(1.) The petitioner moved an application under Section 125 CrPC against her husband for maintenance allowance alleging that she was unable to maintain herself and that she had been treated with cruelty by the husband who resisted the claim on a variety of grounds. There is no dispute that before initiation of this proceeding, the husband had field a suit praying for a decree for divorce against the petitioner and in that case a sum of Rs. 100/- p.m. as was granted as interim maintenance under Section 24 of the Hindu Marriage Act with effect from 25.7.81 The magistrate dismissed the application observing that because the wife was already receiving maintenance allowance in pursuance of an order passed by the Civil Court she was not entitled to get any other order for maintenance allowance. This order dated 5.10.83 was assailed by the wife by means of a revision but she was unsuccessful. The revisional Court (II Additional Sessions Judge, Nainital) endorsed by an order dated 28.6.84.
(2.) This petition has been moved by the wife under Section 482 CrPC for quashing the orders referred to above passed by the Magistrate and the Additional Sessions Judge, Nainital.
(3.) I have heard the learned counsel for the parties. The view taken by both the Courts below suffers from infirmity. Interim maintenance was granted to the wife by the Civil Court in a petition for divorce and after the termination of that proceeding the wife cannot get maintenance allowance on the basis of the interim order passed by the Civil Court exercising powers under Section 24 of the Hindu Marriage Act whereas the order granting maintenance allowance under Section 125 CrPC continues till the prayer under Section 127 CrPC by the husband for modification in (or) cancellation placing reliance on any subsequent event is accepted. Dismissal of application for maintenance allowance may act as a bar for the subsequent petition for maintenance allowance by another application of identical nature after the disposal of civil suit. Both the Courts below have lost sight of this aspect of the matter and also the fact that the proceedings under Section 125 CrPC are entirely different and are based on different facts. The Courts below could have find maintenance allowance to which the wife is entitled and should then have given a direction for adjustment of the amount received as interim maintenance allowance from Civil Court. By not adopting this course, both the Courts below have committed an error which has to be set aside in the ends of justice.