Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. SURINDAR KAUR SANDHU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARBAX SINGH SANDHU & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/04/1984
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1224 1984 SCR (3) 422
1984 SCC (3) 698 1984 SCALE (1)616
ACT:
Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956 Section 6-
Interpretation of-Custody of the child. Conflict of Laws-
Jurisdiction of the Court to decide the question of custody
of a minor child who is a British citizen while the parents
are Indian citizens.
HEADNOTE:
Appellant and Respondent No.1 were married in 1975 at
Bodni Kalan District Faridkot, Punjab according to Sikh
rites. Soon after the marriage, they left for England, where
a boy named Pritpal Singh was born to them on October 24,
1976. Soon thereafter, their relationship came under a
strain with the result Respondent 1 was trying to negotiate
with a hitman to have the appellant run over by a car. The
Berkshire Police got scent of it resulting in the
Respondent’s conviction and sentence for a period of three
years. Ironically the appellant wife intervened and
succeeded in obtaining a probation order for the man who had
attempted to procure her murder. The husband was released on
probation on February 4, 1982. The period of probation
expired on December 24, 1982. On January 31, 1983, while the
wife was away at work, Respondent No. 1 removed the boy from
England and brought him to India. On the same date, the
appellant-wife obtained an order under section 41 of the
Supreme Court Act, 1981 under which the boy became the ward
of the Court with effect from that date. This order was
confirmed on July 22, 1983.
In the meantime the appellant came to India in April,
1983 and on 5.5.1983 filed a petition under section 97 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure in the Court of the learned
Judicial Magistrate first class Jagraon praying for the
custody of the child. The Respondent No. 1 contested and
took an objection that under section 6 of the Hindu Minority
and Guardianship Act, 1956 he was the natural guardian of
the minor boy. The contention was accepted and the petition
was dismissed. The appellant went back to England to resume
her work and obtained the confirmation order dated 22.7.1983
referred to above. Armed with the said order she returned to
India and filed a writ Petition in the High Court of Punjab
and Haryana. The Writ Petition was dismissed on the grounds
inter alia that her status in England is that of a
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foreigner, factory worker and a wife living separately from
the husband and having no relatives and as such the child
would have to live in lonely and dismal surroundings in
England, while it would grow in an atmosphere of self
confidence and self respect, if it was permitted to live
with its father and grand parents:
423
Hence the appeal after obtaining special leave of the
Court.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD: 1. Section 6 of the Hindu Minority and
Guardianship Act, 1956 constitutes the father as the natural
guardian of a minor son. But that provision cannot supersede
the paramount consideration as to what is conducive to the
welfare of the minor. As the matters are presented to the
Court the boy, from his own point of view, ought to be in
the custody of the mother. [427A-B]
2:1 The modern theory of conflict of laws recognises
and, in any event, prefers the jurisdiction of the State
which has the most intimate contact with the issues arising
in the case. Jurisdiction is not attracted by the operation
or creation of fortuitous circumstances such as the
circumstance as to where the child, whose custody is in
issue, is brought or for the time being lodged. To allow the
assumption of jurisdiction by another State in such
circumstances will only result in encouraging forum-
shopping. Ordinarily, jurisdiction must follow upon
functional lines. That is to say, for example, that in
matters relating to matrimony and custody, the law of that
place must govern which has the closest concern with the
well-being of the spouses and the welfare of the offsprings
of marriage The spouses in this case. had made England their
home where this boy was born to them. The father cannot
deprive the English Court of its jurisdiction to decide upon
his custody by removing him to India, not in the normal
movement of the matrimonial home but, by an act which was
gravely detrimental to the place of that home. The fact that
the matrimonial home of the spouses was in England,
establishes sufficient contacts or ties with that State in
order to make it reasonable and just for the Courts of that
State to assume jurisdiction to enforce obligations which
were incurred therein by the spouses. [427-CG]
2:2 The spouses had set up their matrimonial home in
England where the wife was working as a clerk and the
husband as a bus driver. The boy is a British citizen,
having been born in England, and he holds a British
passport. It cannot be controverted that, in these
circumstances the England Court had jurisdiction to decide
the question of his custody.[427B-C]
International Shoe Company v. State of Washington, 90
L.ED 95 [1945] quoted with approval.
3:1 In the instance case; (i) The welfare of the boy
does not require that he should live with his father or with
the grand parents; (ii) the "traumatic experience of a
conviction on a criminal charge" is not a factor in favour
of the father especially when his conduct following
immediately upon his release on probation shows that the
experience has not chastened him, and (iii) The father is a
man without a character who offered solicitation to the
commission of his wife’s murder. The wife obtained an order
of probation for him but, he abused her magnanimity by
running away with the boy soon after the probationary period
was over. Even in that act, he displayed a singular lack of
respect for law by obtaining a duplicate passport for the
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boy on an untrue representation that the original passport
was lost. The original passport was, to his knowledge, in
the Keeping of his wife. In this background, the
424
affluence of the husband’s parents cannot be regarded as a
circumstance of such overwhelming importance as to tilt the
balance in favour of the father on the question of what is
truly for the welfare of the minor. At any rate it will not
be less for the welfare of the minor if the lived with his
mother. He was whisked away from her and it cannot be said
that there are any circumstance to support the view that the
new environment in which he is wrongfully brought is more
conducive to his welfare. He is about 8 years of age and the
loving care of the mother ought not to be denied to him. The
father is made of coarse stuff. The mother earns an income
of $100 a week, which is certainly not large by English
standards, but is not so low as not to enable her to take
reasonable care of the boy. [426E-H]
3:2 It is the duty and function of the court to protect
the wife. against the burden of litigating in an
inconvenient forum which she and her husband had left
voluntarily in order to make their living in England, where
they gave birth to this unfortunate boy. [427H]
(The court directed the custody of the child to the
mother forthwith and awarded cost of Rs. 3000) [428B]
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No.
183 of 1984.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 26th August, 1983 of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court in Cr. Writ Petition No. 392 of 1983.
C.M. Nayar and Vijay Jhani for the Appellant.
Puran Chand, Mrs. Naresh Bakshi and Miss Kailash Mehta
for the Respondents
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD C. J.,: The appellant, Surinder kaur
Sandhu, is the wife of respondent 1, Harbax Singh Sandhu.
Respondent 2 is the father of respondent 1 Appellant and
respondent 1 were married in 1975 at Bodni Kalan, District
Faridkot, Punjab, according to Sikh rites. Soon after the
marriage they left for England, where a boy named Pritpal
Singh was born to them on October 24, 1976.
Within a short period after the birth of the boy, the
relationship between the spouses came under a strain
resulting in a serious episode. The husband was trapped by
the Berkshire Police who got the scent that he was
negotiating with a hitman to have the wife run over by a
car. The husband was convicted and sentenced
425
to a term of three years for that offence. Ironically, it
was the wife who intervened and succeeded in obtaining a
probation order for the man who had attempted to procure her
murder. The husband was released on probation on February 4,
1982. The period of probation expired on December 24, 1982.
On January 31, 1983, while the wife was away at work,
the husband removed the boy from England and brought him to
India. On the same date, the wife obtained an order under
section 41 of the Supreme Court Act, 1981 under which the
boy became the Ward of the Court with effect from that date.
That order was confirmed on July 22, 1983 by Mrs. Justice
Booth of the High Court of Justice (Family Division). By the
said order, the husband was directed to hand over the
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custody of the minor boy to the wife or her agent forthwith.
The wife came to India in April 1983. On May 5, 1983
she filed a petition under section 97 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure in the Court of the learned Judicial
Magistrate, First Class, Jagraon. She asked for the custody
of her son, contending that he was in the illegal custody of
the respondents. Section 97 authorises the Magistrate to
direct a search to be made for persons wrongfully confined
and, on their being found, to be produced in the Court in
order to facilitate the passing of such order as the
circumstances of the case may require. The respondents
relied upon section 6 of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship
Act, 1956, and opposed the petition on the ground that
Respondent 1 was the natural guardian of the minor boy.
Accepting that contention, the learned Magistrate dismissed
the petition, leaving the question of the custody of the
child to be decided in an appropriate proceeding.
The wife then went back to England to resume her work
and obtained the order dated July 22, 1983 to which we have
already referred. She came back to India once again, this
time armed with the aforesaid order of the English High
Court. She then filed the present writ petition in the High
Court of Punjab and Haryana, asking for the production and
custody of her minor son.
The learned single Judge of the High Court who dealt
with the petition made an excellent effort to bring about
rapprochement between the spouses but, he did not succeed.
He questioned the boy more than once and he even presided
the spouses to live together for a couple of days in the
house of the Inspector General of Prisons, Haryana. The
spouses reported back to him that they
426
were unable to resolve their differences.
The learned Judge dismissed the wife’s petition on the
grounds, inter alia, that her status in England is that of a
foreigner, a factory worker and a wife living separately
from the husband that she had no relatives in England; and
that, the child would have to live in lonely and dismal
surroundings in England. On the other hand, according to the
learned Judge, the father had gone through a traumatic
experience of a conviction on a criminal charge; that he was
back home in an atmosphere which welcomed him; that his
parents were in affluent circumstances; and that, the child
would grow in an atmosphere of self-confidence and self-
respect if he was permitted to live with them.
Some of these circumstances mentioned by the learned
Judge are not beside the point but, their comparative
assessment is difficult to accept as made. For example, the
‘traumatic experience of a conviction on a criminal charge’
is not a factor in favour of the father, especially when his
conduct following immediately upon his release on probation
shows that the experience has not chastened him. On the
whole, we are unable to agree that the welfare of the boy
requires that he should live with his father or with the
grand-parents. The father is a man without a character who
offered solicitation to the commission of his wife’s murder.
The wife obtained an order of probation for him but, he
abused her magnanimity by running away with the boy soon
after the probationary period was over. Even in that act, he
displayed a singular lack of respect for law by obtaining a
duplicate passport for the boy on an untrue representation
that the original passport was lost. The original passport
was, to his knowledge, in the keeping, of his wife. In this
background, we do not regard the affluence of the husband’s
parents to be a circumstance of such overwhelming importance
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as to tilt the balance in favour of the father on the
question of what is truly for the welfare of the minor At
any rate, we are unable to agree that it will be less for
the welfare of the minor if he lived with his mother. He was
whisked away from her and the question is whether, there are
any circumstances to support the view that the new
environment in which he is wrongfully brought is more
conducive to his welfare. He is about 8 years of age and the
loving care of the mother ought not to be denied to him. The
father is made of coarse stuff. The mother earns an income
of $100 a week, which is certainly not large by English
standards, but is not so low as not to enable her
427
to take reasonable care of the boy.
Section 6 of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act,
1956 constitutes the father as the natural guardian of a
minor son. But that provision cannot supersede the paramount
consideration as to what is conducive to the welfare of the
minor. As the matters are presented to us to-day, the boy,
from his own point of view, ought to be in the custody of
the mother.
We may add that the spouses had set up their
matrimonial home in England where the wife was working as a
clerk and the husband as a bus driver. The boy is a British
citizen, having been born in England, and he holds a British
passport. It cannot be controverted that, in these
circumstances, the English Court had jurisdiction to decide
the question of his custody. The modern theory of Conflict
of Laws recognises and, in any event, prefers the
jurisdiction of the State which has the most intimate
contact with the issues arising in the case. Jurisdiction is
not attracted by the operation or creation of fortuitous
circumstances such as the circumstance as to where the
child, whose custody is in issue, is brought or for the time
being lodged. To allow the assumption of jurisdiction by
another State in such circumstances will only result in
encouraging forum-shopping Ordinarily, jurisdiction must
follow upon functional lines. That is to say, for example,
that in matters relating to matrimony and custody, the law
of that place must govern which has the closest concern with
the well-being of the spouses and the welfare of the
offsprings of marriage. The spouses in this case had made
England their home where this boy was born to them. The
father cannot deprive the English Court of its jurisdiction
to decide upon his custody by removing him to India, not in
the normal movement of the matrimonial home but, by an act
which was gravely detrimental to the peace of that home. The
fact that the matrimonial home of the spouses was in
England, establishes sufficient contacts or ties with that
State in order to make it reasonable and just for the Courts
of that state to assume jurisdiction to enforce obligations
which were incurred therein by the spouses. (See
International Shoe Company v. State of Washington (1) which
was not a matrimonial case but which is regarded as the
fountainhead of the subsequent developments of
jurisdictional issues like the one involved in the instant
case) It is our duty and function to protect the wife
against the burden of litigating in an inconvenient forum
which she and her husband had left voluntarily in order to
make their living in England, where they gave birth to this
unfortunate boy.
428
For these reasons, we set aside the judgment of the
High Court and direct that the custody of the child shall be
handed over to the appellant-mother. that shall be done
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during the course of this day.
The High Court has referred to the evidence showing
that the annual income of the father’s family is in the
range of Rs. 90,000. That would justify an order directing
the respondents to pay a sum of Rs. 3,000 (three thousand)
to the appellant for her costs of this appeal.
order accordingly,
S.R. Appeal allowed.
429