Judicial Separation is a legal remedy under Hindu Law through which the husband and wife are allowed to live separately without dissolving the marriage. It means the marital relationship continues legally, but the duty of cohabitation ends.
It is governed by Section 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. Judicial separation provides an opportunity for the spouses to reconsider their relationship and possibly reconcile before taking the final step of divorce.
The marriage remains valid, but the spouses are not bound to live together.
The main purpose of judicial separation is to provide relief to spouses who cannot live together due to disputes but do not want to immediately terminate the marriage.
The grounds for judicial separation are the same as grounds for divorce under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955.
Either husband or wife may file a petition for judicial separation on the following grounds:
Additional grounds available only to wife:
Judicial separation has important legal effects on the marital relationship:
If both parties agree, they can resume living together at any time. The court order does not permanently separate them.
If they resume cohabitation, the judicial separation order becomes ineffective.
A husband treats his wife with cruelty and harassment. The wife files a petition for judicial separation.
The court grants judicial separation. Now:
Judicial Separation is provided under Section 10 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955.
It acts as a temporary separation and not permanent dissolution of marriage.
Judicial separation is a legal remedy that allows husband and wife to live separately without ending their marriage. It provides protection from cruelty, desertion, and other matrimonial problems while preserving the marital relationship. It also offers an opportunity for reconciliation before divorce.
Thus, judicial separation acts as an intermediate step between marriage and divorce, ensuring fairness and protection to both spouses.
Adoption is a legal process through which a child is permanently taken from his biological parents and made the lawful child of the adoptive parents.
After adoption, the adopted child gets all the rights, duties, and status of a natural child.
Adoption among Hindus is governed by the Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act, 1956.
For a valid adoption, the following conditions must be fulfilled:
The person adopting must be legally capable.
If male adopts:
If female adopts:
The child must be given in adoption by a legally authorized person:
The child must fulfill the following conditions:
Adoption becomes valid only when the child is physically given and taken with the intention of transferring the child from biological family to adoptive family.
This ceremony is essential for valid adoption.
A Hindu couple with no son adopts a boy legally through proper ceremony and consent.
The adopted boy becomes their lawful child and gets all inheritance rights.
Adoption is governed by Hindu Adoption and Maintenance Act, 1956.
Adoption is a legal process that creates a permanent parent-child relationship between adoptive parents and adopted child. For valid adoption, legal capacity of adoptive parents, person giving adoption, child eligibility, and proper ceremony must be fulfilled.
A valid adoption gives the adopted child full legal rights as a natural child.
When a Hindu female dies without leaving a valid will, she is said to have died intestate. In such situations, the distribution of her property is governed by the Hindu Succession Act, 1956, mainly under Section 15 and Section 16.
The Act provides a fixed order of heirs who will inherit her property. The purpose of this law is to ensure fair, systematic, and legal distribution of property among her relatives.
The property of a Hindu female dying intestate devolves according to the following order:
This order is strict. The next category is considered only when no heir exists in the previous category.
The first and highest priority is given to:
All these heirs inherit the property equally.
If no son, daughter, or husband exists, the property goes to the heirs of the husband.
These heirs include:
If no heirs of husband exist, the property goes to the female's own parents.
They inherit equally.
If parents are not alive, the property goes to the heirs of her father.
Examples include:
If heirs of father also do not exist, the property goes to the heirs of mother.
Examples include:
The Act provides special rules for property inherited by a female from her parents or husband.
This rule ensures that property returns to the original family from where it came.
Section 16 provides rules for distribution of property:
The Hindu Succession Act, 1956 provides a clear and systematic order for succession of a Hindu female dying intestate.
The property devolves in the following order:
The law ensures fair distribution and protects family property by returning it to the original source family when necessary.