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Illegitimate kids have a right to ancestral property too: Supreme Court

A bench of Justice GS Singhvi and Justice AK Ganguly said in a judgment that such children cannot be deprived of their property rights as what was considered illegitimate in the past may not be so in the present changing society.

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The Supreme Court today ruled that illegitimate children were not only entitled to a share in the self-acquired property of parents but also in ancestral property.

A bench of Justice GS Singhvi and Justice AK Ganguly said in a judgment that such children cannot be deprived of their property rights as what was considered illegitimate in the past may not be so in the present changing society.

"The court has to remember that relationship between the parents may not be sanctioned by law but the birth of a child in such a relationship has to be viewed independently of the relationship of the parents.

"A child born in such a relationship is innocent and is entitled to all the rights which are given to other children born in valid marriage. Right to property is no longer fundamental but it is a Constitutional right and Article 300A contains a guarantee against deprivation of property right save by authority of law," the bench said.

The bench disagreed with a plethora of earlier decisions taken by the apex court in Jinia Keotin and several other cases that illegitimate children were entitled only to a share in the self-acquired property of the parents and nothing beyond that.

"In our view, in the case of joint family property, such children will be entitled only to a share in their parents’ property but they cannot claim it on their own right. The only limitation even after the amendment seems to be that during the life time of their parents, such children cannot ask for partition (of property) but they can exercise this right only after the death of their parents.

"Therefore, such children will have a right to whatever becomes the property of their parents whether self acquired or ancestral," the bench said.

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