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Your
Advocate
This
week your advocate is M. Moazzam Husain of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh.
His professional interests include civil law, criminal law and constitutional
law.
Q:
A young man came to me with request to buy his proportion of land property
which his father would have got if he was alive. But his father died before
his parents death. This person has 3 uncles and 4 aunts. His grandparents
did not distribute their land property among their children during there
life time. One thing is mentionable that his grand mother had blind affection
to her youngest son. She declared during her lifetime that she will legally
give all her property to the youngest son by 'heba'/gift or will. My questions
are a) since his father died before his grand parents death, how he will
sell his father's due share? b) In this situation can I buy his said portion
of his grand mother's land property legally? c) His uncles and aunts will
get their due share 2:1 as per rule. How much this boy will get? d) After
purchasing that portion of land from him, if it is found that his grand
mother gave her property to his youngest son by 'heba', will my purchase
be illegal? e) Can the young man sell his portion of land by taking money
form me writing on stamp paper; and will it be legal? f) what is the legal
process to do 'heba' or 'will'? Please give legal advice on the above
subject.
Mr. Jamil Ahmed,
Mirpur, Dhaka.
Your
Advocate: Your query lacks information necessary for a specific
legal opinion. The time of death of the grandparents of the person offering
to sell land is crucial. Since you have used the term 'a young man' let
us presume that his grandparents died after 1961. The year 1961 is important
in the sense that if the proposed seller's grandparents had died before
15th July, 1961 he does not acquire any saleable interest in their property.
Now that the young man offering for sale has lost his father before his
grandparents and the grandparents presumably died after 15th of July 1961
he is entitled to inherit the share of the property of his deceased grandparent
which his father would have inherited, if alive. Therefore, other things
remaining the same, the young man has acquired right, title and interest
in his grandparents' subsisting property so as to be competent to offer
for sale and you can safely go for buying the same. But you must check
the quantum of share he is entitled to.
So
far as the question of gift by his grandmother is concerned, you will
have to make sure whether really there was any such gift made by your
proposed vendor's grandmother in favour of her youngest son. If you cannot
make sure it would be advisable for you to go for buying land to the extent
your vendor is entitled to his grandfather's property only. As for the
transactions, there is legal procedure as to how the transactions of sale
is documented. Law requires that the disposition should be effected by
a deed of sale duly registered in the Sub-Registrar's office having jurisdiction
to register the same.
As
for the question of 'gift' and 'will' the accepted broader principles
are- every Mohammedan of sound mind and not a minor may dispose of his
property by gift. It is a transfer made immediately and without any exchange
by one person to another and accepted by or on behalf of the latter. Gift
may be made of the entire property to any person irrespective of relationship.
But a will may be made of one third of the testator's property after meeting
the funeral expenses and debts. And a will in favour of an heir is invalid
unless other heirs consent to it after the demise of the testator. Under
Mohammedan law both gift and will may be oral. For a valid gift there
must be a declaration of gift by the donor, acceptance by the donee and
delivery of possession to the donee. In case of will there is no particular
form. A verbal declaration may constitute a will. But the intention of
the testator to make a will must be clear and explicit. Regardless of
the legal position the practices of oral gift or oral will are gradually
being narrowed down with the passes of time and almost every single disposition
of the kind now a days is being written and registered. Secular laws,
of course, require a deed of gift above certain valuation to be registered.
Gift and will are complicated subjects involving technical questions of
law and if you really want to make a gift or will it is always advisable
to consult a good civil lawyer.
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