(This story originally appeared in on Nov 22, 2023)
NEW DELHI: The grandson of a septuagenarian woman from Andhra Pradesh spent four decades of his prime years in the labyrinthine litigation queue to finally oust an imposter ‘adopted son’ from inheriting a valuable property. Seventeen of these years were spent in the Andhra high court, and sixteen in the Supreme Court which has repeatedly ruled that the right to speedy justice is part of right to life.
The woman, Venkubayamma, made a will in May 1981, bequeathing her property in a town in Odisha to her only grandson, Kaliprasad. After she died in July 1982, a man who claimed to be her ‘adopted son’ produced an adoption deed of April 1982 and a will of May 1982 by which she gave him the same property after cancelling the earlier one.
The trial court decreed the property in favour of the ‘adopted’ son in 1989. The high court reversed the decree and ruled in favour of the grandson in 2006. The ‘adopted’ son filed an appeal in the SC in January 2008.
The SC admitted the appeal in 2010, sensing that the case required detailed scrutiny of the rival claims. The ‘adopted’ son produced photographs of the supposed adoption ceremony held on April 18, 1982, in which the 70-year-old woman was shown to have black hair.
Did a woman from the hinterland dye her hair in 1982, was one of the questions posed by the SC bench of Justices C T Ravikumar and Sanjay Kumar, which dug out many interlinked improbabilities and saw through the ‘adopted’ son’s devious machinations to usurp the grandson’s legitimate inheritance rights.
Another doubt that the ‘adopted’ son could not explain was what happened between May 1981 and April 1982 to strain the relationship between the grandmother and the