top of page

In case divorce by mutual consent, consent for divorce must continue till end of marriage

In case divorce by mutual consent, consent for divorce must continue till end of marriage

Ajit Shashikant Mhetre Vs Mrs Leena Ajit Mhetre

Bombay HC

13/06/2019

SECOND APPEAL NO. 725 OF 2015

About/from the judgment:

The High Court recently held that consent of a spouse for divorce by mutual consent shall be genuine and must continue till the date divorce is granted.

 

The court said that a petition for divorce by mutual consent that invokes provisions of the Hindu Marriage Act is required to be filed by the spouses jointly and has to meet three basic requirements. She said that spouses should have lived separately for a year or more before filing the application, they should not have been able to live together and they should mutually agree that the marriage is to be dissolved.

 

HC was hearing a plea against a lower court order. A woman had appealed before the district judge in Kolhapur against a decree of divorce granted by a trial court in October 2005. She contended that the divorce petition was filed without her consent and that the trial court dissolved the marriage without ascertaining the plea’s averments or genuineness of her consent.

 

In October 2014, the district judge struck down the trial court’s decree. Following this, the woman’s husband approached HC, stating that the woman had given consent for divorce but remained absent during trial court proceedings.

 

Last week, justice Prabhudessai upheld the district court order. She said the trial court had proceeded on the assumption that consent, once given, was irrevocable. “Suffice it to say that [the trial court’s] view is not sustainable…consent should continue as on the date of the decree.”

 

The HC bench took note of provisions of the Hindu Marriage Act that casts a statutory duty on the family court to ascertain genuineness of the averments in the petition, existence of mutual consent, and that consent has not been obtained by force, fraud or undue influence.

Read the Judgment

Download

Knowledge and content of about almost all their respective descriptions are borrowed from law-related blogs and websites, we, therefore, wish to give proper credit to all the respective law-related blogs and websites like LiveLaw, Bar and Bench, LatestLaws, PathLegal, FirstLaw, Lawctopus, IndianKanoon, Manupatra, LegallyIndia etc.. Many of the judgments are also taken from them websites of Hon'ble Supreme Court and other respective Hon'ble High Courts!

bottom of page