Foreign Judgments in Context of Matrimonial Disputes
Foreign Judgments in Context of Matrimonial Disputes
Foreign Judgments in Context of Matrimonial Disputes
4/8/2018
Submitted to :- S R Subramanian
A foreign decree or judgment can only be conclusive if the above mentioned criteria are fully
satisfied and any matter thereby directly adjudicated between the same parties or between the
parties whom or any of them claim litigating under the same title. After the dissolution of
marriage through foreign court, the litigants should present their case to the district court,
under section 19 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. Each and every petition under this act
shall be presented to the district courts within whose local limits the ordinary original civil
jurisdiction-
The Apex Court of India, after examining the various laws of the land, international
conventions, has laid down the conditions for acceptability and enforceability of foreign
judgments in India pertaining to divorce. Dissolution of marriage can be scrutinised in India
only if the parties marrying in India under Hindu law and husband/wife has obtained decree
of divorce from foreign court by fraud, misrepresentation of facts, incorrect representation of
judicial facts. And the Husband has neither domiciled nor has any intention of settling
permanently to make foreign state as his home state. But for the purpose for obtaining
divorce, he/she must satisfy the technical requirement of living for 90 days in that particular
nation. Therefore, the Supreme Court of India has observed that Indian courts would not
recognize a foreign judgment if it had been obtained by fraud, which need not be only in
relation to the merits of the matter but may also be in relation to jurisdictional facts or in
violation of any international law or breach of Indian laws and public policy and couple
domiciled in India. The court has also laid down broad principles to be followed by Indian
courts regarding foreign judgments in matrimonial matters through case precedents.
As per Section 14 of the Indian Civil Procedure Code, the court shall presume
upon the production of any document purporting to be a certified copy of a
foreign judgment, that such judgment was pronounced by a court of competent
jurisdiction, unless the contrary appears on the record, or is proved. However,
if for admissibility of such copy any further condition is required to be
fulfilled, it can be admitted in evidence only if that condition is satisfied. Thus,
in Narsimha Rao v. Venkata Lakshmi[4], the Supreme Court held that mere
production of a Photostat copy of a decree of a foreign court is not sufficient.
It is required to be certified by a representative of the Central Government in
America.
The case of Anoop Beniwal v. Jagbir Singh Beniwal[5] relates to a
matrimonial dispute between the parties. The facts of the case are that the
plaintiff had filed a suit for divorce in England on the basis of the English Act
that is the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1973. The particular ground under which
the suit was filed was “that the respondent has behaved in such a way that the
petitioner cannot reasonably be expected to live with the respondent.” This
ground is covered by S. 1(1)(2)(b) of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1973. The
decree was obtained in England and came to India for enforcement. The
respondent claimed that since the decree was based on the English Act, there
was refusal by the English Court to recognise the Indian Law. The Court held
that under the Indian Hindu Marriage Act under S. 13(1)(ia), there is a similar
ground which is “cruelty” on which the divorce may be granted. Therefore the
English Act, only used a milder expression for the same ground and therefore
there was no refusal to recognise the law of India. Thus the decree was
enforceable in India.
In deciding the case of Shilpa Sachdeva v. Anand Sachdeva[6] Bombay High
Court ruled that a foreign court does not have the jurisdiction to decide
matrimonial matters of a couple who have Indian domicile and are governed
under the Hindu Marriage Act, even if the parties were at the time residing in a
foreign nation. Therefore it was held that the marriage petition filed by the
petitioner wife before the family court could not have been dismissed on the
basis of the Dubai court’s judgement, which is not binding and enforceable in
India.