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                <title>Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha - Dainik Jagran English</title>
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                <title>Chhattisgarh High Court Questions 'AI-Generated' Affidavit in CIMS Hospital PIL, Seeks Ground Reality</title>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>The Chhattisgarh High Court criticised an affidavit submitted in the CIMS Bilaspur infrastructure case, observing that it appeared AI-generated and failed to reflect the hospital's actual condition. The court also reviewed progress on repairs and procurement of medical equipment.</strong></p>]]></description>
                
                                    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/chhattisgarh-high-court-questions-ai-generated-affidavit-in-cims-hospital-pil/article-21369"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/400/2026-07/chhattisgarh-high-court-pulls-up-cims-over-&#039;ai-generated&#039;-affidavit,-seeks-ground-reality-on-hospital-facilities.jpg" alt=""></a><br /><p>The Chhattisgarh High Court has expressed strong displeasure over an affidavit submitted by the state Health and Family Welfare Department in connection with a public interest litigation (PIL) highlighting poor infrastructure and inadequate medical facilities at the Chhattisgarh Institute of Medical Sciences (CIMS), Bilaspur.</p>
<p>During the hearing, Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha observed that large portions of the affidavit appeared repetitive and suggested it may have been prepared using artificial intelligence (AI). The court remarked that while the document looked well-structured, it failed to address the actual conditions prevailing at the government hospital.</p>
<p>The division bench noted that if the hospital's systems were functioning properly, the matter would not have reached the High Court. It cautioned the authorities against presenting paperwork that does not reflect the ground reality and stressed that the court expects factual and transparent submissions rather than attempts to create a misleading impression.</p>
<p>The court also remarked that ensuring proper healthcare facilities for patients should remain the administration's primary objective, adding that timely treatment for those in need would earn genuine public goodwill.</p>
<h3><strong>Inspection Reports Highlight Deficiencies</strong></h3>
<p>The observations came during the hearing of an ongoing PIL concerning the condition of CIMS. The court referred to inspection reports submitted by court commissioners following visits conducted in March and April this year.</p>
<p>According to the reports, the hospital continues to face significant infrastructure issues. Water leakage was observed in several sections of the building, with portions of the hospital reportedly flooded following recent rains. The commissioners also pointed out that the hospital's fire-fighting system had remained non-functional for an extended period, raising concerns over patient safety.</p>
<p>In response, the state government informed the bench that repair work on the fire safety system had been initiated after work orders were issued on June 15, 2026. Officials submitted that restoration work is currently underway.</p>
<h3><strong>Procurement of Medical Equipment Underway</strong></h3>
<p>The Chhattisgarh Medical Services Corporation Limited (CGMSC) also submitted a separate affidavit detailing the procurement status of advanced medical equipment for CIMS.</p>
<p>The affidavit stated that the hospital is in the process of acquiring 31 advanced medical machines. Of these, 13 have already been delivered to the institution. Purchase orders for two additional machines were issued in June, while approvals are being processed for two high-value equipment purchases.</p>
<p>The government further informed the court that two machines are currently undergoing technical demonstrations before financial bids are opened. Evaluation of bids for two other machines is in progress, while bids for six more machines are scheduled to be opened on July 9.</p>
<h3><strong>Court Focuses on Better Healthcare</strong></h3>
<p>The High Court clarified that the purpose of the proceedings is not to initiate punitive action against officials but to improve healthcare services and infrastructure at CIMS.</p>
<p>The bench observed that court commissioners are free to conduct inspections whenever necessary to verify the implementation of the government's claims. It stressed that improvements must be visible on the ground rather than remaining confined to official records.</p>
<p>The court concluded that patients visiting a government hospital deserve timely treatment, functional equipment and safe infrastructure, emphasizing that meaningful reforms—not paperwork—will ultimately restore public confidence in the healthcare system.</p>
<p> </p>]]></content:encoded>
                
                                                            <category>States</category>
                                            <category>Chhattisgarh</category>
                                    

                <link>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/chhattisgarh-high-court-questions-ai-generated-affidavit-in-cims-hospital-pil/article-21369</link>
                <guid>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/chhattisgarh-high-court-questions-ai-generated-affidavit-in-cims-hospital-pil/article-21369</guid>
                <pubDate>Wed, 08 Jul 2026 13:18:44 +0530</pubDate>
                                    <enclosure
                        url="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/2026-07/chhattisgarh-high-court-pulls-up-cims-over-%27ai-generated%27-affidavit%2C-seeks-ground-reality-on-hospital-facilities.jpg"                         length="158847"                         type="image/jpeg"  />
                
                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abhishek Joshi]]></dc:creator>
                            </item>
            <item>
                <title> Bilaspur High Court Slams PWD Over Road Delays in Chhattisgarh</title>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p dir="ltr"><strong> The Chhattisgarh High Court expressed strong displeasure over road construction delays in Bilaspur, directing PWD and civic officials to submit progress reports with timelines.</strong></p>
<p> </p>]]></description>
                
                                    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/-bilaspur-high-court-slams-pwd-over-road-delays-in/article-16942"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/400/2026-04/bilaspur-high-court-slams-pwd-over-road-delays-in-chhattisgarh.jpg" alt=""></a><br /><h1 dir="ltr">Chhattisgarh High Court Raps PWD Over Bilaspur Road Delays</h1>
<p> </p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Public Cannot Be Made to Suffer Over Procedural Delays, Court Says</h2>
<h2 dir="ltr">Court Takes Strong Exception</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The Chhattisgarh High Court has come down hard on the Public Works Department (PWD) over persistent delays in road construction across Bilaspur, warning that procedural formalities cannot be used as a shield to keep citizens in distress. A Division Bench comprising Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha and Justice Ravindra Kumar Agarwal heard the matter and made clear that essential public infrastructure cannot be held hostage to bureaucratic processes.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">PIL Taken Up Suo Motu</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The court took up the issue as a public interest litigation after media reports highlighted the deteriorating condition of roads in the city. Treating the news coverage as sufficient grounds to intervene, the Division Bench initiated proceedings and called upon the authorities to explain why work had stalled or moved at a sluggish pace. The bench underscored that delays in basic civic amenities like motorable roads directly affect the daily lives of ordinary residents.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">PWD Tables Status Report</h2>
<p dir="ltr">During the hearing, the PWD's Superintending Engineer submitted a status report along with an affidavit, revealing that tenders worth ₹44.59 crore were still caught in procedural stages. As per the report, a tender of approximately ₹40.38 crore for the Pendridih to Nehru Chowk stretch — spanning 15.37 kilometres — was issued on April 9, with May 4 set as the last date for submissions.</p>
<p dir="ltr">For the Devkinandan Chowk to Mahamaya Chowk stretch of 1.30 kilometres, tenders worth around ₹1.84 crore had been invited with a deadline of April 15. Meanwhile, technical approval for the Nehru Chowk to Uslapur corridor of 3.20 kilometres — a project valued at ₹4.20 crore — has been secured, and the draft Notice Inviting Tender (NIT) has been dispatched for further processing.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Civic Body Updates Court on Ground Progress</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The Municipal Commissioner submitted a separate affidavit informing the court that tarring work along the Apollo Chowk to Mansi Guest House route has been completed. Additionally, shifting of electricity poles and drainage construction between Rajkishore Nagar Chowk and Sant Vihar Chowk up to Apollo Chowk are also reported as done.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Currently, work between Mansi Guest House and Rapata Chowk is ongoing, with officials citing encroachment removal and tree transplantation as activities in progress. The court took note of these updates but refrained from treating partial completions as satisfactory given the broader scale of pending work.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">Court Sets Firm Accountability Frame</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The bench has directed both the Municipal Commissioner and the PWD's Executive Engineer to appear before the court with detailed progress reports ahead of the next hearing. These reports must include a clear timeline for completing the pending stretches. The court left no ambiguity — officials are expected to move beyond submitting status notes and demonstrate concrete execution on the ground.Industrial Bodies Also Called to Account</p>
<p dir="ltr">Beyond road infrastructure, the High Court has extended its scrutiny to matters related to industrial development in the region. The Division Bench directed the Managing Director of the Chhattisgarh State Industrial Development Corporation (CSIDC) and the General Manager of the District Trade and Industries Centre to file personal affidavits in the case. Both officials will need to respond with sworn statements before the next date of hearing.</p>
<h2 dir="ltr">What Comes Next</h2>
<p dir="ltr">The matter is set to come up for hearing again shortly, with multiple departments now under the court's watchful eye. According to sources, the court's intervention has prompted officials at various levels to fast-track at least some of the stalled tenders. However, residents and civic activists say on-ground improvement remains the true benchmark — and that, as of now, much of Bilaspur's road network continues to test the patience of its daily commuters.</p>
<p dir="ltr">With the Bilaspur High Court maintaining pressure through direct judicial oversight, this road construction delay case has become a significant marker of how courts in India are increasingly stepping in where routine governance has fallen short on delivering basic civic amenities.</p>
<p dir="ltr"> </p>
<p> </p>]]></content:encoded>
                
                                                            <category>States</category>
                                            <category>Chhattisgarh</category>
                                    

                <link>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/-bilaspur-high-court-slams-pwd-over-road-delays-in/article-16942</link>
                <guid>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/-bilaspur-high-court-slams-pwd-over-road-delays-in/article-16942</guid>
                <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 12:23:16 +0530</pubDate>
                                    <enclosure
                        url="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/2026-04/bilaspur-high-court-slams-pwd-over-road-delays-in-chhattisgarh.jpg"                         length="144333"                         type="image/jpeg"  />
                
                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[Abhishek Joshi]]></dc:creator>
                            </item>
            <item>
                <title>No Divorce, No Maintenance: Chhattisgarh High Court's Landmark Ruling on Second Marriage Claims</title>
                                    <description><![CDATA[<p><strong>Chhattisgarh High Court dismisses woman's ₹1 lakh/month maintenance plea from second husband, ruling her second marriage void as she never legally divorced her first husband.</strong></p>]]></description>
                
                                    <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/no-divorce-no-maintenance-chhattisgarh-high-courts-landmark-ruling-on/article-15083"><img src="https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/media/400/2026-03/built-like-an-airport,-empty-like-a-ghost-town-(5).jpg" alt=""></a><br /><p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">A woman cannot claim maintenance from a second husband if she never legally divorced her first — however long the separation, however bitter the second marriage's breakdown, and however substantial her second husband's income. That is the unambiguous legal position reaffirmed by the <strong>Chhattisgarh High Court at Bilaspur</strong> in a ruling that has attracted significant attention in family law circles across central India.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The bench of <strong>Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha</strong> dismissed a criminal revision petition filed by a woman from Bhilai, Durg district, who had claimed ₹1 lakh per month in maintenance from her second husband — a man she had married on July 10, 2020 at an Arya Samaj temple. The court upheld the <strong>Durg Family Court's January 20, 2026 order</strong> that had originally rejected her maintenance application, finding no legal error in the lower court's reasoning.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The ruling turns on a simple but consequential fact that emerged during cross-examination: the woman's <strong>first husband was still alive</strong>, and she had <strong>never obtained a legal divorce</strong> from him before solemnising her second marriage.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Facts: A Marriage Built on Concealment</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The case originated in Bhilai, Chhattisgarh's steel city and Durg district's commercial hub. The woman filed a petition under <strong>Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC)</strong> — now mirrored in Section 144 of the Bharatiya Nagarik Suraksha Sanhita (BNSS) — against her second husband, claiming he had a monthly income of approximately <strong>₹5 lakh</strong> and that she was entitled to ₹1 lakh per month to maintain herself.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Her grievance against him was not insubstantial on its face: she alleged that shortly after their 2020 Arya Samaj marriage, her husband had begun physically and mentally abusing her, assaulting her and eventually throwing her out of the matrimonial home.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">When the matter came before the Durg Family Court, however, cross-examination produced a disclosure that fatally undermined her maintenance claim. The woman admitted that she had been <strong>previously married</strong>, that her <strong>first husband was still alive</strong>, and — critically — that she had <strong>not obtained a legal divorce</strong> from him before entering into the second marriage. She further acknowledged that she had <strong>two adult sons from her first marriage</strong>, who lived with her.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Family Court found that she had misrepresented herself as unmarried when entering the second marriage. It further noted two additional factors that weighed against her maintenance claim: she had previously worked as an <strong>Asha worker</strong> (frontline health worker), and she was in good physical health — meaning she was capable of supporting herself. On January 20, 2026, the Family Court dismissed her petition.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">She then filed a <strong>criminal revision</strong> before the High Court, challenging the Family Court's order. The High Court, under Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha, reviewed the record and found no legal error in the Family Court's reasoning. The revision petition was dismissed.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Legal Position: Why the Second Marriage Was Void</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The ruling rests on a foundational provision of the <strong>Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 (HMA)</strong>. Section 5(i) of the Act requires that, at the time of marriage, <strong>neither party should have a spouse living</strong>. Where this condition is violated — where one party to a marriage was already married to a living spouse at the time of the second marriage — the second marriage is <strong>void ab initio</strong> under <strong>Section 11 of the HMA</strong>. It is treated in law as though it never happened.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">A void marriage, by definition, creates no legally recognisable matrimonial relationship between the parties. And if no valid matrimonial relationship exists, the right to claim maintenance under Section 125 CrPC — which is premised on the existence of a wife-husband relationship — cannot be invoked.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The court's observation was clear: legal divorce from the first husband is mandatory before a second marriage can be solemnised. A marriage performed without that divorce — regardless of the religious form in which it is conducted (Arya Samaj, or any other) — does not create a legally valid marital bond.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This is not a novel legal position. It restates a principle that is well-established across decades of Supreme Court and High Court jurisprudence. What makes this ruling notable is its factual concreteness: the woman's own cross-examination admission that her first husband was alive and that no divorce had been obtained. There was no ambiguity to resolve, no disputed custom to weigh, no conflicting evidence to reconcile. The second marriage was void on her own admission.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Section 125 Framework: Who Can Claim, Who Cannot</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Section 125 CrPC — now Section 144 BNSS — is one of the most litigated provisions in Indian family law. It provides that a Magistrate may order a man to pay monthly maintenance to his wife, children, or parents if they are unable to maintain themselves. Critically for this case, it covers both married and divorced wives — but it does not extend to a woman whose "marriage" with the man from whom she is claiming maintenance was void from its inception.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Supreme Court has, over many decades, developed a nuanced jurisprudence around this provision to protect women who enter second relationships in good faith — for instance, women who were deceived about their partner's marital status. In such cases, courts have held that the relationship was "in the nature of marriage" and entitled the woman to maintenance protection under the Domestic Violence Act, even if the underlying marriage was void.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The Chhattisgarh ruling is distinguishable from those cases in one crucial respect: here, it was the <strong>woman herself</strong> who already had a subsisting valid marriage and who concealed this fact to contract a second marriage. She was not a victim of deception — she was, on the facts as found by both courts, the party who misrepresented her own status. In such circumstances, the legal protection that exists for good-faith partners in void marriages does not apply with the same force.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Arya Samaj Marriage Question</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">One aspect of this case that deserves attention is the vehicle of the second marriage: an <strong>Arya Samaj temple ceremony</strong> in July 2020. Arya Samaj marriages are legally valid under the Hindu Marriage Act when the parties fulfil the eligibility conditions under Section 5 — which includes the requirement that neither party have a living spouse. An Arya Samaj marriage certificate is a recognised document for various administrative purposes in India.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">However, an Arya Samaj ceremony does not transform a legally void marriage into a valid one. The validity of a marriage under the HMA is governed by the statutory conditions in the Act, not by the form of solemnisation. A marriage conducted with all religious rites and ceremonies is still void under Section 11 if the Section 5 conditions are not met.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This is a point that many couples — and, frankly, some Arya Samaj institutions — either misunderstand or deliberately exploit. The ease of obtaining an Arya Samaj marriage certificate without thorough verification of prior marital status has historically made it a vehicle for bigamous marriages, often at the cost of first spouses who discover the second marriage long after it has been registered. The present case is an unusual inversion: the Arya Samaj ceremony was used by the woman rather than the man to formalise a second relationship without obtaining a prior divorce.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Maintenance Quantum: ₹1 Lakh Per Month and the Income Disclosure Problem</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">While the court's ruling turned on the validity question, one element of the case merits separate attention: the claimed maintenance quantum of <strong>₹1 lakh per month</strong> against an alleged income of <strong>₹5 lakh per month</strong> for the second husband.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Under Section 125, there is no statutory ceiling on maintenance quantum — courts have discretion to determine what is "just and proper" based on the means of the payer and the needs of the claimant. The Supreme Court's 2021 guidelines in Rajnesh v. Neha directed courts to take a consistent, income-disclosure-based approach to maintenance, requiring both parties to file comprehensive affidavits of assets and income.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In this case, neither the income claim nor the maintenance quantum was ultimately adjudicated because the validity question disposed of the entire petition at the threshold. But the ₹5 lakh monthly income allegation illustrates the financial stakes in maintenance litigation and the reason why such cases are contested with such intensity in family courts across India.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">The Broader Pattern: Chhattisgarh HC's Recent Family Law Jurisprudence</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This ruling sits within a broader pattern of significant family law decisions from the Chhattisgarh High Court over the past two years:</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In <strong>January 2026</strong>, the same court (different bench) declared a "Chudi" customary marriage void under the HMA in a property dispute, holding that a widow who had remarried through local custom while her first husband's status was unclear could not claim inheritance rights through that second marriage. The court held that emotional narratives and social customs cannot override the HMA's mandatory conditions.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">In <strong>May 2025</strong>, Justice Arvind Kumar Verma held that a woman divorced on grounds of adultery cannot claim maintenance under Section 125 CrPC, since the adultery finding in the divorce decree operates as a bar under Section 125(4).</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Also from the Chhattisgarh HC: a Division Bench held that Scheduled Tribe couples who have voluntarily adopted Hindu rites and a "Hinduised" lifestyle cannot be barred from seeking mutual consent divorce under Section 13B of the HMA — significantly expanding access to consensual divorce for Hinduised tribal couples.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">Taken together, these decisions reveal a court engaged in careful, case-by-case navigation of the intersection between statutory law, personal customs, and the practical realities of matrimonial breakdown in central India — consistently prioritising legal precision over social accommodation.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">What This Ruling Means in Practice</h2>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">For the woman in this case, the practical outcome is stark: she has no maintenance entitlement from the man she lived with for years and claims to have been abused by. Whether she has any remedy against her first husband — from whom she was separated but never legally divorced — depends on facts not in the reported proceedings.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">For the broader population of women in similar situations, the ruling is a reminder that informal separation from a first husband — however long-standing, however mutually accepted in practice — does not create the legal freedom to remarry. Only a court decree of divorce (or the death of the first spouse) legally dissolves a Hindu marriage. Until that decree exists, any second marriage is void, and the legal protections that flow from marriage — including maintenance rights — do not apply to that second relationship.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">This is a reality that affects a significant number of women, particularly in lower-income communities where formal divorce proceedings are expensive, time-consuming, and socially stigmatised. Many couples separate informally and form new family units — sometimes for years — without ever formalising the legal dissolution of the first marriage. The Chhattisgarh ruling is a blunt reminder of the legal cliff edge on which such arrangements stand.</p>
<p class="font-claude-response-body break-words whitespace-normal leading-[1.7]">The solution — accessible, affordable, and expeditious family courts that can process divorce petitions without years-long delays — is a systemic infrastructure question that no High Court ruling, however well-reasoned, can substitute for.</p>
<hr class="border-border-200 border-t-0.5 my-3 mx-1.5" />
<h2 class="text-text-100 mt-3 -mb-1 text-[1.125rem] font-bold">Key Takeaways</h2>
<ul class="[li_&amp;]:mb-0 [li_&amp;]:mt-1 [li_&amp;]:gap-1 [&amp;:not(:last-child)_ul]:pb-1 [&amp;:not(:last-child)_ol]:pb-1 list-disc flex flex-col gap-1 pl-8 mb-3">
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2"><strong>Chhattisgarh High Court</strong> (Chief Justice Ramesh Sinha bench, Bilaspur) dismissed the woman's criminal revision petition claiming ₹1 lakh/month maintenance from her second husband.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">She married at an <strong>Arya Samaj temple on July 10, 2020</strong> without obtaining a legal divorce from her first, still-living husband — making the second marriage <strong>void under Section 11 of the HMA</strong>.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">She admitted in cross-examination to having <strong>two adult sons from the first marriage</strong>; the Family Court also found her physically capable of self-support as a former Asha worker.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">The <strong>Durg Family Court's January 20, 2026 order</strong> was upheld; the HC found no legal error.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2"><strong>Section 5(i) HMA</strong> mandates that neither party have a living spouse at the time of marriage; violation renders marriage <strong>void ab initio under Section 11</strong>.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">A void marriage creates no legal matrimonial relationship; <strong>Section 125 CrPC maintenance</strong> cannot flow from such a marriage.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">This ruling contrasts with cases where a woman is <em>deceived</em> about her partner's marital status — good-faith victims of bigamy may still claim DV Act protection under "relationship in nature of marriage" doctrine.</li>
<li class="whitespace-normal break-words pl-2">Informal separation without legal divorce is the root systemic problem; fast-tracked family courts are the structural remedy no ruling can replace.</li>
</ul>]]></content:encoded>
                
                                                            <category>States</category>
                                            <category>Chhattisgarh</category>
                                    

                <link>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/no-divorce-no-maintenance-chhattisgarh-high-courts-landmark-ruling-on/article-15083</link>
                <guid>https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/chhattisgarh/no-divorce-no-maintenance-chhattisgarh-high-courts-landmark-ruling-on/article-15083</guid>
                <pubDate>Sun, 08 Mar 2026 14:03:32 +0530</pubDate>
                                    <enclosure
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                                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[Nitin Trivedi]]></dc:creator>
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