Shouldn't We Also Recognize a Daughter's Moral Duty Towards Her Parents?

Do you think that it is unreasonable for a wife to expect to live independent of her in-laws without it constituting grounds for cruelty and divorce? You be the judge.

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Do you think that it is unreasonable for a wife to expect to live independent of her in-laws without it constituting grounds for cruelty and divorce? You be the judge.

Trouble started for Narendra and his wife K. Meena barely a month into their marriage. About two years later, in November 1993, the couple had a child. However, tension mounted between the two, as Meena grew suspicious of her husband, often accusing him of having an extra-marital affair.

Meena wanted to move out of her in-laws' home with her husband, but Narendra, the sole earning member of the family, wasn't keen.

Things came to a head on 12 July 1995. Meena and Narendra quarrelled and she went into the bathroom, locked the door and poured kerosene over herself in an attempt to commit suicide. Narendra, his brother and some neighbours broke the door and managed to stop Meena. She left her marital home that day.

Narendra subsequently filed for divorce on the grounds of cruelty as Meena often threatened to commit suicide, made allegations of an affair with a maid and desired to live independently.

Observing the facts of the case and considering evidence from both the parties, the family court in Bengaluru granted Narendra a divorce on 17 November 2001. Meena filed an appeal and the High Court of Karnataka in Bengaluru concluded that there "was no cruelty meted out" to Narendra, which would enable him to get a divorce under the provisions of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. The high court seemed to find some justification in Meena's request to live separately and subsequently set aside the family court's judgement and divorce decree in March 2006. Narendra filed an appeal in the Supreme Court.

 

The Verdict

On 6 October 2016, a Supreme Court Bench comprising Anil R. Dave and L. Nageswara Rao considered the case. They noted that unlike the family court, the high court hadn't considered important the allegations of an extra-marital affair and those against Narendra's character. It also did not give importance to Meena's attempted suicide or her "constant persuasion" for separating from Naren...

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