|
|
The basic object of the Right to Information Act is to empower the citizens, promote transparency and accountability in the working of the Government, contain corruption, and make our democracy work for the people in real sense. An informed citizenry will be better equipped to keep necessary vigil on the instruments of governance and make the government more accountable to the governed. The Act has created a practical regime through which the citizens of the country may have access to information under the control of public authorities.
For more information on this Act, please visit this link: http://www.498a.org.in/rsrcs_RTI_gd.html
By Mahesh Gen. Sec. Family Harmony Society, Bangalore. http://www.498a.org.in http://www.family-harmony.org
In a rare departure from rules, the Supreme Court has directed a woman to pay Rs 10,000 to her estranged husband, who is unemployed, to enable him fight their matrimonial dispute in a Bangalore court. Normally, under Section 125 CrPC, it is the duty of the husband to pay maintenance allowance to the wife or his parents during a divorce proceeding or thereafter.
But in the instant case, the apex court, after noting that the husband was unemployed, directed the wife Ines Miranda to pay Rs 10,000 to husband Santosh K. Swamy, domiciled in Chennai, to fight the legal battle in Bangalore where the wife is staying along with her daughter.
Mahesh, Gen-Sec, Family Harmony Society, Bangalore. http://www.498a.org.in http://www.Family-Harmony.org
Below is the judgment:
ITEM NO.19 COURT NO.6 SECTION XVIA
S U P R E M E C O U R T O F I N D I A RECORD OF PROCEEDINGS
TRANSFER PETITION (CIVIL) NO.1268 OF 2009 (For Prel. Hearing)
INES MIRANDA Petitioner(s)
VERSUS
SANTOSH K SWAMY Respondent(s)
(With appln(s) for ex-parte stay)
Date: 14/12/2009 This Petition was called on for hearing today.
CORAM : HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE DALVEER BHANDARI HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE A.K. PATNAIK
For Petitioner(s) Mr. S. Gurukrishna Kumar,Adv. Mr. S.R. Setia,Adv.
For Respondent(s)
UPON hearing counsel the Court made the following O R D E R
The petitioner is seeking transfer of the case from Chennai to Bangalore. Her contention is that it is inconvenient for her to look after the case at Chennai because she is working in Bangalore and has a small child. Learned counsel appearing on behalf of the petitioner submits that it would not be inconvenient for the respondent-husband to prosecute the case in Bangalore as he is unemployed.
The petitioner is directed to pay Rupees ten thousand as travelling expenses to the respondent since he is unemployed. Upon deposit of this amount, notice would be issued and the proceeding before the Trial Court shall be stayed.
[ Alka Dudeja ] [ Neeru Bala Vij ] Court Master Court Master
This is the most horrible news I ever read… How can an Apex body like Hon’ble Supreme court make such a statement… http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Legalize-prostitution-if-you-cant-curb-it-SC-to-govt/articleshow/5322127.cms Legalizing prostitution??? come on… what does SC wants??? Does it want to exploit innocent women who are living happily with their families??? I really don’t understand how it will save the young innocent girls by legalizing the prostitution… Legalizing prostitution, will create a social catastrophe. Men will not marry women… they will just use the prostitutes. which results in women who want to live in a marriage left with less options. Women will not marry, they will take this as a career… this will result in men who want to live in a marriage left with less options. It will create a medical hazard… people will suffer with more veneral dieseases. Supreme Court has commited a gross error in giving an economic angle into a social problem. Prostitution is a social issue not an economical issue. In US & UK more and more women are taking up prostitution even though they are economically well-off and even though they have social security provided… They are turning to prostitution, because it is easy money there… Of course, uplifting the people BPL is a priority, but that in no way help in eradicating this social issue of prostitution… To solve the issue of prostitution, we need to bring a social change… change in the mindsets of people… change the life styles of the people.. making them social security to people and social happiness… On one side more and more families are getting divided because of increasing number of divorces, misue of law by women using acts like dowry… The court cases take years to resolve making these sex starved people go to prostitues for fulfilling their needs… I don’t understand on how it will benefit our society by legalizing the prostitution… Please give your comments… Mahesh http://www.family-harmony.org http://www.498a.org.in
Assume that 2 MEN drag a WOMAN in road or quarrel with her, other people who are watching that will stop them. The public will feel that those men are harassing that women and they might cause harm to her. Similarly if 2 MEN drag a MAN in road or quarrel with him, public will still stop them and mediate them to resolve the issue. But, If a WOMEN drag another WOMAN in road or quarrel with her, public will not object. Similarly if a WOMEN drag a MAN in road or quarrel with him, then public will simply watch and enjoy the fun, they will not interrupt. This is the mentality of general public that thinks that no woman can do mistake. This is the psychological thinking of public. Two women in Bangalore took this psychological thinking as an advantage and they kidnapped another woman and forced her to prostitution. On Nov 25, two women in Bangalore kidnapped a girl in broad day light and forced her to prostitution… http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/bangalore/Women-arrested-for-kidnapping-minor-girl/articleshow/5320184.cms After reading this article in Times of India, atleast now, public should change their mindset that not every woman is Holy. Mahesh http://www.family-harmony.org http://www.498a.org.in
http://pib.nic.in/release/release.asp?relid=55062 Lok Sabha
A number of representations have been received from various quarters regarding the misuse of the provision of Section 498A of IPC. Information regarding its misuse is not collected by National Crime Records Bureau. Giving this information in the Lok Sabha to a written question Dr.M.Veerappa Moily, Minister of Law and Justice said that the matter has been referred to the Law Commission of India to study the use of the provision of this section and hold consultation and suggest amendments, if any, to the provision. An advisory has also been issued to the State Governments to prevent the misuse of the said section.
VLK/ska
This is what our Chief Justice of India tells in the wake of his recent request to our Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to protect the judiciary from comman man’s whistle - The Right to Information Act 2005. Apparently our Chief Justice is not comfortable with the queries raised by the common man using this Act. He feels that the public are intruding into the Judicial system and causing erosion of judicial independence. This has made our government to make changes and take off the freedom of the common man to ask questions. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Govt-mulls-changes-in-RTI-Act/articleshow/5308959.cms Any change to the Right to Information Act 2005 is a serious threat to the freedom of common man, a serious threat to democracy. Is this Act being misused in any way? Do we really need changes to the current Right to Information Act 2005? Is this Act really a threat to the judiciary or for that matter any department? Are these questions of common man can really erode the independence of our system, if so to what extent? Does our CJI has a case to change this Act? Let’s start the discussion now… I welcome you to please comment on these questions… Any common man approches any department with an application under Right to Information Act 2005 with an intention to collect information for various reasons - It could be out of curiosity, or he wants to know the status of any application that he made to any department, or he wanted to know about the statistics in a particular department which he can use to expose the government’s or any bearucrat’s or any department’s false claims. Like the exaggerated data claimed by the Women & Child Development ministry regarding the violence against women and the evil of Dowry system. Many people who made applications under this Act to the National Crime Record Bureau (NCRB) have shown the paltry genuine cases and exposed the false claims made by the ministry for obviuos reasons of its survival, for want of exorbiant funds to be eaten up by the ministry, the bureaucrats, the women organizations, etc., This Act in more than one way has empowered the common man. The claims of CJI that chronic litigants are troubling the system is a vague statement no backed up by any data. He doesn’t have any case to claim a change in the Act. CJI is asking for more independence, he is unwilling to bring transparency into the system which is a matter of concern. We have barged into the 21st centuary by flying high the flags of democracy, we cannot go back to red ribbon raj days… I welcome you to put forward your comments on these questions… Mahesh.M http://www.498a.org.in
Women from all over the country claim to be suffering from various kinds of Domestic Violence. The National Commission of Women which has been claiming to protect the women from Domestic Violence. They were instrumental in bringing up a law to protect the women from the Domestic Violence. They bought a law formulated and parliament gave approval and thus the Protection for Women under Domestic Violence Act was born in 2006. Unfortunately this Act has done more bad than good. First of all the process of formulating this Act itself was done in a very haphazard manner. The bureaucracy which formulated this Act have not produced any data supporting the claims of Domestic Violence, except for few rona-dhonas in movies, media hype of dowry deaths, dowry harassments, etc. Second, the congress party which was then in power had pushed to bring this Act in to force in a hurry without verifying whether our society really need such a law or not, whether all the reliefs that this Act provides to the women will be used or misused. Some thoughtful MPs did objected to this Act as this can easily be misused. Still, they went ahead to bring this Act without proper debate due to political pressures from opposition and leftists. Third, the Corruption. There are some sections of our society who are basically corrupt in nature. They do anything & everything to satisfy their greed and ego. Two of those specific categories of corrupted people in our society are some of the complainant wives and their advocates who misuse this Act. The wives who are corrupted up by Greed, Ego, Grudges, Adultery are filing cases under this Act against their husbands and in-laws. Some of the unethical advocates, who want to become rich using short-cuts, are helping these women to Misuse this Domestic Violence Act. Fourth, the implementation of this Act has left a very bad taste of the judicial system. The Magistrates who were given the authority to preside over the cases under this Act think that they are supernatural beings who got power to protect every woman on earth as if they are their sisters. Again these people were also influenced because of bollywood style rona-dhonas and media. This act has become like a coconut in the hands of a monkey, it doesn’t know how to handle this tool. They pass such mindless and stupid orders in a hurry to save the complainant women without applying their minds. Of course we cannot blame them entirely because we all know already that the judicial system is in any ways rotten, magistrates are nothing more than a clerical people, of course they are under the pressure from various radical women organizations with NCW at the top. NCW has gone a step ahead and started propaganda about this Act in news papers and TV commercials only to make the innocent men suffer and break the marriages irretrievably. On one side these corrupted women and their advocates are walking away happily with good booty but on the other side the softer husbands are suffering running around the courts, staying away from their own houses as courts ask them to vacate to accommodate the corrupt women, paying hefty, abnormal and unreasonable maintenance amounts, unable to use their bank accounts including their salary accounts, unable to use their properties and getting stamped as a drug-addict, drunkard, sex-abuser, etc., etc., what not. In most cases this case under Domestic Violence Act follows immediately after a complainant under IPC 498A. The men who are suffering under these cases are ending up filing divorce cases as these sorts of women will not allow them to live in peace. Husbands have no other option but to go for divorces to reclaim their lives. But, these intelligent women make all sorts of allegations on the husband from verbal abuse to life threat in these cases. The same women go to Family courts where the husband would have applied for divorce and claim that their husbands are good and that they love their husbands in order to more frustrate their husbands. Strange Law!!! The judges support these kinds of women. The law is totally biased to women. On Sunday 22nd Nov, the Times of India, Bangalore, has published a half-page article claiming that Domestic Violence exists especially in the economically upper class or upper-middle class of our society. Some advocates have mentioned the same in that article again without support of any data. Obviously this makes sense as men from these sections of the society are well-off and it is easy for their wives and luring for their advocates to squeeze these men for monies using this new tool. There is hardly any case under this Act which is true & genuine. All the cases are driven by Greed, Ego, Grudges, Adultery. This Act is being misused similar to the way the other women centric laws like IPC 498A was being misused since ages. Time has come for Men to raise their voice, fight back to stop this misuse instead of silently suffering from this draconian Domestic Violence Act. Mahesh www.family-harmony.org
Stop playing safe, Addl DGP tells investigating officers TNN 15 November 2009, 02:31am IST CID S P S Yadav PUNE: CID’s additional director general of police S P S Yadav attributed the poor rate of conviction in the state to pressure under which police investigation officers tend to submit charge-sheets even in cases where a final report should be submitted due to lack of evidence. The practice of just submitting charge-sheet as a safe playing technique should be curbed by the higher echelons of Maharashtra police, he said. Adopting scientific measures and making use of latest techniques in investigations has helped the state criminal investigation department (CID), Pune, secure 60 per cent conviction rate in 2008 as against 9.4 per cent by the state police units, said Yadav. Addressing policemen after the release of state’s yearly crime report at the state reserve police headquarters at Wanowrie, Yadav said the crime registered under the Indian Penal Code (IPC) has gone up by 5.4 per cent in 2008 as compared to the previous year, but the crime committed under the special and local laws has declined considerably. The crime which registered rise are: counterfeiting coins and currency notes (+ 50 per cent), riots (+17.5 per cent), murder attempt (+13.7 per cent), dacoity (+13.3 percent), thefts (+10.9 percent) and robbery (+9.4 percent). The crime on the decline include planning dacoity (-32.3 percent), dowry deaths (-10.6 percent) and culpable homicide (-1.8 percent). Yadav said that property offences have gone up by 9.26 per cent and percentage of detection in such cases was 34 per cent, but the rate of illegall transaction of money under such offence was 9 per cent. The crime against women surged by 5.4 percent and in the last five years it has increased by 36.5 percent. The crime against women which are on rise include molestation (+9.47 percent), dowry (prevention) act (+8.89 percent) , rape (+7.37 percent), subjecting women to cruelty (+6.43 percent), sexual harassment (+5 percent) and kidnapping (+3.21 percent). The conviction rate in respect of crime involving husband and relatives is down by 3.55 percent; dowry and suicide abatement is down by 9 percent and 8 percent respectively. These figures call for introspection by investigation officers and supervisory officers, he said. Talking to media persons, Yadav said violent crimes like murder, attempted murder, culpable homicide, dowry deaths, kidnapping, rape, arson, riots, dacoity and robbery has escalated by 11 per cent. Violent crime constitutes 10.95 per cent of the total IPC cases and its percentage per lakh population is 19.42 percent. These crimes poses a serious challenge to crime prevention machinery particularly in rural areas like Beed, Gadchiroli, Hingoli, Aurangabad rural, Parbhani, Latur, Ahmednagar, Dhule, Jalna and Solapur rural. Crime against members of SC/ST communities have increased by 71 percent and 24 percent respectively in the last five years. The rate of conviction under the Prevention of Atrocities Act was 4.8 percent and Prevention of Civil Rights was 2.1 percent. Although the death sentence awarded in the Khairlanji case is a pointer to the success of police investigation, the overall result of investigation of crime against the weaker sections is far from satisfactory. The CID has called for formation of special juvenile police units in every district and commissionerates consisting of child welfare officers as crimes relating to minors have increased in the age group of 16 and 18 years. As many as 12,957 people died in road accidents and 49,656 people were injured in road accidents in 2008. The CID report says that the unit commanders can ill afford to ignore the significance of various traffic planning measures required to be taken in their respective jurisdiction for controlling accidents. Earlier, Mumbai police commissioner D Shivanandan released the CID’s annual report titled: “Annual crime in Maharashtra- 2008″. The function was attended by state police academy director Sridevi Goel, city police commissioner Satya Pal Singh, joint commissioner of police Rajendra Sonawane and mayor Rajlakshmi Bhosale.
Form No. J(2) IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA Appellate/Revisiona l/Civil Jurisdiction Present: The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Bhaskar Bhattacharya And The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Rudrendra Nath Banerjee F.A. No. 96 of 2000 Sri Subhash Chandra Das Chowdhury Versus Smt. Sandhya Das Chowdhury For the Appellant/Petitione r: Mr Dilip Kumar Mondal, Mr Sandip Roy Chowdhury, Mr Gurudas Mitra. For the Respondent/Opposite Party: Mr S.S. Mukherjee, Mr Siddheswar Chandra. Heard on: 03.06.2008, 10.06.2008 &12.06.2008. Judgment on: 18th July, 2008. Bhaskar Bhattacharya, J.: This first appeal is at the instance of a husband in a suit for divorce on the ground of cruelty and is directed against the judgment and decree dated 23rd December, 1998 passed by the learned Additional District Judge, Fifth Court, Alipore, in Matrimonial Suit No.66 of 1990 thereby dismissing the suit with a specific finding that the appellant failed to prove cruelty alleged in the application for divorce. The case made out by the appellant in the pleading as amended may be summed up thus: (a) The parties were married on 7th March, 1988 according to the Hindu rites and ceremonies at 1/15, Mall Road, Dum Dum. On the eighth day of the marriage, at the time of visit to the wife's house, the appellant was told by the mother and the brother of the respondent that he was required to stay away from his own family and start his life with his wife at the paternal house of the respondent at Dum Dum as a domesticated son-in-law. The appellant, however, did not agree with such proposal and such denial on his part annoyed the respondent, her mother, brother and sister. (b) Thereafter, the appellant took his wife to Puri on honeymoon and stayed there for about 10 days and after returning from Puri, the wife stayed in the house of the appellant for a few days and thereafter, left for her own house at Dum Dum on 17th April, 1988. (c) On or about 2nd May, 1988, the appellant went to Dum Dum to take her back but she refused to come back by asserting that the appellant should forget his parents and sisters and must stay at Dum Dum in their family. Subsequently, the appellant again on 12th May, 1988, 19th May, 1988 and 27th May, 1988 went to his father-in-law's house to bring his wife back but she did not come. Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ (d) On 12th June, 1988, the respondent made a false and baseless complaint to the local Nagarik Committee; the office bearers of such Committee, after hearing the parties and being satisfied that there was no truth in her allegations, asked her to return to her matrimonial home but she did not come back. (e) On 27th July, 1988 at about 7 p.m., when the appellant was out of his house, the respondent came along with her brother and some antisocial persons. Although, the sisters of the appellant welcomed them, they, after going to the first floor of the house, started abusing the members of the husband's family in filthy language. Her brother and his antisocial associates started beating the appellant's sisters and even did not spare the old father of the appellant who was then aged about 76 years. One of the appellant's sisters managed to escape and informed the local people and apprehending the danger, those antisocial associates of the respondent left the place and threatened that they would come again. (f) The father of the appellant, therefore, lodged a G.D. with the Behala Police Station on 27th July, 1988 narrating the incident. After coming back, the appellant heard the whole incident and on the next day, he lodged a written complaint before the local police station. (g) During her first one-month stay in the appellant's house, the wife removed all her ornaments that she got as presentation to her father's house and thereafter, she approached the Nagarik Committee by making false complaint against the husband. The Nagarik Committee initially refused to interfere in the matter. However, for maintaining peace and with the hope of better days, the appellant was forced to take a separate rented house at the instigation of the respondent in her name at 48/2/1, Kabi Guru Sarani Road, P.S.-Behala and shifted to that house on 20th August, 1988 leaving his paralytic mother and old father and unmarried sisters. The appellant purchased the household utensils, fan, etc. and stayed there up to March 1989. (h) During his stay with the respondent at the rented house, the appellant passed a very miserable life. The respondent used to come at about 9 p.m. in the evening some time on bus, minibus and on occasions, in the cars of others. On enquiry about her late coming, she used to answer in dirty language. Sometimes at the dead of night, she used to turn the appellant out of bedroom forcibly and for avoiding scandals, the appellant had to stay outside the room sitting on the floor. (i) During the stay at rented house, the respondent sometime kept the house under lock and key for days together staying at her father's residence. These behaviours of the respondent amounted to cruelty and in view of misbehaviour of the respondent, the appellant had lost his dignity and prestige before his friends, neighbours and office colleagues. He could not sleep at night nor could he mix with his friends, neighbours and office colleagues. (j) The respondent also used to utter insulting language towards the appellant and complain that the appellant had been living in adultery with his sisters. Such false allegation gave great shock in the mind of the appellant. (k) On 25th March, 1989, the respondent did not allow the appellant to enter the house shouting that he was in illicit connection with his sisters and that she would not stay with him and drove him out on that ground. Since then, the appellant had been residing at her mother's house at 99, Agarwall Garden Road. (l) On 19th April, 1989, the appellant's mother died and in spite of giving information, the respondent did not come to take part in funeral nor did she take part in the Sradh Ceremony. (m) On 25th May, 1989, the respondent came with her brother and some associates in the house of the appellant and asked the appellant to send the two sisters to any orphanage and the father to an old age home and only in these circumstances, she agreed to come to the house of the appellant. The Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ respondent also used filthy language towards the appellant's sisters and father. Thereafter, they left the house. (n) After the filing of the suit, the respondent with the help of the Nagarik Committee forcibly entered into the house of the appellant and injured the inmates of the house. In view of such incident, a General Diary was lodged in the local police station and subsequently, the respondent lodged complaint under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against the appellant and other members of the family. All of them were arrested and subsequently, were released on bail. She forcibly occupied a portion of the house of his father after the institution of the suit. The respondent contested the suit by filing written statement thereby denying the material allegations made in the plaint and the defence of the respondent may be summed up thus: (1) All the allegations made against the wife were false. On 8th April, 1988, the appellant along with his divorced sister tried to set fire in her Sari as the respondent told that there was no talk of giving dressing table at the time of marriage. The appellant and his divorced sister began to beat her, as a result, the respondent had fallen ill and ultimately, she left with her brother to the respondent's house at Dum Dum on 24th April, 1988. (2) On 27th May, 1988, the respondent went to the appellant's house at Behala after being recovered from illness but the appellant's father and the divorced sister forcibly drove her out from the house and threatened her with dire consequence if the respondent came to the house of the appellant any further. The appellant told the respondent that he would marry his previous girlfriend after divorcing the respondent. The allegation that on 27th July, 1988, the wife and her brother and other antisocial elements came to the house of the appellant and abused the family-members was a false statement and the diary lodged was based on false story. It was equally false that the respondent removed all her ornaments and clothing to her father's house. (3) The appellant at the rented house, on several occasions, forced the wife to stay outside the room and tortured her. It was absolutely a false allegation that she used to come back at late night as alleged. The respondent was attacked with Cholera in the rented house but at that time, the appellant left the respondent and lived at his father's house. The local people helped the respondent from recovering from the illness. It was absolutely false to allege that the wife ever asked the husband to send his two sisters in boarding house and the father to an old age home. (4) The husband had a love affair with a girl from the childhood, which was disclosed by the husband after the marriage, and the appellant married the respondent with an intention to grab the ornaments and the clothing of the respondent, as she was a Central Government employee. The appellant used to often beat the respondent. After returning from Puri, the appellant started beating, slapping and torturing the respondent. However, the mother-in-law of the respondent was very much kind towards the respondent and she advised the appellant not to beat the respondent. The appellant made several General Diaries before the local police station. Once the appellant and his divorced sister tried to burn the respondent when she was asleep at the house of the appellant. At the intervention of the well-wishers of the respondent, the rented house was taken but after the appellant physically assaulted the respondent, the members of the Mahila Samity helped the respondent to enter the house of the appellant on 8th March, 1990 and from that date, the parties started living as husband and wife in the same room sharing the same bed. (5) The respondent is a service holder being an upper division clerk at A.G. Bengal and wants to live with the appellant as husband and wife but the intention of the appellant was to drive out the respondent with a motive to marry another girl and to grab the ornaments of the respondents. Even after the institution of the suit, the parties were leading conjugal life as a husband and wife and therefore, the suit was liable to be dismissed. At the time of Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ hearing, five witnesses including the appellant gave evidence in support of the case of the appellant while six witnesses including the respondent deposed in opposing the claim. As pointed out earlier, the learned Trial Judge by the judgment and decree impugned herein has disbelieved the case of the appellant and, therefore, dismissed the suit. Being dissatisfied, the husband has come up with the present first appeal. After hearing the learned counsel for the parties and after going through the materials on record, we find that the parties were unhappy from the very beginning of the marriage. The allegation of the husband in this regard was that the wife wanted to make him a domesticated son-in-law and that is the cause of all trouble, while the wife alleged that the two sisters of the husband made her life miserable in the matrimonial home and they even tried to kill her by setting fire on her wearing apparel. There is no dispute that the Nagarik Committee and the local Mahila Samity intervened at the instance of the wife and on their advice, a separate tenanted accommodation was taken in the name of the wife in a nearby place. Such effort, however, was not found to be successful. According to the husband, due to cruel treatment of the wife in the rented accommodation, he was compelled to leave the said rented house and come back to his father's house, whereas, according to the wife, it was the husband who misbehaved with her and left her in the said rented accommodation. The wife, however, spoke high of her mother-in-law and stated that she used to protect her from the misbehaviour of her son and daughters. The mother of the husband died in the year 1989. The suit was filed in the month of February 1990 when the wife was not staying in the house of her father-in-law. During the pendency of the suit, the wife with the help of the local people forcibly entered in the house of the father of the husband and occupied one of the rooms and further trouble started leading to the initiation of the criminal case under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against all the members of his family and consequently, all of them were arrested and subsequently released on bail. The said proceedings are still pending after framing of charges. The wife in her deposition admitted that with the help of the Mahila Samity, she got entry in the said house in the month of March 1990 and she claimed that she had been staying in the said house with the appellant as a husband and wife till the death of her father-in-law. There is no dispute that one of the sisters of the husband has also died in the meantime. The learned Trial Judge was of the view that initiation of the criminal proceedings against the husband and the other members of the family could not amount to cruelty as charge has already been framed and at that stage, one could not presume innocence of the husband. Moreover, according to the learned Trial Judge, the wife had every right to start criminal proceedings if any crime was committed by the husband against her. We fully subscribe to the aforesaid view taken by the learned Trial Judge. However, we, in this matrimonial proceeding for divorce, cannot approve the action of the wife of forcefully entering the house of the husband when a suit for divorce had already been filed against her on the ground of cruelty. She had her rented accommodation where she was staying and had also the paternal house at Dum Dum. She is an employee of the Central Government and is not a helpless lady in that sense of the term and not even dependant upon the husband in anyway. In our view, once a matrimonial suit has been filed, the wife has no right to have a force entry in the house of her husband against his will if she is provided with maintenance by the husband. In the case before us, the respondent being an employee of the Central Government, she is quite capable of maintaining herself and thus, she had no right to enter the house of the husband by the help of the local people. The sole object of the respondent was to frustrate the suit by contending that she had been staying in the same room as husband and wife and she has actually taken such plea in this proceeding. We, however, do not believe such assertion of the wife after taking into consideration the fact that the she has initiated proceedings under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ Code during the pendency of the suit and all the members of the family were arrested. No reasonable person will believe the statement of the wife that the husband is staying with her notwithstanding the pendency of the criminal case where charge has been framed and he is an accused person along with other members of the family. Such wrongful entry in the house with the help of local people has definitely caused humiliation of the husband, an employee of the defence service, in the estimation of the local people and in the facts of the present case positively amounts to cruelty. We further find that the wife in her written statements made specific allegation that the husband, in order to marry his girlfriend and to misappropriate her ornaments, filed the suit for divorce. In evidence, however, the respondent did not lead any evidence in support of such allegation about the moral character of the husband and no suggestion was even given in cross-examination of the husband that he had any illicit relation with any girl. We, therefore, find that the wife has made baseless allegation against the husband in the written statement about the desire of the husband to marry any other lady and such act also amounts to cruelty. Therefore, even if we hold that the husband has failed to prove that the wife used to allege his illicit relation with his own sisters, we are satisfied that the subsequent behaviours of the wife towards the husband definitely amount to cruelty. It appears that on the pressure of the wife and the members of the local Nagarik Committee, a separate rented accommodation was taken and that too, in the name of the wife but in spite of such fact, the parties could not live peacefully. No specific cause could be pointed out by the wife showing the reason of the discord and the only defence taken in the written statement as regards the desire to marry the girlfriend has not been proved. In the rented house, the sisters of the husband were not there and therefore, they could not be blamed for the unhappiness of the parties in that rented accommodation. The husband, however, alleged that the respondent used to come late at night and did not cook for the husband, which was denied by the wife. The fact that the husband used to take lunch in his office canteen has been admitted by the wife. We find from the deposition of the wife that she is a pathological liar as would appear from various deliberate false statements made in course of deposition. She stated that she came to know of the filing of the suit on 12th August, 1990 whereas it appears from the order-sheet that she entered appearance in the suit on 26th April, 1990 and repeatedly prayed for time to file written statement. In her cross- examination, she stated that she lodged complaint under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against her father-in-law and the sisters-in-law and not against her husband although it appears that the husband was one of the accused persons and was arrested. She further stated in one place of her deposition that in the rented accommodation, both of them were happy and there was no torture upon either of the parties. (See: page 112 at the penultimate paragraph of the Paper Book). Such statement is inconsistent with her other statements as regards the alleged misbehaviour of the husband in the rented accommodation. She has alleged conspiracy of killing her against the sisters of the husband and in the same breath, expressed her desire to stay with her husband along with her sisters-in-law. She specifically stated that she never created pressure to take any rented house but the facts remain that the said tenancy was taken in her name and it was not the husband who of his own took such tenancy in the name of his wife. On consideration of the entire materials on record we, thus, find that from the very beginning the wife and her family, took shelter under the local organisations controlled by the political party and created pressure upon the husband, first to become a domesticated son-in-law and then to take rented accommodation for the purpose of living separately from the old parents and the dependant sisters of the husband. Even thereafter, she could not be happy and when, the suit was filed after the death of her mother-in-law, she with the help of the local political party entered forcibly in the house of her husband and started criminal proceedings against the husband and the members of his family. However, in Court she took a stance that she was ready to live with her husband. All these facts taken together will lead to the conclusion that she was intolerant in her attitude and her aforesaid acts definitely amounted to Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ cruelty. We now propose to deal with the decisions cited on behalf of the wife. In the case of Swapan Kumar Ganguly vs. Smt. Smiritikana Ganguly reported in A.I.R. 2002 Cal 6, it was established from the evidence on record that the husband was guilty of physical and mental cruelty, and in such circumstances, it was held that there was cogent ground of the wife to stay away from the husband and thus, the husband was found to be not entitled to get a decree for divorce on the ground of desertion. The said decision, therefore, does not help the wife in this case where she was found to be guilty of cruelty towards her husband. In the case of Chetan Dass vs. Kamla Devi reported in A.I.R. 2002 SC 1709, the relief of divorce was claimed by the husband on the ground that the marriage had been broken down irretrievably. It was found that the husband was leading adulterous life and in such circumstances, it was held that the husband could not take advantage of his own wrong. In the case before us, from the very beginning, the wife refused to come back to the matrimonial home and when separate rented residence was taken in her own name, she could not live peacefully and ultimately, after filing of the suit for divorce, forcibly entered into the matrimonial house with the help of the local people although at that point of time, she was staying in her rented accommodation. Thus, from the aforesaid fact, we are unable to conclude that the husband was taking advantage of his own wrong. In the case of Harish Kumar Ledwani vs. Smt. Anita Ledwani reported in A.I.R. 2003 M.P. 197, the husband neither specifically pleaded the particulars regarding his allegation of cruelty with him by wife, nor did he lead any satisfactory evidence in that regard. On the other hand, the evidence on record indicated that it was the husband who was maltreating and assaulting wife and was thus cruel to her. In such a situation, the Madhya Pradesh High Court was of the view that the husband could not get a decree for divorce on the ground of cruelty. In the case before us, the particulars of cruelty have been specifically pleaded and the subsequent events were also incorporated by way of amendment and wife admitted in her evidence that she took the help of the local Mahila Samity for entering into the matrimonial home during the pendency of the suit for divorce leading to the filing of the criminal proceedings. Therefore, the principles laid down in the said decision cannot have any application to the facts of the present case. The decisions cited by the learned advocate for the respondent, therefore, do not help his client in any way. Although Mr Mukherjee as a last resort tried to impress upon us that the divorce is a stigma on a woman in Indian society and thus, we should make endeavour of preserving the marriage. In the case before us, the wife having been found to be guilty of cruelty we do not find any reason to refuse the just prayer of divorce. At this stage, we propose to rely upon the following observations of the Apex Court in the case of Naveen Kohli vs. Neelu Kohli reported in A.I.R. 2006 SC 1675 in answer to the submission of Mr Mukherjee: “Undoubtedly, it is the obligation of the Court and all concerned that the marriage status should, as far as possible, as long as possible and whenever possible, be maintained, but when the marriage is totally dead, in that event, nothing is gained by trying to keep the parties tied forever to a marriage which in fact has ceased to exist. In the instant case, there has been total disappearance of emotional substratum in the marriage. The course which has been adopted by the High Court would encourage continuous bickering, perpetual bitterness and may lead to immorality. In view of the fact that the parties have been living separately for more than 10 years and a very large number of aforementioned criminal and civil proceedings have been initiated by the respondent against the appellant and some proceedings have been initiated by the appellant against the respondent, the matrimonial bond between the parties is beyond repair. A marriage between the parties is only in name. The marriage has Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ been wrecked beyond the hope of salvage, public interest and interest of all concerned lies in the recognition of the fact and to declare defunct de jure what is already defunct de facto. To keep the sham is obviously conducive to immorality and potentially more prejudicial to the public interest than a dissolution of the marriage bond.” This is a case where we have decided to grant decree for divorce after being satisfied with the ground of cruelty and not on the mere ground that the marriage tie has broken down forever. The learned Trial Judge, as it appears from the judgment and decree impugned, did not look into aforesaid misconduct of the wife pointed out by us and erroneously held that there was no wrong on the part of the wife in forcing entry into the house of the husband during the pendency of the suit for divorce and pendency of the criminal case after filing of charge-sheet under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code rather suggested that the husband was prima facie not innocent. We, therefore, set aside the judgment and decree passed by the learned Trial Judge and hold that the husband has successfully proved that the wife was guilty of cruelty and consequently, we pass a decree for divorce on such ground. In the facts and circumstances, there will be, however, no order as to costs. ( Bhaskar Bhattacharya, J. ) I agree. ( Rudrendra Nath Banerjee, J. ) Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/
Form No. J(2) IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA Appellate/Revisiona l/Civil Jurisdiction Present: The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Bhaskar Bhattacharya And The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Rudrendra Nath Banerjee F.A. No. 96 of 2000 Sri Subhash Chandra Das Chowdhury Versus Smt. Sandhya Das Chowdhury For the Appellant/Petitione r: Mr Dilip Kumar Mondal, Mr Sandip Roy Chowdhury, Mr Gurudas Mitra. For the Respondent/Opposite Party: Mr S.S. Mukherjee, Mr Siddheswar Chandra. Heard on: 03.06.2008, 10.06.2008 &12.06.2008. Judgment on: 18th July, 2008. Bhaskar Bhattacharya, J.: This first appeal is at the instance of a husband in a suit for divorce on the ground of cruelty and is directed against the judgment and decree dated 23rd December, 1998 passed by the learned Additional District Judge, Fifth Court, Alipore, in Matrimonial Suit No.66 of 1990 thereby dismissing the suit with a specific finding that the appellant failed to prove cruelty alleged in the application for divorce. The case made out by the appellant in the pleading as amended may be summed up thus: (a) The parties were married on 7th March, 1988 according to the Hindu rites and ceremonies at 1/15, Mall Road, Dum Dum. On the eighth day of the marriage, at the time of visit to the wife's house, the appellant was told by the mother and the brother of the respondent that he was required to stay away from his own family and start his life with his wife at the paternal house of the respondent at Dum Dum as a domesticated son-in-law. The appellant, however, did not agree with such proposal and such denial on his part annoyed the respondent, her mother, brother and sister. (b) Thereafter, the appellant took his wife to Puri on honeymoon and stayed there for about 10 days and after returning from Puri, the wife stayed in the house of the appellant for a few days and thereafter, left for her own house at Dum Dum on 17th April, 1988. (c) On or about 2nd May, 1988, the appellant went to Dum Dum to take her back but she refused to come back by asserting that the appellant should forget his parents and sisters and must stay at Dum Dum in their family. Subsequently, the appellant again on 12th May, 1988, 19th May, 1988 and 27th May, 1988 went to his father-in-law's house to bring his wife back but she did not come. Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ (d) On 12th June, 1988, the respondent made a false and baseless complaint to the local Nagarik Committee; the office bearers of such Committee, after hearing the parties and being satisfied that there was no truth in her allegations, asked her to return to her matrimonial home but she did not come back. (e) On 27th July, 1988 at about 7 p.m., when the appellant was out of his house, the respondent came along with her brother and some antisocial persons. Although, the sisters of the appellant welcomed them, they, after going to the first floor of the house, started abusing the members of the husband's family in filthy language. Her brother and his antisocial associates started beating the appellant's sisters and even did not spare the old father of the appellant who was then aged about 76 years. One of the appellant's sisters managed to escape and informed the local people and apprehending the danger, those antisocial associates of the respondent left the place and threatened that they would come again. (f) The father of the appellant, therefore, lodged a G.D. with the Behala Police Station on 27th July, 1988 narrating the incident. After coming back, the appellant heard the whole incident and on the next day, he lodged a written complaint before the local police station. (g) During her first one-month stay in the appellant's house, the wife removed all her ornaments that she got as presentation to her father's house and thereafter, she approached the Nagarik Committee by making false complaint against the husband. The Nagarik Committee initially refused to interfere in the matter. However, for maintaining peace and with the hope of better days, the appellant was forced to take a separate rented house at the instigation of the respondent in her name at 48/2/1, Kabi Guru Sarani Road, P.S.-Behala and shifted to that house on 20th August, 1988 leaving his paralytic mother and old father and unmarried sisters. The appellant purchased the household utensils, fan, etc. and stayed there up to March 1989. (h) During his stay with the respondent at the rented house, the appellant passed a very miserable life. The respondent used to come at about 9 p.m. in the evening some time on bus, minibus and on occasions, in the cars of others. On enquiry about her late coming, she used to answer in dirty language. Sometimes at the dead of night, she used to turn the appellant out of bedroom forcibly and for avoiding scandals, the appellant had to stay outside the room sitting on the floor. (i) During the stay at rented house, the respondent sometime kept the house under lock and key for days together staying at her father's residence. These behaviours of the respondent amounted to cruelty and in view of misbehaviour of the respondent, the appellant had lost his dignity and prestige before his friends, neighbours and office colleagues. He could not sleep at night nor could he mix with his friends, neighbours and office colleagues. (j) The respondent also used to utter insulting language towards the appellant and complain that the appellant had been living in adultery with his sisters. Such false allegation gave great shock in the mind of the appellant. (k) On 25th March, 1989, the respondent did not allow the appellant to enter the house shouting that he was in illicit connection with his sisters and that she would not stay with him and drove him out on that ground. Since then, the appellant had been residing at her mother's house at 99, Agarwall Garden Road. (l) On 19th April, 1989, the appellant's mother died and in spite of giving information, the respondent did not come to take part in funeral nor did she take part in the Sradh Ceremony. (m) On 25th May, 1989, the respondent came with her brother and some associates in the house of the appellant and asked the appellant to send the two sisters to any orphanage and the father to an old age home and only in these circumstances, she agreed to come to the house of the appellant. The Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ respondent also used filthy language towards the appellant's sisters and father. Thereafter, they left the house. (n) After the filing of the suit, the respondent with the help of the Nagarik Committee forcibly entered into the house of the appellant and injured the inmates of the house. In view of such incident, a General Diary was lodged in the local police station and subsequently, the respondent lodged complaint under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against the appellant and other members of the family. All of them were arrested and subsequently, were released on bail. She forcibly occupied a portion of the house of his father after the institution of the suit. The respondent contested the suit by filing written statement thereby denying the material allegations made in the plaint and the defence of the respondent may be summed up thus: (1) All the allegations made against the wife were false. On 8th April, 1988, the appellant along with his divorced sister tried to set fire in her Sari as the respondent told that there was no talk of giving dressing table at the time of marriage. The appellant and his divorced sister began to beat her, as a result, the respondent had fallen ill and ultimately, she left with her brother to the respondent's house at Dum Dum on 24th April, 1988. (2) On 27th May, 1988, the respondent went to the appellant's house at Behala after being recovered from illness but the appellant's father and the divorced sister forcibly drove her out from the house and threatened her with dire consequence if the respondent came to the house of the appellant any further. The appellant told the respondent that he would marry his previous girlfriend after divorcing the respondent. The allegation that on 27th July, 1988, the wife and her brother and other antisocial elements came to the house of the appellant and abused the family-members was a false statement and the diary lodged was based on false story. It was equally false that the respondent removed all her ornaments and clothing to her father's house. (3) The appellant at the rented house, on several occasions, forced the wife to stay outside the room and tortured her. It was absolutely a false allegation that she used to come back at late night as alleged. The respondent was attacked with Cholera in the rented house but at that time, the appellant left the respondent and lived at his father's house. The local people helped the respondent from recovering from the illness. It was absolutely false to allege that the wife ever asked the husband to send his two sisters in boarding house and the father to an old age home. (4) The husband had a love affair with a girl from the childhood, which was disclosed by the husband after the marriage, and the appellant married the respondent with an intention to grab the ornaments and the clothing of the respondent, as she was a Central Government employee. The appellant used to often beat the respondent. After returning from Puri, the appellant started beating, slapping and torturing the respondent. However, the mother-in-law of the respondent was very much kind towards the respondent and she advised the appellant not to beat the respondent. The appellant made several General Diaries before the local police station. Once the appellant and his divorced sister tried to burn the respondent when she was asleep at the house of the appellant. At the intervention of the well-wishers of the respondent, the rented house was taken but after the appellant physically assaulted the respondent, the members of the Mahila Samity helped the respondent to enter the house of the appellant on 8th March, 1990 and from that date, the parties started living as husband and wife in the same room sharing the same bed. (5) The respondent is a service holder being an upper division clerk at A.G. Bengal and wants to live with the appellant as husband and wife but the intention of the appellant was to drive out the respondent with a motive to marry another girl and to grab the ornaments of the respondents. Even after the institution of the suit, the parties were leading conjugal life as a husband and wife and therefore, the suit was liable to be dismissed. At the time of Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ hearing, five witnesses including the appellant gave evidence in support of the case of the appellant while six witnesses including the respondent deposed in opposing the claim. As pointed out earlier, the learned Trial Judge by the judgment and decree impugned herein has disbelieved the case of the appellant and, therefore, dismissed the suit. Being dissatisfied, the husband has come up with the present first appeal. After hearing the learned counsel for the parties and after going through the materials on record, we find that the parties were unhappy from the very beginning of the marriage. The allegation of the husband in this regard was that the wife wanted to make him a domesticated son-in-law and that is the cause of all trouble, while the wife alleged that the two sisters of the husband made her life miserable in the matrimonial home and they even tried to kill her by setting fire on her wearing apparel. There is no dispute that the Nagarik Committee and the local Mahila Samity intervened at the instance of the wife and on their advice, a separate tenanted accommodation was taken in the name of the wife in a nearby place. Such effort, however, was not found to be successful. According to the husband, due to cruel treatment of the wife in the rented accommodation, he was compelled to leave the said rented house and come back to his father's house, whereas, according to the wife, it was the husband who misbehaved with her and left her in the said rented accommodation. The wife, however, spoke high of her mother-in-law and stated that she used to protect her from the misbehaviour of her son and daughters. The mother of the husband died in the year 1989. The suit was filed in the month of February 1990 when the wife was not staying in the house of her father-in-law. During the pendency of the suit, the wife with the help of the local people forcibly entered in the house of the father of the husband and occupied one of the rooms and further trouble started leading to the initiation of the criminal case under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against all the members of his family and consequently, all of them were arrested and subsequently released on bail. The said proceedings are still pending after framing of charges. The wife in her deposition admitted that with the help of the Mahila Samity, she got entry in the said house in the month of March 1990 and she claimed that she had been staying in the said house with the appellant as a husband and wife till the death of her father-in-law. There is no dispute that one of the sisters of the husband has also died in the meantime. The learned Trial Judge was of the view that initiation of the criminal proceedings against the husband and the other members of the family could not amount to cruelty as charge has already been framed and at that stage, one could not presume innocence of the husband. Moreover, according to the learned Trial Judge, the wife had every right to start criminal proceedings if any crime was committed by the husband against her. We fully subscribe to the aforesaid view taken by the learned Trial Judge. However, we, in this matrimonial proceeding for divorce, cannot approve the action of the wife of forcefully entering the house of the husband when a suit for divorce had already been filed against her on the ground of cruelty. She had her rented accommodation where she was staying and had also the paternal house at Dum Dum. She is an employee of the Central Government and is not a helpless lady in that sense of the term and not even dependant upon the husband in anyway. In our view, once a matrimonial suit has been filed, the wife has no right to have a force entry in the house of her husband against his will if she is provided with maintenance by the husband. In the case before us, the respondent being an employee of the Central Government, she is quite capable of maintaining herself and thus, she had no right to enter the house of the husband by the help of the local people. The sole object of the respondent was to frustrate the suit by contending that she had been staying in the same room as husband and wife and she has actually taken such plea in this proceeding. We, however, do not believe such assertion of the wife after taking into consideration the fact that the she has initiated proceedings under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ Code during the pendency of the suit and all the members of the family were arrested. No reasonable person will believe the statement of the wife that the husband is staying with her notwithstanding the pendency of the criminal case where charge has been framed and he is an accused person along with other members of the family. Such wrongful entry in the house with the help of local people has definitely caused humiliation of the husband, an employee of the defence service, in the estimation of the local people and in the facts of the present case positively amounts to cruelty. We further find that the wife in her written statements made specific allegation that the husband, in order to marry his girlfriend and to misappropriate her ornaments, filed the suit for divorce. In evidence, however, the respondent did not lead any evidence in support of such allegation about the moral character of the husband and no suggestion was even given in cross-examination of the husband that he had any illicit relation with any girl. We, therefore, find that the wife has made baseless allegation against the husband in the written statement about the desire of the husband to marry any other lady and such act also amounts to cruelty. Therefore, even if we hold that the husband has failed to prove that the wife used to allege his illicit relation with his own sisters, we are satisfied that the subsequent behaviours of the wife towards the husband definitely amount to cruelty. It appears that on the pressure of the wife and the members of the local Nagarik Committee, a separate rented accommodation was taken and that too, in the name of the wife but in spite of such fact, the parties could not live peacefully. No specific cause could be pointed out by the wife showing the reason of the discord and the only defence taken in the written statement as regards the desire to marry the girlfriend has not been proved. In the rented house, the sisters of the husband were not there and therefore, they could not be blamed for the unhappiness of the parties in that rented accommodation. The husband, however, alleged that the respondent used to come late at night and did not cook for the husband, which was denied by the wife. The fact that the husband used to take lunch in his office canteen has been admitted by the wife. We find from the deposition of the wife that she is a pathological liar as would appear from various deliberate false statements made in course of deposition. She stated that she came to know of the filing of the suit on 12th August, 1990 whereas it appears from the order-sheet that she entered appearance in the suit on 26th April, 1990 and repeatedly prayed for time to file written statement. In her cross- examination, she stated that she lodged complaint under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code against her father-in-law and the sisters-in-law and not against her husband although it appears that the husband was one of the accused persons and was arrested. She further stated in one place of her deposition that in the rented accommodation, both of them were happy and there was no torture upon either of the parties. (See: page 112 at the penultimate paragraph of the Paper Book). Such statement is inconsistent with her other statements as regards the alleged misbehaviour of the husband in the rented accommodation. She has alleged conspiracy of killing her against the sisters of the husband and in the same breath, expressed her desire to stay with her husband along with her sisters-in-law. She specifically stated that she never created pressure to take any rented house but the facts remain that the said tenancy was taken in her name and it was not the husband who of his own took such tenancy in the name of his wife. On consideration of the entire materials on record we, thus, find that from the very beginning the wife and her family, took shelter under the local organisations controlled by the political party and created pressure upon the husband, first to become a domesticated son-in-law and then to take rented accommodation for the purpose of living separately from the old parents and the dependant sisters of the husband. Even thereafter, she could not be happy and when, the suit was filed after the death of her mother-in-law, she with the help of the local political party entered forcibly in the house of her husband and started criminal proceedings against the husband and the members of his family. However, in Court she took a stance that she was ready to live with her husband. All these facts taken together will lead to the conclusion that she was intolerant in her attitude and her aforesaid acts definitely amounted to Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ cruelty. We now propose to deal with the decisions cited on behalf of the wife. In the case of Swapan Kumar Ganguly vs. Smt. Smiritikana Ganguly reported in A.I.R. 2002 Cal 6, it was established from the evidence on record that the husband was guilty of physical and mental cruelty, and in such circumstances, it was held that there was cogent ground of the wife to stay away from the husband and thus, the husband was found to be not entitled to get a decree for divorce on the ground of desertion. The said decision, therefore, does not help the wife in this case where she was found to be guilty of cruelty towards her husband. In the case of Chetan Dass vs. Kamla Devi reported in A.I.R. 2002 SC 1709, the relief of divorce was claimed by the husband on the ground that the marriage had been broken down irretrievably. It was found that the husband was leading adulterous life and in such circumstances, it was held that the husband could not take advantage of his own wrong. In the case before us, from the very beginning, the wife refused to come back to the matrimonial home and when separate rented residence was taken in her own name, she could not live peacefully and ultimately, after filing of the suit for divorce, forcibly entered into the matrimonial house with the help of the local people although at that point of time, she was staying in her rented accommodation. Thus, from the aforesaid fact, we are unable to conclude that the husband was taking advantage of his own wrong. In the case of Harish Kumar Ledwani vs. Smt. Anita Ledwani reported in A.I.R. 2003 M.P. 197, the husband neither specifically pleaded the particulars regarding his allegation of cruelty with him by wife, nor did he lead any satisfactory evidence in that regard. On the other hand, the evidence on record indicated that it was the husband who was maltreating and assaulting wife and was thus cruel to her. In such a situation, the Madhya Pradesh High Court was of the view that the husband could not get a decree for divorce on the ground of cruelty. In the case before us, the particulars of cruelty have been specifically pleaded and the subsequent events were also incorporated by way of amendment and wife admitted in her evidence that she took the help of the local Mahila Samity for entering into the matrimonial home during the pendency of the suit for divorce leading to the filing of the criminal proceedings. Therefore, the principles laid down in the said decision cannot have any application to the facts of the present case. The decisions cited by the learned advocate for the respondent, therefore, do not help his client in any way. Although Mr Mukherjee as a last resort tried to impress upon us that the divorce is a stigma on a woman in Indian society and thus, we should make endeavour of preserving the marriage. In the case before us, the wife having been found to be guilty of cruelty we do not find any reason to refuse the just prayer of divorce. At this stage, we propose to rely upon the following observations of the Apex Court in the case of Naveen Kohli vs. Neelu Kohli reported in A.I.R. 2006 SC 1675 in answer to the submission of Mr Mukherjee: “Undoubtedly, it is the obligation of the Court and all concerned that the marriage status should, as far as possible, as long as possible and whenever possible, be maintained, but when the marriage is totally dead, in that event, nothing is gained by trying to keep the parties tied forever to a marriage which in fact has ceased to exist. In the instant case, there has been total disappearance of emotional substratum in the marriage. The course which has been adopted by the High Court would encourage continuous bickering, perpetual bitterness and may lead to immorality. In view of the fact that the parties have been living separately for more than 10 years and a very large number of aforementioned criminal and civil proceedings have been initiated by the respondent against the appellant and some proceedings have been initiated by the appellant against the respondent, the matrimonial bond between the parties is beyond repair. A marriage between the parties is only in name. The marriage has Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/ been wrecked beyond the hope of salvage, public interest and interest of all concerned lies in the recognition of the fact and to declare defunct de jure what is already defunct de facto. To keep the sham is obviously conducive to immorality and potentially more prejudicial to the public interest than a dissolution of the marriage bond.” This is a case where we have decided to grant decree for divorce after being satisfied with the ground of cruelty and not on the mere ground that the marriage tie has broken down forever. The learned Trial Judge, as it appears from the judgment and decree impugned, did not look into aforesaid misconduct of the wife pointed out by us and erroneously held that there was no wrong on the part of the wife in forcing entry into the house of the husband during the pendency of the suit for divorce and pendency of the criminal case after filing of charge-sheet under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code rather suggested that the husband was prima facie not innocent. We, therefore, set aside the judgment and decree passed by the learned Trial Judge and hold that the husband has successfully proved that the wife was guilty of cruelty and consequently, we pass a decree for divorce on such ground. In the facts and circumstances, there will be, however, no order as to costs. ( Bhaskar Bhattacharya, J. ) I agree. ( Rudrendra Nath Banerjee, J. ) Indian Kanoon - http://indiankanoon .org/doc/ 1393137/
|
|
Recent Comments