The Supreme Court has made it clear that a woman’s in-laws cannot be dragged into a criminal case for dowry harassment or cruelty simply because they stood by and watched marital disputes unfold without stepping in to help her. The court acknowledged that staying silent in such situations may not be morally right, but being morally wrong and being criminally guilty are two very different things.
A bench of Justices Sanjay Karol and N K Singh firmly stated that you cannot set the law in motion against every member of a husband’s family based on vague, sweeping accusations. If the only charge against a relative is that they “supported” the husband, failed to intervene, or told the wife to adjust, that alone is not enough to make them criminally liable. For criminal charges to stick, the court said, there must be clear and specific evidence of that person’s active involvement in the alleged offence.
The ruling came in a case from Guna, Madhya Pradesh, where a woman had accused her husband and in-laws of dowry harassment. The court quashed proceedings against the in-laws after finding no specific allegations against them. While the bench was careful to acknowledge that the pain of a woman trapped in a failing marriage must never be taken lightly, it also cautioned courts to scrutinise matrimonial complaints far more carefully.
Marital disputes, it noted, are emotionally charged by nature, and that charged atmosphere often leads to entire families being roped in, even those who played little or no real role in the dispute.