Can a husband still be ordered to pay maintenance even when he says he personally did nothing wrong? The Bombay High Court has now answered this clearly.
NAGPUR: The Bombay High Court upheld maintenance granted to a wife after observing that a woman cannot be forced to live in an environment where she is allegedly facing humiliation, harassment, or loss of dignity.
Justice Urmila Joshi-Phalke dismissed the husband’s revision plea and confirmed the Family Court order directing him to pay maintenance of Rs 7,000 per month from September 2024 onwards. Earlier, the Family Court had granted Rs 5,000 from January 2017 till December 2020 and Rs 6,000 till August 2024.
The husband, who was working as a Gangman in the Railway Department, argued that the wife had left the matrimonial house on her own without sufficient reason and therefore was not entitled to maintenance under Section 125 CrPC. He also argued that the wife filing a divorce case itself showed she was unwilling to stay with him.
The wife alleged that from the very first day after marriage, disputes started over dowry demands and she was subjected to physical and mental harassment. She specifically alleged that on June 4, 2014, she was assaulted with a waist belt, after which she approached the police station and later the Women Cell.
The Court noted that during cross-examination, the husband could not disprove the wife’s allegations regarding assault and harassment. The Court also observed that despite receiving notice, the husband chose not to contest the divorce proceedings filed by the wife.
While explaining the scope of Section 125 CrPC, the High Court made important observations on what amounts to “neglect” and “refusal” by a husband.
The Court said:
“Since the object is to prevent vagrancy or destitution by means of a summary remedy before a Magistrate, jurisdiction is preventive rather than remedial or punitive.”
The Court further observed:
“Neglect or refusal may be implied from the conduct of a party and need not be a formal refusal. Refusal or neglect on the part of husband may be proved not only by express words, but also by his conduct.”
In one of the most significant observations, the Court held:
“Torture or ill-treatment in the husband’s house would be sufficient for refusal by the wife-claimant to live with her husband, even though husband may not be guilty personally. Where a wife cannot reasonably hope to live with dignity with her husband she may refuse to live with him.”
The Court also clarified that an offer by the husband to keep the wife with him must be genuine and not merely a legal defence to avoid maintenance liability.
It stated:
“The offer must be bona fide and the same should not have been made with object to escaping the obligation to pay maintenance.”
At the same time, the judgment indirectly highlights how matrimonial litigation today increasingly turns on subjective allegations and surrounding family atmosphere, even where no direct misconduct by the husband is conclusively proved. The Court observed that the burden initially lies on the husband to show that the wife refused to stay with him, after which the wife must justify living separately.
The High Court ultimately found that the husband had made no financial provision for the wife and there was nothing on record to show she had independent income. The Court therefore held that the Family Court’s order was “just and reasonable” and dismissed the revision petition.
Explanatory Table Of Laws & Sections Referred In The Case
| LAW / SECTION | EXPLANATION | COURT’S OBSERVATION |
| Section 125 CrPC | Provision for maintenance to wife, children and parents if they cannot maintain themselves | Court said this section is meant to prevent destitution and provide quick financial relief |
| Section 125(4) CrPC | Wife may lose maintenance if she refuses to live with husband without sufficient reason | Court held that cruelty, humiliation, or unsafe atmosphere can become sufficient reason to live separately |
| Section 125(5) CrPC | Court can cancel maintenance in certain situations | Court observed that the law does not exhaustively define what counts as “sufficient reason” |
| “Neglect” under Section 125 | Failure or omission to maintain wife or dependents | Court said neglect can be inferred from conduct and not only from direct refusal |
| “Refusal” under Section 125 | Denial or failure to maintain after demand | Court clarified refusal can be express or implied through behaviour |
| Second Proviso to Section 125(3) CrPC | Magistrate can examine wife’s reasons for refusing to stay with husband | Court said husband’s offer to keep wife must be genuine and not only to avoid maintenance |
| Rajnesh vs Neha (2021) 2 SCC 324 | Supreme Court guidelines on deciding maintenance amount | Court relied on this judgment for factors like income, status, separate residence and financial condition |
Case Details
- Case Title: M J vs L M J
- Court: Bombay High Court, Nagpur Bench
- Bench: Justice Urmila Joshi-Phalke
- Case Number: Criminal Revision Application No. 183 of 2024
- Date of Judgment: 10 April 2026
- Neutral Citation: 2026:BHC-NAG:6553
- Applicant Counsel: Shri V.N. Mate
- Non-Applicant Counsel: Shri B.V. Gupta
- Relief Sought: Challenge to Family Court order granting maintenance to wife
- Final Outcome: Revision Application Dismissed; Maintenance Upheld
Key Takeaways
- The Court clearly said a husband can still face maintenance liability even if he is “not personally guilty.”
- Alleged ill-treatment by family members or overall matrimonial atmosphere can now become enough ground for separate residence and maintenance.
- “Neglect” and “refusal” do not require direct proof anymore — Courts can infer them from conduct and circumstances.
- Filing of divorce by wife and living separately did not affect her maintenance claim in this case.
- The judgment reflects how Section 125 CrPC is being interpreted more as a social welfare provision, where the husband continues carrying financial responsibility despite disputed facts and absence of criminal conviction.
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