Restriction on a Second Marriage till dismissal of an Appeal would not apply to a case where Parties have settled [SC JUDGMENT]
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 - S.15 - Interpretation of - Divorced
persons when may marry again - Principles of Purposive Construction - the
restriction placed on a second marriage in Section 15 of the Act till the
dismissal of an appeal would not apply to a case where parties have settled and
decided not to pursue the appeal.
AIR 2018 SC 3983 : 2018 (5) Bom.C.R. 505 : 2018 (5) CTC 99 :
2018 (3) JKJ 111 : 2018 (4) JLJR 61 : 2018 (5) Mh.L.J. 714 : 2018 (4) MPLJ 11:
2018 (4) PLJR 99 : 2018 (4) RCR (Civil) 103 : 2018 (4) RLW 2917 : (2018) 9 SCC
691 : 2018 (6) SLT 548
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
[S.A. BOBDE] AND [L. NAGESWARA RAO] JJ.
August 24th 2018
Civil Appeal No.18312 of 2017
MR. ANURAG MITTAL …… APPELLANT (S)
Versus
MRS. SHAILY MISHRA MITTAL …….. RESPONDENT (S)
J U D G M E N T
L. NAGESWARA RAO, J.
1. By a
judgment dated 31.08.2009, the Additional District Judge, North, Tis Hazari
Court, Delhi allowed the petition filed by Ms. Rachna Aggarwal under Section 13
(1) (i) (a) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (hereinafter referred to as “the Act’) and dissolved the marriage between her and the Appellant. By
the said judgment the petition filed under Section 9 of the Act by the
Appellant for restitution of conjugal rights was dismissed. The Appellant filed
appeals against the said judgment and the operation of the judgment and decree
dated 31.08.2009 was stayed by the High Court on 20.11.2009.During the pendency
of the Appeal, the Appellant and Ms. Rachna Aggarwal reached a settlement before
the Mediation Centre, Tis Hazari Court, Delhi. According to the terms of the
settlement dated 15.10.2011, the Appellant had to move an application for
withdrawal of the Appeals within 30 days. The Appellant filed an application to
withdraw the appeals before the High Court in terms of the settlement dated
15.10.2011 which was taken up on 28.11.2011 by the Registrar of the High Court
of Delhi. He recorded that there was a settlement reached between the parties
before the Mediation Centre, Tis Hazari Court, Delhi and listed the matter
before the Court on 20.12.2011. The High Court dismissed the appeals filed by
the Appellant as withdrawn in terms of the settlement by an order dated
20.12.2011. In the meanwhile, the Appellant married the Respondent on 06.12.2011.
Matrimonial discord between the Appellant and the Respondent led to the filing
of a petition by the Respondent for declaring the marriage as void under
Section 5 (i) read with Section 11 of the Act. The main ground in the petition
was that theappeal filed by the Appellant against the decree of divorce dated
31st August, 2009 was pending on the date of their
marriage i.e. 06.12.2011. The Family Court dismissed the petition
filed by the Respondent. The Respondent challenged the judgment of the Family
Court in the High Court. By a judgment dated 10.08.2016, the High Court set
aside the judgment of the Family Court and allowed the appeal of the Respondent
and declared the marriage between the Appellant and the Respondent held on
06.12.2011 as null and void. Aggrieved by the judgment of the High Court, the
Appellant has approached this Court.
2. As a pure
question of law arises for our consideration in this case, we make it clear
that we are not dealing with the merits of the allegations made by both sides. The
points that arises for consideration are:
a) Whether
the dismissal of the appeal relates back to the date of filing of the
application for withdrawal?
b) Whether
the marriage dated 06.12.2011 between the Appellant and the Respondentduring
the pendency of the appeal against the decree of divorce is void?
3. The
Family Court framed only one substantial issue as to whether the marriage
between the parties was null and void on account of the contravention of
Section 5 (i) of the Act. It was held by the Family Court that the judgment and
decree of divorce dated 31.08.2009 is a judgment in rem which was
neither reversed nor set aside by a superior court. As the judgment was
confirmed by the High Court, the marriage between the parties stood dissolved
w.e.f. 31.08.2009 itself. The Family Court also observed that there is no
provision in the Act which declares a marriage in contravention of Section 15
to be void. It was further held by the Family Court that the effect of stay of
the judgment by a superior court is only that the decree of divorce remained in
abeyance but it did not become non-existent. On the other hand, the High Court
framed a question whether the Appellant could have contracted a second marriage
after the decree of divorce was passed on 31.08.2009 notwithstanding the
operation of the decree beingstayed. The High Court was of the opinion that any
marriage solemnized by a party during the pendency of the appeal wherein the
operation of the decree of divorce was stayed, would be in contravention of
Section 5 (i) of the Act.
4. Section
11 of the Act provides that any marriage solemnized after commencement of the
Act shall be null and void if it contravenes any of the conditions specified in
Clauses (i), (iv) and (v) of Section 5. Clause (i) of Section 5 places a bar on
marriage by a person who has a spouse living at the time of the marriage.
Section 15 of the Act which is relevant is as follows:
“15.
Divorced persons. When may marry again.- When a marriage has been dissolved by a decree of divorce and
either there is no right of appeal against the decree or, if there is such a
right of appeal, the time for appealing has expired without an appeal having
been presented, or an appeal has been presented but has been dismissed, it
shall be lawful for either party to the marriage to marry again.”
5. There is
no dispute that the marriage between the Appellant and the Respondent was held
on 06.12.2011 during the pendency of the appeals filed by the Appellant against
the decree of divorce in favour of Ms. Rachna Aggarwal. It is also clear from
the record that theappeals were dismissed as withdrawn on 20.12.2011 pursuant
to an application for withdrawal that was placed before the Registrar on
28.11.2011. The Family Court has rightly held that the decree of divorce is a
judgment in rem. Marsh
v. Marsh 1945 AC 271
6. It is
pertinent to take note of the Proviso to Section 15 of the Act according to
which it shall not be lawful for the respective parties to marry again unless
at the time of such marriage at least one year has elapsed from the date of the
decree in the Court of first instance. This Proviso was repealed w.e.f.
27.05.1976, Hindu Marriage
(Amendment ) Act, 1976, Act 68 of 1976. In Lila Gupta v. Laxmi Narain, (1978)
3 SCC 258 Rajender Kumar
contracted second marriage with Lila Gupta before the expiry of one year from
the date of decree of divorce. This Court was concerned with a point relating
to the marriage between Rajender Kumar and Lila Gupta being void having been
contracted in violation of the Proviso to Section 15 of the Act. In the said
context this Court observed as follows:
“8. Did the framers of law intend that a marriage
contracted in violation of the provision contained in the proviso to Section 15
to be void? While enacting the legislation, the framers had in mind the
question of treating certain marriages void and provided for the same. It
would, therefore, be fair to infer as legislative exposition that a marriage in
breach of other conditions the legislature did not intend to treat as void.
While prescribing conditions for valid marriage in Section 5 each of the six
conditions was not considered so sacrosanct as to render marriage in breach of
each of it void. This becomes manifest from a combined reading of Sections 5
and 11 of the Act. If the provision in the proviso is interpreted to mean
personal incapacity for marriage for a certain period and, therefore, the
marriage during that period was by a person who had not the requisite capacity
to contract the marriage and hence void, the same consequence must follow where
there is breach of condition (iii) of Section 5 which also provides for personal
incapacity to contract marriage for a certain period. When minimum age of the
bride and the bridegroom for a valid marriage is prescribed in condition (iii) of
Section 5 it would only mean personal incapacity for a period because every day
the person grows and would acquire the necessary capacity on reaching the
minimum age. Now, before attaining the minimum age if a marriage is contracted
Section 11 does not render it void even though Section 18 makes it punishable.
Therefore, even where a marriage in breach of a certain condition is made
punishable yet the law does not treat it as void. The marriage in breach of the
proviso is neither punishable nor does Section 11 treat it void. Would it then
be fair to attribute an intention to the legislature that by necessary
implication in casting the proviso in the negative expression, the prohibition
was absolute and the breach of it would render the marriage void? If void
marriages were specifically provided for it is not proper to infer that in some
cases express provision is made and in some other cases voidness had to be
inferred by necessary implication. It would be all the more hazardous in the
case of marriage laws to treat a marriage in breach of a certain condition void
even though the law does not expressly provide for it. Craies on Statute Law, 7th Edn., P. 263 and 264 may be referred to with advantage:
“The words in this section are negative words, and are clearly
prohibitory of the marriage being hadwithout the prescribed requisites, but
whether the marriage itself is void ... is a question of very great difficulty.
It is to be recollected that there are no words in the Act rendering the
marriage void, and I have
sought in vain or any case in which a marriage has been declared null and void
unless there were words in the statute expressly so declaring it (emphasis supplied). . . . From this examination of
these Acts I draw two conclusions. First, that there never appears to have been
a decision where words in a statute relating to marriage, though prohibitory
and negative, have been held to infer a nullity unless such nullity was
declared in the Act. Secondly, that, viewing the successive marriage Acts, it
appears that prohibitory words, without a declaration of nullity, were not
considered by the legislature to create a nullity [Ed. Quoting Catterall v. Sweetman, (1845) 9 Jur 951, 954] .”
9. In the Act under discussion there is a specific provision for
treating certain marriages contracted in breach of certain conditions
prescribed for valid marriage in the same Act as void and simultaneously no
specific provision having been made for treating certain other marriages in
breach of certain conditions as void. In this background even though the
proviso is couched in prohibitory and negative language, in the absence of an
express provision it is not possible to infer nullity in respect of a marriage
contracted by a person under incapacity prescribed by the proviso.
10. Undoubtedly the proviso opens with a prohibition that:
“It shall not be lawful” etc. Is it an absolute prohibition violation of which
would render the act a nullity? A person whose marriage is dissolved by a
decree of divorce suffers an incapacity for a period of one year for
contracting second marriage. For such a person it shall not be lawful to
contract a second marriage within a period of one year from the date of the
decree of the Court of first instance. While granting a decree for divorce, the
law interdicts and prohibits a marriage for a period of one year from the date
of the decree of divorce. Does the inhibition for a period indicate that such
marriage would be void? While there is a disability for a time suffered by a
party from contracting marriage, every such disability does not render the
marriage void. A submission thatthe proviso is directory or at any rate not
mandatory and decision bearing on the point need not detain us because the
interdict of law is that it shall not be lawful for a certain party to do a
certain thing which would mean that if that act is done it would be unlawful.
But whenever a statute prohibits a certain thing being done thereby making it
unlawful without providing for consequence of the breach, it is not legitimate
to say that such a thing when done is void because that would tantamount to
saying that every unlawful act is void. As pointed out earlier, it would be all
the more inadvisable in the field of marriage laws. Consequences of treating a
marriage void are so serious and far reaching and are likely to affect innocent
persons such as children born during the period anterior to the date of the
decree annulling the marriage that it has always been considered not safe to
treat a marriage void unless the law so enacts or the inference of the marriage
being treated void is either inescapable or irresistible. Therefore, even
though the proviso is couched in a language prohibiting a certain thing being
done, that by itself is not sufficient to treat the marriage contracted in
contravention of it as void.”
7. In the
said judgment, this Court also had occasion to deal with the continuance of the
marital tie even after the decree of divorce for the period of incapacity as
provided in the Proviso to Section 15 of the Act. In the said context, this
Court held as follows:
“13. To say that
such provision continues the marriage tie even after the decree of divorce for
the period of incapacity is to attribute a certain status to the parties whose
marriage is already dissolved by divorce and for which there is no legal
sanction. A decree of divorce breaks the marital tie and the parties forfeit
the status of husband and wife in relation to each other. Each one becomes
competent to contract another marriage as provided by Section 15. Merely
because each one of them is prohibited from contracting a second marriage for a
certain period it could not be said that despite there being adecree of divorce
for certain purposes the first marriage subsists or is presumed to subsist.
Some incident of marriage does survive the decree of divorce; say, liability to
pay permanent alimony but on that account it cannot be said that the marriage
subsists beyond the date of decree of divorce. Section 13 which provides for
divorce in terms says that a marriage solemnised may on a petition presented by
the husband or the wife be dissolved by a decree of divorce on one or more of
the grounds mentioned in that section. The dissolution is complete once the decree is made, subject of
course, to appeal. But a final
decree of divorce in terms dissolves the marriage. No incident of such
dissolved marriage can bridge and bind the parties whose marriage is dissolved
by divorce at a time posterior to the date of decree. An incapacity for second
marriage for a certain period does not have effect of treating the former
marriage as subsisting. During the period of incapacity the parties cannot be
said to be the spouses within the meaning of clause (i),
sub-section (1) of Section 5. The word “spouse” has been understood to connote
a husband or a wife which term itself postulates a subsisting marriage. The
word “spouse” in sub-section (1) of Section 5 cannot be interpreted to mean a
former spouse because even after the divorce when a second marriage is contracted
if the former spouse is living that would not prohibit the parties from
contracting the marriage within the meaning of clause (i) of
sub-section (1) of Section 5. The expression “spouse” in clause (i),
subsection (1) of Section 5 by its very context would not include within its
meaning the expression “former spouse”.
(underlining ours)
8. After a
comprehensive review of the scheme of the Act and the legislative intent, this
Court in Lila Gupta (supra) held that a marriage in contravention of the proviso
to Section 15 is not void. Referring to Sections 5 and 11 of the Act, this
Court found that a marriage contracted in breach of only some of the conditions
renders the marriage void. This Court was also conscious of the absence of any
penalty prescribed for contravention of the proviso to Section 15 of the Act.
This Court referred to the negative expression “it shall not be lawful” used in
proviso to Section 15 which indicates that the prohibition was absolute. In
spite of the absolute prohibition, this Court was of the view that a marriage
contracted in violation of the proviso to Section 15 was not void. There was a
further declaration that the dissolution of a marriage is in rem and unless and until a Court of appeal reversed it, marriage for
all purposes was not subsisting. The dissolution of the marriage is complete
once the decree is made, subject of course to appeal. This Court also decided
that incapacity for second marriage for a certain period of time does not have
the effect of treating the former marriage as subsisting and the expression
‘spouse’ would not include within its meaning the expression ‘former spouse’.9. The majority judgment was concerned only with the
interpretation of proviso to Section 15 of the Act. Justice Pathak in his
concurring judgment referred to Section 15, but refrained from expressing any
opinion on its interpretation.
Effective date of the Dismissal of Appeal
10. In case
of a dissolution of marriage, a second marriage shall be lawful only after
dismissal of the appeal. Admittedly, the marriage between the Appellant and the
Respondent was on 06.12.2011 i.e.
before the order of withdrawal
was passed by the Court on 20.12.2011. There is no dispute that the application
for withdrawal of the appeal was filed on 28.11.2011 i.e. prior to the date of
the marriage on 06.12.2011. We proceed to consider the point that whether the
date of dismissal of the appeal relates back to the date of filing of the
application for withdrawal of the appeal. Order XXI Rule 89 (2) of the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (hereinafter referred to as “the CPC”) provides that
unless an application filed under Order XXI Rule 90 of theCPC is withdrawn, a
person shall not be entitled to make or prosecute an application under Order
XXI Rule 89 of the CPC. In Shiv Prasad v. Durga Prasad, (1975) 1 SCC 405 the contention of the Appellant therein that an application
filed under the aforesaid Rule 90 does not stand withdrawn until an order to
the effect is recorded by the Court, was not accepted. It was held that every
applicant has a right to unconditionally withdraw his application and his
unilateral act in that behalf is sufficient. No order of the Court is necessary
permitting the withdrawal of the application. This Court concluded that the act
of withdrawal is complete as soon as the applicant intimates the Court that he
intends to withdraw the application. The High Court of Bombay in Anil Dinmani Shankar Joshi
v. Chief Officer, Panvel Municipal Council, Panvel, AIR 2003 Bom. 238, 239 followed
the judgment of this Court in Shiv Prasad (supra)
and held that the said judgment is applicable to suits also. The High Court
recognized the unconditional right of the plaintiff to withdraw his suit and
held that the withdrawal would be complete as soon as the plaintiff files his purshis of withdrawal.
11. Order
XXIII Rule 1 (1) of the CPC enables the plaintiff to abandon his suit or
abandon a part of his claim against all or any of the defendants. Order XXIII
Rule 1 (3) of the CPC requires the satisfaction of the Court for withdrawal of
the suit by the plaintiff in case he is seeking liberty to institute a fresh
suit. While observing that the word abandonment in Order XXIII Rule 1 (1) of
the CPC is “absolute withdrawal” which is different from the withdrawal after
taking permission of the court, this Court held as follows, K.S.
Bhoopathy v. Kokila (2000) 5 SCC 458:
“12. The law as
to withdrawal of suits as enacted in the present Rule may be generally stated
in two parts: (a) a plaintiff can abandon a suit or abandon a part of
his claim as a matter of right without the permission of the court; in that
case he will be precluded from suing again on the same cause of action. Neither
can the plaintiff abandon a suit or a part of the suit reserving to himself a
right to bring a fresh suit, nor can the defendant insist that the plaintiff
must be compelled to proceed with the suit; and (b) a plaintiff may, in
the circumstances mentioned in sub-rule (3), be permitted by the court to
withdraw from a suit with liberty to sue afresh on the same cause of action.
Such liberty being granted by the Court enables the plaintiff to avoid the bar
in Order II Rule 2 and Section 11 CPC.”
12. Order
XXIII Rule 1 (1) of the CPC gives an absolute right to the plaintiff to
withdraw his suit or abandon any part of his claim. There is no doubt that
Order XXIII Rule 1 of the CPC is applicable to appeals as well and the
Appellant has the right to withdraw his appeal unconditionally and if he makes
such an application to the Court, it has to grant it, Bijayananda Patnaik v. Satrughna Sahu (1962) 2 SCR
538, 550. Therefore,
the appeal is deemed to have been withdrawn on 28.11.2011 i.e. the date of the
filing of the application for withdrawal. On 06.12.2011 which is the date of
the marriage between the Appellant and the Respondent, Ms. Rachna Aggarwal
cannot be considered as a living spouse. Hence, Section 5 (i) is not attracted
and the marriage between the Appellant and the Respondent cannot be declared as
void.
13. Sh. Sakha
Ram Singh, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the Respondent placed reliance
on a judgment of this Court in Lila Gupta (supra)
to submit that the marriage between the Appellant and the Respondent
held on 06.12.2011 is void as it was in violation of Section 15 of the Act. He
relied upon the concurring judgment of Justice Pathak in support of his submission
that the findings pertaining to Proviso to Section 15 cannot be made applicable
to Section 15. He submitted that there is a qualitative difference between the
period of incapacity set out in the Proviso during which a second marriage
cannot be contracted and the bar for another marriage during the pendency of an
appeal. We have already noted that Justice Pathak refrained from expressing any
view on the expression of Section 15 of the Act. However, the scope and purport
of Section 15 of the Act arise for consideration in the present case.
Interpretation of Section 15
Interpretation has been explained by Cross in Statutory
Interpretation, Cross Statutory Interpretation, Ed. Dr. John Bell
& Sir George Ingale, Second Edition (1987) as:
"The meaning that the Court ultimately attaches to the
statutory words will frequently be that which it believes members of the
legislature attached to them, or the meaning which they would have attached to
the words had the situation before the Court been present to their minds.
Interpretation is the process by which the Court determines the meaning of a
statutory provision for the purpose of applying it to the situation before it”.
14. The Hindu
Marriage Act is a social welfare legislation and a beneficent legislation and
it has to be interpreted in a manner which advances the object of the
legislation. The Act intends to bring about social reforms, Parayankandiyal Eravath Kanapravan Kalliani Amma v.
K. Devi (1996) 4 SCC 76, para 68. It is well known that this Court cannot interpret a
socially beneficial legislation on the basis as if the words therein are cast
in stone, Revanasiddappa v.
Mallikarjun, (2011) 11 SCC 1, para 40.
15. The
predominant nature of the purposive interpretation was recognized by this Court
in Shailesh Dhairyawan v.
Mohan Balkrishna Lulla, (2016) 3
SCC 619 which is as follows:
“33.
We may also emphasise that the
statutory interpretation of a provision is never static but is always dynamic.
Though the literal rule of interpretation, till some time ago, was treated as
the “golden rule”, it is now the doctrine of purposive interpretation
which is predominant, particularly in those cases where literal interpretation
may not serve the purpose or may lead to absurdity. If it brings about an end
which is at variance with the purpose of statute, that cannot be countenanced. Not
only legal process thinkers such as Hart and Sacks rejected intentionalism as a
grand strategy for statutory interpretation, and in its place they offered
purposivism, this principle is now widely applied by the courts not only in
this country but in many other legal systems as well.”
16. In Salomon v. Salomon & Co
Ltd., [1897] AC 22 at 38 Lord Watson observed that :
“In a
Court of Law or Equity, what the legislature intended to be done or not to be
done can only be legitimately ascertained from that which it has chosen to
enact, either in express words or by reasonable and necessary implication.”
In Black-Clawson
International Ltd. v. Papierwerke Waldhof-Aschaffenburg AG, [1975]
AC 591, p. 613 Lord Reid
held that:
“We often say that we are looking for the intention of
Parliament, but that is not quite accurate. We are seeking the meaning of the
words which Parliament used. We are seeking not what Parliament meant but the
true meaning of what they said.”
17. It is
also relevant to take note of Dy. Custodian v. Official Receiver, (1965) 1 SCR 220 at 225 F - G in which
it was declared that “if it
appears that the obvious aim and object of the statutory provisions would be
frustrated by accepting the literal construction suggested by the Respondent,
then it may be open to the Court to inquire whether an alternative construction
which would serve the purpose of achieving the aim and object of the Act, is
reasonably possible”.
18. Section
15 of the Act provides that it shall be lawful for either party to marry again
after dissolution of a marriage if there is no right of appeal against the
decree. A second marriage by either party shall be lawful only after dismissal
of an appeal against the decree of divorce, if filed. If there is no right of
appeal, the decree of divorce remains final and that either party to the
marriage is free to marry again. In case an appeal is presented, any marriage
before dismissal of the appeal shall not be lawful. The object of the provision
is to provide protection to the person who has filed an appeal against the
decree of dissolution of marriage and to ensure that the said appeal is not
frustrated. The purpose of Section 15 of the Act is to avert complications that
would arise due to a second marriage during the pendency of the appeal, in case
the decree of dissolution of marriage is reversed. The protection that is
afforded by Section 15 is primarily to a person who is contesting the decree of
divorce.
19. Aggrieved
by the decree of divorce, the Appellant filed an appeal and obtained a stay of
the decree. During the pendency of the appeal, there was a settlement between
him and his former spouse. After entering into a settlement, he did not intend
to contest the decree of divorce. His intention was made clear by filing of the
application for withdrawal. It cannot be said that he has to wait till a formal
order is passed in the appeal, or otherwise his marriage dated 06.12.2011 shall
be unlawful. Following the principles of purposive construction, we are of the
opinion that the restriction placed on a second marriage in Section 15 of the
Act till the dismissal of an appeal would not apply to a case where parties
have settled and decided not to pursue the appeal.
20. It is not
the case of the Appellant that the marriage dated 06.12.2011 is lawful because
of the interim order that was passed in the appeals filed by him against the
decree of divorce. He rested his case on the petition filed for withdrawal of
the appeal. The upshot ofthe above discussion would be that the denouement of
the Family Court is correct and upheld, albeit for different reasons. The
conclusion of the High Court that the marriage dated 06.12.2011 is void is
erroneous. Hence, the judgment of the High Court is set aside.
21. Accordingly,
the Appeal is allowed.
S.A.BOBDE, J.
1. I am in agreement with the view taken by Nageswara Rao J. but it
is necessary to state how the question before us has already been settled by
the decision in Lila
Gupta v. Laxmi Narain and Ors., (1978) 3 SCC 258. Even when the words of the proviso were found to be
prohibitory in clear negative terms – “it shall not be lawful” etc., this Court
held that the incapacity to marry imposed by the proviso did not lead to an
inference of nullity, vide para 9 of Lila Gupta (supra). It is all the more
difficult to infer nullity when there is no prohibition; where there are no
negative words but on the other hand positive words like “it shall be lawful.”
Assuming that a marriage contracted before it became lawful to do so was
unlawful and the words create a disability, it is not possible to infer a
nullity or voidness vide paras 9 and 10 of Lila Gupta case. The Court must have
regard to the consequences of such an interpretation on children who might have
been conceived or born during the period of disability.
2. The observations in Lila Gupta’s case are wide. They are
undoubtedly made in the context of the proviso to sec 15 of the Hindu Marriage
(Amendment) Act, 1976, Act 68 of 1976 since deleted. The proviso opened with the
prohibition that “it shall not be lawful.” This Court considered the question
whether a marriage contracted in violation of the proviso would be a nullity or
void and came to the conclusion that though the proviso is couched in
prohibitory and negative language, in the absence of an express provision it
was not possible to infer nullity in respect of a marriage contracted by a
person under incapacity prescribed by the proviso.
What is held in essence is that if a provision of law prescribes
an incapacity to marry and yet the person marries while under that incapacity,
the marriage would not be void in the absence of an express provision that
declares nullity. Quae incapacity imposed by statute, there is no difference
between an incapacity imposed by negative language such as “it shall not be
lawful” or an incapacity imposed by positive language like “it shall be lawful
(in certain conditions, in the absence of which it is impliedly unlawful)”. It
would thus appear that the law is already settled by this Court that a marriage
contracted during a prescribed period will not be void because it was
contracted under an incapacity. Obviously, this would have no bearing on
the other conditions of a valid marriage. The decision in Lila Gupta case thus
covers the present case on law.
3. In any event, in the present case we are satisfied that the
appellant’s marriage was not subsisting when he married again. He had filed an
application for withdrawal of his appeal against the decree for dissolution and
had done nothing to contradict his intention to accept the decree of
dissolution.