Domestic violence
Fight Against DV
(Querist) 02 October 2013
This query is : Resolved
Dear experts,
Urgently in need of your valuable suggestions...
Got married last year within two weeks time went abroad with my wife.
Her parents keep on insulting me and my family for no reason and make her to fight with me for every thing.
Lot of misunderstanding arise between us and she is very short tempered and sometimes threaten me that she will commit suicide if i ask why your parents doing like this , she cannot tolerate anything against her parents even she know they are at fault.
months back we came back to India and their parents scolded me and my family and used absurd words after that i left back to abroad and now back to India and working in different state till now she is staying with her parents and myself staying separately.
When i left her in her parents house she was pregnant and recently i came to know she aborted the baby but telling to everyone it was miscarriage but it was not neither communicated to me nor to my family
Now she filed domestic violence case against me and my mother in mahila court. In her petition she asked for residential rights and need interim maintenance. Not sure what to do ? is she has the right to stay ? i don't want that to happen how to stop it what legal action i can ask or i can request the judge that i can provide alternate accommodation.
Came to know that judge has order of granting interim maintenance and right to stay in my home and i think it will be passed to me on my appearing before the court in a week time.
Thanks.
Sudhir Kumar, Advocate
(Expert) 05 October 2013
you said "she cannot tolerate anything against her parents even she know they are at fault"
nothing unique. It is almost universal behaviour of all woman but still there are peacefully living families.
You have not specified what were misunderstanding.
Prima facies order under DV Act is correct. This itself denotes that the judge as restored some rights to her which were being denied.
Explore peaceful solution try to see where you were wrong.