In a significant judgment blending statutory interpretation with foundational principles of justice and public policy, the Supreme Court of India has ruled that a person accused of murdering or abetting the murder of another individual cannot claim inheritance over the victim’s property. The Court clarified that the disqualification under Section 25 of the Hindu Succession Act extends not only to intestate succession but also to testamentary succession arising through a Will.
The ruling came in Manjula & Ors. v. D.A. Srinivas, decided by a Bench comprising Justice J.B. Pardiwala and Justice R. Mahadevan. The dispute revolved around a civil suit in which the respondent sought rights over property allegedly bequeathed to him under a Will executed by the deceased. However, the respondent himself had been arrayed as an accused in the murder case concerning the very same deceased person.
Rejecting the claim, the Supreme Court held that the law cannot permit an individual to benefit from his own alleged wrongdoing. The Bench observed that the bar under Section 25 is not confined to inheritance arising in cases where a person dies intestate, but equally applies where succession is claimed through testamentary instruments such as Wills. In effect, the Court decisively rejected the argument that testamentary succession exists outside the moral and legal limitations imposed by Section 25.
Section 25 of the Hindu Succession Act explicitly provides that a person who “commits murder or abets the commission of murder” shall be disqualified from inheriting the property of the person murdered. The Supreme Court interpreted this provision in light of the long-standing equitable maxim that no person should be allowed to profit from his own wrong. Importantly, the Court treated the provision not merely as a technical statutory disability, but as an embodiment of larger principles of justice, equity, fair play, and public policy.
One of the most consequential aspects of the judgment is the Court’s clarification that an actual criminal conviction is not always a mandatory precondition for applying the disqualification. The Bench observed that civil courts adjudicating inheritance disputes are not bound by the strict evidentiary threshold applicable in criminal trials. If the material on record, tested on the civil standard of “preponderance of probabilities,” indicates involvement in the murder, the claimant may still be disentitled from inheriting the estate.
This observation marks a notable doctrinal development. Traditionally, Indian legal discourse has often linked disqualifications arising from criminal conduct to formal conviction. However, the Court’s reasoning reflects a nuanced distinction between criminal culpability and civil consequences. While criminal law demands proof beyond reasonable doubt before imposing penal sanctions, succession disputes operate within the civil domain, where courts assess probabilities rather than absolute certainty. The judgment therefore reinforces the conceptual autonomy of civil adjudication from criminal trial outcomes.
The Court’s reasoning also carries important implications for testamentary freedom under Indian succession law. Ordinarily, the law accords significant sanctity to a testator’s right to distribute property through a Will. However, the judgment clarifies that testamentary autonomy cannot override public policy considerations where the beneficiary himself stands accused of orchestrating or facilitating the death of the testator. In doing so, the Court effectively constitutionalises morality within inheritance jurisprudence by subordinating private succession rights to broader principles of justice.
Critically, the ruling reflects the judiciary’s increasing willingness to interpret succession law through an ethical and purposive lens rather than a narrow textual framework. The Bench appears to have consciously resisted a hyper-technical reading of Section 25 that could have allowed accused persons to circumvent disqualification merely by relying upon a Will instead of intestate succession. Such an interpretation, the Court implied, would defeat the very object of the provision and undermine public confidence in the legal system.
The judgment also resonates with older common law principles recognised even prior to the enactment of the Hindu Succession Act. Courts in India and abroad have historically held that murderers cannot inherit from their victims because the law refuses to reward criminal conduct. Section 25 effectively codified this equitable principle, and the present ruling reinforces its continuing vitality within modern inheritance disputes.
At a broader level, the case illustrates how inheritance litigation increasingly intersects with criminal allegations and family disputes. Property conflicts involving allegations of foul play are not uncommon in India, particularly in cases involving elderly testators, disputed Wills, and competing heirs. The Supreme Court’s decision may therefore influence future civil litigation by empowering courts to more carefully scrutinise inheritance claims tainted by allegations of violence or coercion.
However, the ruling also raises complex questions concerning procedural fairness. Since the Court clarified that conviction is not indispensable, future courts will have to exercise considerable caution to ensure that mere accusation does not automatically translate into civil disinheritance. The distinction between credible evidence and unproven allegation will become crucial. Otherwise, inheritance disputes may risk being weaponised through strategic criminal accusations aimed at excluding rivals from succession claims.
Nevertheless, the judgment stands as a powerful reaffirmation of a foundational legal ethic: the law cannot become an instrument through which wrongdoing generates economic benefit. By extending Section 25 to testamentary succession and recognising the applicability of equitable principles independent of criminal conviction, the Supreme Court has delivered a ruling that strengthens both doctrinal coherence and moral legitimacy within Indian succession jurisprudence

