Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BAKULBHAI AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GANGARAM & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/01/1988
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
BENCH:
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1988 SCR (2) 787 1988 SCC (1) 537
JT 1988 (1) 197 1988 SCALE (1)188
ACT:
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973: Sections 125 &
397(3)-Maintenance for wife and child-Entitlement-
Maintainability of Revision application-Enhancement of
maintenance to allowance to child-Due to inflation and
growing age-Permissibility of.
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955: Sections 11 and 16 Hindu
woman marrying a Hindu male already married and his wife
living-Validity of-Legitimacy of the child born out of such
wedlock-Entitlement of maintenance for such woman and child.
HEADNOTE:
% The appellant filed an application under Section 125
Cr.P.C. before the Judicial Magistrate, claiming maintenance
for herself and her son, alleging lawful marriage with the
respondent, and that the son was born out of the wedlock.
Respondent, however, denied the marriage and paternity of
her son. He claimed that he was already married twice and
both his wives were alive.
The Judicial Magistrate accepted the appellant’s case
and granted maintenance at the rate of 100 per month in her
favour and Rs.50 per month for her minor son. The Judicial
Magistrate held that appellant No. t and respondent lived
together in the same house as husband and wife for a
considerable period, and appellant No. 2 was born out of
this union. He did not record a categorical finding as to
whether the respondent was already married and his wife or
wives were alive on the date of his marriage with appellant
No. t.
A revision application was filed by the appellant for
enhancement of the rate of maintenance. The respondent also
moved the Sessions Judge in revision. The Sessions Judge
reversed the findings of the judicial Magistrate. The
appellant challenged the order by way of a revision
application before the Bombay High Court which rejected the
same holding that since it was the second revision
application, it was not maintainable, being barred by the
provisions of S. 397(3) Cr. P.C. The High Court also
examined the merits of the case and concurred with the view
of the Sessions Judge. This appeal is by Special Leave.
788
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
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^
HELD: t. The plea that respondent could not have
lawfully married a third time in view of the provisions of
the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 was rejected by the Judicial
Magistrate by saying that even according to the respondent,
his second marriage was null and void as his first wife was
then alive. As regards the first marriage he held that it
was not as a fact proved. He got rid of the effect of both
the marriages by adopting a queer logic. If the story of the
first marriage was to be rejected, the second marriage could
not have been held to be void on that ground. It appears
that the respondent has satisfactorily provide his case
about his earlier marriage by production of good evidence.
Either the respondent’s first marriage was subsisting so as
to nullify his second marriage, in which case the
appellant’s marriage also was rendered null and void on that
ground; or if the respondent’s case of his first marriage is
disbelieved the second marriage will have to be held to be
legal and effective so as to lead to the same conclusion of
the appellant’s marriage being void. On either hypothesis
the appellant’s claim is not covered by Section 125 Cr.P.C.
The appellant cannot, therefore, be granted any relief in
the present proceedings. [791D-H; 792A-B]
Smt. Yamunabhai v Anantrao Shivram Adhav and another,
[1988] 2 S.C.R. 809 followed.
2. Besides holding that the respondent had married the
appellant, the Magistrate categorically said that the
appellant and the respondent lived together as husband and
wife for a number of years and that appellant No. 2 was
their child. If, as a matter of fact, a marriage, although
ineffective in the eye of law, took place between the
appellant and the respondent, the status of the boy must be
held to be that of a legitimate son on account of Section
16(1) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. Even if the factum of
marriage of his mother is ignored, he must be treated as an
illegitimate child of the respondent on the basis of the
findings of the Judicial Magistrate and is entitled to
relief by reason of clauses (b) and (c) of Section 125(t)
Cr. P.C. specifically referring to an illegitimate child.
The order of the Judicial Magistrate allowing the
maintenance to appellant No. 2 was correctly passed. But the
amount of Rs.50 per month was allowed as the maintenance of
the child four years back. In view of the fact that money
value has gone down due to inflation and the child has grown
in age, the rate of maintenance is increased to
Rs.150.[791B-C: 793B]
3. Since the claim for maintenance was granted in
favour of the
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appellant, by the Judicial Magistrate, there was no question
of her challenging the same. Her challenge before the
Sessions Judge was confined to that part of the order
assessing the amount of maintenance. and this issue could
not have been raised again by her. Subject to this
limitation, she was certainly entitled to invoke the
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court. The decision on
the merits of her claim went against her for the first time
before the Sessions Judge, and this was the subject matter
of her revision before the High Court. She could not,
therefore, be said to be making a second attempt when she
challenged the order before the High Court. The fact that
she had moved the Sessions Court against the quantum of
maintenance could not be used against her in respect of her
right of revision against the Sessions Judge’s order. [790F-
H;791A]
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4. No error of law appears to have been discovered in
the judgment of the Magistrate and so the revisional courts
were not justified in making a reassessment of the evidence
and substitute their own views for those of the Magistrate.
[792C]
Pathumma v. Mohammad, [1986] 2 SCC 585, followed.
JUDGMENT:
CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Criminal Appeal No .
579 of 1986
From the Judgment and order dated 15.4.1986 of the
Bombay High Court in Crl. R. Appln. No. 160 of 1985.
Rakesh Upadhyay, M.M. Kashyap and N.A. Siddiqui for the
Appellants.
V.N. Ganpule, S.K. Agnihotri and A.S. Bhasme for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHARMA, J. The appellant No. 1 Bakulabai filed an
application under s. 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure,
1973 (hereinafter referred to as the Code) before the
Judicial Magistrate, Degloor, alleging that she was lawfully
married to the respondent No. 1 Ganga Ram and that the
appellant No. 2 Maroti was born out of this wedlock. She
claimed maintenance both for herself and for her son. Ganga
Ram denied the marriage as well as the paternity of the
appellant No. 2. He also averred that he was already married
twice before the wedding
790
pleaded by Bakulabai and that both his wives were living.
2. The Judicial Magistrate accepted Bakulabai’s case
and granted maintenance at the rate of Rs. 100 per month in
her favour and additional Rs.50 per month for the minor boy.
3. Ganga Ram moved the Sessions Judge in revision.
Bakulabai also filed a revision application for enhancement
of the rate of maintenance. The two applications were
registered respectively as Criminal Revision No. 83 of 1984
and Criminal Revision No. 110 of 1984, and were heard
together. The Sessions Judge accepted the defence case,
reversed the findings of the Judicial Magistrate and
dismissed the application for maintenance. Revision case No.
83 of 1984 was thus allowed and the wife’s application was
dismissed. Bakulabai challenged the order before the Bombay
High Court by a revision application. By the impugned
Judgment the High Court rejected the same holding that since
it was the second revision application by the wife it was
not maintainable, being barred by the provisions of s.
397(3) of the Code. The Court further proceeded to examine
the merits of the case and concurred with the view of the
Sessions Judge. The appellants have now come to this Court
by special leave.
4. On the maintainability of the revision application
before it, the High Court took an erroneous view. The
provisions of sub-section (3) of s. 397 relied upon, are in
the following terms:
"(3) If an application under this section has been
made by any person either to the High Court or to
the Sessions Judge, no further application by the
same person shall be entertained by the other of
them."
The main judgment of the Judicial Magistrate upholding the
appellants’ claim for maintenance was in her favour and
there was no question of her challenging the same. Her
challenge before the Sessions Judge was confined to the part
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of the order assessing the amount of maintenance, and this
issue could not have been raised again by her. Subject to
this limitation she was, certainly entitled to invoke the
revisional jurisdiction of the High Court. The decision on
the merits of her claim went against her for the first time
before the Sessions Judge, and this was the subject matter
of her revision before the High Court. She could not,
therefore, be said to be making a second attempt when she
challenged this order before the High Court. The fact that
she had moved before the Sessions Judge against the quantum
of maintenance
791
could not be used against her in respect of her right of
revision against the Sessions Judge’s order. Accordingly,
the decision of the High Court on this question is set aside
and it is held that the revision petition of the appellant
before the High Court, except the prayer for enhancing the
amount was maintainable.
5. Now, coming to the other aspect, the Judicial
Magistrate on a consideration of the evidence led on behalf
of the parties accepted the appellants’ case. He held that
Bakulabai and Ganga Ram had lived together in the same house
as husband and wife for a considerable period, and the boy
Maroti was born of this union. On the question as to whether
Ganga Ram was already married and his wife or wives were
living on the date the marriage with the appellant Bakulabai
is alleged, the Magistrate did not record a categorical
finding. According to the case of Ganga Ram, he was first
married with Rajabai, and again with Kusumbai in 1969. It
was, therefore, argued on his behalf that as he had two
living spouses in 1972, he could not have lawfully-married a
third time in view of the provisions of the Hindu Marriage
Act, 1955. The Judicial Magistrate rejected the plea by
saying that the second marriage of the respondent with
Kusumbai was on his own showing null and void as his first
wife was then alive. Dealing with the effect of the first
marriage he held that it was not as fact proved. Thus he got
rid of the effect of both the marriages by adopting a queer
logic. If the story of the first marriage was to be
rejected, the second marriage could not have been held to be
void on that ground. The finding of the Judicial Magistrate
on the validity of the marriage of the appellant was,
therefore, illegal.
6. We have by our judgment in Criminal Appeal No. 475
of 1983 (Smt. Yamunabai v. Anantrao Shivram Adhav and
another) delivered today held that the marriage of a Hindu
woman with a Hindu male with a living spouse performed after
the coming in force of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, is null
and void and the woman is not entitled to maintenance under
s. 125 of the Code. Coming to the facts of the present case,
it appears that the respondent has satisfactorily proved his
case about his earlier marriage with Kusumbai by production
of good evidence including a certificate issued by the Arya
Samaj in this regard. It is not suggested that Rajabai was
living when Kusumbai was married and was dead by the time
the appellant’s marriage took place. The position which
emerges, therefore, is that either the respondent’s first
marriage with Rajabai was subsisting so as to nullify his
second marriage with Kusumbai, in which case the appellant’s
marriage also was rendered null and void on that very
ground; or if, on the other
792
hand, the respondent’s case of his marriage with Rajabai is
disbelieved A the marriage of Kusumbai will have to be held
to be legal and effective so as to lead to the same
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conclusion of the appellant’s marriage being void on either
hypothesis the appellant’s claim is not covered by s. 125 of
the Code. She cannot, therefore, be granted any relief in
the present preceedings. The decision to that effect of the
High Court is, R therefore, confirmed.
7. The other findings of the Magistrate on the disputed
question of fact were recorded after a full consideration of
the evidence an should have been left undisturbed in
revision. No error of law appears to have been discovered in
his judgment and so the revisional courts were not justified
in making a reassessment of the evidence and substitute
their own views for those of the Magistrate. (See Pathumma
and another v. Mahammad, [1986] 2 SCC 585). Besides holding
that the respondent had married the appellant, the
Magistrate categorically said that the appellant and the
respondent lived together as husband and wife for a number
of years and the appellant No. 2 Maroti was their child. If,
as a matter of fact, a marriage although ineffective in the
eye of law, took place between the appellant No. 1 and the
respondent No. 1, the status of the boy must be held to be
of a legitimate son on account of s. 16(1) of the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955, which reads as follows:
"16(1). Notwithstanding that a marriage is null
and void under Section 11, any child of such
marriage who would have been legitimate if the
marriage had been valid, shall be legitimate,
whether such child is born before or after the
commencement of the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Act,
1976 (68 of 1976), and whether or not a decree of
nullity is granted in respect of that marriage
under this Act and whether or not the marriage is
held to be void otherwise than on a petition under
this Act."
Even if the factum of marriage of his mother is ignored he
must be treated as an illegitimate child of the respondent
on the basis of the findings of the Judicial Magistrate and
is entitled to relief by reason of Clauses (b) and (c) of s.
125(1) of the Code specifically referring to an illegitimate
child. We, therefore, hold that the order of the Judicial
Magistrate allowing the maintenance to the appellant No. 2
was correctly passed.
8. The amount of Rs.50 per month was allowed as the
mainte-
793
nance of the child in 1984. The revision application filed
before the Sessions Judge was rejected. A second application
before the High Court was, therefore, not maintainable. We
will, therefore, assume that the decision assessing the
amount of maintenance as Rs.50 per month in 1984 became
final. However, on account of change of circumstances, this
amount can be revised after efflux of time. During the last
four years the value of money has gone down due to
inflation. The child has also grown in age. In the
circumstances, we direct the respondent Ganga Ram to pay the
appellant No. 1 the maintenance amount for appellant No. 2
at the rate of Rs.150 per month with effect from February,
1988. The arrears up to January, 1988, if not paid, should
also be paid promptly. The appeal is allowed in the terms
mentioned above. G.N. Appeal allowed.
G.N. Appeal allowed.
794