HINDU LAW (FAMILY LAW)
HINDU MARRIAGE ACT, 1955 — SECTION-WISE DETAILED EXPLANATION (SECTION 1–30)
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THE HINDU MARRIAGE ACT, 1955 —
SECTION 1 – SHORT TITLE & EXTENT
Name: Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
Applies to whole of India (except J&K before 2019).
Applies to Hindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs.
Relevant Case Law
Smt. Yamunabai Anantrao Adhav v. Anantrao Shivram Adhav (1988)
Established who qualifies as a “Hindu” under the Act.
SECTION 2 – APPLICATION OF THE ACT
Applies to:
Hindus (including Sikhs, Jains, Buddhists)
Anyone who is NOT Muslim/Christian/Parsi/Jew
Persons born to Hindu parents
Anyone converted to Hinduism
SECTION 3 – DEFINITIONS
Defines:
Custom
Sapindas
Degrees of prohibited relationship
Full blood/half blood/uterine blood
Case Law:
Baluswami Reddiar v. Balakrishna Reddiar (1958)
Explained “custom” must be ancient, certain, and reasonable.
SECTION 4 – OVERRIDING EFFECT
If any old Hindu law/custom conflicts with this Act ⇒ this Act prevails.
Case:
Krishna v. State (1996) — Act overrides inconsistent customs.
SECTION 5 – CONDITIONS FOR A VALID HINDU MARRIAGE
A Hindu marriage is valid only if:
Monogamy (neither has a living spouse)
Sound mind
Age: Male 21+, Female 18+
Not within prohibited degree
Not sapinda relationship unless custom allows
Famous Case:
Sarla Mudgal v. Union of India (1995)
Held – Second marriage during lifetime of spouse = Void.
SECTION 6 – GUARDIAN FOR THE BRIDE (REPEALED)
Earlier guardian consent was needed. Now removed.
SECTION 7 – CEREMONIES OF HINDU MARRIAGE
Marriage valid if:
Performed according to customary rites
Saptapadi (7 steps) = marriage completed on the 7th step
Case:
Priya Bala Ghosh v. Suresh Chandra Ghosh (1971)
Proof of essential ceremonies is necessary to prove marriage.
SECTION 8 – REGISTRATION OF HINDU MARRIAGE
Registration is optional but strong evidence of marriage.
Case:
Seema v. Ashwani Kumar (2006)
Supreme Court recommended compulsory registration.
SECTION 9 – RESTITUTION OF CONJUGAL RIGHTS
If spouse withdraws without reasonable cause ⇒ other spouse may seek court order to resume cohabitation.
Case:
Saroj Rani v. Sudarshan Kumar Chadha (1984)
Section 9 held constitutional.
SECTION 10 – JUDICIAL SEPARATION
Court separation > parties stop living together but marriage continues.
Grounds same as divorce.
SECTION 11 – VOID MARRIAGES
Marriage is automatically invalid if:
Bigamy
Prohibited relationship
Sapinda marriage
Case:
Lily Thomas v. Union of India (2000) — Bigamous marriages void.
SECTION 12 – VOIDABLE MARRIAGES
Can be cancelled if:
Impotency
Mental disorder
Consent obtained by force/fraud
Pregnancy by another man before marriage
Case:
Annullment allowed in B v. A (2006) for concealment of mental illness.
SECTION 13 – DIVORCE
Major grounds:
Adultery
Cruelty
Desertion (2 years)
Conversion
Unsound mind
Venereal disease
Renunciation of world
Not heard alive 7 years
Additional ground for wife:
Husband guilty of rape/sodomy/bestiality
Husband marries again before 1955 Act
Key Case Laws:
Naveen Kohli v. Neelu Kohli (2006) – Cruelty includes mental cruelty.
V. Bhagat v. D. Bhagat (1994) – Explained mental cruelty.
Ravi Kumar v. Julmidevi (2010) – Desertion explained.
SECTION 13-A — ALTERNATIVE RELIEF IN DIVORCE PROCEEDINGS
1. What Section 13-A Says (Plain English)
If a spouse applies for divorce,
but the court feels that divorce is too harsh or not fully justified,
the court may still grant judicial separation as an alternative relief.
2. Why Section 13-A Was Introduced
The legislature realized that sometimes the relationship is strained but not fully broken.
giving spouses time to rethink
preventing hardship caused by outright dismissal
providing flexibility to courts
3. Key Features of Section 13-A
(A) Court can grant judicial separation even without a separate application
(B) Court must be satisfied that some grounds for divorce exist, but not necessarily fully proved
(C) Alternative relief is discretionary
(D) Useful in borderline cases
4. Important Case Laws on Section 13-A
1. Chetan Dass v. Kamla Devi (2001) 4 SCC 250
The Supreme Court held that courts must attempt reconciliation in matrimonial disputes before granting divorce.
Section 13-A gives the court the power to grant judicial separation when divorce is too harsh.
It reaffirms the idea behind Section 13-A — courts should not hastily dissolve marriages.
2. Anjana Kumari v. Gopesh Kumar (2000 Delhi HC)
The court held that when the husband files for divorce but fails to prove grounds fully, the court may still grant judicial separation under Section 13-A.
3. Ram Kali v. Gopal Dass (1971 SCR (2) 924)
4. Suman Singh v. Sanjay Singh (2001 All HC)
The court said that even when the divorce petition fails, if cruelty or incompatibility is partly established, a decree of judicial separation can be granted.
5. Jagdish Singh v. Seema (MP HC, 2014)
The court granted judicial separation under Section 13-A because the evidence showed the marriage was strained but not completely broken.
5. Difference Between Divorce and Judicial Separation
| Point | Divorce | Judicial Separation |
|---|---|---|
| Status of Marriage | Ends permanently | Marriage continues |
| Right to Remarry | Yes | No |
| Grounds Needed | Strict and fully proved | Lesser, partial proof sufficient |
| Scope of Section 13A | Not required | Often granted as alternative |
| Cooling Off | Not applicable | Parties get time for reconciliation |
6. When Courts Commonly Use Section 13-A
desertion cannot be proved clearly
mutual allegations but no clear evidence
marriage is strained but not irretrievable
reconciliation may still be possible
Final Summary
Instead of outright granting or denying divorce, courts may choose judicial separation to:
protect the institution of marriage,
avoid irrational dissolution,
give spouses time for reconciliation.
Latest case laws on Hindu Marriage Act
SECTION 13B – DIVORCE BY MUTUAL CONSENT
Conditions:
Husband & wife living separately for 1 year
Mutual agreement to dissolve marriage
Two motions required (filing + final motion)
Case:
Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur (2017)
Six-month waiting period can be waived.
SECTION 14 – NO PETITION FOR DIVORCE WITHIN 1 YEAR
Except in cases of exceptional hardship.
SECTION 15 – WHEN DIVORCE CAN BE GRANTED
Parties free to remarry after appeal period ends.
SECTION 16 – LEGITIMACY OF CHILDREN OF VOID & VOIDABLE MARRIAGE
Children of void/voidable marriage are legitimate, but inherit only parents’ property.
Case:
Revanasiddappa v. Mallikarjun (2011).
SECTION 17 – PUNISHMENT OF BIGAMY
Second marriage during lifetime of spouse = void + criminal offence (IPC 494/495).
Case:
Sarla Mudgal (1995) again important.
SECTION 18 – PENALTY FOR CONTRAVENING CONDITIONS OF MARRIAGE
Punishment for:
Child marriage
Prohibited degree marriage
Bigamy (covered under Sec 17)
SECTION 19 – COURT JURISDICTION FOR MATRIMONIAL CASES
You can file case where:
Marriage solemnized
Husband & wife last lived
Wife resides (special protection)
Case:
Ruchi Majoo v. Sanjay Majoo (2011)
Explained jurisdiction.
SECTION 20 – CONTENTS & VERIFICATION OF PETITION
Petition must contain:
Detailed facts
Dates
Certify truth of statements
SECTION 21 – PROCEDURE
Civil court procedure for matrimonial cases.
SECTION 21A – TRANSFER OF PETITIONS
If both spouses file petitions in different courts ⇒ can be transferred & tried together.
SECTION 22 – PROCEEDINGS TO BE IN CAMERA
Divorce cases conducted privately.
SECTION 23 – DECREE IN MATRIMONIAL PROCEEDINGS
Court ensures:
No collusion
No unnecessary delay
All conditions satisfied
SECTION 23A – RELIEF IN DIVORCE & SEPARATION PROCEEDINGS
Respondent may also seek relief.
SECTION 24 – MAINTENANCE PENDENTE LITE
Maintenance during case + litigation expenses.
Case:
Jagdish Jugtawat v. Manju Lata (2002)
Daughter entitled till marriage.
SECTION 25 – PERMANENT ALIMONY & MAINTENANCE
Court may grant:
Monthly/one-time payment
Consider income, property, conduct
Case:
Shailja v. Khobbanna (2018) – Earning capacity ≠ actual income.
SECTION 26 – CUSTODY OF CHILDREN
Court decides child custody based on “welfare of child”.
Case:
Gaurav Nagpal v. Sumedha Nagpal (2009).
SECTION 27 – DISPOSAL OF PROPERTY
Court can divide jointly owned property of spouses.
SECTION 28 – APPEAL
Appeal allowed within 90 days.
SECTION 29 – SAVINGS
Preserves certain customs & prior marriages.
SECTION 30 – REPEALS
Repeals old Hindu marriage laws.
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