Is failing to stop a husband’s second marriage enough to make relatives criminally liable?
The Andhra Pradesh HC ruled that even if family elders were requested to prevent the marriage, their failure to intervene does not, by itself, establish criminal intention or common intention.
AMRAVATI: The Andhra Pradesh High Court has held that relatives cannot be convicted for bigamy merely because they attended a second marriage or failed to stop it. Justice Subhendu Samanta delivered the judgment while dismissing revision petitions filed by a woman who challenged the acquittal of some of her husband’s relatives.
The dispute began after a woman alleged that her husband, despite being legally married to her, developed a relationship with another woman and eventually married her while the first marriage was still subsisting.
The couple had been married since 1975 and had a daughter from the marriage. According to the wife, the husband’s relationship with the second woman gradually led to severe problems in the matrimonial home.
She alleged that her husband repeatedly pressured her to agree to the second marriage and subjected her to physical and mental cruelty when she refused. According to her, he assaulted her, threatened her and tried to force her to sign blank papers so that he could proceed with the marriage.
The second marriage was eventually performed in January 1996. The wife then approached the police and initiated criminal proceedings against her husband, the second wife and several relatives from both families. She claimed that family elders knew about the relationship and actively supported the second marriage despite being requested to stop it.
The trial court found the husband guilty of cruelty and bigamy and also convicted the second wife. Several relatives were also convicted. However, the appellate court later acquitted some of those relatives, including two elder brothers of the husband and the mother of the second wife.
Unhappy with their acquittal, the wife approached the High Court and argued that these relatives had full knowledge of the illegal marriage and had encouraged it. She relied on witness testimony stating that family elders were repeatedly requested to intervene but refused to do so. It was also alleged that after the marriage, some relatives attempted to force the wife to accept the second wife into the matrimonial home.
During the hearing, reliance was placed on observations of the Supreme Court, including the statement:
“All that the shifting of the evidential burden does at the final stage of the case is to allow the jury (Court) to take into account the silence of the accused or the absence of satisfactory explanation appearing from his evidence.”
After examining the evidence, the High Court noted that the husband and the second wife were adults who voluntarily entered into the relationship and later chose to marry each other. The Court found no convincing evidence showing that the relatives had compelled, instigated or actively encouraged the marriage.
The Court observed that even if family elders were requested to prevent the marriage and failed to do so, that alone could not make them criminally liable. Their presence at the marriage ceremony or their inability to stop it could not automatically establish guilt.
Justice Subhendu Samanta concluded that the prosecution had failed to prove any active role played by the acquitted relatives in the commission of the offence. Finding no error in the appellate court’s reasoning, the High Court upheld their acquittal and dismissed the revision petitions.
Explanatory Table Of All Laws And Sections Involved
| Law / Section | Purpose | How Applied In This Case |
| Section 498A IPC | Punishes cruelty by husband or his relatives towards a married woman. | The husband (A1) was convicted for subjecting his wife to physical and mental cruelty. |
| Section 494 IPC | Punishes a person who marries again during the subsistence of a valid first marriage. | The husband (A1) and second wife (A2) were convicted for entering into a bigamous marriage. |
| Section 496 IPC | Punishes fraudulent or unlawful marriage ceremonies. | Included among the original charges in the criminal case. |
| Section 34 IPC | Creates joint liability when several persons act with a common intention. | The prosecution alleged that the relatives shared a common intention to facilitate the second marriage, but the High Court found no such proof. |
| Section 109 IPC | Punishes abetment of an offence. | The petitioner argued that the relatives had instigated or encouraged the second marriage, but the Court found insufficient evidence of abetment. |
| Section 106, Indian Evidence Act | Places the burden of explaining facts specially within a person’s knowledge upon that person. | Relied upon by the petitioner to argue that the accused should explain their role in the second marriage. |
| Sections 397 & 401 CrPC | Give the High Court revisional powers to examine legality and correctness of lower court orders. | The revision petitions challenging the acquittal of the relatives were filed under these provisions. |
| Section 151 CPC | Recognizes the Court’s inherent powers to secure the ends of justice. | Invoked in applications seeking condonation of delay in re-submitting the revision petitions. |
Case Details
- Case Title: Chintherla Padmavathi v. State of Andhra Pradesh & Others
- Court: High Court of Andhra Pradesh at Amaravati
- Bench: Hon’ble Sri Justice Subhendu Samanta
- Case Numbers: Criminal Revision Case No. 386 of 2007 | Criminal Revision Case No. 387 of 2007
- Neutral Citation: APHC010568362007
- Date Of Judgment: 7 May 2026
- Counsels:
- For Petitioner: Namineni Pavan Kumar
- For Respondents (Crl.R.C. No. 386 of 2007): Venkat Challa, and Public Prosecutor
- For Respondents (Crl.R.C. No. 387 of 2007): B.V. Aparna Lakshmi, and Public Prosecutor
Key Takeaways
- Criminal liability cannot be imposed merely because a person is a relative of the accused. Family relationships alone are never enough to establish guilt.
- Mere presence at an event, even one that later becomes the subject of criminal proceedings, does not automatically make a person a participant in the offence.
- Failure to prevent the actions of two consenting adults cannot by itself be treated as proof of criminal intention or abetment.
- Courts must distinguish between suspicion and evidence. Allegations may create doubt, but conviction requires clear proof of active involvement.
- Criminal law is based on individual responsibility. Before a person can be punished, the prosecution must prove intention, participation, or instigation through reliable evidence.
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