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Myth: Filing a Domestic Violence Case Automatically Guarantees Maintenance — What Courts Actually Examine Before Granting Monetary Relief

Myth Filing a Domestic Violence Case Guarantees Maintenance

Myth Filing a Domestic Violence Case Guarantees Maintenance

A Detailed Legal Examination of Why Maintenance Under the DV Act Is Conditional, Discretionary, and Evidence-Based — Not Automatic

“Sir, she has filed a Domestic Violence case. Now I will definitely have to pay maintenance, right?”

That question is not legal — it is psychological. It reflects panic, not law.

Most men assume that once a complaint under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (PWDVA) is filed, maintenance becomes inevitable. The belief is simple:

case filed → maintenance granted.

But courts do not operate on social assumptions. They operate on statutory interpretation, evidentiary standards, and judicial discretion.

Maintenance is not a penalty for being accused. It is a judicial relief granted after scrutiny.

Let us examine what the law and courts actually say.

What the Law Actually Says

Maintenance in DV proceedings primarily arises from:

Statutory Language Matters

Section 20 PWDVA states the Magistrate “may direct” payment of monetary relief.

The word “may” is discretionary — not mandatory.

The Supreme Court in Rajnesh v. Neha (2020) clarified that the determination of maintenance requires structured financial disclosure and judicial assessment. It is not mechanical.

The law provides a remedy. It does not guarantee a result.

Filing Is Not the Same as Proving

A DV complaint is an allegation. Maintenance requires judicial satisfaction.

Courts evaluate:

In Inderjit Singh Grewal v. State of Punjab, the Supreme Court held that proceedings under the DV Act must meet statutory requirements; they cannot proceed merely on narrative assertions detached from legal ingredients.

Allegation ≠ Proof

Filing ≠ Entitlement

Maintenance Is Conditional — Not Automatic

  1. Financial Independence Matters

In Mamta Jaiswal v. Rajesh Jaiswal, the Court held that a qualified spouse capable of earning should not sit idle and claim maintenance. Capacity to earn is relevant.

Similarly, in Shailja & Anr v. Khobbanna, the Supreme Court clarified that the mere fact that a wife is capable of earning is not enough to deny maintenance, but actual earning and financial sufficiency are relevant factors.

The test is factual, not ideological.

  1. Income Disclosure Is Mandatory

In Rajnesh v. Neha (2020), the Supreme Court made income affidavits mandatory in maintenance cases to ensure transparency.

Courts now scrutinize:

Suppression can result in adverse inference.

  1. Earning Capacity vs Actual Income

Courts differentiate between:

In Kanchan v. Kamalendra, the Court observed that maintenance cannot become a means of encouraging idleness when earning capacity exists.

Judicial Discretion: The Core Determinant

Maintenance under the DV Act is not formula-based.

Judges consider:

The object is subsistence — not enrichment.

Each case turns on facts. There is no automatic multiplier.

Parallel Proceedings: No Double Recovery

It is common to see maintenance claims under:

In Rajnesh v. Neha (2020), the Supreme Court held that overlapping maintenance orders must be adjusted to prevent duplication.

There is no legal concept of cumulative windfall recovery.

Adjustment is mandatory.

Situations Where Maintenance May Be Denied or Reduced

Courts have reduced or denied maintenance where:

In Sanjay Bhardwaj v. State & Anr, the Delhi High Court held that an educated spouse capable of earning cannot sit idle and burden the other party.

Evidence controls outcome.

Interim vs Final Maintenance

This distinction is frequently misunderstood.

Interim Maintenance

Final Maintenance

Interim orders are provisional.

In Bhuwan Mohan Singh v. Meena, the Supreme Court emphasized timely disposal of maintenance claims — but did not dilute evidentiary standards.

Speed does not mean automatic entitlement.

Consequences of Frivolous or Inflated Claims

Courts are increasingly strict about:

Perjury provisions under IPC may apply where deliberate falsehood is established.

Courts have imposed costs in cases involving suppression and misrepresentation.

Maintenance litigation is evidence-driven — not assumption-driven.

CONCLUSION

The Domestic Violence Act provides legal remedies — not automatic financial outcomes.

From a man’s perspective, panic is understandable when a DV complaint is filed. But legal strategy must replace fear.

Maintenance is not triggered by filing. It is determined by evidence, income assessment, statutory interpretation, and judicial discretion.

Courts do not function on presumption. They function on proof.

Understanding this distinction changes how one approaches litigation — from defensive anxiety to informed strategy.

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