Muslim divorce pronounced privately can still be formally declared by court: Allahabad HC

Muslim divorce pronounced privately can still be formally declared by court: Allahabad HC

NEW DELHI: The Lucknow bench of the Allahabad high court has ruled that a family court cannot refuse to formally declare a couple’s marital status as “divorced” merely because the talaq was pronounced privately under Muslim Personal Law and neither party disputes it.A division bench of Justice Alok Mathur and Justice Syed Qamar Hasan Rizvi held that such a declaration falls squarely within the family court’s powers under the Family Courts Act, 1984.What was the case?The couple got married on February 1, 2022 and both were Sunni Muslims. The marriage later broke down, and the wife left the matrimonial home on September 12, 2023. The husband tried to reconcile through Darul Kaza Faringi Mahal, Lucknow, but at a meeting on May 22, 2024, the wife herself asked for the talaq, as per the court order.The husband then divorced his wife through Talaq-e-hasan. In this, instead of saying talaq all at once, the husband says it three times, once every month, over three months.He sent three separate talaq notices by registered post — the first on July 22, the second on August 22, and the third on September 25, 2024. The wife received all three notices, and she never said she didn’t get them.To get this on record, the husband filed a suit for declaration before the family court, Lucknow. The wife’s written statement did not dispute the talaq, and in her own sworn statement as a witness, she too asked the court to grant a decree of divorce.Despite this, the family court, in its order dated May 20, 2025, dismissed the suit. It held that since nobody had challenged the talaq and the husband hadn’t shown why a court declaration was necessary, the suit was barred under Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act and Section 20 CPC. The husband then challenged the order in the high court.What did the high court say?The high court said that the family court had misapplied the law. It pointed out that talaq is a recognised and valid way to end a marriage under Muslim Personal Law. It also said that such a divorce doesn’t need a court’s approval to take effect — it becomes final the moment the husband pronounces it in the proper, recognised manner.The bench said a family court’s job in such cases, under Section 7 of the Family Courts Act, 1984, is limited — it only needs to check whether a valid talaq was pronounced, and then record it for the public register.“The extra-judicial divorce under Muslim Personal Law by way of Talaq is complete when the spouse pronounces Talaq in the manner as prescribed under the Muslim Personal Law (Shariat). The endorsement of extra-judicial divorce and the consequential declaration of the marital status of the parties by the family court invoking Section 7(b) of the Family Courts Act, 1984 is contemplated only to have a public record of the extra-judicial divorce,” the court noted.The court further relied on Kerala high court guidelines from Asbi K.N. v. Hashim M.U. (2021), which say family courts should treat such matters as uncontested and pass a formal declaration once satisfied that a valid talaq took place — leaving it open for anyone who wants to contest the talaq to do so in a separate case.Finding that the talaq in this case was proved and undisputed, the high court set aside the family court’s order, decreed the husband’s suit, and declared the couple’s marital status as divorced.

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