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Monday, 24 November 2025

THE SILENT APPEAL: Why a Judge Cannot Enhance Maintenance When the Wife Doesn’t Fight Back

 

Introduction: The Paradox of Appellate Justice

Imagine this: A wife receives ₹4,000 per month maintenance. She’s satisfied. But her husband appeals, saying it’s too much. The question that haunts appellate judges across India is this: Can I increase the wife’s maintenance while hearing the husband’s appeal to reduce it—even though she hasn’t asked me to?

The answer lies in one of appellate law’s most profound yet overlooked principles: You cannot appeal for someone else.

This article explains why—and why this principle matters more than you think for the future of domestic violence jurisprudence in India.

When Can an Appeal Be Filed?

Section 29 of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 is brutally simple:

“There shall lie an appeal to the Court of Session within thirty days from the date on which the order made by the Magistrate is served on the aggrieved person or the respondent.”

Two parties can appeal:

1.          The aggrieved person (wife/children) — Seeking more

2.          The respondent (husband) — Seeking less

But here’s the critical point: Each party controls their own destiny. If you don’t fight for yourself, the court won’t fight for you.

The Cornerstone: The No-Cross-Appeal Doctrine

What Is This Doctrine?

Appellate law operates on a premise so fair, so elegant, and yet so often forgotten: An appellate court has LIMITED JURISDICTION when only one party appeals.

The Rule: When Party A appeals but Party B does NOT file a counter-appeal or cross-objection:

             ✓ The court CAN examine issues raised by Party A

             ✓ The court CAN reduce the burden on Party A

             ✓ ✗ The court CANNOT modify the order in a manner favorable to Party B

             ✗ The court CANNOT enhance relief to the non-appealing Party B

             ✗ The court CANNOT pass any order benefiting Party B

Why Does This Rule Exist? Three Timeless Principles

1. Natural Justice — Audi Alteram Partem (“Hear the Other Side”)

Before any order is changed against a party’s interest, that party deserves: - Notice of the proceedings - Opportunity to present arguments - Chance to cross-examine evidence - Fair hearing

If the wife hasn’t appealed, she hasn’t presented her case for why she deserves MORE maintenance. To enhance her award without her participation violates the most fundamental principle of fair process.

Real-world example: Imagine a court increases someone’s property tax without hearing them. That’s unjust. Similarly, increasing a wife’s maintenance without her hearing violates natural justice.

2. No Reformatio in Peius (“No Making Worse”)

When someone files an appeal, they take a risk: the appellate court might scrutinize their case more strictly and make their position WORSE, not better.

To prevent this injustice, there’s a safety valve: Only the appellant’s position can be “improved” through appeal. Non-appellants cannot benefit from someone else’s appeal.

Example: Husband appeals claiming maintenance is excessive. Wife hasn’t appealed. Court reduces maintenance to help the husband. BUT the court CANNOT simultaneously increase wife’s portion—that would allow her to benefit from his appeal without her participation.

This prevents a perverse outcome: Party A appeals, Party B benefits without fighting.

3. Finality and Certainty

Litigation must end. Law must be certain.

When a beneficiary (wife) receives an award and chooses not to appeal, that order becomes final for her. She accepted it. She opted not to challenge it.

If courts could enhance awards without appeals, litigation would never end. The losing side could always point out an “opportunity for enhancement” and drag the case back through courts endlessly.

The Practical Implication: What CAN and CANNOT the Judge Do?

When Only the Husband Appeals

Judge’s Action

Permissible?

Why?

Affirm the order as-is

✓ YES

Wife hasn’t appealed; her silence = acceptance

Reduce maintenance to husband

✓ YES

This benefits the appellant (husband)

Eliminate house rent component

✓ YES

Reduces husband’s burden

Remand to trial court

✓ YES

If procedural defects are material

Enhance wife’s maintenance

✗ NO

Wife hasn’t appealed; no cross-appeal filed

Increase house rent

✗ NO

Would benefit non-appealing wife

Award more compensation

✗ NO

Without wife’s counter-appeal

Modify in wife’s favor

✗ NO

Violates no-cross-appeal principle

The philosophical point: The judge cannot be kinder to the non-appealing wife than the wife herself has demanded. If she wanted more, SHE had the right to appeal within 30 days.

Issue 1: The Salary Slip Mystery

What Happens When the Respondent Doesn’t Produce Proof?

The Scenario: Husband earns ₹35,000/month according to his own statement. But he never produces a salary slip. The wife’s claim is based on his admission.

The Question: Can the trial court accept this and grant maintenance based on ASSUMED income?

The Answer: YES — Through the doctrine of Judicial Estimation.

Why Judicial Estimation Works for Government Servants

For government employees—especially defense personnel—judicial estimation is not just permissible, it’s practically sound because:

1. Government Salaries Are Transparent - Published pay scales - No room for manipulation - Rank-based determination - Publicly verifiable

2. Income Is Stable and Predictable - Unlike private business (which fluctuates) - Government salary is fixed by law - Not subject to discretionary variations

3. Verification Is Easy - Employment records at military headquarters - Pay commission determines scales - No hidden sources typical

The Adverse Inference Principle

If the respondent is called to produce salary proof and refuses:

The court can draw an adverse inference: “You’re hiding something. I’ll presume you earn what the claimant stated—or more.”

This prevents respondents from playing a game: “I earn ₹35,000 in court but won’t prove it. Therefore, ignore me.”

Implication: The trial court’s acceptance of ₹35,000 stated income, without insisting on salary slip proof, is legally sound for government employees, particularly army officers whose salaries are matters of public record.

Issue 2: The Asset Affidavit Requirement—A Procedural Minefield

What Law Requires

Mandatory Requirement: In all maintenance proceedings, both parties must file affidavits disclosing their assets and liabilities: - All properties (real and movable) - Bank deposits and investments - Loans and mortgages - Detailed financial status

Timeline: Maximum 4 weeks to file; maximum 2 adjournments permitted.

When Non-Filing Vitiates the Order (And When It Doesn’t)

The million-rupee question: Does the absence of asset affidavits make the maintenance order INVALID?

Answer: Depends.

Scenario 1: Respondent Raised Timely Objection

If the husband objected in the trial court (“Your Honour, she hasn’t filed the asset affidavit required by law”), and the magistrate ignored him:

This IS a vitiating defect. The order can be set aside. Remand is appropriate.

Scenario 2: Respondent Raised NO Objection

If the husband sat silent in trial court and NOW raises this objection in appeal:

He has WAIVED the objection. He cannot use it as an appeal ground. The principle: “You had your chance to complain; you didn’t. You can’t complain now.”

Scenario 3: Both Parties Failed Equally

If NEITHER party filed affidavits (both defaulted):

Usually NOT vitiating if: - Income was determined through other evidence - The respondent wasn’t prejudiced - The order appears fair despite procedural laxity

MAY BE vitiating if: - Income couldn’t be determined without affidavits - Procedure was fundamentally unfair - Respondent was prejudiced by the defect

The Practical Point

Procedural defects matter only if they caused actual unfairness. If the trial court determined income through other means (government employment records, stated admission, circumstantial evidence), the absence of affidavits becomes less significant.

Issue 3: Can Affidavit Evidence Alone Prove Domestic Violence?

The Legal Standard in DV Cases

Fundamental Principle: Domestic violence typically occurs within four walls.

There are no witnesses. Police may not be involved. Medical treatment may not be sought. Documentary evidence is rare.

Therefore, the law recognizes a practical reality:

In DV Act cases, the wife’s sworn affidavit is credible evidence—sufficient to establish domestic violence—IF:

1.          It is internally consistent (allegations don’t contradict each other)

2.          It is specific and detailed (not vague generalization)

3.          It has logical coherence (events follow a sequence)

4.          It is unshaken in cross-examination (if the wife was cross-examined and maintained her version)

What Is NOT Required

             ✗ Medical certificates proving injuries

             ✗ Police FIR

             ✗ Hospital records

             ✗ Independent witnesses

             ✗ Photographic/video evidence

The Standard of Proof: Balance of probabilities (meaning “more likely than not”), not “beyond reasonable doubt” (which is for criminal cases).

Why This Matters for Appeals

When the husband appeals claiming “insufficient evidence of domestic violence,” the appellate court should examine:

             Are the wife’s allegations specific or vague?

             Do they contain internal contradictions?

             Were they shaken in cross-examination?

             Is there ANY corroborating evidence (even circumstantial)?

The absence of medical/police proof is NOT grounds to reject the affidavit evidence.

Issue 4: The Wife’s Safety Valve—Section 25(2)

The Law That Prevents Final Injustice

Section 25(2) of the DV Act states:

“Any order made under this Act may be modified or revoked on an application made by any aggrieved person on account of any change in circumstances.”

What This Means

Even if the appellate court DOESN’T enhance the wife’s maintenance (respecting the no-cross-appeal principle), the wife is NOT powerless forever.

She retains the right to return to court and seek modification if circumstances materially change:

Examples of “change in circumstances”: - Child’s school fees increased from ₹2,000 to ₹5,000/month - Wife lost her job (if she had one) - Medical emergency requiring expensive treatment - Respondent got promoted and income increased significantly - Child’s special needs emerged (disability, medical condition)

The Procedure

             File application in trial court (not through appeal)

             Demonstrate the material change

             Provide evidence

             No time bar — Can be filed anytime

The Philosophical Point

The absence of a counter-appeal NOW doesn’t mean the wife is forever locked into the original award. It means she must come back and ask (under Section 25(2)) rather than fight now (through counter-appeal).

This prevents a perverse outcome: Encourages resolution today, permits adjustment tomorrow if needed.

Issue 6: Understanding Appellate Court’s True Role

Trial Court vs. Appellate Court: Different Functions

Many litigants (and some judges) misunderstand what an appellate court does.

The Trial Court (Magistrate): - Conducts full trial - Hears all evidence - Examines witnesses - Makes FINDINGS of fact - Has broad discretion

The Appellate Court (Session Judge): - Reviews the trial record - Does NOT typically hear new evidence - Does NOT re-examine witnesses - REVIEWS findings for legal error or perversity - Has LIMITED discretion

The Standard of Review

Appellate judges should NOT ask: “What would I have decided?”

Appellate judges SHOULD ask: “Did the trial court make a legal error? Or did it reach a finding so unreasonable that no prudent judge would reach it?”

In other words: “Is the finding perverse?”

Implication for Your Case

The trial court had discretion to: - Estimate respondent’s income - Assess wife’s needs - Allocate maintenance between wife and children - Determine proportionality

The appellate court should interfere ONLY IF the trial court’s exercise was: - Arbitrary - Contrary to law - Based on no evidence - Perverse

Not merely because the appellate judge would have decided differently.

Issue 7: The Doctrine of Waiver—Use It or Lose It

The Principle

If you don’t raise an objection in the trial court, you’ve WAIVED it. You can’t raise it in appeal.

Practical Applications

1. Salary Slip Objection

If the respondent says nothing when the wife introduces her proof (based on his admitted salary), he has waived the “no salary slip” objection. He cannot raise it in appeal.

2. Asset Affidavit Objection

If the respondent didn’t complain when affidavits weren’t filed, he has waived that objection in appeal.

3. Procedural Irregularities

If the respondent participated in trial without objecting to procedural faults, he cannot suddenly complain in appeal.

The Rationale

Fairness demands immediacy. If something is wrong, you must object when it happens. You can’t remain silent and ambush the court later.

Issue 8: The Fundamental Principle—Natural Justice Must Be Observed

Audi Alteram Partem in the Appellate Context

Even though the wife hasn’t filed a counter-appeal, she remains a respondent in the husband’s appeal.

Natural justice requires: 1. Wife receives notice of the appeal hearing 2. Wife has opportunity to present arguments (if she wishes) 3. Wife cannot be prejudiced by her own default 4. Non-appearance shouldn’t be used against her

The Judge’s Responsibility

When hearing an appeal by the husband: - Ensure wife is notified - Allow her to participate if she desires - Don’t modify against her interests by default - Maintain impartiality

Issue 9: Burden and Standard of Proof

The Balance of Probabilities Standard

In all DV Act proceedings, the standard is: Balance of Probabilities.This is LOWER than the criminal standard (beyond reasonable doubt = 99% certainty).

Who Bears What Burden?

The Wife: - Must prove she is a victim of domestic violence - Must prove her needs - Burden is “balance of probabilities”

The Respondent: - If defending/contesting: Must prove his inability to pay - If disputing allegations: Must produce counter-evidence - Same standard: Balance of probabilities

Issue 10: The Curious Case of Different Legal Regimes

Why DV Act Is Different

Domestic Violence Act is NOT just another family law statute. It’s a protective statute based on the recognition that:

1.          Domestic violence is pervasive and severe

2.          Victims need immediate legal protection

3.          Economic vulnerability is a weapon used in abuse

4.          Courts must prioritize victim protection

Therefore: - Broader definition of “domestic violence” (includes mental cruelty) - Lower evidentiary standards (affidavit evidence sufficient) - Faster procedures (case completed within 60 days ideally) - Protection is paramount

The Ten Principles Summarized: A Checklist for Judges

As You Draft Your Order, Remember:

1. No Cross-Appeal = No Enhancement - Wife didn’t appeal → Cannot enhance her award - Fundamental fairness principle

2. Judicial Estimation Is Valid - For government servants, stated income acceptable - Salary slip proof not mandatory

3. Affidavit Evidence Suffices - Medical proof not required in DV cases - Credibility = internal consistency + specificity

4. Asset Affidavits Are Procedural - Only vitiating if: (a) objection raised timely, (b) prejudice caused - Not vitiating if both defaulted and income determined otherwise

5. Wife’s Earning Irrelevant Under DV Act - Even if wife earns well, maintenance not reduced - Different regime from Section 125 CrPC

6. Section 25(2) Provides Future Remedy - Wife can seek modification if circumstances change - Independent of present appeal

7. Appellate Court Doesn’t Retry - Reviews for legal error, not for different decision - Interferes only if finding is perverse

8. Waiver Applies to Procedural Objections - Not raised timely → Cannot raise in appeal - Lose it or use it

9. Natural Justice Must Be Observed - Wife gets notice; can participate; not prejudiced by default - Audi alteram partem applies

10. DV Act Is Protective, Not Transactional - Focuses on protection and dignity - Different from maintenance as poverty relief

Conclusion: The Philosophy Behind the Law

The no-cross-appeal principle reflects a profound insight into appellate justice:

An appeal is not a do-over. It’s not an opportunity for the judge to be kinder than the parties themselves.

It’s a limited right to challenge an order that harms you. If you don’t exercise that right, your silence speaks: I accept this order.

When only the husband appeals, he’s saying: “This is too much for me.”

The wife’s silence—her failure to counter-appeal—says: “This is fair for me.”

The judge must respect both voices by examining the husband’s case fairly (giving him appellate scrutiny), while respecting the wife’s acceptance of the order (refusing to enhance without her participation).

This balance—giving the appellant fair review while respecting non-appellant’s acquiescence—is the essence of appellate justice.

And it’s why the no-cross-appeal principle endures as one of the most elegant and fair doctrines in Indian appellate law.

For Your Practice

When facing a domestic violence appeal where only one party appeals:

✓ Remember: This is a UNILATERAL appeal, not a bilateral one ✓ Remember: Your powers are LIMITED by the no-cross-appeal doctrine ✓ Remember: You can reduce, affirm, or remand—but NOT enhance for non-appellant ✓ Remember: Procedural defects matter only if they caused actual unfairness ✓ Remember: The wife has Section 25(2) remedy for future adjustments ✓ Remember: You’re not a re-hearing judge; you’re a reviewer


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