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1 - 9 of 9 (0.10 seconds)The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973
Chand Begum vs Hyderabaig on 8 July, 1970
It only now remains for us to consider the further
defence of the respondent that in view of his offer to take
back the appellant and maintain her he stand absolved of his
liability to pay maintenance. The offer to take back the
appellant had been made only before the Revisional Court and
that too after the second marriage had taken place. The
offer was not to the effect that he would set up a separate
residence for the appellant so as to enable her to live in
peace and with dignity. As has been pointed out in Chand
Begum v. Hyderbaig (supra) a husband, who marries again
cannot compel the first wife to share the conjugal home with
the co-wife and as such unless he offers to set up a sepa-
rate residence for the first wife, any offer to take her
back cannot be considered to be a bona fide offer. It is,
therefore, obvious that the offer was only a make-believe
one and not a genuine and sincere offer. On the basis of
such an insincere offer the appellant's rights cannot be
negated or defeated. It is highly unfortunate that the
Sessions Judge and the High Court should have declined to
grant maintenance to the appellant in spite of the appel-
lant's case falling squarely under the Explanation.
As the record contains evidence regarding the earnings
of the respondent we are in a position to determine the
quantum of maintenance for the appellant in this appeal
itself instead of remitting the matter to the Trial Court or
the Revisional Court. The respondent has stated in his
counter-affidavit in the special leave petition that his
income is only Rs.1,000 per month. The appellant has stated
in her
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petition for maintenance that the respondent was getting Rs.
1,500 per month by way of salary and Rs.500 per month by way
of income from properties. In the four years that have gone
by since the maintenance action was instituted the respond-
ent's income must have certainly increased. Therefore,
taking all factors into consideration we fix the quantum of
maintenance for the appellant at Rs.300 per month. This
amount will be paid with effect from 18.10.84 when the
respondent married a second wife. The arrears of maintenance
will be paid by the respondent in five equal instalments,
the first of such instalments to be paid during the first
week of June 1987. The subsequent instalments will be paid
at intervals of three months thereafter i.e. during the
first week of September 1987, first week of December 1987,
first week of March 1988 and first week of June 1988. Future
maintenance must be paid before the cloth of every succeed-
ing month. We also enhance the maintenance to the minor girl
(second appellant) to Rs.200 per month from Rs. 100 per
month with effect from 1.1.1987. Default in payment of
future maintenance or any instalments of the arrears will
entitle the appellant to levy execution against the respond-
ent under Section 125(3) of the Code and realise the amount.
The appeal will stand allowed accordingly.
Section 482 in The Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 [Entire Act]
Article 136 in Constitution of India [Constitution]
Ramji Malviya vs Smt. Munni Devi Malviya on 20 March, 1959
A third line of view was taken in Ramji Malviya v. Munni
Devi, AIR 1959 All. 767 where it was held that ordinarily
remarriage will be a sufficient ground for refusing to live
with the husband but if the remarriage had been occasioned
by the wife's unjust refusal to live with her husband she
cannot take advantage of her own wrong and claim mainte-
nance.
Mohd. Ahmed Khan vs Shah Bano Begum And Ors on 23 April, 1985
Having referred to the views taken by some of the High
Courts and this Court about the ambit of the Explanation, we
will now proceed to consider its terms and its operative
force. Though we stand benefited by the enlightenment de-
rived from the decisions referred to above, we are of opin-
ion that the Explanation calls for a more intrinsical exami-
nation than has been done hitherto. Sub-section (1) of
Section 125 inter alia provides that if a person having
sufficient means neglects or refuses to maintain his wife
who is unable to maintain herself, the Magistrate may, upon
proof of such neglect or refusal,
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order the person to make a monthly allowance for the mainte-
nance of his wife. The second proviso to sub-section (3)
lays down that if a person liable to pay maintenance offers
to maintain his wife on condition of her living with him,
and she refuses to live with him, the Magistrate may consid-
er the grounds of refusal, and may make an order for mainte-
nance notwithstanding the husband's offer, if he is satis-
fied that there is just ground for ordering maintenance.
Then comes the Explanation which says that if a husband has
contracted marriage with another woman or keeps a mistress,
it shall be considered to be just ground for the wife's
refusal to live with him. In the reported decisions where
the Explanation has been construed, as entitling a Muslim
wife to claim maintenance on the basis of the Explanation,
the courts have only taken into consideration the first limb
of the Explanation viz. "If a husband has contracted mar-
riage with another woman." Focussing attention on that part
of the Explanation, the courts have held that the Explana-
tion is of common application to all wives whose husbands
have contracted another marriage irrespective of the fact
the personal law governing the parties permits another
marriage during the subsistence of the earlier marriage. We
would like to point out that the Explanation contemplates
two kinds of matrimonial injury to a wife viz. by the hus-
band either marrying again or taking a mistress. The Expla-
nation places a second wife and a mistress on the some
footing and does not make any differentiation between them
on the basis of their status under matrimonial law. If we
ponder over the matter we can clearly visualise the reason
for a second wife and a mistress being treated alike. The
purpose of the Explanation is not to affect the rights of a
Muslim husband to take more than one wife or to denigrate in
any manner the legal and Social Status of a second wife. to
which she is entitled to as a legally married wife, as
compared to a mistress but to place on an equal footing the
matrimonial injury suffered by the first wife on account of
the husband marrying again or taking a mistress during the
subsistence of the marriage with her. From the point of view
of the neglected wife, for whose benefit the Explanation has
been provided, it will make no difference whether the woman
intruding into her matrimonial life and taking her place in
the matrimonial bed is another wife permitted under law to
be married and not a mistress. The legal status of the woman
to whom a husband has transferred his affections cannot
lessen her distress or her feelings of neglect. In fact from
one point of view the taking of another wife portends a more
permanent destruction of her matrimonial life than the
taking of a mistress by the husband. Be that as it may, can
it be said that a second wife would be more tolerant and
symapthetic than a mistress so as to persuade the wife to
rejoin her husband and lead life
782
with him and his second wife in one and the same house? It
will undoubtedly lead to a strange situation if it were to
be held that a wife will be entitled to refuse to live with
her husband if he has taken a mistress but she cannot refuse
likewise if he has married a second wife. The Explanation
has to be construed from the point of view of the injury to
the matrimonial rights of the wife and not with reference to
the husband's right to marry again. The Explanation has,
therefore, to be seen in its full perspective and not dis-
junctively. Otherwise it will lead to discriminatory treat-
ment between wives whose husbands have lawfully married
again and wives whose husbands have taken mistresses. Ap-
proaching the matter from this angle, we need not resort to
a comparison of Muslim wives with Hindu wives or Christian
wives but can restrict the comparison to Muslim wives them-
selves who stand affected under one or the other of the two
contingencies envisaged in the Explanation and notice the
discrimination. It is this aspect of the matter which we
feel has not been noticed hitherto.
Sm. Bela Rani Chatterjee vs Bhupal Chandra Chatterjee on 5 September, 1955
(7) Bala Rani v. Bhupal Chandra, AIR 1956 Cal 134
(8) Rupchand v. Charubala, AIR 1966 Ca183
(9) Ishar v. Soma Devi, AIR 1959 Pun} 295
(10) Dhan Kaur v. Niranjan Singh, AIR 1960 Punj 595.
Bayanna vs Devamma on 30 April, 1953
(1) Bayanna v. Devamma, [1953] Mad. W.N. Crl. 243 = AIR
1954 Mad. 226.
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