Uttarakhand High Court held says, the husband must first rebut the statutory presumption of legitimacy through strong evidence before DNA testing is considered.
How can a husband prove paternity doubts in court when access to scientific evidence itself depends on prior proof?
NAINITAL: The Uttarakhand High Court, in a recent judgment delivered by Justice Pankaj Purohit and Justice Manoj Kumar Tiwari, dismissed an appeal challenging the Family Court, Nainital order, which had refused permission for DNA testing of a minor child in a matrimonial dispute.
The husband had sought the DNA report to support his allegation of adultery in pending divorce proceedings.
The matter came before the High Court after the Family Court, Nainital, rejected the husband’s application on 16.12.2025. The husband then approached the High Court under Section 19 of the Family Courts Act, 1984.
The husband argued that he was not asking the Court to change the child’s legal status or officially challenge paternity. According to him, he only wanted scientific evidence to prove adultery by the wife. His lawyers submitted that direct proof in such matters is rarely available, so DNA evidence becomes important.
The husband also said the lower court misunderstood his request and treated it as an attempt to question the child’s parentage. He argued that this was never his case and he only wanted evidence for the divorce proceedings.
The High Court examined the law and said that Section 112 of the Indian Evidence Act gives legal protection to a child born during a valid marriage. The Court explained that there is a strong legal presumption that such a child is legitimate.
The Bench quoted the principle of pater est uem nuptiae demonstrant meaning that “the father is he whom the marriage points out”.
The Court said this rule exists to protect children from social harm, stigma and insecurity. It further held that this presumption can be broken only if the husband first proves non-access between husband and wife during the relevant period. The judges clearly stated that:
“DNA testing cannot be ordered as a matter of routine or merely on the asking of a party.”
The Bench further said:
“Such a direction can be issued only in exceptional circumstances where strong prima facie material is available to show non-access or where the interests of justice so demand.”
The Court also warned that careless use of DNA testing can seriously damage a child’s future and identity. It observed:
“A direction for DNA examination, if granted, may have the effect of bastardising the child by conclusively determining non-paternity.”
The Bench further stated:
“Courts are required to exercise utmost caution and restraint while dealing with such requests.”
After reviewing the case record, the High Court found that the husband had not specifically pleaded or shown non-access during the conception period. Because of this failure, the legal protection under Section 112 remained intact.
The Court held that allowing DNA testing without first meeting this burden would weaken the law meant to protect children. It said the request would also amount to unnecessary interference with the privacy and dignity of the minor child under Article 21 of the Constitution.
The High Court ruled that in this matter the balance was in favour of protecting the child rather than permitting a DNA inquiry. Therefore, the husband’s appeal was dismissed.
Explanatory Table: Laws And Sections Involved
| Law / Section | Purpose | How Applied in This Case |
| Section 19, Family Courts Act, 1984 | Gives right to challenge certain Family Court orders before High Court | Husband filed appeal against Family Court refusal to allow DNA testing |
| Section 13, Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 | Provides legal grounds for divorce and matrimonial reliefs | Husband had filed matrimonial case alleging adultery |
| Section 112, Indian Evidence Act | Presumes legitimacy of child born during valid marriage | Court relied on this presumption and refused routine DNA testing |
| Article 21, Constitution of India | Protects dignity, privacy and personal liberty | Court held DNA test could intrude into child’s privacy and dignity |
Case Details
- Case Title: Sunil Singh v. Anju Gupta Singh and Another
- Court: High Court of Uttarakhand
- Case Number: Appeal From Order No. 25 of 2026
- Neutral Citation: 2026:UHC:2426-DB
- Date of Judgment: 02 April 2026
- Bench: Justice Manoj Kumar Tiwari & Justice Pankaj Purohit
- Counsels:
- For Appellant: Mr Shashi Kant Shandilya, Mr. Vishwaketu Vaidya
- For Respondents: Not mentioned in extracted judgment text
Key Takeaways
- Allegations of adultery alone are not enough; a man must first establish strong prima facie proof such as non-access before seeking DNA testing.
- Courts give priority to the legal presumption that a child born during marriage is legitimate, making it difficult to challenge without solid evidence.
- DNA testing is treated as an exceptional remedy, not a routine right available on mere request.
- Even in contested matrimonial disputes, the child’s dignity, privacy and future are placed above the evidentiary needs of the husband.
- Weak pleadings and lack of foundational proof can completely defeat a man’s attempt to bring scientific evidence on record.
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