Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3860 of 2001
PETITIONER:
SMT. KAMTI DEVI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
POSHI RAM RESP
ONDENT
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/05/2001
BENCH:
K.T.Thomas & R.P. Sethi
JUDGMENT:
THOMAS, J.
Leave granted.
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What is the standard of proof required to displace the
conclusive presumption in favour of paternity of a child
born during the subsistence of a valid marriage? Is it
necessary that non-access should be proved beyond reasonable
doubt, or would it be sufficient to prove it by a
preponderance of probabilities? The maxim Pater est quem
nuptiae demonstrant (The father is he, whom the nuptials
indicate) has gained a sturdy legislative recognition which
resulted in the formulation of the rule of evidence
envisaged in Section 112 of the Evidence Act (for short the
Act). It is based on the English rule that the child born
in the wedlock should be treated as the child of the man who
was then the husband of its mother. Its only exception is
when the husband proves that he had no access to his wife at
the time of conception of that child. Section 112 of the
Act reads thus:
Birth during marriage, conclusive proof of legitimacy.
- The fact that any person was born during the continuance
of a valid marriage between his mother and any man, or
within two hundred and eighty days after its dissolution,
the mother remaining unmarried, shall be conclusive proof
that he is the legitimate son of that man, unless it can be
shown that the parties to the marriage had no access to each
other at any time when he could have been begotten.
The Section when stretched to its widest compass is
capable of encompassing even the birth of a child on the
next day of a valid marriage within the range of
conclusiveness regarding the paternity of its mothers
husband, but it excludes the birth happened just one day
after the period of 280 days elapsing from the date of the
dissolution of that marriage. The question regarding the
standard of proof for disrupting the conclusiveness of the
presumption has been mooted before us as a Single Judge of
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the High Court of Himachal Pradesh refused to interfere in a
second appeal with a finding recorded by the District Judge
in a first appeal that the respondent-plaintiff has
discharged his burden of proof and consequently the
presumption stood rebutted. The facts which led to the said
finding are the following:
The marriage between appellant Kamti Devi and respondent
Poshi Ram was solemnised in the year 1975. For almost
fifteen years thereafter Kamti Devi remained childless and
on 4.9.1989 she gave birth to a male child (his name is
Roshan Lal). The long period in between was marked by
internecine legal battles in which the spouses engaged as
against each other. Soon after the birth of the child it
was sought to be recorded in the Register under the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act. Then the husband
filed a civil suit for a decree declaring that he is not the
father of the child, as he had no access to the appellant
Kamti Devi during the period when the child would have been
begotten.
The trial court, on the basis of admitted facts that the
parties are spouses of a valid marriage and that the
marriage subsisted on the date of birth of the child, relied
on the conclusive presumption mentioned in Section 112 of
the Act. The trial court further held that the husband
failed to prove that he has no access to his wife Kamti Devi
during the relevant period. Accordingly the suit was
dismissed.
But the first appellate court, after re-evaluating the
entire evidence, found that the husband plaintiff succeeded
in discharging the burden for rebutting the presumption by
proving that he had no access to the mother of the child
during a very long stretch of time covering the relevant
period. On the strength of the said finding the first
appellate court allowed the appeal and decreed the suit
declaring that the plaintiff is not the father of the child
Roshan Lal. The High Court refused to interfere with the
aforesaid finding in the second appeal on the premise that
the question whether Roshan Lal is the son of the plaintiff
is a pure question of fact which calls for no interference
by the Court in the second appeal under Section 100 of the
Code of Civil Procedure.
Learned counsel for the appellant raised two
contentions. First is that the District Court went wrong in
relying on the interested evidence of the plaintiff. Second
is that the High Court failed in formulating the substantial
question of law involved in this case as to whether the
burden of a husband- plaintiff (to prove that he had no
access to his wife) is as heavy as the burden of prosecution
in a criminal case to prove the guilt of the accused.
Earlier there was a controversy as to what is the true
import of the word access in Section 112 of the Act. Some
High Courts held that access means actual sexual intercourse
between the spouses. However, the controversy came to a
rest when the privy Council held in Karapvya Severai vs.
Mayandi (AIR 1934 PC 49) that the word access connotes
only existence of opportunity for marital intercourse. The
said legal principle gained approval of this Court when a
three judge bench had held Chilukuri Venkateswarlu vs.
Chilukuri Venkatanarayana (1954 SCR 424) that the law has
been correctly laid down therein.
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When the legislature chose to employ the expression that
a certain fact shall be conclusive proof of another fact,
normally the parties are disabled from disrupting such
proof. This can be discerned from the definition of the
expression conclusive presumption in Section 4 of the Act.
Conclusive proof. -When one fact is declared by this Act
to be conclusive proof of another, the Court shall, on proof
of the one fact, regard the other as proved, and shall not
allow evidence to be given for the purpose of disproving
it.
But Section 112 itself provides an outlet to the party
who wants to escape from the rigour of that conclusiveness.
The said outlet is, if it can be shown that the parties had
no access to each other at the time when the child could
have been begotten the presumption could be rebutted. In
other words, the party who wants to dislodge the
conclusiveness has the burden to show a negative, not merely
that he did not have the opportunity to approach his wife
but that she too did not have the opportunity of approaching
him during the relevant time. Normally, the rule of
evidence in other instances is that the burden is on the
party who asserts the positive, but in this instance the
burden is cast on the party who pleads the negative. The
raison detre is the legislative concern against
illegitimatizing a child. It is a sublime public policy
that children should not suffer social disability on account
of the laches or lapses of parents.
We may remember that Section 112 of the Evidence Act was
enacted at a time when the modern scientific advancements
with Dioxy Nucleic Acid (DNA) as well as Ribonucleic Acid
(RNA) tests were not even in contemplation of the
legislature. The result of a genuine DNA test is said to be
scientifically accurate. But even that is not enough to
escape from the conclusiveness of Section 112 of the Act,
e.g. if a husband and wife were living together during the
time of conception but the DNA test revealed that the child
was not born to the husband, the conclusiveness in law would
remain unrebuttable. This may look hard from the point of
view of the husband who would be compelled to bear the
fatherhood of a child of which he may be innocent. But even
in such a case the law leans in favour of the innocent child
from being bastardized if his mother and her spouse were
living together during the time of conception. Hence the
question regarding the degree of proof of non-access for
rebutting the conclusiveness must be answered in the light
of what is meant by access or non-access as delineated
above.
Whether the burden on the husband is as hard as the
prosecution to prove the guilt of the accused in a trial
deserves consideration in the above background. The
standard of proof of prosecution to prove the guilt beyond
any reasonable doubt belongs to criminal jurisprudence
whereas the test of preponderance of probabilities belongs
to civil cases. The reason for insisting on proof beyond
reasonable doubt in criminal cases is to guard against
innocent being convicted and sent to jail if not to extreme
penalty of death. It would be too hard if that standard is
imported in a civil case for a husband to prove non- access
as the very concept of non-access is negative in nature.
But at the same time the test of preponderance of
probability is too light as that might expose many children
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to the peril of being illegitimatised. If a court declares
that the husband is not the father of his wifes child,
without tracing out its real father the fall out on the
child is ruinous apart from all the ignominy visiting his
mother. The bastardized child, when grows up would be
socially ostracised and can easily fall into wayward life.
Hence, by way of abundant caution and as a matter of public
policy, law cannot afford to allow such consequence
befalling an innocent child on the strength of a mere
tilting of probability. Its corollary is that the burden of
the plaintiff-husband should be higher than the standard of
preponderance of probabilities. The standard of proof in
such cases must at least be of a degree in between the two
as to ensure that there was no possibility of the child
being conceived through the plaintiff-husband.
In Goutam Kundu vs. State of West Bengal {1993(3) SCC
418} this Court after considering an early three-Judge Bench
decision in Smt. Dukhtar Jahan vs. Mohammed Farooq
{1987(1) SCC 624} held that this presumption can only be
displaced by a strong preponderance of evidence, and not by
a mere balance of probabilities.
In the present case the first appellate court, which is
the final fact finding court, after evaluating the entire
evidence, came to the following conclusion:
In the present case the plaintiff has examined all the
evidence which he possibly could do in the circumstances.
He has proved by convincing evidence, that he did not visit
his village or house where the defendant was allotted one
room. He has further proved that the defendant also never
visited him at Mandi where he had been living for more than
2 year before the child was born to Kamti Devi. In other
words he has proved that he had no access or opportunity for
sexual intercourse with defendant No.1 for more than 280
days before Roahan Lal (defendant No.2) was begotten by the
defendant No.1
The said conclusion was reached on the strength of the
evidence adduced by both sides and the first appellate court
was satisfied in a full measure that the plaintiff-husband
had no opportunity whatsoever to have liaison with the
defendant mother. The finding thus reached by the first
appellate court cannot be interfered with in a second appeal
as no substantial question of law would have flowed out of
such a finding.
In the result we dismiss this appeal.