Punjab-Haryana High Court
Nachhattar Singh vs Harjinder Kaur on 17 February, 1995
Equivalent citations: II(1995)DMC24
Author: V.S. Aggarwal
Bench: V.S. Aggarwal
JUDGMENT V.S. Aggarwal, J.
1. Sub-section (2) of Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 reads as under :
"(2) Such allowance shall be payable from the date of the order, or, if so, ordered from the date of the application for maintenance."
2. The above provision of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, in its stark brevity leaves it to the Court to decide as to whether the maintenance allowance is to be paid from the date of the order or from the date of application for maintenance. This is the short question in controversy in the present revision petition.
3. To appreciate the answer, facts of it are to be delineated. The application under Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was filed by Harjinder Kaur and Manpreet Kaur (respondent Nos. 1 and 2 in the present petition) against Nachhattar Singh (petitioner). The learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate, Khanna, allowed the application and directed the petitioner to pay Rs. 400/- per month as maintenance to respondent No. 1 and Rs. 200/- per month to respondent No. 2 from the date of the order namely 21st January, 1992. Respondents preferred a revision petition in the Court of Sessions Judge at Ludhiana. The learned Additional Sessions Judge, Ludhiana, modified the order of the trial Court and directed that the maintenance at the rate awarded by the trial Court, shall be payable from the date of application i.e. 16.12.1987. Adjustment of the maintenance allowance already received was granted.
4. The petitioner challenges the order passed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Ludhiana with the sole claim that maintenance should have been allowed only from the date of the order passed by the trial Court.
5. This question has been drawn to the attention of this Court more often than not. Reference to some of the precedents in this regard would be advantageous. In the case of Bhupinder Singh v. Inderjit Kaur reported as 1989(1) R.C.R. page 616=II (1989) DMC 365, it was alleged that the normal rule Was that the maintenance should be granted from the date of the order and not front the date of application. The said argument was repelled from the following specific observation :
"A destitute wife or child needing succour is entitled to get it from the date she or it approaches the Court unless there are circumstances which do not justify such a course. No such circumstance has been pointed out here. The wife has been found to be entitled to maintenance on the neglect or refusal of the husband. She complained of that fact when she made the application. Thus she is entitled to maintenance from the date of the application."
6. This question as to whether it is obligatory for the Court to give special reasons for granting the maintenance from the date of application was referred to the Division Bench and the Division Bench answered the question firstly by holding that it is not obligatory for the Court to give special reasons. In the case of Gurpartap Singh v. Smt. Satwant Kaur reported as 1991 (1) R.C.R. page 40, the findings were recorded in paragraph 4 and the same are reproduced as under :
"It only provides outer limits so as to conclude that the Magistrate cannot fix future date of example two months subsequent to the passing of the order for payment of maintenance allowance nor earlier to the date of application, i.e. with retrospective effect. It is, therefore, not obligatory for the Court to give special reasons for granting maintenance/interim maintenance under Section 125 of the Code, from the date of the application which is purely within its discretion."
Thereafter the Court, however, felt that in any case in view of Section 354 Cr.P.C. the Court is required to support its decision for determination with reasons. The relevant extract is reproduced as under :
"However, we would like to mention here that by force of rule of jurisprudence every order had to be reasoned. Section 354 of Code deals with contents of judgments made in Clause (b) of Sub-section (1) thereof it is clearly mentioned that a judgment shall contain the "point or points for determination, the decision thereof and the reasons for the decision. To that extent, the Court is required to support its decision on every point for determination with reasons and may give reasons in each of the two eventualities. Otherwise, no special reasons are called for, for granting maintenance/interim maintenance under Section 125 of the Code from the date of the application."
7. Similarly in the case of Arun Kumar Sharma v. Smt. Rama Sharma and Anr., reported as 1991 (1) R.C.R. page 151=I (1991) DMC 486, this question arose for determination and it was held that the maintenance should have been granted in the facts of this case from the date of order and not from the date of application. However, subsequently in the case of Bhupinder Singh Walia v. Varinder Kaur reported as 1991(2) page 331, the wife has taken suitable time in producing her evidence and it was held that the delay in disposal of the case cannot be attributed to the husband alone and again the order was passed for maintenance from the date of order of the learned trial Magistrate.
8. It is to be remembered that the jurisdiction is vested in the trial Court to award the maintenance from the date of the order or from the date of the application. It has to be exercised in a reasonable manner keeping in view the facts and circumstances of the case. It is judicial discretion which is to go not by humour, but in the light of the material before the Court. Special reasons need not to be recorded but reasons for arriving at the conclusion have to be given.
9. The petition was filed on 16th December, 1987 and decided by the learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate on 21st January, 1992. Interim maintenance has been awarded during the pendency of the petition. The learned Additional Sessions Judge rightly recorded that withholding of regular maintenance from the date of the application goes a long way in militating against the order of the interim maintenance. In fact the provision has been enacted to help the destitute wife or children. It is to prevent vagrancy by compelling a person to support his wife and child by providing cheap and speedy remedy. Withholding of the maintenance during the pendency of the petition under Section 125 Cr.P.C. in the facts of the present case cannot hold the respondent liable deliberately. There would be gross injustice to the respondent. I find no reasons to set aside the reasonings of the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Ludhiana.
10. In the peculiar facts of the present case, there was full justification for modifying the order of the trial Court and allowing the maintenance from the date of the application.
11. Consequently the revision petition fails and is dismissed.