Can a husband avoid maintenance after winning a 498A case? MP High Court has given a clear answer. Court said acquittal alone does not end duty to support wife and child if they cannot maintain themselves.
JABALPUR: The Madhya Pradesh High Court has ruled that if a husband is acquitted in a cruelty case under Section 498A IPC, he still cannot refuse maintenance to his wife and minor child if they are unable to survive on their own.
Justice Gajendra Singh said Section 125(4) CrPC gives only limited reasons to deny maintenance to a wife. Acquittal in a criminal case filed by the wife is not one of those reasons.
The court held:
“The plea of acquittal from criminal prosecution under Section 498-A in itself is not a ground to deny the maintenance to the wife or minor children if it is proved that they are unable to maintain themselves and husband is having sufficient means and neglects of maintenance”.
The matter came before the High Court after a family court granted ₹7,000 monthly maintenance to the wife and ₹3,000 to the minor child. Both husband and wife challenged the order.
The husband argued that since he had been acquitted in the Section 498A IPC case, the wife should not get maintenance.
However, the High Court rejected this argument. It said Section 125 CrPC is meant for social justice and to prevent financial hardship of dependents who cannot maintain themselves. The law is not meant to punish anyone, but to ensure basic support.
The court clarified:
“For maintenance, the wife and minor child have to prove only that they are unable to maintain themselves and person against whom the application has been preferred have sufficient means and he neglects or refuses to maintain and nothing more is to be proved by the applicants and for that purpose, no strict standard proof is required as proceedings under Section 125 of the Cr.P.C. are summary in nature”.
The bench further said the result of a criminal case, whether conviction or acquittal, does not automatically decide maintenance rights.
Under Section 125(4) CrPC, a wife can be denied maintenance only if she is living in adultery, refuses to live with her husband without valid reason, or both are living separately with mutual consent.
The court observed:
“The above provision of Section 125(4) of Cr.P.C. and Section 144(4) of the BNSS does not envisages that acquittal of husband from criminal proceedings lodged on the report of the wife would provide any exception to deny the maintenance to the wife or minor child. The only effect may be that he may put the acquittal only for the purpose that he is not neglecting or refusing the wife to maintain”.
The High Court also noted that acquittal can happen for many reasons such as weak evidence, technical gaps, or settlement between parties. It does not always mean allegations were false, nor does it prove that maintenance duty was fulfilled.
Explanatory Table Of Laws And Sections Mentioned
| LAW / SECTION | MEANING | ROLE IN THIS CASE |
| Section 498A IPC | Cruelty by husband or relatives | Husband said acquittal should cancel maintenance |
| Section 125 CrPC | Maintenance to wife, child, parents | Main provision under which maintenance granted |
| Section 125(4) CrPC | When wife can be denied maintenance | Court said acquittal is not one of these grounds |
| Section 144(4) BNSS | New law replacing 125(4) CrPC | Same principle continued |
| Section 127 CrPC | Alteration of maintenance amount | Court said husband may seek change later if wife earns |
| Section 146 BNSS | Equivalent of Section 127 CrPC | Mentioned for future modification |
| Section 340 CrPC | Action for false evidence/perjury | Husband sought prosecution of wife |
| Section 341 CrPC | Appeal against Section 340 order | Court treated revision like appeal |
| Section 195 CrPC | Procedure for certain offences affecting justice | Linked with husband’s plea |
| Section 13(1)(ia) Hindu Marriage Act | Divorce on cruelty grounds | Husband claimed wife filed maintenance as counterblast |
| Article 15(3) Constitution | Special protection for women/children | Cited in maintenance context |
| Article 39 Constitution | Social justice / support principles | Used to explain purpose of maintenance law |
Case Details
| PARTICULARS | DETAILS |
| Court | Madhya Pradesh High Court, Indore Bench |
| Case Title | H vs W & S with connected matters W & S vs H |
| Case Numbers | CRR No. 4744 of 2025, CRR No. 2238 of 2025, CRR No. 3974 of 2025 |
| Bench | Hon’ble Shri Justice Gajendra Singh |
| Date of Order | 17 April 2026 |
| Reserved On | 27 January 2026 |
| Neutral Citation | 2026:MPHC-IND:10487 |
| Result | Husband’s revisions dismissed, wife’s revision partly allowed |
| Final Maintenance | Wife ₹7,000/month, Child ₹9,000/month = ₹16,000/month |
| Effective From | Date of filing of application |
Counsels
| SIDE | ADVOCATES |
| Husband / Petitioners | Ms. Sangeeta Choudhary, Shri Yogendra Mehta |
| Wife & Son / Respondents | Shri Arpit Singh |
Key Takeaways
- Acquittal in a 498A case does not automatically protect a man from maintenance orders.
- Even after defeating criminal allegations, a husband may still have to keep paying wife and child.
- False or weak criminal cases can fail, but the financial burden on men often continues.
- Courts treat maintenance and criminal prosecution as separate matters, creating double pressure on men.
- For men, legal victory alone is not enough—real justice requires accountability for misuse and balanced laws.
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