A Mumbai-based woman got married to a US-based man in 1994. Now their marriage has broken. A word spoken on the night of the honeymoon created such a rift in their relationship that it became difficult for the husband and wife to live together. Finally, the wife went to live at her mother’s house and decided to separate from her husband. The matter reached the court and their marriage broke.
Actually, after marriage, like other couples, both the husband and wife went to Nepal for honeymoon. On the night of the honeymoon, the man told his wife that you are ‘second hand’. Both returned from the honeymoon together, but the wife could not forget these words and finally their marriage broke. The court found the husband guilty in the case and ordered him to pay alimony of Rs 1.5 lakh every month along with a compensation of Rs 3 crore.
The woman had married for the second time
After marriage, both the husband and wife started living together in America. This was the woman’s second marriage. Making this matter a big issue, the husband called her ‘second hand’. This statement of the husband stuck in the woman’s mind. After returning from the honeymoon, she asked her husband the same question several times whether he really thinks like this about her? Due to which quarrels started between the two. The husband started doubting his wife and started saying many things about her character.
The quarrel between the two increased so much that it reached the point of fighting. In 2005, both returned to Mumbai and left the woman at her mother’s house. In 2014, the husband returned to America again. Troubled by all these things, she filed a complaint in the Metropolitan Magistrate Court in 2017 under the Domestic Violence Act. The Bombay High Court upheld the decision of the lower court. And ordered to pay Rs 75 thousand for an alternative house, alimony of Rs 1.5 lakh per month and compensation of Rs 3 crore. The court clarified that this amount is being given to the victim woman as compensation for her mental torture and emotional distress.