Escolar Documentos
Profissional Documentos
Cultura Documentos
Schools
Submission To:
Submitted By:
Prashant Kumar
Roll no:- 8
V Semester
S.S. Jain Subodh Law College
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Acknowledgment............................................................................................ iii
2. Research Methodology.................................................................................. iv
3. Abstract.......................................................................................................... v
4. Introduction.................................................................................................... 6
5. Schools of Hindu Law.................................................................................... 7
6. Mitakshara and Dayabhaga Schools ............................................................ 8
7. Migration and the schools............................................................................. 15
8. Conclusion & Suggestions............................................................................ 17
9. Bibliography.................................................................................................. 18
ii
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I take this opportunity to express our humble gratitude and personal regards to Dr.
Alpana Sharma for inspiring me and guiding me during the course of this project work and
also for his cooperation and guidance from time to time during the course of this project work
on the topic.
Jaipur
15th August 2014
Prashant Kumar
iii
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
Aims and Objectives:
The aim of the project is to present a detailed study of the topic SCHOOLS
OF
HINDU
LAW: A COMPARATIVE STUDY forming a concrete informative capsule of the same with an
insight into its relevance in the Indian Society.
Research Plan
The researchers have followed Doctrinal method.
Case Study
Websites
Case Laws
Books
iv
ABSTRACT
This project aims at introducing the concept of schools of Hindu. From thousands of years
people living in the Indian subcontinent have been leading their lives by following the
guidelines and concepts given in the Vedas. These guidelines have evolved into rules followed
by the people and enforced by the rulers and have thus become de facto law. In this modern
times, the same laws have been retrofitted to suit present conditions and have been codified in
the form of several acts of which the important ones are - Hindu Marriage Act 1955, Hindu
Adoption and Maintenance Act 1956, Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act 1956, and Hindu
Succession Act 1956.In hindu law school have major importance.School means rules and
principles of Hindu Law which are divided into opinion. It is not codified. There are two
Schools of Hindu Law- (a) Mitakshara (b) Dayabhaga. Mitakshara School prevails throughout
India except in Bengal. It is a running commentary on the code of Yagnavalkya. Mitakshara is
an orthodox School whereas the Dayabhaga is Reformist School. The Mitakshara and
Dayabhaga Schools differed on important issues as regards the rules of inheritance. However,
this branch of the law is now codified by the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, which has dissolved
the differences between the two. Today, the main difference between them is on joint family
system.
Introduction:
With the exceptions of the hindus and the muslims, the other communities have no school. In
the case of hindus, schools have some regional connotation, while it is not so in case of
muslims, it is as per sects.
Hindu law has two main schools: the Mitakshara school and Dayabhaga. The former has four
sub-schools: the Mithila, the Benares, the Bombay and the south India or the Dravida. The sub
schools prevail in their respective jurisdictions and some matters modify the Mitakshara law;
otherwise it is the Mitakshara law which prevails. The Dayabhaga school of Hindu law prevails
in the Bengal, Assam, Tripura, Manipur, Mizoram, Arunachal and Meghalaya. In rest of India, it
is the Mitakshara school which has its sway. The Mitakshara School prevails even in the
Dayabhaga jurisdiction on all those mattes on which Dayabhaga is silent.
The peculiarity of school of Hindu law is that if a Hindu governed by a school migrates to
another region (where different school has jurisdiction), he will continue to be governed by his
own school, unless he gives up school and adopts the law of the place where hi has settled. In
the modern Hindu law, schools have relevance only in respect of the uncodified Hindu law;
they have lost all their relevance in regard to the codified Hindu law.
Another important aspect of Hindu law is that a person will be governed by custom if he is able
to establish a custom applicable to him, even though such a custom is in derogation to Hindu
law. Although the codified Hindu law overrides all rules and customs of Hindu laws, yet such
has been the impact of custom that in certain areas custom has been expressly saved.
vi
The codified hindu law lays down uniform law for all hindus. In the codified areas of hindu law,
there is no scope for existence of schools. The schools of hindu law have relevance only in
respect of the uncodified areas of hindu law.
Schools of Hindu law emerged with the emergence of the era of commentaries and digests.
The commentator put his own gloss on the ancient texts, and his authority having been
received in one and rejected in another part of India, schools with conflicting doctrines arose.
There are two main schools of hindu law :
1. The mitakshara schools, and
2. The dayabhaga school or Bengal school
The mitakshara school has the following sub-schools:
i.
Benares school,
ii.
Mithila school,
iii.
iv.
vii
1. Mitakshara:
The Mitakshara by Vijnanehvara or Vijnana Yogin is the most celebrated and authoritative of
all the commentaries of the Yajnavalkya Smriti. The age of Vijnaneshvara has been fixed by
recent research to be the latter part of the 11th century
The Mitakshara in its turn has been the subject of several commentaries. Amongst them the
best known are the Subodhini of Visveswarabhatta (1360-1390 AD) and the Balambhatti
said to have been written by Balakrihna alias Balabhatt in the name of his 0mother
Lakshmidevi toward the end of the 18th century AD.
The authority of Mitakshara is supreme throughout India except in Bengal and became the
leading school in Bengal also. The mitakshara is considered as a great authority in all natters
in respect where of there is no conflict between it and the dayabhaga.
By his time, caste system was , it seems, fully entrenched. He classified all society into four
classes, the Brahmin, the kshatriya, the vaishya and lastly the shudra of whom the first three
were called twice-born(Dwija) whose life to enformed to vedic requirement.he lays down
minutre rule regarding pregnancy and the rites to be performed from time to time till the sacred
thread ceremony. Regarding marriage, he forbids marriage between a shudra and a twice
born and he advocates limited polygamy. He recites the eight form of marriage, out reprobates
remarriageof widows or their duty to raie up their chidern to their deceased huband. Intercastemarriage were limited to the three castes known as the twice-born. The seconde part of
his work deals with vyavhar and embrace is in great detail and is the basis of the present day
law of partition. The rest of the work deals with boundary disputes, misdemeanors, bailment,
contract of service , law of mortgage, the allowable intrestin loans, the rules of evidence,
duties of kings, etc.
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2. Dayabhag:
The Dayabhag School which finds it following mainly in Bengal and Assam is not a
commentary on any particular code but is a digest of all the codes. It has been written by
Jimutavahana who lived sometime in the 12th century. Dayabhaga is not divided into any subschool.
Some consider the Mitakshara is the orthodox school whereas the Dayabhag , or the Bengal
school, as it is sometimes called , is the reformed school of Hindu law. The Mitakshara and
Dayabhaga schools differ on important issue as regard the rule of inheritance.
The author of the Dayabhaga was Jimuta Vahan, of whom very little is known except that he
was a Brahmin of the Paribhadriya class and was the author of another work Kalavivek.
Jamuta Vahan professes to base his view on the manusmriti which he says have not been
fully comprehended. Basing his view on other smriti-writer and sages, he refuted the doctrines
of the Baneras and Mithila schools and with a candour characteristic of his able reasoning his
own views.
According to Siromani, Jimuta refers to the opinion of Srikara, Bhajdeva, Vishwaraf and
Govindaraja. In the words of Prof. Sarkar, The Dayabhag was supposed to have been written
by way of revolt against many artificial and sometimes even absurd principles of inhertence,
based on theory of propinquity conscious of the shortcomings and limitation of Vijnaneswars
doctrine. Jimuta-Vahana propounds the theory of spiritual benefit for the governance of the
rules of succession. The immediate benefit of this new theory was the inclusion of many
cognates in the list of heirs, excluded by the Mitakshara which was mainly agnatic.1
Without accepting the set of propositions laid down by other commentators, he deals with the
subject of inheritance, partition and succession as an objective science with a forthright and
direct approach. He appeals to reasons and logic and not merely to precepts, precedents or
postulations. Examining the roots by digging up various stand points, he plunges into the heart
of the subject to come up with doctrine that were close to practicality and rationality.
In the Dayabhag School, besides the authority of Dayabhag, the following commentaries were
followed: (i) Dayatatva; (ii) Dayakram sangrah; (iii) Virmitrodaya and Dattaka chandrika.
ix
Sub-school of Mitakshara:
The Mitakshara School may be subdivided into four schools:
(b) Smritichandrika:
This work by Devanna Bhatta deals with the subject of inheritance. It was also composed
during the, Vijayanagar Empire. It is a Nibandha or digest of law.
(c) Saraswativilasa:
This was a work of the great ruler Prataparudra Deva, who belonged to the Gajapati dynasty
and ruled Orissa between 1497-1539. This author should not be confused with the Kakatiya
ruler of that name who ruled Warangal and was captured by the Delhi Sultan in 1322. The
probable date of the Saraswati Vilasa is 1515. The absence of any reference to
Parasaramadhaviya in this work is explained by the fact that the Gajapathi rulers of Orissa
were hostile to Vijaynagar. Krishna Deva Raya of the Vijayanagar dynasty married the
daughter of Gajapathi (Tukka Devi alias Jaganmohini) in 1516 and brought that hostility to an
end.
th
(a) Viramitrodaya:
The author of this digest is Mitra Misra, who composed it between 1610-1640 under the
patronage of King Virasimhadeva, a scion of the Kasiraju family who ruled at Orchha from
1605 to 1627. In Vedachela v. Subramania, 1921 (48) IA 349, the Privy Council observed:
The Viramitrodaya holds in Western India a high position. It supplements many gaps and
omissions in the earlier commentaries and illustrates and elucidates with logical preciseness
the meaning doubtful prescription. In Girdkarilal v. Bengal Government, 1868 (12) MIA 448,
the Privy Council had observed:
The Viramitrodaya is properly receivable as an exposition of what may have been left doubtful
by the Mitakshara and declaratory of the law of the Benaras School.
(b) Nirnayasindhu:
This work is received as an authority not only in Western India but also in the Benaras School.
Similarly in Western India Viramitrodaya is received as an authority.
xi
(c) Madanaparijata:
This was composed under the patronage of King Madanapala who ruled in Kastha on the
Jumna. It was composed between 1360 and 1390 by Visweswarabhatta who was also the
author of Subodhini, a commentary on the Mitakshara.
xii
A Hindu is governed by the law of the place to which he originally belonged. On migration he
continues to be governed by the law of the original domicile. A Hindu family carries with it, its
law including customs of locality and the burden is heavy on the party alleging otherwise.
Where a Hindu Marwari governed by the Benaras school of law migrated from Jodhpur it was
held that the Hindu Womens Right to Property Act, 1937 applied to his estate on the ground
that law does not hold a migrating family to be immune from changes introduced in the law of
its origin by statutes governing all Hindus subsequent to its migration.
It is a settled law that there is a presumption that parties residing in particular area are
governed by the lex loci unless migration is proved. The burden of proving that the family
came from some other tract and is, therefore, governed by some other branch of Hindu law is
on the party which asserts it.
The ordinary presumption is that a Hindu is governed by the law of the land where he resides.
This presumption is, however, not based on the theory of lex loci but on the ground of its being
a personal law.
Their Lordships of the Privy Council said, where a Hindu family migrates from one part of India
to another, prima fade they carry with them their personal law, and if they are alleged to have
become subject to a new local custom, their new custom must be affirmatively proved to have
been adopted but when such a family emigrates to another country, and being themselves
Mohammedans, settle among Mohammedans, the presumption that they have accepted the
law of the people when they have joined seems to their lordships to be one that should be
much more readily made.
The analogy is that of a change of domicile on settling in a new country rather than the
analogy of a change of custom on migration within India. If nothing is known about a man
except that he lived in certain place, it will be assumed that his personal law is the law which
prevails in that place.
xiii
In such a case domicile plays an important role, e.g., Khojas and Kutchi Memons of Kutch and
Kathiawad on migration to Madras and other parts of India retained the (Mitakshara) rules of
Hindu law in general not only in matters of succession and inheritance but also with regard to
their property including the Hindu concept of coparcenary and survivorship.
xiv
The main points of Fundamental difference between the Mitakshara and Dayabhagaa are as
follows:
1. Under the Mitakshara, The right to property of the coparcener arises by birth; hence the son
is a co-owner with the father in ancestral property, whereas under the Dayabhaga the right to
property arises after the death of the last owner. Hence the son has no right to ancestral
property during fathers life time.
2. Under the Mitakshara the father has the restricted power of alienation of ancestral property
whereas the father has the absolute power of alienation of ancestral property under the
Dayabhaga School.
3. Under the Mitakshara the son can ask for partition of the joint family property even against
the father, whereas under the Dayabhaga the son cannot demand partition against the father.
4. The interest of a member of joint family under the Mitakshara would, on his death pass to
other members by survivorship whereas under the Dayabhaga, the interest of a member
would, on his death, pass by inheritance to his heirs namely widow, son and daughters.
5. Under the Mitakshara, members of joint family cannot dispose of their shares while
undivided, whereas under the Dayabhaga any member of joint family may sell or give away his
share even when undivided.
The modern Hindu Law does not affect the joint family system of Hindus and therefore both
the Schools with their differences still operate. The Hindu Succession Act, 1956, affects the
Mitakshara joint family only on its fringes.
xv
1. Under the Mitakshara, inheritance is governed by the rule of consanguinity i.e., blood
relationship, whereas under the Dayabhaga inheritance is governed by the rule of religious
efficacy i.e., offering of Pindas.
2. Under the Mitakshara, cognates are postponed to agnates but under the Dayabhaga some
cognates like sisters sons are preferred to many agnates.
3. As regards the recognition of the doctrine of factum valet, Mitakshara extended its
recognition to a very limited extent but Dayabhaga has extended its full recognition to it.
Under the modern Hindu Law, the difference between two main schools is no longer tenable.
Under the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, we have one uniform law of succession for all Hindus,
to whatever school or sub-school they may belong.
xvi
Conclusion:
Hindu is one of the most ancient religion on the world. So the laws of hindu are came from
differentsources. In ancient times the hindus are maintain only the law which they believe that
come from Diety, but now they have also some manmade law. All the sources of the law of
ancient and the modern are mentioned above. Both schools has played very important role in
their aspects. The differentiation between them was not such kind that make the difference in
their jurisprudential life but they really exists.
xvii
Bibliography
1: Dr. Diwan Paras- family law; Tenth edition reprint, 2014 ISBN: 81-89530-33-x
2: http://www.shareyouressays.com/117391/what-are-the-sub-schools-of-the-mitakshara
3: Dr. Paras Diwan- Modern Hindu law; twenty second edition reprint, 2013
4:S.R. Myneni Hindu Law(FamilyLaw I) First Ed.(Reprint)- 2010 ISBN: 978-93-80553-64-3
5: Sharma, Dr.B.K, Hindu Law, 1st Ed., Central Law Publishers, 2007
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