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Mrs. Beatrice Honor Agatha Goodal vs Mr. Harrylock Charles David ...

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|15 December, 1932

JUDGMENT / ORDER

ORDER Young, J.
1. This is the petition of Mrs. Beatrice Goodal against her husband, Harry Charles David Goodal, for dissolution of her marriage to him on the ground of adultery, desertion and cruelty. No written statement has been filed. Counsel for the respondent says he is not in a position to put his client in the box. The petition is undefended. The parties are Anglo-Indians domiciled in India, and last resided together at Cawnpore. This Court therefore has jurisdiction to hear and decide this petition. The marriage took place at All Saints Cathedral, Allahabad, on 2nd October 1926. The petitioner was born on 27th August 1913. When this fact was brought to my attention on examining the pleadings I added an issue: "Was there a valid marriage; was the petitioner able to consent to the said marriage." At the time of the marriage the petitioner was just 13 years old. The petitioner was married at this early age because the respondent seduced her under promise of marriage. The mother thought that it would be better under the circumstances to have the marriage celebrated. She gave the petitioner's age as sixteen. There appears to be nothing either in the Divorce Act or in the Christian Marriage Act as regards the age of consent. Under Section 7, Divorce Act, the High Courts have to act, subject to the provisions contained in that Act, according to the principles and rules on which the Court for divorce and matrimonial causes in England for the time being acts and gives relief. It appears to me therefore that for a Christian marriage in India the age of consent at the date of this marriage would be 12 in the case of a girl, that being the then state of the law in England at the date of this marriage. The answer to this issue is therefore that this marriage was a valid marriage and the petitioner consented to it.
2. With regard to the other issues of adultery, desertion and cruelty, the petitioner has given evidence herself on the issues of desertion and cruelty. The marriage, as was not unnatural under the circumstances, was unhappy from the very beginning. The girl was very young, and the husband does not appear to have been tactful or kind. There is evidence that he beat his wife when she not unnaturally resisted his advances. Eventually, after living together for only 15 days, the husband turned the petitioner out of the house; and the same day she and her mother lodged a report at the thana giving these facts. From that day the petitioner and the respondent have not lived together. One Mr. Arratoon, a private detective from Calcutta, has given evidence that the respondent is now living at Ondal with another woman who passed as Mrs. Goodal. He has satisfied me that the respondent and this other woman are now living together as husband and wife. The detective's evidence has been corroberated by the evidence of Mr. Moss, who states that whilst stationed at Ondal he knew the respondent and that he was then living with a woman who passed as his wife, that woman not being the petitioner. On these facts there can be no question as to the proof of adultery and desertion; cruelty too has been proved. The wife is therefore entitled to a decree nisi. Mr. Haripal Varshni, who appears here on behalf of the husband, has drawn our attention to Section 49, Divorce Act, which enacts that where the petitioner is a minor he or she shall sue by his or her next friend to be approved by the Court, and no petition presented by a minor under this Act shall be filed, until the next friend has undertaken in writing to be answerable for costs.
3. He contends that the petitioner being under 21 years of age is a minor within the meaning of this section, and that therefore the petition is bad as the petitioner is not suing through her next friend. Although no defence has been entered in this case and Mr. Haripal Varshni has really no locus standi in the Court, I have allowed him as amicus curiae to draw my attention to this. In my opinion there is nothing in the point. Under Section 3(5) minor children other than those of "native" parents are defined as unmarried children who have not completed the age of 18 years. Although this does not apply strictly to the petitioner who is married it is a guide. In any event the Civil Procedure Code by Section 45, Divorce Act, applies to petitions under the Divorce Act; under that Code a next friend is not required over the age of 18. The petitioner is over 19 and therefore she is not a minor within the meaning of Section 49. There will he a decree nisi in favour of the petitioner. The petitioner will get her costs of the suit from the respondent. With regard to alimony pendente lite I have evidence which satisfies me that the respondent is drawing pay to the extent of Rs. 300 a month. He has a 10 P.C. cut and other deductions, land I think the amount the respondent should pay to the petitioner is Rupees 50 per month, which sum he will pay on the 9th day of each month.
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Title

Mrs. Beatrice Honor Agatha Goodal vs Mr. Harrylock Charles David ...

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
15 December, 1932