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1 - 10 of 12 (0.28 seconds)Section 498A in The Indian Penal Code, 1860 [Entire Act]
The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
Section 3 in The Dowry Prohibition Act, 1961 [Entire Act]
Section 9 in The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 [Entire Act]
Section 13 in The Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 [Entire Act]
Section 13 in The Family Courts Act, 1984 [Entire Act]
Naveen Kohli vs Neelu Kohli on 21 March, 2006
In Naveen Kohli v. Neelu Kohli1, a three-Judge Bench of
the Hon'ble Apex Court observed as follows:
Section 19 in The Family Courts Act, 1984 [Entire Act]
Samar Ghosh vs Jaya Ghosh on 26 March, 2007
15. The Hon'ble Apex Court, in a series of judgments, has
exercised its inherent powers under Article 142 of the Constitution
of India for dissolution of a marriage where the Court finds that
the marriage is totally unworkable, emotionally dead, beyond
salvage and has broken down irretrievably, even if the facts of the
case do not provide a ground in law on which, the divorce could be
granted (see Samar Ghosh Vs. Jaya Ghosh2; Sukhendu Das
Vs. Rita Mukherjee3).