The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, set aside the Karnataka High Court’s order, restored the trial court’s order, and sent the partition suit back for trial. The Court held that the second application to reject the plaint was barred by res judicata, Section 65 of the Hindu Succession Act is only a saving clause and not a bar to filing the suit, and the daughters had an independent claim as Class I heirs under Section 8 because their father died intestate in 1985.
- Procedural Finality and Res Judicata
The Court held that the principle of res judicata applies between different stages of the same litigation (interlocutory res judicata).
- A defendant cannot file a second application for the rejection of a plaint under Order VII Rule 11 of the CPC if a previous application on substantially the same grounds was already dismissed and that dismissal attained finality.
- The Court clarified that reframing a challenge under different sub-clauses of Order VII Rule 11 (e.g., adding clause (a) or (b) to a previous clause (d) application) does not allow a party to circumvent the finality of an earlier adverse order.
- Additionally, the legal representatives of a deceased defendant are bound by the same res judicata bar if they share a common interest and litigate under the same title as the original defendants.
- Section 6(5) as a “Saving Clause” vs. “Jurisdictional Bar”
The Court established a critical distinction between a statutory bar to a suit and a saving clause.
- Section 6(5) of the H.S. Act (which protects partitions effected before December 20, 2004) is a saving clause of narrow and strict application, not a jurisdictional bar to the institution of a suit.
- Because it is a saving clause, it provides a defense on the merits that must be proved by the party asserting it during a trial.
- Whether a partition was validly “effected” and whether it is binding on daughters who were not parties to it are contested questions of fact and law that cannot be decided at the threshold stage of rejecting a plaint.
- Independent Rights of Daughters under Section 8
The Court reaffirmed that daughters have an independent right to a share in their father’s property if he died intestate prior to the 2005 Amendment.
- This right accrued at the moment of the father’s death (in this case, 1985) by operation of the proviso to the erstwhile Section 6 read with Section 8 of the H.S. Act.
- This right is wholly independent of and unaffected by the 2005 Amendment or the saving clause in Section 6(5), as those provisions deal with new coparcenary rights by birth rather than the pre-existing rights of Class I heirs under Section 8.
- Consequently, a “change in law” regarding coparcenary rights (such as the Vineeta Sharma decision) does not undermine the legal basis of a daughter’s claim founded on Section 8.
Conclusion
The Court concluded that a suit for partition cannot be rejected at the threshold if the plaint discloses a cause of action based on Section 8 rights, even if the defendants plead a prior partition protected by Section 6(5), as the validity of that partition must be adjudicated on its merits at trial.
2026 INSC 499
B.S. Lalitha And Others V. Bhuvanesh And Others (D.O.J. 15.05.2026)




