Second marriage valid even if plea against divorce is pending: SC

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HIGHLIGHTS

The SC set aside a HC ruling that held any marriage solemnised by a party during pendency of appeal wherein the operation of the decree of divorce was stayed would be in contravention of Section 5 (1) of the act.

SC passed the order on an appeal filed by a man challenging  HC verdict which had declared his second marriage void on a plea of his 2nd wife.



NEW DELHI: Although the Hindu Marriage Act prescribes that it shall be lawful to marry again only after dismissal of an appeal filed by aggrieved party against the decree of divorce, the Supreme Court, however, clarified that second marriage would not be void if solemnised during the pendency of appeal.

Interpreting section 15 of Hindu Marriage Act, a bench of Justices S A Bobde and L Nageswara Rao said that incapacity for a certain period of time (during the pendency of appeal against divorce )did not have the effect of treating the former marriage as subsisting and that a marriage contracted during that period will not be void because it was contracted under an incapacity.



Section 15 says when a marriage has been dissolved by a decree of divorce and either there is no right of appeal against the decree or, if there is such a right of appeal, the time  for appealing has expired without an appeal having been presented, or an appeal has been presented but has been dismissed, it shall be lawful for either party to the marriage to marry again. Section 5(1) of the Act says a marriage may be solemnized between any two Hindus, if neither party has a spouse living at the time of the marriage.

The apex court set aside Delhi high court which had held that any marriage solemnized by a party during the pendency of the appeal wherein the operation of the decree of divorce was stayed, would be in contravention of Section 5 (i) of the Act. It passed the order on an appeal filed by a man challenging HC verdict which had declared his second marriage void on a plea of his second wife.

 

 

The man got married the second time when his appeal against divorce from his first wife was pending in HC. During pendency of his plea, he had settled the dispute with his first wife and filed an application for accepting the divorce and sought withdrawal of his appeal. But a fortnight before the HC passed the formal order allowing him to withdraw his appeal, he got married for the second time.

His second marriage also did not turn out to be blissful and matrimonial discord between the couple led his second wife to challenge validity of the marriage saying that it was void as it was solemnised during the pendency of case in HC. A family court dismissed her plea but the HC gave verdict in her favour and declared the marriage void.

“The Hindu Marriage Act is a social welfare legislation and a beneficent legislation and it has to be interpreted in a manner which advances the object of the legislation. The Act intends to bring about social reforms. It is well known that this court cannot interpret a socially beneficial legislation on the basis as if the words therein are cast in stone,” the bench said.

“The dissolution of the marriage is complete once the decree is made, subject of course to apappeal. This court also decided that incapacity for second marriage for a certain period of time does not have the effect of treating the former marriage as subsisting and the expression ‘spouse’ would not include within its meaning the expression former spouse,” the bench said while referring to its 1978 verdict.

“Whenever a statute prohibits a certain thing being done thereby making it unlawful without providing for consequence of the breach, it is not legitimate to say that such a thing when done is void because that would tantamount to saying that every unlawful act is void… Consequences of treating a marriage void are so serious and far reaching and are likely to affect innocent persons such as children born during the period anterior to the date of the decree annulling the marriage that it has always been considered not safe to treat a marriage void unless the law so enacts or the inference of the marriage being treated void is either inescapable or irresistible,” the bench said while quoting its earlier judgement.