Allahabad High Court quashes maintenance denial over second marriage before talaq validation

The Allahabad High Court has set aside a Prayagraj family court order denying maintenance to a woman from her second husband because she remarried before her first husband's talaq was declared valid by a court. Justice Madan Pal Singh's single bench ruled that under Mohammedan Law, talaq takes effect from the date of pronouncement.

The Allahabad High Court has quashed a May 27, 2025, order by the Prayagraj family court that denied maintenance to Humaiyra Riyaz from her second husband, Mohammad Daud, while granting it to their two minor sons.

Humaiyra first married Abdul Waheed Ansari in February 2002. He pronounced talaq on February 27, 2005, which the family court declared valid on January 8, 2013. After observing iddat, she married Daud on May 27, 2012, and they have two sons.

Daud, a central government employee with a substantial salary, refused maintenance. His counsel argued the first marriage subsisted until the 2013 decree and iddat was not properly observed. Humaiyra's counsel countered that Daud knew of the talaq and acknowledged paternity of the sons.

Justice Madan Pal Singh observed, “Under Mohammedan Law, when a husband pronounces talaq, the divorce takes effect from the date on which the talaq is pronounced... The decree is declaratory in nature.” The bench remanded the case to the family court for fresh consideration within six months.

Relaterte artikler

News illustration of UN concern regarding Taliban judicial decree on child marriage in Afghanistan.
Bilde generert av AI

UN raises alarm over Taliban decree on judicial separation that includes child-marriage provisions

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI Faktasjekket

The United Nations has voiced “grave concern” over a new decree issued by Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities governing judicial separation between spouses, warning that provisions in the text appear to allow child marriage and weaken requirements for free consent to marriage.

The Allahabad High Court quashed an FIR against a married couple after the woman stated she had married of her own free will. The court rebuked Uttar Pradesh Police, saying such actions violate personal liberty, and ordered protection for the couple's matrimonial life.

Rapportert av AI

The Allahabad High Court ruled on Tuesday that second maternity leave cannot be denied on the ground of a two-year gap between children. Justice Karunesh Singh Pawar delivered the judgment in Manisha Yadav's case.

A Nashik Road court rejected anticipatory bail plea of Nida Khan, accused in the TCS Nashik case. The prosecution cited digital evidence, seized material and the serious nature of the offence. Khan plans to appeal the decision.

Rapportert av AI

Bhopal police took Samarth Singh into custody on Friday after he surrendered at a Jabalpur court. The Madhya Pradesh high court ordered a second autopsy by experts from AIIMS Delhi in the death of his wife, model Twisha Sharma.

India’s Supreme Court on Wednesday refused to review its ruling granting solatium and interest to landowners under the National Highways Act. The court set a cut-off date of March 28, 2008. It dismissed NHAI’s plea despite a ₹29,000-crore liability.

Rapportert av AI

More than a year after Uttarakhand implemented the Uniform Civil Code (UCC) in January 2025, state police remain unable to register cases under its provisions due to a pending software update on the centralised Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems (CCTNS). The issue surfaced in a Haridwar case involving resident Shaheen, where triple talaq and halala allegations led to an FIR under other laws but not UCC sections 30 and 32. A senior officer cited the absence of UCC provisions on CCTNS.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis