No maintenance by non-working husband
In a judgment which can bring relief to a number of unemployed husbands from the liability to pay maintenance to their wives, the Delhi High Court recently has declared that the law relating to maintenance to be paid to wives under Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure does not apply in a situation where the husband is unemployed and isn't himself earning. Deciding in Sanjay Bhardwaj v. State, the Justice Shiv Narayan Dhingra reversed the decision of the lower court fixing maintenance in such circumstances.
The High Court inter alia observed;
4. ... Under prevalent laws i.e.
Hindu Adoption & Maintenance Act, Hindu Marriage Act, Section 125 Cr.P.C -
a husband is supposed to maintain his un-earning spouse out of the income which
he earns. No law provides that a husband has to maintain a wife, living
separately from him, irrespective of the fact whether he earns or not. Court
cannot tell the husband that he should beg, borrow or steal but give
maintenance to the wife, more so when the husband and wife are almost equally
qualified and almost equally capable of earning and both of them claimed to be gainfully
employed before marriage. If the husband was BSc. and Masters in
Marketing Management from Pondicherry University, the wife was
MA (English) & MBA. If the husband was working as a Manager abroad,
the wife with MBA degree was also working in an MNC in India. Under these
circumstances, fixing of maintenance by the Court without there being even a
prima facie proof of the husband being employed in India and with clear proof
of the fact that the passport of the husband was seized, he was not permitted
to leave country, (the bail was given with a condition that he shall keep
visiting Investigating Officer as and when called) is contrary to law and not
warranted under provisions of Domestic Violence Act.
5. We are living in an era of
equality of sexes. The Constitution provides equal treatment to be given
irrespective of sex, caste and creed. An unemployed husband, who is holding an
MBA degree, cannot be treated differently to an unemployed wife, who is also
holding an MBA degree. Since both are on equal footing one cannot be asked to
maintain other unless one is employed and other is not employed. As far as
dependency on parents is concerned, I consider that once a person is grown up,
educated he cannot be asked to beg and borrow from the parents and maintain
wife. The parents had done their duty of educating them and now
they cannot be burdened to maintain husband and wife as both are grown up
and must take care of themselves.
6. It must be remembered that there
is no legal presumption that behind every failed marriage there is either dowry
demand or domestic violence. Marriages do fail for various other reasons.
The difficulty is that real causes of failure of marriage are rarely admitted
in Courts. Truth and honesty is becoming a rare commodity, in marriages and in
averments made before the Courts.
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