Adoption under Hindu law was once a deeply religious act, performed mainly so that a man would have a son to light his funeral pyre and carry forward his lineage. A daughter could rarely be adopted, a woman could almost never adopt in her own right, and the entire process leaned heavily on old Shastric texts rather than any uniform statute. The Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 (HAMA) changed that picture completely. It took adoption out of the religious sphere and turned it into a secular, codified legal institution, applicable uniformly to Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, and Sikhs across the country.
This piece walks through the heart of the Act — Sections 6 to 16 — which together lay down who can adopt, who can be adopted, who can give a child away in adoption, and what legal consequences follow once an adoption is complete. Along the way, we will also look closely at one comparison that almost every student and practitioner of family law eventually has to untangle: the difference between a male Hindu’s capacity to adopt under Section 7 and a female Hindu’s capacity to adopt under Section 8.
The Nature and Scope of HAMA, 1956
HAMA was passed as part of the broader Hindu Code Bills, alongside the Hindu Marriage Act, the Hindu Succession Act, and the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act. Together, these statutes replaced a patchwork of regional customs and religious texts with one consistent legal code. Section 4 of HAMA gives it an overriding effect — once the Act came into force, no earlier custom, usage, or text inconsistent with its provisions could continue to operate.
Originally, the Act did not extend to the State of Jammu and Kashmir, owing to the special constitutional position it held under Article 370. Following the reorganisation of the state in 2019, that exclusion was removed, and HAMA now applies there as well, just as it does everywhere else in the country.
What makes HAMA distinct from the old Shastric law is its insistence on intent and welfare rather than ritual. While religious ceremonies like datta homam are still sometimes performed out of tradition, Section 11 makes it clear that performing such a ceremony is not essential to a valid adoption. What matters legally is the actual giving and taking of the child.
Essential Requisites of a Valid Adoption — Section 6
Section 6 sets the tone for the rest of the chapter on adoption. It states that no adoption can be valid unless four conditions are simultaneously satisfied:
- The person adopting must have both the capacity and the right to take a child in adoption.
- The person giving the child away must have the legal capacity to do so.
- The person being adopted must be eligible, under the Act, to be taken in adoption.
- The adoption must comply with every other condition laid down in the chapter, including the age gap and the “no existing child” rule discussed later.
If even one of these four pillars is missing, the adoption is void from the very start — it is treated, in legal terms, as if it never happened. A void adoption neither creates new rights in the adoptive family nor takes away any rights the child already had in the family of birth.
Capacity of a Male Hindu to Adopt — Section 7
Under Section 7, any Hindu male who is of sound mind and has attained majority has the legal capacity to take a son or a daughter in adoption. There is, however, an important condition attached: if he has a wife who is living, he cannot adopt without her consent. The law makes an exception only if the wife has completely and finally renounced worldly life, has ceased to be a Hindu, or has been declared of unsound mind by a competent court.
Where a man has more than one wife living — a situation still occasionally relevant for marriages solemnised before the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, came into force — the consent of every wife is required, unless one of them falls within the exceptions just mentioned. Courts have clarified that this consent does not need to be a separately signed document; it can be inferred from conduct, such as a wife actively participating in the adoption ceremony.
Capacity of a Female Hindu to Adopt — Section 8
Section 8, as it originally stood, was far more restrictive than Section 7. A married woman simply had no independent right to adopt while her husband was alive, regardless of what he thought about it. That changed with the Personal Laws (Amendment) Act, 2010, which rewrote Section 8 to bring it much closer to Section 7.
Under the present law, any Hindu female of sound mind who has attained majority has the capacity to adopt a son or a daughter. If she has a husband who is living, she needs his consent before adopting — but, just as with Section 7, this requirement falls away if the husband has renounced the world, ceased to be a Hindu, or been judicially declared of unsound mind. An unmarried woman, a widow, or a divorced woman can exercise this right entirely on her own, without needing anyone’s permission.
Difference Between Section 7 and Section 8: Male vs Female Capacity to Adopt
Although the 2010 amendment brought the two provisions much closer together, a few practical and historical differences are still worth noting, and this comparison is one of the most commonly asked questions on this topic.
| Point of Comparison | Section 7 (Male Hindu) | Section 8 (Female Hindu) |
|---|---|---|
| Basic eligibility | Sound mind, not a minor | Sound mind, not a minor |
| Position before 2010 | Could always adopt with wife’s consent | Could not adopt at all if married, irrespective of husband’s wishes |
| Position after 2010 | Unchanged — consent of living wife required | Now parallel to Section 7 — consent of living husband required |
| Exception to spousal consent | Wife has renounced the world, ceased to be Hindu, or is of unsound mind | Husband has renounced the world, ceased to be Hindu, or is of unsound mind |
| Multiple spouses | Consent of all living wives needed (for pre-1955 marriages) | Not applicable, since polyandry has no parallel recognition |
| Independent right when unmarried/widowed | Always available to an unmarried or widowed man | Always available to an unmarried, widowed, or divorced woman |
| Underlying historical position | Always had the right to adopt under classical law | Had no independent right to adopt under classical Shastric law; the entire concept of a woman adopting in her own name is a creation of HAMA |
The most important takeaway is this: today, both provisions follow the same basic structure — capacity, age, and conditional spousal consent — but the female’s right to adopt is, historically speaking, the far more transformative provision, since classical Hindu law never recognised it at all.
Persons Capable of Giving a Child in Adoption — Section 9
Section 9 restricts the power to give a child in adoption to three categories of people: the biological father, the biological mother, and, in their absence, a court-appointed guardian. After the 2010 amendment, both parents enjoy an equal right to give the child away, but neither can exercise that right without the other’s consent, unless that other parent has renounced the world, ceased to be a Hindu, or been declared of unsound mind.
A guardian — whether appointed by will or by a court — may only give a child in adoption with the prior permission of the court. Before granting such permission, the court must satisfy itself that the adoption genuinely serves the child’s welfare, taking into account the child’s own wishes where the child is old enough to express them, and confirming that no payment or reward has changed hands in connection with the adoption.
It is worth noting that the terms “father” and “mother” here refer strictly to biological parents. An adoptive parent has no power, under this section, to give the already-adopted child away in a second adoption.
Persons Who May Be Adopted — Section 10
Not every child is eligible to be adopted under HAMA. Section 10 lays down four conditions that must all be met:
- The child must be a Hindu.
- The child must not have already been adopted by someone else.
- The child must be unmarried, unless a recognised custom permits the adoption of a married person.
- The child must not have completed fifteen years of age, again unless a specific custom applicable to the parties allows for the adoption of an older child.
These conditions apply equally whether the child being adopted is a boy or a girl, and whether the child is legitimate, illegitimate, or even an abandoned child whose biological parentage is unknown.
Other Conditions for a Valid Adoption — Section 11
Beyond capacity and eligibility, Section 11 lays down a set of structural conditions that protect the integrity of the family being created:
- If the adoption is of a son, the adoptive parent must not already have a living Hindu son, grandson, or great-grandson, whether through blood or through an earlier adoption.
- If the adoption is of a daughter, the adoptive parent must not already have a living Hindu daughter or granddaughter.
- Where a male adopts a female, the adoptive father must be at least twenty-one years older than the girl. Equally, where a female adopts a male, the adoptive mother must be at least twenty-one years older than the boy.
- The same child cannot be adopted simultaneously by two or more people.
- The child must actually be given and taken in adoption, with the clear intention of transferring the child from one family to another. As noted earlier, a religious ceremony such as datta homam is not a mandatory part of this process.
Effects of Adoption — Section 12
This is, in many ways, the most consequential provision in the entire chapter. Section 12 states that once an adoption is valid, the child is deemed to be the child of the adoptive parents for all purposes, from the date of the adoption onward. From that moment, the child’s ties to the family of birth are severed for legal purposes, and any property the child held in that family continues to vest in them, subject to any obligations attached to it.
There are, however, a few built-in safeguards. The adopted child cannot marry anyone in the family of birth whom they would have been prohibited from marrying had the adoption never taken place — in other words, the prohibited relationships under Hindu marriage law continue to apply. The adoption also does not divest any person of property that had already vested in them before the adoption took effect, and it does not affect the right of the adopted child to maintain themselves out of any estate that vested in them before the adoption.
This section is often summarised as creating a kind of “civil death” in the birth family and a fresh “legal birth” in the adoptive family, granting the child full rights of inheritance and family status in their new home, as though they had been born into it.
Right of Adoptive Parents to Dispose of Their Property — Section 13
Section 13 clarifies that, unless there is an agreement to the contrary, the act of adopting a child does not by itself stop the adoptive father or adoptive mother from dealing with their own property in any way they choose, whether by sale, gift, or will. Adoption, in other words, does not automatically lock the adoptive parents into leaving their property to the adopted child if they decide otherwise.
Determination of Adoptive Mother in Certain Cases — Section 14
Where a man with more than one wife adopts a child, the question naturally arises as to who becomes the child’s legal mother. Section 14 answers this directly: if the man has only one wife at the time of adoption, she becomes the adoptive mother. If he has more than one wife living, the senior-most wife becomes the adoptive mother, and the others are treated as step-mothers. A similar rule applies where a widower or bachelor adopts a child and later marries — the woman he marries afterward is treated as the child’s step-mother.
Valid Adoption Not to Be Cancelled — Section 15
Once an adoption has been validly made, it cannot be reversed by anyone. The adoptive parents cannot cancel it, and the adopted child cannot renounce their adoptive status and return to the family of birth. This irrevocability is precisely what gives an adopted child the same security and permanence that a biological child enjoys, and it is one of the clearest departures HAMA made from older, more fluid customary practices.
Presumption as to Registered Documents Relating to Adoption — Section 16
To make adoption easier to prove in court, Section 16 creates a rebuttable presumption. If a registered document recording the adoption is produced before a court, and it is signed by both the person giving the child and the person taking the child in adoption, the court presumes that the adoption has been carried out in compliance with the Act. This presumption holds good unless someone successfully disproves it with evidence to the contrary.
A Few Relevant Judicial Observations
Courts have repeatedly stressed that the four conditions under Section 6 are mandatory, not merely directory, meaning that even minor non-compliance can render an adoption void. In Ghisalal v. Dhapubai, the Supreme Court underlined that a wife’s consent under Section 7 must be either expressly recorded or clearly demonstrated through her conduct, rather than simply assumed. Similarly, courts have held in several cases that the requirement of a wife being “alive” at the time of adoption is a strict precondition for a male Hindu’s right to adopt under Section 7, and any consent obtained later cannot validate an adoption made without it.
Conclusion
Sections 6 to 16 of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956, together form a tightly knit framework that decides who may adopt, who may be adopted, who may give a child away, and what legal status the child acquires once the process is complete. What stands out across these provisions is the shift from a ritual-bound, male-dominated custom to a structured, welfare-oriented, and — after the 2010 amendment — far more gender-balanced legal mechanism. Anyone trying to understand modern Hindu adoption law would do well to treat these eleven sections as the backbone of the subject, since nearly every later question, whether about inheritance, maintenance, or family status, eventually traces back to whether these basic conditions were properly satisfied at the time of adoption.