Woman Can't Be Ousted From Matrimonial Home For In-Laws' Peace: High Court

A single bench of Justice Sandeep Marne stayed an order passed by a tribunal directing a woman and her estranged husband to vacate his parents' home.

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India News

The Bombay High Court susended a tribunal's 2023 order for six months in the case (File)

Mumbai:

While senior citizens are entitled to live in their own homes in peace and without disturbance, a woman cannot be ousted from her matrimonial house and rendered homeless only to preserve the peace of mind of her elderly in-laws, the Bombay High Court said.

It also said that the machinery under the Senior Citizens Act cannot be used to defeat the rights of a woman, the Bombay High Court has said, refusing to evict a woman from her matrimonial home.

A single bench of Justice Sandeep Marne stayed an order passed by a tribunal directing the woman and her estranged husband to vacate the home of his elderly parents.

The woman filed a petition in the High Court against the tribunal order and claimed that this was just a ploy to get her out of the flat.

She had earlier filed an application before the family court under the provisions of the Domestic Violence Act seeking protection from eviction from the shared household.

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The court, in its March 18 order, noted that the woman cannot be ousted from her matrimonial home and rendered homeless only to preserve the peace of mind of her elderly in-laws.

The bench noted that there is no doubt that senior citizens are entitled to reside in their own house in peace and without any disturbance.

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"But at the same time, the machinery under the Senior Citizens Act cannot be used for the purpose of defeating the rights of a woman under the provisions of the Domestic Violence Act," the High Court said.

It said when a contest is noticed between the rights of senior citizens under the Senior Citizens Act and of a woman under the Domestic Violence Act, a balancing act needs to be done and the rights of the senior citizen cannot be decided in isolation.

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The court noted that the woman has been residing in the apartment since her wedding in October 1997.

The senior citizen couple claimed they were subjected to harassment and torture by their son and daughter-in-law and hence approached the tribunal seeking their ouster from the flat.

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The court said the tribunal before ordering eviction ought to have considered the fact that in the present case, there are contesting claims.

The grievances made by the senior citizen couple could not have been considered in isolation and the petitioner must also be permitted to get her claim of residence in a shared household, at least at an interim stage, it added.

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"The petitioner (woman) cannot be rendered homeless to ensure peace of mind of the senior citizens," the High Court said.

The court noted that the woman's application filed before the family court was currently pending and said the petitioner woman shall be permitted to stay in the flat till the same is decided.

The court suspended the tribunal's September 2023 order for six months.

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

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