S 13 Hindu Marriage Act Flashcards
Case Title: XXX v YYY
Amending act of 1976 on S 13 HMA
- Referring to the Amending Act of 1976 of the HMA which introduced clauses (ia) and (ib) to Section 13 and Section 13A of the Act, that added various grounds for divorce.
- the Court observed that the Statement of Objects and Reasons of the Amendment Act makes it clear that the intention of the legislature was to liberalize the grant of divorce.
- On the question of burden of proof in cases of divorce, the Apex Court said that it lies on the petitioner. “However, the degree of probability is not one beyond reasonable doubt, but of preponderance.” The Court clarified.
- Section 23 confers on the court the power to pass a decree if it is “satisfied” on matters mentioned in clauses (a) to (e) of the section.
- Considering that proceedings under the Act are essentially of a civil nature, the word “satisfied” must mean “satisfied on a preponderance of probabilities” and not “satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt”.
Shri Rakesh Raman vs Smt. Kavita
Citation. : 2023
- In a notable judgment, the Supreme Court has held that irretrievable breakdown of marriage can be read as the ground of “cruelty” under Section 13 (1)(ia) of the Hindu Marriage Act for the dissolution of marriage.
- A bench comprising Justices Sudhanshu Dhulia and JB Pardiwala made this notable observation while dealing with a case in which a couple had been living separately for 25 years. The couple had lived together as husband and wife for barely four years after which they fell apart.
- The Supreme Court, while considering the husband’s appeal, noted that the relationship between the parties have become acrimonious over the years. The Court also noted that no child is born in the wedlock.
- The bench further noted that irretrievable breakdown of marriage is not yet a ground for dissolution of marriage, though a recommendation to that effect was made by the Supreme Court in Naveen Kohli v. Neelu Kohli (2006)
- The Law Commission of India, in its 71st and 217th reports, recommended that a marriage, which has de facto broken down, needs to be de jure recognised as such by the law.
- Dealing with the present appeal, the bench said, Irretrievable breakdown of a marriage may not be a ground for dissolution of marriage, under the Hindu Marriage Act, but cruelty is.
- It opined that “continuation of this marriage would mean continuation of cruelty, which each now inflicts on the other”.
- In our considered opinion, a marital relationship which has only become more bitter and acrimonious over the years, does nothing but inflicts cruelty on both the sides. 9. To keep the façade of this broken marriage alive would be doing injustice to both the parties
- It is therefore a ground for dissolution of marriage under Section 13 (1) (ia) of the Act”, the bench observed.
- The long separation and absence of cohabitation and the complete breakdown of all meaningful bonds and the existing bitterness between the two, has to be read as cruelty under Section 13(1) (ia) of the 1955 Act.
- IBOM can be read as ground for ‘cruelty under S. 13(1)(a) of HMA.
- IBOM not yet but rec. in Naveen Kohli v Neelu Kohli -
- 217 Law comm. report.
- dead marriage kept alive constitutes as cruelty to both parties.
5.
Case Title : Shilpa Sailesh vs Varun Sreenivasan. 2023 - held
- In a significant judgment, the Supreme Court has held that it can dissolve marriages on the ground of ‘irretrievable breakdown of marriage’, by invoking the powers under Article 142 of the Constitution, as per which the Supreme Court can issue extraordinary directions to do “complete justice”.
- It may be noted that “irretrievable breakdown of marriage” is not a statutorily recognised ground for divorce. Therefore, the issue was referred to a Constitution Bench to decide whether the powers under Article 142 can be invoked to dissolve marriage on a ground which is not statutorily accepted.
- “Fault theory” (by which marriages are dissolved only if a statutorily recognized fault is found on the part of one of the spouses) can be diluted by this Court to do ‘complete justice’ in a particular case
- The courts must not encourage matrimonial litigation, and prolongation of such litigation is detrimental to both the parties who lose their young age in chasing multiple litigations. Thus, adopting a hyper-technical view can be counter-productive.
- The judgment clearly stated that grant of divorce on the ground of irretrievable breakdown of marriage by this Court is not a matter of right, but a discretion which is to be exercised with great care and caution.
- This Court should be fully convinced and satisfied that the marriage is totally unworkable, emotionally dead and beyond salvation and, therefore, dissolution of marriage is the right solution and the only way forward.
Case Title : Shilpa Sailesh vs Varun Sreenivasan
Citation : 2023. Factors to be considered for irretrievable breakdown of marriage
Factors to be considered to hold that a marriage has irretrievably broken down?
The judgment authored by Justice Sanjiv Khanna refrained from laying down concrete factors which should be considered to decide if a marriage has been irretrievably broken down.
However, the judgment specified certain broad factors, which are illustrative. The Court should consider factors such as :
1. the period of time the parties had cohabited after marriage;
2. when the parties had last cohabited;
3. the nature of allegation made by the parties against each other and their family members
4. the orders passed in the legal proceedings from time to time, cumulative impact on the personal relationship;
5. whether, and how many attempts were made to settle the disputes by intervention of the court or through mediation, and when the last attempt was made, etc.
6. The period of separation should be sufficiently long, and anything above six years or more will be a relevant factor.
7. Question of custody and welfare of minor children, provision for fair and adequate alimony for the wife, and economic rights of the children and other pending matters, if any, are relevant considerations”, the Court stated
Amardeep Singh v Harveen Kaur
The Constitution Bench noted that in Amardeep Singh, certain factors were mentioned which will warrant the waiving of the waiting period :
1. The statutory period of six months specified in Section 13B(2), in addition to the statutory period of one year under Section 13B(1) of separation of parties is already over before the first motion itself;
2. All efforts for mediation/conciliation including efforts in terms of Order XXXIIA Rule 3 CPC/Section 23(2) of the Act/Section 9 of the Family Courts Act to reunite the parties have failed and there is no likelihood of success in that direction by any further effort;
3. The parties have genuinely settled their differences including alimony, custody of child or any other pending issues between the parties;
4. The waiting period will only prolong their agony
Shilpa Sailesh vs Varun Sreenivasan
Citation : 2023 - on Section 13B of HMA
- A Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court has held that it can invoke the special powers under Article 142 of the Constitution of India to waive the waiting period of 6 to 8 months prescribed for seeking divorce through mutual consent as per Section 13-B of the Hindu Marriage Act 1955.
- Supreme Court can exercise power under Article 142(1) of the Constitution, in view of the settlement between the parties, and grant a decree of divorce by mutual consent dispensing with the period and the procedure prescribed under Section 13-B of the Hindu Marriage Act
- As per Section 13-B of the Hindu Marriage Act, after filing the first motion seeking divorce through mutual consent, the parties have to wait for a minimum of six months and a maximum of 18 months before moving the second motion.
- This ‘cooling off period’ is mandated by the legislature so as enable the parties to have an opportunity for introspection and re-think over the decision. However, this mandate for waiting period was found to be causing hardships in certain cases.
- In 2017, a two-judge a two-judge bench of the Court in Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur held that the six months waiting period as prescribed under Section 13B(2) of the HMA is not mandatory and that the same can be waived by the Family Court in exceptional circumstances.
Delhi HC on housework being a ground of cruelty?
- The Delhi High Court has observed that a husband expecting his wife to do household chores cannot be termed as cruelty.
- Observing that when the parties enter into wedlock, their intent is to share the responsibilities of future life,
- the bench said: In a catena of decisions, it has already been held that if a married woman is asked to do household work, the same cannot be equated to the work of a maid servant and shall be counted as her love and affection for her family.”
- It added: “family. In certain strata, the husband takes over the financial obligations and wife accepts house hold responsibility. Such is the present case.
vvv
Wife Turning Children Against Father Is Parental Alienation, Amounts To Grave Mental Cruelty: Delhi High Court
- The Delhi High Court has observed that the act of a wife in trying to turn the children against the father is a clear case of “parental alienation”, which amounts to “grave mental cruelty.”
- Such vindictiveness aimed to erode a father-daughter relationship is not only an act of extreme cruelty to the father but also gross inhumanity to the child
3.
Wife’s Conduct Of Attempting Suicide, Trying To Put Blame On Husband And His Family Amounts To Cruelty: Delhi High Court Upholds Divorce
- The bench said that the husband, for about two years, was subjected to civil and criminal litigation by the wife’s conduct who had filed not only civil, but also criminal cases against him on unsubstantiated allegations
- Such conduct of the appellant in attempting suicide and then trying to put the blame on the husband and his family members is an act of extreme cruelty as the family remanded under constant threat of being implicated in false cases
V. Bhagat v. D. Bhagat,
- the Apex Court said, “Mental cruelty in Section 13(1)(i-a).can broadly be defined as that conduct which inflicts upon the other party such mental pain and suffering as would make it not possible for that party to live with the other.
- If it is physical, it is a question of fact and degree. If it is mental, the enquiry must begin as to the nature of the cruel treatment and then as to the impact of such treatment on the mind of the spouse.”
SC on what is cruelty
- The word ‘cruelty’ under Section 13(1)(ia) of the Act of 1955 has got no fixed meaning, and therefore, gives a very wide discretion to the Court to apply it liberally and contextually.
- What is cruelty in one case may not be the same for another.
- The cruelty alleged may largely depend upon the type of life the parties are accustomed to or their economic and social conditions. It may also depend upon their culture and human values to which they attach importance.”
- The concept of cruelty differs from person to person depending upon his upbringing, level of sensitivity, educational, family and cultural background, financial position, social status, customs, traditions, religious beliefs, human values and their value system. (Samar Ghosh v Jaya Ghosh)
- There can never be any straitjacket formula or fixed parameters for determining mental cruelty in matrimonial matters. The prudent and appropriate way to adjudicate the case would be to evaluate it on its peculiar facts and circumstances. (Samar Ghosh v Jaya Ghosh)
S 13(1) HMA Explained?
- Section 13(1) of the Act of 1955 sets contours and rigours for grant of divorce at the instance of both the parties.
Reynolds Rajamani. V UOI
- Justice O.Chinnappa Reddy, in his concurring opinion in Reynold Rajamani and Another v. Union of India and Another, (1982), took note of the position of women in a marital relationship and the consequent social and economic inequalities faced by the female spouse in view of divorce.
- The resultant stigmatization hinders societal reintegration, making a woman divorcee socially and economically dependent.
- Hence, Courts must adopt a holistic approach and endeavor to secure some measure of socio-economic independence for the woman.
Dr. N.G. Dastane v. Mrs. S. Dastane, (1975)
To marry or not to marry and if so whom, may well be a private affair but the freedom to break a matrimonial tie is not. The society has a stake in the institution of marriage and therefore the erring spouse is treated not as a mere defaulter but as an offender.
S 23(2) explained
- Section 23(2)3 of the Act of 1955 postulates that the court before granting any relief under the Act shall, in the first instance, where it is possible in the nature and circumstances of the case, make every endeavour to bring about reconciliation between the parties. The proviso carves out certain exceptions.
- The object and purpose of these provisions is to check any party taking advantage of social and economic inequalities between the sexes given the fact that on many occasions a divorce may solve one problem, but create another when the woman is separated both socially and economically