Mumbai (Agencies): The Bombay
High Court on Tuesday said as per law, if a man has two wives and both lay
claim to his money, only the first wife would be entitled for it but his
children from both marriages would get the money.
A Bench of Justices SJ
Kathawalla and Madhav Jamdar made the above observation orally after the state
government submitted that there existed a previous full Bench judgement of the
high court’s Aurangabad Bench that gave a similar direction.
The Bench led by Justice
Kathawalla was hearing a petition filed by the second wife of Suresh Hatankar,
an assistant sub-inspector in the Maharashtra Railway Police Force who died of
COVID-19 on May 30.
As the state government’s
resolution promises a compensation of Rs 65 lakh to police personnel who die of
COVID-19 while on duty, two women, both claiming to be Hatankar’s wives, had
laid a claim to the compensation amount.
Later, Shraddha, Hatankar’s
daughter from his second wife, approached the Bombay High Court, seeking that
she be given a proportionate share of the compensation amount to save her and
her mother from “starvation” and homelessness.
On Tuesday, state’s counsel
Jyoti Chavan told the Bench that the state would deposit the compensation
amount in the court for the time that HC takes to decide who is entitled to the
amount.
Chavan also informed the court
about the judgement of the Aurangabad Bench.
The court then said, “The law
says that the second wife might not get anything. But the daughter from the
second wife, and the first wife and the daughter from the first marriage will
be entitled to the money.”
Hatankar’s first wife Shubhada
and the couple’s daughter Surbhi, who were present before the court through
video-conferencing, claimed they were not aware that Hatankar had “another
family”.
However, Shraddha’s counsel
Prerak Sharma told the court that Surbhi and Shubhada knew about Hatankar’s two
marriages and they had contacted Surbhi on Facebook on previous occasions.
Sharma also said that Hatankar
had been living with his second wife and their daughter in the railway police
quarters allotted to him in Dharavi.
The high court, therefore,
directed Hatankar’s first wife and her daughter to file an affidavit by
Thursday, clarifying if they knew Hatankar had two families.
The court posted the matter
for hearing on Thursday.
Hatankar married for the first
time in 1992 and his second marriage took place in 1998.
Shraddha told the court in her
plea that both the marriages were registered with the Registrar of Marriages
and under the Hindu Marriage Act.
She claimed in her plea that
being the child of Hatankar’s second wife, she too had the right to family
pension, and death-cum-retirement gratuity.
Therefore, she and her mother
should get equal proportion of the compensation disbursed by the state
government and the Railways.
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