* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI
Date of Reserve: July 27, 2010
Date of Order: 13th August, 2010
+ Crl. M.C. No.3878/2009
% 13.08.2010
VIJAY VERMA ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. K.K. Manan, Mr. Tarun Goomber,
Mr. Nipun Bhardwaj, Mr. Pankaj Mandiratta and
Mr. Ashish George, Advocates.
versus
STATE N.C.T. OF DELHI & ANR. ..... Respondents
Through: Mr. Sunil Sharma, APP for the State.
Mr. Sunil Sethi, Mr. Sumit Sethi & Mr. B.C.
Mishra, Advocates for R-2.
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
1. This petition has been filed under Section 482 Cr. P.C. assailing order of
learned A.S.J. dated 7th September, 2009, upholding the order of learned
M.M. dated 11th July, 2009.
2. Brief facts relevant for the purpose of deciding this petition are that the
petitioner herein had filed an application under Section 12 of Protection of
Women from Domestic Violence Act making her brother and his wife as
respondents. She sought an interim order from the Court of M.M. for
immediate residence rights and police protection so that she could stay at
premises No. A-181, Defence Colony, Delhi, whenever she visited India. The
petitioner is a permanent resident of USA and is living in USA since year 2000.
She came to India on a visit on 15th July, 2008 and alleged that when she went
to her parental house on 16th July, 2008, she was not allowed to enter her
parental house and hence the application.
3. Learned MM in her order observed that in this case the petition was
more in a nature of claiming right in the property. The whole dispute seemed
to be property dispute between the parties and there was no ground to pass
an interim order of residence. The learned ASJ upheld this contention in
appeal.
4. It is not disputed that father of the petitioner is not alive. Property No.
A-181, Defence Colony, New Delhi, was owned by the father of the petitioner
and respondent No. 2. Petitioner claimed right in the property alleging that
she had a right in her father’s property whereas respondent No. 2 relied upon
a Will executed by father bequeathing his rights and share in the property in
favour of his grandson. The respondent also relied upon an affidavit earlier
executed by the petitioner showing that she had received her share in the
property. It is also not disputed that a suit for partition titled as
“Indra Warman Vs. Kishan Kumar Verma”, being CS(OS) No. 2137 of 2006,
filed by the sister of petitioner was pending in the High Court wherein the
petitioner was one of the defendants and the petitioner herself also filed a
suit for partition in the High Court being CS(OS) No. 2028 of 2009, titled as “
Vijay Verma Vs. Kishan Kumar Verma & Ors.”
5. Filing of a petition under Protection of Women from Domestic Violence
Act by the petitioner taking shelter of domestic relationship and domestic
violence needs to be considered so that this Act is not misused to settle
property disputes. Domestic relationship is defined under the Act in Section
2(f) as under:
“(f) ‘domestic relationship’ means a relationship between
two persons who live or have, at any point of time, lived
together in a shared household, when they are related by
consanguinity, marriage, or through a relationship in the
nature of marriage, adoption or are family members living
together as a joint family.”
6. A perusal of this provision makes it clear that domestic relationship
arises in respect of an aggrieved person if the aggrieved person had lived
together with the respondent in a shared household. This living together can
be either soon before filing of petition or ‘at any point of time’. The problem
arises with the meaning of phrase “at any point of time”. Does that mean that
living together at any stage in the past would give right to a person to become
aggrieved person to claim domestic relationship? I consider that “at any point
of time” under the Act only means where an aggrieved person has been
continuously living in the shared household as a matter of right but for some
reason the aggrieved person has to leave the house temporarily and when she
returns, she is not allowed to enjoy her right to live in the property. However,
“at any point of time” cannot be defined as “at any point of time in the past”
whether the right to live survives or not. For example if there is a joint family
where father has several sons with daughters-in-law living in a house and
ultimately sons, one by one or together, decide that they should live separate
with their own families and they establish separate household and start living
with their respective families separately at different places; can it be said that
wife of each of the sons can claim a right to live in the house of father-in-law
because at one point of time she along with her husband had lived in the
shared household. If this meaning is given to the shared household then the
whole purpose of Domestic Violence Act shall stand defeated. Where a family
member leaves the shared household to establish his own household, and
actually establishes his own household, he cannot claim to have a right to
move an application under Section 12 of Protection of Women from Domestic
Violence Act on the basis of domestic relationship. Domestic relationship
comes to an end once the son along with his family moved out of the joint
family and established his own household or when a daughter gets married
and establishes her own household with her husband. Such son, daughter,
daughter-in-law, son-in-law, if they have any right in the property say because
of coparcenary or because of inheritance, such right can be claimed by an
independent civil suit and an application under Protection of Women from
Domestic Violence Act cannot be filed by a person who has established his
separate household and ceased to have a domestic relationship. Domestic
relationship continues so long as the parties live under the same roof and
enjoy living together in a shared household. Only a compelled or temporarily
going out by aggrieved person shall fall in phrase ‘at any point of time’, say,
wife has gone to her parents house or to a relative or some other female
member has gone to live with her some relative, and, all her articles and
belongings remain within the same household and she has not left the
household permanently, the domestic relationship continues. However,
where the living together has been given up and a separate household is
established and belongings are removed, domestic relationship comes to an
end and a relationship of being relatives of each other survives. This is very
normal in families that a person whether, a male or a female attains self
sufficiency after education or otherwise and takes a job lives in some other
city or country, enjoys life there, settles home there. He cannot be said to
have domestic relationship with the persons whom he left behind. His
relationship that of a brother and sister, father and son, father and
daughter, father and daughter-in-law etc survives but the domestic
relationship of living in a joint household would not survive & comes to an
end.
7. This meaning of domestic relationship has sense when we come to
definition of domestic violence and the purpose of the Act. The purpose of
the Act is to give remedy to the aggrieved persons against domestic violence.
The domestic violence can take place only when one is living in shared
household with the respondents. The acts of abuses, emotional or economic,
physical or sexual, verbal or nonverbal if committed when one is living in the
same shared household constitute domestic violence. However, such acts of
violence can be committed even otherwise also when one is living separate.
When such acts of violence take place when one is living separate, these may
be punishable under different provisions of IPC or other penal laws, but, they
cannot be covered under Domestic Violence Act. One has to make distinction
between violence committed on a person living separate in a separate
household and the violence committed on a person living in the shared
household. Only violence committed by a person while living in the shared
household can constitute domestic violence. A person may be threatening
another person 100 miles away on telephone or by messages etc. This may
amount to an offence under IPC, but, this cannot amount to domestic
violence. Similarly, emotional blackmail, economic abuse and physical abuse
can take place even when persons are living miles away. Such abuses are not
covered under Domestic Violence Act but they are liable to be punished under
Penal laws. Domestic Violence is a violence which is committed when parties
are in domestic relationship, sharing same household and sharing all the
household goods with an opportunity to commit violence.
8. I therefore consider that the application filed by the petitioner under
Section 12 of Domestic Violence Act was not at all maintainable. The
petitioner had settled her separate house in America, her Passport was issued
in America, she is doing job in America, she was adult and able to take care of
herself, take her own decisions. She decided to live in America after leaving
her parents here. If she has any right in her father’s property, she has already
filed a suit for partition. An application under Section 12 of Domestic Violence
Act was nothing but a gross misuse of the Act and I consider that she was
rightly denied the interim relief of residence in the property left by her father.
The petition is hereby dismissed.
August 13, 2010 SHIV NARAYAN DHINGRA, J.
acm
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