Pratibha Rani Vs Suraj Kumar

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Pratibha Rani vs Suraj Kumar & Anr on 12 March, 1985

Equivalent citations: 1985 AIR 628, 1985 SCR (3) 191


Author: S M Fazalali
Bench: Fazalali, Syed Murtaza
PETITIONER:
PRATIBHA RANI

Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SURAJ KUMAR & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/03/1985

BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
BENCH:
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)

CITATION:
1985 AIR 628 1985 SCR (3) 191
1985 SCC (2) 370 1985 SCALE (1)458
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC 833 (50)
RF 1992 SC 604 (103)

ACT:
Nature, character and concomitants of stridhan-Right of
exclusive ownership over the stridhan during coverture-
Whether the dowry/stridhan given to a wife and her exclusive
property becomes a joint property/partnership property by a
fiction of being placed in the custody of her husband and
her relations, the moment a married woman enters her
matrimonial home-Indian Partnership Act, 1932, section 4.
Dowry Prohibition Act (28 of 1961) sections 2 Hindu Marriage
Act, 1955 section 27 Hindu Succession Act Section 14 Indian
Penal Code, sections 405, 406 and 482.
Remedies open under law-Whether criminal remedy is
barred when civil remedy is available simultaneously.
Entrustment-Charge Or Criminal breach of trust by wife
against her husband and his close relations maintainability-
Essential ingredients of an offence section 405/406 Indian
Penal Code.
Inherent powers of the High Court to quash a First
Information Report on a complaint under section 482' the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Act 11 of 1974),
explained.

HEADNOTE:
The appellant Pratibha Rani, the estranged wife of the
first respondent Suraj Kumar, filed a criminal complaint
against her husband, his father, his three brothers and a
brother-in-law in the court of the Additional Chief Judicial
Magistrate, Ludhiana, alleging; (i) that she was married to
the first respondent at Ludhiana on 4 2. 1972 according to
Hindu rites and customs; (ii) that the aforesaid persons,
namely, father, brothers and brother-in-law of the first
respondent attended the marriage and demanded dowry from the
appellants' parents as consideration for the marriage; (iii)
that the dowry articles mentioned in the list worth Rs
60,000 in the form of gold ornaments, clothes and other
valuables were given and entrusted to the respondents and
four others at Ludhiana at the time of 'doli' on 5. 2. 1972
in the presence of Kapur Chand Jain and six others; (iv)
that all the six respondents, from the time of marriage
started teasing, harassing and beating her and they kept her
without even food to extract more money from her parents;
(v) that they turned out the appellant with her children in
the beginnings of 1977 (vi) that after a great deal of
persuasion and intervention by Panchayatdars, respondent No.
I came
192
to Ludhiana and took her to his house, after giving an
undertaking in writing on 21. 6. 1977 not to misbehave with
and not to maltreat the appellant and her children; (vii)
that after some time all the respondents in the Complaint
not only started again maltreating the appellant and
misbehaving with her, but also brought the appellant at 4.30
a.m. On 11.12.80 and left her near Kailash Cinema Chowk,
(viii) that the articles (the stridhana) mentioned in the
list appended to the complaint were never given by the
respondents to the appellant for her use but were retained
by them illegally and with the dishonest intention of
causing wrongful gain to themselves and wrongful loss to the
appellant y (ix) that when the appellants' husband and his
brother, Vishwinder Kumar, respondent 1 and 5 in the
complaint, came to Ludhiana on 10 2.81 to attend the
proceedings started by the appellant under section 125
Criminal Penal Code her parents persuaded them to return the
articles entrusted to them at the time of the marriage but
they flatly refused to comply with that demand; (x) that the
articles have not been returned in spite of service of
notice dated 17.12.81 on the first respondent; (xi) that the
respondents in the complaint have dishonestly, thus,
converted the articles belonging to the appellant for their
use in violation of the instructions of the appellants'
parents given at the time of the marriage to give the
articles for the appellants' use and that (xii) they
individually and jointly committed the offences under
sections 405 and 406 Indian Penal Code.
Thereupon respondent No. 1 filed Criminal Misc.
Application No. 4876 of 1981 in the Punjab and Haryana High
Court under section 482 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
for quashing the criminal proceedings and the complaint
taken on file by the Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate,
Ludhiana under section 406 IPC and his order summoning
them.A Learned Single Judge of the High Court relying
strongly upon the observations made by a Full Bench of that
High Court in Vinod Kumar Sethi & Ors. v. State of Punjab &
Ors. reported in AIR 1982 Punjab 372 allowed the petition
and quashed the proceedings arising out of the appellants'
complaint, observing that the allegations in the appellants'
complaint are similar to the one in that case and therefore,
fully covered by the ratio in that decision. Hence the
appeal by special leave.
Allowing the appeal, the Court,
^
HELD; (Per E.lzal Ali, J.) (on behalf of Sabyasachi
Mukharji, J. and himself)
1.1 The stridhan property of a married woman cannot
acquire the character of a joint property of both the
spouses as soon as she enters her matrimonial home so as to
eliminate the application of section 406 IPC. The position
of stridhan of a Hindu married woman's property during
coverture is absolutely clear and unambiguous; she is the
absolute owner of such property and can deal with it in any
manner she likes-She may spend the whole of it or give it
away at her own pleasure by gift or will without any
reference to her husband. The entrustment to the husband of
the stridhan property is just like something which the wife
keeps in a bank and can withdraw any amount when ever she
likes without any hitch or hindrance. Ordinarily, the
husband has no right or interest in it with the sole
exception that in times of extreme distress, as
193
in famine, illness or the like, the husband can utilize it
but he is morally bound to restore it or its value when he
is able to do so. This right is purely personal to the
husband and the property so received by him in marriage
cannot be proceeded against even in execution of a decree
for debt. [206F; 201D-E]
Suraj Kumar & Anr. v. Pratibha Rani, Criminal Misc.
Petition No. 4876 of 1981 Punjab & Haryana High Court
reversed.

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