“Long Cohabitation & Economic Dependence”: HP High Court Grants Family Pension To Woman Despite Void Marriage
The Himachal Pradesh High Court allowed an appeal and held that a woman, though not a legally wedded spouse, would be entitled to family pension, having lived in a long cohabiting relationship with the deceased employee. A Division Bench of Chief Justice G.S. Sandhawlia and Justice Bipin Chander Negi remarked that: “The long cohabitation inter se the parties, the entry of the name of...
The Himachal Pradesh High Court allowed an appeal and held that a woman, though not a legally wedded spouse, would be entitled to family pension, having lived in a long cohabiting relationship with the deceased employee.
A Division Bench of Chief Justice G.S. Sandhawlia and Justice Bipin Chander Negi remarked that: “The long cohabitation inter se the parties, the entry of the name of the appellant in the service book/pension record of the deceased (though subsequently withdrawn), … when considered with relevant factors like economic empowerment, social justice, dignity of the individual requires this Court to be sensitive to and positively inclined towards the weaker party. Thereby… the appellant… would be entitled to pension.”
Background:
The appellant, Umawati, claimed that she had married late Jai Ram in 1994 after obtaining a customary divorce from her earlier husband. Jai Ram, a foreman with HPSEB, had initially nominated her in his service records. However, prior to his death in 2020, he sought to withdraw her nomination.
Her claim for family pension was rejected by the authorities and later by a Single Judge, primarily on the ground that a civil court had earlier held that no valid marriage existed between the parties, particularly because her earlier marriage was subsisting at the time of the alleged second marriage.
The Court remarked that If a man and a woman cohabit as husband and wife for a long duration, then a presumption under Section 114 of the Evidence Act can be drawn. However, the Court clarified that this presumption is rebuttable and, in the present case, stood rebutted due to an earlier civil court finding that no valid marriage existed.
The Court observed that it was already noted by the civil court that the appellant had not acquired the status of the wife as existence of a valid marriage had not been proved.
The Court stated that since the appellant belonged to a weaker and marginalised section, it was its duty to promote social justice. Instead of adopting a strict adversarial approach, the Court emphasized a “social justice adjudication” approach, meaning that laws should be interpreted in a way that serves their purpose and delivers meaningful relief, rather than defeating it through technicalities.
The Court examined Rule 50 of the CCS (Pension) Rules, which provides that family pension is payable to the “widow” or “widower,” defined as a legally wedded spouse, and acknowledged that the appellant did not strictly fall within this definition due to the invalidity of her marriage. However, it held that the rule must not be applied in a rigid or technical manner so as to defeat its welfare objective.
The Court stated that pension serves a purpose akin to maintenance, the Court adopted a purposive interpretation, holding that in circumstances involving long cohabitation, absence of rival claimants, and the appellant's economic dependence, the benefit of family pension cannot be denied merely on the ground that she is not a legally recognised “widow.”
Thus, the Court allowed the appeal, holding that denying pension would defeat the very purpose of welfare legislation.
Case Name: Umavati V/s HPSEB & others
Case No.: LPA No.545 of 2025
Date of Decision: 25.04.2026
For the appellant: Mr. Inder Singh Chandel and Mr. Arun Kumar, Advocates.
For the respondent: Ms. Sunita Sharma, Sr.Advocate with Ms. Meenakshi Katoch and Mr. Dhananjay Sharma, Advocates.