Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. CHAND DHAWAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAWAHARLAL DHAWAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/06/1993
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
YOGESHWAR DAYAL (J)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (3) 954 1993 SCC (3) 406
JT 1993 (4) 22 1993 SCALE (3)1
ACT:
%
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955-S. 25 and Ss. 9 to 14, 24 & 28-‘Any
decree’ in S. 25-Dismissing of matrimonial petition, held,
does not constitute ‘only decree’ for award of permanent
maintenance or alimony--Marital status has to be affected or
disrupted for maintenance to be awarded--Evidence Act, 1862,
s. 41
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955--S.25-Hindu Adoptions and
Maintenance Act, 1956--S.18--Held, Court cannot grant relief
of maintenance simplicitor obtainable under one Act in
proceedings under the other-Code of Criminal Procedure 1973,
s. 125.
Interpretation of Statutes-Hindu Marriage Act. 1955-S. 25-
Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956-S. 18-Held, where
both statutes codified and clear on their subjects,
liberality of interpretation cannot permit interchangeabil-
ity so as to destroy distinction.
HEADNOTE:
The parties were married in 1972 in Punjab. In 1985, a
petition for divorce by mutual consent was filed in court at
Amritsar The appellant-wife alleged that she was not a
consenting party, and the petition was dismissed in 1987
following an agreement on the basis of which she would be
put back in the matrimonial home. However, barely three
months later, the respondent husband filed a regular
petition for divorce at Ghaziabad inter alia alleging
adultery against his wife. The appellant-wife refuted the
charge. The Court granted her maintenance pendente lite at
Rs. 1,000 p.m. The husband not paving this amount, the
divorce proceedings stand stayed.
On 22nd March, 1990 the appellant moved the District judge,
Amritsar and was granted Rs. 6,000as litigation expenses
and Rs. 2,000as maintenance pendente lite from the date of
application under S. 24. She also claimed permanent alimony
and maintenance under S. 25 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955.
On appeal, the High Court held that an application under S.
25 was not
955
maintainable as the matrimonial court at amritsar had not
passed any decree for restitution of conjugal rights,
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judicial separation, nullity or divorce. Sequelly it
quashed the order under S. 24 of the Act.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court
HELD:The right of permanent maintenance in favour of the
husband or the wife is dependent (in the Court passing a
degree of the kind envisaged under Ss. 9to 14 of the Act.
In (other words, without the marital status being affected
or disrupted by the matrimonial court under the Hindu
Marriage Act the claim (of permanent alimony was not to be
valid as ancilliary or incidental to such affectation or
disruption.
Kadia Martial Purshotham v. Kadia Lilavati Gokaldas AIR 1961
Guj 202; Shantaram Gopalshet Narkar v. Hirabai, AIR 1962 Bom
27 Minarani Majumdar v. Dasarath Majumdar AIR 1963 Cal 428;
Shantaram Dinkar Karnik v. Malti Shantaram Karnik AIR 1964
Bom 83; Akasam Chinna Babu v.Akasam Parbati, AIR 1967 Ori
163; Gurcharan Kaur v. Ram Chand, AIR 1979 P & H 206;
Darshan Singh v. Mst. Daso., AIR 1980 Raj 102; Smt.
Sushama v. Satish Chander, AIR 1984 Del 1; Vinod Chandra
Sharma v. Smt. Rajesh Pathak, AIR 1988 All 150 and
Ranganatham v. Shyamala AIR 1990 Mad 1, affirmed.
Smt. Swaran Lata v.Sukhvinder Kumar (1986) 1 Hindu LR 363;
Sadanand Sahadeo Rawool v. Sulochana Sadanand Rawool, AIR
1989 Bom 220; Surendra Singh Chauhan v. Mamta Chauhan, 11
1990 Divorce & Matrimonial Cases 208; Modilal kalaramji Jain
v. Lakshmi Modilal Jain AlR 1991 Bom 440; and Shilla
Jagannadha Prasad v. Smt. Shilla Lalitha Kumari 1988 Hindu
LR 26, overruled.
Durga Das v. Smt. Tara Rani, AIR & H 141, referred to.
2.A Court intervening under the Hindu Marriage Act
undoubtedly has the power to grant permanent alimony or
maintenance, if that power is invoked at the juncture when
the marital status is affected or disrupted. It also
retains the power subsequently to be invoked on application
by a party entitled to relief. A nd such order, in all
events, remains within the jurisdiction of that court, to be
altered or modified as future situations may warrant.
3.While sustaining her marriage and preserving her marital
status, a Hindu wife’s claim to maintenance is codified is
S.18 of the Hindu Adoptions
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and Maintenance Act, 1956 and must necessarily be agitated
thereunder.
4.The court is not at liberty to grant relief of maintenance
simplicitor obtainable under one Act in proceedings under
the other. As is evident, both the statutes are codified as
such and are clear on their subjects and by liberality of
interpretation inter-changeability cannot be permitted so as
to destroy the distinction on the subject of maintenance.
Carew, & Co. v. Union of India [1975] 2 SCC 791 and Motor
Owners’ Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Jadavjit Keshavji Modi [1981]
4 SCC 660, referred to.
5.When distinctive claims are covered distinctly under two
different statutes, choosing of one forum or the other, are
not mere procedural technicalities or irregularities. These
are matters which go to the root of the jurisdiction. The
matrimonial court, a court of special jurisdiction. is not
meant to pronounce upon a claim of maintenance without
having to go into the exercise of passing a decree which
implies that unless it goes onwards, Moves or leads through,
to affect or disrupt the marital status between the parties.
By rejecting a claim, the matrimonial court does make an
appealable decree. in terms of section 28, but neither
affects nor disrupts the marriage. It certainly does not
pass a decree in terms of section 25 for its decision has
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not moved or done anything towards, or led through, to
disturb the marriage, or to confer or to take away any legal
character or status.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2653-54 of
1991.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.2.91 of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court in Civil Revision Nos. 2998 and 2919 of
1990.
D.V. Sehgal and N.K. Aggarwal for the Appellant.
G.L, Saghi, P.P. Tripathi and Suchinto Chatterji for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PUNCHHI, J. The point which requires determination in these
two appeals, arising from a common judgment and order dated
February 15, 1991 of a Division Bench of the Punjab and
Haryana High Court at Chandigarh, in Civil Revision Nos.
2918 and 2919 of 1990 is, whether the payment of alimony is
admissible
957
without the relationship between the spouses being
terminated.
The wife-appellant was married to the husband-respondent on
September 19,1972 at Amritsar, in the State of Punjab.
Three children were born from the wed lock and are at
present living with their father. Out of them two are
males, their respective years of birth being 1973 and 1980
and the third is a female born in the year 1976. On 28-8-
1985 a petition under section 13-B of Hindu Marriage Act,
1955 (hereafter referred to as the Act’) seeking divorce by
mutual consent was received by the court of the Additional
District Judge, Amritsar purported to have been failed
jointly by the two spouses. It was stated therein that the
parties had been living separately for over a year due to
incompatibility of temperament and their effort to settle
their differences amongst themselves, or with the aid of
friends and relatives, had been futile. On receipt the
petition was kept pending, as was the requirement of section
13-B of the Act. According to the wife she was not a
consenting party to the filing of such petition at all. Her
version was that the husband had duped her in obtaining her
signatures on blank papers on a false pretext and in turn
had employed those papers in the said petition for divorce.
On coming to know of the pendency of the petition, she
immediately filed objections before the court, obstructing
the grant of petition. The respective pleas of the parties
were put to issue and evidence was led. According to the
wife some understanding later was reached between the
parties on the basis of which she was to be put back in the
matrimonial home and thus the petition was got dismissed on
19-8-1987, on the basis of the joint statement of the
parties before the Additional District Judge, Amritsar which
was to the following effect:
"We agree that applications under sections 24
and 25 of Hindu Marriage Act may be dismissed.
We also agree that since the parties have not
been able to make a joint statement within a
period of six months of the original petition,
the main petition under section 13B of the
Hindu Marriage Act may be dismissed.
Otherwise too, the parties to the marriage do
not want to proceed with their main
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application under section 13 of the Hindu
Marriage Act and the same be also dismissed
and the parties may be left to bear their own
costs.
On the basis of the above statement, the court passed the
following order, the same day:
"The applicant and counsel for the parties
have made their statements recorded separately
the main petition under section 13 and
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also applications under sections 24 and 25 of
the Hindu- marriage Act are dismissed as
withdrawn. The parties are left to bear their
own costs. The file be consigned."
It appears that the dismissal of the petition under section
13-B led only to a temporary truce, and not peace as hoped.
Rehabilitation in the matrimonial home evaded the wife. The
husband, who in the meantime had established his business at
Ghazibad in Utter Pradesh, barely three months after the
dismissal of the petition under section 13-B. approached the
District Court at Ghaziabad in a regular petition for
divorce under section 13 of the Act levelling, amongst
others, allegations of adultery against the wife. To meet
the offensive the wife refuted the charge of adultery and
prayed to the Ghaziabad Court grant of maintenance pendente
lite, which the Court fixed at Rs. 1000 per month. It
appears since the husband had obstacled payment of
maintenance pendente lite, divorce proceedings stand stayed
under orders of the High Court of Allahabad, until the order
of grant of maintenance pendente lite was obeyed. The
matter thus stands stagnated there.
The wife then went in an offensive. She moved the court of
Additional District Judge, Amritsar on 22-3-1990, under
section 15 of the Hindu Marriage Act for the grant of
permanent alimony on the plea that she was facing
starvation, when her husband was a multi-millionaire, having
cars, telephone facilities and other amenities of life.
Simultaneously she moved the court under section 24 of the
Hindu Marriage Act for maintenance pendente lite and
litigation expenses. After a grim contest between the
parties the Additional District Judge, Amritsar on September
20, 1990 allowed the petition under section 24 of the Act
granting her a sum of Rs. 6000 as litigation expenses and
Rs. 2000 per month as maintenance pendente lite, from the
date of application. The husband challenged the said order
of grant in revision before the High Court of Punjab and
Haryana at Chandigarh. The wife too approached the High
Court in revision seeking enhancement of sums under both
counts. Both the revision petitions being referred to a
larger bench were disposed of by the common judgment under
appeal sustaining the objection of the husband that an
application under section 25 of the Act was, in the facts
and circumstances, not maintainable; the Matrimonial Court
at Amritsar, in the earlier litigation, having not passed
any decree of the variables known as Restitution of Conjugal
Rights, Judicial Separation, Nullity of Marriage, or
Divorce, so as to quash proceedings under section 25 and
sequally quashing the order under section 24 of the Act
granting litigation expenses and maintenance pendente lite.
Hence these appeals.
959
Section 25 of the Act, as it now stands, after amendment by
Act 68 of 1976 is reproduced hereunder:
"25 PERMANENT ALIMONY AND MAINTENANCE (1) Any
court exercising jurisdiction under this Act
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may, at the time of passing- any decree or at
any time subsequent thereto, on application
made to it for purpose by either the wife o
r
the husband, as the case may be, order that
the respondent shall pay to the applicant for
her or his maintenance and support such cross
sum or such monthly or periodical sum for a
term not exceeding the life of the applicant
as, having regard to the respondent’s own
income and other property, if any, the income
and other property of the applicant, [the
conduct of the parties and other circumstances
of the case], it may seem to the court to be
just, and any such payment may be secured, if
necessary, by a charge on the immovable
property of the respondent.
(2)If the court is satisfied that there is, a
change in the circumstances of either party at
any time after it has made an order under sub-
section (1), it may at the instance of either
party, very, modify or rescind any such order
in such manner as the court may deem just.
(3)If the court is satisfied that the party in
whose favour an order has been made under this
section has remarried or, if such party is the
wife, that she has not remained chaste, or, if
such party is the husband, that he has had
sexual intercourse with any woman outside
wedlock, [it may at the instance of the other
party very, modify or rescind any such order
in such manner as the court may deem just]."
It is relevant to reproduce Section 28 as
well:
"28 APPEAL FROM DECREES AND ORDERS- (1) All
decrees made by the court in any proceeding
under this Act shall, subject to the
provisions of sub-section (3) be appealable as
decrees of the court made in the exercise of
its original civil jurisdiction, and every
such appeal shall lie to the court to which
appeals ordinarily lie from the decisions of
the court given in the exercise of its
original civil jurisdiction.
(2) Orders made by the court in any
proceeding under this Act, under
960
section 25 or Section 26 shall, subject to the
provisions of sub-section (3), be appealable
if they are not interim orders and every such
appeal shall lie to the court to which appeals
ordinarily lie from the decisions of the court
given in exercise of its original civil
jurisdiction.
(3) There shall be no appeal under this
section on the subject of costs only.
(4) Every appeal under this section shall be
preferred within a period of thirty days from
the date of the decree or order."
Right from its inception, at the unamended stage, the words
"at the time of passing any decree or any time subsequent
thereto" posed difficulty. The majority of the High Courts
in the country took the view that those words indicated that
an order for permanent alimony or maintenance in favour of
the wife or the husband could only be made when a decree is
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passed granting any substantive relief and not where the
main petition itself is dismissed or withdrawn. It was also
gathered that if no request for alimony was made at the time
of passing the decree the same relief could be sought
subsequently on an application. The relief of permanent
alimony was deduced to be ancilliary or incidental to the
substantive relief, and it was given to the party to whom
such relief was due. The expression "any decree" was viewed
to have been used having regard to the various kinds of
decrees such as decree for Restitution of Conjugal Rights,
Judicial Separation, Nullity of Marriage, and Divorce, which
could be passed either on contest or consent. Some of the
High Courts also had occasion to distinguish between the
expression "passing any decree" referred to in section 25
(1) with "decrees made" referred to in section 28 providing
for appeals from decrees and orders made by the Court in any
proceeding under the Act, and such decrees being appealable,
as decrees of the Court made in exercise of its original
civil jurisdiction. It led to the determination of the
question whether the denial of relief under the Act, when
making a decree in the sense appealable under section 28,
could be it a decree passed within the meaning of Section 25
entitling the respective spouses to claim permanent alimony
thereunder. On this question too there has been rife a
difference of opinion.
A Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court in Kadia Harilal
Purshottam v. Kadia Lilavati Gokaldas AIR [1961] Gujarat
202; ruled that the words "at the time of passing any decree
or any time subsequent thereto" occurring in section 25
meant passing of any decrees of the kind referred to in the
earlier provisions of the Act and not at the time of
dismissing the petition for any relief provided in those
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sections, or any time subsequent thereto. It was viewed
that the expression "any decree" did not include an order of
dismissal and that the passing of an order of dismissal of
the petition could not be regarded as the passing of decree
within the meaning of section 25. On that view a petition
for permanent alimony preferred by the wife was dismissed
when the petition of the husband for restitution of conjugal
rights had been dismissed.
In Shantaram Gopalshet Narkar v. Hirabai, AIR [1962] Bombay
27 Vol. 49, a learned Single Judge of the Bombay High Court
took the view that in order to confer jurisdiction upon the
court to proceed under section 25(1) there must be a decree
as contemplated under the Hindu Marriage Act and one of the
decrees can. be under section 10(1) (B). And when the
petition was allowed to be withdrawn, there was no decree
passed in favour of the husband, and if there was no decree,
the court had no jurisdiction to pass any order granting
permanent alimony to the wife under section 25(1).
In Minarani Majumdar v. Dasarath Majumdar AIR [1963]
Calcutta 428 Vol. 50, a Division Bench of the Calcutta High
Court ruled that an order dismissing a petition by the
husband for divorce under section 13 is not a decree within
the meaning of section 25 and as such when no substantive
relief is granted under sections 9 to 14, there is no
passing of a decree as contemplated by section 25 and hence
no jurisdiction to make an order for maintenance under the
said section. Harilal’s case (supra) of the Gujarat High
Court was noticed and relied upon.
A learned Single Judge of the Bombay High Court in Shantaram
Dinkar Karnik v. Malti Shantaram Karnik, AIR [1964] Bombay
83 - vol. 51 relying on the earlier decision of that court
in Shantaram Gopalshet’s case (supra) and kadia Hiralal’s
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case (supra) reaffirmed the view that the expression
"passing of any decree" only referred to passing of any
decrees provided for in section 9 to 13 of the Act, even
though technically speaking dismissal of a suit or a
petition may be called a decree but not for the purpose of
section 25 confering jurisdiction on the Matrimonial Court
to grant permanent alimony.
A Division Bench of the Orissa High Court in Akasam Chinna
Babu v. Akasam Parbati & Another AIR [1967] Orissa 163 -
Vol. 54 denied the relief of permanent alimony when the
petition for divorce of the husband had been dismissed. The
views of the Bombay High Court and the, Gujarat High Court
above referred to were taken in aid to get to that view.
A three-Judge full bench of the Punjab and Haryana High
Court in Durga
962
as v. Smt. Tara Rani,AIR (1971) Punjab and Haryana 141 -
Vol. 58, in a different context, while determining the
question whether a party to a decree or divorce could apply
for maintenance under sub-section (1) of section 25 of the
Act after which decree has been granted, ruled that the
proceedings for grant of permanent alimony were incidental
to the main proceeding and as such an application for
alimony could be made even after the grant of the decree for
divorce.
A learned Single Judge of that Court, however, in Gurcharan
Kaur v. Ram chand AIR 1979 Punjab and Haryana 206 Vol. 66
even while relying, on the full bench decision afore-
referred went on to deny permanent alimony to the wife hose
claim for decree of Nullity of Marriage stood dismissed and
on that basis the petition for alimony was held not
maintainable.
In Darshan Singh vs. Mst. Daso AIR 1980 Rajasthan 102 -
Vol. 67 a learned single Judge of the Rajasthan High Court
made a distinction between the expression "passing any
decree" occurring in section 25 and the expression decree
made" under section 28. He viewed that the former
expression meant granting any relief of the nature stated in
sections 9 to 13 while the later meant granting or refusing
the relief. In other words, it meant that passing of any
decree as to mean granting any relief, and the making of any
decree was to mean granting or refusing any relief.
A Division Bench of the Delhi High court too in Smt. Sushma
v. Shri Satish Chander AIR 1984 Delhi 1 Vol. 71 taking stock
of the above-referred to views of the Rajasthan, Orissa.
Bombay, Calcutta and Gujarat High Courts affirmedly took the
view that the passing of the decree in section 25 meant the
passing of a decree of divorce, Nullity, Restitution of
Conjugal Rights or Judicial Separation and not the passing
of a decree dismissing the petition. It was further held
that if the petition fails then no decree is passed, i.e.,
the decree is denied to the applicant and therefore alimony
cannot be granted in a case where a decree is refused
because in such a case the marriage subsists. The word
"decree" in matrimonial cases was held to have been used in
a special sense different from that in which it is used in
the Civil Procedure Code.
Following Delhi High Court’s decision in Sushma’s case
(supra), a learned Single Judge of the Allahabad High Court
in Vinod Chandra Sharma v. Smt. Rajesh Pathak AIR 1988
Allahahad 150 - Vol. 75 opined that when an application for
divorce is dismissed, there is no decree passed and
obviously therefore alimony cannot he granted because in
such a case the marriage subsists.
963
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A learned Single Judge of the Madras High Court in
Ranganatham v. Shyamla AIR 1990 Madras 1- Vol. 77 too
following the above decisions held that the existence of any
of the decrees referred to in sections 9 to 13 is a
condition precedent to the exercise of jurisdiction under
section 25 (1) of the Act and the granting of ancilliary
relief for permanent alimony and maintenance, when the main
petition was dismissed, was not permissible.
A divergent view, however, was struck by a learned Single
Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Smt. Swaran
Lata v. Sukhvinder Kumar(1986) 1 Hindu Law Reporter 363
taking the view that when the rights of the parties stand
determined conclusively with regard to matters in
controversy, irrespective as to whether relief is granted or
not, it culminates in a decree and on the basis of that
decree, the wife would be entitled to claim maintenance or
permanent alimony under section 25 of the Act. Not only was
on such interpretation of sections 25 and 28 the view taken
but liberality of interpretation was injected to justify the
view. It was expressed that when the right of the wife to
maintenance was assured under section 125 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973 and section 18 of the Hindu
Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 and when that right of
the wife was not being disputed, the court, in order to
avoid multiplicity of proceedings could give effect to that
right, wherever possible, in a proceeding under section 25
of the Act itself. There the objection of the husband to
the jurisdiction was termed as technical and the
maintainability of claim under section 25 was upheld.
A learned Single Judge of the Bombay High Court in Sadanand
Sahadeo Rawool v. Sulochana Sadanand Rawool, AIR 1989 Bombay
220- Vol. 76 also took a similar view and based his decision
on "necessity of the times" expressing that technicalities
should not be allowed to away any court. In the situation,
the dismissal of petition for divorce was held to be no bar
to grant maintenance under section 25 to the successful
spouse.
Then in Surendra Singh Chaudan v. Mamta Chauhan II(1990)
Divorce & Matrimonial Cases 208 a learned Single Judge of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court taking the view that the
dismissal of a petition amounts to passing of a decree for
the purposes of Section 25 of the Act held that claim for
permanent alimony was maintainable. The learned Judge ruled
that there appeared to be no justification for curtailing
the ambit of the words to go on to hold that a decree is not
a "decree" for the purposes of section 25 of the Act, though
a "decree" for the purposes of section 28 of the Act. Here
again the intention of the legislature was gathered avoiding
multiplicity of proceedings. so that every dispute between
the parties, particularly connected with matters like
maintenance etc. should be settled in the
964
same proceedings.
A learned Single Judge of the Bombay High Court in Modilal
Kalaramji Jain v. Lakshmi Modilal Jain AIR 1991 Bombay 440 -
Vol. 78 omitting the word "passing" from the expression,
interpreted the expression "any decree" to include an order
refusing to grant matrimonial relief and on that basis held
adjudication of claim of permanent maintenance to be within
the jurisdiction of the matrimonial court.
Same is the view of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in Shilla
Jagannadha Prasad alias Ram v. Smt. Shilla Lalitha Kumari
[1988] 1 Hindu Law Reporter 26 and some other cases which
need not be multiplied.
The preamble to the Hindu Marriage Act suggests that it is
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an Act to amend and codify the law relating to marriage
among Hindus. Though it speaks only of the law relating to
marriage, yet the Act itself lays down rules relating to the
solemnization and requirements of a valid Hindu marriage as
well as Restitution of Conjugal Rights, Judicial Separation,
Nullity of Marriage, Divorce, legitimacy of children and
other allied matters. Where the statute expressly codifies
the law, the court as a general rule, is not at liberty to
go outside the law so created, just on the basis that before
its enactment another law prevailed. Now the other law in
the context which prevailed prior to that was the unmodified
Hindu law on the subject. Prior to the year 1955 or 1956
maintenance could be claimed by a Hindu wife through court
intervention and with the aid of the case law developed.
Now with effect from December 21, 1956, the Hindu Adoptions
and Maintenance Act is in force and that too in a codified
form. Its preamble too suggests that it is an Act to amend
and codify the law relating to adoptions and maintenance
among Hindus. Section 18 (1) of the Hindu Adoptions and
Maintenance Act, 1956 entitles a Hindu wife to claim
maintenance from her husband during her life-time. Sub-
section (2) of section 18 grants her the right to live
separately, without forfeiting her claim to maintenance, if
he is guilty of any of the misbehaviours enumerated therein
or on account of his being in one of objectionable
conditions as mentioned therein. So while sustaining her
marriage and preserving her marital status, the wife is
entitled to claim maintenance from her husband. On the
other hand, under the Hindu Marriage Act, in contrast, her
claim for maintenance pendente lite is durated on the
pendency of a litigation of the kind envisaged under
sections 9 to 14 of the Hindu Marriage Act, and her claim to
permanent maintenance or alimony is based on the supposition
that either her marital status has been strained or affected
by passing a decree for restitution of conjugal rights or
judicial separation in favour or against her, or her
marriage stands dissolved by a decree of nullity or divorce,
965
with or without her consent. Thus when her marital status
is to be affected or disrupted the court does so by passing
a decree for or against her. On or at the time of the
happening of that event, the court being siezen of the
matter, invokes its ancilliary or incidental power to grant
permanent alimony. Not only that, the court retains the
jurisdiction at subsequent stages to fulfil this incidental
or ancilliary obligation when moved by an application on
that behalf by a party entitled to relief. The court
further retains the power to chance or alter the order in
view of the changed circumstances. Thus the whole exercise
is within the gammit of a diseased of a broken marriage.
And in order to avoid conflict of perceptions the
legislature while codifying the Hindu ’Marriage Act
preserved the right of permanent maintenance in favour of
the husband or the wife, as the case may be, dependent on
the court passing a decree of the kind as envisaged under
sections 9 to 14 of the Act. In other words without the
marital status being affected or disrupted by the
matrimonial court under the Hindu Marriage Act the claim of
permanent alimony was not to be valid as ancilliary or
incidental to such affectation or disruption. The wife’s
claim to maintenance necessarily has then to be agitated
under the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956 which is
a legislative measure later in point of time than the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955, though part of the same socio-legal
scheme revolutionizing the law applicable to Hindus.
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Section 41 of the Evidence Act inter alia provides that a
final judgment, order or decree of a competent court in the
exercise of matrimonial jurisdiction, which confers upon or
takes away from any person any legal character, or which
declares any person to be entitled to such character, is
relevant. And that such judgment, order or decree is
conclusive proof as to the conferral, accrual,or taking away
of such. legal character from a point of time as declared by
the court. Such judgments are known as judgments in rem,
binding the whole world. But the judgment of that kind must
have done something positive, onwards. This provision is
indicative of the quality of matrimonial jurisdiction.
We have thus, in this light, no hesitation in coming to the
view that when by court intervention under the Hindu
Marriage Act, affection or disruption to the marital status
has come by, at that juncture, while passing the decree, it
undoubtedly has the power to grant permanent alimony or
maintenance, if that power is invoked at that time. It also
retains the power subsequently to be invoked on application
by a party entitled to relief. And such order, in all
events, remains within the jurisdiction of that court, to be
altered or modified as future situations may warrant. In
contrast, without affectation or disruption of the marital
status, a Hindu wife sustaining‘ that status can live in
separation from her husband, and
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whether she is living in that state or not, her claim to
maintenance stands preserved in codification under section
18 (1) of the Hindu Adoptions and Maintenance Act. The
court is not at liberty to grant relief of maintenance
simplicitor obtainable under one Act in proceedings under
the other. As is evident, both the statutes are
codified as such and are clear on their subjects and by
liberality of interpretation inter-changeability cannot be
permitted so as to destroy the distinction on the subject of
maintenance.
Relief to the wife may also be due under section 125 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure whereunder an order of
maintenance can be granted after contest, and an order of
interim maintenance can be made at the outset, without much
contest. This provision however has two peculiar features:
(i) the provision applies to all and not only to Hindus;
and
(ii) maintenance allowance cannot exceed a sum of Rs. 500
per mensem.
But this is a measure in the alternative to provide
destitute wives.
This court has ruled that if the language used in a statute
can be construed widely so as to salvage the remedial
intendment, the court must adopt it. Of course, if the
language of a statute does not admit of the construction
sought, wishful thinking is no substitute, and then, not the
court but the legislature is to blame for enacting a damp
squib statute. These are the observations of V.K. Krishna
Iyer, J. in Carew and Company v. Union of India [1975] 2 SCC
791 at pages 803-804. Towards interpreting statutes, the
court must endeavour to see its legislative intendment.
Where the language is ambiguous or capable of more than one
meaning, the court must sympathetically and imaginatively
discover the true purpose and object of the Provision by
filling gaps, clearing doubts, and mitigating hardships,
harshness or unfair consequences. See Motor Owners’
Insurance Company, Limited vs. Jadavji Keshavji Modi and
others [1981] 4 SCC 660 paras 14. 15 and 16. These
principles were pressed into service by learned counsel for
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the appellant contending that if the claim of the wife for
maintenance was otherwise justified on fact and law, the
procedures and the for a should not stand in her way and let
her cash on her claim over-ruling all objections. It was
asserted that the Amritsar court had jurisdiction to grant
relief, as asked for, because once upon a time it was seisin
of the petition for dissolution of marriage by mutual
consent, though such petition was withdrawn.
On the afore-analysis and distinction drawn between the fora
and perceptives,
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it is difficult to come to the view that a claim which is
ancilliary or incidental in a matrimonial court under the
Hindu Marriage Act could be tried as an original claim in
that court; a claim which may for the moment be assumed as
valid, otherwise agitable in the civil court under the Hindu
Adoptions and Maintenance Act, 1956. As said before, these
two enactments keeping apart, the remaining two, i.e., Hindu
Succession Act, 1956 and Hindu Minority and and Guardianship
Act, 1956 are a package of enactments, being part of one
socio-legal scheme applicable to Hindus. When distinctive
claims are covered distinctly under two different statutes
and agitable in the courts conceived of thereunder, it is
difficult to sustain the plea that when a claim is otherwise
valid, choosing of one forum or the other should be of no
consequence. These are not mere procedural technicalities
or irregularities, as termed by one line of reasoning by
some of the High Courts. These are matters which go to the
root of the jurisdiction. The matrimonial court, a court of
special jurisdiction, is not meant to pronounce upon a claim
of maintenance without having to go into the exercise of
passing a decree, which implies that unless it goes onwards,
moves or leads through, to affect or disrupt the marital
status between the parties. By rejecting a claim, the
matrimonial court does make an appealable degree in terms of
section 28, but neither affects nor disrupts the marriage.
It certainly does not pass a decree in terms of section 25
for its decision has not moved or done anything towards, or
led through, to disturb the marriage, or to confer or take
away any legal character or status. Like a surgeon, the
matrimonial court, if operating, assumes the obligation of
the post operatives, and when not, leaves the patient to the
physician.
On the afore analysis we have been led to the conclusion
that the step of the wife to move the court of Additional
District Judge, Amritsar for (,rant of maintenance under
section 25 of the Hindu Marriage Act was ill-advised. The
judgment of the High Court under appeal could be no other
than the one that it was in the present state of law and the
facts and circumstances. It is still open to the wife to
stake her claim to maintenance in other fora. The judgments
of the High Courts earlier quoted, and others which have
been left out, which are not in line with our view are over-
ruled. The earlier and predominant view was the correct one
and the later an aberration; something unfortunate from the
precedential point of view. The appeals thus inevitably
have to and are hereby dismissed, but without any order as
to costs.
Before we part with this judgment, we need to mention that
while this judgment was reserved, an Interlocutory
Application was received by the Registry, which unnumbered
Interlocutory Application was duly transmitted to us. It is
for directing the appellant to pay arrears of
maintenance.While granting leave
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this Court on 8th July, 1991 had ordered that during the
pendency of the appeal, but without prejudice to the
respective stands of the spouses, the husband shall pay a
sum of Rs. 1000 per mensem by way of maintenance to the wife
month to month by bank draft. In the Interlocutory
Application there is an allegation that this Court’s orders
have not been complied with. Let notice on the application
separately be issued to the respondent returnable within six
weeks to show cause why payment of arrears of maintenance be
not secured to the wife forthwith.
U.R. Appeal dismissed.
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