In India, whether a father can
give all his property to one son and evict the others depends on several factors, including:
Type of Property (self-acquired vs. ancestral)
Mode of Transfer (gift, will, sale)
Applicable Laws (Hindu Succession Act, other personal laws)
1. Self-Acquired Property- If the property is self-acquired (bought by the father from his own earnings), he generally has full rights to transfer it to anyone, including one son, through:
- Gift Deed (during his lifetime)
- Will (to take effect after death)
- Other children cannot automatically claim a share, but they could challenge the gift or will if they suspect:
- Fraud, coercion, or undue influence
- Violation of legal procedures (like registration of gift deed)
2. ancestral Property- Ancestral property (property inherited up to 4 generations) is joint Hindu family property.
- A father cannot unilaterally transfer the entire ancestral property to one son, because:
- All coparceners (sons, daughters, father) have equal rights by birth.
- Evicting other coparceners is illegal without their consent.
- Any transfer without consent can be challenged in court.
3. Evicting Other Sons- A father cannot evict other sons from:
- Joint family (ancestral) property, or
- Property in which they have rights under the law (like the Hindu Succession Act, 2005)
- For self-acquired property, eviction is possible only if it is legally gifted or willed to one son.
- Courts usually protect the rights of other heirs, so disputes often end up in litigation.
4. Legal Protections for Other Children- Hindu Succession Act (for Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs)
- Sons and daughters have equal inheritance rights in ancestral property.
- A will or gift can override rights in self-acquired property, but not in joint family property without consent.
- Other personal laws (Muslim, Christian, Parsi, etc.) may have different inheritance rules, but eviction of rightful heirs is generally not allowed without legal procedure.
Summary TableProperty TypeCan father Give All to One Son?Can Other Sons Be Evicted?Self-acquiredYes, via gift or willYes, legally possibleAncestral/JointNo, needs consent of coparcenersNo, illegal without consent
Key Takeaway:A father
can give his self-acquired property to one son, but
cannot evict other children from ancestral property or property in which they have
birth rights. Any attempt to do so could be
challenged in court.
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