Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM NARAIN GUPTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SMT. RAMESHWARI GUPTA
DATE OF JUDGMENT12/09/1988
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1988 AIR 2260 1988 SCR Supl. (2) 913
1988 SCC (4) 247 JT 1988 (3) 621
1988 SCALE (2)670
ACT:
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955--Section 13(1)(iii)--
Dissolution of marriage--All mental disorders not recognised
as grounds for grant of decree--Degree of severity or
acuteness of--To be proved--Burden of proof on the spouse
who alleges--Mere branding of a person as Schizophrenic not
enough.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant and respondent married in 1977. In 1983,
the appellant filed a suit for dissolution of the marriage,
alleging that his wife was suffering from severe mental
disorder, psychiatrically recognised as ‘Schizophrenia’
which rendered her unsociable and despite competent
professional treatment, her condition deteriorated to the
point of making manifest in her suicidal tendencies and
aggressive violent behaviour towards others. The appellant
could not therefore reasonably be expected to live with the
respondent as man and wife.
The Respondent denied the imputation of insanity and
contended that the appellant was determined to get rid of
her, as a result of the domestic discord between her and the
appellant’s mother and sister. Both the husband and the wife
gave evidence, to prove their respective cases. Other
witnesses were also examined. The respondent-wife produced a
copy of the order passed by the Magistrate in proceedings
initiated by the appellant under the Lunacy Act. for the
committal of his wife to a mental asylum. The order stated
that there was no abnormality in her, requiring
institutional treatment.
On appreciation of the evidence, the trial court
accepted the case of the appellant and granted a decree for
dissolution of the marriage.
The Respondent-wife appealed to the High Court. Allowing
the appeal, the High Court reversed the decree of
dissolution of marriage, granted by the trial court. It held
that the appellant had not shown that his wife’s mental
illness was so intense as to justify a reasonable
apprehension that it would be impossible or unsafe for the
appellant to live with her.
PG NO 913
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PG NO 914
In the present appeal before this Court, it was
contended on behalf of the appellant that in assessing the
reasonableness of the husband’s apprehension that he could
not be expected to spend the rest of his life with a
‘Schizophrenic’, due acknowledgement required to be made to
his subjective susceptibilities also.
Dismissing the appeal,
HELD: 1.1 Section 13(1)(iii) does not make the mere
existence of a mental disorder of any degree sufficient to
justify the dissolution of a marriage. The burden of proof
of the existence of the requisite degree of mental disorder
is on the spouse basing the claim on that state of facts.
The context in which the ideas of unsoundness of ‘mind’ and
‘mental-disorder’ occur in the section as grounds for
dissolution of a marriage, require the assessment of the
degree of the ‘mental-disorder’. Its degree must be such as
that the spouse seeking relief cannot reasonably be expected
to live with the other. All mental abnormalities are not
recognised as grounds for grant of decree. [921 C-H; 922A]
1.2 scnizophrenia is said to be a difficult mental-
affliction. It is insidious in its onset and has hereditary
pre-disposing factor. Each case of Schizophrenia has to be
considered on its own merits. Mere branding of a person as
Schizophrenic will not suffice. For purpose of Sec.
13(1)(iii) Schizophrenia is what Schizophrenia does. Not all
Schzophrenics are characterised by the same intensity of the
disease.[924D;928D]
2. In the instant case, taking into account the facts
and circumstances the High Court, on a reasonable assessment
of the situation, rightly came to the conclusion that the
requisite degree of the mental-disorder which alone would
justify dissolution of marriage has not been established and
that the decree for the dissolution of the marriage. granted
by the trial court was not justified. [917C-D]
Rita Roy v. Sitesh Chandra, AIR 1982 Cal 138, approved.
McLoughin v. O’Brian, [1982] 2 All ER 298; Bennett v.
Bennett. [1969] 1 All ER 539, relied on.
John Searle ‘Minds, Brains and Science’ [l984] Reith
Lectures, PP. 10 & 11, Concise Medical Dictionary, p. 566,
Oxford Medical Publications, 1980, Philosophy and Medicine,
Vol. 5, p.x. F.C. Redlich and Daniel X. Freedman. ‘The
Theory and Practice of Psychiatry’ [1966] Edn. William
Alanson White, New York, The Autobiography of a Purpose’--
PG NO 915
Doubleday & Co. 1938 p. 53, Karl Menninger ‘Communication
and Mental Health’, The Menninger Quarterly, [1962], p. 1.,
Richard C. Allen, Elyce Zennott Ferster, Jassee C. Rubin
‘Readings in Law and Psychiatry’, Revised & Expanded edn.
(1975), p. 38 relied on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2377 of
1987.
From the Judgment and Order dated 29.10.1986 of the
Allahabad High Court in F.A. No. 493 of 1984.
J.P. Goyal, Rajesh and V.K. Verma for the Appellant.
Mrs. Rani Chhabra for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALIAH, J. This appeal, in a matrimonial cause,
is by the husband, and is directed against the Judgment and
Decree, dated 29.10.1986, of High Court of Allahabad in
First Appeal No. 493 of 1984, allowing the Respondent-
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wife’s appeal and reversing the decree of dissolution of
marriage dated 31.7.1984 granted by the Second Additional
District Judge, Jhansi, in Original Suit No. 34 of 1983 of
his file.
Appellant’s suit for a decree of dissolution of his
marriage with the respondent on the ground envisaged in
Section 13(1)(iii) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (Act)
that respondent suffered from a mental-disorder of such a
kind that rendered Respondent unfit for married-life and
that petitioner could not reasonably be expected to live
with her had been decreed by the Court of first instance but
dismissed by the High Court in appeal. Appellant-husband has
come-up by Special Leave.
2. The marriage between appellant, Ram Narain Gupta, and
respondent, Rameshwari Gupta, was solemnised on 17.6.1979 at
Jhansi. The suit for the dissolution of the marriage was
filed on 14.7.1983 on the allegation that the wife was a
schizophrenic. The High Court, while holding it probable
that the wife did suffer from some such mental-disorder,
however, was persuaded to the view that appellant had not
established the requisite extent and degree of the mental-
disorder recognised by law as constituting a legal
justification for the dissolution of the marriage. In the
suit appellant had also alleged that the respondent was of
PG NO 916
unsound mind even before the marriage and that this fact had
been concealed from him at the time of the marriage. This
alternative case that the marriage was itself induced by the
suppression of the material facts pertaining to the mental-
state of the bride and that, accordingly, the marriage
required to be annuled was, however, not pressed before the
High Court.
3. In his suit appellant pleaded that the respondent
suffered from a mental-disorder, psychiatrically recognised
as ‘schizophrenia’, which was of such severeity as to render
Respondent unsociable and given to violent propensities,
that the wife had been treated by the doctors at the
Department of Psychiatry at the Medical College, Jhansi,
and that despite competent professional treatment the mental
condition of respondent continued to deteriorate to the
point of making manifest in her suicidal tendencies and
aggressive violent behaviour towards others. Appellant,
therefore, averred that the mental-disorder of the
respondent was of such a kind and to such extent that
appellant could not reasonably be expected to live with
respondent as man and wife.
Respondent in her written-statement denied the
imputation of insanity and commission of several overt acts
indicative of mental-disorder alleged against her and
contended that appellant’s determination to get rid of her
was attributable to the domestic discord between her on the
one side and the mother and sisters of the appellant on the
other. Indeed, she also entered the witness-box to testify
to and substantiate her defence. She was subjected to
searching cross-examination .
4. The Trial Court framed the necessary and material
issues stemming from the pleadings. On his side, appellant
called a certain Dr. Ganesh Datt Shukla, (PW. l) Head of the
Diptt. of Psychiatry. Maharani Laxmi Bai Medical College to
support his version. Appellant himself tendered evidence as
PW 2. He also examined a certain Gyasi Ram (PW 3) said to be
an artisan who claimed that during one of his visits to
appellant’s house for some odd job. he had seen respondent
beating-up small children and conducting herself in a
disorderly manner. Appellant also called a certain Janki
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Prasad (PW 4) said to be the private-home-teacher of
appellant’s nephews. PW 4 spoke to what, according to him,
were oddities in the behaviour of the respondent and of her
violent propensities. Appellant in order to show that
Respondent was a violent--lunatic relied upon the medical-
certificates at Exhibits P3, P4 and A2,--the first two
issued by PW 1 and the third by a certain -Dr. S.A. Khan.
PG NO 917
Appellant also relied upon certain incidents which occurred
on 1.7.1983 in which the respondent is alleged to have
exhibited unprovoked violence towards appellant’s sisters
and inflicted injuries on their person.
The respondent-wife, as stated earlier, tendered
evidence as D W 1. She also produced a copy of the order
passed by the Magistrate in proceedings under the Lunacy Act
initiated by the appellant for her committal to a mental-
asylum. In those proceedings, it would appear, the
Magistrate, after examining the respondent, is stated have
found no abnormality in her, requiring institutionalised
treatment.
5. The trial court on an appreciation of the evidence
accepted appellant’s case and recorded a finding that
respondent was afflicted with schizophrenia which was
dangerous for her as well as for those who lived with her
and granted a decree for the dissolution of the marriage.
This decree, as stated earlier, has been reversed by the
High Court.
The point that commended itself to the High Court was
that though the evidence indicated the possibility of some
mental-disorder, however, the requirement of the law as to
the existence of the requisite degree and the nature of the
disorder that could alone justify a reasonable apprehension
in the mind of the appellant that he could not live with the
respondent-wife had not been established. This implied that
the High Court partly accepted the appellant s case that
respondent did suffer from a mental-disorder which in this
case was described as schizophrenia. The High Court stated:
"The case of the plaintiff is that the defendant
remained under the treatment of the psychiatrist Dr. G.D
Shukla, in Maharani Laxmi Bai Medical College, Jhansi. Exts.
1 and 2 are the prescription and discharge certificates
issued by Dr. G.D. Shukla, Ext. 4. is the medical
certificate dated 18.5.1983, which was issued by Dr. Shukla,
in which he certified that the defendant suffered from
schizophrenia since 26th March, 1983. There is no counter
certificate of any expert from the side of the defendant. I,
therefore, do not see any cogent reason to brush aside this
certificate of Dr. G.D. Shukla, who examined himself as
P.W.1." The High Court proceeded to refer to certain medical
literature on ’schizophrenia’ and felt pursuaded to the view
PG NO 918
that having regard to the various kinds of schizophrenia or
rather the various ways in which that mental illness is
known to manifest itself, it would be necessary for the
appellant to go further and establish the degree and
severity of the mental illness which would alone satisfy the
requirement of the ground for dissolution of marriage
envisaged in Section 13(1)(iii) of the Act. In substance,
the High Court held that appellant had not shown that the
mental-illness of the wife was of such a kind and intensity
as to justify a reasonable apprehension that it would not be
possible or safe for appellant to live with the respondent.
The High Court posited the proposition which required
its consideration thus:
"So it is only when the schizophrenia is of the third
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variety i.e. catatonia, that the patient is in a state of
wild excitement destructive violent and abusive.
Let us see whether the defendant suffers from
schizophrenia and whether there is any unassailable and
cogent evidence to establish that the schizophrenia is of
third variety, namely, catatonia, when the patient becomes
destructive, wild and abusive."
Dealing with this, High Court noticed what according to
it were certain shifts in emphasis in the two certificates
Exhibit 4 dated noticed 18.5.1983 and Exhibit 3 dated
2.7.1983 issued by P.W. 1. High Court that while the earlier
certificate dated 18.5.1983 did not contain any specific
reference to the severity of the disease or to the
violent propensities attributed to respondent which tended
to endanger safety of others, the later certificate dated
2.7.1983, how-ever, sought to supply this element. The High
Court allow noticed certain events of 1.7.1983, in the wake
of which the certificate Exhibit- 3 dated 2.7.1983 came into
existence. High Court referred to the evidence on record
which disclosed that at 11.45 AM on 1.7. 1983, respondent-
wife had lodged the first-information, as per Exhibit 11,
with the jurisdictional police complaining that she had been
assaulted, first, by her husband’s nephew and then by the
members of the family of the appellant. She also had
occasion to complain that appellant’s mother, sisters etc.
had threatened to extinguish respondent’s life by setting
her ablaze.
The attempt on the part of the appellant, the High
Court noticed, to commit her to an asylum was made on the
PG NO 919
very next day viz., 2.7.83. The medical certificate ex. 3 is
also of that date. The Magistrate who was moved by the
appellant under the provisions of the Lunacy Act rejected
the application observing that respondent whom he had
occasion to examine talked "in a sensible manner and is not
at all hostile."
Referring to the setting in which Dr. Shukla’s (PW. 1)
certificate dated 2.7.1983 was required to be appreciated
the High Court
observed:
".....The second certificate (Ext. 3) by Dr. G.D. Shukla
dated 2nd July, 1983, has to be seen in the sequence of the
above events. There is nothing on record to show that the
defendant lodged false report with the police in the morning
of 1st July, 1983, against the plaintiff inter alia. It is
after the said report was lodged the plaintiff made efforts
to collect all the evidence with the aim of sending the
defendant to the mental asylum and filed the suit for
dissolution of marriage by the decree of divorce. The above
evidence were collected in quick succession. Keeping in view
the above events, the reliability of the second medical
certificate (ext. 3) dated 2.7.1983 has to be tested ......"
"........Neither in the first certificate (Ext. 4) nor
in the second certificate (Ext. 3) Dr. G.D. Shukla stated
that the schizophrenia, the defendant is suffering from, was
of the third variety, namely, Catatona, when the patient
becomes wild, destructive and violent. In this statement
also, Dr. G . D . Shukla (PW. 1) does not state that the
schizophrenia was of Catatonia variety. He does not say even
a word about the danger, arising from the mental disorder of
the defendant. The certificate Ext. 3 does not bear the
thumb impression or signature of the defendant and,
therefore, it cannot be said with certainty that the said
certificate was issued by Dr. G.D. Shukla after having
examined the defendant."
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6. The High Court also evaluated the evidence of PW 3 &
4 and pointed out the intrinsic improbabilities of the
evidence and the consequent unacceptability of their
versions. The High Court, in particular, noticed that PW 4
in his cross-examination "expressed total inability to give
description of the defendant’s Physique i.e. her complexion,
height etc." The High Court observed:
PG NO 920
" .... The inability of this witness in giving the
physical description of the defendant shows that his entire
statement is tutored one. This is the state of affairs of
the evidence of the plaintiff."
7. The High Court also referred to the respondent’s
grievance that the environment of hostility and harassment
to which she was subjected by appellant’s parent and sisters
etc. had taken its toll and rendered her apprehensive and
irritable. High Court observed:
"....... Cruelty inflicted by the in-laws culminated
in the first information report which the defendant lodged
in the morning of 1st July, 1983, for which no convincing
evidence has been given by the plaintiff that the said
report was false and that was filed by the defendant without
any grave provocation. The case of the defendant is that the
ill-treatment extended to her by her in-laws throughout
right from the time of marriage told upon her mental state
and she became very irritable and apprehensive. The case
of the defendant has to be seen in this background."
Concluding the High Court said:
.....................I accept the contention of learned
counsel for the defendant-appellant that the decree of the
divorce cannot be sustained, as the plaintiff failed to
adduce any evidence that could prove beyond reasonable doubt
that the mental disorder of the defendant was of such a kind
and to such an extent that the plaintiff cannot live
safely with the defendant."
8. Shri Goel, learned senior counsel appearing in
support of the appeal, assailed the correctness of the
approach of and the conclusions reached by the High Court.
Learned counsel submitted that the High Court having, on the
basis of overwhelming medical evidence, rightly accepted
that part of the appellant’s case that the respondent did
suffer from ’schizophrenia’, however, fell into an error in
weighing the possible manifestation of that insidious
disease in golden scales and in its conclusion that
appellant could yet live with her. Learned counsel submitted
that if the evidence of the conduct of the respondent is
assessed in the background of the fact that she was a
confirmed ’schizophrenic’, there would be no room for any
PG NO 921
speculative allowance to be made for any possibility of any
alternative hypothesis for that behaviour. Learned counsel
submitted that in assessing the reasonableness of the
apprehension of the husband that he could not be expected to
spend the rest of his life with a ’schizophrenic’, due
acknowledgment had to be made to the subjective
susceptibilities of the husband also. Smt. Rani Chhabra for
the respondent, however, soughtto support the judgment under
appeal.
9. The point, however, to note is that Section
13(1)(iii) does not make the mere existence of a mental-
disorder of any degree sufficient in law to justify the
dissolution of a marriage. Section 13(1)(iii) provides:
"Sec. 13. Divorce: (1) Any marriage solemnised, whether
before or after the commencement of this Act, may, on a
petition presented by either the husband or the wife, be
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dissolved by a decree of divorce on the ground that the
other party--
(i) ]
(ii) ] Omitted as unnecessary
(iii) has been incurably of unsound mind, or has been
suffering continuously or intermittently from mental
disorder of such a kind and to such an extent that the
petitioner cannot reasonably be expected to live with the
respondent.
Explanation: In this clause,
(a) the expression mental disorder means mental illness,
arrested or incomplete development of mind, psychopathic
disorder or any other disorder or disability of mind and
includes schizophrenia;"
(b) Omitted as unnecessary.
(Emphasis Supplied)
10. The context in which the ideas of unsoundness of
’mind’ and ’mental-disorder’ occur in the section as grounds
for dissolution of a marriage, require the assessment of the
degree of the ’mental-dis-order. Its degree must be such as
PG NO 922
that the spouse seeking relief cannot reasonably be expected
to live with the other. All mental abnormalities are not
recognised as grounds for grant of Decree. If the mere
existence of any degree of mental abnormality could justify
dissolution of a marriage few marriages would, indeed,
survive in law.
The answer to the apparently simple--and perhaps
misleading--question as to "who is normal?" runs inevitably
into philosophical thickets of the concept of mental
normalcy and as involved therein, of the ’mind’ itself.
These concepts of ’mind’, ’mental-phenomena’ etc., are more
known than understood and the theories of "mind" and
"ment˜on" do not indicate any internal consistency, let
alone validity, of their basic ideas. Theories of ’mind’
with cognate ideas of ’perception’ and ’consciousness’
encompass a wide range of thoughts, more ontological than
epistemological. Theories of mental phenomena are diverse
and include the dualist concept--shared by Descartes and
Sigmund Freud--of the separateness of the existence of the
physical or the material world as distinguished from the
non-material mental-world with its existence only spatially
and not temporally. There is, again, the theory which
stresses the neurological basis of the ’mental phenomenon’
by asserting the functional correlation of the neuronal
arrangements of the brain with mental phenomena. The
’behaviourist’--tradition, on the other hand, interprets all
reference to mind as ’constructs’ out of behaviour.
"Functionalism", however, seems to assert that mind is the
logical or functional state of physical systems. But all
theories seem to recognise, in varying degrees, that the
psychometric control over the mind operates at a level not
yet fully taught to science. When a person is oppressed by
intense and seemingly insoluble moral dilemmas, or when
grief of loss of dear ones etch away all the bright colours
of life, or where a broken-marriage brings with it the loss
of emotional-security what standards of normalcy of
behaviour could be formulated and applied? The arcane
infallibility of science has not fully pervaded the study of
the non-material dimensions of ’being’.
Speaking of the indisposition of science towards this
study, a learned author says:
".... We have inherited cultural resistence to treating
the conscious mind as a biological phenomenon like any
other. This goes back to Descartes in the seventeenth
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century. Descartes divided th,e world into two kinds of sub-
stances; mental substances and physical substances. Physical
PG NO 923
substances were the proper domain of science and mental
substances were the property of religion. Something of an
acceptance of this division exists even to the present day.
So, for example, consciousness and subjectivity are often
regarded as unsuitable topics for science. And this
reluctance to deal with consciousness and subjectivity is
part of a persistent objectifying tendency. People think
science must be about objectively observable phenomena. On
occasions when I have lectured to audiences of
biologists and neurophysiologists, I have found many of them
very reluctant to treat the mind in general and
consciousness in particular as a proper domain of scientific
investigation.
" .... the use of the noun mind’ is dangerously
inhabited by the ghosts of old philosophical theories. It is
very difficult to resist the idea that the mind is a kind
of a thing, or at least an arena, or at least some kind of
black box in which all of these mental processes occur."
(See: John Searle Minds, Brains And Science 1984 Reith
Lectures, p. 10 & l l)
Lord Wilberforce, referring to the psychological basis of
physical illness said that the area of ignorance of the
body-mind relation seems to expand with that of knowledge.
In McLoughlin v. O’Brian, [ 1983] 1 Law Reports 410 at 418
the learned Lord said, though in a different context:
"....... Whatever is unknown about the mind-body
relationship (and the area of ignorance seems to expand with
that of knowledge), it is now accepted by medical science
that recognisable and severe physical damage to the human
body and system may be caused by the impact, through the
senses, of external events on the mind. There may thus be
produced what is as identifiable an illness as any that may
be caused by direct physical impact. It is safe to say that
this, in general terms, is understood by the ordinary man or
woman who is hypothesised by the courts
But the illnesses that are called mental’ are kept
distinguished from those that ail the ’body’ in a
fundamental way. In Philosophy and Medicine", Vol. 5 at
PG NO 924
page-X the learned Editor refers to what distinguishes the
two qualitatively:
".... Undoubtedly, mental illness is so disvalued
because it strikes at the very roots of our personhood. It
visits us with uncontrollable fears, obsessions,
compulsions, and anxieties .."
" .... This is captured in part by the language we use
in describing the mentally ill. One is an hysteric, is a
neurotic, is an obsessive, is a schizophrenic, is a manic-
depressive. On the other hand, one has heart disease, has
cancer, has the flu, has malaria, has smallpox .. "
(emphasis supplied)
12. ’Schizophrenia’, it is true, is said to be difficult
mental-affliction. It is said to be insidious in its onset
and has hereditary pre-disposing factor. It is characterized
by the shallowness of emotions and is marked by a
detachment from reality. In paranoid-states, the victim
responds even to fleeting expressions of disapproval from
others by disproportionate reactions generated by
hallucinations of persecution. Even well meant acts of
kindness and of expression of sympathy appear to the victim
as insidious traps. In its worst manifes-tation, this
illness produces a crude wrench from reality and brings
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about a lowering of the higher mental functions.
"Schizophrenia" is described thus:
"A severe mental disorder (or group of disorders)
charac-terized by a disintegration of the process of
thinking, of contact with reality, and of emotional
responsiveness. Delusions and hallucinations (especially of
voices) are usual features, and the patient usually feels
that his thoughts, sensations, and actions are controlled
by, or shared with, others. He becomes socially withdrawn
and loses energy and initiative. The main types of
schizophrenia are simple, in which increasing social
withdrawal and personal ineffectiveness are the major
changes; hebephrenic, which starts in adolescence or young
adulthood (see hebephrenia); paranoid; characterized by
prominent delusion; and catatonic, with marked motor
disturbances (See catatonia).
PG NO 925
Schizophrenia commonly--but not inevitably--runs a
progressive course. The prognosis has been improved in
recent years with drugs such as phenothiazines and by
vigorous psychological and social management and
rehabilitation. There are strong genetic factors in the
causation, and environmental stress can precipitate
illness." (See Concise Medical Dictionary at page 566:
Oxford Medical Publications, 1980)
But the point to note and emphasise is that the
personality-disintegration that characterises this illness
may be of varying degrees. Not all schzophrenics are
characterised by the same intensity of the disease. F.C.
Redlich & Daniel X. Freedman in "The Theory and Practice of
Psychiatry" ( 1966 Edn.) say:
"............... Some schizophrenic reactions, which
we call psychoses, may be relatively mild and transient;
others may not interfere too seriously with many aspects of
everyday living ......."
(p. 252)
"Are the characteristic remissions and relapses
expressions of endogenous processes, or are they responses
to psychosocial variables, or both? Some patients recover,
apparently completely, when such recovery occurs without
treatment we speak of spontaneous remission. The term need
not imply an indpendent endogenous process; it is just as
likely that the spontaneous remission is a response to
nondeliberate but none-the-less favourable psychosocial
stimuli other than specific therapeutic activity . ......"
(p. 465)
(Emphasis Supplied)
13. The reasoning of the High Court is that the
requisite degree of the mental disorder which alone would
justify dissolution of the marriage has not been
established. This, it seems to us, to be not an unreasonable
assessment of the situation--strong arguments of the Sri
Goel to the contrary notwithstanding.
The High Court referred to and relied upon the decision
of the Calcutta High Court in Smt. Rita Roy v. Sitesh
Chandra, AIR 1982 (Cal.) 138. In; that case the Division
Bench of the Calcutta High Court observed:
PG NO 926
" ... each case of schizophrenia has to be
considered on its own merits ......"
".........According to the aforesaid clause (iii), two
elements are necessary to get a decree. The party concerned
must be of unsound mind or intermittently suffering from
schizophrenia or mental disorder. At the same time that
disease must be of such a kind and of such an extent that
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the other party cannot reasonably be expected to live with
her. So only one element of that clause is insufficient to
grant a decree . "
Considering the evidence in that case, the High Court
reached the conclusion:
" .... We are clearly of the opinion that she only has
slight mental disorder and she has been suffering
intermittently from the same. But after considering the
totality of the evidence and the impact on the husband, we
must hold that such mental disorder is not of such a kind
and to such an extent that the husband cannot reasonably be
expected to live with her, within the meaning of the second
portion of clause (iii) of Sec. 13(1) of the Act ......"
We approve this approach of the High Court of Calcutta.
Indeed, the following observations of Ormrod J. in Bennett
v. Bennett, [1969] 1 All E.R. 539 with reference to ’mental-
disorder’ in Section 4 of the Mental Health Act, 1959, are
opposite in the context of Sec. 13(1)(iii) of the‘ Act’:
" ..... Now, the definition of ‘mental disorder’ in
sec. 4 of the Mental Health Act, 1959, is in very wide
language indeed. It includes mental illness, arrested or
incomplete development of mind, psychopathic disorder,
and any other disorder or disability of mind and so, for the
moment to turn to medical language it clearly includes, or
one would suppose it clearly includes, not only
psychotic illness but neurotic illnesses as well and thus
begins by enormously enlarging the field. The way in which
this very large field is cut down in the Act of 1965, s.
9(1)(b), is by the use of this phrase "of such a kind or to
such an extent as to be unfitted for marriage and the
procreation of children."
PG NO 927
The burden of proof of the existence of the requisite degree
of mental disorder is on the spouse basing the claim on that
state of facts.
14. Indeed the caution of a learned author against too
readily giving a name to a thing is worth recalling:
"Giving something a name seems to have a deadening
influence upon all our relations to it. It brings matter to
a finality. Nothing further seems to need to be done. The
disease has been identified. The necessity for further
understanding of it has ceased to exist." (See "The Auto-
biography of a purpose": William Alanson White New York:
Double-day & Co., 1938, p. 53)
It is precisely for this reason that a learned authority
on mental health saw wisdom in eschewing the mere choice of
words and the hollowness they would bring with them. He
said:
"I do not use the word ’schizophrenia’ because I do not
think any such disease exists .... I know it means widely
different things to different people. With a number of other
psychiatrists, I hold that the words ’neurosis’,
’psychoneurosis’, ’psychopathic personality’, and the like,
are similarly valueless. I do not use them, and I try to
prevent my students from using them, although the latter
effort is almost futile once the psychiatrist discovers how
conveniently ambiguous these terms really are ......"
"In general, we hold that mental illness should be
thought and spoken of less in terms of disease entities than
in terms of personality disorganization. We can precisely
define organization and disorganization; we cannot precisely
define disease ......."
"Of course, one can describe a ’manic’ or a ’depressed’
or a ’schizophrenic’ constellation of symptoms, but what is
most important about this constellation in each case? Not,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
we think, its curious external form, but rather what it
indicates in regard to the process of disorganization and
reorganization of a personality which is in a fluctuant
state of attempted adjustment to environmental reality. Is
the imbalance increasing or decreasing? To what is the
stress related? What psychological factors are accessible to
external modification? What latent capacities for
PG NO 928
satisfaction in work, play, love, creativity, are
discoverable for therapeutic planning? And this is language
that can be understood. It is practical language and not
language of incantation and exorcism. "
(Emphasis Supplied)
(See Karl Menninger, "Communication and Mental Health", "The
Menninger Quarterly (1962) p. 1--Readings in Law and
Psychiatry: Richard C. Allen, Elyce Zenott Ferster, Jessee
C. Rubin: Revised & Expanded Edn. 1975: page 38).
15. This medical-concern against too readily reducing a
human being into a functional non-entity and as a negative-
unit in family or society is law’s concern also and is
reflected, at least partially, in the requirements of
Section 13(1)(iii). In the last analysis, the mere branding
of a person as schizophrenic will not suffice. For purposes
of Section 13(1)(iii) ’schizophrenia’ is what Schizophrenia
does.
The appeal is dismissed. There will be no order as to
costs.
G.N. Appeal dismissed.