Judgment:
ORDER
1. The applicants who are the wife and son of the non-applicant No. 1 Subhash, have challenged the order passed by the Additional Sessions Judge in Criminal Revision No. 211/90 setting aside the order of maintenance passed in favour of applicant No. 1-the wife by the Judicial Magistrate First Class, Amravati, Court No. 3.
2. The undisputed position is that, the applicant No. 1 was married to non-applicant No. 1 some time in the year 1983. They lived happily for some time. But from February 1985, applicant No. 1 wife went to reside in the house of her maternal uncle and since then she did not return to the house of non-applicant No. 1. While this was the position, applicants filed an application under S. 125 of Criminal Procedure Code for maintenance on 20-1-1989. During the pendency of the said maintenance application non-applicant No. 1 filed Hindu Marriage Petition No. 78/87 for divorce under S. 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act on the ground of cruelty and desertion. While the maintenance application continued to remain pending, Hindu Marriage Petition No. 78/87 came to be decided on 14-12-1989. The learned Joint Civil Judge, Senior Division, Amravati passed a decree for Judicial separation. Thereafter on 24-7-1990, Judicial Magistrate First Class, Amravati passed an order for maintenance in favour of applicants awarding them maintenance of Rs. 250/- and Rs. 150/- respectively per month. Non-applicant No. 1 challenged this order in Criminal Revision Application No. 211/90. The learned Sessions Judge by his order dated 24-4-1992 allowed the said revision application so far as grant of maintenance to applicant No. 1 is concerned and set it aside mainly on the ground that applicant No. 1 who was held to have deserted her husband in the matrimonial proceedings cannot be held to be entitled to get maintenance under S. 125 of Criminal Procedure Code, since the finding recorded by the Civil Court was binding on the criminal court. He, however, confirmed the order of maintenance passed in favour of applicant No. 2.
3. Mrs. Sirpurkar, appearing on behalf of the applicants urged that merely passing of a decree for judicial separation wasn't enough to disentitle the applicant No. 1 for grant of maintenance and in an enquiry under Section 125 of Criminal Procedure Code, the Court will have to see the ground on which the decree for judicial separation was passed and whether it can be said that applicant No. 1 was not residing with the non-applicant No. 1 without sufficient cause. She relied upon Angrez Kzaur v. Baldev Singh wherein it is held that decree for judicial separation under Section 13-A of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 would not affect maintenance order granted to the wife earlier under Section 488 of Criminal Procedure Code. She also relied upon Nathu Ram v. Atar Kunwar : AIR1969All191 wherein it is held that a decree for judicial separation under Section 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act does not operate as bar for claiming maintenance under Section 488 of the old Criminal Procedure Code. Relying on these two authorities, it was urged that in the present case if the judgment passed in Hindu Marriage Petition granting a decree for judicial separation is read as a whole, it will be clear that the learned Civil Judge has recorded a finding that it was not the husband who was given cruel treatment by the wife, but it was the wife who was given cruel treatment by the husband and that is why the wife had gone to her uncle and was living separately continuously from the year 1985. She urged that if these facts are taken into consideration merely because there was a factum of separation proved, the applicant No. 1 cannot be denied her right of maintenance if she proved that she was living separate from non-applicant No. 1 for sufficient cause.
4. On the other hand, Shri Gilda, the learned counsel appearing for the non-applicant No. 1 placed strong reliance on Sharadchandra Satbhai v. Indubai Satbhai, 1978 MLJ 123 and particularly concluding portion of para 8 and urged as soon as it was found that a decree for judicial separation was passed on the ground of desertion then it was not open to the Magistrate under Section 125 of Criminal Procedure Code to grant maintenance to the wife who has been held to have deserted the husband in the judicial separation proceeding.
5. In the present case, the whole difficulty has arisen because of the peculiar decree passed by the Joint Civil Judge, Senior Division, in Hindu Marriage Petition No. 78/87. No doubt, while framing the issues, the following two issues were framed, viz :
(1) Does the petitioner prove that the respondent has treated him with cruelty, and
(2) Does the petitioner prove that the respondent has deserted him for a period of not less than two years immediately preceding the presentation of the application.
Although he has recorded negative finding on the first issue and an affirmative finding on issue No. 2, the reasoning given by him in para 7 of the judgment indicates that according to him, it was the petitioner husband who was at fault of giving ill-treatment to the respondent wife, and therefore, the probability cannot be avoided that respondent is living separately from the petitioner. Really speaking, consistent with this reasoning, the correct order would have been to refuse to pass any decree including a decree for judicial separation because desertion as defined by Explanation to sub-section (1) of Section 13 requires desertion of the petitioner by the other party of the marriage without reasonable cause etc. When the learned Judge came to the conclusion that the wife had started residing separately because of the fault of the husband on account of his ill-treatment, there was no question of legal desertion which could have been the basis for passing a decree for judicial separation. However, the fact remains that till this decree is either set aside or annulled by appropriate proceedings, it remains effective and what is required to be considered in the present proceeding under Section 125 of Criminal Procedure Code is its effect.
6. I have carefully perused the decision of the Division Bench in Sharadchandra v. Indubai's case supra and I find that the facts of the present case do not come within the ratio of that decision. The Division Bench has observed and the observation on which Mr. Gilda has strongly relied are;
'In our judgment, Indubai is not entitled to maintenance under S. 125, Criminal Procedure Code, 1973, as she had no reasonable ground not to live with her husband. The approach of the learned Additional Sessions Judge overlooks the object and purpose of sub-sec. (4) which also governs sub-sec. (1) of Section 125. It is true that a divorcee is entitled to approach the Magistrate under S. 125 for speedy remedy. So could a wife against whom a decree for judicial separation is passed, but a wife who has deserted her husband within the meaning of the Explanation to S. 10(1) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, as discussed above, is not entitled to apply under S. 125 of Criminal Procedure Code, 1973.'
This shows that even a wife against whom a decree for judicial separation is passed is entitled to apply for maintenance under S. 125 of Criminal Procedure Code. But, if it is proved that such wife has deserted her husband within the meaning of the Explanation of 'desertion' to sub-sec. (1) of S. 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, then she is not entitled to maintenance. This is in the context of the provision of sub-sec. (4) of S. 125 of Criminal Procedure Code which says that no wife shall be entitled to receive an allowance from her husband under this section if she is living in adultery or, if without any sufficient reason, she refuses to live with her husband, or if they are living separately by mutual consent. Therefore, the emphasis even according to the Division Bench is on living separately without any sufficient reason which will disentitle the wife to receive maintenance. On the facts of the present case, as earlier narrated by me, the learned Judge who passed the decree for judicial separation has in so many words found that it was the petitioner husband who was at fault of giving ill-treatment to the respondent, and therefore, in all probability respondent wife was living separately from her husband. Taking this finding as it is, it clearly shows that the wife was living separate from her husband with sufficient cause and it cannot be said that she has deserted her husband within the meaning of the term 'desertion' as defined in the Explanation to sub-sec. (1) of S. 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 which was Explanation to sub-sec. (1) of S. 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 prior to amendment and which fell for consideration before the Division Bench in Sharadchandra's case supra. Therefore, taking the ratio of Sharadchandra's case (supra) as it is, it is that wife who is proved to have deserted her husband without any sufficient cause, who is disentitled to make any claim for maintenance. It is not necessary to refer to other two authorities of other High Courts relied upon by Smt. Sirpurkar. In the present case, even the learned trial Magistrate on appreciation of evidence led before him has come to the conclusion that the husband was not ready and willing to keep his wife with him and he had refused and neglected applicant No. 1 to maintain and that too without any sufficient reason. No doubt the revisional Court has not gone into this aspect, but taking into consideration the constraints on the revisional Court, the finding recorded by the Magistrate on appreciation of evidence would have been binding even on the revisional Court had he taken a different view on the question of law. The learned Additional Sessions Judge has simply assumed that the decree for judicial separation was passed on the ground that the wife had deserted her husband without any sufficient cause, though there is no such finding as such recorded by the Civil Court in the divorce proceedings between the parties. Therefore, so far as applicant No. 1 is concerned, the order passed by the Additional Sessions Judge in the revision is liable to be set aside.
7. So far as the quantum is concerned, I have heard Shri Gilda as well as Mrs. Sirpurkar and I have also perused the evidence on that point. The quantum of Rs. 250/- per month awarded to the wife appears to be on a higher side having regard to the meagre income of non-applicant No. 1. So far as the applicant No. 2 is concerned, the quantum of Rs. 150/- has become final, and therefore, it cannot be in any way reduced in the present revision application. But having regard to the capacity of the non-applicant No. 1, in my view, instead of Rs. 250/- per month, the applicant No. 1 should be held to be entitled to Rs. 150/- per month.
8. Accordingly the revision application is allowed. The order passed by the Sessions Judge rejecting the maintenance application of applicant No. 1 is set aside and the order passed by the Judicial Magistrate First Class is resorted with the modification that applicant No. 1 as well as applicant No. 2 each will be entitled to Rs. 150/- per month by way of maintenance from the date of the filing of the original application.
9. Order accordingly.