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Sobha Ram vs Tika Ram

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad|15 February, 1936

JUDGMENT / ORDER

JUDGMENT Bennet, J.
1. This is a Letters Patent appeal from the decree of a learned single Judge dismissing the suit of the plaintiff. The plaintiff brought a suit for damages against the defendant on the ground that the defendant had enticed away the wife of the plaintiff while the plaintiff was at Calcutta. The home of the plaintiff and of the defendant is in a village in tahsil Bah of Agra District, and the plaintiff alleged that his wife had been taken away by the defendant from that village to another village under the pretext that she would be carried away to Calcutta, and had been locked up in the house of the defendant, and the defendant had attempted to have sexual intercourse with her, and that an alarm being raised the defendant ran away. The plaintiff then came from Calcutta. The defence was a denial that the defendant had taken any part in the matter. The plaintiff in the first instance went to the criminal Court under Section 498, I.P.C., and the defendant was convicted and sentenced to a fine of Rs. 50. The two civil Courts below have held that the facts alleged by the plaintiff were established, and have held that the enticement of the wife of the plaintiff is a ground for awarding damages to the plaintiff, and have awarded Rs. 400 against the defendant. The learned Judge of this Court has referred to various rulings of English Courts and various books on law, which deal with the action of seduction, and especially that action in regard to the seduction of a daughter or a servant of the plaintiff. We are of the opinion that the question of the action of seduction of a daughter or a servant has no bearing on the present case. In our opinion the husband has a right to the society of his wife, and the infringement of that absolute right by any other person is a tort. It does not matter that in this particular case the husband was at the time of the acts complained of in Calcutta, and that he was not present. It is not the mere depriving of a husband for a day or two of the society of his wife which gives rise to this action: it is the fact that the defendant has acted in a way towards the wife of the plaintiff which is illegal, and which he is not entitled to do. In Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 16, it is laid down in para. 957:
If a third person without just cause, persuades or entices a wife to live apart from her husband...that person commits an actionable wrong for which the husband is entitled to recover damages.
2. In para. 958 it is stated:
A husband may also maintain an action for damages for the loss of society or services of his wife against a third person in respect of any other wrongful act whereby he is deprived of the benefit of such society or services.
3. The case of a wife stands on a different footing from that of a servant or daughter because there is a contract of marriage between the husband and the wife. The action of the defendant infringed that contract of marriage, and on account of the infringement of that contract the husband is entitled to damages. Learned Counsel for the defendant objected to the wording of para. 8 of the plaint in which it was stated that the above acts of the defendant were highly improper, against the etiquette of society and unlawful. The plaintiff was thereby greatly defamed and disgraced, was put to much shame had to suffer humiliation, was put to considerable expense and worry and suffered great loss in business also in other ways.
4. We consider that the wording of this paragraph is a very fair summary of the grounds on which a plaintiff may bring an action of this nature. Moreover it is to be noted that the Penal Code provides in Section 498 for a complaint to be brought against a person who entices away any married woman with intent that she may have illicit intercourse with any person. The action of the defendant was therefore a crime against the section and has been so found by the Court. It is provided in the Criminal Procedure Code, Section 199, that no Court shall take cognizance of an offence under Section 498, I.P.C., except upon a complaint made by the husband of the woman or certain other persons in his absence; that is, the criminal law recognizes that this particular offence of Section 498, I.P.C., is an offence which is specially directed against a husband, and that a husband is a person aggrieved by such an offence. If, therefore, the matter is an offence against the husband in the penal law, it must also be a tort against that husband in civil law, which will entitle him to sue for damages. No ruling or authority has been shown: to us by the learned Counsel for the defendant which would entitle us to hold that the plaintiff would not be entitled to damages in a case like the present.
5. There has been some discussion in regard to the plea of limitation, and the learned single Judge was under the impression that Article 22, Limitation Act, would apply. That article prescribes a period of one year for compensation for any other injury to the person. Injuries to person mean physical injuries to the plaintiff. This is not a case for injury to the person of the plaintiff. We are of the opinion that the proper article is 120 the article for suits for which no period of limitation is provided elsewhere in the Schedule, and the period for that article is six years. The suit was brought well within that period and therefore it is not barred by limitation. For these reasons we allow this Letters Patent Appeal with costs throughout and restore the decree of the lower appellate Court.
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Title

Sobha Ram vs Tika Ram

Court

High Court Of Judicature at Allahabad

JudgmentDate
15 February, 1936