LAWS(PVC)-1898-8-1

BODHA BIBI Vs. SAYED MAZHAR HUSAIN

Decided On August 03, 1898
Bodha Bibi Appellant
V/S
Sayed Mazhar Husain Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) IBN Ali died on August 2, 1878. He was possessed of property. The respondents are the assignees of two ladies, the first cousins of Ibn Ali, and described in the letter or will of August 1 as his paternal uncle's daughters.

(2.) THE appellant is the assignee and representative of Haidri Begam, the mother and heir of Ibn Ali. The respondents claim the property in dispute under a letter or will of August 1, 1878.

(3.) NOW comes the more important question, as to the writing of the will being before or after the poison was taken by Ibn Ali. It is not at all free from difficulty, but their Lordships are not prepared to dissent from the decision of the High Court. It appears reasonable to hold that the onus of proving whether the letter or will was written after the swallowing of poison should rest on the party impugning the will. The Subordinate Judge came to his conclusion apparently on the terms of the letter itself, in which the writing states : "I, in consequence of my honour having suffered to a certain extent, and the exposure being so great that I could not shew my accursed face to any one, thought it advisable to put an end to my life, and therefore took poison and died to-day"; and again in paragraph 5 the writer states : "Please begin to take all these proceedings after perusing this letter. Don't delay in hope of my life, for, by God, I am actually dead, and this letter I have written an hour before death." The Subordinate Judge considers these passages prove that Ibn Ali had taken the poison; but their Lordships are of opinion, though the words "took poison" are in the past tense, they are connected with the words "and died to-day," which cannot be read in the past tense, and the statement is consistent either with the fact that he had taken the poison, or that he had resolved to take poison and resolved to die. The evidence is circumstantial, and the evidence of Musharaf and Husain Bakh go strongly to shew that it must have been subsequent to the sending of the letter that Ibn Ali retired from the mardana and went into the zenana on August 1, then apparently well. The circumstances lead their Lordships to agree with the conclusion of the High Court, that the deceased Ibn Ali took the poison after sending the letter to his friend, who lived some twenty miles distant. Their Lordships will, therefore, humbly advise Her Majesty that the appeals in this case should be dismissed. The respondents will have their costs.