Delhi High Court Rules Second Wife in Void Marriage Not Eligible for Army Family Pension
Delhi HC: Second Wife in Void Marriage Can't Claim Army Pension

Delhi High Court Delivers Landmark Ruling on Family Pension Eligibility

The Delhi High Court has issued a significant judgment clarifying that a woman whose marriage was solemnized during the subsistence of her husband's first marriage is not entitled to family pension under the Pension Regulations for the Army, 1961. This ruling holds true even if the legally wedded first wife subsequently passes away, establishing that a void marriage does not acquire validity upon the death of the first spouse.

Court's Clear Stance on Legal Marriage Requirements

A Division Bench comprising Justice V. Kameswar Rao and Justice Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora made it unequivocally clear that pensionary benefits remain strictly restricted to a legally wedded spouse. The Court emphasized: "Consequently, the widow who is entitled to a family pension is the 'wife' who was lawfully married to the officer."

Rejecting the petitioner's claim, the Court further elaborated: "The second marriage... continued to remain unlawful until his demise in 2011 and therefore the demise of Smt. Satwati Devi in 2012 would not make the petitioner's marriage valid."

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Background and Chronology of the Case

The writ petition was filed by the petitioner challenging an order dated November 27, 2025, passed by the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT), Principal Bench, which had rejected her claim for grant of family pension as the widow of late Sepoy Udey Singh.

The petitioner's husband, Late Sepoy Udey Singh, had been enrolled in the Indian Army in 1963 and served for more than 16 years before being discharged in 1979. He received service pension post-retirement and later joined the Atomic Minerals Directorate for Exploration and Research in 1981, retiring from there in 2002 while drawing pension from both organizations during his lifetime.

The petitioner claimed she had married the deceased soldier between 1970 and 1980 as per customary rites after migrating from Jammu and Kashmir to Udhampur. She stated she was unaware at the time of marriage that he already had a legally wedded wife, Smt. Satwati Devi. Three children were born from this relationship.

Upon visiting his native village, she discovered he had a first wife and reported the matter to authorities. During his lifetime, the deceased soldier attempted to include the petitioner's name as his next of kin in official records and sought issuance of a Part-II order recognizing the marriage. However, this request was rejected on the ground that the first wife was alive, making a second marriage void under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955.

Post-Death Proceedings and Legal Arguments

After the soldier's death on September 27, 2011, the petitioner made several representations seeking family pension. However, her claim was consistently rejected, including through a communication dated March 5, 2013, on the ground that her marriage was void. The Court noted that the first wife, Smt. Satwati Devi, had survived the deceased and had duly claimed family pension in accordance with applicable regulations.

The petitioner further pointed out that the first wife died on May 13, 2012, arguing that upon her death, the right to receive family pension should devolve upon her.

Petitioner's Contentions and Court's Scrutiny

The petitioner argued that the Tribunal had erred in recording that the first wife was alive and receiving pension despite her demise in 2012. She maintained she had lived with the deceased soldier throughout, while the first wife had been living separately. Reliance was placed on the Supreme Court's judgment in Shriramabai v. Record Officer to argue that pensionary benefits could be extended to a second wife in certain circumstances.

The principal issue before the Court was whether a woman whose marriage was void at inception could claim family pension upon the subsequent death of the legally wedded wife.

Court's Comprehensive Legal Analysis

The Court, after thorough consideration of the record, held that the petitioner's marriage was void as it had been solemnized during the subsistence of the first marriage and therefore did not confer any legal status as a 'wife'. The Court reiterated that the grant of family pension is governed by the Pension Regulations for the Army, 1961, under which pension is payable only to a legally wedded widow.

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The Court emphasized that under Section 5 of the Hindu Marriage Act, a valid marriage requires that neither party has a spouse living at the time of marriage, and Section 11 renders a marriage void if contracted during subsistence of a prior marriage.

Rejecting the core argument of the petitioner, the Court held that the death of the first wife does not validate a void marriage. The Court observed that the petitioner's argument that the right to pension devolved upon her after the first wife's death was "without any basis in law." It further held that the deceased soldier had not taken any legal steps to dissolve his first marriage during his lifetime, despite having sufficient opportunity to do so.

Precedent Examination and Distinction

The Court relied on the Supreme Court's decision in Raj Kumari v. Krishan, observing: "Normally, pension is given to the legally wedded wife... By no stretch of imagination one can say that the plaintiff... was the legally wedded wife... especially when he had a wife who was alive when he married another woman."

The Court also rejected reliance on the Shriramabai case, holding that the facts were entirely different. It noted that in Shriramabai, the first marriage had been dissolved by divorce, and thereafter long cohabitation gave rise to a presumption of valid marriage.

In contrast, the Court noted that in the present case the first marriage of the deceased soldier was never dissolved in accordance with law, and the first wife was still alive at the time of his death. As a result, the second marriage continued to remain void throughout and never acquired legal validity at any stage. On this basis, the Court held that the judgment in Shriramabai had no application to the facts of the present case.

Additional Legal Considerations

The Court further noted that the petitioner had placed reliance on an Office Memorandum issued under the Central Civil Services (Pension) Rules, 2021. However, the Court recorded that these rules were not applicable to the present case, as the grant of family pension was governed by the Pension Regulations for the Army, 1961. It was further observed that, in any event, the said memorandum did not confer any right upon a spouse who was not lawfully married to the deceased.

It was also clarified that while the children born from the relationship were entitled to family pension, they were no longer eligible as they had attained majority and were married.

Final Verdict and Case Details

The Court held that the decision of the authorities rejecting the petitioner's claim for family pension was correct and had been rightly upheld by the Tribunal. It concluded: "The present petition is without any merit and is accordingly dismissed."

Case Details:

  • Case Title: Vidya Devi v. Union of India & Ors.
  • Court: Delhi High Court
  • Bench: Justice V. Kameswar Rao and Justice Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora
  • Case No.: W.P.(C) 2333/2026
  • Decision Date: February 18, 2026

This judgment reinforces the legal principle that statutory benefits like family pension are strictly tied to legally recognized relationships and cannot be extended to parties in void marriages, regardless of subsequent events or circumstances.