We reside in an unpartitioned house built by my grandfather. My grandfather had made a Will around 60 years back, where the building was transferred to a Board of Trustees comprising of his children, after his and his wife's death. It was also mentioned in this Will that this Board of Trustees would strive to keep this building till the very end (many provisions for this were made in the Will) and then if it becomes impossible to do this then it should be sold as a whole. But if the decision to sell is made, then the Trustee members must be unanimous in this and they should put it in writing.
Now after my grandfather and grandmother's death, my father and his siblings decided not to probate this Will due to some complexities involved, but instead opted to make a Family Settlement with individual allotments more or less as prescribed in the Will. They have been living thus for more than 30 years . Now that my father and his brothers and sisters are dead, some of my cousins have tied up with real estate agents for promoting of the land. but as some of us are not agreeable to this, they are threatening us day in and day out to sell off their portions and letting promoters inside the land, and also refusing to compensate as per as our allotment made in the Family Settlement.
To prevent this one of my cousins have filed a Declaration and Injunction suite but the ones hand in gloves with the building promoters have filed a partition case instead. It is quite apparent that if the partition case goes through then some of the shareholders will immediately sell off their portions to the land sharks and then it would be quite impossible for the others to live in the premises anymore.
Now my question is that what are the various grounds under which a partition case can be denied?
Since I am getting various differing inputs on this, so I will highly appreciate your input .