This Article is From Jan 16, 2024

Refusal To Consummate Marriage, Denying Physical Intimacy Is Mental Cruelty: High Court

A division bench on January 3 granted divorce to a man on the ground that his wife had refused to consummate the marriage and had denied physical intimacy with him since their wedding in 2006.

Advertisement
India News

The woman allegedly told the man that she was in love with someone else. (Representational)

Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh:

Refusal to consummate marriage and denial of physical intimacy amounts to mental cruelty and is a valid ground for divorce, the Madhya Pradesh High Court has held.

A division bench of Justices Sheel Nagu and Vinay Saraf on January 3 granted divorce to a man on the ground that his wife had refused to consummate the marriage and had denied physical intimacy with him since their wedding in 2006.

"The non-consummation of marriage and denial of physical intimacy amounts to mental cruelty," the high court said in its order.

As per the appeal filed by the man, he married the woman in July 2006. However, his wife refused to cohabit with him and consummate the marriage as she claimed that she was forced into the marriage.

The woman allegedly told the man that she was in love with someone else and requested the man to unite them.

Advertisement

The man said he left for the US for work the same month, and in September, the woman went to live with her family and never returned.

In 2011, the man filed an application before a family court in Bhopal seeking divorce. In 2014, the family court rejected the plea.

Advertisement

The man then filed an appeal in the high court.

The high court, in its order, noted that on several occasions, the woman refused to consummate the marriage and have physical relations with her husband.

Advertisement

"We understand that unilateral refusal to have sexual intercourse for a considerable period without any physical incapacity or valid reason can amount to mental cruelty," the bench said.

While quashing the family court order, the high court said the lower court had wrongly held that failure on the part of the wife to consummate the marriage cannot be a ground for divorce.

Advertisement

"The appellant solemnised the marriage. It was already decided that he would leave India in a short period. During this period, the appellant was hopeful to consummate the marriage but the same was denied by the respondent and certainly the said act of the respondent amounts to mental cruelty," the high court said.
 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Featured Video Of The Day

Stepwell, Likely 150-Year-Old, Discovered During Excavation In UP's Sambhal

Advertisement