Vendor No. 3 ………………………. and confirmed by the
Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 (hereinafter referred to as "The said Agreement") and Vendor No. 3 has
agreed to procure for construction the said land and to construct ................ residential
buildings consisting of ..................... flats/tenements as per plan approved by
the .................. Municipal Corporation and as per designs and specifications required
by the purchaser at the rate and on the terms and conditions contained in the said Agreement.
AND WHEREAS the Additional Collector, .................... has granted permission for
non-agricultural use of the land for construction of residential buildings on the said land by
order No. ............... dated ..................
AND WHEREAS pursuant to the said agreement the Vendor No. 3 called upon the
Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 to execute the conveyance of the said land together with the buildings
constructed thereon in favour of the purchaser and the Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 have agreed to do
so on the vendor No. 3 joining in the execution of this present as the Vendor No. 3.
AND WHEREAS the Vendors are desirous and have agreed to sell unto the purchaser
the said land with three buildings containing .......................
tenements ................ sq. fts. of built-up area which includes over and above the sanctioned
rate of Rs . ................ per sq. ft. an extra rate of Rs . ............... per sq. ft. for
providing extra amenities, superior specifications and additional developments and the
purchaser has agreed to purchase them for the total price of Rs . .............. of
18
which Rs . ................... and Rs . ................. are payable to the Vendor No. 1 and Vendor
No. 2 respectively.
NOW THIS DEED OF SALE WITNESSETH AS FOLLOWS:
That in pursuance of the said agreement and in consideration of the sum of
Rs . ................... (Rupees .......................... only) paid on or before the execution of
these presents, by the Vendor No. 3 to the Vendor Nos. 1 and 2 in further consideration of the
sum of Rs. .................... (Rupees ......................... only) paid on or before the execution of
these presents, by the Purchaser to the Vendor No. 3 (the receipt and payment of which the
vendors do hereby acknowledge, and admit and of and from the same and every part thereof,
do hereby acquit and release and forever discharge the purchaser), the vendors do hereby
GRANT, CONVEY, SELL, TRANSFER AND ASSURE unto the purchaser, its successors,
assigns and administrators-in-interest ALL THE SAID land more particularly described in
the First Schedule hereunder written together with the three buildings consisting of ....... flats
and all ways, paths, passages, easements, privileges, trees, appurtenances, whatsoever to the
said plot or in any way appertaining to the same and/or any part thereof now or at any time
heretofore usually held, used, occupied or enjoyed therewith or reputed to be so held, used,
occupied or enjoyed and all the estate, right, title, interest, claim and demands whatsoever
both at law or in equity of the vendors into or out of the said plot, hereby granted, conveyed,
sold, transferred and assured or otherwise expressed and intended so to be UNTO AND TO
THE use of the purchaser absolutely forever and absolutely free from all encumbrances,
claims, SUBJECT HOWEVER to the payment of all rates, taxes, assessments, dues and
duties chargeable upon the said plot and payable to the Government or the Municipal
Corporation of the City of .................... or any other authority in respect thereof and the
vendors do hereby covenant with the purchaser that notwithstanding any act, deed or thing by
the vendors done or executed or knowingly suffered to the contrary, the vendors now have in
themselves good right, full power and absolute authority to grant, convey, sell, transfer and
assure the said land with the buildings hereby conveyed and assured or expressed and
intended so to be unto and to the use of the purchaser in the manner aforesaid and that the
purchaser shall and may at all times hereafter peacefully and quietly possess and enjoy the
same and receive the rents and profits thereof without any lawful eviction, interruption, claim
and demands whatsoever from or by the vendors or by any other person or persons lawfully
or equitably claiming by, from, under or in trust for the vendors and that free and clear and
19
freely and clearly and absolutely acquitted, exonerated, released and forever discharged or
otherwise by the vendors well and sufficiently saved, defended or kept harmless and
indemnified, or from and against all estates, claims, charges, encumbrances whatsoever
heretofore made, executed, occasioned or suffered by the vendors or by any person or persons
lawfully claiming or to claim by, from, under or in trust for them and the vendors and all
other persons claiming by from / or under the vendors shall and will from time to time and at
all times hereinafter at the request of the purchaser execute, make or perfect or cause to be
executed, made or perfected all such acts, deeds, things and assurances whatsoever for further
and more perfectly assuring the said land and building constructed thereon and every part
thereof UNTO AND TO THE USE of the Purchaser as shall or may be reasonably required.
AND THIS INDENTURE FURTHER WITNESSETH that in pursuance of the said
Agreement and in consideration of the premises the vendors with intent to bind so far as they
can, call upon all persons into whose custody the deeds and writing comprised in the Second
Schedule hereunder written shall come DO FURTHER COVENANT with the purchaser, its
successors and assigns that the vendors shall and will unless prevented by fire or some other
inevitable accident from time to time and at all times hereafter upon every reasonable request
and at the cost of the purchaser or any person or persons having or lawfully or equitably
claiming through the purchaser, its successors and or assigns any estate or interest in the said
land described in the First Schedule hereunder written or any part thereof produce or cause to
be produced to the purchaser and other person or persons as aforesaid or its/their solicitors,
advocates or agent or the person or persons so requiring production of the said deeds and
writings comprised in the Second Schedule hereunder written at any trial, hearing,
commission or examination or in the course of any judicial or other proceedings or otherwise
as occasion shall require all or any of the said deeds and writings comprised in the Second
Schedule hereunder written which relate as well as to the said land as also to other land
belonging to the vendors and the possession of which is retained by the vendors for the proof,
defence and support, of the title of the purchaser, its successors and assigns or any other
person or persons as aforesaid to the said land described in Schedule 1 hereunder written or
any part thereof and will permit the same to be examined, inspected or given in evidence and
will also at the like request and cost of the purchaser, its successors or assigns or any other
person or persons as aforesaid made and furnish or cause to be made and furnished to it/or
them such true attested or other copies or abstracts of or extracts from the same deeds and
writings respectively or any of them as it or they may require and shall and will in the
20
meantime unless prevented as aforesaid keep the same deeds and writings safe, whole,
uninjured, unobliterated and uncancelled. Provided always and it is hereby declared that in
case the vendors or their successors and assigns shall deliver the said deeds and writings or
any of them to any further purchaser or purchasers of any of the land hereditaments and
premises to which the same may relate or to any other person or persons for the time being
entitled to the custody of the said deeds and writings and shall thereupon at their own costs
and charges procure for such purchaser herein, its successors and assigns similar in all respect
of the covenant hereinbefore contained then and in such case and immediately thereupon the
said mentioned covenant shall cease and be null and void so far as regards the deeds and
writings to which the said substituted covenant shall relate.
The Vendor No. 3 hereby confirms the sale between the vendors and the purchaser of
the said land and has executed this Deed as Vendor No. 3.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the vendors hereto have hereunto set their respective
hands on the day, month and year first hereinabove written.
First Schedule above referred to
(Description of the said Land)
Second Schedule
List of Documents retained and covenanted to be produced
Signed and delivered by the within named vendor
Nos. 1 and 2 by their duly constituted Attorney
Shri ................................
Signed and delivered by the Vendor
No. 3 ……………………,
by Shri M and Shri N, partners
WITNESSES;
21
Received the day and year first hereinabove written a sum of Rs . .................... (Rupees
............................ only) being the full consideration money as within mentioned payable to
the vendor No. 1.
I say received
(Vendor No. 1)
Received the day and year first hereinabove written a sum of Rs. ..................
(Rupees ........................................... ) being the full consideration money as within
mentioned payable to the vendor No. 2.
I say received
(Vendor No. 2)
Received the day and year first hereinabove written a sum of Rs. .......................
(Rupees ....................................... ) being the full consideration money as within
mentioned payable to the vendor No. 3.
We say received
for ……………..
WITNESSES
1 .
2.
22
SALE DEED OF A HOUSE
This indenture of sale made on the……..day of…….. 20……between Shri X, son of Shri Y,
resident of………..hereinafter called the vendor (which expression shall include wherever
applicable his heirs, executors, legal representatives and assigns) of the ONE PART and Shri
A, son of Shri B, resident of………hereinafter called the purchaser (which expression shall
include wherever applicable his heirs, executors, legal representatives and assigns) of the
OTHER PART.
Whereas one Shri……had by means of a deed of conveyance dated…..and registered
as No...........................................in Book No……….Volume………on pages……in the
office of Joint/Sub-registrar at.. . .had acquired the estate which was commonly known as
…….. and thereafter had constructed new houses on the open land and named the same
as…….. and
Whereas on the demise of the said Shri ……., Shri…….son of……resident of……had
………acquired the said premises by means of the last will and testament of the said Shri
……..dated ……. and registered as No…….. in the Book No………Volume……..pages
……..in the office of the Joint/Sub-Registrar,...................on ………;and
Whereas the said Shri.............. sold out the entire estate to Shri………jointly with
Shri…… by means of a sale deed dated ………Registered as No……..of……in Book
No......Volume No.........on pages.......in the office of the Joint/Sub-Registrar…….on the
..........;and
Whereas the said Shri……jointly with Shri……..sold out the entire estate to
Smt…….and Shri……by means of a sale deed dated……..Registered as No…….in Book No
………Volume……on pages…….dated………in the office of Joint/Sub-Registrar;……..and
Whereas the said Smt…….. and Shri…….. jointly sold a portion of the said estate
(approx about......................................................... acres) to Smt……. wife of………..and
Shri……..son of late……… resident of................by sale deed dated Registered as No…….in
Book…….Volume No........................................... pages……in the office of Joint/Sub-
Registrar, ….. and
23
Whereas the said Smt……and Shri.........jointly sold other portion of the said estate (approx
about 3.50 acres) to Smt.......................... wife of ................. and Shri…….son of
late……..resident of................................by a sale deed dated……..Registered as No in
Book No……..Volume No.....................pages…….in the office of Joint/Sub-Registrar, ……
and
Whereas the said Smt……. and Shri....…..jointly sold the entire property under their
ownership admeasuring approx……… acres to the Vendor by sale deed dated………..
Registered as No................................. Book No……….Volume No pages in the
office of Joint/Sub-Registrar..................; and
Whereas Smt….. and Shri ............ also jointly sold the property to Vendor under their
ownership admeasuring about......acres by sale deed dated……..Registered as No…… in
Book No........................................Volume No................ pages……on…….in the office of
Joint/Sub-Registrar, .....................; and
Whereas the Vendor herein has become absolute owner of the total extent of…….acres and
the building constructed thereon more particularly described in the Schedule hereunder; and
Whereas the said property was renamed as………and at the request of the Vendor the change
of name was also recorded in the records of Municipal Board……….;
And whereas the Vendor has offered to sell the said…….acres of land, bearing plot
No…….situated on…….known as…….together with a building bearing No ….
…… .Road……..and the Purchaser has agreed to purchase the said property more
particularly described in the schedule hereunder and delineated in the plan attached hereto
and coloured red thereon for a total sale consideration of a sum of Rs…….(Rupees only).
NOW THIS INDENTURE OF SALE WITNESSETH AS UNDER:
That in pursuance of the said agreement and in consideration of the said sum of Rs……...
{Rupees………only) paid by the Purchaser herein unto the Vendor before execution of these
presents (the receipt of which sum the Vendor doth hereby acknowledge as the full
consideration) the Vendor doth hereby grant, convey, and assign by way of absolute sale unto
the Purchaser all those pieces and parcel of land admeasuring……….acres bearing plot No
popularly known as situated at ……… along with the building constructed
24
thereon bearing municipal No……….more particularly described in the Schedule
herein and delineated in the plan attached thereto and coloured thereon together with
building fixtures, etc. with all the estate, right, title and interest of the Vendor herein together
with all other rights, easements, advantages, privileges and appurtenances whatsoever in the
said piece and parcel of land to have and to hold the same unto the Purchaser herein
absolutely for ever and absolutely free from all encumbrances, claims, demands, attachments
and charges of all claim but subject however to the payment of all any other Local
Authorities in respect of the said land and property more particularly described in the
Schedule hereunder the delineated in the plan attached hereto and coloured thereon together
with all ways, waters, watercourses thereto/whatever in the said piece or parcel of land more
particularly described in the Schedule hereunder and hereby conveyed, the Vendor covenant
and confirm that any rents, rates, taxes assessment dues, duties on the paid property have
been paid by them upto and including the date of these presents and further covenant that
should any rates, taxes, dues and duties be found payable upto date, the same shall and will
be paid by him; and
Whereas the Vendor doth hereby convenant with the said purchaser that he, the Vendor have
good right, title, interest and full power to grant, convey and assign the said piece and parcel
of property more particularly described in the Schedule hereunder and delineated in the plan
attached hereto and coloured thereon in the manner aforesaid and that the said property is
free from al! encumbrances, claims, demands and other court attachments and that the
Purchaser may quietly enter into and enjoy the same, the rents and profits of the said
property without any lawful interruption, claims, demand or disturbance whatsoever from the
said vendor or any other person or persons claiming through, under or in trust for the said
Vendor. And that free and clear and freely and clearly and absolutely acquitted, exonerated,
released and forever discharged or otherwise by the vendor and sufficiently saved, defended,
kept harmless and indemnified of, from and against all former and other estates, titles and
charges and/or encumbrances whatever had made, executed, occasioned or suffered by the
Vendor or by any other person or persons lawfully or equitably claiming or to claim by,
from, under or in trust for them or any of them with the vendor and all persons having or
lawfully or equitably claiming any estate; right, title or interest in law or in equity in all said
property hereby assigned, transferred or any part thereof by, from or in trust for the vendor or
his successors, assigns and representatives shall and will from time to time.
25
And the Vendor doth hereby covenant with the Purchaser that notwithstanding any act, deed,
matters or things whatsoever by the Vendor or by any person or persons lawfully or
equitably claiming by, from, through, under or in trust for him, made, done, committed or
knowingly or willingly suffered to the contrary, has right, title or interest to the said property
not becoming void or voidable or the Vendor doth hereby covenant with the Purchaser that
there is no mortgage, charge or lien or other encumbrances on the said property and the
Vendor doth hereby further covenant with the Purchaser that the Purchaser, its visitors,
servants agents and licenses from time to time and at all times hereafter by day and night at
its or their free will and pleasure for all purposes connected with the use and enjoyment of
the said property hereby conveyed, and assured or expressed so to be to go to return, pass
and repass with or without vehicles of all descriptions (including mechanically propelled
vehicles) laden or unladen and with or without animals over the common road and the
Vendor declare that he has handed over to the Purchaser all documents of title relating to,
belonging to or connected with the said property and the Vendor declare and confirm that he
does not have any other document of title and should he come in possession of any evidence
or document of or relating to title, he shall and will hand over or cause to be handed over to
the Purchaser or any person claiming through or under the Purchaser.
And, lastly the Vendor, doth hereby confirm that he had handed over to and placed the
Purchaser in possession of the said property hereby granted, conveyed, transferred and
assigned unto the purchaser.
And the vendor doth hereby further covenant with the said Purchaser that whenever
reasonably required by the said Purchaser and at the cost of the Purchaser, the Vendor will do
sign and execute all other acts, deeds and writings for further and better assuring the said land
and property more particularly described in the Schedule hereunder and hereby conveyed to
the said Purchaser.
In witness whereof the Vendor has hereunto set his hand to this Indenture of sale on the day,
month and year first above herein written.
Schedule of the property above referred
All that piece or parcel of land or ground bearing plot No……..situated at……….….
admeasuring……..acres or the thereabouts along with the building bearing
Municipal No……of……popularly known as……..marked A, B, C, D, E, F, G and
26
delineated by the red colour in the site plan annexed thereto, within the Registration District
of………and bounded as follows:
North :
South :
East :
West :
WITNESSES Signed and delivered by Shri…………..
1 …………………… the within-named Vendor
2…………………….
Received the day and year first hereinabove written of and from the within-named Purchaser
a sum of Rs……(Rupees……only) being the full consideration money as within mentioned
payable by it to us.
Rs............................................
I say received.
Date (Vendor)
27
CHAPTER- IV
PARTNERSHIP DEED
Partnership is formed by an agreement. The agreement nay be verbal or in writing or
may be inferred from the conduct of the partners. To avoid future disputes and differences
between the partners it is desirable to have a written agreement. The written agreement
between or among the partners is known as “Partnership Deed” otherwise known as 'Articles
of Partnership'. It must be signed by all partners and stamped in accordance with the Indian
Stamp Act.18
4.1. Definition:
According to definition in section 4 of the Indian Partnership Act, 1932, a partnership
is the relation between persons who have agreed to share the profits of a business carried on
by all or any of them acting for all. The agreement to share the profits of a business is an
essential element, and it is expressly provided by section 5 that the relation of partnership
arises from contract and not from status.
4.2. Deed of Partnership:
Partnership may be created by oral agreement, but it is always safe, in order to avoid
future disputes, to have a proper deed of partnership drawn up. It is executed by all the
partners and is drafted as an agreement by them to carry on a business in partnership on
certain terms and conditions.19
4.3. Parties:
All the partners should join in the execution of the partnership deed. If they are more
than ten, in the case of a banking business, and more than 20 in the case of other businesses,
the partnership should be registered as a company under the Companies Act, 1956 and in that
case Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association shall be drawn up.20
18 SP Aggarwal, Drafting and Conveyancing, (1st ed., 2005), Lexis Nexis Butterworths Wadhwa.19 JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book Company, 450.20 S. 11 Companies Act, 1956.
28
A minor cannot be a partner but he may be admitted to the benefits of partnership.21
His rights on such admission are laid down in section 30 of the Partnership Act. On attaining
majority he should give notice whether he does or does not elect to become a partner.22
4.4. Business:
The business should be clearly defined. It should not be immoral, or illegal, or against
public policy, as the contract to carry on such business will be illegal and not enforceable.
4.5. Registration of firm:
Registration of a firm is not compulsory, but registration of the firm is a condition
precedent to the right to institute a suit to enforce a right arising from a contract or conferred
by the Act.23
4.6. Terms of Partnership and Contents of Deed:
Terms should be carefully settled and entered in the Partnership deed. They will
always depend on the nature of the business and it is not possible to lay down definitely what
they should be. But as a general rule provision may be made for:24
i. Names and addresses of the firm and each partners
ii. Nature of business to be carried on and the locally where business is to set up
iii. Duration of partnership, whether for a fixed period/job of not
iv. Capital contribution by the each partner
v. Profit sharing ratio among the partners
vi. Interest on capital, if any to be paid to partners
vii. Drawings and interest on drawings, whether permissible or not
viii. Loans and advances by partners to the firm
21 Ram Gopal v Baij Nath AIR 1937 Cal 396.22 S. 30, Indian Partnership Act, 1932.23 s. 58, Indian Partnership Act, 1932.24 SP Aggarwal, Drafting and Conveyancing, (1st ed., 2005), Lexis Nexis Butterworths Wadhwa.
29
ix. Whether or not to pay salary or commission to partners How and who will manage the
business
x. Methods of keeping accounts who and how to audit the accounts. Maintaining bank
accounts
xi. The mode of admission and retirement of partners
xii. How to value the goodwill on admission, retirement and death of a partner
xiii. Method of settlement of accounts on retirement and death of a partner
xiv. Provision for arbitration in case of disputes
xv. The methods of dissolution of partnership firm
xvi. Settlement of accounts in case of dissolution of the firm
To say in brief, everything that is relevant to the relationship between the partners
forms part of the agreement. Even aspects relating to Arbitration (in case of disputes among
themselves) etc., will be part of the agreement.
The relationship among the partners is contractual. To constitute partnership, it is not
incumbent that each partner contributes capital in the form. The Partnership sails primarily
upon mutual confidence. It is illegal if constituted for some purpose opposed to public policy
or the law. A partner cannot obtain private benefit at the expense of the firm. With the co
partners he is to share the benefits.
4.7. Dissolution of Partnership:
Dissolution of Partnership has been defined under s 39 of the Indian Partnership Act
1932 and various modes of dissolution have been defined under s 40,41,42 and 43 and
dissolution by court is defined under s 44 of the Indian Partnership Act 1932.
Dissolution is of the following types:25
Dissolution by agreement- with the consent of all parties
Compulsory dissolution
25 Ss 40,41,42,43, Indian Partnership Act, 1932.
30
Dissolution on the happening of certain contingencies
Dissolution by notice of partnership at will
Dissolution by the Court
31
DEED OF PARTNERSHIP
THIS DEED of Partnership is made at.................... on this .................... day
of ............... by and between: Shri ............................... aged about .............. years, son of Shri
.................................. resident of ………………………………………… (Hereinafter to be
called the First Party); Shri ............................... aged about ............... years, son of
Shri .................................. resident of ………………………………………(Hereinafter to be
called the Second Party); Shri ............................. aged about ................ years, son of
Shri .................................. resident of (Hereinafter to be called the Third Party);
Shri .......................... aged about ................. years, son of Shri .................................. resident
of (Hereinafter to be called the Fourth Party);
WHEREAS the parties to this deed have been carrying on the business
of ....................................... under the name and style of M/s. ......................... with its
principal place of business at ............. on the terms and conditions incorporated in the
Partnership Deed executed on .........................................
AND WHEREAS vital amendments have been made by the Finance Act, 1992 in the
procedure for assessment of firm. Consequent to the said amendment, the parties to this deed
had a meeting and have orally and mutually agreed to amend and alter some of the terms and
conditions contained in the aforesaid partnership deed with effect from 1-4-1992.
AND FURTHER WHEREAS the parties to this deed have been carrying on the above
said business in partnership on the terms and conditions orally and mutually agreed amongst
themselves as aforesaid;
AND NOW WHEREAS the parties to this deed desire that the terms and conditions
on which they have been carrying on the above said business in partnership
since ...................... and propose to continue in future be reduced to writing to avoid future
difficulties or misunderstanding.
NOW, THEREFORE THIS DEED WITNESSETH as under, incorporating the
aforesaid amendment/ alteration in the terms and conditions of the partnership:
1. That the partnership business has been and shall continue to be carried on under the
name and style of M/s. ....................................
32
2. That the partnership business has been and shall continue to be that of ................
with its principal place of business at .............. The parties by mutual consent may
carry on business at such other place or places, in such other name or names and of
such other nature or natures, as they may deem fit and proper from time to time.
3. That the amount lying to the credit of the partners as on 1-4-1992 shall be deemed as
their capital investment. Further capital, loans or deposits looking to the
needs/requirements of the partnership firm shall be arranged, invested or contributed
by the partners.
4. That interest at the rate of 18% per annum or as may be prescribed under section
40(b)(iv) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 or any other applicable provisions as may be in
force in the income-tax assessment of the partnership firm for the relevant accounting
period or at a lower rate as may be agreed to by and between the parties from time to
time shall be paid to the partners or credited to the partners on the amount standing to
the credit of the account of the partners.
Such interest shall be considered as an expenditure of the firm and shall be
debited to the Profit & Loss Account of the firm before arriving at the divisible profit
or loss. The interest to persons other than partners shall be paid or credited to their
accounts at the rate or rates as may be agreed to by and between the partners and such
persons from time to time.
5. That Shri ................................ Shri ..................... and Shri ............................ the
parties of the ....................... parts have agreed to keep themselves actively engaged in
conducting the affairs of the business of the partnership firm. The said partners shall
be working partners. It is hereby agreed to that in consideration of the said parties
keeping themselves actively engaged in the business of the partnership firm and
working as working partners, shall be entitled to remuneration.
The remuneration payable to the said working partners shall be computed in
the manner laid down or deduction under section 40(b)(v), read with Explanation 3 of
the Income-tax Act, 1961 or any other applicable provision as may be in force in the
income-tax assessment of the partnership firm for the relevant accounting year. Such
33
amount of remuneration shall be distributed between the said working partners in the
following proportion:
A. Shri ................................ ....... per cent of such amount
B. Shri ................................ ....... per cent of such amount
C. Shri ................................ ....... per cent of such amount
The partners shall be entitled to increase or reduce the above remuneration and
may agree to pay remuneration to other working partner or partners as the case may
be. The partners may also agree to revise the mode of calculating the above said
remuneration as may be agreed to by and between the partners from time to time.
6. That the parties hereto shall be true and faithful to each other and shall not do or cause
to be done anything which may be detrimental to the interest of the firm.
7. That the parties shall keep or cause to be kept proper books of account and documents
and shall make entries therein of all receipts, payments and other matters as is usually
done and entered in the books of account kept by persons engaged in business similar
to that of the firm. Each partner shall have a right to have access to and to inspect and
take copy of the same.
8. That the partnership has been and shall be a partnership at will.
9. That the net profit of the partnership firm after deduction of all expenses including
rent, salaries, other establishment expenses, interest and remuneration payable to the
partners in accordance with this deed of partnership or any supplementary deed as
may be executed by the partners from time, to time, shall be divided and distributed
amongst the partners in the following proportion:
Sr. No. Name of Party Share in profits
1.
2.
3.
34
4.
The losses, if any, including loss of capital suffered in any year shall also be
apportioned in the above said proportion.
10. That the bank account or accounts have been and shall be maintained in the name of
the firm and shall be operated singly or jointly by the partners.
11. That the books of account shall be closed on 31st day of March each year. The net
profit or loss after deducting all expenses, interest, remuneration, outgoings shall be
divided between the parties in proportion to the sharing ratio referred to hereinabove.
12. That notwithstanding anything contained in the Indian Partnership Act it is hereby
mutually agreed to by and between the parties that in case of death of any one or more
partners, the firm shall not be dissolved but shall continue to be carried on by and
between the surviving partners and legal heirs and/or representatives of the deceased
partner, as a continuing concern, on the same terms and conditions as incorporated in
this Deed or on such terms and conditions as may be agreed to by and between them
from time to time. It is hereby further clarified that it shall be deemed as change in
constitution and not succession.
13. That with respect to any matter connected with the affairs of the firm, which is not
specifically provided for herein, the partners may make such agreements therefor and
may set in such manner with regard thereto as may be agreed upon by and between
themselves.
14. That if the partners deem proper and in their interest, they may admit any other person
or persons as partners on the terms and conditions as may be mutually agreed amongst
themselves.
15. That the partners to this deed are partners in their individual capacity/representing
HUF styled as M/s. ..................................... The parties do not represent any other
person.
16. All bonds, bills, notes, bills of exchange, hundies or promissory notes or other
securities given on behalf of the partnership (except cheques) shall be signed,
endorsed, accepted or executed jointly by all the partners and any bond, bill, note,
35
bill of exchange, etc. to which any partner may be a party contrary to this provision
shall be deemed to have been on the personal account of such partner and he shall pay
and discharge the same out of his own moneys and indemnify other partners and the
firm against payment thereof and against all actions, proceedings, costs, charges,
expenses, claims and demands in respect thereof.
17. That the parties of ...................... part are not working partners but are only financing,
dormant and sleeping partners. The parties of ....................... part need not be in
charge of, responsible to the firm for the conduct of the business of the firm and need
not take interest in day-to-day working and business of the partnership firm.
That the parties of the ............................ part shall not be liable to any criminal
action for the business or working of the partnership firm or for the acts of the other
partners or its employees or its representatives for and on behalf of or on account of
the partnership firm or for the purposes of the partnership firm. The said partners shall
not be liable for any liability, civil or criminal, against the partnership firm or other
partners.
That the said partners shall not become and shall not be liable for any criminal
action for any default or offence committed by other partners or employees or
authorised representatives of the firm under the Income-tax Act, Customs Act,
Foreign Exchange Regulation Act, Sales tax Laws or other Central or State Acts,
laws, Rules or Regulations.
18. That the partners shall be entitled to modify the above terms relating to remuneration,
interest, etc. payable to partners by executing a supplementary deed and such deed
when executed shall have effect unless otherwise provided from the first day of
accounting period in which such supplementary deed is executed and the same shall
form part of this deed of partnership.
19. That all disputes and questions in ...................... connection with the partnership or
this deed arising between the partners or between any one of them or their legal
representatives and whether during or after the partnership, shall be referred to the
arbitrator in accordance with the provisions of the Arbitration and Conciliation Act,
1996 then in force.
36
IN WITNESS WHEREOF the parties to this deed have set their hands on the day and
year first above written and in the presence of:
First Party Second Party
Third Party Fourth Party
WITNESSES;
1.
2.
37
PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT BETWEEN ADVOCATES
THIS DEED of Partnership made at ........................ this ............... day
of .........................., 2000, between A son of ............................ resident of ...........................
of the FIRST PART, B son of ........................ resident of ................. of the SECOND PART,
C son of ....................... resident of .................. of the THIRD PART, and D son
of ................... resident of ............... of the FOURTH PART.
WITNESSETH THAT the parties hereto shall be and become partners on the
following terms and conditions:
(1) The said partners will carry on the business of Advocates in partnership at ...............
under the name and style of M/s. .................................................. with effect
from .............
(2) The partnership shall be for a period of ................ years unless previously determined
in the manner hereinafter provided.
(3) The capital requisite for carrying on the partnership business is Rs. ......................
which shall be contributed by all the partners equally. Any further capital required
from time to time shall be contributed by the partners in equal shares.
(4) The partnership firm shall open an account with ..................
Bank ................................... Branch ............................... or such other bank as the
partners shall from time to time agree upon.
(5) All partnership moneys, cheques, pay orders, demand drafts and other instruments for
money shall as and when received be paid into or deposited in the bank to the credit
of the partnership account. The moneys received by the firm or any partner on behalf
of the firm of any client or third person shall forthwith be deposited in the said bank
to a separate clients account to be kept by the firm.
(6) Proper books of account and diaries shall be kept by the partners at the business
premises and the same shall be available for inspection by all the partners at all times.
(7) Each partner shall make full and proper entries of all business transacted by him on
account of the partnership and cheek up the bills for all such matters.
38
(8) Each partner shall devote his whole time and attention to the partnership business and
no partner shall, without the consent of the other partners engage in any other
business or hold any office or appointment, provided that each partner can provide
free and voluntary service to his friends or relatives.
(9) Each partner shall be entitled to ...................... days holiday in each year, and to
absent himself from business to ................... days consecutively or otherwise in each
year. If the period of absence of any partner exceeds ................ days, his share of the
net profits of such year shall be considered as divided into 365 parts and for every day
on which such partner shall have been absent in excess of such .............. days, one of
such parts shall be divided equally between all the partners for the time being
(including the partner so absenting himself).
(10) Each partner shall be entitled to draw a sum of Rs. ................. every month on account
of his accruing share of the net profits for the current year. If in any year the aggregate
amount drawn out by any partner shall be found to exceed the amount of his share in
the net profits on taking of the annual account, he shall forthwith repay the excess to
the partnership.
(11) No partner shall pledge and credit the partnership except in the usual and regular
course of the business or conduct any business for any person, company or firm,
whom the other partners shall have previously in writing, forbidden him to deal with.
(12) The firm shall not charge for acting as Advocates for a partner or the wife or any child
or children of a partner or his, her, or their trustees, except out of pocket expenses or
costs recovered against other parties in any proceedings or out of any estate or
property the subject of any such proceedings and any costs recovered shall be credited
to partnership account.
(13) No partner shall without the written consent of the other partners:
(a) Engage directly or indirectly in any business other than that of the partnership.
(b) Engage or dismiss any clerk, junior or any other employee of the partnership
or take any junior, except hereinafter provided.
39
(c) Employ any of the moneys of the partnership or clients or pledge the credit of
the partnership except in the ordinary course of business and upon the account
or for the benefit of the partnership.
(14) Each partner shall be entitled at any time to receive one junior to enable the latter to
qualify as an advocate without paying any premium.
(15) The general account and balance sheet shall be taken and made as at the close of each
year ending on the 31st March and after the taking of the account, the same shall be
audited by M/s. ..................................... Chartered Accountants, whose audit shall
extend to the separate clients account and to all properties belonging to any client
which are in the possession or custody of the firm.
(16) The net profits appearing on each such yearly account shall be divided in equal shares
and such profits less such sums as may have been previously drawn on account by
such partner, may be withdrawn by the partners respectively entitled thereto, as and
when there shall be money at the said bank available for that purpose over and above
the moneys necessary for the current expenses of the partnership business. However,
if on taking annual account, it is found that any partner has drawn out more than the
share of profits as ascertained thereby, he shall repay the excess to the partnership
within ................. days from the date of preparation of final annual account.
(17) Each of the partner shall be entitled to nominate one son in the partnership business
and the nominee will work as junior advocate in the firm at a salary of Rs . .................
p.m. and on the partner retiring from the firm or on death of the partner, the nominee,
if then duly qualified as an Advocate, shall be admitted a partner and will be entitled
to his appointed share; Provided that if the nominee shall not be duly qualified or shall
refuse or have refused by reason of death or otherwise have become unable to accept
such nomination and become a partner then in any such case, such nomination shall
be void and of no effect and his share shall be dealt with in accordance with the
provisions hereinafter mentioned. Upon the admission of any such nominee as a
partner, he shall be bound by the provisions of this deed so far as applicable and he
shall execute a deed covenant to perform and observe the same, if required by the
other partners.
40
(18) If any partner dies during the continuance of the partnership and his son does not
become partner of the firm due to any reason, the share of the partner so dying shall
be purchased by the surviving partners and he shall pay the purchase price to the legal
representatives of the deceased within three months from the death of the deceased
partner. For calculating the purchase price, an account and balance sheet shall be
taken up to the day of the death from the last previous annual account and the share in
the capital and assets of the partnership including goodwill, office furniture, books
and office papers shall be ascertained and the said sum along with the sum which
upon '3 0 taking of such account and balance sheet shall appear to be due to
the deceased partner in respect of undrawn profits drawn to the date of his death shall
be the purchase price. The value of the goodwill of the partnership business shall be
taken to be a sum equal to two years purchase of the average net profits of the
business for the three years next preceding the date of valuation as appearing from the
annual accounts for those three years.
(19) On the death of the partner, the surviving partners will execute in favour of the legal
representatives of the deceased partner, indemnity against the debts, liabilities, and
obligations and the legal representatives shall also execute proper deeds and other
instruments for vesting the share of the deceased partner in the partner or partners
entitled thereto under the provisions of this deed.
(20) If either partner shall commit any breach of any of stipulations contained in this deed
or if a partner becomes insolvent or shall become of unsound mind or incapacitated
from attending to the partnership business for .................. months consecutively or
if any partner retires, the partnership shall not dissolve and the provisions contained in
clauses 18 and 19 hereof shall apply, provided that on the retirement of any partner
from the partnership, he shall enter into a covenant with the continuing partners that
he will not open an office or practice in the ................................ city or in or at any
place within a radius of ........................ kms. measured in a straight line
from ................... either in his own name or as a partner in any other firm.
(21) The notice to the parties under this deed shall be deemed to be duly served, if the
same shall be delivered to him personally or sent by post in a registered letter
addressed to him at his usual or last known place of abode in India.
41
(22) If the partnership is determined by a notice by any partner or by any means not
hereinbefore expressly provided for then, the partnership shall be wound up and assets
distributed as provided by the Partnership Act, 1932.
(23) All disputes and differences which shall arise between the partners or between the
partners and legal representatives of one or more partners or between their respective
legal representatives and whether during or after the determination of the partnership
relating to the rights and liabilities or interpretation of this deed or to any act or
omission of either party or matter or things done or to be done in pursuance hereof,
such disputes and differences shall be referred to arbitration and award of
Shri ............................. and his decision and award shall be final and binding upon the
parties.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have hereunto set and subscribed their
respective hands the day, month and year first above written.
Signed and delivered by the within named A
Signed and delivered by the within named B
Signed and delivered by the within named C
Signed and delivered by the within named D
WITNESSES;
1.
2.
42
CHAPTER- V
WILL
Will is a legal declaration of the intention of a testator with respect to his property,
which he desires to be carried into effect after his death. It includes codicil and every writing
making a voluntary posthumous disposition of property. It is testamentary instrument by
which a person makes disposition of his property to take effect after his death, and which, in
its own nature, is ambulatory and revocable during his life26. Thus, a Will can be changed by
the executant as and when he so likes. It is a secret and confidential document which the
executant is never ordered to produce27.
There are two essential characteristics of a Will:-
(i) It must be intended to come into effect after the death of the testator; and
(ii) It must be revocable by the testator at any time. Although Wills are usually made for
disposing property, they can also be made for appointing executors, for creating trusts and for
appointing testamentary guardians of minor children. In one case, the Andhra Pradesh High
Court has held that contents of the Will must indicate that it is intended to come into effect
after death of testator and that it is revocable at any time prior to his death and a document
cannot be treated as a Will by a mere reading of heading of it28.
A gift to take effect the life lime of the donor is a deed of settlement and not a Will.
The Indian Succession Act provides that a Will is liable to be revoked or altered by the maker
of it at any time when he is competent to dispose of his property by Will29.
When a person dies without having made a Will, he is said to have died intestate. His
property is then inherited by his legal heirs in accordance with the law of inheritance
applicable to him. It must be noted here that legal heirs generally include close family
members such as one’s spouse, children, parents, brothers and sisters.
26 NS Bindra, Conveyancing, Draftsman & Interpretation of Deeds, (7th ed.), Delhi Law House.27 AB Kafaltiya, Textbook on Pleading, Drafting and Conveyancing, (2010), Universal Law Publishing Co.28 Noshirvan H. Jhabvala, Drafting, Pleading, Conveyancing And Professional Ethics, (2011), C. Jamnadas & Co.29 Section 63, the Indian Succession Act, 1925
43
Wills are always effective after death, never in the life time of the testator. Section 63
of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 provides that a Will is liable to be revoked or altered by
the maker of it at nay time when he is competent to dispose of his property by Will,
Therefore, the essential characteristic of a Will is its revocability.
Wills executed according to the provisions of section 63 of the Indian Succession Act
are called Unprivileged Wills and Wills executed under section 66 of the Act, by a soldier
employed in an expedition or engaged in actual warfare, or by an airman so employed or
engaged, or by mariner being at sea, are called Privileged Wills. It is provided in the Act that
such a Will may be written wholly by the testator with his own hands and, in such a case, it
need not be signed or attested; or it may be written wholly or in part by another person, in
which case, it may be signed by the testator but need not be attested. If, however, an
instrument purporting to be a Will is written wholly or in part by another person and is not
signed by the testator, it shall be deemed to be his Will, if it is shown that it was written by
the testator’s directions or was recognised by him as his Will30.
If, on the face of it, the instrument appears to be incomplete, it shall nevertheless, be
deemed to be the Will of the testator, provided the fact that it was not completed, can be
attributed to some cause other than the abandonment of the testamentary intentions expressed
in the instrument. Further, if such a soldier, airman or mariner has written instructions for the
preparation of his Will, but has not died before it could be prepared and executed, the
instructions shall be deemed to be his Will; and if such a person has, in the presence of two
witnesses, given verbal instructions for the preparation of his Will, and such instructions have
been reduced to writing in his lifetime, but he has died before the Will could be prepared and
executed, then such instructions are to be considered to constitute his Will, although they may
not have been reduced into writing in his presence, nor read over to him. It is also provided
that such a soldier, airman or mariner may make a Will by word of mouth by declaring his
intention before two witnesses present at the same time, but such a Will shall become null at
the expiration of one month after the testator, being still alive, has ceased to be entitled to
make a privileged Will. An unprivileged Will like Codicil can be revoked by the testator only
by another Will or by some writing declaring an intention to revoke the same and 3executed
in the manner in which an unprivileged Will can be executed under the Act or by burning,
30 CR Datta and MN Das, DeSouza's: Conveyancing, (13th ed. 2010), Eastern Law House.
44
tearing or destroying of the same by the testator or by some other person in his presence and
by his directions with the intention of revoking the same31.
Mere loss of a Will does not operate as a revocation but where a Will is destroyed by
the testator or with his privacy or approbation, it is to be deemed to have been revoked.
No obliteration, interlineations or other alternation made in any unprivileged Will
after the execution thereof, can have any effect except so far as the words or meaning of the
Will have been thereby rendered illegible or unidiscernible, unless such alteration has been
executed in the same manner as is required for the execution of the Will; but a Will, as so
altered, shall be deemed to be duly executed if the signature of the testator and the
subscription of the witnesses is made in the margin or some other part of the Will opposite or
near to such alternation, or at the foot or end or opposite to a memorandum referring to such
alteration, and written at the end or some other part of the Will.
A privileged Will or Codicil may be revoked by the testator by an unprivileged Will
or codicil, or buy any act expressing an intention to revoke it and accompanied by such
formalities as would be sufficient to give validity to a privileged Will, or by the burning,
tearing or otherwise destroying the same by the testator or by some person in his p[resence
and by his direction with the intention of revoking the same. In such cases, it is not necessary
that the testator should, at the time of doing the act which has the effect of revocation of the
Will or Codicil, be in a situation which entitles him to make a privileged Will.
Every Will is revoked by the marriage of the maker, except a Will made in exercise of
a power of appointment, when the property over which the power of appointment is
exercised, would not, in default of such appointment, pass to his or her executor or
administrator, or to the person entitled in case of intestacy.
This rule as to revocation of a Will by marriage, does not, however, apply to Wills
and codicils executed by Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs or Jains.
An unprivileged Will which has once been validly revoked cannot be received
otherwise than by the re-execution thereon with the prescribed formalities, or by a codicil
executed with such formalities and showing an intention to revive the same. When a Will or a
codicil, which has been partly revoked and afterwards wholly revoked, such revival cannot
31 SP Aggarwal, Drafting and Conveyancing, (1st ed., 2005), Lexis Nexis Butterworths Wadhwa.
45
extend to so much thereof as has been revoked before the revocation of the whole thereof,
unless and intention to the contrary is shown by the Will or codicil.
It has already been stated that in the case of Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs and Jains a Will
could validly be made orally and no formalities for the execution of a Will are required. This
rule, however, did not apply to Wills made by Hindu, Buddhists, Sikhs or Jains, on or after
the 1st of September, 1870, within the territories which were subject to the Provincial
Government of Bengal or in the local limits of the ordinary civil jurisdiction of the High
Courts of Judicature at Madras and Bombay, and also, to all such Wills and codicils made
outside those territories or limits so far as they related to immovable property situated within
these territoes or limits. The execution of such Wills was previously regulated by the Hindu
Wills Act (XXI of 1870). Except in the cases mentioned in that Act, oral Wills could be made
by person’s professing the Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh and Jain religions. A question, however,
arises whether the Indian Succession Act, 1925 has the effect of depriving such persons of the
privilege of making oral Wills, or whether the previsions of section 63 of the Act do not
merely provide for the formalities which must be observed, if any of such persons chooses to
‘execute’ a Will, i.e., chooses to reduce his testamentary dispositions to writing. It will be
observe that section 63 of the Act provides for the manner of ‘execution’ of unprivileged
Wills, it does not deal with the question of the ‘making’ of such Wills.
That the Act seems to make a distinction between the ‘execution’ and the ‘making’ of
Wills, will appear from a comparison of the phraseology of sections 63 and 66 of the Indian
Succession Act, 1925. While section 63 refers to the ‘execution’ of unprivileged Wills,
section 63 refers to the ‘execution’ of unprivileged Wills, section 66 prescribes the ‘mode of
making’ and rules for executing Privileged Wills’. A distinction, therefore, seems to be
contemplate between the ‘execution’ and the ‘making’ of a Will. The former expression
apparently applies to cases where the Will is to be reduced to writing, and the expression
‘making of a Will’ includes the execution of a Will and also an oral declaration by the
testator of his testamentary disposition of his estate, if such declaration legally amounts to a
Will. The matter is a debatable one, and no definite opinion, therefore, need be expressed on
it at this stage.32
32 JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book Company.
46
Types of Wills:
Conditional or Contingent Wills: A Will may be expressed to take effect only in the
event of the happening of some contingency or condition, and if the contingency does not
happen or the condition fails, the Will is not be legally enforceable. Accordingly, where A
executes a Will to be operative for a particular year, i.e.,. if he dies within that year. A lives
for more years, after that years. Since A does not express an intention that the Will be
subsisting even intestate. A Conditional Will is invalid if the condition imposed is invalid or
contrary to law.
Joint Wills: A Joint Will is a testamentary instrument whereby two or more persons
agree to make a conjoint Will. Where a Will is joint and is intended to take effect after the
death of both, it will not be enforceable during the life– time of either. Joint Wills are
revocable at anytime by either of the testators during their joint lives, or aster the death of
one, by the survivor.
A Will executed by two or more testators as a single document duly executed by each
testator disposing of his separate properties or his joint properties is not a single Will. It
operates on the death of each and is in effect for tow or more Wills. On the death of each
testator, the legatee would become entitled to the properties of the testator who dies.
Mutual Wills: A Will is mutual when two testators confer upon each other reciprocal
benefits by either of them constituting the other his legatee. But when the legatees are distinct
form the testators, there can be no position for Mutual Wills.
Duplicate Wills: A testator, for the sake of safety, may make a Will in duplicate, one
to be kept by him and the other to be deposited in the safe custody with a bank or executor or
trustee. If the testator mutilates or destroys the one which is in his custody it is revocation of
both.
Concurrent Wills: Generally, a man should leave only one Will at the time of his
death. However, for the sake of convenience a testator may dispose of some properties in one
country by one Will and the other properties in another country by a separate will.
Sham Wills: If a document is deliberately executed with all due formalities
purporting to be a Will, it will still be nullity if it can be shown that the testator did not intend
47
it to have nay testamentary operation, but was to have only some collaterally object. One
thing must be borne in mind that the intention to make the Will is essential to the validity of a
Will.
Holograph Wills: Such Wills are written entirely in the handwriting of the testator.
48
WILL
I, ______________, son of Shri _______________, aged __ years, resident of
______________________________, do hereby revoke all my former Wills, Codicils and
Testamentary dispositions made by me. I declare this to be my last Will and Testament.
I maintain good health, and possess a sound mind. This Will is made by me of my
own independent decision and free volition. Have not be influenced, cajoled or coerced in
any manner whatsoever.
I hereby appoint my ________________, as the sole Executor of this WILL.
The name of my wife is _________________. We have two children namely, (1)
__________________ (2) ________________, I own following immovable and movable
assets.
1. One Flat No.___ in _______________________.
2. Jewelry, ornaments, cash, National Saving Certificate, Public Provident Fund, shares
in various companies, cash in hand and also with certain banks.
All the assets owned by me are self-acquired properties. No one else has any right,
title, interest, claim or demand whatsoever on these assets or properties. I have full right,
absolute power and complete authority on these assets, or in any other property which may be
substituted in their place or places which may be Acquired or received by me hereafter.
I hereby give, devise and bequeath all my properties, whether movable or immovable,
whatsoever and wheresoever to my wife, _____________________, absolutely forever.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I have hereunto set my hands on this ____ day of ____,
2000 at ____________.
-sd-
49
TESTATRIX
SIGNED by the abovenamed Testatrix as his last WILL and Testament in our
presence, who appear to have perfectly understood & approved the contents in the presence
of both of us presents, at the same time who in his presence and in the presence of each other
have hereunto subscribed our names as Witnesses.
WITNESSES :
1.
2.
50
WILL WITH SEVERAL LEGACIES AND RELIGIOUS AND CHARITABLE
BEQUESTS AND RESIDUE TO VEST IN TRUSTEES
FOR BENEFIT OF WIFE AND CHILDREN
This is the last will executed by me, AB, etc., this the _______ day in the city of
__________________.
1. I hereby revoke all former wills and codicils heretofore made by me.
2. I appoint CD, etc., EF, and GH, etc., to be the executors and trustees of my this will.
3. I appoint the said trustees as guardian of my children jointly with my wife.
4. I bequeath –
(i) to my wife OP Shares Nos. ______ in Company Limited’
(ii) to my son MN my gold watch, chain and my signestring ;
(iii) to my daughter KL my motor car;
(iv) to my friend XY all my books.
5. I bequeath the following pecuniary legacies :
(i) the sum of Rs. _______ to each of the trustees who shall prove my will and act
in trust thereof.
(ii) Rs. _______ to each of my servants MN and Rs.
6. I bequeath the following charitable legacies ;
(i) to the __________ Hospital Rs. ___________,
(ii) to the___________ College Rs. ___________.
(iii) to the __________ Orphanage Rs. ___________.
(iv) to the __________ Temple Rs. ___________.
51
7. I give to my sister PQ, the wife of TU, during her life an annuity of Rs. _____ payable
my equal monthly installments on the first day of each month after my death without
power of anticipation during her coverture.
8. I release and forgive to IJ or to his representative if he dies before me the amount that
may be due at the time of my death to me on his bond for Rs. ______ dated _______
and direct my trustees to cancel and deliver up the bond to him.
9. I devise and bequeath all my property, movable and immovable, existing at the time
of my death (except property disposed of by this will) unto my trustees upon trust to
sell all the covert the same into money, and after payment of all my debts, funeral
expenses, legacies and annuities hereinbefore provided, to invest the net proceeds
thereof in any investment they in their absolute discretion think fit and to hold the
same and income thereof upon trust hereinafter declared and specified.
10. My trustees shall pay the income of the trust estate to my wife during her lifetime
without power of anticipation until her re-marriage and after her remarriage, one
moiety to her and the other moiety to my children in equal shares.
11. Subject to aforesaid my trustees shall divide the corpus of the trust estate among my
children equally, who being sons attain the age of majority and in the case of
daughters attain majority or marry under age :
Provided that if any child of mine dies during my life-time, then his children
shall take equally between them and share of such child.
12. I hereby give power to my wife, the said OP to appoint a new trustee or new trustees
on the occurrence of any vacancy in the office of the trustees.
13. I direct that if there is any difference of opinion between the trustees on any matter
concerning this will, or the management of the property hereby bequeathed, or the
execution of trust hereby created, the opinion of the majority shall prevail.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF I, the said AB, have executed this will in the presence of
the witnesses hereunder who have attested the same in my present.
52
(Sd.)
Testator
Witnesses :
1. ________________
2. ________________
53
CHAPTER VI
CONCLUSION
iii
Bibliography
AB Kafaltiya, Textbook on Pleading, Drafting and Conveyancing, (2010), Universal Law
Publishing Co.
AN Chaturvedi, Principles & Forms of Pleadings & Conveyancing, (10th ed, 2007),
Allahabad Law Agency
Bryan A Garner, Black’s Law Dictionary, (9th ed., 2009) WEST
CR Datta and MN Das, DeSouza's: Conveyancing, (13th ed. 2010), Eastern Law House
JM Srivastava and GC Mogha, The Indian Conveyancer, (14th ed., 2009), Eastern Book
Company
Noshirvan H. Jhabvala, Drafting, Pleading, Conveyancing And Professional Ethics,
(2011), C. Jamnadas & Co.
NS Bindra, Conveyancing, Draftsman & Interpretation of Deeds, (7th ed.), Delhi Law
House
SP Aggarwal, Drafting and Conveyancing, (1st ed., 2005), Lexis Nexis Butterworths
Wadhwa