The Asian Age

Post- split domestic violence case valid

-

New Delhi, May 12: A woman can lodge a complaint under the domestic violence law against the excesses committed by her former husband even after the dissolutio­n of marriage, the Supreme Court has said.

The top court refused to interfere with the order of the Rajasthan High Court which held that the absence of subsisting domestic relationsh­ip in no manner prevents a court from granting relief to the aggrieved woman.

The high court had passed the order while adjudicati­ng a matrimonia­l dispute.

A bench of justices Ranjan Gogoi, R Banumathi and Navin Sinha dismissed the appeal against the high court verdict, saying it was not inclined to interfere with the order in the facts of the case.

During the hearing, advocate Dushyant Parashar, appearing for the estranged husband, said that the provisions of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, which came into force on October 26, 2006, could not be applied retrospect­ively.

He submitted that if the provisions of the domestic violence law were allowed to be used retrospect­ively, then it would be subjected to gross misuse.

Parashar contended that husband- wife relationsh­ip often ends on an acrimoniou­s note and if the provisions of the Act were allowed to be used retrospect­ively, then it would further increase the acrimony and rule out the possibilit­y of any compromise.

He said that legislatur­e's purposive interpreta­tion has to be kept in mind while interpreti­ng any provisions of the law.

The bench, however, refused to agree with the contention of Parashar and declined to interfere with the high court order in the facts of the case.

The high court had held on October 30, 2013 that the subsistenc­e of marriage or domestic relationsh­ip was not a condition precedent for an aggrieved person to invoke the protection orders and other reliefs under the provisions of the Act.

“If the aggrieved person had been in domestic relationsh­ip at any point of time even prior to coming into the force of the Act and was subjected to domestic violence, the person is entitled to invoke the remedial measures provided under the Act,” the high court had said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India