.   The question that
requires to be answered first is as to 
whether  the
averments, accusations and 
character  assassination  of 
the  wife  by  the
appellant husband in the written statement constitutes  mental 
cruelty  for
sustaining the claim for divorce under Section 13(1)(i-a)
of  the 
Act.  The
position of law in this regard has come to  be 
well  settled  and 
declared
that  levelling  disgusting  
accusations   of   unchastity  
and   indecent
familiarity with a person outside wedlock and  allegations 
of  extramarital
relationship is a 
grave  assault  on 
the  character,  honour, 
reputation,
status as well as the health of the wife. Such aspersions
of  perfidiousness
attributed to the wife, viewed in the context of  an 
educated  Indian  wife
and judged by Indian conditions and standards would amount
to worst form  of
insult and cruelty, sufficient by itself to  substantiate 
cruelty  in  law,
warranting the claim of the wife being allowed. That
such  allegations  made
in the written statement or suggested in the course of  examination 
and  by
way of cross-examination satisfy the requirement of law has
also come to  be
firmly laid down by this Court. On going through the  relevant 
portions  of
such allegations, we find that no exception could be taken
to  the 
findings
recorded by the Family Court as well as the High Court.
We  find 
that  they
are of such quality, magnitude and consequence  as 
to  cause  mental 
pain,
agony and suffering amounting to the  reformulated 
concept  of  cruelty 
in
matrimonial law causing profound and  lasting 
disruption  and  driving 
the
wife to  feel  deeply 
hurt  and  reasonably 
apprehend  that  it 
would  be
dangerous for her to live with a husband who was taunting
her like that  and
rendered the maintenance of matrimonial home impossible.”
  Applying the
said ratio to the facts of this case, we are inclined  to
hold that the unsubstantiated allegations levelled by  the 
Respondent  wife
and the threats and attempt to commit suicide  by 
her  amounted  to 
mental
cruelty and therefore, the marriage deserves to be dissolved
by a decree  of
divorce on the ground stated in Section 13(1)(ia) of the
Act.
 Taking an
overall  view  of 
the  entire  evidence 
and  the  judgment
delivered by the trial Court, we firmly believe that there
was  no 
need  to
take a different view than the one taken by the trial
Court.  The  behaviour
of the Respondent wife appears to be terrifying  and 
horrible.   One  would
find it difficult to live with such a person with
tranquility and  peace  of
mind.  Such torture
would adversely affect the life of the husband.   It  is
also not in dispute that the Respondent wife had left the
matrimonial  house
on 12th July, 1995 i.e. more than 20 years back.  Though not on record,  the
learned counsel submitted that  till 
today,  the  Respondent 
wife  is  not
staying with the Appellant. 
The daughter of the 
Appellant  and  Respondent
has also grown up and according to the learned counsel,
she  is 
working  in
an IT company.  We
have  no 
reason  to  disbelieve 
the  aforestated  facts
because with the passage of time, the daughter must have
grown  up 
and  the
separation of the Appellant and the wife must have also  become 
normal  for
her and therefore, at this juncture it would not be  proper 
to  bring  them
together, especially when the Appellant husband was
treated  so  cruelly 
by
the Respondent wife.
 We, therefore,
quash and set aside the impugned judgment delivered  by
the High Court.  The
decree of divorce dated 17th November, 2001 
passed  by
the Principal Judge, Family Court, Bangalore  in 
M.C.  No.603  of 
1995  is
hereby restored.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             REPORTABLE
 
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
                       
CIVIL APPEAL NO.3253 OF 2008
NARENDRA                            … APPELLANT
VERSUS
K. MEENA                          … RESPONDENT
                               J U D G M E N T
ANIL R. DAVE, J.
1.    This appeal has
been filed by the Appellant husband, whose decree  for
divorce passed by the trial 
Court  has  been 
set  aside  by 
the  impugned
judgment dated 8th March, 2006 passed by the  High 
Court  of  Karnataka 
at
Bangalore in Miscellaneous First Appeal No.171 of 2002 (FC).
  2.  The facts giving rise to the present appeal,
in  a 
nutshell,  are  as
under :
      The Respondent
wife filed Miscellaneous  First  Appeal 
under  Section
28(1) of the Hindu Marriage Act,  1955 
(hereinafter  referred  to 
as  “the
Act”) before the High Court as she was aggrieved by the
judgment and  decree
dated 17th November, 2001, passed by  the 
Principal  Judge,  Family 
Court,
Bangalore in M.C. No.603 of 1995 under Section 13(1)(ia)
of  the 
Act  filed
by the Appellant husband seeking divorce.
3.    The  Appellant 
husband  had  married 
the  Respondent  wife 
on  26th
February, 1992.  Out
of the wedlock, a female child named Ranjitha was  born
on 13th November, 1993. 
The case of the Appellant was that 
the  Respondent
did not live 
happily  with  the 
Appellant  even  for  a  month 
after  the
marriage.   The  reason 
for  filing  the 
divorce  petition  was 
that  the
Respondent wife had become cruel because of  her 
highly  suspicious  nature
and she used to level absolutely frivolous but serious  allegations 
against
him regarding his character and more particularly  about 
his  extra-marital
relationship. 
Behaviour of the Respondent wife made life of  the 
Appellant
husband miserable and it became impossible for the
Appellant  to  stay  with
the Respondent 
for  the  aforestated 
reasons.   Moreover,  the 
Respondent
wanted the Appellant to leave his parents and other
family  members  and  to
get separated from them so that the Respondent can live  independently;  and
in that event it would become more torturous for the
Appellant to stay  only
with the Respondent wife with  her 
such  nature  and 
behaviour.  The  main
ground was cruelty, as serious allegations were  levelled 
about  the  moral
character of the Appellant to the  effect 
that  he  was 
having  an  extra-
marital affair with a maid, named Kamla.  Another important  allegation 
was
that the Respondent would very often threaten the Appellant
that  she 
would
commit suicide.  In
fact, on 2th July, 1995, she picked up 
a  quarrel  with
the Appellant, went to the bathroom, locked the door from
inside and  poured
kerosene on her body and attempted to commit suicide.  On getting 
smell  of
kerosene coming from the bathroom, the  Appellant, 
his  elder  brother 
and
some of the neighbours broke open the door of  the 
bathroom  and  prevented
the Respondent wife from committing suicide.   The 
aforestated  facts  were
found to be 
sufficient  by  the 
learned  Family  Court 
for  granting  the
Appellant a decree of divorce dated 17th November,
2001,  after  considering
the evidence adduced by both the parties.
4.    Being aggrieved
by the judgment  and  decree 
of  divorce  dated 
17th
November, 2001, the Respondent wife had  filed 
Miscellaneous  First  Appeal
No.171 of 2002 (FC), which has been allowed by the High
Court on 8th  March,
2006, whereby the decree of divorce dated 17th November,
2001 has  been  set
aside.  Being
aggrieved by the judgment and order passed by the High  Court,
the Appellant has filed this appeal.
5.    The learned
counsel appearing for the Respondent was not present  when
the appeal was called out for hearing.  The matter was  kept 
back  but  for
the whole day, the learned counsel for the Respondent did
not appear.   Even
on an earlier occasion on 31st March, 2016, when the appeal
was called  out,
the learned counsel appearing for the Respondent wife
was  not 
present  and
therefore, the Court 
had  heard  the 
learned  counsel  appearing 
for  the
Appellant.
6.    The learned
counsel appearing for the  Appellant  submitted 
that  the
High Court had committed a grave error in  the 
process  of  re-appreciating
the evidence and by setting aside the decree of divorce  granted 
in  favour
of the Appellant.  He
submitted that there was no  reason  to 
believe  that
there was no cruelty on the part of the  Respondent 
wife.   He  highlighted
the observations made by the Family Court and took us
through the  evidence,
which was recorded before the Family Court.  He drew our 
attention  to  the
depositions made by independent witnesses, neighbours of the
Appellant,  who
had rescued the Respondent wife from committing  suicide 
by  breaking  open
the door of the bathroom when the Respondent was on the
verge of  committing
suicide by pouring kerosene on herself and by lighting a
match  stick.   Our
attention was also drawn to 
the  fact  that 
serious  allegations  levelled
against the character of the 
Appellant  in  relation 
to  an  extra-marital
affair with a maid were absolutely baseless as no maid named
Kamla had  ever
worked in the 
house  of  the 
Appellant.   It  was 
also  stated  that 
the
Respondent wife was insisting  the 
Appellant  to  get 
separated  from  his
family members and on 12th July, 1995  i.e. 
the  date  of 
the  attempt  to
commit  suicide,  the 
Respondent  wife  deserted 
the  Appellant   husband.
According to the learned counsel, the facts recorded by
the  learned  Family
Court after appreciating the evidence  were 
sufficient  to  show 
that  the
Appellant was entitled to a decree of  divorce 
as  per  the  provisions  of
Section 13(1)(ia) of the Act.
7.    We have
carefully gone through the evidence 
adduced  by  the 
parties
before the trial Court and we tried to find out  as 
to  why  the  appellate
Court had taken a different view than the one  taken 
by  the  Family 
Court
i.e. the trial Court.
8.    The High Court
came to the conclusion that there was no cruelty  meted
out to the Appellant, which would enable him to get a decree
of divorce,  as
per the 
provisions  of  the 
Act.   The  allegations 
with  regard  to  the
character of the Appellant and the extra-marital affair  with 
a  maid  were
taken very seriously by the Family Court, but the High
Court  did  not 
give
much importance to the false allegations made.  The constant 
persuasion  by
the Respondent 
for  getting  separated 
from  the  family 
members  of  the
Appellant and constraining the Appellant to live separately  and 
only  with
her was also not considered to be of any importance by the
High  Court.   No
importance was given to the incident with regard to  an 
attempt  to  commit
suicide made by the Respondent wife.  On the contrary, it appears  that 
the
High Court found some justification in the request made  by 
the  Respondent
to live separately from the family of the Appellant
husband.   According  to
the High Court, the trial Court did not appreciate  the 
evidence  properly.
For the aforestated reasons, the High Court reversed  the 
findings  arrived
at by the learned Family Court and set aside the decree of
divorce.
9.    We do not agree
with the manner  in  which 
the  High  Court 
has  re-
appreciated the evidence and has come to a different conclusion.
10.   With regard to
the allegations of cruelty levelled by 
the  Appellant,
we are in agreement with the findings of the trial  Court.  
First  of  all,
let us look at the incident with regard to an attempt to
commit  suicide  by
the Respondent.  
Upon  perusal  of 
the  evidence  of 
the  witnesses,  the
findings arrived at by the trial Court to the  effect 
that  the  Respondent
wife had locked herself in the bathroom and had poured
kerosene  on  herself
so  as  to 
commit  suicide,  are 
not  in  dispute.  
Fortunately  for  the
Appellant, because of the noise and disturbance, even the
neighbours of  the
Appellant rushed to help and the door of the bathroom
was  broken  open 
and
the Respondent was saved. 
Had she been successful in her attempt to  commit
suicide, then one can 
foresee  the  consequences 
and  the  plight 
of  the
Appellant because in that 
event  the  Appellant 
would  have  been 
put  to
immense difficulties because of the legal provisions.  We 
feel  that  there
was no fault on the part of the Appellant nor was there any
reason  for  the
Respondent wife to make an attempt to  commit 
suicide.   No  husband 
would
ever be comfortable with or tolerate such an act by  his 
wife  and  if  the
wife succeeds in committing 
suicide,  then  one 
can  imagine  how 
a  poor
husband would get entangled into the clutches of law, which
would  virtually
ruin his sanity, peace of mind, career and probably his  entire 
life.   The
mere idea with regard to facing  legal 
consequences  would  put 
a  husband
under tremendous stress. 
The thought itself is distressing. 
Such a  mental
cruelty could not have 
been  taken  lightly 
by  the  High 
Court.  In  our
opinion, only this one event was sufficient for  the 
Appellant  husband  to
get a decree of divorce on the ground of cruelty.  It 
is  needless  to  add
that such threats 
or  acts  constitute 
cruelty.   Our  aforesaid 
view  is
fortified by a decision of this Court in  the 
case  of  Pankaj 
Mahajan  v.
Dimple @ Kajal (2011) 12 SCC 
1,  wherein  it 
has  been  held 
that  giving
repeated threats to commit suicide amounts to cruelty.
11.   The Respondent
wife wanted the Appellant to  get  separated 
from  his
family.  The evidence
shows that the family was  virtually  maintained 
from
the income of the 
Appellant  husband.  It 
is  not  a 
common  practice  or
desirable culture for a Hindu  son 
in  India  to  get  separated 
from  the
parents upon getting married at the instance of the  wife, 
especially  when
the son is the only earning member in the family.  A 
son,  brought  up  and
given education by his parents, has a moral and  legal 
obligation  to  take
care and maintain the parents, when they  become 
old  and  when 
they  have
either no income or have a meagre income.  In 
India,  generally  people 
do
not subscribe to 
the  western  thought, 
where,  upon  getting 
married  or
attaining majority, the son gets  separated 
from  the  family.  
In  normal
circumstances, a wife is expected to be  with 
the  family  of  the  husband
after the marriage. 
She becomes integral to and forms part 
of  the  family
of the husband and normally 
without  any  justifiable 
strong  reason,  she
would never insist that her husband should get  separated 
from  the  family
and live only with her. 
In the  instant  case, 
upon  appreciation  of  the
evidence, the trial Court came to the conclusion that  merely 
for  monetary
considerations, the Respondent wife wanted  to  get  her 
husband  separated
from his family.  The
averment of the Respondent was to the effect that  the
income of the Appellant was also spent  for 
maintaining  his  family.  
The
said  grievance  of 
the  Respondent  is 
absolutely  unjustified.   A   son
maintaining his parents is absolutely normal in Indian  culture 
and  ethos.
There is no other reason for which the Respondent
wanted  the  Appellant 
to
be separated from the family - the sole reason was to
enjoy  the  income 
of
the Appellant. 
Unfortunately, the  High  Court 
considered  this  to 
be  a
justifiable reason. In the opinion  of 
the  High  Court, 
the  wife  had  a
legitimate expectation to see that the income of her  husband 
is  used  for
her and not for the family members of the Respondent  husband.  
We  do  not
see any reason to justify the said  view 
of  the  High 
Court.   As  stated
hereinabove, in a Hindu society, it is a pious  obligation 
of  the  son  to
maintain the parents. 
If a wife  makes  an 
attempt  to  deviate 
from  the
normal practice and normal 
custom  of  the 
society,  she  must 
have  some
justifiable 
reason  for  that 
and  in  this 
case,  we  do 
not  find  any
justifiable reason, except monetary consideration of  the 
Respondent  wife.
In our opinion, normally, no husband would tolerate this
and  no 
son  would
like to be separated from his old parents and other family
members, who  are
also dependent upon his income.  The persistent  effort 
of  the  Respondent
wife to constrain the Appellant to be separated from  the 
family  would  be
torturous for the husband and in our opinion,  the 
trial  Court  was 
right
when it came to the conclusion that this constitutes an  act 
of  ‘cruelty’.
12.   With regard to
the allegations  about  an 
extra-marital  affair  with
maid named Kamla, the re-appreciation of the  evidence 
by  the  High 
Court
does not appear to be correct.  There is sufficient evidence to  the 
effect
that there was 
no  maid  named 
Kamla  working  at 
the  residence  of  the
Appellant.  Some
averment with regard to some relative has been relied  upon
by the High Court to come to a conclusion that there was a
lady named  Kamla
but the High Court has 
ignored  the  fact 
that  the  Respondent 
wife  had
levelled 
allegations  with  regard 
to  an  extra-marital 
affair  of   the
Appellant with the maid and not with someone else.  Even if there 
was  some
relative named Kamla, 
who  might  have 
visited  the  Appellant, 
there  is
nothing to substantiate the allegations  levelled 
by  the  Respondent 
with
regard to an extra-marital affair.  True, it is very difficult to  establish
such allegations but at the same time, it is equally true
that to suffer  an
allegation pertaining to one’s character of having an  extra-marital 
affair
is quite torturous for any person – be it a husband  or 
a  wife.   We 
have
carefully gone through the evidence but  we 
could  not  find  any  reliable
evidence to show 
that  the  Appellant 
had  an  extra-marital 
affair  with
someone.  Except for
the baseless and reckless 
allegations,  there  is  not
even the slightest evidence that would  suggest 
that  there  was 
something
like an affair of the Appellant with the maid named by
the  Respondent.   We
consider levelling of 
absolutely  false  allegations 
and  that  too, 
with
regard to an extra-marital life to be quite serious and that
can  surely  be
a cause for metal cruelty.
13.   This Court, in
the  case 
of  Vijaykumar  Ramchandra 
Bhate  v.  Neela
Vijaykumar Bhate, 2003 (6) SCC 334 has held as under:-
“7.   The question
that requires to be answered first is as to 
whether  the
averments, accusations and 
character  assassination  of 
the  wife  by  the
appellant husband in the written statement constitutes  mental 
cruelty  for
sustaining the claim for divorce under Section 13(1)(i-a)
of  the 
Act.  The
position of law in this regard has come to  be 
well  settled  and 
declared
that  levelling  disgusting  
accusations   of   unchastity  
and   indecent
familiarity with a person outside wedlock and  allegations 
of  extramarital
relationship is a 
grave  assault  on 
the  character,  honour, 
reputation,
status as well as the health of the wife. Such aspersions
of  perfidiousness
attributed to the wife, viewed in the context of  an 
educated  Indian  wife
and judged by Indian conditions and standards would amount
to worst form  of
insult and cruelty, sufficient by itself to  substantiate 
cruelty  in  law,
warranting the claim of the wife being allowed. That
such  allegations  made
in the written statement or suggested in the course of  examination 
and  by
way of cross-examination satisfy the requirement of law has
also come to  be
firmly laid down by this Court. On going through the  relevant 
portions  of
such allegations, we find that no exception could be taken
to  the 
findings
recorded by the Family Court as well as the High Court.
We  find 
that  they
are of such quality, magnitude and consequence  as 
to  cause  mental 
pain,
agony and suffering amounting to the  reformulated 
concept  of  cruelty 
in
matrimonial law causing profound and  lasting 
disruption  and  driving 
the
wife to  feel  deeply 
hurt  and  reasonably 
apprehend  that  it 
would  be
dangerous for her to live with a husband who was taunting
her like that  and
rendered the maintenance of matrimonial home impossible.”
14.   Applying the
said ratio to the facts of this case, we are inclined  to
hold that the unsubstantiated allegations levelled by  the 
Respondent  wife
and the threats and attempt to commit suicide  by 
her  amounted  to 
mental
cruelty and therefore, the marriage deserves to be dissolved
by a decree  of
divorce on the ground stated in Section 13(1)(ia) of the
Act.
15.   Taking an
overall  view  of 
the  entire  evidence 
and  the  judgment
delivered by the trial Court, we firmly believe that there
was  no 
need  to
take a different view than the one taken by the trial
Court.  The  behaviour
of the Respondent wife appears to be terrifying  and 
horrible.   One  would
find it difficult to live with such a person with
tranquility and  peace  of
mind.  Such torture
would adversely affect the life of the husband.   It  is
also not in dispute that the Respondent wife had left the
matrimonial  house
on 12th July, 1995 i.e. more than 20 years back.  Though not on record,  the
learned counsel submitted that  till 
today,  the  Respondent 
wife  is  not
staying with the Appellant. 
The daughter of the 
Appellant  and  Respondent
has also grown up and according to the learned counsel,
she  is 
working  in
an IT company.  We
have  no 
reason  to  disbelieve 
the  aforestated  facts
because with the passage of time, the daughter must have
grown  up 
and  the
separation of the Appellant and the wife must have also  become 
normal  for
her and therefore, at this juncture it would not be  proper 
to  bring  them
together, especially when the Appellant husband was
treated  so  cruelly 
by
the Respondent wife.
16.   We, therefore,
quash and set aside the impugned judgment delivered  by
the High Court.  The
decree of divorce dated 17th November, 2001 
passed  by
the Principal Judge, Family Court, Bangalore  in 
M.C.  No.603  of 
1995  is
hereby restored.
17.   The appeal is,
accordingly, allowed with no order as to costs.
                                                            
.…………………………….J.
                                        (ANIL
R. DAVE)
                                                            
……………………………..J.
                               (L. NAGESWARA
RAO)
NEW DELHI
OCTOBER 06, 2016.