Media & Press Updates

Important Legal Judgments Reported in Leading Newspapers

Family law in India evolves constantly through court decisions. This Media Page highlights important matrimonial-law judgments reported in Times of India, Indian Express, Economic Times and New Indian Express.

These updates help clients understand how courts presently view issues like divorce, cruelty, child custody, matrimonial home rights, DV Act protection, maintenance disputes and misuse of criminal law.

Important Judgments

Understanding these judgments can help you navigate maintenance disputescontested divorce, and custody matters.

Denial of Physical Relationship = Cruelty: Bombay High Court

The Bombay High Court held that repeated denial of physical intimacy without reasonable cause amounts to mental cruelty. The wife's conduct, including suspicion and disrespectful behaviour, supported the decree of divorce.

Useful for contested divorce cases based on emotional cruelty and long-term marital breakdown.

Wife's Impotency Allegation Is Not Defamation During Divorce

The HC held that when the wife alleges impotence as part of her divorce grounds, it cannot be treated as defamation because such allegations are directly connected to the marital dispute.

Important for cases involving sensitive allegations, sexual incompatibility or medical concerns.

Divorce Decree Set Aside — Family Court Gave No Reasoning

The High Court criticised a "mechanical" divorce decree passed solely because the wife failed to file her written statement. It restored the matter for proper hearing.

Shows that matrimonial cases must follow due process; courts cannot grant divorce casually.

Child Cannot Be Separated from Grandmother: Bombay HC

The father sought access only if the maternal grandmother was excluded. The HC disagreed, stating that grandparents play a vital role in a child's upbringing.

Critical for custody disputes where extended family is involved.

Triple Talaq Invalid; Talaq-e-Ahsan Valid if Procedure Followed

The HC reaffirmed that instant triple talaq is invalid. However, Talaq-e-Ahsan is valid if proper notice and reconciliation attempts are made.

Important guidance for Muslim divorce proceedings such as Khula, Mubarat and Talaqnama drafting.

Working Woman Still Entitled to Maintenance: Bombay HC

The HC held that even if a woman is employed, she may receive maintenance when her husband earns significantly more and there is lifestyle disparity.

Important for maintenance disputes involving dual-income families.

Large Income Disparity Justifies Maintenance

The HC upheld maintenance for a woman earning ₹19,000/month, noting her husband's income exceeded ₹1 lakh, impacting lifestyle and standard of living.

Supports maintenance petitions where income disparity is significant.

Widow Cannot Be Removed from Matrimonial Home: Bombay HC

The HC ruled that preventing a widow from residing in her matrimonial home constitutes domestic violence and violates her shared-household rights.

Important for DV Act matters involving residential rights and matrimonial home disputes.

False & Repeated Criminal Complaints = Cruelty: Bombay HC

The HC upheld divorce on the ground that the wife had repeatedly filed false criminal complaints to harass the husband and his family.

Significant for cases involving misuse of 498A, false FIRs or repeated litigation abuse.

Calling Husband a "Womaniser" = Cruelty: Bombay HC

The HC held that making false allegations that damage the spouse's character and reputation amounts to mental cruelty. Divorce was granted on this ground.

Helpful for cases involving character assassination, defamation and emotional harm.

Scroll to Top

Disclaimer

The Bar Council of India does not permit solicitation of work or advertising by advocates. By accessing this website, the user acknowledges and confirms that:

  1. The user is accessing this website solely for the purpose of obtaining general information about Advocate Khevana Dagli and her areas of practice, and that there has been no attempt by the advocate to advertise or solicit work through this website.
  2. Any information obtained or downloaded from this website does not create an Advocate-Client relationship between Advocate Khevana Dagli and the user.
  3. The information provided on this website is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice or legal opinion.
  4. This website may use cookies to enhance the user experience. By continuing to browse this website, the user consents to the use of cookies in accordance with the Cookies Policy and Privacy Policy.