Domestic Violence: India

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Contents

Grounds for "domestic violence"

Not paying for child's birth is not DV

Aamir Khan2, Not paying for child's birth is not domestic violence', August 15, 2017: The Times of India


Expenses of child's delivery whether borne by the husband or by the woman's parents is of no consequence, held a court while rejecting a woman's claims of domestic violence against her estranged husband and in-laws. The court held that the same did not amount to domestic violence.

Similarly, metropolitan magistrate Bhavna Kalia also held that her allegations were vague. The woman had filed a plea under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act seeking various relief including compensation and an order on residence.

The court noted that the wo man's testimony was full of contradictions which prima facie showed that the husband and his family cared for the couple's child. “It appears that the respondent was bearing all the household expenses and school expenses of the child but no extra expenses of the aggrieved. This cannot amount to domestic violence,“ the court held.

However, she alleged, an additional demand of Rs 2-3 lakh was made by the in-laws. The woman also asserted that in 2001, when she was pregnant, her in-laws sent her to her parental home for the delivery of the child. She claimed all the expenses of her hospitalisa tion were borne by her parents.

She said that in January 2002, she was “compelled“ to leave her matrimonial home with her child. The woman also said that on her “alcoholic“ husband's demand her parents had to arrange for a separate accommodation. In April 2007, the husband deserted the woman and their child. The husband and his family , through their counsel Prabhjit Jauhar, however refuted all the allegations made by the woman. The counsel said that the man and the woman had eloped, and therefore, there was no question of a dowry demand. On the contrary, it was the woman's father and brother who had a problem with the marriage and had also threatened the couple.

Households, shared

From the archives of The Times of India 2007, 2009

‘Right to share house can be enforced against husband’

New Delhi: Women fighting legal battles to re-enter the ‘‘shared household’’ can enforce their right to cohabit against estranged spouses and not against in-laws under the Domestic Violence Act, a court has said.

‘‘If the interpretation (that the Act provides right to share house with husband’s relatives) is accepted, all houses of the husband’s relatives will be shared households and the wife can well insist in living in them merely because she had stayed there with her husband for some time in the past. Such a view would lead to chaos and would be absurd,’’ additional sessions judge S K Sarvaria said.

The court, which rejected the plea of an estranged wife seeking re-entry into a house of her mother-in-law, cited a Supreme Court judgment on the issue. ‘‘Undoubtedly, when the husband has been living in a rented property somewhere else, wife cannot say that the property owned... by her mother-inlaw (even prior to her marriage) is the shared household and she should be allowed to re-enter such property,’’ it said.

‘‘The wife is only entitled to claim a right to residence in a shared household, and a ‘shared household’ would only mean the house belonging to or taken on rent by the husband, or the house belonging to the joint family of which the husband is a member,’’ it said.

It was hearing the appeal filed by a Delhi-based woman, who had challenged the order of a lower court by which she was restrained from entering the house owned by her mother-in-law. PTI

Live in partners

`Live-in partner can't claim aid under DV Act'

Mumbai The Times of India Mar 06 2015


Rajesh Khanna's wife Dimple Kapadia and her family sought quashing of proceedings against them initiated by initiated by the late actor's alleged live-in partner, contending that a woman in such relationship cannot claim relief under the Domestic Violence Act.

Anita Advani, the alleged live-in partner of Khanna, had in 2013 filed a complaint under the DV Act against the Khanna's estranged wife Kapadia, daughters Rinkie and Twinkle and son-in-law Akshay Kumar.

Advani had claimed she was evicted from Khanna's bungalow and sought monthly maintenance and a flat. A court had then sought their reply.“As live-in partner, she cannot claim relief from Khanna's estranged wife and family who have never shared a roof with her,“ Dimple's lawyer said.Justice M L Tahaliyani will now hear the case on March 10.

DV Act not applicable if ’living in’ with a married man

Abhinav Garg, DV Act not for live-in ties if man already married: HC, October 10, 2018: The Times of India


In an important ruling, Delhi high court has said that the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act (DV) can’t be invoked in a live-in relationship if the man is already married.

Justice R K Gauba, in a recent order, quashed the DV Act proceedings filed by a woman against her live-in partner, after HC found that she was aware he was married to someone else while living with her.

“The relationship between the parties not being in the nature of domestic relationship within the meaning of expression used in Section 2(f) Domestic Violence Act, proceedings arising therefrom against the petitioner are quashed,” the court noted.

The woman had filed a petition under DV Act seeking various relief in the nature of protection order, residence order, monetary relief and other compensation from the male partner.

“The factum of marriage of the petitioner was well-known to the second respondent (woman) before she entered into the live in-relationship with him...she very well knew that in order to enter into a marital relationship with another person it was necessary that he also should not be married to another person,” the court observed, pointing out that for a case to qualify under DV Act, there should be a possibility of a couple having a “domestic relationship.”

HC cited Supreme Court rulings to add that the parties should be “otherwise qualified to enter into a legal marriage with each other” while claiming to be in a domestic relationship such as a live-in arrangement.

Appearing for the male partner, advocate Gurmeet Narula had argued that the woman’s entire case is founded on allegations of a“live-in relationship” but such a relationship was not in the nature of marriage as she was aware that his client during that period was married to another woman.

In her plea, the woman had alleged that the couple had come together and became physically and emotionally involved, and started living together in a house in Gurgaon since 2010. She claimed even though aware that her partner had a child from his first marriage, the man led her to believe his marriage had been dissolved by a decree of divorce by a court. She further claimed before HC that the man had told her in 2008 that his wife had sent him a notice for divorce and he had finally separated from her permanently through divorce by mutual consent in 2010.

However HC wasn’t impressed by the claim and noted that “fact remains that throughout the period the parties lived together under the same roof in Gurgaon the petitioner was married to another woman, their marriage having continued and subsisting that is to say, it having not been dissolved by a decree of divorce.”

HC cited SC rulings to add that the parties should be ‘otherwise qualified to enter into a legal marriage with each other’ while claiming to be in a domestic relationship such as a live-in arrangement

Second Wives: maintenance for, rights of

From the archives of The Times of India 2010

HC opens maintenance door to ‘second wife’

Shibu Thomas | TNN

Mumbai: A second wife has to battle not just stigma but also her ‘‘illegal’’ status under Indian laws. If the relationship sours, the laws say she has no right to a maintenance from her polygamous husband nor a share in property (though the children from the wedlock have inheritance rights). But the Bombay High Court, in a path-breaking ruling, has opened a small door for such women.

Justice A B Chaudhari has said second wives could approach courts under the Domestic Violence Act. The judge asked a Nagpur-based 45-year-old housewife, Manda Thaore, to move court under the 2005 law to seek maintenance, accommodation and other benefits from the man who married her 27 years ago.

Justice Chaudhari also directed the husband, Ramaji Thaore (59), to pay a compensation of Rs 15,000 to Manda to cover her legal costs so that she could prosecute him under the Domestic Violence Act.

‘‘To my mind, it is clear that the husband has treated Manda as if she was his wife (but it was his second marriage),’’ said Justice Chaudhari. ‘‘It is no doubt true that Ramaji had cheated Manda and had kept sexual relationships with her resulting in the birth of two children... despite holding that there had been close relationship between applicant and respondent and he treated her like wife and produced children, unfortunately, this court cannot help Manda for providing her maintenance,’’ said the judge, but went on to say that a new law could come to her aid.

‘‘This is a fit case for Manda to have a recourse to the provisions of the new beneficial act, the Protection of Women From Domestic Violence Act, and proceed against her husband for claiming accommodation, maintenance.’’

Under the Indian system, a second wife has no legally enforceable rights unless the man has divorced his first wife. A wife can claim maintenance and alimony under the Hindu Marriage Act as well as the Criminal Procedure Code; she is also entitled to a share of the property. ‘‘The Supreme Court has said that the second marriage is a nullity and so a second wife has no right which is available only to a legally wedded wife,’’ said advocate Arfan Sait, an advocate who practises in the HC.

The DVA says that a woman can move court against a person with whom she is having ‘‘a domestic relationship within a shared household’’, seeking protection from abuse as well as maintenance and accommodation.

Wives’ rights

Woman has right to stay even in in-laws’ home: SC

Dhananjay Mahapatra, October 16, 2020: The Times of India

Woman can’t be thrown out, even if house not owned by husband: SC

NEW DELHI: In a landmark judgment under the Domestic Violence Act that aims to ensure in-laws treat daughters-in-laws well, the Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that once a woman lodges a complaint under the 2005 law, she will have the right to residence in the shared house even if it was rented or owned by the in-laws and the husband had no ownership right over it. In an important widening of the term ‘shared household’ to protect hapless women at risk of being thrown out of marital homes, the court ruled that the aggrieved woman can claim right of residence in any house that she had lived in with her husband or live-in partner even if that house belonged to the parents-in-law, the husband’s relatives, or was even a tenanted premise where they lived together. To remove her from the house, the only option with the owner of the house is to file an eviction suit, it said. Setting aside an earlier ruling that a distressed woman could have right to residence only if the house where she resided after marriage or during a live-in relationship was owned by the husband or if he had shared ownership right over it (such as a family home), a bench of Justices Ashok Bhushan, R S Reddy and M R Shah gave a wider meaning to ‘shared household’ concept to offer foolproof protection to women or live-in partners from being summarily thrown out of the house by the husband or the in-laws during pendency of her complaint under DV Act.

The bench explained the meaning of ‘living together’ and said there should be some permanency attached to it. “Mere fleeting or casual living at different places shall not make a shared household. The intention of the parties and the nature of living, including the nature of the household, have to be looked into to find out as to whether the parties intended to treat the premises as a shared household or not,” it said.

But it held the DV Act as a milestone in ensuring rights of women, noting that they were often unable to register a complaint due to adverse social equations.

In a 151-page judgment ironing out important issues in applicability of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, Justice Bhushan said, “Definition of shared household given in Section 2(s) cannot be read to mean that shared household can only be that household which is household of the joint family of which the husband is a member or in which the husband of the aggrieved person has a share.”

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