Business Standard

Friday, December 20, 2024 | 04:16 AM ISTEN Hindi

Notification Icon
userprofile IconSearch

Husband treating wife as 'cash cow' amounts to cruelty, says Karnataka HC

In its recent judgement, a division bench of Justices Alok Aradhe and J M Khazi held that husband treating wife as 'cash cow' amounts to cruelty

Regular maintenance paid to ex-wife is taxable

Press Trust of India Bengaluru

The Karnataka High Court has granted divorce to a couple after it found that the husband had treated the wife like a 'cash cow.'

In its recent judgement, a division bench of Justices Alok Aradhe and J M Khazi held that husband treating wife as 'cash cow' amounts to cruelty.

The woman had submitted bank account transaction records and other documents to prove that she had transferred Rs 60 lakh to him over the years.

The bench said, "it is evident that the respondent (husband) has treated the appellant as a cash cow and had a materialistic attitude towards the appellant. The Respondent had no emotional ties with the appellant. The attitude of the respondent in itself has caused mental agony and emotional trauma to the appellant which is sufficient to make out a ground of mental cruelty."

A Family Court had refused to grant divorce and rejected her application in 2020. The wife then challenged the lower court order in the HC.

 

The high court bench set aside the lower court order saying, "The Family Court has grossly erred in not appreciating the version of the appellant (wife) and it ought to have been appreciated that the testimony of the appellant was not even put to cross examination."

The couple were married in 1999 in Chikkamagaluru. They had a child in 2001. The wife applied for divorce in 2017. The wife submitted that the husband's family was in financial distress "which led to fights and arguments between parents, siblings and children." She took up a job in UAE to pay the family debt. She also purchased agricultural land in the husband's name. But, he "failed to be financially independent and instead of taking care of financial

needs of the appellant was dependant on her."

She even set up a salon for him in UAE in 2012. But he returned to India in 2013.

In the divorce petition in the lower court, the husband did not make an appearance and the case was decided ex parte. The lower court had said that the grounds of cruelty was not proved.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Jul 20 2022 | 1:33 PM IST

Explore News Home