Manish Minda vs Alka Minda on 19 August, 2025

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Telangana High Court

Manish Minda vs Alka Minda on 19 August, 2025

  IN THE HIGH COURT FOR THE STATE OF TELANGANA

           CIVIL REVISION PETITION No.3956 OF 2024

Between:

Manish Minda,
S/o Satyanarayana Minda


                                                   ... Petitioner
And
Alka Minda, D/o Nanda Kishore Mittal

                                                  ...Respondent

JUDGMENT PRONOUNCED ON 19.08.2025

HON'BLE JUSTICE LAXMI NARAYANA ALISHETTY

1. Whether Reporters of Local newspapers :     Yes/No
  may be allowed to see the Judgment?

2. Whether the copies of judgment may be

  marked to Law Reporters/Journals?        :   Yes/No

3. Whether her Lordship wishes to

    see the fair copy of the Judgment?     :   Yes/No



                   _______________________________________
                    JUSTICE LAXMI NARAYANA ALISHETTY
                                        2                          LNA, J
                                                     CRP.No.3956 of 2024



     HON'BLE JUSTICE LAXMI NARAYANA ALISHETTY

           CIVIL REVISION PETITION No.3956 OF 2024

% 19.08.2025

Between:


# Manish Minda,
S/o Satyanarayana Minda
                                                    ..... Petitioner

And
Alka Minda, D/o Nanda Kishore Mittal

                                                    ....Respondent
< Gist:


> Head Note:


! Counsel for the petitioner: Sri Sharad Sanghi


^ Counsel for Respondent: Sri P.Vamsheedhar Reddy



? Cases Referred:
  1. (2021) 5 SCC 489
  2. 2018(4) ALD 204 (DB)
  3. (2011) 4 SCC 240
  4. (2013) 2 SCC 114
  5. 2025 SCC Online SC 1421
  6. 2025 SCC Online MP 4217
                                        3                             LNA, J
                                                        CRP.No.3956 of 2024



HON'BLE SRI JUSTICE LAXMI NARAYANA ALISHETTY

         CIVIL REVISION PETITION No.3956 OF 2024

ORDER:

This Civil Revision Petition is filed assailing the order, dated

20.11.2024, passed by the I Additional Family Court, Secunderabad,

in I.A.No.211 of 2024 in F.C.O.P.No.635 of 2021.

2. Heard Sri Sharad Sanghi, learned counsel for the petitioner

and Sri P. Vamsheedhar Reddy, learned counsel for the respondent.

3. The revision petitioner is the husband of the respondent.

4. Brief facts of the case are that the revision petitioner filed

FCOP vide FCOP.No.635 of 2021 seeking divorce against the

respondent. The respondent entered appearance and filed counter

denying the plaint averments. The trial commenced, PW1 filed

chief-affidavit and also additional chief-affidavit and the matter was

coming up for marking of documents and at that stage, the petitioner

filed an application under Order VII Rule 14 (3) of CPC and Section

14 of Family Courts Act, to receive the documents i.e., CD,

WhatsApp chats and oral conversation transcript in English language

as electronic evidence and also other documents i.e., letters along
4 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

with certified translations and original postal receipts as secondary

evidence.

5. The respondent filed counter opposing the said application

contending that the documents now sought to be received are created

only to cover up the laches that occurred during the filing of the O.P.

and to improvise his case and as such, the application is not

maintainable and prayed the Court to dismiss the application.

6. The trial Court duly taking into consideration the contentions

of the both the parties dismissed the application by impugned order,

by observing that in the entire plaint averments, there is no reference

about the letters dated 11.08.2020 and 18.09.2020 and no foundation

was laid regarding the same and as such, declined to receive the said

documents as secondary evidence.

7. Learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that WhatsApp

chats and the English transcript of oral conversations were retrieved

from the respondent’s mobile phone backup, which was accessed

when the respondent had left the phone unattended at one point of

time and the same are crucial in proving his case. He further

submitted that the trial Court while not receiving the copies of

letters, has erroneously discarded the electronic evidence i.e.,
5 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

Whatsapp chats and oral conversations transcript in English as well

and hence, the impugned order warrants interference by this Court.

8. In support of his contentions, he relied upon the following

judgments:

(i) Aman Lohia vs. Kiran Lohia 1

(ii) Nawab Mir Barkat Ali Khan Waleshan Bahadur vs. Princess
Manolya Jah and another
2.

9. Per contra, learned counsel for respondent submitted that the

documents sought to be received were not annexed to the O.P and at

least, there is no whisper about the said documents in the O.P., as

contemplated under Order VII Rule 14 of CPC, therefore, the

application filed by the petitioner under Order VII Rule 14 (3) of

CPC read with 151 CPC is not maintainable and as such, trial Court

has rightly dismissed the said application. He further submitted that

no valid grounds are made out in the Revision and the Revision

being devoid of merits is liable to be dismissed.

10. In support of his contentions, learned counsel relied upon the

following judgments:

1

(2021) 5 SCC 489
2
2018 (4) ALD 204 (DB)
6 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

(i) Siddiqui (died) by LRS vs. A. Ramalingam 3

(ii) U. Sree vs. U. Srinivas4

11. This Court has bestowed its attention to the submissions

advanced by learned counsel for both the parties and thoroughly

gone through the aforesaid judgments relied upon by the learned

counsels for both the parties.

12. In Aman Lohia‘s case (cited supra), relied upon by learned

counsel for petitioner, it is held as hereunder:

“The family Court is deemed to be a civil Court having powers
of such Court. Consequent to bestowing such power on the
family Court, comes its primary duty to make efforts for
settlement, as prescribed under Section 9. If that does not
happen during the resolution of the dispute between the parties,
the family Court then has to bear in mind the principles
enunciated in the Evidence Act, 1872, which had been made
applicable in terms of Section 14 of the Family Courts Act. A
Family Court can receive as evidence any report, statement,
documents, information, or matter that may, in its opinion,
assist it to deal effectually with a dispute, whether or not the
same would be otherwise relevant or admissible under
Evidence Act, 1872.”

3

(2011) 4 SCC 240
4
(2013) 2 SCC 114
7 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

13. In Nawab Mir Barkat Ali Khan Waleshan Bahadur‘s case

(cited supra), which is relied upon by learned counsel for

petitioner, a Division Bench of the erstwhile Hon’ble High Court of

Andhra Pradesh held as follows:

“The discretion is vested with the Family court to receive any
evidence, any report, any relevant statement, documents,
information etc., which is necessary for its assistance to deal
effectively with a dispute. It is made permissible in the statute
whether or not such documents are relevant or admissible in
the Evidence Act. Thus, the powers are vested with the Family
Court under Section 14 of the Family Court Act to take those
documents on record.”

14. In the aforesaid judgments, it is well settled that discretionary

powers are vested with Family Court under Section 14 of the Family

Courts Act to receive any evidence, report, relevant statement,

documents, information, etc., which is necessary for its assistance to

effectively deal with the dispute, even if that evidence is normally

inadmissible under the Indian Evidence Act. The overriding effect

given to the Family Courts under Section 20 of the Family Courts

Act is confined not only to the Code of Civil Procedure but also to

the Evidence Act.

8 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

15. In H. Siddiqui (died) by LRs’s case (cited supra), which is

relied upon by learned counsel for respondent, the Hon’ble Supreme

Court while dealing with Section 65 of the Evidence Act, held that

though the said provision permits the parties to adduce secondary

evidence, yet such a course is subject to a large number of

limitations.

It was further held as hereunder:-

“In a case where the original documents are not produced at
any time, nor has any factual foundation been laid for giving
secondary evidence, it is not permissible for the court to
allow a party to adduce secondary evidence. Thus,
secondary evidence relating to the contents of a document is
inadmissible, until the non-production of the original is
accounted for, so as to bring it within one or other of the
cases provided for in the section. The secondary evidence
must be authenticated by foundational evidence that the
alleged copy is in fact a true copy of the original.”

16. In U. Sree‘s case (cited supra), the proposition laid down in

H.Siddiqui’s case has been reiterated.

17. Before adverting to the merits of the case, it is appropriate

to refer to Section 14 of the Family Courts Act which reads as

under:-

“A Family Court may receive as evidence any report,
statement, documents, information or matter that may, in its
9 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

opinion, assist it to deal effectually with a dispute, whether
or not the same would be otherwise relevant or admissible
under the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (1 of 1872).”

18. It is also relevant to refer to Section 122 of the Indian

Evidence Act and for better appreciation, the said Section is

extracted as under:-

“122. Communications during marriage.

No person who is or has been married, shall be compelled to
disclose any communication made to him during marriage
by any person to whom he is or has been married ; nor shall
he be permitted to disclose any such communication, unless
the person who made it, or his representative-in-interest,
consents, except in suits between married persons, or
proceedings in which one married person is prosecuted for
any crime committed against the other.”

19. A combined and harmonious reading of the aforesaid two

provisions of law, would indicate that the provisions of the Indian

Evidence Act have no strict application to the matters before the

Family Court.

20. As regards this aspect, in a recent judgment, the Hon’ble

Supreme Court in Vibhor Garg Vs. Neha 5 has held that Section 14

of the Family Courts Act gives a wide discretion to Family Courts in

5
2025 SCC Online SC 1421
10 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

deciding matrimonial disputes since they can go beyond strict Rules

of evidence in terms of relevance and admissibility while admitting

any evidence which they think is relevant for adjudication of the

dispute at hand.

21. The Hon’ble Supreme, by referring to Section 122 of the

Indian Evidence Act, further observed that the right to privacy is not

a relevant consideration in cases of spousal communications.

22. In Anjali Sharma Vs. Raman Upadhyay6, the High Court

of Madhya Pradesh has observed as hereunder:-

“The legislature, being fully aware of the principles of
admissibility of evidence, has enacted Section 14 in order to
expand that principle insofar as disputes relating to
marriage and family affairs are concerned. The Family
Court is thereby freed of restrictions of the strict law of
evidence and the only test under Section 14 for a Family
Court to receive evidence, whether collected legitimately or
otherwise, is based upon its subjective satisfaction that the
evidence would assist it to deal effectually with the dispute.”

23. In the light of Section 14 of the Family Courts Act and

Section 122 of the Indian Evidence Act and the ratio laid down by

the Hon’ble Supreme Court in Vibhor Garg‘s case (cited supra) as

well as the judgment of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in Anjali

6
2025 SCC Online MP 4217
11 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

Sharma‘s case (cited supra), it is settled that the Family Court has

discretion to admit any evidence which is relevant for adjudication

of dispute at hand, without referring to the restrictions and

technicalities prescribed under the Indian Evidence Act and also as

to whether the same is collected legitimately or otherwise.

24. In the backdrop of the above legal position, the point that

arises for consideration in this Revision is whether the documents

sought to be taken on record by the petitioner can be received or not.

25. In the present case, the petitioner is seeking to place on

record two letters, dated 11.08.2020 and 08.09.2020 which were said

to be addressed by his father to the father of respondent and

whatsapp chats and oral conversations downloaded from the mobile

belonging to the respondent.

26. In the impugned order, the Family Court has made specific

observations that insofar as the two letters, dated 11.08.2020 and

08.09.2020, no foundation has been laid and that there is no whisper

about the same in the entire pleadings in the FCOP.

27. Perusal of record would disclose that FCOP was filed in the

month of December, 2020, whereas the two letters are dated

11.08.2020 and 08.09.2020. As rightly pointed out by the Family

Court, there is no reference to these letters in the entire pleadings in
12 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

the FCOP, therefore, in the considered opinion of this Court, the trial

Court has rightly declined to receive the said letters as secondary

evidence.

28. As regards the whatsapp chats and oral conversations

downloaded from the mobile belonging to the respondent are

concerned, in the light of the legal position laid down by Hon’ble

Supreme Court in Vibhor Garg‘s case (cited supra) as well as the

judgment of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh in Anjali Sharma’s

case (cited supra), as well as considering the purport and intent of

Sections 14 of the Family Courts Act and Section 122 of the Indian

Evidence Act, this Court is of considered opinion that the same can

be taken on record.

29. Perusal of the impugned order would disclose that the Family

Court has neither adverted to nor discussed as to whether the

whatsapp chats and oral conversations downloaded from the mobile

belonging to respondent can be received or not. The Family Court

has repeatedly referred to only the two letters dated 11.08.2020 and

08.09.2020 and has totally lost sight of other documents i.e.,

whatsapp chats and oral conversations downloaded from the mobile

belonging to the respondent and one CD, which were sought to be

received by the petitioner.

13 LNA, J
CRP.No.3956 of 2024

30. For the foregoing reasons and in the light of the law laid

down by the Hon’ble Supreme Court as stated supra, the impugned

order is required to be interfered with by this Court insofar as

receiving the CD, and the whatsapp chats and oral conversations

downloaded from the mobile belonging to the respondent are

concerned.

31. Accordingly, this Revision is allowed and the impugned

order dated 20.11.2024, passed by the I Additional Family Court,

Secunderabad, in I.A.No.211 of 2024 in F.C.O.P.No.635 of 2021, is

set aside and consequently, IA.No.211 of 2024 stands partly allowed

only to the extent of receiving the whatsapp chats and oral

conversations downloaded from the mobile belonging to the

respondent are concerned along with the CD.

32. As a sequel, the miscellaneous applications pending, if any,

shall stand closed.

__________________________________
LAXMI NARAYANA ALISHETTY, J
Dated: 19.08.2025
dr



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