In a significant procedural challenge concerning passport issuance and parental identity, the Delhi High Court stepped in to address a sensitive dispute where a minor child’s passport carried the father’s name despite a prior legal settlement severing all ties. The case raised a crucial question: can authorities insist on including a parent’s name when legal custody and guardianship lie exclusively with the other parent? The Court examined whether such insistence ignored binding judicial settlements and the lived realities of fractured families.
The controversy began when the mother, having secured permanent custody and sole guardianship of her minor daughter through a conciliated settlement and subsequent divorce decree, applied for the child’s passport. Despite explicit representations and the binding agreement, where the father had relinquished all custody and visitation rights, the passport issued still bore his name.
Counsel for the petitioner argued that this was contrary to the settlement terms and served no legal or practical purpose, especially when the father had completely withdrawn from the child’s life. Reliance was placed on prior rulings, including Shalu Nigam and Smita Maan, to contend that such rigid requirements must yield to the child’s best interests and factual realities.
The Court found merit in the plea, emphasizing that the father had unequivocally surrendered all rights and had no continuing relationship with the child. In a pointed observation, the bench noted that “for all practical purposes, the relationship… has been terminated,” and further held that “there should not be any impediment for the passport authority in reissuing the passport without the name of… the father.”
Drawing strength from precedents where similar relief had been granted in “peculiar circumstances,” the Court concluded that administrative formalities cannot override settled custody arrangements.
Consequently, the Court directed the passport authority to reissue the minor’s passport without the father’s name and disposed of the petition.
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