Eknath s/o. Sukhdeo Gaikwad v. Nirmala w/o. Eknath Gaikwad
1995-11-28
A.D.MANE
body1995
DigiLaw.ai
JUDGMENT - A.D. MANE, J. :---This revision can be disposed of at the admission stage itself. On hearing the learned Counsel for the parties, rule is, therefore, made returnable forthwith. 2. A short but important question is involved in this civil revision application. The petitioner is the husband of the respondent wife, whose marriage took place in accordance with Bhil rites on 28-4-1986. The petitioner filed Hindu Marriage Petition No. A-46/1995 in the Family Court at Aurangabad for dissolution of the marriage. Pending that petition the respondent made her application under section 24 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (for short, the Act) and the Family Court by its order made on 20-9-1995 directed the petitioner to pay interim alimony at the rate of Rs. 700/- per month to the respondent and her minor children, in addition to Rs. 500/- towards costs of the expenses of the litigation and Rs. 160/- towards the expenses to be borne by the respondent for attending the Court. 3. Mr. Naik, learned Counsel for the petitioner, urged that granting interim alimony not only to the respondent but also to her two minor children under section 24 of the Act is illegal. It is submitted that section 24 of the Act does not empower the Court to grant interim alimony to the children of either of the spouses. Therefore, in the instant case, the Family Court has committed an error of law in granting interim alimony in excess than what the respondent wife was entitled to receive having regard to the financial capacity of the petitioner. 4. The impugned order, no doubt, directs the petitioner to pay Rs. 700/- per month as interim alimony not only to the respondent but also to her two minor children. But to appreciate the contention it would be appropriate to re-produce section 24 of the Act.
4. The impugned order, no doubt, directs the petitioner to pay Rs. 700/- per month as interim alimony not only to the respondent but also to her two minor children. But to appreciate the contention it would be appropriate to re-produce section 24 of the Act. It reads as under :--- "Where in any proceeding under this Act it appears to the Court that either the wife or the husband, as the case may be, has no independent income sufficient for her or his support and the necessary expenses of the proceedings, it may, on the application of the wife or the husband, order the respondent to pay to the petitioner the "expenses of the proceeding and monthly, during the proceeding such sum as, having regard to the petitioner's own income and the income of the respondent, it may seem to the Court to be reasonable." On plain reading of section 24, it is no doubt true that the section recognises only the right either of the wife or husband who has no independent sufficient income for her or his support, to be entitled to maintenance pendente lite and expenses of the proceedings under the Act. It does not include children dependant either on the wife or the husband. Section 24 of the Act clearly postulates the right of wife to maintenance as an incident of her status or estate of matrimony. Moreover, in general the husband is bound to defray the wife's costs of any proceedings under the Act and to provide for her maintenance and separate expenses pending the disposal of such proceedings. 5. Thus, the principle embodied in section 24 of the Act provides a rule for payment of the maintenance pendente lite and the expenses of the proceedings by the husband to the wife as subsistence allowance during the proceedings relating to the matrimonial causes under the Act. Nevertheless it is implicit in the provisions of section 24 of the Act that making of the order is a matter of discretion for the Court. The Court may make order in favour of wife or the husband, as the case may be, where it is shown that such person has no independent income sufficient for her or his support and necessary expenses of the proceedings.
The Court may make order in favour of wife or the husband, as the case may be, where it is shown that such person has no independent income sufficient for her or his support and necessary expenses of the proceedings. The section also lays down that interim alimony may be ordered to be paid must be such as appears reasonable to the Court in exercise of that discretion and directs the Court that in doing so it must have regard to the petitioner's own income and the income of the respondent. The Court is thus empowered under this action to make an order which is to operate during the proceedings by taking into account the circumstances of the case. That necessarily means that the Court is not precluded from taking into account the liability of the wife to maintain her children where it is shown that even in case of minor children there is no separate support for them except the mother. The Court is indeed within its powers to fix the amount of interim maintenance in proceedings under the Act even though the minor children are not entitled to claim separate maintenance pendente lite and the expenses of such proceedings under the Act. In this context it is important to take into account the general rule relating to the personal obligation of husband to maintain his wife and children who are unable to maintain themselves. Therefore, even if section 24 of the Act is applicable only in case of wife to receive maintenance pendente lite and expenses of the proceedings under the Act, the Court is not precluded in fixing the quantum of maintenance by taking into account all the attending circumstances of the case including the maintenance of minor child or children to arrive at a proper solution having particular regard to the facts of each case. 6. Therefore, there does not appear any merit in the submission of the learned Counsel for the petitioner that the quantum of Rs. 700/- per month granted to the respondent wife as maintenance pendente lite is either excessive or exorbitant or same is not within the paying capacity of the petitioner. 7. The respondent has been able to show from the salary pass book produced by the petitioner that his total salary is Rs. 4,513/. It is true that after deductions the petitioner receives Rs.
7. The respondent has been able to show from the salary pass book produced by the petitioner that his total salary is Rs. 4,513/. It is true that after deductions the petitioner receives Rs. 1789/- in his hand but it cannot be said that granting of interim alimony at the rate of Rs. 700/- per month is outside the paying capacity of the petitioner. The deductions cannot be regarded as compulsory deductions from his salary. The petitioner can very well avoid some deductions from his salary in which case he can very well pay more than Rs. 700/- to the respondent by way of interim alimony. As a matter of fact, if rule of one-third is applied for grant of maintenance allowance to the wife, the petitioner is under legal obligation to pay Rs. 1,500/- per month as interim alimony. That means the quantum of maintenance for the respondent would be more than Rs. 700/- per month in the present case. Keeping in view the facts that the respondent has to look after her two minor children I do not think that the amount of Rs. 700/- per month can be regarded as excessive amount fixed by the family Court. In the circumstances I find no merit in the submission of Mr. Naik, learned Counsel for the petitioner. 8. The result, therefore, is that the petition is liable to be rejected. It is accordingly rejected. Rule is discharged. Petition dismissed.