Can a daughter-in-law continue staying in her in-laws’ house by claiming it as a shared household? Or do senior citizens have a stronger legal right to live peacefully in their own property? The Delhi High Court has now given a major ruling on this issue.
NEW DELHI: The Delhi High Court has upheld the eviction of a widow and her son from her in-laws’ property under the Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007. The Court said that senior citizens cannot be forced to live in a hostile environment inside their own house.
Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav dismissed the petition filed by the daughter-in-law and her son against the order of the Divisional Commissioner directing them to vacate the entire Safdarjung Enclave property in Delhi.
The dispute started after the death of the woman’s husband in February 2020. After his death, disagreements reportedly grew within the family regarding family properties, LIC policies, business assets and financial benefits.
The elderly parents approached authorities under the Senior Citizens Act alleging ill-treatment and seeking eviction of the petitioners from the property. Initially, the District Magistrate directed the family to vacate only the ground floor portion of the house. However, the Divisional Commissioner later ordered eviction from the entire property after observing that relations between the parties had become extremely bitter and living together was no longer possible.
Before the High Court, the daughter-in-law argued that the property was a “shared household” under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 and that she had a right to stay there. She also claimed rights over properties allegedly purchased from ancestral business funds and benefits arising from LIC policies of her late husband.
The Court, however, made it clear that proceedings under the Senior Citizens Act are limited in nature and cannot be turned into full civil property disputes.
The Court observed:
“The jurisdiction of the authorities under the Senior Citizens Act is circumscribed to the limited but significant objective of protecting senior citizens and ensuring that they are able to reside peacefully and securely in their own property without interference.”
The High Court relied upon the Supreme Court judgment in S. Vanitha v. Deputy Commissioner, where it was held that a woman’s right to reside in a shared household has to be balanced with the rights of senior citizens to live peacefully in their own property.
The Court also noted that the daughter-in-law was not financially dependent. It recorded that she was a government school teacher earning more than ₹1 lakh per month and that her children were already grown up.
Quoting from the appellate authority’s findings, the Court noted:
“From the arguments of both the sides and facts and circumstances of the case, this appellate authority has no doubt that the relations are acrimonious between them and they can’t reside together under the same roof.”
The Court further recorded:
“It is not the situation where the daughter-in-law is a poor lady, victim of domestic violence and matrimonial discord. Herein this case she is a Government employee working as a teacher in a MCD School and her children are grown up too.”
Another important point considered by the Court was that the petitioners already had an alternative accommodation at Khirki Extension. The father-in-law also expressed willingness to hand over documents of that property and two Faridabad plots after the house was vacated.
The Court also clarified that rights claimed in LIC policies, ancestral business assets or inheritance disputes must be decided separately before competent civil courts and cannot be used to block eviction proceedings under the Senior Citizens Act.
Finally, the High Court refused to interfere with the eviction order and directed the petitioners to vacate the property within 45 days.
Important Laws And Sections Discussed In The Judgment
| LAW / SECTION | PURPOSE | HOW COURT USED IT IN THIS CASE |
| Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Act, 2007 | Protects senior citizens from neglect, abuse and interference in peaceful living | Court held the Act gives authorities power to order eviction to protect senior citizens’ peaceful residence |
| Rule 22(3)(1) of Delhi Maintenance and Welfare of Parents and Senior Citizens Rules, 2009 | Provides procedure for complaints and action by authorities | In-laws filed complaint under this provision seeking eviction |
| Article 226/227 of Constitution of India | Gives High Courts power to review orders of lower authorities | Court refused to interfere because no illegality or perversity was found |
| Section 2(s) of Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 | Defines “shared household” | Daughter-in-law claimed right to reside under this section |
| Sections 17 & 19 of Domestic Violence Act | Protects woman’s residence rights in shared household | Court clarified residence right is protective, not ownership right |
| Section 19(1)(f) of Domestic Violence Act | Allows alternate accommodation or rent arrangements | Court referred to this principle while balancing competing rights |
| Senior Citizens Act Proceedings | Summary proceedings meant for speedy relief | Court said complicated property and inheritance disputes cannot be decided here |
| Civil Property & Inheritance Law Principles | Governs ownership, ancestral property and succession disputes | Court said such claims must be decided separately before civil courts |
Supreme Court Judgments Relied Upon
| JUDGMENT | PRINCIPLE APPLIED |
| S. Vanitha v. Deputy Commissioner | Daughter-in-law’s residence rights must be balanced against senior citizens’ right to peaceful life |
| Satish Chander Ahuja v. Sneha Ahuja | Right to residence does not create ownership rights in in-laws’ property |
Case Details
| PARTICULARS | DETAILS |
| Case Title | Smt. Ritu Taneja & Anr. v. Govt. of NCT of Delhi & Ors. |
| Court | Delhi High Court |
| Bench | Justice Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav |
| Case Number | W.P.(C) 12721/2023 and CM APPL. 25845/2026 |
| Judgment Reserved On | 28.04.2026 |
| Judgment Pronounced On | 08.05.2026 |
| Petitioners | Smt. Ritu Taneja and Khushaal Taneja |
| Respondents | Govt. of NCT of Delhi, Om Prakash Taneja & Savitri Taneja |
Counsels
| SIDE | ADVOCATES |
| Petitioners | Ms. Mouli Bhattacharjee, Advocate |
| Respondent No. 1 | Ms Avni Singh, Panel Counsel-GNCTD with Mr Vaibhav Sharma, Advocate |
| Respondent Nos. 2 & 3 | Ms. Archana Gaur, DHCLSC, Ms. Ridhima Gaur, Mr. Deepu Kumar, Advocates |
Key Takeaways
- The Court clearly held that a daughter-in-law cannot use “shared household” rights as a permanent weapon to occupy in-laws’ self-acquired property.
- Senior citizens’ right to peaceful residence was given priority over prolonged hostile cohabitation and emotional harassment inside their own house.
- The High Court exposed a common reality — many such disputes are actually property, LIC and financial battles disguised as residence-right claims.
- The judgment strongly reinforces that Domestic Violence Act protections do not automatically create ownership rights over the husband’s parents’ property.
- This ruling is a major relief for elderly parents and male family members who are often dragged into endless legal and emotional conflict inside their own homes.
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