Sunday, July 12, 2015

Mental cruelty by wife is ground for divorce : Supreme Court

This Supreme Court in its Judgment dated 4th July two thousand and twelve in Sarla Vishwanath Agrawal Agrawal vs  Civil Appeal No. 4905 of 2 012 decided that by Mental Cruelty by wife is ground for divorce.

The facts are that the husband filed an application for divorce. The same was dismissed by trial judge. The appeal by 1st appellate court was also rejected. Husband preferred Second appeal to the High Court. High court held that no substantial question of law was involved and dismissed Appeal. Husband approached Supreme Court by way of SLP.

Agreeing with the husband, Supreme Court granted leave and allowed his appeal. Relying on various judgments, the Supreme Court held that the expression 'cruelty' had an inseparable nexus with human conduct or human behavior. It was always dependent upon social strata or milieu to which parties belonged, their ways of life, relationship, temperaments and emotions that had been conditioned by their social status. Court observed that Section 13 (1) (ia) of Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 did not define 'cruelty' and same could not be defined. 'Cruelty' might be mental or physical, intentional or unintentional. Mental cruelty was a state of mind and feeling with one of spouses due to behaviour or behavioural pattern by other. Mental cruelty could not be established by direct evidence and it was necessarily a matter of inference to be drawn from facts and circumstances of case. A feeling of anguish, disappointment, and frustration in one spouse caused by conduct of other could only be appreciated on assessing attending facts and circumstances in which two partners of matrimonial life had been living. Facts and circumstances were to be assessed emerging from evidence on record and thereafter, a fair inference had to be drawn whether Petitioner in divorce Petition had been subjected to mental cruelty due to conduct of other. As to what constituted mental cruelty for purposes of Section 13 (1) (ia) of Act, would not depend upon numerical count of such incident or only on continuous course of such conduct but one had to really go by intensity, gravity and stigmatic impact of it when meted out even once and deleterious effect of it on mental attitude necessary for maintaining a conducive matrimonial home. In a matrimonial dispute, it would be inappropriate to expect outsiders to come and depose - Family members and sometimes relatives, friends and neighbours were most natural witnesses. Veracity of testimony was to be tested on objective parameters and not to be thrown overboard on ground that witnesses were related to either of spouse. Conduct and circumstances made it graphically clear that, Respondent-wife had really humiliated Appellant and caused mental cruelty. Her conduct exposited that it had resulted in causing agony and anguish in mind of Appellant-husband. She had made wild allegations about his character. She had made an effort to prosecute him in criminal litigations which she had failed to prove. Feeling of deep anguish, disappointment, agony and frustration of Appellant-husband was obvious. Cumulative effect of evidence brought on record established a sustained attitude of causing humiliation and calculated torture on part of Respondent-wife to make life of Appellant-husband miserable. Appellant-husband felt humiliated both in private and public life. With this mental pain, agony and suffering, Appellant-husband could not be asked to put up with conduct of Respondent-wife and to continue to live with her. Therefore, he was entitled to a decree for divorce.

The Court also held that Permanent alimony was to be granted taking into consideration social status, conduct of parties, way of living of spouse and such other ancillary aspects and granted permanent alimony of Rs.50 lakh to the wife.

Click here for the Full text of the judgment:




Supreme Court of India awards Rs.60 lakh as damages to a child who suffered injuries due to negligence of electricity company



In a Judgment passed on 17th December 2014 in the matter of Raman vs Uttar Haryana Bijli Vitran Nigam Ltd.  Civil Appeal No. 11466/2014, the Supreme Court of India awarded compensation of Rs.60 lakh to a child who suffered injuries due to negligence of electricity authority. 

Raman, a 4 year boy in 2011 was electrocuted on 3.11.2011 by coming in direct contact with the naked electric wire lying open on the roof of his House in Panipat. The injuries were such that doctors were left with no other option but to carry out triple amputation by removing both his arms upto arm pit and left leg upto knee as the grievous injuries suffered were not curable. It was 100% permanent disability.

Prior to this tragic incident, the boy’s father along with other neighbours had given representations to the electricity company to remove the iron angle from the vicinity of the residential area, as it endangers the life of around 40 to 60 families which is densely populated, but no action was taken.
The boy’s father filed a writ petition in Punjab & Haryana High Court which directed electricity company to compensate the child. But on appeal by electricity company, the Division Bench reduced the compensation amount. 

On filing appeal by the child through father, the Supreme Court restored the compensation of Rs.60 lakh ordered by the single Judge and also directed in case the child does not survive till 21 years of age, the amount will go to his legal heirs. The Supreme Court, taking a compassionate view, observed : He is virtually dead wood and further, he has to undergo continuous pain and suffering at the time of attending nature's call, sitting, standing, walking and sleeping. He has to face difficulties on all walks of life, which is worse than death. His childhood is lost, the marital status and happiness is lost, which cannot be compensated in terms of money. He has to undergo a great ordeal and agony throughout his life”.

This is a landmark judgment on the issue of damages to be awarded in case of personal injury due to negligence.

Click below for Full Text of Judgment



Supreme Court of India dismisses PIL to rename 'India' to 'Bharat'

The Supreme Court (Bench of Chief Justice HL Dattu and Justice AK Sikri) on 10th November 2014 declined to entertain a plea seeking to rename India as Bharat and asked the petitioner to first make an appropriate representation before an authority in support of his plea. The court said that the petitioner can approach it only after making a representation and getting response to it. The case was  W.P.(C) NO. 924/2014 and titled as NIRANJAN BHATWAL vs UNION OF INDIA AND others.

Click below for the Order dated 10.11.2014.