Man has to maintain wife
till nullity of marriage;
The man had challenged
a magisterial court's interim maintenance order on the grounds that his
estranged wife was already married before marrying him.
A married woman is
entitled to benefits and protection under the domestic violence law until her
husband gets a decree of nullity of their marriage, a Delhi court has said. The
sessions court made the law clear to a man, who had challenged a magisterial court’s
order directing him to pay an interim maintenance of Rs 5,000 to his estranged
wife on the grounds that the woman was already married before marrying him.
“I am of the view that
until and unless the man did not get decree of nullity of marriage with the
woman, as divorce petition under the Hindu Marriage Act has already been filed,
she is entitled for benefits and protection under Domestic Violence Act as the
Act is benevolent in favour of a woman,” Additional Sessions Judge Jagdish
Kumar said. The court dismissed the man’s appeal, saying there was no
illegality, infirmity or impropriety in the order of trial court and it was an
interim order of maintenance which could be modified at the time of final
disposal of main petition.
The man challenged the
trial court order, saying it had not considered the fact that his marriage with
the woman was null and void from the beginning as she was already married to
some other person. To this, the sessions court said even if this fact was
accepted for the sake of an argument, the marriage of the woman with the other
person “may be nullity ab-initio” under the provisions of the Hindu Marriage
Act as she asserted that he was her cousin brother.
“Then the marriage
between the appellant man and the woman may subsist. Though, it is not within
the jurisdiction of this court to give any opinion regarding the nullity or
subsisting of marriage between the man and the woman but I am giving the
observation only on the basis of averment in pleading, if same is admitted to
be correct and same are only for the sake of argument,” the judge said.
The woman, in her
petition seeking maintenance from her husband, had said that she got married to
him in March 2013 and alleged that the man and his parents started harassing
her just after few days of marriage. She also alleged that her husband and
in-laws started demanding dowry and she was thrown out of her matrimonial house
two months after marriage, i.e. in May 2013 after which she approached the
court.
The man, in his
appeal, also placed on record a marriage certificate of the woman with the
other person purportedly issued by the registrar of Hindu marriages in
Ghaziabad. The court, however, said mere production of a marriage certificate
issued under the Special Marriage Act in support of her claimed first marriage
was not sufficient.
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