K. P. MOHAPATRA, J. ( 1 ) THE petitioner, husband of the opposite party has challenged the order passed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge, Jeypore, whereby, he set aside the order of the learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate, Nowrangpur and allowed the petition of the opposite party under S. 125 of the Cr. P. C. (Code' for short) by granting maintenance to be paid to her by the petitioner at the rate of Rs. 75/- per month with effect from 27-1-1982. ( 2 ) THE undisputed facts are that the petitioner and the opposite party, husband and wife respectively are middle aged and the former fathered six children born to the latter. Both of them come from comparatively affluent families of Nowrangpur sub-division in Koraput district. According to the allegations made by the opposite party in her petition under S. 125 of the Code, the petitioner kept a concubine which became the root cause for dissension between them. As she used to protest, the petitioner used to give her beatings, for which she had on several occasions left the matrimonial home and taken shelter in her paternal house. On one occasion she even went to Pondichery and lived with her sister in the Ashram of Sri Aurobindo. She was finally driven out by the petitioner who did not even provide bare necessities for her maintenance. The petitioner opposed and countered all the allegations by stating that he was not the culprit, but the real trouble-monger was the opposite party who is a spendthrift and has quarrelsome habits. She could not stay in peace with him and for no cause often picked up quarrels not only with him, but also with his parents. He denied that he had kept a mistress which was real cause for the family dissension and he stated that he was ready to welcome the opposite party back in the matrimonial home. ( 3 ) THE learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate while dealing with the evidence of the opposite party and her witnesses was more critical than usual in such types of cases. He wanted corroboration for the main events, such as, the quarrels and beatings leading to the dissension between the couple without lending thought to the fact that such events took place inside the house, may be in privacy in the absence of onlookers and neighbours.
He wanted corroboration for the main events, such as, the quarrels and beatings leading to the dissension between the couple without lending thought to the fact that such events took place inside the house, may be in privacy in the absence of onlookers and neighbours. When no such corroboration could be provided, he was reluctant to accept the case of the opposite party. On the contrary he gulped the entire evidence produced by the petitioner straightway without becoming as much critical about the same. Ultimately, he rejected the maintenance claimed. In the above premises, when a revision was filed by the opposite party, the learned Additional Sessions Judge had to look up the evidence to satisfy himself that the appreciation thereof made by the learned court below was appropriate and correct. But he was disappointed. On the contrary he found that the appreciation of evidence as lop-sided, unreasonable and unacceptable. He appreciated the evidence in the correct perspective and held that the opposite party was treated with cruelty and was ultimately deserted by the petitioner without making any provision for her maintenance. This finding of the learned Additional Sessions Judge has been vehemently challenged by Mr. K. T. Rao, learned counsel appearing for the petitioner. He urged that the learned Additional Sessions Judge exercising the power of revision had no business to scrutinise the evidence so as to record a different finding. Therefore, the revisional order is liable to be set aside. Mr. R. K. Patra, learned counsel appearing for the opposite party, on the other hand rightly contended that a case beset with human problems of enduring nature should not have been treated superficially seeking for corroboration of events which could not be provided and so the learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate was quite in error in holding that without corroboration cruelty and desertion could not be established. In that context, according to him, the approach of the learned Additional Sessions Judge was more human and could be justly arrived at according to law. Therefore, the impugned order by which he has allowed maintenance of Rs. 75/- per month in these days of soaring prices will only save the opposite party from destitution and so it should not be set aside. ( 4 ) I have glanced through the evidence adduced by the parties.
Therefore, the impugned order by which he has allowed maintenance of Rs. 75/- per month in these days of soaring prices will only save the opposite party from destitution and so it should not be set aside. ( 4 ) I have glanced through the evidence adduced by the parties. The evidence of the opposite party (P. W. 4) is that on account of her protest for the petitioner keeping a mistress she was being ill-treated and beaten at home. She was also driven out of the house on several occasions. The facts of ill-treatment and beatings confined to the four walls of the matrimonial home could not be provided with corroboration. A Hindu wife will never blame the husband unless the treatment meted out to her became unbearable beyond endurance. Particularly in the case of the opposite party, she was a mother of six children and if things were normal she would not have left the house leaving the children and their affection. This is a human aspect which was completely lost sight of by the learned Sub-Divisional Judicial Magistrate. It is true that the petitioner in his evidence (O. P. W. 1) denied ill-treatment and desertion of the opposite party by saying that she is quarrelsome and was unable to live in his house. But the fact remains that the opposite party did live in his house for a number of years so as to give birth to six children and to rear them up. In ordinary course she would not have left the matrimonial home, but for the behaviour meted out by the petitioner to her. It cannot be gainsaid that the petitioner as a husband was bound to tolerate and correct even if the opposite party had the tendency to quarrel. It was his duty to mend her habits than to drive her out of the house and refuse to maintain her. Till now he has not paid a farthing to her for maintenance. On consideration of the evidence of the parties themselves and without looking into any corroboration or otherwise through the mouth of outsiders, I am convinced that the learned Additional Sessions Judge took a correct view for holding that the opposite party was treated with cruelty and was deserted by the petitioner. The quantum of maintenance is low. Therefore, the interference with the impugned order is unwarranted.
The quantum of maintenance is low. Therefore, the interference with the impugned order is unwarranted. ( 5 ) IN the result, the criminal revision is dismissed. Revision dismissed. .