The Supreme Court of India, in Shephali Chakraborty v. The State of West Bengal (2026 INSC 621), addressed a critical legal issue concerning the boundaries of a natural guardian’s power to alienate a minor’s immovable property under Section 8 of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956. The appellant, a widowed mother, sought judicial permission to sell her minor son’s inherited share in a property to secure their financial livelihood and ensure the child’s future education. Both the District Court and the Calcutta High Court had rejected her application.
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, clarifying that statutory restrictions under Section 8(2) are intended to safeguard the minor from exploitative alienations, not to paralyze a natural guardian from acting in situations of genuine “evident advantage” or “necessity”. The Court ruled that lower courts must adopt a realistic, holistic, and child-centric approach—rather than a pedantic one—when evaluating what constitutes the “benefit of the minor”.
1. Factual Background of the Case
- The Parties: The appellant, Shephali Chakraborty, is the mother and natural guardian of the minor, Master Basab Chakraborty.
- The Property: The minor inherited a fractional share of an ancestral property located in Darjeeling following the intestate demise of his father, Late Mr. Basudeb Chakraborty. The property had originally been acquired by the minor’s paternal great-grandfather in 1957.
- The Necessity to Sell: Following her husband’s death, the appellant faced acute financial distress, lacking any stable stream of income to sustain herself and provide for her minor son’s upkeep and higher education. She sought to sell the minor’s share along with her own to relocate, stabilize their lives, and invest the proceeds into a secure fixed deposit for the minor’s exclusive benefit.
2. Procedural History
- Trial Court (District Judge, Darjeeling): The appellant filed an application seeking prior judicial permission to dispose of the minor’s share as mandated under Section 8(2) of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956. The District Judge rejected the application, taking a strict view that an immediate, pressing financial emergency or “evident danger” to the property had not been demonstrated.
- High Court Appeal: The Calcutta High Court affirmed the District Court’s rejection, holding that a future educational requirement did not constitute an immediate legal necessity sufficient to alienate minor-owned immovable property. Aggrieved by these orders, the mother filed a Special Leave Petition before the Supreme Court.
3. Statutory Framework Analyzed
The Supreme Court meticulously unpacked the structure of Section 8 of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956, dividing it into operational parts:
- Section 8(1) – Managerial Powers: Empowers a natural guardian to perform all acts necessary or reasonable for the benefit, protection, or proper management of the minor’s estate.
- Section 8(2) – Absolute Restrictions: Explicitly prohibits a natural guardian from selling, gifting, exchanging, mortgaging, or encumbering the minor’s immovable property without obtaining prior permission from the Court. It also restricts long-term leases exceeding 5 years.
- Section 8(3) – Voidable Nature: Declares that any disposal of immovable property by a natural guardian in violation of sub-section (1) or (2) is voidable at the instance of the minor or any person claiming under him.
4. Observations and Legal Reasoning of the Court
- The True Purpose of Legislative Caution: The Court observed that the requirement of prior judicial approval under Section 8(2) acts as a protective shield against reckless or self-serving transactions by guardians that permanently erode a minor’s proprietary rights. However, this caution cannot be transformed into an insurmountable barrier when a mother is acting in absolute good faith for her child’s survival and growth.
- Defining “Benefit of the Minor”: The Supreme Court rejected the rigid interpretation applied by the lower courts. It held that “benefit of the minor” is a broad concept that encompasses not just the physical protection of an estate, but the overall socio-economic well-being, nutrition, clothing, housing, and structural education of the child.
- Correction of a Pedantic Approach: The Court noted that forcing a widowed mother to retain a fractional, un-demarcated share of property while depriving her of the liquid funds required to raise the child defeats the very spirit of welfare legislation. Funding higher education and migrating away from financial distress are valid components of “evident advantage” to the minor.
5. Final Conclusion and Directions
The Supreme Court granted leave, set aside the orders of the Calcutta High Court and the District Judge, Darjeeling, and allowed the appellant’s application to sell the minor’s share. To ensure the minor’s financial security, the Court imposed the following protective conditions:
- The sale must be executed at a fair market value or higher.
- The entire sale proceeds corresponding to the minor’s share must be directly deposited into a long-term fixed deposit scheme in a nationalized bank under the minor’s name, with the mother designated as the guardian.
- The minor shall be entitled to the absolute proceeds upon attaining majority, while the mother can utilize the accruing interest strictly for the child’s educational expenses upon satisfying the bank’s requirements.
2026 INSC 621
Shephali Chakraborty V. State of West Bengal (D.O. J. 03.06.2026)



