Ram Charan & Ors. vs Sukhram & Ors. (Civil Appeal)

In Ram Charan & Ors. vs Sukhram & Ors., the Supreme Court allowed the appeal of the daughters of a Scheduled Tribe woman seeking partition in ancestral property. The trial and appellate courts had denied them the claim, holding that no custom supporting female succession had been proved. The Supreme Court reversed this, holding that in absence of any proven custom to the contrary, the principles of justice, equity and good conscience—preserved under Section 6 of the Central Provinces Laws Act, 1875—must prevail. It emphasized that denial of inheritance to female heirs, without lawful justification, violates Article 14 of the Constitution.

Download Supreme Court Judgment PDF: Ram Charan & Ors. vs Sukhram & Ors.


I. Case Identification & Vitals

1. Court: Supreme Court of India
2. Case Title: Ram Charan & Ors. vs Sukhram & Ors.
3. Document Type and Date of Judgment: Judgment, July 17, 2025
4. Case Number: Civil Appeal No. 9537 of 2025 [Arising out of SLP(C) No. 5559 of 2023]
5. SCR Citation: NA
6. Neutral Citation: 2025 INSC 865
7. Disposal Nature: Appeal Allowed
8. Case Type: Civil Appeal
9. Law Applicable: Customary Law, Central Provinces Laws Act, 1875, Constitution of India (Article 14), Hindu Succession Act (excluded)
10. Bench:

  1. Hon’ble Justice Sanjay Karol
  2. Hon’ble Justice Joymalya Bagchi

11. Judgment Authored by:

  • Hon’ble Justice Sanjay Karol*

II. Summaries & Core Issues

12. Headnote: (Drafted)
In Ram Charan & Ors. vs Sukhram & Ors., the Supreme Court allowed the appeal of the daughters of a Scheduled Tribe woman seeking partition in ancestral property. The trial and appellate courts had denied them the claim, holding that no custom supporting female succession had been proved. The Supreme Court reversed this, holding that in absence of any proven custom to the contrary, the principles of justice, equity and good conscience—preserved under Section 6 of the Central Provinces Laws Act, 1875—must prevail. It emphasized that denial of inheritance to female heirs, without lawful justification, violates Article 14 of the Constitution.

13. Short Summary:
The Supreme Court granted equal inheritance rights to a tribal woman’s heirs, ruling that exclusion based on absence of custom violates justice, equity, good conscience and Article 14.

14. Issue for Consideration:

  1. Can a tribal woman’s legal heirs claim equal share in ancestral property in absence of established custom?
  2. Is exclusion of women from inheritance valid where no contrary custom is proven?
  3. Does such exclusion violate Article 14 of the Constitution?

III. Procedural & Factual Background

15. Case Start Date: October 1992 (Cause of action arose)
16. Case Arising From:
Plaintiffs (legal heirs of a tribal woman, Dhaiya) sought partition of property inherited from her father. Lower courts dismissed the claim for lack of proven custom supporting female inheritance.

17. Background and Facts:
Dhaiya, a tribal woman from the Gond community, was one of six children. Her heirs filed a suit claiming partition in property of her father, Bhajju @ Bhanjan Gond. Trial Court and Appellate Court denied rights based on absence of proof that daughters could inherit. The High Court affirmed. Supreme Court ruled such exclusion unconstitutional.

18. Timeline:

  • October 1992: Cause of action
  • February 29, 2008: Trial Court dismissed the suit
  • April 21, 2009: First Appellate Court affirmed dismissal
  • July 1, 2022: High Court upheld lower courts’ judgment
  • July 17, 2025: Supreme Court allowed the appeal

19. Parties Involved:

  • Appellants: Ram Charan & Ors. (Legal heirs of Dhaiya)
  • Respondents: Sukhram & Ors.

20. Procedural History:

  • Trial Court: Suit dismissed
  • First Appellate Court: Dismissal affirmed
  • High Court: Dismissal upheld
  • Supreme Court: Judgments reversed; appeal allowed

IV. Legal Analysis & Arguments

21. Issues Framed: (a) Customary law and its applicability in Scheduled Tribes
(b) Role of justice, equity, and good conscience in absence of law

22. Areas of Debate:

  1. Does silence of custom imply exclusion or inclusion?
  2. Should tribal women be denied property rights without explicit bar?

23. Cases Cited by Petitioner:

  • Mst. Sarwango vs Mst. Urchamahin (2013 SCC OnLine Chh 5)
  • Niemla Textile Finishing Mills Ltd. v. 2nd Punjab Tribunal (1957 SCC OnLine SC 64)
  • M. Siddiq v. Suresh Das (Ram Janmabhoomi) (2020) 1 SCC 1
  • Tirith Kumar v. Daduram (2024 SCC OnLine SC 3810)

24. Cases Cited by Respondent:

  • Bihari vs Yashwantin (1973 RN 64)
  • Heera Lal Gond vs Sukhbariya Bai (1993 MP V No. 2 143)

25. Acts/Rules/Orders Referred:

  • Central Provinces Laws Act, 1875 – Section 6
  • Constitution of India – Articles 14, 15, 38, 46
  • Hindu Succession Act – Section 2(2) (Exclusion of Scheduled Tribes)

26. Acts/Rules/Orders Governing the Case: Central Provinces Laws Act, Constitution of India (equality provisions)

27. Literature Citation: NA

28. Appearances for Parties:

  • Appellants: Counsel on record for legal heirs
  • Respondents: State and private respondents

29. Prayer: Appellants prayed for declaration of title and partition based on equal rights in ancestral property

30. Evidence & Findings:

  1. No custom proving exclusion of daughters from succession was shown
  2. Hindu Succession Act not applicable to Scheduled Tribes
  3. Repeal of 1875 Act does not affect rights that accrued before repeal

31. Petitioner/Appellant Arguments:

  1. Rights must be governed by equity in absence of law
  2. Denial of inheritance violates constitutional guarantees

32. Respondent/Defendant Arguments:

  1. Custom must be proved for claim to succeed
  2. Plaintiffs failed to establish such a custom or statutory right

V. Judgment & Conclusion

33. Ratio Decidendi:

  1. In absence of applicable law or proven custom, equity must prevail
  2. Denying female heirs right to property violates Article 14
  3. Courts should not assume exclusion; burden is on those who claim it

34. Final Decision: Appeal allowed. Judgments of all lower courts set aside. Appellants entitled to equal share in ancestral property of their mother.

35. Legal Jargons and Maxims:

  • Justice, Equity & Good Conscience: Principles applied in absence of codified law
  • Substantive Equality: Equal rights regardless of gender

36. Exhibits:

  • Trial Court judgment dated February 29, 2008
  • First Appellate Court judgment dated April 21, 2009
  • High Court judgment dated July 1, 2022

VI. Key Learnings for Law Students and Legal Professionals

  1. This landmark ruling emphasizes that silence of custom does not imply exclusion. In the absence of codified succession laws for Scheduled Tribes, courts must apply principles of justice, equity and good conscience, backed by constitutional values of gender equality. It paves the way for recognizing women’s property rights even in customary frameworks.

Important Keywords for the Judgment of Ram Charan vs Sukhram

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