November 21, 2024
DU LLBFamily Law 1Semester 1

A. Yousuf Rawther v Sowramma 1971 Case Analysis

इसे हिंदी में पढ़ने के लिए यहाँ क्लिक करें

Case – Case Summary

CitationA. Yousuf Rawther v. Sowramma, 1971
Keywords
FactsSowramma, a Hanafi girl, around 15, married in 1962 Yusuf Rowthan, nearly twice her age, but the husband’s home hardly found them together for more than a few days and after a long spell of living apart, an action for dissolution was instituted by the wife against the husband. The husband having taken another wife and the latter having wed again after dissolution was granted in appeal.

The plaintiff had attained puberty even before her marriage and soon after the wedding, the bridal pair moved on to the husband’s house. The very next day the defendant left for Coimbatore where he was running a radio dealer’s business. A month’s sojourn in the house of the husband, and then the girl went back to her parents, the reason for her return being blamed by each on the other.

This separation lasted for over two years during which span the defendant admittedly failed to maintain the wife, the ground alleged by the defendant being that he was willing and, indeed, anxious to keep her with him but she wrongfully refused to return to the conjugal home.
The trial court dismissed the suit but the Subordinate Judge’s Court granted a decree for dissolution of the marriage.

The aggrieved husband has come up to this court challenging the validity of the decree of the lower appellate court.

The concurrent findings are that the plaintiff was 15 years old, that she had attained puberty and the marriage had been consummated. Again, while both the courts have held that the defendant had failed to provide maintenance for the plaintiff for a period of two years, they have also recorded a crucial finding “that it was through her own conduct that she led her husband to stop maintenance for a period of 2 years”.
IssuesIs she eligible for divorce only if she has not violated her conjugal duties? Or can she ask for it on mere failure of the husband to provide maintenance for her for two years, the wife’s delinquency being irrelevant?
Contentions
Law PointsThe claim of a Muslim wife to divorce is now provided for and canalized by the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, Act 8 of 1939. Section 2 (ii) liberates a woman from her matrimonial bondage if her husband “has neglected or has failed to provide for her maintenance for a period of two years”.

“Before the advent of Islam, neither the Jews nor the Arabs recognized the right of divorce for women: and it was the Holy Quran that, for the first time in the history of Arabia, gave this great privilege to women”.

“Divorce is permissible in Islam only in cases of extreme emergency. When all efforts for effecting a reconciliation have failed, the parties may proceed toa dissolution of the marriage by ‘Talaq’ or by ‘Khola’. When the proposal of divorce proceeds from the husband, it is called ‘Talaq’, and when it takes effect at the instance of the wife it is called ‘Kholaa’.”

Islamic law’s serious realism on divorce, when regarded as the correct perspective, excludes blameworthy conduct as a factor and reads the failure to provide maintenance for two years as an index of irreconcilable breach, so that the mere fact of no maintenance for the statutory period entitles the wife to sue for dissolution.

In AIR 1941 Lah 167, Abdul Rashid, J. stated: In Cl. (ii), however, the words ‘without reasonable cause’ do not occur. It must, therefore, be held that whatever the cause may be the wife is entitled to a decree for the dissolution of her marriage, if the husband fails to maintain her for a period of two years, even though the wife may have contributed towards the failure of the maintenance by her husband.

In the Muslim law of dissolutions, the failure to maintain when it has continued for a prolonged period in such circumstances, is regarded as an instance where a cessation or suspension of the marriage had occurred. It will be seen therefore that the wife’s disobedience or refusal to live with her husband does not affect the principle on which the dissolution is allowed.
I hold that a Muslim woman, under Section 2 (ii) of the Act, can sue for dissolution on the score that she has not as a fact been maintained even if there is good cause for it –the voice of the law, echoing public policy is often that of the realist, not of the moralist.

Having affirmed the decree under Section 2 (ii) of the Act, the applicability of Section 2 (ix) is, perhaps, supererogatory. I do not decide the plaintiff’s claim to Khulaa under Section 2 (ix) of the Act. Having succeeded on the ground set out in Section 2 (ii) of the Act the respondent is entitled to a divorce.
Judgment
Ratio Decidendi & Case Authority

Full Case Details

V.R. KRISHNA IYER, J. – This case, like most others, reveals a human conflict, over- dramatised by both sides and dressed up in legal habiliments, as usual; and when, as here, parties project a matrimonial imbroglio on the forensic screen, the court attempts a reconciliation between law and justice. What deeply disturbs a judge in such case-situations is the conflict between doing justice by promoting a rapprochement and enforcing the law heedless of consequence. Sowramma, a Hanafi girl, around 15, married in 1962 Yusuf Rowthan, nearly twice her age, but the husband’s home hardly found them together for more than a few days and after a long spell of living apart, an action for dissolution was instituted by the wife against the husband. The matrimonial court should, and I did, suggest to counsel, in vain though, to persuade the parties to repair the broken bond. Unhappily, irreversible changes in the conjugal chemistry baulked the effort, the husband having taken another wife and the latter having wed again after dissolution was granted in appeal. And thus their hearts are pledged to other partners. The prospect of bringing together the sundered ends of the conjugal knot being absent a decision on the merits, according to the law of the parties, has to be rendered now. Even so, the legal impact of such subsequent events on granting or moulding the relief falls to be considered.

  1. A brief narration of the facts will help to appreciate the questions argued before me, with thoroughness and fairness, by counsel for the appellant and his learned friend opposite. (A young advocate of this court, Sri Manhu, who has impressed me with his industrious bent and depth of preparation on questions of Muslim law, has, as amicus curiae, brought into my judicial ken old texts and odd material which are outside the orbit of the practising lawyer). The plaintiff had attained puberty even before her marriage and soon after the wedding, the bridal pair moved on to the husband’s house. The very next day the defendant left for Coimbatore where he was running a radio dealer’s business. A month’s sojourn in the house of the husband, and then the girl went back to her parents, the reason for her return being blamed by each on the other. This separation lasted for over two years during which span the defendant admittedly failed to maintain the wife, the ground alleged by the defendant being that he was willing and, indeed, anxious to keep her with him but she wrongfully refused to return to the conjugal home-thanks to the objectional inhibition by the father of the girl. The husband, finding the young wife recalcitrant, moved the mosque committee, through his brother (Ext. D2) but the effort failed and so they reported that divorce was the only solution (Ext. D4). Anyway, after preliminary skirmishes, in the shape of lawyer notices, a litigation for dissolution of marriage erupted. The trial court dismissed the suit but the Subordinate Judge’s Court granted a decree for dissolution of the marriage. The aggrieved husband has come up to this court challenging the validity of the decree of the lower appellate court. His counsel, Shri Chandrasekhara Menon, has highlighted a seminal issue of Muslim law – the right of a female wrongfully leaving the matrimonial home to claim dissolution through court for mere failure of the husband to maintain the erring wife for 2 years.
  2. The concurrent findings are that the plaintiff was 15 years old, that she had attained puberty and the marriage had been consummated. Again, while both the courts have held that the defendant had failed to provide maintenance for the plaintiff for a period of two years, they have also recorded a crucial finding “that it was through her own conduct that she led her husband to stop maintenance for a period of 2 years”.
  3. The claim of a Muslim wife to divorce is now provided for and canalised by the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, Act 8 of 1939 (for short, referred to as the Act). Section 2 is the charter of the wife and, in this case, the plaintiff has pressed into service sub- sections (ii), (vii) and (ix) thereof. I shall deal briefly with the second ground, which has been negatived by both the courts, and then pass on to the first and the last which, in the circumstances of this case, require detailed consideration. Section 2, cl (vii) vests in the woman, who has been given in marriage by her father or other guardian before she attains the age of 15 years, the right to repudiate the marriage before attaining the age of 18 years, provided that the marriage has not been consummated. The plaintiff and her father had no qualms in pleading notwithstanding the Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929, that the girl was only 13 ½ years old at the time of the marriage. Social legislation without the community’s militant backing, is often a flop. However, the court held: “as there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff was under the age of 15 years when her marriage was solemnised and as the probabilities establish that the marriage had been consummated it is obvious that the second ground which the plaintiff relied upon for dissolution of her marriage with the defendant has not been made out”. On these findings, Section 2 (vii) is off altogether. However, the assumption of the learned Subordinate Judge that if the marriage has been consummated Section 2 (vii) is excluded irrespective of the tender age of the female partner, may be open to question. The Lahore High Court had occasion to consider the import to this provision in a ruling reported in Mt. Ghulam Sakina v. Falak Sher Allah Baksh [AIR 1950 Lah 45]. The learned Judge expatiated on the real significance of the option of puberty thus:

The marriage under Muhammadan law is in the nature of a contract and as such requires the free and unfettered consent of the parties to it. Normally speaking, a man and a woman should conclude the contract between themselves but in the case of minors i.e., who have not attained the age of puberty as recognised by Muhammadan law, the contract might be entered into by their respective guardians. Before the Act 8 of 1939 (The Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act 1939) a minor girl given in marriage by the father or the father’s father, had no option to repudiate it on the attainment of her puberty but this has now been changed. The contract of the father or the father’s father stands on no higher footing than that of any other guardian and the minor could repudiate or ratify the contract made on his or her behalf during the minority after the attainment of puberty. ‘Puberty’ under Muhammadan law is presumed in the absence of evidence, on completion of the age of 15 years. It would, therefore, necessarily follow that the minor should exercise the option after the age of 15 years unless there was evidence to the contrary that the puberty had been attained earlier and the burden of proving this shall lie upon the person so pleading. Anything done by minor during the minority would not destroy the right which could accrue only after puberty. The co-habitation of a minor girl would not thus put an end to the ‘option’ to repudiate the marriage after puberty. There is persuasiveness in this reasoning but on the facts found in the present case, even the Lahore view cannot sustain the plaintiff’s claim, while another ruling reported in Rabia Khatoon v. Mohd. Mukhtar Ahmad [AIR 1966 All 548] goes against her stand.

  1. Now, to the other grounds. Section 2 (ix) of the Act is of wide import and preserves the woman’s right to dissolution of her marriage on any ground recognised as good under Muslim law. Thus, it is perfectly open to a female spouse to press into service not merely the ground set out in Cls. (i) to (viii) but also any other which has enjoyed recognition under the Shariat. Section 2 (ii) liberates a woman from her matrimonial bondage if her husband “has neglected or has failed to provide for her maintenance for a period of two years”. We have, therefore, to examine whether the plaintiff has been able to make out any ground sanctioned by the Muslim law or set out in Section 2 (ii) of the Act. There is a sharp cleavage of opinion in India on the scope and meaning of this latter provision while the former clause has not been expressly pronounced upon.
  2. The interpretation of a legislation, obviously intended to protect a weaker section of the community, like women, must be informed by the social perspective and purpose and, within its grammatical flexibility, must further the beneficent object. And so we must appreciate the Islamic ethos and the general sociological background which inspired the enactment of the law before locating the precise connotation of the words used in the statute.
  3. There has been considerable argument at the bar – and precedents have been piled up by each side – as to the meaning to be given to the expression ‘failed to provide for her maintenance’ and about the grounds recognised as valid for dissolution under Muslim law. Since infallibility is not an attribute of the judiciary, the view has been ventured by Muslim jurists that the Indo-Anglian judicial exposition of the Islamic law of divorce has not exactly been just to the Holy Prophet or the Holy Book. Marginal distortions are inevitable when the Judicial Committee in Downing Street has to interpret Manu and Muhammad of India and Arabia. The soul of a culture – law is largely the formalised and enforceable expression of a community’s cultural norms – cannot be fully understood by alien minds. The view that the Muslim husband enjoys an arbitrary, unilateral power to inflict instant divorce does not accord with Islamic injunctions. The statement that the wife can buy a divorce only with the consent of or as delegated by the husband is also not wholly correct. Indeed, a deeper study of the subject discloses a surprisingly rational, realistic and modern law of divorce and this is a relevant enquiry to apply Section 2 (ix) and to construe correctly Section 2 (ii) of the Act.

Marriage under Islam is but a civil contract, and not a sacrament, in the sense that those who are once joined in wed-lock can never be separated. It may be controlled, and under certain circumstances, dissolved by the will of the parties concerned. Public declaration is no doubt necessary but it is not a condition of the validity of the marriage. Nor is any religious ceremony deemed absolutely essential. [The Religion of Islam by Ahmad A. Galwash, p. 104]

It is impossible to miss the touch of modernity about this provision; for the features emphasised are precisely what we find in the civil marriage laws of advanced countries and also in the Special Marriage Act, Act 43 of 1954. Religious ceremonies occur even in Muslim weddings although they are not absolutely essential. For that matter, many non-Muslim marriages, (e.g. Marumakkathayees) also do not insist, for their validity, on religious ceremonies and registered marriages are innocent of priestly rituals. It is a popular fallacy that a Muslim male enjoys, under the Quranic law, unbridled authority to liquidate the marriage. “The whole Quran expressly forbids a man to seek pretexts for divorcing his wife, so long as she remains faithful and obedient to him, “if they (namely, women) obey you, then do not seek a way against them”. (Quran IV:34). The Islamic “law gives to the man primarily the faculty of dissolving the marriage, if the wife, by her indocility or her bad character, renders the married life unhappy; but in the absence of serious reasons, no man can justify a divorce either in the eye of religion or the law. If he abandons his wife or puts her away in simple caprice, he draws upon himself the divine anger for the curse of God, said the Prophet, rests on him who repudiates his wife capriciously.” As the learned author, Ahmad A. Galwash notices, the pagan Arab, before the time of the Prophet, was absolutely free to repudiate his wife whenever it suited his whim, but when the Prophet came. He declared divorce to be “the most disliked of lawful things in the sight of God. He was indeed never tired of expressing his abhorrence of divorce. Once he said: “God created not anything on the face of the earth which He loveth more than the act of manumission (of slaves) nor did He create anything on the face of the earth which He detesteth more than the act of divorce”. Commentators on the Quran have rightly observed – and this tallies with the law now administered in some Muslim countries like Iraq – that the husband must satisfy the court about the reasons for divorce. However, Muslim law, as applied in India, has taken a course contrary to the spirit of what the Prophet or the Holy Quran laid down and the same misconception vitiates the law dealing with the wife’s right to divorce. Dr. Galwash deduces.

Marriage being regarded as a civil contract and as such not indissoluble, the Islamic law naturally recognises the right in both the parties, to dissolve the contract under certain given circumstances. Divorce, then, is a natural corollary to the conception of marriage as a contract,

It is clear, then, that Islam discourages divorce in principle, and permits it only when it has become altogether impossible for the parties, to live together in peace and harmony. It avoids, therefore, greater evil by choosing the lesser one, and opens a way for the parties to seek agreeable companions and, thus, to accommodate themselves more comfortably in their new homes. We have to examine whether the Islamic law allows the wife to claim divorce when she finds the yoke difficult to endure “for such is marriage without love. a hardship more cruel than any divorce
whatever”. The learned author referred to above states, “Before the advent of Islam, neither the Jews nor the Arabs recognised the right of divorce for women: and it was the Holy Quran that, for the first time in the history of Arabia, gave this great privilege to women”. After quoting from the Quran and the Prophet, Dr. Galwash concludes that “divorce is permissible in Islam only in cases of extreme emergency. When all efforts for effecting a reconciliation have failed, the parties may proceed to a dissolution of the marriage by ‘Talaq’ or by ‘Khola’. When the proposal of divorce proceeds from the husband, it is called ‘Talaq’, and when it takes effect at the instance of the wife it is called ‘Kholaa’.” Consistently with the secular concept of marriage and divorce, the law insists that at the time of Talaq the husband must pay off the settlement debt to the wife and at the time of Kholaa she has to surrender to the husband her dower or abandon some of her rights, as compensation.

  1. The decisions of court and the books on Islamic law frequently refer to the words and deeds of the Prophet in support of this truly forward step. He said “if a woman be prejudiced by a marriage, let it be broken off”. “The first ‘kholaa’ case in Islam is quoted by Bukhari in the following words: The wife of Thabit-ibn-Quais came to the Prophet and said ‘O Messenger of God, I am not angry with Thabet for his temper or religion; but I am afraid that something may happen to me contrary to Islam, on which account I wish to be separated from him.’ The Prophet said: ‘Will you give back to Thabit the garden which he gave to you as your settlement?” She said, ‘Yes’: Then the Prophet said to Thabit. ‘Take your garden and divorce her at once’.” (Bukhari is the greatest commentary of Mohammadan orthodox traditions). “This tradition clearly tells us that Thabit was blameless, and that the proposal for separation emanated from the wife who feared she would not be able to observe the bounds set by God namely not to perform her functions as a wife. The Prophet here permitted the woman to release herself by returning to the husband the ante-nuptial settlement, as compensation for the release granted to her.” Asma, one of the wives of the Holy Prophet, asked for divorce before he went to her , and the Prophet released her as she had desired.
  2. . The Indian Judges have been sharply divided on the woman’s right to divorce. Is she eligible only if she has not violated her conjugal duties? Or can she ask for it on mere failure of the husband to provide maintenance for her for two years, the wife’s delinquency being irrelevant? If the latter view be the law, judges fear that women, with vicious appetite, may with impunity desert their men and yet demand divorce – forgetting, firstly that even under the present law, as administered in India, the Muslim husband has the right to walk out of the wedlock at his whim and secondly, that such an irreparably marred married life was not worth keeping alive. The learned Munsif chose to follow the leading case in AIR 1951 Nag 375, while in appeal, the Subordinate Judge was impressed by the reasoning in AIR 1950 Sind 8. Neither the Kerala High Court nor the Supreme Court has spoken on the issue and, speaking for myself, the Islamic law’s serious realism on divorce, when regarded as the correct perspective, excludes blameworthy conduct as a factor and reads the failure to provide maintenance for two years as an index of irreconcilable breach, so that the mere fact of non- maintenance for the statutory period entitles the wife to sue for dissolution.
  1. Mulla, in his book on Mahomedan Law, commenting on the failure to maintain the wife as a ground for divorce under the Act, says:
    Failure to maintain the wife need not be wilful. Even if the failure to provide for her maintenance is due to poverty, failing health, loss of work, imprisonment or to any other cause, the wife would be entitled to divorce. unless, it is submitted, her conduct has been such as to disentitle her to maintenance under the Mahomedan Law. In 1942 it was held by the Chief court of Sind that the Act was not intended to abrogate the general law applicable to Mahomedans, and ‘the husband cannot be said to have neglected or failed to provide maintenance for his wife unless under the general Mahomedan Law he was under an obligation to maintain her’. The wife’s suit for divorce was dismissed as it was found that she was neither faithful not obedient to her husband, So also was the wife’s suit dismissed, where the wife, who lived separately, was not ready and willing to perform her part of marital duties. The Nagpur High Court read Section 2(ii) of the Act to mean that where the wife voluntarily stayed away from her husband’s house despite the husband’s request to return to his house and live with him, there was no neglect or failure to maintain the wife merely because he did not send any money to her during this period and the wife was not entitled to claim divorce. Mudholkar, J. was of the view that the words “to provide for her maintenance” occurring in Cl. (ii) would apply only when there was a duty to maintain under the general Mahomedan law.
  1. The learned Judge explained the need to answer the question with reference to the Muslim law:
    It is true that Act 8 of 1939 observed his Lordship, “crystallises a portion of the Muslim law. but it is precisely for that reason that it must be taken in conjunction with the whole of the Muslim law as it stands. Under the Muslim law, it is the duty of the wife to obey her husband and to live with him unless he refuses to live with her or unless he makes it difficult for her to live with him
    When the law enjoins a duty on the husband to maintain his wife, it is obvious that the wife can only be maintained at the place where she ought properly to be. If she wants for no reason to be maintained elsewhere, she can clearly claim no maintenance from husband under the Mahomedan law. Since her right to claim maintenance is limited to this extent by the Mahomedan law, it must necessarily follow that in Cl. (ii) of Section 2 of the Act 8 of 1939 the Legislature intended to refer only to this limited right and to no other It would be against all canons of judicial interpretation to hold that a wife’s right of maintenance, in so far as Act 8 of 1939 is concerned, is different from that contained in the rest of the Mahomedan law.
  1. A Division Bench of the Rajasthan High Court (AIR 1956 Raj 102 at p. 103) agreed with the construction and observed:
    (W)e are of opinion that the failure or neglect to provide maintenance in order to give rise to claim for dissolution, must be without any justification. For if there is justification, there cannot be said to be neglect. Neglect or failure implies non- performance of a duty. But if the husband is released from the duty on account of the conduct of the lady herself, the husband cannot be said to have neglected or failed to provide maintenance.
    The Peshawar court also was of opinion that where the wife was entirely to blame, it could not be said that the husband had failed or neglected to provide for her maintenance within the meaning of Section 2 (ii) of the Act. Their Lordships harked back to and endorsed the opinion expressed in AIR 1944 All 23 “that the word ‘neglect’ implies wilful failure and that the words ‘has failed to provide’ are not very happy, but even they imply an omission of duty.” Allsop Ag. C. J., speaking on behalf of the Bench in AIR 1947 All 3, said:
    The Act does not mean that the husband is bound to follow his wife wherever she
    may go and force money or food or clothes upon her……….If she refused to avail herself of the shelter which was offered to her, she cannot complain and is certainly not entitled to a decree.
  1. Even here, I may mention that Section 2 (ii) does not speak of the wife’s right of maintenance but only of the fact of her being provided with maintenance and this is the ratio of the ruling in AIR 1950 Sind 8. Tyabji, C. J., elaborately examined this branch of Muslim jurisprudence as well as the precedents under Section 2 (ii) of the Act and wound up:
    Having very carefully considered the reasoning in all these cases (His Lordship adverts to the rulings pro and con) I can see no reason for taking a different view of the question before us from that which I expressed in Hajra’s case (Suit No. 288 of 1942). The plain ordinary grammatical meaning of the words: ‘Has failed to provide maintenance’ in Cl. (ii) appears to me to be very clear. It is true that these words occur in an enactment which deals with the dissolution of Muslim marriages, but the meaning of these words cannot therefore be different from what it would be for instance, if these words were used with reference to a Hindu or a Christian or a Parsi husband …….The question whether there was a failure to maintain was a pure question of fact, which did not in any manner depend upon the circumstances in which the failure had occurred. As I pointed out in Hajra’s case, Muslim morals and ideas undoubtedly expect every husband to maintain his wife as long as the marriage subsists, even when the wife does not in law be able to enforce any claim for maintenance. It is therefore no less correct to speak of a man’s failure to maintain his wife even when she is not entitled to claim maintenance, than it is to speak of a man’s failure to pay his debts of honour on bets or his debts which have become time barred…….In the cases in which it has been held that there could be no failure to maintain, unless the wife was entitled to enforce a claim for maintenance, the plain ordinary meaning of the words, it seems to me, was intentionally departed from, on the express ground that the ordinary meaning of the words was not the one which could really have been intended, that the really intended meaning had been sought to be expressed, rather unhappily, by the use of words which in fact had a different meaning; and the supposed intended meaning which necessarily involved importing into the enacted words something which was not there, was then preferred to the ordinary meaning; on the supposition that unless that was done an abrogation of the general Muhammadan law and a startling state of affairs would result…….
    The learned Chief Justice expatiated on the Muslim law and observed:
    The principles upon which maintenance is enforced during the subsistence of a marriage, and those upon which a dissolution is allowed, are entirely different. A dissolution of a marriage is allowed when a cessation of the state of marriage has in reality taken place, or the continuance of the marriage has become injurious to the wife. The continuance of a state of affairs in which a marriage had ceased to be a reality, when the husband and the wife no longer lived ‘within the limits of Allah’ is abhorred in Islam, and the prophet enjoined that such a state of affairs should be ended. The main object of enacting the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act was to bring the law as administered in this sub-continent into conformity with the authoritative texts.
  2. Tyabji, C. J. relied on Beckett, J., (AIR 1943 Sind 65) who had made a like approach. In AIR 1941 Lah 167, Abdul Rashid, J. stated:
    Where the words of the statute are unambiguous, effect must be given to them whatever the consequences. It is laid down expressly in Cl. (iv) of Section 2, that where the husband has failed to perform without reasonable cause his marital obligations for a period of three years the wife is entitled to a dissolution of her marriage. In Cl. (ii), however, the words ‘without reasonable cause’ do not occur. It must, therefore, be held that whatever the cause may be the wife is entitled to a decree for the dissolution of her marriage, if the husband fails to maintain her for a period of two years, even though the wife may have contributed towards the failure of the maintenance by her husband.:
    This observation was extracted, with approval, in the Sind decision and the ancient texts, traditions and fatwaas were adverted to for holding that the Indian Hanafis had all along allowed divorce for simple failure by the husband to maintain his wife. The most compelling argument in the Sind ruling runs thus:
    The Muslim marriage differs from the Hindu and from most Christian marriages in that it is not a sacrament. This involves an essentially different attitude towards dissolutions. There is no merit in preserving intact the connection of marriage when the parties are not able and fail ‘to live within the limits of Allah’, that is to fulfil their mutual marital obligations, and there is no desecration involved in dissolving a marriage which has failed. The entire emphasis is on making the marital union a reality, and when this is not possible, and the marriage becomes injurious to the parties, the Quran enjoins a dissolution. The husband is given an almost unfettered power of divorce, the only restraints upon him being those imposed by the law relating to dower and by his own conscience. He has to remember the Prophet’s words: “Of all things permitted by the law, the worst is divorce.’ The Quran enjoins a husband either to render to his wife all her rights as a wife and to treat her with kindness in the approved manner, or to set her free by divorcing her, and enjoins him not to retain a wife to her injury (Cf. verses II, 229 and 231). Any suspension of the marriage is strongly condemned (Cf. e.g. Quran IV, 129). The attitude of the Prophet is illustrated by the well-known instance of Jameela, the wife of Sabit Bin Kais, who hated her husband intensely although her husband was extremely fond of her. According to the account given in Bukhari (Bu. 68:11) Jameela appeared before the Prophet and admitted that she had no complaint to make against Sabit either as regards his morals or as regards his religion. She pleaded, however, that she could not be wholeheartedly loyal to her husband, as a Muslim wife ought to be, because she hated him, and she did not desire to live disloyally (‘in Kufr’). The Prophet asked her whether she was willing to return the garden which her husband had given to her, and on her agreeing to do so, the Prophet sent for Sabit, asked him to take back the garden, and to divorce Jameela. From the earliest times Muslim wives have been held to be entitled to a dissolution when it was clearly shown that the parties could not live ‘within the limits of Allah’, when (1) instead of the marriage being a reality, a suspension of the marriage had in fact occurred, or (2) when the continuance of the marriage involved injury to the wife. The grounds upon which a dissolution can be claimed are based mainly on these two principles When a husband and a wife have been living apart, and the wife is not being maintained by the husband, a dissolution is not permitted as a punishment for the husband who had failed to fulfil one of the obligations of marriage, or allowed as a means of enforcing the wife’s rights to maintenance. In the Muslim law of dissolutions, the failure to maintain when it has continued for a prolonged period in such circumstances, is regarded as an instance where a cessation or suspension of the marriage had occurred. It will be seen therefore that the wife’s disobedience or refusal to live with her husband does not affect the principle on which the dissolution is allowed.
  1. I am impressed with the reasoning of Tyabji, C. J. which, in my humble view, accords with the holy Islamic texts and the ethos of the Muslim community which together serve as a backdrop for the proper understanding of the provisions of the Act 8 of 1939.
  2. I may also point out with satisfaction that this secular and pragmatic approach of the Muslim law of divorce happily harmonises with contemporary concepts in advanced countries. One of the serious apprehensions judges have voiced, if the view accepted in AIR 1950 Sind 8 were to be adopted, is that the women may be tempted to claim divorce by their own delinquency and family ties may become tenuous and snap. Such a fear is misplaced and (sic) has been neatly expressed by Bertrand Russel in his “Marriage and Morals”.
    One of the most curious things about divorce is the difference which has often existed between law and custom. The easiest divorce laws by no means always produce the greatest number of divorces. I think this distinction between law and custom is important, for while I favour a somewhat lenient law on the subject, there are to my mind, so long as the biparental family persists as the norm, strong reasons why custom should be against divorce, except in somewhat extreme cases. I take this view because I regard marriage not primarily as a sexual partnership, but above all as an undertaking to co-operate in the procreation and rearing of children.
    The law of the Marumakkathayees provides a large licence for divorce but actual experience allays the alarm. The law has to provide for possibilities; social opinion regulates the probabilities. For all these reasons, I hold that a Muslim woman, under Section 2 (ii) of the Act, can sue for dissolution on the score that she has not as a fact been maintained even if there is good cause for it–the voice of the law, echoing public policy is often that of the realist, not of he moralist.
  3. The view I have accepted has one other great advantage in that the Muslim woman (like any other woman) comes back into her own when the Prophet’s words are fulfilled, when roughly equal rights are enjoyed by both spouses, when the talaq technique of instant divorce is matched somewhat by the Khulaa device of delayed dissolution operated under judicial supervision. The social imbalance between the sexes will thus be removed and the inarticulate major premise of equal justice realised
  1. Act 8 of 1939 does not abrogate the grounds already available to a woman and Section 2 (ix) is clearly a statutory preservation of prior Islamic rights. I have dilated on the incidents of Khulaa the last gateway for a Muslim woman out of an irreparably embittered co existence. Having affirmed the decree under Section 2 (ii) of the Act, the applicability of Section 2 (ix) is, perhaps, supererogatory. I do not decide the plaintiff’s claim to Khulaa under Section 2 (ix) of the Act. Having succeeded on the ground set out in Section 2 (ii) of the Act the respondent is entitled to a divorce. The appeal fails and is dismissed.

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Sampuran Singh v. Niranjan Kaur (Smt.)AIR 1999 SC 1047

vikash Kumar

Kusheshwar Dubey v. Bharat Coking Coal Ltd.(1988) 4 SCC 319 : AIR 1988 SC 2118

vikash Kumar

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