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Delhi High Court Clarifies: “Ad-Interim Maintenance Is Not Automatic, Must Be From Order Date” While Upholding ₹6,000 Monthly Relief to Wife Pending Interim Maintenance Application

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Court’s Decision

The Delhi High Court upheld the Family Court’s grant of ₹6,000 per month as ad-interim maintenance to the wife under Section 125 of the Criminal Procedure Code during the pendency of her interim maintenance application. However, it clarified that ad-interim maintenance cannot be granted retrospectively from the date of the application and should only be operative from the date of the order granting it. The petition challenging the grant was partly allowed by modifying the payment start date while affirming the maintenance quantum and jurisdiction of the Family Court to grant such relief.


Facts

The parties married in 2016 and had no children. The husband, working as a medical representative earning ₹17,907 per month, claimed that the wife, who studied up to 12th standard, ran a beauty parlour and left the matrimonial home due to temperamental differences. He alleged she filed multiple criminal and civil cases as counterblasts to his restitution petition.

The wife alleged mental and physical cruelty by the husband and his family over dowry demands and stated she was forced to leave in 2021, residing with her parents since then. She filed an application under Section 125 CrPC in July 2022, seeking maintenance.

The Family Court, on 24 May 2024, granted ad-interim maintenance of ₹6,000 per month from the date of application filing, also directing arrears to be cleared within three months. On 26 September 2024, the Family Court rejected the husband’s objections regarding the lack of provision under Section 125 for ad-interim maintenance and differences with DV Act proceedings, directing him to clear arrears or face consequences including defence striking.


Issues

  1. Whether ad-interim maintenance can be equated with interim maintenance.
  2. Whether ad-interim maintenance requires a specific application.
  3. Whether ad-interim maintenance should be granted from the date of filing or the date of order.
  4. Whether the Family Court correctly applied the law and precedents while granting ad-interim maintenance.

Petitioner’s Arguments

The husband argued the Family Court erred in granting ad-interim maintenance:

He sought the setting aside of the Family Court’s orders.


Respondent’s Arguments

The wife argued:


Analysis of the Law


Precedent Analysis

1. Rajnesh v. Neha (2021) 2 SCC 324
Directed that interim and final maintenance should generally be from the date of application but did not address ad-interim maintenance.

2. Kusum Sharma v. Mahinder Kumar Sharma (2014-2020)
Held that ad-interim maintenance can be granted based on admitted income pending interim maintenance determination.

3. Inder Singh v. Sumitra (2019 SCC OnLine Del 9485)
Held a separate application is not mandatory for granting interim maintenance.

4. Bharat Hegde v. Saroj Hegde (2007) DLT 16 and Manish Divedi v. Jyotsana (2019 SCC OnLine Del 10492)
Clarified principles of assessing quantum of maintenance and the tentative nature of ad-interim maintenance.


Court’s Reasoning

The Court held:


Conclusion

The Delhi High Court:
1. Upheld the grant of ₹6,000 per month ad-interim maintenance based on the husband’s admitted income.
2. Clarified ad-interim maintenance should commence from the date of the order (24 May 2024), not from the filing date.
3. Dismissed the petition in part while modifying the payment start date.
4. Reaffirmed the right of dependents to immediate relief under Section 125 CrPC while preserving the legal distinction between ad-interim and interim maintenance.


Implications


FAQs

1. Can ad-interim maintenance be granted without a specific application under Section 125 CrPC?
Yes, courts can grant ad-interim maintenance based on urgent necessity and admitted income, even without a specific application.

2. Is ad-interim maintenance payable from the application filing date?
No, the Delhi High Court clarified it is payable only from the order date.

3. Does dismissal under the Domestic Violence Act bar maintenance under Section 125 CrPC?
No, both are independent remedies, and denial under one does not preclude relief under the other.

Also Read: Patna High Court Grants Liberty to File Fresh Representation Seeking Unpaid Milling and Transportation Charges for Custom Milled Rice, Holding Dispute Can Be Addressed Administratively Before Invoking Writ Jurisdiction

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