Patna HC Invokes Doctrine Of Frustration To Dissolve Marriage Under SMA After Wife Remarried, Flags “Perverse” Family Court Ruling
The Patna High Court has strongly criticised a Family Court's interpretation of the Special Marriage Act as “perverse”, and in a significant development, invoked the doctrine of frustration to dissolve a marriage, holding that courts must recognise reality where continuation of marital obligations has become impossible.
A Division Bench of Justice Bibek Chaudhuri and Justice Chandra Shekhar Jha was hearing an appeal against the judgment dated 28.02.2018 passed by the Principal Judge, Family Court, Begusarai, which had dismissed a divorce petition on the ground that the marriage was “void ab initio”.
The case arose from a marriage solemnised under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 between the parties in 2007. The respondent-wife alleged that she was subjected to cruelty, caste-based humiliation, and dowry demands, and was ultimately driven out of her matrimonial home. She further alleged attempts on her life and subsequent criminal proceedings against the husband and his family.
The Family Court, however, dismissed the divorce petition at the threshold, holding that the marriage itself was not validly solemnised due to non-compliance with Section 12 of the Act, and therefore no decree of divorce could be granted.
Assailing this finding, the appellant-husband contended that the Family Court erred in declaring the marriage void despite the existence of a valid marriage certificate issued by the Marriage Officer.
The High Court framed the core issue as whether the Family Court was justified in declaring the marriage void ab initio and consequently refusing to adjudicate the divorce petition on merits. Upon examining the statutory scheme, the Court found that the Family Court had completely ignored Section 13(2) of the Special Marriage Act, which provides that a marriage certificate is conclusive evidence of solemnisation. The Court observed:
“We never came across such a perverse legal interpretation of law as we are witnessing in the present case. Learned Family Court completely ignored the provisions of section 13(2) of the Special Marriage Act, that “the marriage certificate shall be deemed to be conclusive evidence of the fact that marriage under this Act has been solemnized...”
It held that once a marriage certificate had been duly issued following compliance with statutory requirements, the Family Court could not disregard its evidentiary value and declare the marriage void on speculative grounds. Having set aside the reasoning of the Family Court, the High Court then considered whether the marriage could be sustained in light of subsequent developments.
Noting that the parties had long lived separately and that the respondent-wife had since remarried and had a child, the Court held that the matrimonial bond had lost its very substratum. In an important doctrinal development, the Court invoked the doctrine of frustration (borrowed from contract law under Section 56 of the Indian Contract Act) and applied it in the matrimonial context. The Court observed:
At the outset, it is not in dispute that the marriage between the parties was solemnized in accordance with law under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 and continued for a certain period, thereby creating a legally valid and subsisting matrimonial bond. The statutory presumption attached to such marriage stands fortified by the mandate of Section 13(2) of the Act, which accords conclusiveness to the certificate of marriage. 45. It must be acknowledged that though marriage is not a commercial contract, it undeniably embodies a bundle of reciprocal obligations—cohabitation, fidelity, companionship, emotional support, and exclusivity…A marriage solemnized under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 stands on a fundamentally different footing from marriages governed by personal laws. It is a secular and civil institution, brought into existence not by religious rites or sacramental ceremonies, but by free consent of parties expressed before a statutory authority.”
The Court further noted:
Thus, while not a contract in the strict commercial sense, a marriage under the Special Marriage Act possesses a contractual foundation, being a union created by free consent of parties and regulated by statute, rather than by religious sanction. Although marriage is not strictly a commercial contract, in cases governed by secular statutes such as the Special Marriage Act, the contractual underpinnings of marriage permit limited doctrinal borrowing from contract law, particularly where continuation of marital obligations becomes impossible…The doctrine of frustration, embodied in Section 56 of the Indian Contract Act, is founded on the principle that law does not compel performance of that which has become impossible. When applied in the matrimonial context, particularly to civil marriages under the Special Marriage Act, this principle manifests in situations where the foundation of marriage— cohabitation, consortium, mutual obligations—stands irretrievably destroyed”
Court concluded by holding:
“The doctrine of frustration, as evolved in contract law, operates where an unforeseen event renders the performance of obligations impossible or destroys the very foundation upon which the relationship rests. Transposed into matrimonial jurisprudence, the doctrine applies where the substratum of marriage—mutual trust, exclusivity, and consortium—is irreversibly destroyed, leaving no scope for restoration. The law, in such a situation, must recognize reality over fiction.”
Distinguishing this from the doctrine of irretrievable breakdown of marriage, the Court noted that while irretrievable breakdown addresses failure of the relationship, frustration applies where performance of marital obligations has become impossible due to supervening circumstances.
The Court emphasised that although marriage is not a commercial contract, marriages under the Special Marriage Act possess contractual underpinnings, allowing limited doctrinal borrowing where necessary to advance justice. Holding that continuation of the marriage would be “illusory” and devoid of substance, the Court concluded that this was a rare case warranting application of the doctrine of frustration.
Accordingly, the Court dissolved the marriage between the parties.
Case Title: Manoj Kumar @ Munna v. Nita Bharti.
Case No.: Miscellaneous Appeal No. 151 of 2023 (in First Appeal No. 47 of 2018).
Appearance: Mr. Alok Kumar Sinha and Mr. Pramod Man Bansh appeared for the Appellant. Mr. Kumar Vikram appeared for the Respondent.