The Jharkhand High Court has dismissed a husband’s appeal seeking divorce on the ground of desertion, holding that desertion under matrimonial law is not about physical absence from the marital home but the abandonment of marital obligations. The ruling reinforces a settled yet often-misunderstood principle that mere separation does not automatically translate into legal desertion.

The appeal arose from a challenge to a 2022 family court order rejecting the husband’s divorce plea under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. The husband alleged that his wife left the matrimonial home with their infant child and refused to return, accusing her of hostile behaviour towards his family.

The wife, however, consistently maintained that she was willing to resume cohabitation and that she had been forced out of the matrimonial home. The central dispute before the High Court was whether the facts disclosed a legally valid case of desertion or merely a breakdown marked by separation without the requisite intent.

A Division Bench of Justice Sujit Narayan Prasad and Justice Arun Kumar Rai held that desertion is a continuing matrimonial offence requiring both physical separation and a clear intention to permanently end cohabitation. Emphasising the doctrinal distinction, the Court observed that “desertion is not the withdrawal from a place but from a state of things,” underscoring that law protects the mutual obligations of marriage rather than mere co-residence. The Bench noted the wife’s repeated willingness to live with her husband and relied on the husband’s own admission that he would not accept her back even if she wished to return.

Concluding that the wife lacked the intent to desert and that the husband failed to establish animus deserendi, the Court upheld the family court’s refusal to grant divorce.

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Siddharth Raghuvanshi