Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6501 of 2001
PETITIONER:
BIMLENDU KUMAR CHATTERJEEAPPELLANT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIPA CHATTERJEE & ORS.RESPONDENTS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/09/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & Shivaraj V. Patil
JUDGMENT:
D.P.Mohapatra, J.
Leave granted.
We have heard the petitioner Shri Bimlendu
Kumar Chatterjee, who appeared in person and learned
counsel appearing for the respondents.
The appellant is the husband of respondent no.1 .
Smt.Dipa Chatterjee. The dispute raised in the case
relates to the right of the appellant to have custody or at
least a right to visit regularly his daughter who is now
residing with respondent no.1.
This appeal is directed against the order passed
by a Division Bench of the Ranchi Bench of Patna High
Court on 6th November, 2000 in LPA 358/97 (R) titled
Bimlendu Kumar Chatterjee vs. Smt.Dipa Chatterjee & Anr.
Relevant portion of the order reads thus :
The Court heard this matter for some
time. The Court has also seen the record
of the present letters patent appeal. The
Court is also conscious of the order which
was passed by a Bench presided over by
Honble Mr.Justice Narayan Roy and
Honble Mr.Justice M.Y.Eqbal on 25th
November, 1997. In short, the Court will
not permit the child to become a shuttle-
cock. The matter must rest on the order
as recorded on 25th November, 97.
Thus, the application filed on 16th
August, 2000 is consigned.
From the above order it is clear that the Division Bench has
reiterated the arrangement made in the order dated 25th
November, 1997 regarding custody of the child.
In the order dated 25th November, 1997 in LPA
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No.358/1997 (R) a Division Bench of the High Court
disposed of the petition filed by the appellant herein praying
to the Court to ascertain from the respondent no.1 herein
whether she was agreeable to the desire expressed by him
for an amicable settlement of the matter. The Division
Bench disposed of the said petition with the following order :
We find that the Letters Patent Appeal
itself has been filed for giving custody of
the girl child to the appellant. Since the
matter is subjudice in this court, in our
view, it would not be appropriate to pass
any direction giving the female child in
custody of the appellant even temporarily.
A liberty has already been given to the
appellant by the order impugned to see his
daughter at least once in a week and in
view of the direction the appellant may see
his daughter once in a week and the
respondent no.1 must make her daughter
available to the appellant in terms of the
order impugned.
For the reasons aforementioned we
refrain ourselves from passing any further
order in the matter.
Thereafter in the order passed on 10th August, 1998 in MJC
No.783 of 1997 (R) filed in LPA No.358/97 (R) for initiation of
a contempt proceeding against respondent no.1 for violating
the order dated 25th November, 1997 of the Court, a Division
Bench passed the following order :
The petitioner will have the liberty to visit
the house of Opp.Party NO.1 on every
Sunday in the afternoon between 2.00 p.m.
and 4.00 p.m. and if he does so, the Opp.
Party No.1 will make arrangement to
enable him to meet daughter and allow him
to remain with her for a reasonable time.
This order is being passed so as to
avoid future controversy.
LPA No.358/97 (R) was decided by the judgment
rendered by a Division Bench on 4th May, 2000. The appeal
was allowed and that part of the order by which the learned
single Judge had directed that the child will remain with the
mother with liberty to the father to go and see the child at
least once a week, was set aside.
Thereafter, it appears that the respondent no.1
having failed to restore custody of the child to him, the
appellant filed an application before the High Court seeking
implementation of the order of the Family Court, Dhanbad
giving custody of the child to him. Considering the said
application, another Division Bench passed the order dated
6th November, 2000, as quoted earlier. The said order is
under challenge in this appeal.
As noted earlier, in the order under challenge,
the High Court reiterated the order passed on 25th
November, 1997 in LPA No.358/97 (R) overlooking the
position that the said order which was an interim order
passed in the appeal was not subsisting after disposal of the
appeal by the judgment dated 4th May, 2000. Further, the
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Division Bench had also overlooked the position that the
LPA itself having been disposed of, no further order reviving
the interim order passed during the pendency of the said
appeal could be passed in the disposed of case. In the
circumstances, the order under challenge is clearly
unsustainable and has to be set aside. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondents fairly accepted the position
that the impugned order is wholly unsupportable.
Then the question arises what will be an
appropriate order to be passed on the facts and
circumstances of the case. The appellant, who is the father
of the child, submitted before us that after long years of
litigation, he has not yet got even a right to see his child for
some time at regular intervals. The grievance of the
appellant cannot be brushed aside. A humanitarian
approach is necessary for solving the problem.
In the result, the appeal is allowed. The order
dated 6th November, 2000 in LPA No.358/97 (R) is set aside.
Leave is granted to the appellant to file an application for
appropriate interim arrangement for getting custody of his
child or for making an arrangement enabling him to see his
child at regular intervals before the Court in which the
suit/appeal stated to have been filed by him is pending. If
such an application is filed, the Court will dispose of the
same as expeditiously as possible. There will be no order as
to costs.
.J.
(D.P. Mohapatra)
.J.
(Shivaraj V.Patil)
September 19, 2001