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Mst. Kauri Vs. Deepa Singh

Mst. Kauri vs Deepa Singh

Disposition Appeal dismissed Court Rajasthan Decided Feb 22, 1974
~4 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/758171

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Citation
Court
Rajasthan High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
S.B. Civil Misc. Appeal No. 27 of 1971
Subject
Family
Disposition
Appeal dismissed

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Hindu Marriage Act - Conjugal right--Wife not justified in with drawing society of her husband--No interference with decree for restitution of conjugal rights.;I, in agreement with the learned District Judge am not prepared to place any reliance on the type of evidence produced by the appellant. The appellant has th...

Key legal issue
Family
Outcome / disposition
Appeal dismissed

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Mst. Kauri

Respondent

Deepa Singh

Legal References

Reported In
1974WLN(UC)234

Excerpt

hindu marriage act - conjugal right--wife not justified in with drawing society of her husband--no interference with decree for restitution of conjugal rights.;i, in agreement with the learned district judge am not prepared to place any reliance on the type of evidence produced by the appellant. the appellant has thus not succeeded in establishing any justifiable cause for not living in the society of her husband and the decree for restitution of conjugal rights passed in favour of the respondent seems to be just & proper & does not call for any interference.;(b) hindu marriage act - cruelty--matter neither reported in police nor medical evidence not neighbouring witnesses examined--held, cruelty not proved. - section 2(k), 2(1), 7 & 40 & juvenile justice (care and protection of children) rules, 2007, rule 12 & 98 & juvenile justice act, 1986, section 2(h): [altamas kabir & cyriac joseph, jj] determination as to juvenile - appellant was found to have completed the age of 16 years and 13 days on the date of alleged occurrence - appellant was arrested on 30.11.1998 when the 1986 act was in force and under clause (h) of section 2 a juvenile was described to mean a child who had not attained the age of sixteen years or a girl who had not attained the age of eighteen years - it is with the enactment of the juvenile justice act, 2000, that in section 2(k) a juvenile or child was defined to mean a child who had not completed eighteen years of a ge which was given prospective prospect - appellant was about sixteen years of age on the date of commission of the alleged offence and had not completed eighteen years of age when the juvenile justice act, 2000, came into force - juvenile act, of 2000 has been given retrospective effect by rule 12 of juvenile justice rule, 2007 - as such, accused has to be treated as juvenile under the said act. .....out that the respondent's mother is 60 years old where as the appellant s brother gura singh who went to bring her from the respondent's house is a young man of 30 years. even the respondent is younger than gura singh. it, therefore does not stand to reason that gura singh may have suffered his sister being beaten in his presence. not a single neighbour or member of the locality who could have witnessed the act of alleged beating has been produced by the appellant it cannot be accepted, regard being had to the ordinary course of human conduct that on the very first night of their meeting a dowry of rs. 10,000/- would be demanded from the appellant and her parents, who do not seem to belong to a comparatively prosperous section of the society. the theory of beating by the mother-in-law put forth by the appellant seems to be a false and lame excuse to justify her act of not living in the society of her husband. there are discrepancies in the evidence of the appellant s witnesses regarding time and place of beating, and i, in agreement with the learned district judge am not prepared to place any reliance on the type of evidence produced by the appellant the appellant has thus not succeeded in establishing any justifiable cause for not living in the society of her husband & the decree for restitution of conjugal rights passed in favour of the respondent seems to be just and proper and does not call for any interference.7. this appeal is therefore, dismissed, but without any order as to costs.

Full Judgment

C.M. Lodha, J.

1. This is a wife's appeal from the decree of restitution of conjugal rights granted against her in favour of the husband by the District Judge Sri Ganganagar by his judgment dated 31-10-1970.

2. The marriage between the spouses took place on 13th July, 1965 and the wife went to the husband's house about a year after the marriage on the completion of 'Muklawa' ceremony, and lived with him for 3 days only. The husband's case is that thereafter the appellant's brother took her from his house and since then the appellant has never returned to the husband. It is alleged by the respondent that he called Panchayat of the members of his community several times so that some effort may be made by the Panchas to bring the appellant to the respondent's house. It was thus alleged that the appellant had withdrawn from the society of the respondent without any reasonable excuse.

3. The appellant-non petitioner resisted the respondent's application on the ground of cruelty and pleaded that the respondent asked for Rs. 10,000/- from her father by way of 'dowry' and was severely beaten by the respondent mother on account of not being able to get a 'dowry' of Rs. 10,000/- from her father.

4. After recording the evidence produced by the parties the learned District Judge Ganganagar found chat the appellant had withdrawn from the society of the respondent without any reasonable excuse and therefore he granted a decree for restitution of conjugal rights.

5. In this appeal learned Counsel for the appellant has urged that it was proved that the respondent had treated the appellant with such cruelty as to cast a reasonable apprehension in the mind of the appellant that it would be harmful or injurious to her to live with the respondent.

6. The respondent examined himself and two more witnesses viz. Jugrajsingh and Hajur Singh. As observed by the lower court it is fully established by the evidence of the respondent and his two witnesses that the appellant stayed with the petitioner only for 3 days after the 'Muklawa' ceremony was performed and thereafter refused to live m the society of the respondent. These witnesses have been cross-examined at length but nothing has been brought out from their cross examination so as to discredit their testimony. In rebuttal the appellant examined herself as D. W. 1 and produced four other persons in support of her case. They are N.A.W. 2 Jagrup Singh, N. A.W. 3 Babu Singh, N.A.W. 4 Jethu Singh, and N.A.W. 6 Kartar Singh. No medical evidence has been placed on the record in support of the appellant a allegation that she was beaten. It is further clear that no report was made to the Police nor any complaint filed in the court in this respect. It may be pointed out that the respondent's mother is 60 years old where as the appellant s brother Gura Singh who went to bring her from the respondent's house is a young man of 30 years. Even the respondent is younger than Gura Singh. It, therefore does not stand to reason that Gura Singh may have suffered his sister being beaten in his presence. Not a single neighbour or member of the locality who could have witnessed the act of alleged beating has been produced by the appellant It cannot be accepted, regard being had to the ordinary course of human conduct that on the very first night of their meeting a dowry of Rs. 10,000/- would be demanded from the appellant and her parents, who do not seem to belong to a comparatively prosperous Section of the society. The theory of beating by the mother-in-law put forth by the appellant seems to be a false and lame excuse to justify her act of not living in the society of her husband. There are discrepancies in the evidence of the appellant s witnesses regarding time and place of beating, and I, in agreement with the learned District Judge am not prepared to place any reliance on the type of evidence produced by the appellant The appellant has thus not succeeded in establishing any justifiable cause for not living in the society of her husband & the decree for restitution of conjugal rights passed in favour of the respondent seems to be just and proper and does not call for any interference.

7. This appeal is therefore, dismissed, but without any order as to costs.

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