In Tilak Raj vs. Renu Sharma and Another, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh ruled that a maintenance amount fixed via a matrimonial settlement in a Lok Adalat—even if the underlying Section 125 CrPC petition was technically recorded as “dismissed as withdrawn”—is legally deemed to have been passed under Section 125 CrPC. The Court established that a parent’s mutual agreement at the time of divorce cannot permanently curtail or waive a minor child’s statutory right to seek enhancement under Section 127 CrPC due to changing circumstances or inflation. Additionally, the Court clarified that impleading a natural guardian as an independent respondent in a revision petition, when they acted solely as a representative for a minor in the lower court, constitutes a misjoinder of parties.
- Procedural Context and Misjoinder of Parties
The petitioner (father) challenged a Family Court order that enhanced the monthly maintenance for his minor daughter (Respondent No. 2) from Rs. 1,500 to Rs. 2,000. The High Court noted a procedural error in the petitioner’s filing: he impleaded his divorced wife as an independent respondent. The sources clarify that since the original petition for enhancement was filed by the daughter through her mother as a natural guardian, the mother was merely a representative and not a personal party to the dispute. Consequently, her impleadment in the revision petition was declared a misjoinder of parties.
- The Jurisdictional Challenge under Section 127 CrPC
The petitioner argued that the Family Court lacked jurisdiction to enhance the maintenance because no foundational order under Section 125 CrPC existed. His primary contentions were:
- Withdrawal of Original Petition: The initial Section 125 petition had been “dismissed as withdrawn” during a Lok Adalat session.
- Civil Decree Foundation: The maintenance of Rs. 1,500 was stipulated in a civil consent decree for mutual divorce under Section 13B of the Hindu Marriage Act, which lacked an express clause for future enhancement.
- The Doctrine of “Deemed Orders”
The High Court rejected the petitioner’s narrow interpretation of the Lok Adalat proceedings. It held that when a petition is withdrawn based on a reciprocal settlement where the father agrees to a specific sum, the court effectively disposes of the criminal maintenance claim in terms of that compromise. Therefore, the maintenance awarded in the divorce decree must be legally deemed to have been passed under Section 125 CrPC, providing the necessary foundation for a subsequent modification under Section 127 CrPC.
- Inviolability of a Minor’s Right to Maintenance
The Court emphasized that the rights of a minor child are independent of the parents’ marital disputes. Key findings included:
- Non-Binding Agreements: A minor’s right to claim maintenance or seek enhancement cannot be curtailed by a mutual agreement between parents at the time of divorce.
- Incapacity to Contract: Being a minor, the child is legally incapable of entering an agreement that waives their statutory protections.
- Changed Circumstances: In view of the “increasing expenses to have basic amenities,” the daughter is entitled to enhancement regardless of the technical nature of the original settlement.
- Final Ruling
The Court found that the petitioner’s attempt to avoid enhancement on technical grounds was “misconceived” and “hyper-technical”. Noting that the original amount of Rs. 1,500 was “meager” and the enhanced sum of Rs. 2,000 was “reasonable and justified,” the High Court dismissed the revision petition and upheld the Family Court’s order.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 303
Tilak Raj. V. Renu Sharma And Another (D.O.J. 02.06.2026)
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