
Rajnesh
vs Neha
CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 730
OF 2020 (Arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 9503 of 2018)
Decided On: 04.11.2020
Bench: Indu Malhotra and R. Subhash Reddy, JJ
Facts: The application for
interim maintenance under Section 125 Cr.P.C. was pending before the Courts for
seven years and there have been difficulties encountered in the enforcement of
orders passed by the Courts so as the wife was constrained to move successive
applications for enforcement from time to time. Addressing the plight of wife
and lacuna on clarity of law, the Supreme Court issued guidelines in this respect.
The Supreme Court framed
guidelines on the issue of maintenance of wife, covering overlapping
jurisdiction under different enactments for payment of maintenance, payment of
Interim Maintenance, the criteria for determining the quantum of maintenance,
the date from which maintenance is to be awarded, and enforcement of orders of
maintenance.
Guidelines
and Directions
(a)Issue of overlapping jurisdiction
To overcome the issue of
overlapping jurisdiction, and avoid conflicting orders being passed in
different proceedings, the Court issued the following directions in order to
ensure uniformity in the practice followed by the Family Courts/District
Courts/Magistrate Courts throughout the country:
(i) where successive claims
for maintenance are made by a party under different statutes, the Court would
consider an adjustment or setoff, of the amount awarded in the previous
proceeding/s, while determining whether any further amount is to be awarded in
the subsequent proceeding;
(ii) it is made mandatory
for the applicant to disclose the previous proceeding and the orders passed
therein, in the subsequent proceeding;
(iii) if the order passed in
the previous proceeding/s requires any modification or variation, it would be
required to be done in the same proceeding.
(b) Payment of Maintenance
Interim Maintenance
(a) the Affidavit of
Disclosure of Assets and Liabilities shall be filed by both parties in all
maintenance proceedings, including pending proceedings before the concerned
Family Court / District Court / Magistrates Court, as the case may be,
throughout the country.
(b) The applicant making the
claim for maintenance will be required to file a concise application
accompanied with the Affidavit of Disclosure of Assets;
(c) The respondent must
submit the reply alongwith the Affidavit of Disclosure within a maximum period
of four weeks.
- The Courts may not grant more than two
opportunities for submission of the Affidavit of Disclosure of Assets and
Liabilities to the respondent.
- If the respondent delays in filing the reply
with the Affidavit, and seeks more than two adjournments for this purpose,
the Court may consider exercising the power to strike off the defence of
the respondent, if the conduct is found to be wilful and contumacious in
delaying the proceedings.
- On the failure to file the Affidavit within the
prescribed time, the Family Court may proceed to decide the application
for maintenance on basis of the Affidavit filed by the applicant and the
pleadings on record;
(d) The above format may be
modified by the concerned Court, if the exigencies of a case require the same.
It would be left to the judicial discretion of the concerned Court, to issue
necessary directions in this regard.
(e) If apart from the
information contained in the Affidavits of Disclosure, any further information
is required, the concerned Court may pass appropriate orders in respect
thereof.
(f) If there is any dispute
with respect to the declaration made in the Affidavit of Disclosure, the
aggrieved party may seek permission of the Court to serve interrogatories, and
seek production of relevant documents from the opposite party under Order XI of
the CPC. On filing of the Affidavit, the Court may invoke the provisions of
Order X of the C.P.C or Section 165 of the Evidence Act 1872, if it considers
it necessary to do so.
The income of one party is
often not within the knowledge of the other spouse. Hence, the Court may invoke
Section 106 of the Evidence Act, 1872 if necessary, since the income, assets
and liabilities of the spouse are within the personal knowledge of the party
concerned.
(g) If during the course of
proceedings, there is a change in the financial status of any party, or there
is a change of any relevant circumstances, or if some new information comes to
light, the party may submit an amended / supplementary affidavit, which would
be considered by the court at the time of final determination.
(h) The pleadings made in
the applications for maintenance and replies filed should be responsible
pleadings; if false statements and misrepresentations are made, the Court may
consider initiation of proceeding u/S. 340 Cr.P.C., and for contempt of Court.
(i) In case the parties
belong to the Economically Weaker Sections (“EWS”), or are living Below the
Poverty Line (“BPL”), or are casual labourers, the requirement of filing the
Affidavit would be dispensed with.
(j) The concerned Family
Court / District Court / Magistrate’s Court must make an endeavour to decide
the I.A. for Interim Maintenance by a reasoned 37 order, within a period of
four to six months at the latest, after the Affidavits of Disclosure have been
filed before the court.
(k) A professional Marriage
Counsellor must be made available in every Family Court
Permanent alimony
(i)Parties may lead oral and
documentary evidence with respect to income, expenditure, standard of living,
etc. before the concerned Court, for fixing the permanent alimony payable to
the spouse.
(ii) In contemporary
society, where several marriages do not last for a reasonable length of time,
it may be inequitable to direct the contesting spouse to pay permanent alimony
to the applicant for the rest of her life. The duration of the marriage would
be a relevant factor to be taken into consideration for determining the
permanent alimony to be paid.
(iii) Provision for grant of
reasonable expenses for the marriage of children must be made at the time of
determining permanent alimony, where the custody is with the wife. The expenses
would be determined by taking into account the financial position of the
husband and the customs of the family.
(iv) If there are any trust
funds / investments created by any spouse / grandparents in favour of the
children, this would also be taken into consideration while deciding the final
child support.
(c) Criteria for determining the quantum of
maintenance
For determining the quantum
of maintenance payable to an applicant, the factors which would weigh with the
Court inter alia are the status of the parties; reasonable needs of the wife
and dependant children; whether the applicant is educated and professionally
qualified; whether the applicant has any independent source of income; whether
the income is sufficient to enable her to maintain the same standard of living
as she was accustomed to in her matrimonial home; whether the applicant was
employed prior to her marriage; whether she was working during the subsistence
of the marriage; whether the wife was required to sacrifice her employment
opportunities for nurturing the family, child rearing, and looking after adult
members of the family; reasonable costs of litigation for a non-working wife.
The financial capacity of
the husband, his actual income, reasonable expenses for his own maintenance,
and dependant family members whom he is obliged to maintain under the law,
liabilities if any, would be required to be taken into consideration, to arrive
at the appropriate quantum of maintenance to be paid. The Court must have due
regard to the standard of living of the husband, as well as the spiralling
inflation rates and high costs of living.
Serious disability or ill
health of a spouse, child / children from the marriage / dependant relative who
require constant care and recurrent expenditure, would also be a relevant
consideration while quantifying maintenance
The aforesaid factors are
however not exhaustive, and the concerned Court may exercise its discretion to
consider any other factor/s which may be necessary or of relevance in the facts
and circumstances of a case.
(d) Date from which maintenance is to be awarded
Maintenance in all cases
will be awarded from the date of filing the application for maintenance before
the concerned Court. The right to claim maintenance must date back to the date
of filing the application, since the period during which the maintenance
proceedings remained pending is not within the control of the applicant.
(e) Enforcement/Execution of orders of maintenance
For enforcement / execution
of orders of maintenance, it is directed that an order or decree of maintenance
may be enforced under Section 28A of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1956; Section
20(6) of the D.V. Act; and Section 128 of Cr.P.C., as may be applicable. The
order of maintenance may be enforced as a money decree of a civil court as per
the provisions of the CPC, more particularly Sections 51, 55, 58, 60 r.w. Order
XXI.