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Lost job, maintnence is about to be passed

Hi All recently my company has asked me to resign form job due to my performance reasons, and i have resigned from the company, i have asked to provide me the written communication asking to resign from the comany as stated orally. the company HR is checking with the company's legal team, weather it can give the letter or not. but i have the e-mail communiction with the HR about the status of the written communication to be provided to me. My query in HMA 24 the maintancnce is about to be passed on 2nd nov-2012, how can i defend to court saying that i have lost job. can i take the email communication print out and submitt in the court. or any other options do i have to defend my self. regards Satish


Learning

 5 Replies

Tajobsindia (Senior Partner )     31 October 2012

1. Submit an Affidavit prior to passing of S. 24 HMA Order or on next available date of hearing stating in simple phrase 'That the defendant / husband was working in such and such company and have lost his job from such and such date and is currently un-employed."

Now wait for the Oral order in S. 24 HMA that is all nothing else could be done.

 

Shonee Kapoor (Legal Evangelist - TRIPAKSHA)     01 November 2012

There is a catch.

 

The court can understand that you have incapacitated yourself from earning and that is why it can fix Maintenance based on your last drawn salary.

 

The job loss may be true in many cases, but every husband becomes a pauper when it comes to pay maintenance. Like 498a is being misused, this excuse is also grossly misused.

 

Regards,

 

 

 

Regards,

 

Shonee Kapoor

Never Give Up (Fighter)     01 November 2012

Hi Satish,

 

You can always say that you have lost previous high paying job and now you are working with so & so person (may be your distant friend or friend's relative) with some meager salary (3-5K or so drawn in cash) till the time you get a better paying job .. I think that should be acceptable in the court.

stanley (Freedom)     01 November 2012

Originally posted by : Shonee Kapoor

There is a catch.
The court can understand that you have incapacitated yourself from earning and that is why it can fix Maintenance based on your last drawn salary.
The job loss may be true in many cases, but every husband becomes a pauper when it comes to pay maintenance. Like 498a is being misused, this excuse is also grossly misused.
Regards,
Shonee Kapoor
www.facebook.com/shoneekapoor 
Handphone: +91-8010850498
Email: harassed.by.498a@gmail.com

Yahoogroups: https://groups.yahoo.com/group/sahodar

Yes the above is true but isnt it also true that every metro earning wife becomes a pauper when it comes to the question of maintanence over here itself i have seen several women targeting the property of thehusband / ancestrial property :) even before any order has been passed in their relevant cases . In the next general election of 2014 we would see another few laws being passed in the name of women empowerment :(

We have laws like crpc 125 which have the  words women or children . For years these laws have not been over hauled and as a matter of fact instead the word women has to be replaced by spouse . Article 14 says that the government shall not deny to any person equality before law or the equal protection of the laws. Article 15 declares that government shall not discriminate against any citizen on the ground of s*x. 

 The Dv act itself violates article 14 of the indian constitution :)

stanley (Freedom)     01 November 2012

 

No Maintenance in DV if hubby unemployed and wife educated capable to earn

January 26, 2011

IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI

Date of Reserve: 9th August, 2010

Date of Order: 27th August, 2010

+Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009

%

27.08.2010

Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. … Petitioner Through: Dr. Naipal Singh, Advocate

Versus

The State & Anr. … Respondents Through: Mr. O.P.Saxena, APP for the State

With Mr. Gajraj Singh, SI

Mr. K.C.Jain, Adv. for the Complainant/Wife

JUSTICE SHIV NARAYAN DHINGRA

1. Whether reporters of local papers may be allowed to see the judgment? Yes.

2. To be referred to the reporter or not? Yes.

3. Whether judgment should be reported in Digest? Yes. JUDGMENT

The present petition under Section 482 Cr.P.C.

assails an order of interim maintenance under The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (in short Domestic Violence Act) passed by the learned MM on 16th January, 2008 and confirmed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge in appeal by order dated 29th February, 2008.

2. The petitioner was a Non-Resident Indian, working in Luanda, Angola in Africa as a Manager. He came to India Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 1 of 6 taking leave from his job for marriage. Marriage between the petitioner and respondent no.2/wife was settled through matrimonial advertisement. The respondent wife was MA (English) and MBA. As per her bio-data sent before marriage, she was doing job with a Multinational Company. The marriage between the parties was solemnized on 14th May, 2007 at a Farmhouse in Vasant Kunj and was got registered on 25th May, 2007. The parties lived together for a limited period of 10 days i.e. from 15th May, 2007 to 19th May, 2007 and from 2nd June to 6th June, 2007. While the allegations of husband are that marriage failed within 3 weeks since the wife was suffering from a chronic disease about which no information was given to him before marriage and a fraud was played. The allegations made by wife were as usual of dowry demand and harassment. Since the marriage did not succeed, the husband/petitioner filed a petition under Section 12 of Hindu Marriage Act for declaring the marriage as null and void and the wife first filed an FIR against the husband under Section 498A/406 IPC and then filed an application under Section 12 of Domestic Violence Act.

 

3. It is not relevant for the purpose of this petition to go into the details of allegations and counter allegations made Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 2 of 6 by each other. Suffice it to say that the learned MM passed an order dated 16th January, 2008 directing husband to pay an interim maintenance of ` 5000/- pm to the wife. He fixed this maintenance without considering the contentions raised by the husband (as is stated in the order) that the husband lost his job in Angola (Africa) where he was working before marriage because his passport was seized by police and he could not join his duties back. After marriage he remained in India, he was not employed. In the appeal, learned Additional Session Judge noted the contentions raised by the husband that he had become jobless because of the circumstances as stated by him and he had no source of income, he was not even able to maintain himself and had incurred loan, but observed that since the petitioner had earlier worked abroad as Sales Manager and in view of the provisions of Domestic Violence Act, he had the responsibility to maintain the wife and monetary relief was necessarily to be provided to the aggrieved person i.e. wife. He observed that the wife was not able to maintain herself therefore husband, who earned handsomely in past while working abroad, was liable to pay ` 5000/- pm to the wife as fixed by the learned MM. Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 3 of 6

4. A perusal of Domestic Violence Act shows that Domestic Violence Act does not create any additional right in favour of wife regarding maintenance. It only enables the Magistrate to pass a maintenance order as per the rights available under existing laws. While, the Act specifies the duties and functions of protection officer, police officer, service providers, magistrate, medical facility providers and duties of Government, the Act is silent about the duties of husband or the duties of wife. Thus, maintenance can be fixed by the Court under Domestic Violence Act only as per prevalent law regarding providing of maintenance by husband to the wife. Under prevalent laws i.e. Hindu Adoption & Maintenance Act, Hindu Marriage Act, Section 125 Cr.P.C – a husband is supposed to maintain his un-earning spouse out of the income which he earns. No law provides that a husband has to maintain a wife, living separately from him, irrespective of the fact whether he earns or not. Court cannot tell the husband that he should beg, borrow or steal but give maintenance to the wife, more so when the husband and wife are almost equally qualified and almost equally capable of earning and both of them claimed to be gainfully employed before marriage. If the husband was BSc. and Masters in Marketing Management from Pondicherry University, the wife was MA Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 4 of 6 (English) & MBA. If the husband was working as a Manager abroad, the wife with MBA degree was also working in an MNC in India. Under these circumstances, fixing of maintenance by the Court without there being even a prima facie proof of the husband being employed in India and with clear proof of the fact that the passport of the husband was seized, he was not permitted to leave country, (the bail was given with a condition that he shall keep visiting Investigating Officer as and when called) is contrary to law and not warranted under provisions of Domestic Violence Act.

 

5. We are living in an era of equality of s*xes. The Constitution provides equal treatment to be given irrespective of s*x, caste and creed. An unemployed husband, who is holding an MBA degree, cannot be treated differently to an unemployed wife, who is also holding an MBA degree. Since both are on equal footing one cannot be asked to maintain other unless one is employed and other is not employed. As far as dependency on parents is concerned, I consider that once a person is grown up, educated he cannot be asked to beg and borrow from the parents and maintain wife. The parents had done their duty of educating them and now they Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 5 of 6 cannot be burdened to maintain husband and wife as both are grown up and must take care of themselves.

 

6. It must be remembered that there is no legal presumption that behind every failed marriage there is either dowry demand or domestic violence. Marriages do fail for various other reasons. The difficulty is that real causes of failure of marriage are rarely admitted in Courts. Truth and honesty is becoming a rare commodity, in marriages and in averments made before the Courts.

 

7. I therefore find that the order dated 16th January, 2008 passed by the learned MM and order dated 29th February, 2008 passed by the learned Additional Sessions Judge fixing maintenance without there being any prima facie proof of the husband being employed are not tenable under Domestic Violence Act. The petition is allowed. The orders passed by Metropolitan Magistrate and learned Additional Sessions Judge are hereby set aside.

August 27, 2010 SHIV NARAYAN DHINGRA, J. vn

Crl.M.C.No. 491/2009 Sanjay Bhardwaj & Ors. v. The State & Anr. Page 6 of 6

 


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