Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6534-6536 of 1995
PETITIONER:
ADHYATMA BHATTAR ALWAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ADHYATMA BHATTAR SRI DEVI
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 06/11/2001
BENCH:
D.P. Mohapatra & Doraiswamy Raju
JUDGMENT:
D.P.MOHAPATRA, J.
These appeals, filed by the husband of the
respondent are directed against the judgment of the
Division Bench of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh in
AAO Nos.365 and 718/91, in which the High Court
allowed the appeal filed by the wife and dismissed the
appeal filed by the husband and set aside the judgment
passed by the Subordinate Judge, Narsapur.
The appellant Adhyatma Bhattar Alwar, and the
respondent Adhyatma Bhattar Sri Devi were married on 22nd
August, 1978 in Nalamvari Choultry at Rajahmundry. The
couple stayed together in village Palacole where the parents
of the husband reside. A female child was born to them on
12th December, 1979, whereafter they separated. The wife
and daughter lived with her parents at Rajhmundry, while the
husband continued to stay with his parents at Palacole. The
husband filed a petition for dissolving the marriage under
Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) praying for a decree of divorce on the
ground stated in sub-clause (ib) of Sub-section 1. In the
petition it was alleged, inter alia, that the father of the
respondent -wife had taken her to Rajahmundry for delivery
and also stating that her mother was not well. After birth of
the child, since the respondent did not return to Palacole, the
appellant, his father and other relations made attempts to
persuade the respondents father to send his daughter to
Palacole. The attempts did not bear fruit as the respondent
was insistent that the appellant should live separately from
his parents in a separate house. Since the condition was not
acceptable to the appellant, she refused to join him at
Palacole. On 23rd May, 1981 the appellant went to
Rajahmundry to bring the respondent but she was not sent
and the appellant was informed that the respondent would
be sent only after he got a job. It is relevant to state here
that at the time of marriage, the appellant had graduated in
Commerce (B.Com.); subsequently he completed M.A. in
Hindi, but he was without a job. Since all attempts to
persuade the respondent to come and live with him failed,
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the appellant filed the petition on 21st February, 1984 for
divorce on the ground of desertion by the wife for a period of
more than two years.
Contesting the application for divorce, the
respondent repudiated the allegations made by the appellant
that she had voluntarily left her matrimonial home for staying
with her parents. While admitting that she had gone to her
parental home for birth of the child whereafter she had
returned to her father-in-laws house where she faced a very
embarrassing situation as her father-in-law made indecent
advances towards her and her complaints to her husband
about such incidents went unheeded. She also averred that
her husband appeared to be a silent spectator to such
incidents and did not even raise any protest against his
fathers behavior towards his daughter-in-law. In the
circumstances, the respondent pleaded that she had every
justification to insist on her husband having a separate
residence. It was further alleged by her that in the month of
August, 1980 her father-in-law had made repeated attempts
at molesting her and when she vehemently protested against
such behaviour she got a severe beating from him. She also
complained that her husband was ill-treating and assaulting
her, believing the false stories and backbitings of his mother.
She contended that it was she who was deserted by her
husband and not vice versa.
Both parties led oral and documentary evidence
before the Trial Court. The learned Subordinate Judge in
the Judgment dated 8th December, 1989 held that the
appellant had satisfactorily proved that the respondent was
guilty of having deserted him for a continuous period of more
than two years preceding the filing of the petition for divorce
and that he was entitled to a decree for judicial separation
under Section 10 of the Act instead of a decree for
dissolution of marriage under Section 13(1)(ib) of the Act.
Accordingly, the petition was allowed by granting a decree
for judicial separation instead of a decree for divorce.
Both the parties challenged the judgment of the
trial Court by filing appeals. The husband filed the appeal -
AAO No.365/91, while the appeal filed by the wife was
registered as AAO 718/91. As noted above, the High Court,
in the judgment rendered on 14th July, 1993, set aside the
judgment and decree of the trial Court, allowed the appeal
filed by the wife and dismissed the appeal filed by the
husband. The High Court held that the wife did not have at
any time the necessary animus to put an end to the
matrimonial relationship and never intended to desert her
husband. Hence, these appeals by the husband.
Section 13(1)(ib) of the Act reads as follows:
Divorce.- (1) Any marriage solemnized,
whether before or after the
commencement of this Act, may, on a
petition presented by either the husband
or the wife, be dissolved by a decree of
divorce on the ground that the other
party
xxx xxx xxx
(ib) has deserted the petitioner for a
continuous period of not less than two
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years immediately preceding the
presentation of the petition; or
xxx xxx xxx
Explanation In this sub-section the
expression desertion means the
desertion of the petitioner by the other
party to the marriage without reasonable
cause and without the consent or
against the wish of such party and
includes the willful neglect of the
petitioner by the other party to the
marriage, and its grammatical variations
and cognate expressions shall be
construed accordingly.
Xxx xxx xxx
Desertion in the context of matrimonial law
represents a legal conception. It is difficult to give a
comprehensive definition of the term. The essential
ingredients of this offence in order that it may furnish a
ground for relief are :
1. The factum of separation;
2. The intention to bring cohabitation permanently to an end
animus deserndi;
3. The element of permanence which is a prime condition
requires that both these essential ingredients should
continue during the entire statutory period;
The clause lays down the rule that desertion to amount to a
matrimonial offence must be for a continuous period of not
less than two years immediately preceding the presentation
of the petition. This clause has to be read with the
Explanation. The Explanation has widened the definition of
desertion to include willful neglect of the petitioning spouse
by the respondent. It states that to amount to a matrimonial
offence desertion must be without reasonable cause and
without the consent or against the wish of the petitioner.
From the Explanation it is abundantly clear that the
legislature intended to give to the expression a wide import
which includes willful neglect of the petitioner by the other
party to the marriage. Therefore, for the offence of
desertion, so far as the deserting spouse is concerned, two
essential conditions must be there, namely, (1) the factum of
separation, and (2) the intention to bring cohabitation
permanently to an end (animus deserendi). Similarly, two
elements are essential so far as the deserted spouse is
concerned: (1) the absence of consent, and (2) absence of
conduct giving reasonable cause to the spouse leaving the
matrimonial home to form the necessary intention aforesaid.
The petitioner for divorce bears the burden of proving those
elements in the two spouses respectively and their
continuance throughout the statutory period.
This Court in the case of Bipin Chander
Jaisinghbhai Shah vs. Prabhawati, 1956 SCR 838,
observed :
........ Thus the quality of permanence is one
of the essential elements which differentiates
desertion from willful separation. If a spouse
abandons the other spouse in a state of
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temporary passion, for example, anger or
disgust, without intending permanently to
cease cohabitation, it will not amount to
desertion. For the offence of desertion, so far
as the deserting spouse is concerned, two
essential conditions must be there, namely;
(1) the factum of separation, and (2) the
intention to bring cohabitation permanently to
an end (animus deserendi). Similarly two
elements are essential so far as the deserted
spouse is concerned: (1) the absence of
consent, and (2) absence of conduct giving
reasonable cause to the spouse leaving the
matrimonial home to form the necessary
intention aforesaid. The petitioner for divorce
bears the burden of proving those elements in
the two spouses respectively. Here a
difference between the English law and the
law as enacted by the Bombay Legislature
may be pointed out. Whereas under the
English law those essential conditions must
continue throughout the course of the three
years immediately preceding the institution of
the suit for divorce, under the Act, the period
is four years without specifying that it should
immediately precede the commencement of
proceedings for divorce. Whether the
omission of the last clause has any practical
result need not detain us, as it does not call
for decision in the present case. Desertion is
a matter of inference to be drawn from the
facts and circumstances of each case. The
inference may be drawn from certain facts
which may not in another case be capable of
leading to the same inference; that is to say,
the facts have to be viewed as to the purpose
which is revealed by those acts or by conduct
and expression of intention, both anterior and
subsequent to the actual acts of separation.
If, in fact, there has been a separation, the
essential question always is whether that act
could be attributable to an animus deserendi.
The offence of desertion commences when
the fact of separation and the animus
deserendi co-exist. But it is not necessary
that they should commence at the same time.
The de facto separation may have
commenced without the necessary animus or
it may be that the separation and the animus
deserendi coincide in point of time; for
example, when the separating spouse
abandons the marital home with the intention,
express or implied, of bringing cohabitation
permanently to a close. The law in England
has prescribed a three years period and the
Bombay Act prescribed a period of four years
as a continuous period during which the two
elements must subsist. Hence, if a deserting
spouse takes advantage of the locus
poenitentiae thus provided by law and decides
to come back to the deserted spouse by a
bona fide offer of resuming the matrimonial
home with all the implications of marital life,
before the statutory period is out or even after
the lapse of that period, unless proceedings
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for divorce have been commenced, desertion
comes to an end and if the deserted spouse
unreasonably refuses to offer, the latter may
be in desertion and not the former. Hence it is
necessary that during all the period that there
has been a desertion, the deserted spouse
must affirm the marriage and be ready and
willing to resume married life on such
conditions as may be reasonable. It is also
well settled that in proceedings for divorce the
plaintiff must prove the offence of desertion,
like and other matrimonial offence, beyond all
reasonable doubt. Hence, though
corroboration is not required as an absolute
rule of law the courts insist upon corroborative
evidence, unless its absence is accounted for
to the satisfaction of the court.......
xxx xxxx xxx
But it is not necessary that at the time the wife
left her husbands home she should have at
the same time the animus deserendi. Let us
therefore examine the question whether the
defendant in this case, even if she had no
such intention at the time she left Bombay,
subsequently decided to put an end to the
matrimonial tie. This is in consonance with
the latest pronouncement of the Judicial
Committee of the Privy Council in the case of
1955 A.C.402 at p.417 (F) in an appeal from
the decision of the High Court of Australia, to
the following effect :-
Both in England and in Australia, to
establish desertion two things must be proved
: first, certain outward and visible conduct
the factum of desertion; secondly, the
animus deserendi the intention underlying
this conduct to bring the matrimonial union to
an end.
In ordinary desertion the factum is
simple; it is the act of the absconding party in
leaving the matrimonial home. The contest in
such a case will be almost entirely as to the
animus. Was the intention of the party
leaving the home to break it up for good, or
something short of, or different from that?
(Emphasis supplied)
In the case of Lachman Utamchand Kirpalani vs.
Meena alias Mota, 1964 (4) SCR 331, a Constitution Bench
of this Court, considering the case of judicial separation on
the ground of desertion without just cause held on facts that
the respondent (wife) left the appellants matrimonial home
on February 26, 1954 with the intention of permanently,
breaking it up, and that such desertion continued during the
requisite period of two years and that the appellants letter of
1st April 1955, did not constitute an interruption of the
respondents desertion by its being a just cause for her to
remain away from the matrimonial home; and that, in
consequence, the appellant was entitled to a decree for
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judicial separation under Section 10(1)(a) of the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955. It was observed that An offer to return
to the matrimonial home after sometime, though desertion
had started, if genuine and sincere and represented his or
her true feelings and intention, would bring to an end the
desertion because thereafter the animus deserendi would be
lacking, though the factum of separation might continue; but
on the other hand, if the offer was not sincere and there was
in reality no intention to return, the mere fact that letters were
written expressing such an intention would not interrupt the
desertion from continuing. In this connection, reference
was also made to the decision in the case of Bipin Chander
Jaisinghbhai Shah vs. Prabhawati (supra).
This Court in the case of Smt.Rohini Kumari vs.
Narendra Singh, 1972(1) SCC 1, while considering the case
of judicial separation on the ground of desertion under
Section 10(1)(a) of the Act read with the Explanation, held :
........The two elements present on the side of
the deserted spouse should be absence of
consent and absence of conduct reasonably
causing the deserting spouse to form his or
her intention to bring cohabitation to an end.
The requirement that the deserting spouse
must intend to bring cohabitation to an end
must be understood to be subject to the
qualification that if without just cause or
excuse a man persists in doing things which
he knows his wife probably will not tolerate
and which no ordinary woman would tolerate
and then she leaves, he has deserted her
whatever his desire or intention may have
been. The doctrine of constructive desertion
is discussed at page 229. It is stated that
desertion is not to be tested by merely
ascertaining which party left the matrimonial
home first. If one spouse is forced by the
conduct of the other to leave home it may be
that the spouse responsible for the driving out
is guilty of desertion. There is no substantial
difference between the case of a man who
intends to cease cohabitation and leaves the
wife and the case of a man who with the
same intention compels his wife by his
conduct to leave him.
In Lachman Utamchand Kirpalani v. Meena
alias Mota, this Court had occasion to
consider the true meaning and ambit of
Section 10(1)(a) of the Act read with the
Explanation. Reference was made in the
majority judgment to the earlier decision in
Bipin Chander Jaisinghbhai Shah v.
Prabhawati, in which all the English decisions
as also the statement contained in
authoritative text books were considered.
After referring to the two essential conditions,
namely, the factum of physical separation and
the animus deserendi which meant the
intention to bring the cohabitation permanently
to an end as also the two elements so far as
the deserted spouse was concerned i.e. (1)
the absence of consent and (2) absence of
conduct giving reasonable cause to the
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spouse leaving the matrimonial home to form
the intention aforesaid, it was observed while
examining how desertion might come to an
end :
In the first place, there must be conduct on
the part of the deserted spouse which affords
just and reasonable cause for the deserting
spouse not to seek reconciliation and which
absolves her from her continuing obligation to
return to the matrimonial home. In this one
has to have regard to the conduct of the
deserted spouse. But there is one other
matter which is also of equal importance, that
is, that the conduct of the deserted spouse
should have had such an impact on the mind
of the deserting spouse that in fact it causes
her to continue to live apart and thus continue
the desertion. But where, however, on the
facts it is clear that the conduct of the
deserted spouse has had no such effect on
the mind of the deserting spouse there is no
rule of law that desertion terminates by reason
of the conduct of the deserted spouse.
(Emphasis supplied)
This Court in the case of Sanat Kumar Agarwal
vs. Nandini Agarwal, (1990) 1 SCC 475, considering a case
under Section 13(1)(ib) of the Act, held that it is well settled
that the question of desertion is a matter of inference to be
drawn from the facts and circumstances of each case and
those facts have to be viewed as to the purpose which is
revealed by those facts or by conduct and expression of
intention, both anterior and subsequent to the actual act of
separation.
In a recent case in Chetan Dass vs. Kamla Devi,
(2001) 4 SCC 250, this Court considered the question
whether the offer made by the husband in this Court to keep
his wife, was held to be not sincere and did not deserve to
be seriously considered. In that connection, this Court held :
During the course of the arguments, learned
counsel for the appellant, so as to show the
allegations made against the appellant about
having illegitimate relationship with Sosamma
Thomas(sic.), submitted that the appellant is
still prepared to keep the respondent Kamla
Devi with him. According to him, the appellant
never refused to live with her. In reply,
learned counsel for the respondent submitted
that the respondent was also prepared to live
with the appellant provided that he
discontinued his relationship with Sosamma
Thomas. The hollowness of the submission
that the appellant was still prepared to keep
the respondent with him is quite apparent. It
is on record that it was on the some (sic.
Same) undertaking that the respondent was
taken to Ganganagar by the appellant to live
with him but there she was subjected to
humiliating treatment meted out to her by the
appellant himself having his food only in the
room of Sosamma Thomas and staying there
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during the night leaving his wife and sister
alone on the ground floor. With this kind of
attitude, the offer as made on behalf of the
appellant is too shallow to deserve any
serious thought. At the same time, the
condition on which the respondent is prepared
to live with him seems to be quite justified,
that is to say, she is still prepared to live with
him provided he behaves and snaps his
relationship with the other woman. It is
apparent that it is the own conduct of the
appellant which led the respondent to live
separate from the appellant. None else, but
the appellant alone, is to be blamed for such
an unhappy and unfortunate situation. The
findings of facts, as recorded by the two
courts below, do not deserve to be disturbed
in any manner nor have they been seriously
assailed before us.
Coming to the case at hand, it is revealed from
the evidence on record, as discussed in the judgments of
the Trial Court and the High Court that the respondent had
gone to her parents house for birth of the child, which
apparently cannot be construed as an expression of her
desire to forsake her husband permanently; but after the
birth of her child when attempts were made by the appellant,
his parents and relations, she laid down a condition that the
appellant should live in a separate house from his parents
taking the plea that her father-in-law had attempted to molest
her, which explanation she signally failed to establish. In the
meantime, father of the appellant expired some time in 1988,
putting an end to the so-called reason of misbehavior of her
father-in-law. There is nothing on record that thereafter she
expressed her desire to join her husband at the matrimonial
home. It is relevant to state here that the appellant is the
only son of his parents and as expected, he was not willing
to establish a separate residence leaving his parents to live
alone in their old age. The cumulative effect of the
circumstances and the conduct of the respondent is that she
had given expression of animus deserendi. Thus, the two
ingredients of the matrimonial offence of desertion i.e.
separation in fact and animus deserendi have been
established by the appellant. The learned trial Judge, having
regard to the facts and circumstances of the case, was right
in recording the finding that the husband had successfully
established the case of desertion by the wife and exercising
the discretion vested under Section 13 A of the Act, the
learned trial Judge had granted the decree of judicial
separation instead of divorce. The High Court recorded the
finding that in the absence of any evidence, direct or
circumstantial, in support of her plea of alleged indecent
behavior by her father-in-law, the Court was not prepared to
accept the allegations made by her against her father-in-law;
the Court without discussing any evidence, had observed
that as the cause itself has disappeared or ceased to exist
the wife had agreed to join the husband, and even before the
death of the husbands father she was ready and lived with
the husband indeed and arrived at the conclusion that the
wife cannot be held to have the necessary intention to put an
end to the matrimonial obligation and, therefore, could not be
found guilty of deserting the husband. The High Court has
not discussed whether the alleged offer by the wife to live
with her husband after the death of her father-in-law was
indeed a sincere move or merely a hollow expression bereft
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of any sincerity. The High Court has also not discussed if
she indeed had the desire to come and live with her husband
what prevented her to request her parents to take necessary
steps in the matter. In the absence of any such evidence the
finding recorded by the High Court that the wife was not
guilty of deserting her husband cannot be sustained. The
failure on the part of the wife to substantiate a serious
allegation of infamous conduct of indecent advances said to
have been made to her by the father-in-law, taken together
with the absence and omission from her side to
demonstrate her readiness and willingness to discharge her
continuing objection to return to the matrimonial home,
establish sufficiently the animus deserendi, necessary to
prove legal desertion as required under section 13(1) (ib).
The conduct of the wife seems to be more indicative of a firm
determination not to return to the marital home and
discharge the obligations attendant thereto. Therefore, the
judgment of the High Court is unsustainable and has to be
set aside.
Accordingly, these appeals are allowed, the
judgment of the High Court is set aside and the judgment of
the trial Court is restored. There will, however, be no order
as to costs.
..J.
(D.P.Mohapatra)
...J.
(Doraiswamy Raju)
Dated the 6th November, 2001