Tribunal Orders the Gift Deed Executed by Mother as Cancelled and re-transfers the Property:
Nanjamma's late husband Krishnappa was owning a residential property in Bangalore. The youngest son was residing along with his family with the Nanjamma. In the said house, Son-In-Law suffered business losses due to his own vices. As a concern to the daughter, Nanjamma invited both of them to the house and they were staying together in the same house. In between, Krishnappa was suffering from Parkinson’s Disease and was not able to take any independent decision in the house. Looking at the house situation, as a first step, daughter and Son-In-Law got the house property transferred in the name of the Nanjamma by way of gift deed on 13/02/2008. Nanjamma's husband also passed away on 24/04/2010. The daughter and Son-In-Law were totally managing the affairs of the house at their wishes and fancies, and they have also destroyed the Mother & Son relationship.
Tribunal Orders the Son to Pay Monthly Maintenance to Mother:
Her husband Dasappa Suvarna had purchased 1.23 acre land in 1961 in Shivalli village of Udupi taluk. This couple constructed a house on this land with their own earnings. For the last 52 years, Chandravathi has been residing in this house. After the demise of Dasappa Suvarna in 1981, in Revenue records the ownership of this land was entered in the joint name of Chandravathi along with her children. Within a short time, in 1984, the family sold 20 cents of land to meet the expenditure of daughter’s marriage. She distributed the remaining land to her children 10 cents each and retained 23 cents land along with the house in her name. Though she was uneducated she knew how to sign. In 2001, one of her sons, Jagannath took advantage of the situation and fraudulently transferred 23 cents land to his name along with the house situated in the land.
The Tribunal re-transfers the immovable property fraudulently taken by the son:
Sadananda, the son of Menpa moily was insisting his father to transfer 0.66 acres of land in survey number 31/6b through a gift deed. But, Menpa Moily was very particular that the son should get the land only after his death. Therefore, the father agreed to transfer the same land of 0.66 acres through a Will. Accordingly, in 2011, Menpa moily went to Sub-Registrar office. Without doubting his son, he had put his thumb impression on several documents as per his son’s direction. But Sadananda had fraudulently prepared a document which would transfer both darkhast land as well as patta land spread over four survey numbers absolutely owned by his father to his name. In 2012, as soon Menpa Moily came to know about the fraud, he filed a case against his son at Civil court of Karkala.
The Senior Citizen Tribunal protected Puttaiah Gowda:
Three decades ago the government granted 4.07 acres of land to Puttaiah in the revenue limits of Abbigallu village. He raised a garden on this land and constructed a house with his own hard earned money. First son Dinesh was in Bangalore for 11 years and returned to native in 2016. Both sons wander in the village without doing any work and get back home during night. It was their routine to come back in drunken state and picking up quarrel with father. Puttaiah’s sons abused him regularly and used to get all the work done by him including cooking. Senior Citizen Puttaiah was forced to work in the garden, but sons used to take away valuable agricultural products like pepper, Arecanut, coconut forcibly and sell in the nearby market. They never paid any money to the father even for his medicine and other needs but used to spend money for their bad habits.
The Senior Citizen GIRIJAKKA LOST EVERYTHING FOR NO FAULT OF HERS:
Her husband Late Parameshwara Shettigar was a businessman with 40 handlooms and owned landed properties too. He married Girijakka about 45 years ago, when his first wife expired. Late Shettigar had five children in his first marriage, three sons and two daughters. Girijakka had no issues of her own but brought up the step children with much love and affection as if they were her own. Late Shettigar had several properties, apart from ancestral family residence and about forty handlooms with several skilled workmen. Girijakka lived happily with comfort, peace and dignity till her husband was alive. Somewhere in 2003, through a settlement deed, the possession of the landed properties along with the ancestral house was given to his second son Raviraj. Immediately after the death of his father in 2007, Raviraj got the possession of the land and the house.
Menpa Moily
Puttaiah Gowda
Girija Shettigar
Nanjamma

Chandravathi