Laws meant to protect women are being “blatantly abused and misused” to silence the in-laws, a Delhi court has observed and made it clear that the judiciary would effectively prevent such “illegal conduct”.
The court made the observations while granting relief of possession of property to a 70-year-old widowed woman who has accused her estranged daughter-in-law of illegally entering and staying in her house. “The case in hand reflects the manner in which the special laws for protection of women are being blatantly abused and misused only to silence and arm-twist the in-laws.
The courts of law cannot permit such an abuse. Needless to say, courts of law would certainly and effectively step in for redressal in order to stop this inappropriate and illegal conduct,” Additional District Judge Kamini Lau said.
The court directed the daughter-in-law and her two children, who are adults, to peacefully vacate the property of her mother-in-law in Shastri Nagar within six months.
“In the meanwhile, till such time they (daughter-in-law and her children) continue to be in possession of the suit property, I hereby restrain defendants... from dispossessing the plaintiff (mother-in-law) forcibly and illegally from property of Shastri Nagar here and from disposing off, selling off or parting with possession of the plaintiffs...,” it said.
The old woman had approached court seeking a decree of permanent injunction by restraining her daughter-in-law and two grand children from forcibly and illegally dispossessing her from her house. She said in her petition that due to strained relations, her daughter-in-law had left the matrimonial house in 1983 and the couple was legally separated in 1984. A criminal case was lodged against the in-laws in which they were acquitted.