In The High Court of Delhi at New Delhi CRL - REV.P. 751/2018

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IN

* IN THE HIGH COURT OF DELHI AT NEW DELHI

CRL.REV.P. 751/2018

Reserved on : 02.12.2019
Decision on : 06.12.2019

IN THE MATTER OF:


CRL.REV.P. 751/2018
SH. ARUN VATS ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. S.C. Vats, Advocate.
versus

MS. PALLAVI SHARMA & ANR. ..... Respondents


Through: Mr. Rajesh Sharma, Advocate along
with R-1 in person.
CORAM:
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE MANOJ KUMAR OHRI

1. The present revision petition has been filed challenging the order

dated 05.07.2018 passed by the Family Court in MT No. 696/2016 whereby

in the respondent’s petition under Section 125 Cr.P.C., an interim

maintenance of Rs.33,005/- per month was granted to the respondent/wife

and the minor child.

2. In the aforesaid petition, it is the case of respondent/wife that she was

thrown out of her matrimonial house and was with her mother at her parental

home along with her minor child. It was also stated that she had no source

of income and claimed Rs.80,000/- per month as maintenance.

CRL.REV.P. 751/2018 Page 1 of 4


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3. It was further stated by the respondent/wife that she had done her

LLB and was enrolled as an advocate in the year 2000. She practised briefly

prior to her marriage and at the time of filing of her petition, she was

pursuing her LLM. She was unable to pursue her profession on account of

the young age of her child who was 3 and half years old back then.

4. The petitioner/husband filed his income affidavit before the Family

Court wherein it was stated that he was working as an Executive Chef in

Convention Hotels Pvt. Ltd., Goa and earning about Rs.88,000/- per month.

It was stated that the petitioner/husband has old aged parents to care for and

other liabilities towards loan and rent of his accommodation. He was paying

maintenance @ Rs.4,000/- per month for the minor child.

5. The Family Court noted that the annual income of the

petitioner/husband was Rs.11,31,040/- per annum for the year 2016-17 and

his gross income for the year 2017-18 was Rs.8,81,940/- per annum. After

deducting the tax paid amounting to Rs. 95,838/-, the Family Court took the

net income at Rs.7,86,102/-. The Family Court allotted two units to every

member, one unit for the minor child and one extra unit to the

petitioner/husband for maintaining his separate household. Thus, after

rounding off, the respondent/wife was awarded interim maintenance @

CRL.REV.P. 751/2018 Page 2 of 4


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Rs.33,005/- per month for herself and the minor child.

6. Learned counsel for the petitioner/husband has referred to the bio data

of the respondent/wife which is stated to have been downloaded from a

social website. He has submitted that the respondent/wife is professionally

qualified and is earning well. He also submitted that the petitioner was

paying rent @ Rs.4,000/- per month vide order dated 16.07.16.

7. During the course of arguments, learned counsel for the

petitioner/husband was asked if any document has been filed to support his

contention that the respondent/wife was practising and earning. However,

he was unable to show any document in support. A perusal of the record

would show that besides placing on record the aforesaid bio data of the

respondent/wife, which is disputed, the petition/husband has not placed any

document on record to show that the respondent/wife is actually earning.

8. In Shalija & Anr. Vs. Khobbana reported as (2018) 12 SCC 199, it

was held that ‘capable of earning’ and ‘actual earning’ are two different

requirements. Merely because wife is capable of earning was held not to be

a sufficient reason to reduce the maintenance awarded by the Family Court.

9. The petitioner’s aforementioned contention, in absence of any

supporting document, remains a disputed question and needs to be tested in

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trial. The Family Court has recorded in the impugned order that any amount

paid as maintenance in favour of the respondent/wife and her minor child

for the period in question would be liable to be adjusted.

10. In view of the above discussions, I find no illegality or perversity in

the impugned order passed by the Family Court. The revision petition is

dismissed accordingly. Miscellaneous application is disposed of as

infructuous.

MANOJ KUMAR OHRI, J


DECEMBER 06, 2019
ga

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