City
Epaper

Woman leaving husband's home before divorce forfeits right to reside there: Bombay HC

By IANS | Updated: October 3, 2022 20:35 IST

Aurangabad, Oct 3 A woman who leaves her husband's home pending divorce loses the right to later seek ...

Open in App

Aurangabad, Oct 3 A woman who leaves her husband's home pending divorce loses the right to later seek 'right to residence' in the same house even if her plea against the divorce is pending under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, the Bombay High Court's Aurangabad Bench has ruled.

A bench of Justice Sandipkumar C. More, while upholding the woman's in-laws' plea in the matter, quashed the order of a lower court permitting her full right to residence along with use of bath, toilet, electricity, etc in their house.

Umakant H. Bondre and his wife Shobha, both of Udgir, Latur, had move the plea challenging the February 2018 order by Additional Sessions Judge, Udgir Court, permitting the right of residence to their former daughter-in-law Sakshi Bondre - who was granted divorce from her husband, Suraj Bondre.

The couple was married in June 2015, but a year later, following disputes between them, she left the home and went to live with her parents.

Later, in November 2017, an Udgir magistrate had granted her an interim maintenance of Rs 2,000 per month and additional Rs 1,500 per month to enable her make alternative accommodation arrangements.

In their plea, the senior Bondre couple had questioned the lower court's orders particularly since the home stood in the name of Umakant H. Bondre (father-in-law) and Sakshi Bondre's plea against the divorce - granted in July 2018 - was pending before the high court.

Justice More ruled that under Sec. 17 of the DV Act, the right to residence is allowed only when the woman continues to reside in the shared (husband's) household before their divorce.

Accordingly, Sakshi Bondre could not take recourse to the earlier residence order when her marriage was dissolved by a divorce decree passed by the competent court, and especially when she had already left her shared household four years ago.

"Under the circumstances, she is not even entitled for the relief of restraining dispossession since she is not in possession of the shared household," the judge noted.

Sakshi Bondre's lawyers had contended that the divorce decree was challenged in an appeal filed by her citing grounds that it was obtained by fraud, and the plea is pending before the court.

Rejecting her contentions, Justice More noted that Sakshi Bondre had left her matrimonial home much prior to the divorce and failed to produce any material on record to indicate that was forcibly evicted by her husband or in-laws.

Hence, the pendency of her appeal would not come in the way of her in-laws' applications challenging the lower court orders granting her the right to residence, ruled Justice More.

However, the court has permitted Sakshi Bondre to seek alternative remedies from her ex-husband to claim rent for a rental accommodation instead of occupying his home.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Udgir courtSakshi bondreSuraj bondreBombay High CourtJustice of bombay high courtBombay high
Open in App

Related Stories

MumbaiBombay HC Orders DNA Test of Seafarer Dixit Solanki Killed in Oman Drone Attack

MumbaiMumbai Police Arrest Jamtara Man in Rs 6 Lakh Cyber Fraud Case Targeting Bombay High Court Judge

CricketBombay High Court Allows Raj Kundra to Challenge UK Order in Rajasthan Royals Stake Dispute

MumbaiMumbai Bomb Threat Emails Traced to Bangladesh IP; Sender Used VPN to Hide Location

MumbaiMumbai on Alert After Threatening Email Warns of Bomb Blasts at BSE, High Court, Metro and Banks

National Realted Stories

NationalPakistan Govt fails to meet IMF's revenue collection target

NationalKerala HC steps in to safeguard poll officials' voting rights

NationalSaradha chit fund chief Sudipta Sen gets bail, to walk free after 13 years

NationalIndia and Turkey discuss bilateral ties, regional and global issues of mutual interest

National"I am head of the family, and I am nobody for her," says Rani Kapur amid dispute over RK family trust