Presumption of Marriage and Maintenance: High Court Upholds Relief for Wife Despite Allegations of Prior Marriage
In the judgment of ***Jatinpreet Singh v. Pooja Devi and Ors.***, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh upheld a Sessions Court order granting maintenance and rental expenses to a wife under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (DV Act). The Court ruled that once a marriage is admitted, the husband cannot escape the liability of maintenance by merely alleging a prior subsisting marriage without a formal decree of nullity from a competent court.
The Dispute: Allegations of Bigamy and Harassment
The case originated from a complaint filed by Pooja Devi (respondent) alleging that her marriage to Jatinpreet Singh (petitioner) was solemnized in January 2019 according to Sikh rites. She claimed that after the marriage, her husband—an Indian Army soldier—and his family harassed her for dowry, subjected her to physical beatings, and eventually ousted her from the matrimonial home.
The petitioner-husband contested the maintenance claim, arguing that the marriage was invalid because the respondent had a subsisting marriage with another individual named Pradeep Kumar at the time of their wedding.
Key Legal and Factual Findings
Justice Sandeep Sharma identified several factors that supported the grant of maintenance:
- Admitted Marriage: The petitioner and his family categorically admitted to the marriage with the respondent and the fact that she had resided in their home for a significant period.
- Failure to Prove Prior Marriage: While the husband produced photographs and affidavits to allege a prior marriage between the respondent and Pradeep Kumar, the Court noted that Pradeep Kumar himself had specifically denied the marriage in related civil proceedings.
- Requirement of Judicial Annulment: Relying on the Supreme Court precedent in Deoki Panjhiyara v. Shashi Bhushan Narayan Azad, the Court held that until a marriage is formally annulled or declared a nullity by a competent court, the parties continue to be treated as legally wedded.
- Domestic Violence Proven: The respondent successfully established that she was subjected to physical and mental torture for dowry, justifying her separate residence.
- Husband’s Financial Capacity: The petitioner is serving in the Indian Army with a monthly salary of approximately ₹72,000. The Court found the award of ₹10,000 for maintenance and ₹5,000 for rent to be reasonable given current inflation.
Final Ruling
The High Court concluded that there was no illegality in the Sessions Judge’s findings. The Court emphasized that a husband is legally obligated to provide for his wife and that the petitioner’s “subsisting marriage” defense was insufficient to bypass this duty in the absence of a valid decree of nullity. The petition was dismissed, and the maintenance order was upheld.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 104
Jatinpreet Singh V. Pooja Devi And Ors. (D.O.J. 23-03-2026)
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