Allahabad High Court dismissed a mother’s habeas corpus plea for custody, holding no unlawful detention as no court order was violated.
Are unproven accusations enough to harass a father who is a natural guardian?
PRAYAGRAJ: The Allahabad High Court, presided over by Justice Anil Kumar-X, heard a habeas corpus petition filed by a mother seeking custody of her two minor children from their father.
The parties were married in 2010 and later developed disputes. The mother alleged that in 2022, the father came to her residence and forcibly took away the children at gunpoint, after which they remained with him.
The mother approached the High Court claiming that the children were in illegal custody and requested their return. The father opposed the plea and stated that he is the natural guardian and the children have been living with him since 2022. He also argued that the mother should approach the competent Family Court under the Guardians and Wards Act.
The Court examined the law relating to child custody and held that habeas corpus cannot be used in ordinary custody disputes between parents. It observed that such remedy is only for exceptional cases where custody is clearly illegal or without authority of law.
The Court said:
“Habeas corpus is an extraordinary remedy, to be exercised sparingly and only in cases where the custody is shown to be wholly illegal or without authority of law.”
The Court further clarified that merely alleging that the father forcibly took the children is not enough to make custody illegal because father is recognized in law as a natural guardian.
The Judge also observed:
“The father, being a natural guardian, cannot be said to have taken the minors out of lawful guardianship so as to attract any criminality.”
After reviewing the facts, the Court found no exceptional circumstance showing that the children were in unlawful or harmful custody. Since the children were above five years of age and had been living with the father since 2022, no interference was required in writ jurisdiction.
The petition was dismissed. The judgment protects fathers from being wrongly branded as illegal custodians and reminds that custody battles must be decided through proper family law proceedings.
Explanatory Table: Laws And Sections Involved
| Law / Section | Purpose | How It Applied in This Case |
| Article 226, Constitution of India | Gives High Courts power to issue writs like habeas corpus | Mother filed custody plea through writ jurisdiction |
| Habeas Corpus | Remedy against illegal detention | Court said it cannot replace normal custody proceedings |
| Section 361 IPC | Defines kidnapping from lawful guardianship | Court held father as guardian cannot normally be treated as kidnapper |
| Section 363 IPC | Punishment for kidnapping | Court observed criminal offence does not arise merely because father took child |
| Section 6, Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956 | Declares natural guardians of Hindu minors | Court relied on this to recognize father as natural guardian |
| Section 4(2), Guardians and Wards Act, 1890 | Defines who is a guardian | Court noted parents have recognized legal status regarding child |
| Guardians and Wards Act, 1890 | Provides remedy for custody and guardianship disputes | Court said proper forum is competent Family/Civil Court |
| Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956 | Governs guardianship rights of Hindu minors | Relevant for deciding lawful custody rights |
Case Details
- Case Title: Smt Anjali Devi And 2 Other vs State Of U.P. And 3 Other
- Case Number: Habeas Corpus Writ Petition No. 387 of 2026
- Court: High Court of Judicature at Allahabad
- Bench: Hon’ble Justice Anil Kumar-X
- Date of Judgment: 10 April 2026
- Neutral Citation: 2026:AHC:79268
- Counsels:
- For Petitioners: Pradeep Kumar Singh, Rahul Shukla
- For Respondents: Amit Kumar Chaudhary, G.A.
Key Takeaways
- A father, being a natural guardian, cannot be casually branded as an illegal custodian of his own children.
- Allegations of force alone are not enough to convert a parental custody situation into a criminal or illegal detention issue.
- Habeas corpus is not a shortcut for child custody battles; proper legal remedies must be followed.
- Custody disputes between parents are civil matters and require detailed examination by Family Courts, not summary writ proceedings.
- Misuse of legal processes to target fathers in custody conflicts is discouraged, reinforcing their lawful and equal parental status.
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