In Salil Dhawan v. Priyanshi Ghai (Civil Appeal No. [To Be Allocated] of 2026, arising out of SLP (C) No. 971 of 2025, decided on May 27, 2026), the Supreme Court of India exercised its extraordinary jurisdiction under Article 142 of the Constitution of India to dissolve a dead marriage that had irretrievably broken down. The appellant (an Indian Army officer) and the respondent (a qualified dentist) had been entangled in structural marital discord and a multiplicity of legal battles for over eight years.
Despite the wife’s opposition to a summary divorce—as she intended to pursue a contested divorce on the ground of adultery—the Supreme Court ruled that continuing a marriage that exists only on paper serves no legitimate purpose when all emotional ties have long been severed. To provide ultimate finality and ensure the wife’s long-term financial security, the Apex Court dissolved the marriage under Article 142 and enhanced the global permanent alimony to Rs. 50,000,000/- (Rupees Fifty Lakhs only), completely quashing all separate pending civil, criminal, maintenance, and domestic violence proceedings between the parties.
1. Factual Matrix and Path of Litigation
- The Background: The marriage between the appellant (Major Salil Dhawan) and the respondent (Dr. Priyanshi Ghai) was solemnized according to Hindu rites on April 19, 2017. Due to severe marital discord rooted in the wife’s allegations of adultery against the husband, the respondent moved out of the matrimonial home shortly thereafter.
- The Legal Overlaps: The separation triggered a barrage of legal proceedings initiated by the wife:
- April 2018: Application to Army Authorities under Section 90(i) of the Army Act, 1950, leading to source deductions from the husband’s salary.
- October 2018: A domestic violence complaint under Section 12 of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005.
- November 2018: A criminal complaint at the Mahila Thana, Noida.
- November 2019: Maintenance proceedings under Section 125 of the CrPC, resulting in an ex-parte monthly maintenance order of Rs. 30,000/-.
- The Failed Settlement: During mediation at the Mahila Thana, the parties signed a Settlement Agreement on February 21, 2019, agreeing to file for divorce by mutual consent in exchange for a total permanent alimony of Rs. 31,00,000/- (later verbally renegotiated to Rs. 32,00,000/-). The husband paid Rs. 20,00,000/- across two installments. However, after the first motion was filed on January 2, 2020, the wife completely stopped appearing and refused to sign the second motion. Consequently, the Family Court dismissed the mutual consent petition upon the expiration of the statutory 18-month window.
- High Court Intervention: The Allahabad High Court upheld the dismissal, ruling that consent must be mutually maintained at the second motion stage. It directed that the Rs. 20,00,000/- already pocketed by the wife be adjusted against historical army maintenance arrears. Aggrieved, the husband appealed to the Supreme Court.
2. Key Legal Issues & Court’s Observations
A. Dissolution of Marriage Under Article 142 Despite Lack of Mutual Consent
The primary legal obstacle was the wife’s staunch opposition to a summary divorce decree under Article 142, as she sought to independently establish the husband’s adultery through a contested petition under Section 13(1)(i) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955. The Supreme Court overrode this objection based on systemic ground realities:
- Irretrievable Breakdown: Justice Vikram Nath observed that the marriage was dead both emotionally and practically. The parties had been separated for over eight years, shared a long-standing history of bitter acrimony, and were trapped in a web of multiple civil and criminal actions.
- Paper Monogamy Denied: The Court established that compelling two individuals to stay legally bound to a non-functional marriage that exists only on paper serves no legislative or social purpose. Thus, the factual matrix made it a textbook case for invoking the Court’s extraordinary power under Article 142 to administer absolute justice and break the deadlock.
B. Restructuring Financial Security and Alimony Metrics
To grant absolute finality, the Court required a total resolution of all past, present, and future financial liabilities:
- The Refund: During the Supreme Court proceedings in March and April 2026, the wife returned the initial settlement sum of Rs. 20,00,000/- back to the husband via demand drafts in open Court, completely resetting the financial baseline.
- Adequacy Test: While the husband expressed a willingness to stick to the original settlement baseline of Rs. 32,00,000/-, the Supreme Court conducted an independent evaluation of several critical factors. Assessing the husband’s earning capacity as an active military officer, the wife’s professional status, their standard of living, the long years of isolation, and her need for robust future financial security, the Court enhanced the global permanent alimony to a lump-sum amount of 50,00,000/-. This payment effectively wipes out all concurrent maintenance survival claims under the Army Act or Section 125 of the CrPC.
3. Final Directions and Operational Decrees
The Supreme Court disposed of the Civil Appeal with the following absolute mandates:
- Dissolution of Marriage: The marriage solemnized between Salil Dhawan and Priyanshi Ghai on April 19, 2017, stands officially dissolved by a decree of divorce under Article 142 of the Constitution.
- Alimony Payment Schedule: The appellant-husband must pay the total permanent alimony of Rs. 50,00,000/- in two equal installments:
- First Installment (Rs. 25,00,000/-): On or before June 15, 2026.
- Second Installment (Rs. 25,00,000/-): On or before September 15, 2026.
- Absolute Closure of Pending Litigation: All cross-cases and auxiliary proceedings pending before various subordinate courts stand completely closed and disposed of. This explicitly includes:
- The domestic violence complaint (Complaint No. 413/2018) before the Judicial Magistrate, Noida.
- The Section 125 CrPC maintenance suit (Crl. Misc. No. 447/18) and its execution application before the Family Court, Noida.
- Both connected contempt petitions (Case No. 87/2023 and Case No. 175/2023).
Decree Issuance: The Registry is directed to formalize and draw up the final decree of divorce immediately upon the submission of proof showing total compliance with the alimony schedule. All connected pending applications were closed with no order as to costs.
2026 INSC 577
Salil Dhawan V. Priyanshi Ghai (D.O.J. 27.05.2026)




