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Civil & Property Law — Partition Suits

Partition Suits — Division of Jointly-Owned Property

Informational guide to suits for partition of co-owned and joint-family (coparcenary) property — how a court divides property by metes and bounds through a preliminary and a final decree under Order XX Rule 18 and Section 54 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908; when a court may order a sale instead of division under the Partition Act, 1893; a co-sharer’s right to buy out an outsider transferee of a dwelling-house (Section 4, Partition Act and Section 44, Transfer of Property Act, 1882); and the equal coparcenary right of daughters under Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 following Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) and Shub Karan Bubna v. Sita Saran Bubna (2009). The firm’s practice covers partition and civil-property suits before the Delhi District Courts at Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket and Dwarka, and the Delhi High Court.

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Last Updated: 17 June 2026 Content Verified: checked against India Code & reported judgments

How a Partition Suit Moves

1
Demand / Notice for Partition
2
Plaint + Valuation & Court Fee
3
Pleadings, Issues & Evidence
4
Preliminary Decree (Shares Declared)
5
Commissioner — Division by Metes & Bounds
6
Final Decree & Possession

What is a Partition Suit?

A partition suit is a civil suit by which a co-owner or coparcener asks the court to divide jointly-held property into separate, identifiable shares so that each owner can hold and enjoy his or her portion independently. Until partition, every co-owner has a unity of possession — each is entitled to joint possession of the whole, and none can point to a specific part as exclusively his own. A decree of partition converts that undivided share into a separately demarcated holding.

Indian law recognises two broad situations. The first is ordinary co-ownership (tenancy-in-common) — for example, where several heirs inherit property on the death of an owner and hold it in defined shares. The second is the Hindu Mitakshara coparcenary — a narrower body within a joint Hindu family in which coparceners acquire a right in ancestral property by birth. Since the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005, a daughter is a coparcener by birth in the same manner as a son under Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956.

The substantive right to a share is drawn from the relevant succession or property law, while the machinery of partition — the preliminary decree declaring shares and the final decree dividing the property by metes and bounds — is governed by Order XX Rule 18 and Section 54 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, supplemented by the Partition Act, 1893 where physical division is not feasible. Once a partition is duly effected, the share allotted to a person becomes, in the ordinary course, that person’s separate property, as the Supreme Court reiterated in Angadi Chandranna v. Shankar (2025).

Key Takeaways
  • A partition suit divides jointly-held property among co-owners or coparceners. It proceeds in two stages under CPC Order XX Rule 18 read with Section 54: a preliminary decree declaring each party's share, followed by a final decree physically dividing the property by metes and bounds (through a court Commissioner); for an estate paying land revenue, the actual division is made by the Collector.
  • Where the property cannot be conveniently divided, the Partition Act, 1893 applies: Section 2 lets the court order a sale instead of division on the request of shareholders holding half or more; Section 3 lets a co-sharer buy out at a court valuation; and Section 4 (with TPA Section 44) protects a family dwelling-house — an outsider who buys a share cannot force joint possession, and a family member may buy that share out.
  • For Hindus, shares are governed by the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. The 2005 amendment to Section 6 made daughters coparceners by birth, equal to sons, and omitted the old Section 23 dwelling-house restriction. Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020, 3-Judge Bench) settled that this right is by birth and does not depend on the father being alive on 9 September 2005.
  • Character of the property is decisive. After a valid partition, each allottee's share becomes self-acquired property that can be freely alienated, unless a joint-family nucleus or blending is proved — Angadi Chandranna v. Shankar (2025). The burden of proving that property is joint/ancestral lies on the person asserting it.
  • Every co-sharer has a right to seek partition, and possession of joint property by one co-owner is possession on behalf of all, so mere exclusive possession does not extinguish another's share without clear ouster. A co-sharer may also rely on the right of pre-emption where applicable.
  • Practical levers shape the outcome: an unequal or excluded sharer can seek re-allotment, the court can order owelty (money adjustment) to equalise unequal lots, and court fee is payable on the plaintiff's share (often at a fixed/low rate where the plaintiff is in joint possession). Limitation generally runs 12 years, but the right to partition is a recurring right that revives on each denial.

Who Can Sue & What Can Be Partitioned

A suit for partition may be brought by anyone holding an undivided interest in the property. The cards below summarise who can claim a partition and what property is, and is not, available for division.

Coparceners — Sons & Daughters
Members of a Hindu Mitakshara joint family who have a birthright in ancestral / joint-family property. Since the 2005 amendment to Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, a daughter is a coparcener by birth in the same manner as a son — Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020).
Co-owners / Tenants-in-common
Persons who hold the property in defined shares otherwise than as coparceners — for example, heirs who have inherited in fixed shares on intestate succession, or persons who purchased property jointly. Each may sue for division of his or her share.
Legal Heirs
A person to whom a share has devolved by intestate succession or under a will may seek partition and separate possession of that share, joining all co-sharers so that the decree binds everyone.
Transferee of a Co-owner’s Share — S.44 TPA
A buyer of one co-owner’s share steps into the transferor’s shoes and may sue for partition under Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. A buyer of a coparcener’s undivided interest, however, acquires only a right to seek partition, not possession of a specific part — Hardeo Rai v. Sakuntala Devi (2008).
What is Partible
Jointly-owned and coparcenary property is partible. Self-acquired property is not coparcenary and is not partible merely because the owner belongs to a joint family — Shashidhar v. Ashwini Uma Mathad (2024).
Dwelling-house — Special Protection
Where a share in a family dwelling-house is sold to an outsider, the outsider gets no joint possession and a family member may buy out that share at a court valuation (Section 4 of the Partition Act, 1893 read with Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882).

Reliefs & Court Powers in a Partition Suit

A partition court is not confined to physically dividing land. Depending on the nature of the property and the equities, it may divide, direct a sale, or order a buy-out. The table below maps the principal powers and their statutory source.

Power / Relief Provision What the Court Does
Division by metes & boundsCPC O.XX R.18; S.54Passes a preliminary decree declaring each party’s share, then a final decree dividing the property physically; for an estate assessed to land revenue, the actual division is made by the Collector under Section 54.
Sale instead of divisionPartition Act, S.2Where, by the nature of the property or the number of shareholders, a division cannot reasonably or conveniently be made and a sale would be more beneficial, the court may — on the request of shareholders holding one moiety (half) or more — direct a sale and distribute the proceeds.
Buy-out by a co-sharerPartition Act, S.3When a sale is sought under S.2, another shareholder may apply for leave to buy at a court valuation; if two or more apply, the share is sold to the one offering the highest price above the valuation.
Dwelling-house — outsider transfereePartition Act, S.4 + TPA S.44Where an outsider has bought a share in a family dwelling-house and sues for partition, a family member may undertake to buy that share at a valuation; the outsider is not entitled to joint possession of the family home.
Partly partition, partly salePartition Act, S.9The court may, if it thinks fit, partition part of the property and direct a sale of the remainder under the Act.

Daughter’s Coparcenary Rights — Before vs After the 2005 Amendment

The Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005 transformed a daughter’s position in Mitakshara coparcenary property. The table contrasts the pre-amendment and post-amendment positions.

Aspect Before 9 September 2005 After the 2005 Amendment (Section 6)
Status of daughterNot a coparcener; a daughter took only a limited share through her father’s notional partition interest, not as a coparcener in her own rightCoparcener by birth in her own right, in the same manner as a son, with the same rights and liabilities (S.6(1))
Right by birthConferred on sons onlyConferred on daughters and sons equally
Father living on 9.9.2005Pre-amendment law did not confer coparcenary status on the daughter at allNot necessary — since the right is by birth, the father coparcener need not have been alive on 9.9.2005, per Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020)
Earlier judicial viewPrakash v. Phulavati (2015) read the right as available only to a living daughter of a living coparcener as on 9.9.2005That view, to the extent it required the father to be alive, was overruled by the three-Judge Bench in Vineeta Sharma (2020)
Dwelling-house restriction (old S.23)Old Section 23 restricted a female heir’s right to claim partition of a dwelling-house wholly occupied by the familySection 23 was omitted by the 2005 amendment — the restriction no longer applies
Saving for past transactionsDispositions, alienations, partitions or testamentary dispositions made before 20 December 2004 are saved by the proviso to S.6(1)

Filing a Partition Suit — Step by Step

The following steps describe how a suit for partition of immovable property is ordinarily conducted in the Delhi civil courts. The exact forum, valuation and court fee depend on the value of the property, the share claimed and whether the plaintiff is in joint possession.

1
Demand for Partition (and, Where Useful, a Notice)
Partition is usually preceded by a demand on the other co-sharers to divide the property amicably. While a formal legal notice is not a statutory pre-condition to a partition suit, a clear demand — and any refusal — is useful evidence of the date from which a co-sharer was excluded, which is relevant to limitation and to the relief of separate possession.
2
Draft the Plaint, State Shares, Value the Suit & Pay Court Fee
The plaint must describe the property, set out the devolution of title (the family tree / succession), specify the share claimed by the plaintiff and the shares of the other co-sharers, and pray for partition and separate possession. Valuation and court fee depend on possession: where the plaintiff is in joint possession the court fee is generally a fixed amount, whereas a plaintiff who has been ousted and seeks possession of a share ordinarily pays ad valorem court fee on the value of that share under the Court-Fees Act, 1870 read with the Suits Valuation Act, 1887.
3
File in the Competent Civil Court
The suit is instituted in the civil court within whose territorial jurisdiction the immovable property is situated — in Delhi, the relevant District Court (Rohini, Tis Hazari, Karkardooma, Saket or Dwarka) depending on the property’s location and pecuniary value, or the Delhi High Court where the value exceeds its original-side limit. All co-sharers and persons having an interest in the property are joined as parties so that the decree binds everyone.
4
Pleadings, Issues & Evidence
After written statements, the court frames issues — typically the nature of the property (ancestral / joint-family / self-acquired), the existence of a prior partition or family settlement, the plaintiff’s share, and any ouster. Evidence includes title documents, revenue records, the pedigree and oral testimony. Whether a property is coparcenary or self-acquired is decided on these well-settled principles, as the Supreme Court explained in Shashidhar v. Ashwini Uma Mathad (2024).
5
Preliminary Decree — Declaration of Shares
If the partition cannot be conveniently made without further inquiry, the court passes a preliminary decree under Order XX Rule 18(2) of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 declaring the shares of the several parties. A Commissioner is then appointed (Order XXVI Rule 13) to suggest a scheme of division. A preliminary decree merely declares shares; it does not by itself allot specific portions.
6
Final Decree, or Sale, & Possession
On the Commissioner’s report the court passes a final decree dividing the property by metes and bounds (Order XXVI Rule 14), or, where division is not reasonably possible, directs a sale and distribution of proceeds under Section 2 of the Partition Act, 1893. Possession of the allotted share is taken in execution under Order XXI Rule 35. As the Supreme Court held in Shub Karan Bubna v. Sita Saran Bubna (2009), it is the court’s duty to carry the suit to a final decree without unnecessary delay, and an application for the final decree is not barred by a separate period of limitation.
Important Note
First settle the character of the property — ancestral/coparcenary or self-acquired — because it decides who has a share. After Angadi Chandranna (2025), a coparcener's post-partition share is self-acquired and freely alienable unless joint-family funds or blending are proved, and the burden lies on the person claiming the property is joint. Second, remember the two-decree structure: the suit does not end with the preliminary decree declaring shares — you must pursue the final decree to get physical division, and a final-decree application can be moved even years later. For Hindu families, Vineeta Sharma (2020) confirms a daughter is a coparcener by birth regardless of whether the father was alive in 2005, and the old Section 23 dwelling-house bar is gone. Where the property cannot be split, plan early for a Partition Act sale or buy-out, and for a family dwelling-house invoke Section 4 / TPA Section 44 to keep out a stranger purchaser.

Documents Required

For a suit seeking partition and separate possession of property:

Title documents of the property — sale deed, will, gift deed, mutation, khatauni / khasra
Family tree / genealogy / pedigree establishing the line of devolution
Death certificate of the ancestor / propositus (for property devolving by intestate succession)
Revenue records — jamabandi, khasra-girdawari, record of rights
Any earlier partition deed, family settlement, or memorandum of partition
Property tax receipts, electricity / water bills evidencing possession
Suit valuation statement and court fee (fixed or ad valorem, depending on possession)
Site plan / map of the property and identity-address proof of parties; vakalatnama

This is a general checklist for guidance only; the precise documents depend on how the property devolved, its nature, and the relief claimed.

Practical Tip
Before filing, map the title and the shares — the source of the property (ancestral vs self-acquired), the genealogy/coparcenary, prior partitions or settlements, and any registered partition deed — and gather the revenue records, sale deeds, mutation entries and family tree. Plead the exact share claimed and ask for a preliminary decree, then follow through to the final decree and the Commissioner's division; do not stop at the preliminary stage. If the property is indivisible (a single flat, a small plot, a running business), ask for a Section 2 sale or a Section 3 buy-out at valuation; for the family home, invoke Section 4 against an outsider purchaser. Watch limitation and ouster — if a co-sharer has openly excluded you, act promptly. Pay court fee on your share and consider seeking interim injunction against alienation or alteration of the property during the suit. Because partition turns on title, shares and the property's character, consult an advocate to frame the plaint, prove the coparcenary, and choose between division, sale and buy-out.

Key Points — Partition Suits

⏱ Key Reference Points — Partition
Right to partition (in joint possession)A recurring right; no limitation runs while joint possession subsists
Exclusion from joint family property — Art. 11012 years from when exclusion becomes known
Adverse possession — Art. 6512 years from dispossession / ouster
Preliminary decree → final decreeNo separate limitation (Shub Karan Bubna, 2009)
Daughter’s coparcenary right — HSA S.6By birth; father need not be alive on 9.9.2005
Sale instead of division — Partition Act S.2On request of shareholders holding one moiety or more
Dwelling-house outsider — Partition Act S.4Family member may buy out the outsider’s share
Self-acquired propertyNot partible as coparcenary (Shashidhar, 2024)
Court feeFixed if in joint possession; ad valorem if ousted
ForumCivil court where the property is situated
Registration of partitionA partition deed effecting transfer of interest is compulsorily registrable
Revenue estatePhysical division by the Collector under CPC S.54

Relevant Statutes

📖 Relevant Section — S.2 (Partition Act, 1893) +
2. Power to court to order sale instead of division in partition suits.—Whenever in any suit for partition in which, if instituted prior to the commencement of this Act, a decree for partition might have been made, it appears to the court that, by reason of the nature of the property to which the suit relates, or of the number of the shareholders therein, or of any other special circumstance, a division of the property cannot reasonably or conveniently be made, and that a sale of the property and distribution of the proceeds would be more beneficial for all the shareholders, the court may, if it thinks fit, on the request of any of such shareholders interested individually or collectively to the extent of one moiety or upwards, direct a sale of the property and a distribution of the proceeds.

This is the heart of the Partition Act: where land cannot be fairly cut up — because of its nature, the number of sharers, or other special circumstances — and a sale would benefit everyone, the court may, on the request of shareholders holding half or more, order a sale instead of division. Sections 3 and 4 then allow a co-sharer (or, for a dwelling-house, a family member) to buy out the share at a court valuation rather than let it pass to a stranger. — Section 2, Partition Act, 1893 (Act 4 of 1893). Source: verified bare-act PDF, India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/5657.
📖 Relevant Section — O.XX R.18 (CPC, 1908) +
18. Decree in suit for partition of property or separate possession of a share therein.—Where the Court passes a decree for the partition of property or for the separate possession of a share therein, then,—

(1) if and in so far as the decree relates to an estate assessed to the payment of revenue to the Government, the decree shall declare the rights of the several parties interested in the property, but shall direct such partition or separation to be made by the Collector, or any gazetted subordinate of the Collector deputed by him in this behalf, in accordance with such declaration and with the provisions of section 54;

(2) if and in so far as such decree relates to any other immovable property or to movable property, the Court may, if the partition or separation cannot be conveniently made without further inquiry, pass a preliminary decree declaring the rights of the several parties interested in the property and giving such further directions as may be required.

This Rule, read with Section 54, sets up the two-stage structure of a partition suit — a preliminary decree declaring shares, followed by a final decree (through a Commissioner) dividing the property by metes and bounds; for land paying revenue, the actual division is left to the Collector. — Order XX Rule 18, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Act 5 of 1908). Source: verified bare-act PDF, India Code (indiacode.nic.in).
📖 Relevant Section — S.44 (Transfer of Property Act, 1882) +
44. Transfer by one co-owner.—Where one of two or more co-owners of immoveable property legally competent in that behalf transfers his share of such property or any interest therein, the transferee acquires, as to such share or interest, and so far as is necessary to give effect to the transfer, the transferor’s right to joint possession or other common or part enjoyment of the property, and to enforce a partition of the same, but subject to the conditions and liabilities affecting, at the date of the transfer, the share or interest so transferred.

Where the transferee of a share of a dwelling-house belonging to an undivided family is not a member of the family, nothing in this section shall be deemed to entitle him to joint possession or other common or part enjoyment of the house.

The first paragraph lets a co-owner sell his share and lets the buyer sue for partition; the second paragraph protects a family dwelling-house by denying an outsider-buyer joint possession — the very protection enforced through Section 4 of the Partition Act in Ghantesher Ghosh v. Madan Mohan Ghosh (1996). — Section 44, Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (Act 4 of 1882). Source: verified statutory text, India Code / Indian Kanoon.
📖 Relevant Section — S.6(1) (Hindu Succession Act, 1956) +
6. Devolution of interest in coparcenary property.—(1) On and from the commencement of the Hindu Succession (Amendment) Act, 2005, in a Joint Hindu family governed by the Mitakshara law, the daughter of a coparcener shall,—
(a) by birth become a coparcener in her own right in the same manner as the son;
(b) have the same rights in the coparcenary property as she would have had if she had been a son;
(c) be subject to the same liabilities in respect of the said coparcenary property as that of a son,
and any reference to a Hindu Mitakshara coparcener shall be deemed to include a reference to a daughter of a coparcener:

Provided that nothing contained in this sub-section shall affect or invalidate any disposition or alienation including any partition or testamentary disposition of property which had taken place before the 20th day of December, 2004.

This substituted Section 6 made daughters coparceners by birth, equal to sons. The Supreme Court in Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) held the right is by birth, so the father coparcener need not have been alive on 9 September 2005, subject only to the saving for transactions before 20 December 2004. — Section 6(1), Hindu Succession Act, 1956 (as substituted by Act 39 of 2005). Source: verified bare-act PDF, India Code (indiacode.nic.in), handle 123456789/1713.
Partition Act, 1893 (Act 4 of 1893)
The technical statute for partition suits. S.2: power to order sale instead of division where division is not reasonable or convenient. S.3: a co-sharer’s right to buy at a valuation. S.4: a family member’s right to buy out an outsider transferee of a dwelling-house. S.9: power to partition part and sell the remainder. S.8: orders of sale deemed decrees.
View on India Code →
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 — Order XX Rule 18 & Section 54
The procedural machinery. Order XX Rule 18 provides for a preliminary decree declaring shares and a final decree of division; Section 54 requires that an estate assessed to land revenue be physically divided by the Collector. Order XXVI Rules 13–14 govern appointment of a Commissioner and the final decree; Order XXI Rule 35 governs delivery of possession.
View on India Code →
Transfer of Property Act, 1882 — Section 44
Governs a transfer by one co-owner: the transferee steps into the transferor’s shoes and may enforce a partition, but a buyer who is an outsider to an undivided family cannot claim joint possession of a family dwelling-house.
View on Indian Kanoon →
Hindu Succession Act, 1956 — Section 6 (as amended in 2005)
Governs the devolution of interest in Mitakshara coparcenary property. The substituted Section 6 makes a daughter a coparcener by birth, equal to a son, and provides for devolution by succession (not survivorship) on a coparcener’s death, with a notional partition to ascertain shares.
View on India Code →

Landmark & Recent Judgments

1 Recent (2025) — Post-Partition Property is Self-Acquired Angadi Chandranna v. Shankar Supreme Court of India | 2025 INSC 532 | Decided: 22.04.2025 | R. Mahadevan, J.
After a valid partition, the share allotted to a coparcener — and property he subsequently purchases with his own or borrowed funds, absent a joint-family nucleus or an act of blending — is his separate, self-acquired property, which he may sell, gift or transfer freely. The Court also reaffirmed that a High Court in second appeal under Section 100 CPC cannot reappreciate evidence without framing a substantial question of law.
View on Indian Kanoon →
2 Recent (2024) — Self-Acquired Property Not Partible Shashidhar v. Ashwini Uma Mathad Supreme Court of India | (2024) 8 SCC 381 | 2024 INSC 485 | Decided: 08.07.2024 | S.V.N. Bhatti, J.
In a partition suit, the Court held that self-acquired properties — there, properties received through succession or transfer from the mother and sister — cannot be included as part of the coparcenary / ancestral property available for partition. Treating self-acquired property as coparcenary was held to be untenable and illegal; the nature of each property must be established on evidence before it can be brought into the hotchpot.
View on Indian Kanoon →
3 Recent (2022) — Presumption of Marriage; Children’s Share Kattukandi Edathil Krishnan v. Kattukandi Edathil Valsan Supreme Court of India | (2022) | Decided: 13.06.2022 | S. Abdul Nazeer, J.
Where a man and woman are proved to have lived together as husband and wife for a long time, the law raises a presumption of a valid marriage unless the contrary is clearly proved. On that footing, the Court held that children of such a long cohabitation are legitimate and entitled to a share in the ancestral / joint-family property in a partition suit — a useful authority where legitimacy is disputed in a partition contest.
View on Indian Kanoon →
4 Landmark (2020) — Daughters are Coparceners by Birth Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma Supreme Court of India | (2020) 9 SCC 1 | Decided: 11.08.2020 | Arun Mishra, J. (3-Judge Bench)
A three-Judge Bench held that the substituted Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 confers the status of coparcener on a daughter, born before or after the 2005 amendment, in the same manner as a son, with the same rights and liabilities. Since the right is by birth, it is not necessary that the father coparcener be living as on 9 September 2005. The rights can be claimed by a daughter with effect from 9.9.2005, subject to the saving for dispositions, alienations, partitions or testamentary dispositions made before 20 December 2004. The conflicting view in Prakash v. Phulavati was, to that extent, overruled.
View on Indian Kanoon →
5 Landmark (2019) — Preferential Right under Section 22, HSA Babu Ram v. Santokh Singh Supreme Court of India | (2019) 7 SCC 641 | Decided: 07.03.2019 | Uday Umesh Lalit, J.
The Court held that the preferential right given by Section 22 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956 to a Class-I heir — to acquire the interest of a co-heir who proposes to transfer his share to an outsider — applies even to agricultural land. The provision allows a co-heir to keep the inherited property within the family before it can be sold to a stranger, a principle that frequently surfaces in partition and succession disputes.
View on Indian Kanoon →
6 Landmark (2018) — Daughter’s Share in Pending Partition Suit Danamma @ Suman Surpur v. Amar Supreme Court of India | (2018) 3 SCC 343 | Decided: 01.02.2018 | A.K. Sikri, J.
The propositus died in 2001 and a partition suit was filed in 2002; the preliminary decree was passed in 2007. The Court held that as the suit was pending and no final decree had crystallised when the 2005 amendment came into force, the daughters were entitled to an equal share as coparceners, allotting each of the two sons, two daughters and the widow a one-fifth share. The decision was later read together with, and clarified by, Vineeta Sharma (2020).
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7 Landmark (2015) — Earlier View, Since Superseded Prakash v. Phulavati Supreme Court of India | (2016) 2 SCC 36 | Decided: 16.10.2015 | A.K. Goel, J.
The Court initially read the 2005 amendment as prospective, holding that the rights under amended Section 6 were available only to a living daughter of a living coparcener as on 9 September 2005. This requirement that the father be alive was overruled by the larger Bench in Vineeta Sharma (2020); the case is included to show the evolution of the law, and the current position is that stated in Vineeta Sharma.
View on Indian Kanoon →
8 Landmark (2009) — Preliminary & Final Decree; No Limitation Bar Shub Karan Bubna v. Sita Saran Bubna Supreme Court of India | (2009) 9 SCC 689 | Decided: 21.08.2009 | R.V. Raveendran, J.
A partition suit does not end with the preliminary decree; it continues until the final decree dividing the property by metes and bounds is passed. The Court held that an application for drawing up the final decree is not governed by Article 137 of the Limitation Act, 1963, because it is a step in a pending suit, and that it is the court’s duty to see that final-decree proceedings commence and conclude without unnecessary delay.
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9 Landmark (2008) — Sale of a Coparcener’s Undivided Share Hardeo Rai v. Sakuntala Devi Supreme Court of India | (2008) 7 SCC 46 | Decided: 29.04.2008 | S.B. Sinha, J.
The Court reiterated the settled rule that a purchaser of a coparcener’s undivided interest in joint family property is not entitled to possession of what he has purchased; he acquires only a right to sue for partition and to have the transferor’s share worked out. A coparcener can validly transfer his undivided share, but the transferee’s remedy is to seek partition, not direct possession of a specific portion.
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10 Landmark (1996) — Section 4, Partition Act (Dwelling-House) Ghantesher Ghosh v. Madan Mohan Ghosh Supreme Court of India | (1996) 11 SCC 446 | S.B. Majmudar, J.
Interpreting Section 4 of the Partition Act, 1893, the Court held that where an outsider has purchased the share of a co-owner in a dwelling-house belonging to an undivided family, a member of the family may exercise the right to buy out that share at a valuation — and this pre-emptive right can be pressed even at the execution stage of a final decree for partition. The provision protects the privacy and integrity of a family home against intrusion by strangers.
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Recent Developments

August 2020 — Supreme Court
Vineeta Sharma Settles the Daughter’s Right
In Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) a three-Judge Bench held that a daughter is a coparcener by birth and the father need not have been alive on 9 September 2005, resolving the conflict between Prakash v. Phulavati (2015) and Danamma (2018).
April 2025 — Supreme Court
Property After Partition is Separate Property
In Angadi Chandranna v. Shankar (2025) the Court clarified that property purchased by a coparcener after a valid partition, without a joint-family nucleus, is self-acquired, and cautioned against High Courts reappreciating evidence in second appeal under Section 100 CPC.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a partition suit?

A partition suit is a civil suit in which a co-owner or coparcener asks the court to divide jointly-held property into separate, identifiable shares, so that each owner can hold and enjoy a specific portion independently. The court first declares the shares (preliminary decree) and then divides the property by metes and bounds (final decree) under Order XX Rule 18 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908.

Who can file a suit for partition?

Any person holding an undivided interest in the property — a coparcener in a Hindu joint family (sons and, since 2005, daughters), a co-owner or tenant-in-common, a legal heir who has inherited a share, or a person who has purchased a co-owner’s share under Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882. A buyer of a coparcener’s undivided share can seek partition but not direct possession of a specific part.

What is the difference between a coparcenary and ordinary co-ownership?

A coparcenary is a narrower body within a Hindu Mitakshara joint family whose members acquire a right in ancestral property by birth. Ordinary co-ownership (tenancy-in-common) arises in other ways, such as when several heirs inherit property in defined shares or when persons buy property jointly. Coparcenary rights are governed by Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956; co-ownership shares are usually fixed and pass to one’s own heirs.

Do daughters have an equal right in ancestral property?

Yes. Under the substituted Section 6 of the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, a daughter is a coparcener by birth in the same manner as a son. In Vineeta Sharma v. Rakesh Sharma (2020) the Supreme Court held that this right is by birth and the father need not have been alive on 9 September 2005, subject only to the saving for dispositions or partitions made before 20 December 2004.

What is the difference between a preliminary decree and a final decree?

A preliminary decree declares the shares of the parties but does not allot specific portions. A Commissioner is then appointed to suggest a scheme of division, and the court passes a final decree dividing the property by metes and bounds (or directing a sale). In Shub Karan Bubna (2009) the Supreme Court held that the suit continues until the final decree and an application for it is not separately barred by limitation.

Can the court order a sale instead of physically dividing the property?

Yes. Under Section 2 of the Partition Act, 1893, where a division cannot reasonably or conveniently be made — because of the nature of the property, the number of shareholders, or other special circumstances — and a sale would be more beneficial, the court may, on the request of shareholders holding one moiety (half) or more, order a sale and distribute the proceeds. Under Section 3 another co-sharer may apply to buy the share at a valuation.

An outsider has bought a share in our family house — what are our rights?

Where a share of a dwelling-house belonging to an undivided family is transferred to an outsider, Section 44 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 denies that outsider joint possession of the house, and Section 4 of the Partition Act, 1893 lets a family member buy out the outsider’s share at a court valuation. In Ghantesher Ghosh (1996) the Supreme Court held this pre-emptive right can be exercised even at the execution stage.

Is there a limitation period for filing a partition suit?

So long as a co-sharer remains in joint possession, the right to seek partition is a recurring right and limitation does not ordinarily run against it. However, where a co-sharer has been excluded from the joint family property, Article 110 of the Limitation Act, 1963 prescribes twelve years from when the exclusion becomes known; a claim defeated by adverse possession is governed by Article 65 (twelve years). The exact position depends on the facts and should be checked.

How much court fee is payable in a partition suit?

It depends on possession. Where the plaintiff is in joint possession of the property and seeks only a division, the court fee is generally a fixed amount; where the plaintiff has been ousted and seeks possession of his share, ad valorem court fee on the value of that share is ordinarily payable, under the Court-Fees Act, 1870 read with the Suits Valuation Act, 1887. Local rules and the relief claimed determine the precise figure.

Does a partition need to be registered?

A partition deed that creates or extinguishes an interest in immovable property worth Rs. 100 or more is a document of transfer and is compulsorily registrable under the Registration Act, 1908. A mere memorandum recording a partition that has already taken place by family arrangement stands on a different footing. A partition effected by a court decree operates through the decree itself.

Is self-acquired property of the father liable to partition?

Generally no — self-acquired property is not coparcenary property and is not partible merely because the owner belongs to a joint family. In Shashidhar v. Ashwini Uma Mathad (2024) the Supreme Court held that self-acquired property received by succession or transfer cannot be included as coparcenary property in a partition; the owner can deal with it as he wishes. Its character must be established on evidence.

Test Your Knowledge — Partition Suits Quiz

⚖️ Partition Suits

Key Legal Terms

Partition
The division of jointly-owned property into separate, identifiable shares, ending the unity of possession so that each owner holds a specific portion.
Coparcenary
A narrower body within a Hindu Mitakshara joint family whose members acquire a right in ancestral property by birth. Since 2005, daughters are coparceners equally with sons.
Coparcener
A member of a coparcenary who has a birthright in the coparcenary property and can demand partition — sons and, after 2005, daughters.
Tenant-in-common
A co-owner who holds a defined, separate share with no right of survivorship; each share passes to the owner’s own heirs and can be transferred.
Preliminary Decree
A decree under Order XX Rule 18(2) CPC declaring the shares of the parties in a partition suit, before the property is physically divided.
Final Decree
The decree that actually divides the property by metes and bounds, usually on a Commissioner’s report, or directs a sale under the Partition Act, 1893.
Metes and Bounds
Division of land by fixed physical boundaries, allotting a specific, demarcated portion to each sharer.
Notional Partition
A legal fiction under Section 6 HSA by which a coparcener’s share is worked out as if a partition had taken place immediately before his death, to determine devolution.
Dwelling-house (S.4)
A family residence given special protection: an outsider who buys a share gets no joint possession, and a family member may buy out that share at a valuation.
Self-acquired property
Property acquired by a person through his own effort or by succession/transfer, which is not coparcenary and is not partible as joint-family property.
Sale instead of division (S.2)
The court’s power under the Partition Act, 1893 to order a sale and distribute proceeds where division cannot reasonably or conveniently be made.
Article 110, Limitation Act
The provision giving twelve years to a person excluded from joint family property to enforce a right to a share, counted from when the exclusion becomes known.
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