Judgement JUDGMENT :- The defendant is the appellant. The suit out of which this appeal arises was brought by the three respondents in the Court of the Subordinate Judge of Ootacamund for maintenance on the ground alternatively that the first respondent was married to the appellant, of was at least his permanently kept concubine, and that respondents 2 and 3 were born to the first respondent by the appellant. The Subordinate Judge found against both cases, viz., the case of marriage and permanent concubinage, and dismissed the suit. On appeal, the learned Additional District Judge, Coimbatore, found the case of permanent concubinage made out and granted a decree to respondents 2 and 3 awarding maintenance at the rats of Rs. 30 per month which was the rate which the Sub-ordinate Judge indicated would be the maintenance payable if he had found that they were entitled to maintenance. The appellant seeks to dislodge the fmding that the children (respondents 2 and 3) were born to him, on the ground that the finding as to permanent concubinage of the first respondent is vitiated by the fact that the District Judge failed to take note of two important pieces of evidence. The first is evidence furnished by Ex. B-15 and B-16 wherein it was stated on a prior occasion by first respondent that respondents 2 and 3 were born to one Kallan. This Kallan is not the appellant. It is true the District Judge has not referred to this piece of evidence, though the Subordinate Judge has referred to it. But, on that ground alone, it would not be permissible for this Court to interfere in second appeal with a finding of fact when there is other material available to support the finding. In this case, there is ample material available to support the finding of the District Judge as to permanent concubinage. I am not therefore inclined to interfere with the finding arrived at by the learned District Judge on that point. 2.
In this case, there is ample material available to support the finding of the District Judge as to permanent concubinage. I am not therefore inclined to interfere with the finding arrived at by the learned District Judge on that point. 2. Next Sri D. Ramaswami Aiyangar for the appellant contended that on the finding of the District Judge, the intercourse between the appellant and the first respondent would be adulterous, because the husband of the first respondent is found by the Subordinate Judge and the District Judge to be alive and consequently counsel argues that the illegitimate children born to a woman as a result of adulterous intercourse would not be entitled to any relief under the Hindu law. We referred to the text books to show that such illegitimate children born of adulterous intercourse would not be entitled to rank as heirs of sudras. That rule can apply only to inheritance as heirs. Certainly, it does not apply to a claim for maintenance as illegitimate children. As early as Subramania Mudaliar v. Velu, ILR 34 Mad 68 it was laid down that an illegitimate son of a sudra born as a result of adulterous intercourse would be entitled to maintenance at the hands of the putative father. The very argument now advanced namely that such a claim would be opposes to public policy was rejected by the Bench in Subramania Mudaliars case ILR 34 Mad 68 because the principle of Hindu law under which maintenance is awarded is exclusion from inheritance. If that principle is kept in view, there can be no distinction between the case of an offspring of an adulterous intercourse and the illegitimate son by an unmarried woman in so far as right to maintenance is concerned. 3. Another argument attempted by Sri Ramaswami Aiyangar was that the continuance of a valid marriage would prevent any Inference being drawn to the effect that the children bom of the woman during the continuance of the valid marriage were born to another man as a as a result of adulterous intercourse. That is only a rule of evidence and not a conclusive presumption. It would be open in a particular case to show that despite the subsistence of a valid marriage, the husband had no access to the woman at the concerned period and the children were born to the paramour.
That is only a rule of evidence and not a conclusive presumption. It would be open in a particular case to show that despite the subsistence of a valid marriage, the husband had no access to the woman at the concerned period and the children were born to the paramour. There is evidence in this case to show that the first respondents husband deserted her many years ago and had nothing to do with her during the time when respondents 2 and 3 could have been conceived. This is a rule of evidence and has no application to this case. 4. The second appeal therefore fails and is dismissed with costs. No leave. Appeal dismissed.