Smt. Saroj vs Videsh Kumar on 17 January, 2025

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Chattisgarh High Court

Smt. Saroj vs Videsh Kumar on 17 January, 2025

Author: Rajani Dubey

Bench: Rajani Dubey

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                                                   2025:CGHC:3198-DB


                                                               AFR
            HIGH COURT OF CHHATTISGARH AT BILASPUR
               Judgment reserved on : 17-12-2024
               Judgment delivered on : 17-01-2025

                      FA(MAT) No. 39 of 2020
Smt. Saroj W/o Videsh Kumar Sahu, aged about 28 years, R/o Village
Pendri, Ward No.20, Tahsil & District Rajnandgaon (CG)


                                             ---- Appellant/Defendant

                               versus
Videsh Kumar S/o Shri Chandra Shekhar Sahu, aged about 30 years,
Caste - Teli, Village - Pendri, Ward 20, Tahsil & District Rajnandgaon
(CG)
                                            ---- Respondent/plaintiff

For Appellant  : Mr. Aditya Bhardwaj, Advocate.
For Respondent : None.

              Hon'ble Smt. Justice Rajani Dubey, J
             Hon'ble Shri Justice Bibhu Datta Guru, J

                          C A V Judgment

Per Rajani Dubey, J

Challenge in this appeal under Section 19(1) of the Family

Courts Act, 1984 is to the legality and validity of the judgment and

decree dated 26.6.2019 passed by Family Court, Rajnandgaon in Civil

Suit No.121-A/2017 whereby the application under Section 27(1)(B)(D)
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of the Special Marriage Act, 1954 filed by the respondent/plaintiff has

been allowed and consequently, the marriage of the parties solemnized

on 7.7.2008 has been dissolved.

02. The admitted fact is that marriage of the appellant with the

respondent was solemnized on 7.7.2008 before the District Marriage

Officer, Rajnandgaon and from their wedlock, one daughter was born

who is living with the appellant.

03. The respondent/plaintiff filed an application under Section 27(1)

(B)(D) of the Special Marriage Act, 1954 with the averments that after

marriage, behaviour of the appellant towards the respondent and his

family members was ignorant and cruel; she started pressurizing the

respondent for living separately from his parents and even when the

respondent was living separately at Kaurinbhata, Rajnandgaon in a

rented accommodation, she used to pick up quarrel on trivial issues

and started going to her parental house every now and then. After birth

of a daughter, she lived with the respondent only for six months and

thereafter, on the pretext of seeing her parents, she left the rented

accommodation of her own and started living at Village-Pendri,

Rajnandgaon. Though the respondent tried his level best to bring her

back through intervention of his relatives and friends and also filed an

application under Section 22 of the Special Marriage Act before the

Family Court, Rajnandgaon for restitution of conjugal rights but despite

issuance of several notices and even after publication of notice in
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newspaper, she deliberately remained absent. Ultimately, being fed up

with the conduct of the appellant, he withdrew the said application on

28.8.2010. She is deliberately living separately from the respondent

for the last 7-8 years and therefore, he prayed for grant of a decree of

divorce on the ground of cruelty and desertion.

04. The appellant/defendant in her written statement contended that

as she is of Satnami caste and the respondent is of Sahu caste, he did

not ever take her to his home and was residing separately with her.

After birth of the daughter, she was living with him at Karuinbhata.

However, after some time he stopped living with her there, he also did

not pay any attention to the daughter, stopped paying the rent and

giving her money, therefore, she was compelled to leave the said

accommodation and live at her parental house. She stated that she

neither received any notice from the Court nor has any knowledge

about publication of notice in the newspaper. The respondent never

took any step to keep her with him. Theirs was a love marriage. After

marriage, they lived together for two years in Jagdalpur (CG). The

respondent has two mothers, the biological mother living at Village-

Pendri and step mother in Jagdalpur with his father. She being a

member of scheduled caste, the respondent never took her to either of

his houses. After return from Jagdalpur, they lived for four years in

rented accommodation and in the year 2009 he went away saying that

he is going to Jagdalpur and thereafter stopped visiting her and giving

her money for daily expenses which forced her to live at her parental
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house. As the respondent got government employment, he wanted to

get rid of her and contract second marriage, therefore, on false

allegations he filed the instant application. She stated that though she

wants to live with the respondent, however, if the Court finds that there

is no possibility of restitution of conjugal rights between the parties, the

respondent be directed to give Rs.20 lacs as permanent alimony for

the maintenance of the appellant and the minor daughter.

05. Based on the pleadings of the respective parties, the learned

Family Court framed issues and after appreciation of oral and

documentary evidence, allowed the application of the

respondent/plaintiff on the ground of desertion by the impugned

judgment and decree dissolving their marriage solemnized on

7.7.2008. Hence this appeal by the appellant/defendant.

06. Learned counsel for the appellant would submit that the

impugned judgment and decree are illegal and based on conjecture

and surmises. From the conduct of the respondent it is explicit that he

did not take the appellant to her matrimonial house because she

belongs to scheduled caste community. The appellant never left the

house of the respondent of her own. In fact, when the respondent

stopped living with her at the rented accommodation and even did not

pay the rent and give money to her, she had no option except to leave

that house with her daughter for her parental house. He would submit

that the appellant had no information about the application under
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Section 22 of Special Marriage Act filed by the respondent because no

notice was ever served upon her. Even she had no knowledge about

publication of notice in the newspaper as no newspaper comes to her

parental house. As the respondent has got government job, he wants

to perform second marriage and get rid of the appellant and the

daughter, therefore, on false grounds he filed the suit for a decree of

divorce. Learned trial Court did not appreciate the oral and

documentary evidence properly as well as conduct of the respondent

towards the appellant, hence the impugned judgment and decree are

liable to be set aside.

07. None appears for the respondent despite service of notice.

08. Heard learned counsel for the appellant and perused the

material available on record.

09. It is not disputed before the learned Family Court that marriage

of the parties was solemnized on 7.7.2008 and from their wedlock, one

daughter was born.

10. The respondent/husband filed an application under Section 27(1)

(B)(D) of the Special Marriage Act on the ground of cruelty and

desertion. He examined himself as PW-2 and one witness Bhagichand

Sai as PW-1 whereas the appellant/wife examined herself as DW-1

and her mother Smt. Keshari as DW-2.

11. PW-1 Bhagchand Sai states that when wife of the respondent left
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his home without informing anyone, the respondent tried his level best

to bring her back but she did not return. In cross-examination he

admits that he does not remember the dates when the respondent

went to the parental house of the appellant for bringing her back.

12. PW-2 Videsh Kumar, husband, states that the appellant/wife left

his home without any sufficient cause. He made many efforts to bring

her back and ultimately filed an application under Section 22 of the

Special Marriage Act for restitution of conjugal rights but she did not

receive any of the notices of that case and even after publication of

notice in the newspaper on 3.6.2010, she did not turn up before the

Family Court, so after some time he withdrew his application on

28.8.2010 and filed the present petition for divorce. In cross-

examination he denied the suggestion that he is not willing to keep his

wife because she is of different caste. He also denied the suggestion

that he deliberately kept her separately to make a ground for divorce.

13. The appellant/wife (DW-1) states in her affidavit under Order 18

Rule 4 of CPC that her husband kept her in a rented accommodation

and after getting job in police department he stopped visiting her at

Kaurinbhata and also stopped paying rent and money for household

expenses, so she went to her parental house. She states that she is

still willing to live with her husband. In cross-examination she admits

that she has no knowledge as to since when her husband is working in

police department and that no meeting was convened in the village for
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their reunion. She also admits that she filed an application seeking

maintenance after the plaintiff filed an application for divorce. She

further admits that after going to her parental house at Pendri, she

never lived with her husband. She states that she has been living at

her parental house at Pendri for the last 07 years.

14. DW-2 Smt. Keshari, mother of the defendant, admits that the

appellant/wife after living at Kaurinbhata for about one and a half years

came back to live with her. She then volunteers that as he deserted

her, so she came to Pendri. She admits that no social meeting was

ever convened for sending her back to the matrimonial house. She

states that she has no knowledge whether any application was filed by

the respondent for bringing the appellant back.

15. It is clear from the statement of wife that she did not make any

effort to go back to her husband and that she went to her parental

house of her own. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the matter of Savitri

Pandey Vs. Prem Chandra Pandey reported in (2002) 2 SCC 73,

observed in paras 6 & 9 of its judgment as under:

“6. Treating the petitioner with cruelty is a ground for
divorce under Section 13(1)(i-a) of the Act. Cruelty has not
been defined under the Act but in relation to matrimonial
matters it is contemplated as a conduct of such type which
endangers the living of the petitioner with the respondent.
Cruelty consists of acts which are dangerous to life, limb or
health. Cruelty for the purpose of the Act means where one
spouse has so treated the other and manifested such
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feelings towards her or him as to have inflicted bodily injury,
or to have caused reasonable apprehension of bodily injury,
suffering or to have injured health. Cruelty may be physical
or mental. Mental cruelty is the conduct of other spouse
which causes mental suffering or fear to the matrimonial life
of the other. “Cruelty”, therefore, postulates a treatment of
the petitioner with such cruelty as to cause a reasonable
apprehension in his or her mind that it would be harmful or
injurious for the petitioner to live with the other party.
Cruelty, however, has to be distinguished from the ordinary
wear and tear of family life. It cannot be decided on the
basis of the sensitivity of the petitioner and has to be
adjudged on the basis of the course of conduct which
would, in general, be dangerous for a spouse to live with
the other. In the instant case both the trial court as well as
the High Court have found on facts that the wife had failed
to prove the allegations of cruelty attributed to the
respondent. Concurrent findings of fact arrived at by the
courts cannot be disturbed by this Court in exercise of
powers under Article 136 of the Constitution of India.
Otherwise also the averments made in the petition and the
evidence led in support thereof clearly show that the
allegations, even if held to have been proved, would only
show the sensitivity of the appellant with respect to the
conduct of the respondent which cannot be termed more
than ordinary wear and tear of the family life.

9. Following the decision in Bipinchandra case [AIR 1957
SC 176] this Court again reiterated the legal position in
Lachman Utamchand Kirpalani v. Meena [AIR 1964 SC 40]
by holding that in its essence desertion means the
intentional permanent forsaking and abandonment of one
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spouse by the other without that other’s consent, and
without reasonable cause. For the offence of desertion so
far as the deserting spouse is concerned, two essential
conditions must be there (1) the factum of separation, and
(2) the intention to bring cohabitation permanently to an end
(animus deserendi). Similarly two elements are essential so
far as the deserted spouse is concerned : (1) the absence
of consent, and (2) absence of conduct giving reasonable
cause to the spouse leaving the matrimonial home to form
the necessary intention aforesaid. For holding desertion as
proved the inference may be drawn from certain facts which
may not in another case be capable of leading to the same
inference; that is to say the facts have to be viewed as to
the purpose which is revealed by those acts or by conduct
and expression of intention, both anterior and subsequent
to the actual acts of separation.”

16. The Hon’ble Supreme Court in the case of Debananda Tamuli

Vs. Kakumoni Kataky reported in (2022) 5 SCC 459 observed in

para 7 of its judgment as under:

“7. We have given careful consideration to her submissions.
Firstly, we deal with the issue of desertion. The learned
counsel appearing for the appellant relied upon the decision
of this Court in the case of Lachman Utamchand Kirpalani
(supra) which has been consistently followed in several
decisions of this Court. The law consistently laid down by
this Court is that desertion means the intentional
abandonment of one spouse by the other without the
consent of the other and without a reasonable cause. The
deserted spouse must prove that there is a factum of
separation and there is an intention on the part of deserting
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spouse to bring the cohabitation to a permanent end. In
other words, there should be animus deserendi on the part
of the deserting spouse. There must be an absence of
consent on the part of the deserted spouse and the conduct
of the deserted spouse should not give a reasonable cause
to the deserting spouse to leave the matrimonial home. The
view taken by this Court has been incorporated in the
Explanation added to sub-section (1) of Section 13 by Act
No.68 of 1976. The said Explanation reads thus:

“13. Divorce.– (1) …………

3[Explanation.–In this sub-section, the expression
“desertion” means the desertion of the petitioner by the
other party to the marriage without reasonable cause and
without the consent or against the wish of such party, and
includes the wilful neglect of the petitioner by the other
party to the marriage, and its grammatical variations and
cognate expressions shall be construed accordingly.”

17. Upon minute appreciation of oral and documentary evidence on

record, the learned trial Court found that the husband tried to bring his

wife back to his house many a time and even filed an application for

restitution of conjugal rights but the wife remained adamant and she

did not appear before the Family Court despite issuance of notices as

also publication of notice in the newspaper. It is an admitted position in

this case that since 2009 the parties are living separately. Looking to

the overall evidence and conduct of the parties, the learned trial Court

observed that the wife is living separately without any just and

reasonable cause. It is also clear that the plaintiff’s job is at another
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place and the wife never resided with him for a considerable period.

Therefore, the learned trial Court found that Issue No.1 regarding

cruelty is not proved against the wife but issue No.2 regarding

desertion is duly proved against her and granted decree of divorce in

favour of the husband on that ground. We find no good ground to

interfere with this finding of the learned Family Court.

18. As regards permanent alimony, it is clear that the husband is

working in police department and he also admits that he is paying

maintenance to his wife and daughter. Therefore, in the given facts and

circumstances of the case, a permanent alimony of Rs.10,000,00/-

(Rupees Ten Lakhs Only) is awarded in favour of the appellant/wife.

19. In the result, the appeal is allowed in part. The impugned

judgment and decree of learned Family Court are hereby affirmed. The

respondent/husband is directed to pay a total sum of Rs.10 lacs as

permanent alimony to the appellant/wife within a period of three

months from the date of passing of this judgment.

A decree be drawn up accordingly.

                         Sd/                                           Sd/
                   (Rajani Dubey)                               (Bibhu Datta Guru)
                       Judge                                           Judge
       Digitally
MOHD signed by
AKHTAR MOHD
KHAN   AKHTAR
       KHAN
Khan
 



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