In Bishan Dass&Ors. v. Sardari Lal [Neutral Citation: 2026 INSC 669, decided on July 6, 2026], the Supreme Court of India adjudicated a civil appeal concerning the rigorous standard of proof required to validate a Will under Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925, and Section 68 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872. The dispute arose after Chhajju Ram, an illiterate agriculturist, allegedly executed a registered Will in 1974 disinheriting his wife (the original plaintiff) in favor of non-relative beneficiaries. While the Trial Court and First Appellate Court concurrently discarded the Will due to unexplained “suspicious circumstances”—including uninitialed alterations changing the executant’s name on the registration endorsement and false recitals regarding the beneficiaries’ relationship to the testator—the Himachal Pradesh High Court reversed these findings in a second appeal, accepting the Will based on the attesting witness’s testimony.
The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the High Court’s judgment, thereby restoring the decree passed by the Trial Court. A Division Bench comprising Justice Manoj Misra and Justice K.V. Viswanathan ruled that the propounder of a Will bears an absolute duty to satisfy the “conscience of the Court” by dispelling all suspicious circumstances. The Court held that when an illiterate testator completely disinherits a dependent spouse with whom he had cordial relations in favor of strangers, and the document contains factual inaccuracies, a high rule of prudence must be applied. Furthermore, the Bench strictly emphasized that satisfying the judicial conscience is a question of fact, and the High Court exceeded its statutory jurisdiction under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC) by aggressively interfering with sound, concurrent findings of fact in a second appeal.
- Factual Matrix & Lower Court Litigations
- The Claim of Intestate Succession: The original plaintiff, Bhambo Devi (later represented by her legal heir, Sardari Lal), filed a suit for declaration of ownership and possession over the property of her deceased husband, Chhajju Ram, who died in 1992. It was undisputed that Chhajju Ram was an illiterate agriculturist who died without leaving any issues, making the widow his sole natural Class I heir under intestate succession.
- The Proprietary Counter-Claim: The defendant-respondents resisted the suit by producing a registered Will dated November 6, 1974, asserting that the testator had bequeathed his entire movable and immovable property to them out of love and affection and as a reward for their caretaking services.
- Concurrent Judicial Disapproval: The Trial Court and First Appellate Court meticulously scrutinized the original Will ( DW-2/A) and discarded it. They Isolated major suspicious circumstances: the total disinheritance of a caring wife based on vague claims that she possessed adequate jewelry; the fact that one beneficiary was a minor student in 1974 and incapable of rendering the claimed services; and extensive, uninitialed manual cross-outs on the reverse side of the judicial paper where the Sub-Registrar’s official endorsement originally carried the name of a different presenter (“Laxmi Kant Bassi”) before being overwritten as “Chhajju”.
- The High Court Reversal: In a second appeal, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh reversed the decrees, ruling that because a singular attesting witness (DW-2) had testified to the execution and the Will was registered, the internal administrative defects or text recitals could not override the proved signature of the testator.
- Core Legal Issues Formulated
The Supreme Court structured the controversy around the following core questions:
- Whether alternative or inconsistent pleas raised in a plaint (e.g., claiming a Will is completely bogus while simultaneously alleging fraud and undue influence) amount to an admission of its execution.
- Whether the non-examination of a plaintiff is sufficient to dismiss a suit anchored on admitted facts of marriage and title under the doctrine of non-traverse.
- What legal obligations rest upon the propounder when a Will executed by an illiterate person is surrounded by unnatural dispositions and uninitialed registration changes.
- What are the strict jurisdictional boundaries of a High Court under Section 100 of the CPC when reviewing a final court of fact’s assessment of testamentary documents.
- Legal Analysis &Ratio Decidendi of the Court
- Inconsistent Pleadings & The Doctrine of Non-Traverse
The respondents argued that because the plaintiff’s plaint simultaneously alleged that the Will was a forged document and that it was executed under fraud or undue influence, she had implicitly admitted the execution. The Supreme Court textually rejected this assertion, referencing Srinivas Ram Kumar Firm v. Mahabir Prasad (1951) and Vikrant Kapila v. Pankaja Panda (2024). The Court held that a plaintiff is legally entitled to rely upon alternative, inconsistent sets of allegations. For a statement in a pleading to constitute a binding admission, it must be clear, unequivocal, and unconditional when read in its entirety.
Furthermore, because the respondents failed to deny the plaintiff’s lawful marriage and the testator’s exclusive ownership in their written statement, these facts stood judicially admitted under the doctrine of non-traverse (Order VIII Rule 5 of the CPC) and required no independent proof under Section 58 of the Evidence Act. Therefore, the plaintiff’s failure to enter the witness box was not a fatal defect.
- The Heavy Onus of Proof in Unnatural Wills
The Court traced the foundational law governing wills through H. Venkatachala Iyengar (1959), Rani Purnima Debi (1962), and Shivakumar v. Sharanabasappa (2021). It ruled that executing a Will is not a simple adversarial transaction; it is an exercise to satisfy the judicial conscience of the court.
The Bench noted that a circumstance is legally “suspicious” when it deviates from what is normally expected of a normal person in a normal situation. While disinheriting a wife in favor of children may not turn heads, completely stripping a dependent wife of her inheritance in favor of a non-relative stranger is an abnormal disposition that pinches the Court’s conscience, mandating strict judicial caution.
- Factual Illiteracy & Defective Registration Presumptions
The Supreme Court highlighted that the testator was an illiterate man who could only sign documents via a thumb impression, placing a highly restrictive burden of proof on the propounders to show he understood what was written. The text of the Will contained two blatant falsehoods: it claimed the beneficiaries were his nephews and that he resided with them. The Court reasoned that an individual would not deliberately insert false facts into his own final testament. This indicates the document was prepared without the testator’s active understanding.
Furthermore, the Court dismantled the High Court’s reliance on the registration status of the Will. Under Sections 34, 35, 58, and 60 of the Registration Act, 1908, a Sub-Registrar must verify identity and endorse the actual presenter. Because the back page carried 7 to 8 uninitialed cross-outs replacing the name “Laxmi Kant Bassi” with “Chhajju,” the court held that the benefit of the regular statutory presumption—that the document was read out and acknowledged before an officer—was completely lost.
- Delineating the Limits of Second Appeals (Section 100 CPC)
The Supreme Court issued a stern reminder regarding the limits of a High Court’s jurisdiction under Section 100 of the CPC. Invoking the three-judge bench precedent in MansinghraoYeshwant Rao Patil v. Ramchandra Govindrao Patil (1954), the Court ruled that utilizing time-honored legal maxims like “satisfying the conscience of the court” does not magically transform a pure question of fact into a question of law.
Evaluating whether suspicious circumstances exist and whether the propounder’s explanations are credible represents a standard assessment of facts[cite: 19]. Unless the lower courts’ findings are completely ungrounded in evidence or based on wild figments of imagination (as seen in Madhukar D. Shende (2002)), a High Court cannot overturn concurrent lower court decrees simply because it disagrees with their factual conclusions[cite: 19].
- Final Order & Operational Directives
- Appeal Allowed: The Civil Appeal is allowed, and the impugned judgment of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dated July 18, 2016, is set aside[cite: 19].
Decree Restored: The concurrent decrees passed by the Trial Court and the First Appellate Court discarding the Will and declaring the plaintiff the lawful owner in possession are fully restored and affirmed.
2026 INSC 669
Sardari Lal V. Bishan Dass&Ors. (D.O.J. 06.07.2026)




