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Gujarat High Court · body

2018 DIGILAW 1265 (GUJ)

Vankar Manibhai Dhulabhai v. State of Gujarat

2018-12-18

A.S.SUPEHIA

body2018
JUDGMENT : A.S. SUPEHIA, J. 1. RULE. Mr. H.K. Patel, learned Additional Public Prosecutor for respondent No. 1-State and Mr. Dharmesh Patel, learned advocate for respondent No. 2-first informant appear and waive service of notice of rule on behalf of the respective respondents. (1) By way of the present petition, the petitioner seeks to challenge the impugned judgment and order dated 25.09.2017 passed by Additional Sessions Judge, Mahisagar at Lunawada in Criminal Revision Application No. 30 of 2017, whereby the learned Judge has allowed the revision application of respondent No. 2 and enhanced the amount of monthly maintenance from Rs. 3,000/- to Rs. 12,000/- in favour of the respondent No. 2 from the date of application. 2. The facts of the case as mentioned in the memo of application are as under: 2.1 The respondent No. 2 had preferred an application bearing Criminal Misc. Application No. 32 of 1999 under section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1974 (the Code) for maintenance before Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Balasinor. As settlement was arrived at between the parties, as per the compromise pursis below Exh.14, by judgment and order dated 17.01.2001 maintenance amount of Rs. 400/- per month was granted in favour of the respondent No. 2. 2.2 On 17.01.2001 the respondent No. 2 had preferred an application bearing Criminal Misc. Application No. 55 of 2005 under section 127 of the Code for enhancement of the maintenance amount before Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Balasinor, which was allowed by judgment and order dated 03.12.2009, whereby the learned Judge enhanced the maintenance amount of Rs. 1,000/- fixing the enhanced maintenance amount of Rs. 1,400/- to respondent No. 2. 2.3 Again respondent No. 2 preferred Criminal Misc. Application No. 51 of 2012 on 03.12.2009 under section 127 of the Code for enhancement of the maintenance amount before Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Balasinor, which came to be allowed vide judgment and order dated 05.05.2015, whereby the learned Judge enhanced the maintenance amount of Rs. 3,000/- per month to respondent No. 2. Application No. 51 of 2012 on 03.12.2009 under section 127 of the Code for enhancement of the maintenance amount before Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Balasinor, which came to be allowed vide judgment and order dated 05.05.2015, whereby the learned Judge enhanced the maintenance amount of Rs. 3,000/- per month to respondent No. 2. 2.4 Thereafter, respondent No. 2 challenged the aforesaid order dated 05.05.2015 by filing Criminal Revision Application No. 58 of 2015 for enhancement of maintenance amount before 3rd Additional Sessions Judge, Kheda at Nadiad and considering the salary slip of the petitioner by the impugned judgment and order dated 15.02.2016 the aforesaid revision application of respondent No. 2 came to be allowed and thereby the amount of maintenance was enhanced from Rs. 3,000/- to Rs. 12,000/- per month. 2.5 Against the aforesaid judgment and order, the petitioner preferred Special Civil Application No. 2802 of 2016 before this court, wherein vide order dated 29.11.2016 stay was granted after bi-party hearing on the ground that there is proof of marriage between the parties. Thereafter, by order dated 11.07.2017 this court disposed of the matter and thereby quashed and set aside the aforesaid order dated 15.02.2016 and remanded the matter before the lower court for passing a fresh order, after giving an opportunity of hearing to all concerned. 2.6 The petitioner has paid maintenance amount to respondent No. 2 till today as per the aforesaid judgment and order dated 03.12.2009 passed by Judicial Magistrate, First Class, Balasinor in Criminal Misc. Application No. 55 of 2005. 3. Learned advocate for the petitioner has submitted that learned Judge has erred in awarding the enhanced maintenance from the date of application. He has submitted that as per the settled law alteration of allowance can be made from the date of the order and not from the date of application. Reliance was placed upon the judgments reported in 1958 Cr.L.J. 1522, 1982 Cr.L.J. 1081, 1994 Cr.L.J. 2234, 2002 Cr.L.J. 2894 and 1998 Cr.L.J. 1922. 3.1 Learned advocate for the petitioner has further submitted that the learned Judge has failed to appreciate that respondent No. 2 had not produced any evidence or proof of marriage with the petitioner and, therefore, the impugned order required to be quashed and set aside. 3.1 Learned advocate for the petitioner has further submitted that the learned Judge has failed to appreciate that respondent No. 2 had not produced any evidence or proof of marriage with the petitioner and, therefore, the impugned order required to be quashed and set aside. He has further submitted that when the marriage between the parties is void ab initio, section 125 of the Code does not apply to a de facto wife. He has submitted that if a woman is not lawfully married she is not entitled to maintenance under section 125 of the Code. He has further submitted that the marriage of a woman in accordance with the Hindu rites with a man having a spouse is complete nullity in the eyes of law and she is not entitled to the benefit of section 125 of the Code. Reliance was placed upon the judgment in the case of Yamunabai Anantrao Adhav vs. Anantrao Shivram Adhav, (1988) 1 SCC 530 to substantiate his case. 3.2 Learned advocate further submitted that learned Judge ought to have appreciated that respondent No. 2 is residing in village and for her to maintain herself amount of Rs. 3,000/- is reasonable and proper. He has also submitted that the learned Judge without considering the surrounding facts and circumstances of the case erred in awarding the amount of Rs. 12,000/- per month, which is at a very higher side. No further submissions are made on behalf of the petitioner. 4. In response, the learned advocate for the respondent no. 2 has submitted that the order passed by the Court below does not require interference since the maintenance of Rs. 12,000/- has been correctly fixed from the date of application. He has submitted that earlier all the applications under section 127 of the Code were allowed and the maintenance was fixed from the date of application and hence, the submission made by the learned advocate for the petitioner that the maintenance should be granted from the date of the order is liable to be rejected. In support of his submission, reliance is placed on the judgment reported in the case of Ismail Kasam Khokhar vs. Khatun Alarakha, 1983 (2) GLR 863 and in the case of Nisarg Jayantkumar Gajera vs. Jayantkumar Mevabhai Gajera and Others, 2015 (2) Crimes (HC) 729. 5. In support of his submission, reliance is placed on the judgment reported in the case of Ismail Kasam Khokhar vs. Khatun Alarakha, 1983 (2) GLR 863 and in the case of Nisarg Jayantkumar Gajera vs. Jayantkumar Mevabhai Gajera and Others, 2015 (2) Crimes (HC) 729. 5. I have given my thoughtful consideration to the arguments of the learned advocates for the respective parties. 6. The core issue which falls for the consideration of this Court that whether the Magistrate can allow the maintenance under section 127 of the Code from the date of application or from the date of the order. Section 127 of the Code reads as under: “SECTION 127: Alteration in allowance: (1) On proof of a change in the circumstances of any person, receiving, under section 125 a monthly allowance for the maintenance or interim maintenance, or ordered under the same section to pay a monthly allowance for the maintenance, or interim maintenance, to his wife, child, father or mother, as the case may be, the Magistrate may make such alteration, as he thinks fit, in the allowance for the maintenance or the interim maintenance, as the case may be. (2) Where it appears to the Magistrate that, in consequence of any decision of a competent Civil Court, any order made under section 125 should be cancelled or varied, he shall cancel the order or, as the case may be, vary the same accordingly. (3) Where any order has been made under section 125 in favour of a woman who has been divorced by, or has obtained a divorce from, her husband, the Magistrate shall, if he is satisfied that: (a) the woman has, after the date of such divorce, remarried, cancel such order as from the date of her remarriage. (b) the woman has been divorced by her husband and that she has received, whether before or after the date of the said order, the whole of the sum which, Under any customary or personal law applicable to the parties, was payable on such divorce, cancel such order: (i) in the case where such sum was paid before such order, from the date on which such order was made. (ii) in any other case, from the date of expiry of the period, if any, for which maintenance has been actually paid by the husband to the woman. (ii) in any other case, from the date of expiry of the period, if any, for which maintenance has been actually paid by the husband to the woman. (c) the woman has obtained a divorce from her husband and that she had voluntarily surrendered her rights to [maintenance or interim maintenance, as the case may be] after her divorce, cancel the order from the date thereof. (4) At the time of making any decree for the recovery of any maintenance or dowry by any person, to whom [monthly allowance for the maintenance and interim maintenance or any of them has been ordered] to be paid under section 125, the Civil Court shall take into account that sum which has been paid to, or recovered by, such person [as monthly allowance for the maintenance and interim maintenance or any of them, as the case may be, in pursuance of] the said order.” What follows from the bare reading of the provisions of section 127 of the Code is that the Magistrate can make such alteration or vary the allowance for the maintenance or the interim maintenance, as he thinks fit. Thus, so far as quantum of amount is concerned, the Magistrate in his wisdom after considering the relevant factors can alter or vary the same, but as regards the date of entitlement is concerned, the same has to be from the date of application claiming the same. In the present case, the Magistrate has granted the maintenance of Rs. 3,000/- by partly allowing the application of the respondent no. 2 from the date of application. In the revision, the Session Court has only enhanced the same to Rs. 12,000/-. The direction exercised by the Magistrate to grant the same from the date of application is not disturbed. 7. The facts not in dispute are that: (a) On a compromise arrived at between the petitioner and the respondent no. 2 in the proceedings under section 125 of the Code, the petitioner agreed to pay maintenance of Rs. 400/- per month to the respondent no. 2. The said settlement is recorded in the order and judgment dated 17.01.2001 in Criminal Misc. Application No. 32 of 1999. (b) In the application filed under section 127 of the Code by the respondent no. 2, the Magistrate enhanced the amount to Rs.1,400/vide order dated 03.12.2009 passed in Criminal Misc. 400/- per month to the respondent no. 2. The said settlement is recorded in the order and judgment dated 17.01.2001 in Criminal Misc. Application No. 32 of 1999. (b) In the application filed under section 127 of the Code by the respondent no. 2, the Magistrate enhanced the amount to Rs.1,400/vide order dated 03.12.2009 passed in Criminal Misc. Application No. 55 of 2005 from the date of application i.e. 15.07.2005. (c) Thereafter, the respondent no. 2 filed an Criminal Misc. Application No. 51 of 2012 claiming further enhancement to Rs. 12,000/- which was partly allowed vide order dated 05.05.2015 by the Magistrate by enhancing the maintenance to Rs. 3,000/- from the date of the application. (d) The aforesaid order was challenged in Criminal Revision application No. 58 of 2015 before the Sessions Court, whereby the Sessions Court enhanced the amount of maintenance to Rs. 12,000/- from the date of application. (e) The petitioner challenged the aforesaid order before this court by filing Special Criminal Application no. 2802 of 2016, whereby by the order dated 11.07.2017, this court remanded the proceedings before the Sessions Court. (f) Finally, the Sessions Court, after considering all the relevant facts maintained the earlier order granting the maintenance of Rs. 12,000/- from the date of application. The conspectus of the aforenoted facts will clarify that initially, the petitioner had agreed to pay the maintenance on the compromise arrived at between him and the respondent No. 2 in the judgment and order dated 17.01.2001 in Criminal Misc. Application No. 32 of 1999. Thereafter also, in the subsequent applications filed by the respondent no. 2, the maintenance has been enhanced from the date of application. The petitioner has not challenged the earlier orders and the compromise and the same was accepted by him. Thus, he cannot confront or challenge the maintenance of the respondent no. 2 on the ground that she has suppressed the subsequent proceedings filed by her for restitution of conjugal rights in the year 2006 being H.M.P. No. 123 of 2006 after the compromise arrived at between the parties in 2001 in the suit filed in the year 1999. The Session Court in the revision application filed by respondent no. 2 has comprehensively dealt with all the contentions after considering all the factors, including the salary and liabilities of the petitioner. The Session Court in the revision application filed by respondent no. 2 has comprehensively dealt with all the contentions after considering all the factors, including the salary and liabilities of the petitioner. The Sessions Court has observed that the petitioner, though was given sufficient opportunities, did not step in to the witness box. The respondent No. 2 cannot be put to prejudicial position by permitting the maintenance from the date of order of the Magistrate, instead from the date of application only because the proceedings consumed considerable time. In the case of Ismail Kasam Khokhar (supra) this court has observed thus: “If the learned Magistrate has got power to increase the maintenance then the cause of action for the same must have arisen on the date of application for enhancement and there is no reason for the learned Magistrate not to increase the rate from the date on which the wife or the mother of the child has made an application for enhancement. If ultimately on the evidence recorded the learned Magistrate comes to the conclusion that a case for enhancement has been made out then naturally his decision to enhance should relate back to the date of the application. To read anything in Section 127 by way of a fetter to the power of the learned Magistrate would be to read something in Section 127 which the Legislature in its wisdom has not incorporated therein.” Hence, granting the maintenance from the date of order of the Magistrate will be in aggression to the provisions of section 127 of the Code. There is no legal bar restricting the Sessions Court from granting the maintenance from the date of application, which is filed before the concerned Magistrate. 8. The judgment of Apex Court in the case of Yamunabai Anantrao Adhav (supra) cannot rescue the petitioner since in the Apex Court has examined the provisions of section 125 of the Code in context of remarriage. 9. In the considered opinion of this Court the sum of Rs. 3,000/- can be said to be niggardly even she is residing in a village in light of the position of prevalent inflation. Merely because the petitioner has incurred liability to pay installments by obtaining loans, the wife cannot be denied the enhancement in the maintenance. It is the matter of the discretion of the Magistrate to fix the amount. 3,000/- can be said to be niggardly even she is residing in a village in light of the position of prevalent inflation. Merely because the petitioner has incurred liability to pay installments by obtaining loans, the wife cannot be denied the enhancement in the maintenance. It is the matter of the discretion of the Magistrate to fix the amount. Hence, no illegality or perversity can be said to have been committed by the court below in enhancing the amount to Rs. 12,000/-. 10. In view of the aforesaid discussion, the present petition is dismissed. NOTICE is discharged.