In the judgment of Kailash Chand v. Deepa Devi &Ors., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh set aside concurrent findings of lower courts and ruled that the defendant failed to prove she was the legally wedded wife of the plaintiff. The Court emphasized that a valid marriage cannot be established by mere acknowledgment or short-term cohabitation in the absence of proven customary rites.
The Dispute: Contested Customary Marriage
The plaintiff (Kailash Chand) sought a legal declaration that Defendant No. 1 (Deepa Devi) was not his wife and an injunction to stop her from proclaiming herself as such. Deepa Devi asserted that they had a “love marriage” and subsequently performed a customary ceremony on May 4, 2005, which involved putting a Thipu (Dupatta) on her head before a deity and organizing a feast.
Key Legal Findings and Failures
- Failure to Prove Custom: The Court held that for a custom to have the force of law, it must be ancient, certain, and uniform. While the lower Appellate Court relied on “Ganesh Pooja” as a recognized tribal custom, the High Court noted that Deepa Devi had never actually pleaded that Ganesh Pooja was performed; her specific plea regarding the Thipu ceremony was not recognized by the established tribal records (Riwaj-e-Aam).
- Insufficient Cohabitation: Under the law, a strong presumption of marriage arises only when a couple has lived together for a “long spell” or “number of years”. In this case, the defendant admitted they lived together for only 7–8 months. The Court ruled this short duration was insufficient to invoke the legal presumption of a valid marriage.
- Acknowledgment is Not Marriage: The defendants relied on a compromise document (Ext.DW3/A) where the plaintiff allegedly admitted the relationship following a police complaint. The High Court ruled that even if the plaintiff had acknowledged her as his wife in a document, such an acknowledgment cannot create a valid marriage if the mandatory legal rites or customs were never performed.
- Suspicious Documentation: The Court found the circumstances surrounding the “compromise” document suspicious, noting it was allegedly executed on a Sunday at a stamp vendor’s shop, which is a notified holiday, with no clear explanation provided.
Final Ruling: Marriage Declared Invalid
The High Court concluded that the lower courts had misappreciated the evidence and relied on findings inconsistent with the pleadings.
The Court’s Directives:
- The judgments of the lower courts were set aside.
- The suit was decreed in favor of the plaintiff, declaring that Deepa Devi is not his legally wedded wife.
- A permanent prohibitory injunction was granted, restraining Deepa Devi from proclaiming herself as the plaintiff’s wife and from entering his house.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 159
Kailash Chand V. Deepa Devi &Ors.(D.O.J. 09-04-2026)
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