DUSHYANT SOMAL CAPT DUSHYANT SOMAL Vs. SUSHMA SOMAL:SUSHMA SOMAL
LAWS(SC)-1981-2-27
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA (FROM: DELHI)
Decided on February 18,1981

DUSHYANT SOMAL Appellant
VERSUS
SUSHMA SOMAL Respondents

JUDGEMENT

Chinnappa Reddy, J. - (1.) The appellant-petitioner, in the Criminal Appeal and Special Leave Petition, Capt. Dushyant Somal married Sushma Somal on May 10, 1973.1 A daughter Sweta born on May 16, 1974 and a son Sandeep born on April 1, 1975 are the children of the marriage. There Was estrangement between husband and wife and they appear to have been living separately since 1976. The children were living with the mother. On an allegation that Sandeep was removed from her custody by her husband in Sep., 1977, the wife moved an application under the Guardians and Wards Act, seeking custody of her minor son Sandeep. She obtained an ex parte order and pursuant to the order obtained by her, with the help of the Police, she recovered custody of her son Sandeep. According to the wife on Oct. 27, 1980, at about 7 a. m. when Sandeep escorted by his grand-mother Shanti Devi was waiting at the bus stop, Capt. Dushyant Somal accompanied by three or four other persons came in a car and forcibly took away the child. At that time Sushma Somal was helping her daughter to board a bus to go to School. After Sweta boarded the bus she came towards the place where her son was to board the bus. She found her mother shouting for help. On enquiry she was told about the kidnapping. She immediately rang up the Police Control Room and gave a report. The Police registered a case under Section 363, Indian Penal Code against her husband. Having searched in vain at various places for her son she finally filed an application under Art. 226 of the Constitution in the Delhi High Court for the issue of a Writ of Habeas Corpus directing her husband to produce her son. In answer to the Rule Nisi issued by the Court the appellant-petitioner filed a counter-affidavit denying that he had ever kidnapped the child. According to him the entire case had been fabricated to forestall any application by him under the Guardians and Wards Act seeking the custody of his son on the ground that he had completed five years and therefore, as father, he was entitled to the custody of the son. Various Preliminary objections were raised regarding the maintainability of the petition. The preliminary objections were overruled. As the appellant had denied the removal of the child, the High Court decided to examine witnesses. On the side of the wife, she examined herself and her mother. The husband did not examine himself as a witness nor did he examine anyone else on his side. He did not also choose to cross-examine his wife and mother-in-law. The High Court accepted the evidence of the wife and her mother and held that Sandeep had been 'unauthorisedly taken away' from the lawful custody of his mother by his father and that he was being kept under illegal detention by the father. A writ was issued to the appellant directing him to produce the child before the Court on Dec. 17, 1980, so that the custody of the child could be entrusted to the mother. Despite the direction of the Court the appellant did not produce the child. The High Court came to the conclusion that the appellant was clearly guilty of contempt of Court and accordingly directed him to be taken into custody and detained in a Civil Prison until he produced the child in the Court. Criminal Appeal No. 12 of 1981 has been filed against the order of the Delhi High Court committing the appellant to prison for contempt of Court. Special Leave Petition No. 1 of 1981 is directed against the order of the High Court in the application under Article 226 of the Constitution.
(2.) Shri Yogeshwar Prasad, learned counsel for the appellant-petitioner argued that the appellant ought not have been committed to prison for alleged contempt of Court, when the direction of the Court that he should produce the child was impossible of obedience as the child was not in his custody. He submitted that having regard to the pendency of the prosecution under Section 363 of the Indian Penal Code, the High Court should not have issued a Writ of Habeas Corpus for the production of the child. He further submitted that the case against the appellant had not been established beyond reasonable doubt and therefore, he should not have been convicted and sentenced to be detained in the civil prison. Having regard to the pendency of the criminal case the appellant could not himself give evidence in the proceeding under Article 226 nor could he disclose his defence by cross-examining the witnesses examined by his wife. He did not go into the witness box himself and did not cross-examine the witnesses examined by his wife because of the protection given to him by Art. 20 (3) of the Constitution. It was also suggested that there was violation of Art. 20 (2). Another submission was that the wife should have sought her remedy under the Guardians and Wards Act and not by moving an application under Art. 226 of the Constitution. In any case, it was submitted that the High Court was wrong, in sentencing him to an indefinite term of imprisonment which may even exceed the maximum. prescribed by the Contempt of Courts Act.
(3.) There can be no question that a Writ of Habeas Corpus is not to be issued as a matter of course, particularly when the writ is sought against a parent, for the custody of a child. Clear grounds must be made out. Nor is a person to be punished for Contempt of Court for disobeying an order of Court except when the disobedience is established beyond reasonable doubt, the standard of proof being similar, even if not the same, as in a criminal proceeding. Where the person alleged to be in contempt is able to place before the Court sufficient material to conclude that it is impossible to obey the order, the Court will not be justified in punishing the alleged contemner. But all this does not mean that a Writ of Habeas Corpus cannot or will not be issued against a parent who with impunity snatches away a child from the lawful custody of the other parent, to whom a Court has given such custody. Nor does it mean that despite the contumacious conduct of such a parent in not producing the child even after a direction to do so has been given to him, be can still plead justification for the disobedience of the order by merely persisting that he has not taken away the child and contending that it is therefore, impossible to obey the order. In the case before us, the evidence of the mother and the grand-mother of the child was not subjected to any cross-examination; the appellant-petitioner did not choose to go into the witness box; he did not choose to examine any witness on his behalf. The evidence of the grand-mother, corroborated by the evidence of the mother, stood unchallenged that the appellant-petitioner snatched away Sandeep when he was waiting for a bus in the company of his grand-mother. The High Court was quite right in coming to the conclusion that the appellant-petitioner had taken away the child unlawfully from the custody of the child's mother. The Writ of Habeas Corpus was, therefore, rightly issued. In the circumstances, on the finding impossibility of obeying the order was not an excuse which could be properly put forward.;


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