The Hindu - International

Going to police should be the last resort in matrimonia­l disputes: SC

- Krishnadas Rajagopal

The Supreme Court has in a judgment advised caution to families facing marital trouble, stating that going to the police should be the “last resort”.

“Police machinery should be resorted to as a measure of last resort and that too in a very genuine case of cruelty and harassment. The police machinery cannot be utilised for the purpose of holding the husband at ransom so that he could be squeezed by the wife at the instigatio­n of her parents or relatives,” a Bench of Justices J.B. Pardiwala and Manoj Misra observed on Friday.

Justice Pardiwala, who authored the judgment, said invocation of Section

Top court requests Parliament to change Sections 85 and 86 of the Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023

498A of the Indian Penal Code (domestic cruelty) should not be mechanical in every case in which “a wife complains of harassment or ill-treatment”.

“Every matrimonia­l conduct, which may cause annoyance to the other, may not amount to cruelty. Mere trivial irritation­s, quarrels between spouses, which happen in day-today married life, may also not amount to cruelty,” the court noted. Moreover, in cases of domestic abuse, an FIR is “not complete” without criminal intimidati­on to cause death or serious harm (Section 506(2) IPC) and causing hurt (Section 323 IPC).

The court requested Parliament to make changes in Sections 85 (husband or his relative subjecting his wife to cruelty) and 86 (de‹nition of cruelty) of the Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita, 2023, which correspond with Section 498A IPC, after considerin­g the pragmatic realities mentioned in the judgment, especially since the accused is looking at a jail of up to three years and ‹ne. It said the provisions were only a verbatim reproducti­on of Section 498A. The court directed its Registry to send a copy of the judgment to the Law and Home Secretarie­s and their respective Union Ministries.

The judgment said, many times, the parents of the wife make “a mountain out of a mole”. Instead of salvaging the situation and making all possible endeavours to save the marriage, their action either due to ignorance or on account of sheer hatred towards the husband and his family members, brings about complete destructio­n of marriage on trivial issues, the court said.

“The ‹rst thing that comes in the mind of the wife, her parents and her relatives is the police, as if the police is the panacea of all evil. No sooner the matter reaches the police than, even if there are fair chances of reconcilia­tion between the spouses, they would get destroyed,” Justice Pardiwala noted.

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