Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act
Chapter I - Preliminary
1. Short title and extent
2. Application of Act
3. Definitions
4. Overriding effect of Act
Chapter II - Adoption
5. Adoptions to be regulated by this Chapter
6. Requisites of a valid adoption
7. Capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption
8. Capacity of a female Hindu to take in adoption
9. Persons capable of giving in adoption
10. Persons who may be adopted
11. Other conditions for a valid adoption
12. Effects of adoption
13. Right of adoptive parents to dispose of their properties
14. Determination of adoptive mother in certain cases
15. Valid adoption not to be cancelled
16. Presumption as to registered documents relating to adoption
17. Prohibition of certain payments
Chapter III - Maintenance
18. Maintenance of wife
19. Maintenance of widowed daughter-in-law
20. Maintenance of children and aged parents
21. Dependants defined
22. Maintenance of dependants
23. Amount of maintenance
24. Claimant to maintenance should be a Hindu
25. Amount of maintenance may be altered on change of circumstances
26. Debts to have priority
27. Maintenance when to be a charge
28. Effect of transfer of property on right to maintenance
Chapter IV - Repeal And Saving
29. [Rep. by the Repealing and Amending Act, 1960]
30. Saving
Chapter I - Preliminary
1. Short title and extent
(1) This Act may be called the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance
Act, 1956.
(2) It extends to the whole of
2. Application of Act
(1) This Act applies-
(a) to any person, who is a Hindu by religion
in any of its forms or developments, including a Virashaiva, a Lingayat or a
follower of the Brahmo, Prarthana or Arya Samaj,
(b) to any person who is a Buddhist, Jaina or
Sikh by religion, and
(c) to any other person who is not a Muslim,
Christian, Parsi or Jew by religion, unless it is proved that any such person
would not have been governed by the Hindu law or by any custom or usage as part
of the law in respect of any of the matters dealt with herein if this Act had
not been passed.
Explanation: The following persons are Hindus, Buddhists,
Jainas or Sikhs by religion, as the case may be:
(a) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, both of whose parents
are Hindus, Buddhists, Jainas or Sikhs by religion;
(b) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, one of whose parents
is a Hindu, Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh by religion and who is brought up as a
member of the tribe, community, group or family to which such parent belongs or
belonged; 1[***]
2[(bb) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, who has been
abandoned both by his father and mother or whose parentage is not known and who
in either case is brought up as a Hindu, Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh; and]
(c) any person who is convert or reconvert to the Hindu,
Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh religion.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1),
nothing contained in this Act shall apply to the members of any Scheduled Tribe
within the meaning of clause
(25) of article 366 of the Constitution unless the Central
Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, otherwise directs.
(2A) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1),
nothing contained in this Act shall apply to Renoncants of the Union Territory
of Pondicherry.
(3) The expression "Hindu" in any portion of this Act shall be construed as if it included a person who, though not a Hindu by religion, is, nevertheless, a person to whom this Act applies by virtue of the provisions contained in this section.
3. Definitions
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires,-
(a) the expressions "custom" and "usage"
signify any rule which, having been continuously and uniformly observed for a
long time, has obtained the force of law among Hindus in any local area, tribe,
community, group or family:
PROVIDED that the rule is certain and not unreasonable
or opposed to public policy:
PROVIDED FURTHER that, in the case of a rule applicable only to
a family, it has not been discontinued by the family;
(b) "maintenance" includes-
(i) in all cases, provision for food,
clothing, residence, education and medical attendance and treatment;
(ii) in the case of an unmarried daughter,
also the reasonable expenses of and incidents to her marriage;
(c) "minor" means a person who has not completed his or her age of eighteen years.
4. Overriding effect of Act
Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Act,-
(a) any text, rule or interpretation of Hindu law or any custom
or usage as part of that law in force immediately before the commencement of
this Act shall cease to have effect with respect to any matter for which
provision is made in this Act;
(b) any other law in force immediately before the commencement of this Act shall cease to apply to Hindus insofar as it is inconsistent with any of the provisions contained in this Act.
Chapter II - Adoption
5. Adoptions to be regulated by this Chapter
(1) No adoption shall be made after the commencement of this Act
by or to a Hindu except in accordance with the provisions contained in this
Chapter, and any adoption made in contravention of the said provisions shall be
void.
(2) An adoption which is void shall neither create any rights in the adoptive family in favor of any person which he or she could not have acquired except by reason of the adoption, nor destroy the rights of any person in the family of his or her birth.
6. Requisites of a valid adoption
No adoption shall be valid unless-
(i) the person adopting has the capacity, and also the right, to
take in adoption;
(ii) the person giving in adoption has the capacity to do so;
(iii) the person adopted is capable of being taken in adoption;
and
(iv) the adoption is made in compliance with the other conditions mentioned in this Chapter.
7. Capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption
Any male Hindu who is of sound mind and is not a minor has the
capacity to take a son or a daughter in adoption:
PROVIDED that, if he has a wife living, he shall not adopt
except with the consent of his wife unless the wife has completely and finally
renounced the world or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court
of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.
Explanation: If a person has more than one wife living at the time of adoption, the consent of all the wives is necessary unless the consent of any one of them is unnecessary for any of the reasons specified in the preceding proviso.
8. Capacity of a female Hindu to take in adoption
Any female Hindu-
(a) who is of sound mind,
(b) who is not a minor, and
(c) who is not married, or if married, whose marriage has been dissolved or whose husband is dead or has completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind, has the capacity to take a son or daughter in adoption.
9. Persons capable of giving in adoption
(1) No person except the father or mother or the guardian of a
child shall have the capacity to give the child in adoption.
(2) Subject to the provisions of 3[sub-section(3) and
sub-section(4)], the father, if alive, shall alone have the right to give in
adoption, but such right shall not be exercised save with the consent of the
mother unless the mother has completely and finally renounced the world or has
ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction
to be of unsound mind.
(3) The mother may give the child in adoption if the father is
dead or has completely and finally renounced the world or has ceased to be a
Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of
unsound mind.
3[(4) Where both the father and mother are dead or have
completely and finally renounced the world or have abandoned the child or have
been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind or
where the parentage of the child is not known, the guardian of the child may
give the child in adoption with the previous permission of the court to any
person including the guardian himself.]
(5) Before granting permission to a guardian under sub-section
(4), the court shall be satisfied that the adoption will be for the welfare of
the child, due consideration being for this purpose given to the wishes of the
child having regard to the age and understanding of the child and that the
applicant for permission has not received or agreed to receive and that no
person has made or given or agreed to make or give to the applicant any payment
or reward in consideration of the adoption except such as the court may
sanction.
Explanation: For the purposes of this section-
(i) the expression "father" and "mother" do
not include an adoptive father and an adoptive mother; 1[***]
2[(ia) "guardian" means a person
having the care of the person of a child or of both his person and property and
includes-
(a) a guardian appointed by the will of the
child's father or mother; and
(b) a guardian appointed or declared by a
court; and]
(ii) "court" means the city civil court or a district court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the child to be adopted ordinarily resides.
10. Persons who may be adopted
No person shall be capable of being taken in adoption unless the
following conditions are fulfilled, namely,-
(i) he or she is Hindu;
(ii) he or she has not already been adopted;
(iii) he or she has not been married, unless there is a custom
or usage applicable to the parties which permits persons who are married being
taken in adoption;
(iv) he or she has not completed the age of fifteen years, unless there is a custom or usage applicable to the parties which permits persons who have completed the age of fifteen years being taken in adoption.
11. Other conditions for a valid adoption
In every adoption, the following conditions must be complied
with:
(i) if the adoption is of a son, the adoptive father or mother
by whom the adoption is made must not have a Hindu son, son's son or son's son
(whether by legitimate blood relationship or by adoption) living at the time of
adoption;
(ii) if the adoption is of a daughter, the adoptive father or
mother by whom the adoption is made must not have a Hindu daughter or son's
daughter (whether by legitimate blood relationship or by adoption) living at
the time of adoption;
(iii) if the adoption is by a male and the person to be adopted
is a female, the adoptive father is at least twenty-one years older than the
person to be adopted;
(iv) if the adoption is by a female and the person to be adopted
is a male, the adoptive mother is at least twenty-one years older than the
person to be adopted;
(v) the same child may not be adopted simultaneously by two or
more persons;
(vi) the child to be adopted must be actually given and taken in
adoption by the parents or guardian concerned or under their authority with
intent to transfer the child from the family of its birth 2[or in the case of
an abandoned child or child whose parentage is not known, from the place or
family where it has been brought up] to the family of its adoption:
PROVIDED that the performance of datta homam shall not be essential to the validity of adoption.
12. Effects of adoption
An adopted child shall be deemed to be the child of his or her
adoptive father or mother for all purposes with effect from the date of the
adoption and from such date all the ties of the child in the family of his or
her birth shall be deemed to be severed and replaced by those created by the
adoption in the adoptive family:
PROVIDED that-
(a) the child cannot marry any person whom he or she could not
have married if he or she had continued in the family of his or her birth;
(b) any property which vested in the adopted child before the
adoption shall continue to vest in such person subject to the obligations, if
any, attaching to the ownership of such property including the obligation to
maintain relatives in the family of his or her birth;
(c) the adopted child shall not divest any person of any estate
which vested in him or her before the adoption.
Comment: It is clear on a reading of the main part of
Section 12 and sub-section
(vi) of Section 11 that the effect of adoption under the Act is that it brings about severance of all ties of the child given in adoption in the family of his or her birth. The child altogether ceases to have any ties with the family of his birth. Correspondingly, these very ties are automatically replaced by those created by the adoption in the adoptive family. The legal effect of giving the child in adoption must therefore be to transfer the child from the family of its birth to the family of its adoption. Smt. Sitabai v. Ramchandra, AIR 1970 SUPREME COURT 343
13. Right of adoptive parents to dispose of their properties
Subject to any agreement to the contrary, an adoption does not deprive the adoptive father or mother of the power to dispose of his or her property by transfer inter vivos or by will.
14. Determination of adoptive mother in certain cases
(1) Where a Hindu who has a wife living adopts a child, she
shall be deemed to be the adoptive mother.
(2) Where an adoption has been made with the consent of more
than one wife, the senior-most in marriage among them shall be deemed to be the
adoptive mother and the others to be step-mothers.
(3) Where a widower or a bachelor adopts a child, any wife whom
he subsequently marries shall be deemed to be the step-mother of the adopted
child.
(4) Where a widow or an unmarried woman adopts a child, any husband whom she marries subsequently shall be deemed to be the step-father of the adopted child.
15. Valid adoption not to be cancelled
No adoption which has been validly made can be cancelled by the adoptive father or mother or any other person, nor can the adopted child renounce his or her status as such and return to the family of his or her birth.
16. Presumption as to registered documents relating to adoption
Whenever any document registered under any law for the time being in force is produced before any court purporting to record an adoption made and is signed by the person giving and the person taking the child in adoption, the court shall presume that the adoption has been made in compliance with the provisions of this Act unless and until it is disproved.
17. Prohibition of certain payments
(1) No person shall receive or agree to receive any payment or
other reward in consideration of the adoption of any person, and no person
shall make or give or agree to make or give to any other person any payment or
reward the receipt of which is prohibited by this section.
(2) If any person contravenes the provisions of sub-section (1),
he shall be punishable with imprisonment which may extend to six months, or
with fine, or with both.
(3) No prosecution under this section shall be instituted without the previous sanction of the State Government or an officer authorized by the State Government in this behalf.
Chapter III - Maintenance
18. Maintenance of wife
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section, a Hindu wife,
whether married before or after the commencement of this Act, shall be entitled
to be maintained by her husband during her lifetime.
(2) A Hindu wife shall be entitled to live separately from her
husband without forfeiting her claim to maintenance-
(a) if he is guilty of desertion, that is to
say, of abandoning her without reasonable cause and without her consent or
against her wish, or of willfully neglecting her;
(b) if he has treated her with such cruelty as
to cause a reasonable apprehension in her mind that it will be harmful or injurious
to live with her husband;
(c) if he is suffering from a virulent form of
leprosy;
(d) if he has any other wife living;
(e) if he keeps a concubine in the same house
in which his wife is living or habitually resides with a concubine elsewhere;
(f) if he has ceased to be a Hindu by
conversion to another religion;
(g) if there is any other cause justifying her
living separately.
(3) A Hindu wife shall not be entitled to separate residence and maintenance from her husband if she is unchaste or ceases to be a Hindu by conversion to another religion.
19. Maintenance of widowed daughter-in-law
(1) A Hindu wife, whether married before or after the
commencement of this Act, shall be entitled to be maintained after the death of
her husband by her father-in-law:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to
maintain herself out of her own earnings or other property or, where she has no
property of her own, is unable to obtain maintenance-
(a) from the estate of her husband or her father or mother, or
(b) from her son or daughter, if any, or his or her estate.
(2) Any obligation under sub-section (1) shall not be enforceable if the father-in law has not the means to do so from any coparcenary property in his possession out of which the daughter-in-law has not obtained any share, and any such obligation shall cease on the re-marriage of the daughter-in-law.
20. Maintenance of children and aged parents
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section a Hindu is bound,
during his or her lifetime, to maintain his or her legitimate or illegitimate
children and his or her aged or infirm parents.
(2) A legitimate or illegitimate child may claim maintenance
from his or her father or mother so long as the child is a minor.
(3) The obligation of a person to maintain his or her aged or
infirm parent or a daughter who is unmarried extends insofar as the parent or
the unmarried daughter, as the case may be, is unable to maintain himself or
herself out of his or her own earnings or other property.
Explanation: In this section "parent" includes a childless step-mother.
21. Dependants defined
For the purposes of this Chapter "dependants" means
the following relatives of the deceased:
(i) his or her father;
(ii) his or her mother;
(iii) his widow, so long as she does not re-marry;
(iv) his or her son or the son of his predeceased son or the son
of predeceased son of his predeceased son, so long as he is a minor:
PROVIDED and to the extent that he is unable to obtain
maintenance, in the case of a grandson from his father's or mother's estate,
and in the case of a great grand-son, from the estate of his father or mother
or father's father or father's mother;
(v) his or her unmarried daughter, or the unmarried daughter of
his predeceased son or the unmarried daughter of a predeceased son of his
predeceased son, so long as she remains unmarried:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to obtain
maintenance, in the case of a grand-daughter from her father's or mother's
estate and in the case of a great-grand-daughter from the estate of her father
or mother or father's father or father's mother;
(vi) his widowed daughter:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to obtain
maintenance-
(a) from the estate of her husband, or
(b) from her son or daughter if any, or his or her estate; or
(c) from her father-in-law or his father or the estate of either
of them;
(vii) any widow of his son or of a son of his predeceased son,
so long as she does not remarry:
PROVIDED and to the extent that she is unable to obtain
maintenance from her husband's estate, or from her son or daughter, if any, or
his or her estate; or in the case of a grandson's widow, also from her
father-in-law's estate
(viii) his or her minor illegitimate son, so long as he remains
a minor;
(ix) his or her illegitimate daughter, so long as she remains unmarried.
22. Maintenance of dependants
(1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2) the heirs of a
deceased Hindu are bound to maintain the dependants of the deceased out of the
estate inherited by them from the deceased.
(2) Where a dependant has not obtained, by testamentary or
intestate succession, any share in the estate of a Hindu dying after the
commencement of this Act, the dependant shall be entitled, subject to the
provisions of this Act, to maintenance from those who take the estate.
(3) The liability of each of the persons who takes the estate
shall be in proportion to the value of the share or part of the estate taken by
him or her.
(4) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (2) or sub-section (3), no person who is himself or herself a dependant shall be liable to contribute to the maintenance of others, if he or she has obtained a share or part the value of which is, or would, if the liability to contribute were enforced, become less than what would be awarded to him or her by way of maintenance under this Act.
23. Amount of maintenance
(1) It shall be in the discretion of the court to determine
whether any, and if so what, maintenance shall be awarded under the provisions
of this Act, and in doing so the court shall have due regard to the
considerations set out in sub-section (2), or sub-section (3), as the case may
be, so far as they are applicable.
(2) In determining the amount of maintenance, if any, to be
awarded to a wife, children or aged or infirm parents under this Act, regard
shall be had to-
(a) the position and status of the parties;
(b) the reasonable wants of the claimant;
(c) if the claimant is living separately, whether
the claimant is justified in doing so;
(d) the value of the claimant's property and
any income derived from such property, or from the claimant's own earnings or
from any other source;
(e) the number of persons entitled to
maintenance under this Act.
(3) In determining the amount of maintenance, if any, to be
awarded to a dependant under this Act, regard shall be had to-
(a) the net value of the estate of the
deceased after providing for the payment of his debts;
(b) the provision, if any, made under a will
of the deceased in respect of the dependant;
(c) the degree of relationship between the
two;
(d) the reasonable wants of the dependant;
(e) the past relations between the dependant
and the deceased;
(f) the value of the property of the dependant
and any income derived from such property; or from his or her earnings or from
any other source;
(g) the number of dependants entitled to maintenance under this Act.
24. Claimant to maintenance should be a Hindu
No person shall be entitled to claim maintenance under this Chapter if he or she has ceased to be a Hindu by conversion to another religion.
25. Amount of maintenance may be altered on change of circumstances
The amount of maintenance, whether fixed by a decree of court or by agreement, either before or after the commencement of this Act, may be altered subsequently if there is a material change in the circumstances justifying such alteration.
26. Debts to have priority
Subject to the provisions contained in section 27 debts of every description contracted or payable by the deceased shall have priority over the claims of his dependants for maintenance under this Act.
27. Maintenance when to be a charge
A dependant's claim for maintenance under this Act shall not be a charge on the estate of the deceased or any portion thereof, unless one has been created by the will of the deceased, by a decree of court, by agreement between the dependant and the owner of the estate or portion, or otherwise.
28. Effect of transfer of property on right to maintenance
Where a dependant has a right to receive maintenance out of an estate, and such estate or any part thereof is transferred, the right to receive maintenance may be enforced against the transferee if the transferee has notice of the right or if the transfer is gratuitous; but not against the transferee for consideration and without notice of the right.
Chapter IV - Repeal And Saving
29. [Rep. by the Repealing and Amending Act, 1960]
30. Saving
Nothing contained in this Act shall affect any adoption made before the commencement of this Act, and the validity and effect of any such adoption shall be determined as if this Act had not been passed.