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[Cites 5, Cited by 37]

Supreme Court of India

Bhupinder Singh vs Daljit Kaur on 13 November, 1978

Equivalent citations: 1979 AIR 442, 1979 SCR (2) 292, AIR 1979 SUPREME COURT 442, 1979 ALL. L. J. 209, (1979) 1 FAC 260, 1979 SCC (CRI) 923, 1979 CRILR(SC MAH GUJ) 377.2, 1979 UJ(SC) 658, 1979 CRILR(SC MAH GUJ) 463, (1979) MARRILJ 534, 1979 SC CRI R 127, (1979) 1 SCJ 526, (1979) 1 APLJ 31, 1979 RAJLR 241, 1979 MADLJ(CRI) 446, (1979) 2 SCR 208 (SC), (1979) 2 SCR 292 (SC), 1979 CRI APP R (SC) 52, (1980) 3 MAHLR 11, 1979 CRI APP R (SC) 55, 1979 SCC(CRI) 302, (1979) HINDULR 748, (1979) MADLW(CRI) 77, (1979) MATLR 168, 1979 (1) SCC 352, (1979) 3 MAHLR 245

Author: V.R. Krishnaiyer

Bench: V.R. Krishnaiyer, P.N. Shingal, A.P. Sen

           PETITIONER:
BHUPINDER SINGH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
DALJIT KAUR

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/11/1978

BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SHINGAL, P.N.
SEN, A.P. (J)

CITATION:
 1979 AIR  442		  1979 SCR  (2) 292
 1979 SCC  (3) 352


ACT:
     Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, Section 125 Scope of.



HEADNOTE:
     The respondent  obtained an  ex parte maintenance award
for a  sum of  Rs. 250/-  p.m. from  the Court	of competent
jurisdiction under  Sec. 125  Crl.P.C.	Subsequently,  as  a
result of a compromise between the parties and resumption
 of  cohabitation an  application was made by the respondent
praying that  her application  for maintenance	be dismissed
and the execution proceedings for recovery of maintenance be
withdrawn. Though the Trial Court did not proceed to recover
the arrears  of maintenance  it did not set aside the award.
As the respondent was betrayed, she proceeded to enforce the
order  for   maintenance.  The	 petitioner   resisted	 the
application on	the ground  that resumption of cohabitation,
after the original order for maintenance revoked the said
order. This  plea having  been rejected	 right	through	 the
petitioner came up by way of special leave.
      Dismissing the petition, the Court,
^
     HELD: the	Criminal Procedure  Code is  complete on the
topic and  any defence against an order passed under section
125 Crl.P.C.  must be  founded on  a provision	in the Code.
Section 125 b a provision to protect the weaker
 of the two parties, namely, the neglected wife. If an order
for maintenance	 has been  made against the deserter it will
operate until  vacated or altered in terms of the provisions
of the	Code itself, if the husband has a case under section
125(4)(S) or  section 127  of the  Code it ii open to him to
initiate appropriate  proceedings. But	until  the  original
order for  maintenance is  modified or cancelled by a higher
court or  is varied or vacated in terms of section 125(4) or
(S) or section 127, its validity survives. It is enforceable
and  no	 plea  that  there  has	 been  cohabitation  in	 the
interregnum or	that there has been a compromise between the
parties can hold good as a valid defence. [294G-H, 295A]
     A statutory  order can ordinarily be demolished only in
terms of  the statute. That being absent in the present case
the Magistrate	will execute  the order for maintenance [295
B] Fazal  Din v.  Mt. Fatima,  A.I.R  1932  Lahore  P.	115;
approved.
     Natesan Pillai  v. Jayammani, A.I.R. 1960 Madras, U. Po
Chein v.  Ma Sein  Mya, A.I.R.	1931 Rangoon,  89, Ampavalli
Veerabhadrudu v.  Ampavalli Gaviramma  1955 A.l.R. (Crl.) p.
244; over-ruled.



JUDGMENT:

CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Review Petition No. 95 of 1978.

K.R. Nagaraja, S.K. Metha and P.N. Puri for the petitioner.

293

The order of the Court was delivered by KRISHNA IYER, J.-A short narrative of the facts is necessary to explore and explode the submission that a substantial question of law arises, which merits grant of leave under art. 136 of the Constitution. The respondent is the wife of the petitioner. She moved the Magistrate, having jurisdiction over the subject-matter, for grant of maintenance under Sec. 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code. The Court awarded maintenance, in a sum of Rs. 250/- per mensem but the order was made ex-parte since the petitioner did not appear in court. The motion for setting aside the- ex parte order was dismissed whereupon a criminal revision was filed by the husband before the High Court. During the pendency of the said petition a compromise was entered into between the parties as a result of which the wife resumed cohabitation with the husband. This resumption of conjugal life was followed by an application by the wife (respondent) praying that her application for maintenance be dismissed and the execution proceedings for recovery of arrears of maintenance be withdrawn. Apparently, on this basis the trial court did not proceed to recover arrears of maintenance. But as the record now stands, the order for maintenance remains. That has not been set aside and must be treated as subsisting. The High Court apparently dismissed the revision petition on the score that the parties had compromised the dispute.

Later developments were not as smooth as expected. The wife was betrayed, because her allegation is that her husband is keeping a mistress making it impossible for her to live in the conjugal home. Naturally, the proceeded to enforce the order for maintenance. This was resisted by the petitioner (husband) on the ground that resumption of cohabitation, after the original order for maintenance, revoked the said order. This plea having been rejected right through, the petitioner has come up to this Court seeking leave to appeal. The short question of law pressed before us is that the order for maintenance under section 125 of the Code is superseded by the subsequent living of the wife with the husband and is unavailable for enforcement.

Counsel has relied on a ruling of the Madras High Court in A.I.R. 1960 Madras 515. The holding in that case is that resumption of cohabitation puts an end to the order of maintenance. The learned Judge observed:

"on the authority of the above decisions I must hold in this case that there was a reunion for some time and that put ran end to the order under S. 488 Cr. P. C. If the wife separated again from the husband, then she must file another peti-
294
tion, a fresh cause of action, and obtain an order if she satisfied the Court that there is sufficient reason to leave her husband and that he neglected to maintain her."

To the same effect is the decision of the Andhra High Court reported in 1955 Andhra Law Times Reports (Criminal) Page 244. The head note there leads "If a wife who has obtained an order of maintenance under Sec. 488 rejoins her husband and lives with him, the order is revoked and cannot be enforced subsequently, if they fall out again. If there are fresh grounds" such as would entitle her to obtain maintenance under Section 488, it is open to her to invoke the jurisdiction of court once again for the same relief."

An earlier Rangoon case (A.I.R. 1931 Rangoon 89) as lends support to this proposition.

A contrary position has found favour with the Lahore High Court reported in A.I.R. 1932 Lahore p. 115. The facts of that case have close, similarity to the present one and the head-note brings out the ratio with sufficient clarity. It reads:

Shadi Lal, C. J. observed:
Now, in the present case the compromise, as pointed out above, was made out of Court and no order under S. 488, Criminal P. C. was made in pursuance of that compromise, Indeed, the order of the Magistrate allowing maintenance at the rate of Rs. 10 per mensem was neither rescinded nor modified, and no ground has been shown why that order should not be enforced. If the husband places his reliance upon the terms of the compromise, he may have recourse to such remedy in a civil Court as may be open to him. The criminal Court can not however take cognizance of the compromise and refuse to enforce the order made by it."
This reasoning of the learned Chief Justice appeals to us.
We are concerned with a Code which is complete on the topic and any defence against an order passed under section 125 Cr1. P. C. must be founded on a provision in the Code.

Section 125 is a provision to protect the weaker of the two parties, namely, the neglected wife. If an order for maintenance has been made against the deserter it will operate until vacated or altered in terms of the provisions of the Code itself. If the husband has a case under section 125 (4) (5) or section 127 of the Code it is open to him to initiate appropriate proceedings.

295

But until the original order for maintenance is modified or cancelled by a higher court or is varied or vacated in terms of section 125(4) or (5) ar section 127, its validity survives. It is enforceable and no plea that there has been cohabitation in the interregnum or that there has been a compromise between the parties can hold good as a valid defence. In this view, we hold that the decisions cited before us in favour of the proposition contended for by the petitioner are not good law and that the view taken by Sir Shadi Lal Chief Justice is sound.

A statutory order can ordinarily be demolished only in terms of the statute. That being absent in the present case the Magistrate will execute the order for maintenance. Our order does not and shall not be deemed to prejudice the petitioner in any proceedings under the law which he may start to vacate or vary the order for maintenance.

S.R.					 Petition dismissed.
296