(1.) THE question of law, which arises in this appeal, is one of considerable importance and relates to the exact scope of the expression samanodaka as used in the Hindu law of inheritance.
(2.) THE facts bearing upon the question do not admit of any dispute. THE property, which is in dispute between the parties, belonged to one Manikrao, who died in October, 1916. THE plaintiffs are descended in the male line from one Tulsingh, who was an ancestor of Manikrao in the 22nd degree. THEy claimed the estate on the ground that they were entitled to succeed to it as the agnates of the deceased in preference to the defendant Atmaram who was his father's sister's son. THE trial Judge negatived their claim, but on appeal his judgment was reversed by the Court of the Judicial Commissioner, Central Provinces and Berar, who have held that the plaintiffs come within the purview of the term samanodaka and have priority over the defendant, who, being only a bandhu, cannot succeed in the presence of an agnate, however remotely the latter may be related to the deceased.
(3.) NOW, the word samanodakas, literally translated, means persons connected by equal libations of water ; but Vijnaneshvara, the author of the Mitakshara, abandoned the ancient doctrine basing the right of inheritance upon the right to offer funeral oblations and founded it upon propinquity. After detailing the heirs coming within the class of sapindas he states, chapter 2, Section 5, verse 6, the law relating to samanodakas in these terms : If there be none such, the succession devolves on samanodakas, and they must be understood to reach to seven degrees beyond sapindas, or else as far as the limits of Knowledge as to birth and name extend. Accordingly, Vrihad Manu says : -'the relation of the sapindas ceases with the seventh person, and that of samanodakas extends to the fourteenth degree ; or as some affirm, it reaches as far as the memory of birth and name extends. This is signified by gotra. '