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Marriage Laws
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Indian Laws - The Hindu Adoptions
and Maintenance Act, 1956
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(Act No. 78 of 1956)
[21st December, 1956]
An Act to amend and codify the law relating to adoptions
and maintenance among Hindus.
Be it enacted by Parliament in the Seventh Year of the
Republic of India as follows:-
CHAPTER I
PRELIMINARY
1. Short title and extent - (1) This Act may be called
the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956.
(2) It extends to the whole of India except the State
of Jammu and Kashmir.
2. Application of Act - (1) This Act applies -
(a) to any person, who is a Hindu by religion in any of
its forms and developments, including a Virashaiva, a
Lingayat or a follower of the Brahmo, Prarthana or Arya
Samaj,
(b) to any person who is a Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh by
religion, and
(c) to any other person who is not a Muslim, Christian,
Parsi or Jew by religion, unless it is proved that any
such persons would not have been governed by the Hindu
law or by any custom or usage as part of that law in respect
of any of the matters dealt with herein if this Act had
not been passed.
Explanation. - The following persons are Hindus, Buddhists,
Jainas or Sikhs by religion, as the case may be :-
(a) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, both of whose
parents are Hindus, Buddhists, Jainas or Sikhs by religion;
(b) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, one of whose
parents is a Hindu, Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh by religion
and who is brought up as a member of the tribe, community,
group or family to which such parents belongs or belonged;
(bb) any child, legitimate or illegitimate, who has been
abandoned both by his father and mother or whose parentage
is not known and who in either case is brought up as a
Hindu, Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh; and
(c) any person who is convert or reconvert to the Hindu,
Buddhist, Jaina or Sikh religion.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section
(1), nothing contained in this Act shall apply to the
members of any Scheduled Tribe within the meaning of clause
(25) of article 366 of the Constitution unless the Central
Government, by notification in the Official Gazette, otherwise
directs.
(3) The expression "Hindu" in any portion of
this Act shall be construed as if it included a person
who, though not a Hindu by religion, is, nevertheless,
a person to whom this Act applies by virtue of the provisions
contained in this section.
3. Definitions - In this Act, unless the context otherwise
requires, -
(a) the expressions "custom" and "usage"
signify any rule which, having been continuously and uniformly
observed for a long time, has obtained the force of law
among Hindus in any local area, tribe, community, group
or family:
Provided that the rule is certain and not unreasonable
or opposed to public policy: and
Provided further that, in the case of a rule applicable
only to a family, it has not been discontinued by the
family ;
(b) "Maintenance" includes -
(i) in all cases, provision for food, clothing, residence,
education and medical attendance and treatment;
(ii) in the case of an unmarried daughter also the reasonable
expenses of an incident to her marriage;
(c) "minor" means a person who has not completed
his or her age of eighteen years.
4. Overriding effect of Act - Save as otherwise expressly
provided in this Act, -
(a) any text, rule or interpretation of Hindu law or any
custom or usage as part of that law in force immediately
before the commencement of this Act shall cease to have
effect with respect to any matter for which provision
is made in this Act;
(b) any other law in force immediately before the commencement
of this Act shall cease to apply to Hindus in so far as
it is inconsistent with any of the provisions contained
in this Act.
CHAPTER II
ADOPTION
5. Adoptions to be regulated by this Chapter - (1) No
adoption shall be made after the commencement of this
Act by or to a Hindu except in accordance with the provisions
contained in this Chapter, and any adoption made in contravention
of the said provisions shall be void.
(2) An adoption which is void shall neither create any
rights in the adoptive family in favour of any person
which he or she could not have acquired except by reason
of the adoption, nor destroy the rights of any person
in the family of his or her birth.
6. Requisites of a valid adoption - No adoption shall
be valid unless -
(i) the person adopting has the capacity, and also the
right, to take in adoption;
(ii) the person giving in adoption has the capacity to
do so;
(iii) the person adopted is capable of being taken in
adoption; and
(iv) the adoption is made in compliance with the other
conditions mentioned in this Chapter.
7. Capacity of a male Hindu to take in adoption - Any
male Hindu who is of sound mind and is not a minor has
the capacity to take a son or a daughter in adoption:
Provided that, if he has a wife living, he shall not adopt
except within the consent of his wife, unless the wife
has completely and finally renounced the world or has
ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of
competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.
Explanation. - If a person has more than one wife living
at the time of adoption, the consent of all the wives
is necessary unless the consent of any one of them is
unnecessary for any of the reasons specified in the preceding
proviso.
8. Capacity of a female Hindu to take in adoption - Any
female Hindu -
(a) who is of sound mind,
(b) who is not a minor, and
(c) who is not married, or if married, whose marriage
has been dissolved or whose husband is dead or has completely
and finally renounced the world or has ceased to be a
Hindu or has been declared by a court of competent jurisdiction
to be of unsound mind, has the capacity to take a son
or daughter in adoption.
9. Persons capable of giving in adoption - (1) No person
except the father or mother or the guardian of a child
shall have the capacity to give the child in adoption.
(2) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (3) and sub-section
(4) the father, if alive, shall alone have the right to
give in adoption, but such right shall not be exercised
save with the consent of the mother unless the mother
has completely and finally renounced the world or has
ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a court of
competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.
(3) The mother may give the child in adoption if the father
is dead or has completely and finally renounced the world
or has ceased to be a Hindu or has been declared by a
court of competent jurisdiction to be of unsound mind.
(4) Where both the father and mother are dead or have
completely and finally renounced the world or have abandoned
the child or have been declared by a court of competent
jurisdiction to be of unsound mind or where the parentage
of the child is not known, the guardian of the child may
give the child in adoption with the previous permission
of the court to any person including the guardian himself.
(5) Before granting permission to a guardian under sub-section
(4), the court shall be satisfied that the adoption will
be for the welfare of the child, due consideration being
for this purpose given to the wishes of the child having
regard to the age and understanding of the child and that
the applicant for permission has not received or agreed
to receive and that no person has made or given or agreed
to make or give to the applicant any payment or reward
in consideration of the adoption except such as the court
may sanction.
Explanation. - For the purposes of this section -
(i) the expression "father" and "mother"
do not include an adoptive father and an adoptive mother;
(ia) "guardian" means a person having the care
of the person of a child or of both his person and property
and includes -
(a) a guardian appointed by the will of the child's father
or mother; and
(b) a guardian appointed or declared by a court; and
(ii) "court" means the city civil court or a
district court within the local limits of whose jurisdiction
the child to be adopted ordinarily resides.
10. Persons who may be adopted - No person shall be capable
of being taken in adoption unless the following conditions
are fulfilled, namely : -
(i) he or she is a Hindu;
(ii) he or she has not already been adopted;
(iii) he or she has not been married, unless there is
a custom or usage applicable to the parties which permits
persons who are married being taken in adoption;
(iv) he or she has not completed the age of fifteen years,
unless there is a custom or usage applicable to the parties
which permits persons who have completed the age of fifteen
years being taken in adoption.
11. Other conditions for a valid adoption - In every
adoption, the following conditions must be complied with:-
(i) If the adoption is of a son, the adoptive father or
mother by whom the adoption is made must not have a Hindu
son, son's son or son's son's son (whether by legitimate
blood relationship or by adoption) living at the time
of adoption;
(ii) if the adoption is of a daughter, the adoptive father
or mother by whom the adoption is made must not have a
Hindu daughter or son's daughter (whether by legitimate
blood relationship or by adoption) living at the time
of adoption;
(iii) if the adoption is by a male and the person to be
adopted is a female, the adoptive father is at least twenty-one
years older than the person to be adopted;
(iv) if the adoption is by a female and the person to
be adopted is a male, the adoptive mother is at least
twenty-one years older than the person to be adopted;
(v) the same child may not be adopted simultaneously by
two or more persons;
(vi) the child to be adopted must be actually given and
taken in adoption by the parents or guardian concerned
or under their authority with intent to transfer the child
from the family of its birth or in the case of an abandoned
child or child whose parentage is not known, from the
place or family where it has been brought up to the family
of its adoption:
Provided that the performance of datta homam shall not
be essential to the validity of adoption.
12. Effects of adoption - An adopted child shall be
deemed to be the child of his or her adoptive father or
mother for all purposes with effect from the date of the
adoption and from such date all the ties of the child
in the family of his or her birth shall be deemed to be
severed and replaced by those created by the adoption
in the adoptive family:
Provided that - (a) the child cannot marry any person
whom or she could not have married if he or she had continued
in the family of his or her birth;
(b) any property which vested in the adopted child before
the adoption shall continue to vest in such person subject
to the obligations, if any, attaching to the ownership
of such property, including the obligation to maintain
relatives in the family of his or her birth;
(c) the adopted child shall not divest any person of any
estate which vested in him or her before the adoption.
Sections --» 13
to 30
OTHER
TOPICS IN THIS SECTION
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