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1979 DIGILAW 148 (MAD)

V. S. Ramanathan v. B. Subbulakshmi

1979-03-05

BALASUBRAMANYAN

body1979
Judgment :- 1. In this matrimonial case, a husband accused his wife of living in adultery with her own foster father. He asked for a divorce on that ground. The trial court granted him a decree. But the district court in appeal reversed it. In this second appeal the same outrageous allegation is again made by the husband against his wife. 2. Fornication between a foster parent and his ward is not exactly incestuous. Yet it is too revolting to the human mind to be of frequent occurrence even in imagainative fiction. There is only one modern classic I know of in this genre: Nabakovs “Lolita“Lolita—by Vladimir Nabakov.But even in that literary masterpiece, the principal characters were quite abnormal. One was a self-confessed old reprobate; the other was a teasing teenage nymphet. Such an unholy combination must be extremely rare in real life, almost as infrequent as rank incest. I do not rule out cases where individuals may practise sex behind closed shutters, all the while masquerading outside under an assumed consanguinity. The possibility of such cases, or, rather, the prepossession in ones mind of their existence, might render difficult the task of distinguishing a genuine relationship from the bogus. But all this must only further underline the caution that we should not countenance charges of illicit sexual intercourse excepting on the basis of strict proof. 3. The trial court observed in this case that direct evidence of adultery is well-nigh impossible. So it is, with most murders too. But that does not mean that a court of law can grant a divorce for the mere asking, any more than it can send a man to the gallows on pure suspicion. 4. The husband in this case had made two bold assertions in his petition for divorce. One was that his wife was having sexual intercourse with her forester father. The other was that he himself had no sexual intercourse with her and a child born to her was not his, but the foster fathers. He went into the witness box and gave evidence to this effect. But his own letters addressed to his wife as well as his father-in-law clearly showed that not only did he sleep with his wife and made her with child but t hat he had discussed plans for her forthcoming seem an them. He went into the witness box and gave evidence to this effect. But his own letters addressed to his wife as well as his father-in-law clearly showed that not only did he sleep with his wife and made her with child but t hat he had discussed plans for her forthcoming seem an them. In the teeth of these letters he nevertheless had the temerity to tell the court that he was innocent of carnal knowledge of his wife and suspected that the child was not his. Both the trial court and the first appellate court rightly disbelieved this part of his evidence. Nevertheless, this did not prevent the trial court from holding, on the basis of what it recorded as the “general background of life between the parties” that the wife had c ommitted adultery with her foster father. 5. As to the family background there was hardly any dispute between the parties. The wifes foster parents were an aged childless Brahmin couple in Madurai. The foster mother was not in the best of health as she had innumerable abortions. The girl had come into their household in 1962 having lost her father, after her widowed mother had left her to reside with some relations. From her early teenage, the girl was living in the same house with her foster parents. It was the foster father who got this girl a teaching job in a local school at Madurai. It was he who came forward to arrange for her marriage. It was he who paid the dowry to the bridegroom and undertook the wedding expenses. The foster father was in his late fifties when the marriage took place. 6. The trial court, however, took into note of a letter produced by the husband at the trial which the court regarded as containing a confession by the wife that she was committing adultery with her foster father. This was an inland letter without a post mark, written in the hand of the wife. The husbands case was that the wife had written that letter and had sealed it and had given it for mailing, but he got it intercepted when a neighbours urchin was about to take it to the pillar box. The wife admitted in her evidence from the witness box that the letter was written by her. The husbands case was that the wife had written that letter and had sealed it and had given it for mailing, but he got it intercepted when a neighbours urchin was about to take it to the pillar box. The wife admitted in her evidence from the witness box that the letter was written by her. But she said that she was not in full control of her will when she wrote it. She stated that her husband had given her some freeboot and then commanded her to write the letter to his own dictation. She asserted that the contents of the letter were untrue. The trial court, however, rejected her evidence. It accepted the husbands testimony to the effect that he had nothing to do with the composition of the letter and that it was done voluntarily by the wife and at her own will. The court rejected the contention put forward on behalf of the wife that she wrote it in a state of automatism. The court wondered as to whether Veeboothi or sacred ash could bring about this result. 7. The appellate court, however, accepted the endure of the wife. It said that the letter could not have been written voluntarily, although it was in her own hand. The appellate court observed that there was no occasion whatever for the wife writing such a letter to her foster parents when all the while she has been living with the foster father even after the marriage and only waiting for her husband to get a transfer to Madurai to come and live with her. The appellate court rejected the evidence of the husband, having found that he had not told the truth as respects his own relationship with his wife after the marriage. 8. In this understanding of the evidence in one way by the trial court and the other by the appellate court, this case has really to be decided on the conventional formula as to whether there was any evidence to support the finding of the appellate court. I am satisfied that not only was there ample evidence in support of the conclusion of the appellate court, but the trial court had no evidence whatever to have decided the case the other way about. As I earlier pointed out, the trial court relied heavily on its reading of what the background circumstances of this case were. I am satisfied that not only was there ample evidence in support of the conclusion of the appellate court, but the trial court had no evidence whatever to have decided the case the other way about. As I earlier pointed out, the trial court relied heavily on its reading of what the background circumstances of this case were. It seems to me that the trial court did not draw the proper legal inference but jumped to irrational conclusion on the question of adultery by the mere fact of the wife living under the same roof with her foster father. At this rate, I wonder whether it would not be possible for any court to infer improprieties in the relationship between persons living under the same roof as brother and sister, father and daughter, and the like. As I said before, incest is so abhorrent to mankind that one should expect the strongest proof for concluding that it exists in any given case. Although the relationship between a foster parent and a foster daughter is not based on consanguinity, any sexual connection between the two is just as bad as incest. For this kind of relationship to be known to exist in any give a case the court would have to have the strongest and the most cogent and convincing pieces of evidence to come to a conclusion that there was any such impropriety. From this standard, the trial courts conclusion was not only a wrong guess, but wholly heartless and perverse. 9. The appellate court, on the other hand, had drawn the correct inference from the facts. It rightly rejected the evidence of the husband as untrue, placing reliance on the testimony on the side of the wife as acceptable especially when not only the aged foster father but also the ailing foster mother had come into the witness box and faced the cross-examination. 10. Learned counsel for the husband then sought to put forward a legal submission on the basis of S. 13-A of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1956. This section was introduced by Amending Act 68 of 1976. The test of the section is as follows:— “13A. Alternate relief in divorce proceedings—In any proceeding under this Act, on a petition for dissolution of marriage by a decree of divorce except in so far as the petition is founded on the grounds mentioned in Cl. This section was introduced by Amending Act 68 of 1976. The test of the section is as follows:— “13A. Alternate relief in divorce proceedings—In any proceeding under this Act, on a petition for dissolution of marriage by a decree of divorce except in so far as the petition is founded on the grounds mentioned in Cl. (ii), (vi), and (vii) of sub S. (1) of S. 13, the court may, if it considers it just to do having regard to the circumstances of the case, pass instead a decree or for judicial separation.” Learned counsel invoked this new provision and urged me to pass a decree for judicial separation as the proper one in the circumstances of this case. I think the request of the learned counsel is based on a misconception of S. 13 A of the Act. The crucial word in the section is “instead”. This means that for a court to act under this section the court must be in a position to hold that the petitioner is entitled to a divorce, but ‘instead’ of granting a decree for divorce, a decree for judicial separati on might be made as the preferred way of disposal of the case. The section does not mean that where the petitioner has completely failed to make out any case, the court can even then simply present him with a decree for judicial separation, as if it were some consolation prize. 11. In this case, I have held that the appellate court was quite justified, on the evidence on record, in rejecting the ground put forward by the husband for the grant of divorce. These findings therefore, rule out the application of S. 13A. 12. Learned counsel, however, laid stress on the words “having regard to the circumstances of the case” occurring in S. 13A, and said that these circumstances are present in this case. I hold that these words do not operate and are not intended to operate in the void. As I earlier pointed out, the court must first be in a position to uphold the grounds for divorce urged by the petitioner, in order to consider the feasibility of passing a mere decree for judicial separation “having regard to the circumstances of the case”. As I earlier pointed out, the court must first be in a position to uphold the grounds for divorce urged by the petitioner, in order to consider the feasibility of passing a mere decree for judicial separation “having regard to the circumstances of the case”. The plea of the husband on the basis of S. 13A has to be rejected, not only because of absence of circumstances which are indicative of its application, but also because the section itself does not, and cannot, come into play in this case. 13. Before ending the matter with the formal words of disposal of the second appeal, I think should remark on the way in which both the courts below had approached the matter in issue before them although each differed from the other in its ultimate conclusion. Here was a case where a husband was accusing his wife of a heinous matrimonial deviation in a way which would outrage civilised peoples sensibilities on prohibited degrees of sex relationship. There is an endure, however, that either court was scandalised by the nature of the case. Their judgments give the impression that they have dealt with the controversy in this petition as yet another addition to the statistics of their disposals, and nothing more. They have set down the pleadings, the formulation of the issues, the discussion of the evidence and the findings under each issue, all in numbered paragraphs, without any show of concern, very mechanically. It is not known whether they were disturbed at all by the kind of case which they had to go through and determine. Not one comment was made even about the strangeness of the allegations, the base character of the testimony and the like. Divorce cases might be on the increase nowadays. And trial of such cases might have almost become a routine, like promissory note suits. Even so, it seems to me that in the trial and the understanding of these cases, the courts must bring to bear a human approach. They must hear the cases with their ears as close to their hearts as to their reasoning faculties. And trial of such cases might have almost become a routine, like promissory note suits. Even so, it seems to me that in the trial and the understanding of these cases, the courts must bring to bear a human approach. They must hear the cases with their ears as close to their hearts as to their reasoning faculties. Even the legislature, in drawing up the statute, has accepted the human approach as the desideratum in the trial of these cases when it laid down that the court will have to try whether the parties could not be brought together, before proceeding to enter upon an inquiry. The judgments of the courts below do not disclose whether all attempt in this direction was ever made either at the trial stage or at the stage of first appeal. When the matter came to me in second appeal, however, my own nature and the mandate of the statute prompted me to find out if the parties could come together without an adjudication by me of the second appeal. I called not only the husband and the wife to come to court in person but also summoned the foster father. The wifes attitude was let bygones be bygones Even after all the happenings inside the court and outside she was ready to join her husband. The husband, however, set his face against any settlement and was keen in getting on with the second appeal and obtain a decision from this Court. I have earlier entered my conclusions on the points arising in the appeal. For the reasons stated therein, I hold that there is no merit in this Civil Miscellaneous Second Appeal. The order and decree of the lower appellate court are confirmed. The Civil Miscellaneous Second Appeal is dismissed. The appellant will pay the costs of the respondents.