SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Rameshwari Devi
Versus
State of Bihar
(D.P. Wadhwa and S.N. Phukan, JJ.)
Civil Appeal No. 605 of 2000 (Arising out of SLP(Civil)
No. 17636 of 1998). 27.01.2000
27.01.2000
JUDGMENT
D.P. Wadhwa, J. - Leave granted.
Appellant is aggrieved by judgment dated April 23, 1998 of
the Division Bench of the Patna High Court passed in Letters Patent Appeal
affirming the judgment of the learned single Judge dated April 26, 1996.
2. Dispute concerns to payment of family pension and
death-cum-retirement gratuity to two wives of Narain Lal, who died in 1987
while posted as Managing Director, Rural Development Authority of the State
of Bihar. Appellant is the first wife. Narain Lal is stated to have married
second time with Yogmaya Devi on April 10, 1963 while the appellant was still
alive. From the first marriage he had one son and from the second marriage
four sons born in 1964, 1971, 1972 and 1976. Learned single Judge in his
judgment held that children born to Narain Lal from the wedlock with Yogmaya
Devi were entitled to share the family pension and death-cum-retirement
gratuity and further that family pension would be admissible to the minor
children only till they attained majority. He also held that the second wife
Yogmaya Devi was not entitled to anything Appeal by the first wife Rameshwari
Devi against the judgment was dismissed by the Division Bench. According to
her there was no marriage between Narain Lal and Yogmaya Devi and the
children were, therefore, not legitimate. Aggrieved Rameshwari Devi has come
to this Court.
3. On filing of the special leave petition notices were
issued to the respondents. In response thereto counter affidavits have been
filed by (1) Yogmaya Devi, (2) State of Bihar, and (3) Accountant General
(A&E) II Patna.
4. Stand of the State Government is that Rameshwari Devi
was the legally married life of Narain Lal. He married again to Yogmaya Devi
in April, 1963 and that the marriage with Yogmaya Devi was against the
provisions of law as contained in Sections 5 and 11 of the Hindu Marriage
Act, 1955. It was, therefore, a void marriage. Second wife had thus no status
and could not claim any share from the estate of Narain Lal as per the
provisions of Hindu Succession Act, 1956. Accordingly State Government
sanctioned family pension and gratuity of Rameshwari Devi by its order dated
August 22, 1995. By this order the State Government cancelled its previous
two orders dated September 23, 1993 and October 6, 1993. Group insurance and
final withdrawal of GPF had already been sanctioned to Rameshwari Devi.
However, in compliance with the order of the High Court dated April 26, 1996
in writ petition filed by Yogmaya Devi family pension, gratuity, GPF, pay for
unutilised leave and group insurance were sanctioned to Rameshwari and her
son and minor sons of Yogmaya Devi.
5. Accountant General in his affidavit has only to refer
to the action of the State Government in cancelling its earlier order dated
September 23, 1993 and fresh order dated August 22, 1995 authorising all the
payments to Rameshwari Devi being the sole recipient of family pension and
death-cum-retirement gratuity. Accountant General says that on the orders of
the State Government it authorised full family pension and full gratuity to
Rameshwari Devi. Reference was then made to writ petition filed by Yogmaya
Devi in the High Court and when the State Government on the basis of the
order of the High Court issued fresh order dated October 17, 1996 Accountant
General accordingly authorised 50% of family pension and death-cum-retirement
gratuity to the minor children of Yogmaya Devi. A direction was issued to the
Treasury Officer to recover excess amount of family pension and
death-cum-retirement gratuity paid to Rameshwari Devi and further to reduce
her family pension and death-cum-retirement gratuity by 50%. Accountant
General is non-committal if the children of Yogmaya Devi are legitimate or
illegitimate children of Narain Lal and rightly so. He has merely to act as
per the directions issued by the State Government.
6. Rameshwari Devi has disputed the very factum of
marriage between Narain Lal and Yogmaya Devi. Her case is that nothing has
come on record to show that there was any valid marriage solemnized as per
Hindu law between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal. Yogmaya Devi says that from
the time of her marriage with Narain Lal in April, 1963 she has been
continuously living with Narain Lal as his wife. At the time of her marriage
she had no knowledge if Narain Lal had earlier been married. She has referred
to various judgments of this Court to show that when two persons are living
together for long years as husband and wife, in such circumstances, even in
absence of proof, a presumption of valid marriage between them would arise.
She says nothing has been brought on record to rebut that presumption. In
Badri Prasad v. Dy. Director of Consolidation & others, 1978(3) SCC 527
this Court said that a strong presumption arises in favour of wedlock where
the partners have lived together for a long spell as husband and wife.
Although the presumption is rebuttable, a heavy burden lies on him who seeks
to deprive the relationship of legal origin. Law leans in favour of
legitimacy and frowns upon bastardy. The Court further observed that if men
and women who live as husband and wife in society are compelled to prove,
half a century later, by eye-witness evidence that they were validly married,
few will succeed. There have been various other judgments of this Court
holding where a man and a woman live together for long years as husband and
wife then a presumption arose in law of legality of marriage existed between
the two, though the presumption is rebuttable.
7. An inquiry report dated December 11, 1987 of ADM,
Danapur Sub Division, Danapur, Patna has been brought on record. According to
this report inquiry it was found that Narain Lal had married twice. First
time to Rameshwari Devi in 1948 and second time to Yogmaya Devi on April 10,
1963. There is mention of one son from his first marriage with Rameshwari
Devi and four sons from marriage with Yogmaya Devi. Two persons have
testified to the marriage of Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal. Both Narain Lal and
Yogmaya Devi had lived together as husband and wife at all the places
wherever Narain Lal was posted. This fact was also verified from the
colleagues of Narain Lal and their wives. That four sons were born to Narain
Lal from his marriage with Yogmaya Devi has also been similarly testified.
8. Now, when first order was cancelled by the State
Government and second passed depriving Yogmaya Devi and her children of any
right in the pensionary benefits of Narain Lal, she filed writ petition in
the High Court, which, as noted above, was allowed by the learned single
Judge and later appeal filed by Rameshwari Devi against that was dismissed by
the Division Bench of the High Court which is impugned. Learned single Judge
referred to Section 16 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 holding that even
though the marriage of Narain Lal with Yogmaya Devi was void their children
would be legitimate and thus would be entitled to claim share in the family
pension and death-cum-reitrement gratuity of Narain Lal but only till they
attained majority. Learned single Judge accordingly issued direction to the
State Government to issue fresh sanction order for payment of arrears of
family pension and death-cum-retirement gratuity to the minor children born
from the wedlock between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal till they attain
majority but nothing would be payable to Yogmaya Devi.
9. Mr. Dubey, counsel for Rameshwari Devi, submitted that
inquiry conducted by the State Government as to the marriage of Narain Lal
with Yogmaya Devi was incompetent as there was no lawful authority with the
State Government to hold such an inquiry. It was for Yogmaya Devi to establish
her right of her being married to Narain Lal in a court of law. Mr. Dubey
said under the relevant Conduct Rules applicable to Narain Lal he could be
charged with misconduct of his having married a second time during the life
time of his first wife. It is only in that circumstances when there is charge
of misconduct there could be an inquiry as to the marriage of Narain Lal with
Yogmaya Devi. He referred to Rule 21 of the Central Civil Service (Conduct)
Rules as well as to Rule 23 of the Bihar Government Servants Conduct Rules,
1976, which are as under :-
CCS Rules
"21. Restriction regarding
marriage
(1) No Goverment servant shall
enter into, or contract, a marriage with a person having a spouse living; and
(2) No Government servant having
a spouse living, shall enter into, or contract, a marriage with any person :
Provided that the Central
Government may permit a Government servant to enter into, or contract, any
such marriage as is referred to in Clause (1) or Clause (2), if it is
satisfied that -
(a) such marriage is permissible
under the personal law applicable to such Government servant and the other
party to the marriage; and
(b) there are other grounds for
so doing.
(3) A Government servant who has
married or marries a person other than of Indian nationally shall forthwith
intimate the fact to the Government.
Bihar Government Servants Conduct
Rules, 1976
23. Restrictions regarding
marriages. - (1) No Government servant shall enter into, or contract a
marriage with a person having a spouse living; and
(2) No Government servant, having
a spouse living shall enter into or contract a marriage with any person :
Provided that Government may
permit a Goverment servant to enter into, or contract, any such marriage as
is referred to in clause (4) or clause (2) if it is satisfied that, -
(a) such marriage is permissible
under the personal law applicable to such government servant and the other
party to the marriage; and
(b) there are other grounds for
so doing.
(3) A Government servant who has
married or marries a person other than of Indian Nationality shall forthwith
intimate the fact to the Government."
373_
10. We may also note two
judgments of this Court on the question when there is charge of misconduct
against a Government servant. In State of Karnataka and another v. T.
Venkataramanappa, 1996(6) SCC 455 : 1997(1) SCT 484 (SC) the respondent, a
police constable was prosecuted at the instance of his wife for having
contracted second marriage. He was discharged for want of evidence. A
departmental inquiry was instituted against him for having contracted second
marriage, for which he was suspended. He approached the Karnataka
Administrative Tribunal against the order of suspension and for stopping of
the inquiry against him on the ground that a criminal court had discharged
him of the offence of bigamy. Tribunal accepted the stand of the respondent,
quashed the departmental proceedings and lifted the suspension. On appeal
filed by the State this Court said as under :-
"There is a string of
judgments of this Court whereunder strict proof of solemnisation of the
second marriage, with due observation of rituals and ceremonies, has been
insisted upon. The prosecution evidence in the criminal complaint may have
fallen short of those standards but that does not mean that the State was in
any way debarred from invoking Rule 28 of the Karnataka Civil Service Rules,
which forbids a government servant to marry a second time without the
permission of the Government. But, here the respondent being a Hindu, could
never have been granted permission by the Government to marry a second time
because of his personal law forbidding such marriage. It was thus beyond the
ken of the Tribunal to have scuttled the departmental proceedings against the
respondent on the footing that such question of bigamy should normally, not
be taken up for decision in departmental enquiries, as the decisions of
competent courts tending to be decisions in rem would stand at the highest
pedestal. There was a clear fallacy in such view because for purposes of Rule
28, such strict standards, as would warrant a conviction for bigamy under
Section 494 IPC, may not, to begin with, be necessary."
11. In State of W.B. and others
v. Prasenjit Dutta, 1994(2) SCC 37 departmental proceedings were initiated
against the respondent, who was a member of the Police Service of the State
of West Bengal under Rule 5(4) of the West Bengal Services (Duties, Rights
and Obligations of the Government Employees) Rules, 1980 for having
contracted a second marriage. That rule says that no government employee who
has a wife\husband living shall contract another marriage without previously
obtaining the dissolution of the first marriage in accordance with law for
the time being in force, notwithstanding such second marriage is permissible
in the personal law of the community to which he or she belongs. On an
inquiry made by an officer, appointed for the purpose, and on his report that
the respondent was guilty of misconduct alleged, an order of dismissal was passed
by the disciplinary authority. Respondent approached the High Court and the
order of his dismissal was stayed. Nevertheless High Court was of the view
that the second marriage was a serious matter, which could not be left to be
decided by the departmental authorities, in proceedings such as these, and a
civil or matrimonial court needs to pronounce thereon properly and finally.
On appeal filed by the State Government this Court said :-
"The view of the High Court
may be correct that a matter such as the present one concerning the existence
or not of a relationship of husband and wife is normally to be dealt with in
a matrimonial or a civil court. It cannot at the same time be said that the
departmental authorities cannot go into such question for the limited
purposes of sub-rule (4) of Rule 5 of the aforesaid Rules. When contracting
another marriage, in the presence of the previous one, has been termed to be
misconduct visiting departmental punishment it is difficult to keep suspended
action under the Rule till after a proper adjudication is made by the civil
or matrimonial court. It would, thus, have to be viewed that the departmental
proceeding could not be shut in the manner in which the High Court has done
and it would have to go on to some finality at a departmental end, on the
culmination of which, it may then give rise to the delinquent approaching the
civil court for determining his matrimonial status."
12. But then it is not necessary
for us to consider if Narain Lal could have been charged of misconduct having
contracted a second marriage when his first wife was living as no
disciplinary proceedings were held against him during his lifetime. In the
present case, we are concerned only with the question as to who is entitled
to the family pension and death-cum-retirement gratuity on the death of
Narain Lal. When there are two claimants to the pensionary benefits of a
deceased employee and there is no nomination wherever required State
Government has to hold an inquiry as to the rightful claimant. Disbursement
of pension cannot wait till a civil court pronounces upon the respective
rights of the parties. That would certainly be a long drawn affair. Doors of
civil courts are always open to any party after and even before a decision is
reached by the State Government as to who is entitled to pensionary benefits.
Of course, inquiry conducted by the State Government cannot be a sham affair
and it could also not be arbitrary. Decision has to be taken in a bona fide,
reasonable and rational manner. In the present case an inquiry was held which
cannot be termed as sham. Result of the inquiry was that Yogmaya Devi and
Narain Lal lived as husband and wife since 1963. A presumption does arise,
therefore, that marriage of Yogmaya Devi with Narain Lal was in accordance
with Hindu rites and all ceremonies connected with a valid Hindu marriage
were performed. This presumption Rameshwari Devi has been unable to rebut.
Nevertheless, that however does not make the marriage between Yogmaya Devi
and Narain Lal as legal. Of course, when there is a charge of bigamy under
Section 494 IPC strict proof of solemnisation of the second marriage with due
observance of rituals and ceremonies has been insisted upon.
13. It cannot be disputed that
the marriage between Narain Lal and Yogmaya Devi was in contravention of
clause (i) of Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act and was a void marriage.
Under Section 16 of this Act, children of void marriage are legitimate. Under
the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, property of a male Hindu lying intestate
devolve firstly on heirs in clause (1) which include widow and son. Among the
widow and son, they all get shares (see Sections 8, 10 and the Schedule to
the Hindu Succession Act, 1956). Yogmaya Devi cannot be described a widow of
Narain Lal, her marriage with Narain Lal being void. Sons of the marriage
between Narain Lal and Yogmaya Devi being the legitimate sons of Narain Lal
would be entitled to the property of Narain Lal in equal shares along with
that of Rameshwari Devi and the son born from the marriage of Rameshwari Devi
with Narain Lal. That is, however, legal position when Hindu male dies
intestate. Here, however, we are concerned with the family pension and
death-cum-retirement Gratuity payments which is governed by the relevant
rules. It is not disputed before us that if the legal position as aforesaid
is correct, there is no error with the directions issued by the learned
single Judge in the judgment which is upheld by the Division Bench in LPA by
the impugned judgment.
14. Rameshwari Devi has raised
two principal objections : (1) marriage between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal
has not been proved, meaning thereby that there is no witness to the actual
performance of the marriage in accordance with the religious ceremonies
required for a valid Hindu Marriage, and (2) without a civil court having
pronounced upon the marriage between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal in
accordance with Hindu rights, it cannot be held that the children of Yogmaya
Devi with her marriage with Narain Lal would be legitimate under Section 16
of the Hindu Marriage Act. First objection we have discussed above and there
is nothing said by Rameshwari Devi to rebut the presumption in favour of
marriage duly performed between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal. On the second
objection, it is correct that no civil court has pronounced if there was a
marriage between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal in accordance with Hindu rights
(rites ?). That would, however, not debar the State Government from making an
inquiry about the existence of such a marriage and act on that in order to
grant pensionary and other benefits to the children of Yogmaya Devi. On this
aspect we have already adverted to above. After the death of Narain Lal,
inquiry was made by the State Government as to which of the wives of Narain
Lal was his legal wife. This was on the basis of claims filed by Rameshwari
Devi. Inquiry was quite detailed one and there are in fact two witnesses
examined during the course of inquiry being (1) Sant Prasad Sharma, teacher,
DAV High School, Danapur, and (2) Sri Basukinath Sharma, Shahpur Maner who
testified to the marriage between Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal having
witnessed the same. That both Narain Lal and Yogmaya Devi were living as
husband and wife and four sons were born to Yogmaya Devi from this wedlock
has also been testified during the course of Inquiry by Chandra Shekhar
Singh, Rtd. District Judge, Bhagalpur, Smt. (Dr.) Arun Prasad Sheohar, Smt.
S.N. Sinha, w\o Sri S.N. Sinha, ADM and others. Other documentary evidence
were also collected which showed Yogmaya Devi and Narain Lal were living as
husband and wife. Further, the sons of the marriage between Yogmaya Devi and
Narain Lal were shown in records as sons of Narain Lal.
15. Having considered all the
facts of the case as presented before us we do not find any error in the
impugned judgment of the Division Bench of the Patna High Court upholding the
judgment of the learned single Judge referred to in the beginning of this
judgment. The appeal, therefore, fails and is dismissed. However, there shall
be no order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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