The Supreme Court of India, in Jayesh Kanna v. The Assistant Commissioner Law and Order (West) Etc. (2026 INSC 615), considered criminal appeals filed by a husband challenging his conviction under Section 498A of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). The Madras High Court had previously upheld the Trial Court’s decision convicting him to three years of Rigorous Imprisonment following the tragic suicide of his wife. The central legal question involved evaluating whether the husband’s act of refusing to speak to his wife over the telephone after she left her matrimonial home without his family’s consent legally amounted to “willful conduct” or “mental cruelty” severe enough to drive her to suicide under the statutory framework of Section 498A IPC.
1. Factual Background of the Case
- The Parties and Marriage: The Appellant, Jayesh Kanna, an Engineer working in Muscat, Oman, married the deceased, Sangeetha, on November 2, 2014.
- Brief Cohabitation: The couple resided together for less than a month before the Appellant returned to Muscat on November 29, 2014. The deceased stayed with her in-laws for about 1.5 months and then moved to her parental home on January 18, 2015.
- The Incident: On January 31, 2015, just 13 days after moving to her parents’ house, Sangeetha committed suicide by hanging.
- Prosecution Allegations: The prosecution alleged that the family had demanded dowry at the time of marriage and subsequently harassed her. Crucially, the prosecution asserted that the Appellant reprimanded the deceased for visiting her parents against his family’s wishes and deliberately cut off telephonic communication with her. This silence allegedly inflicted immense mental agony, driving her to suicide.
2. Procedural History
- Trial Court Findings: The police initially registered a case under Sections 498A and 304B (dowry death) IPC against the Appellant and four in-laws.
- The Trial Court acquitted all the in-laws because allegations of dowry harassment lacked cogent evidence.
- The Trial Court also acquitted the Appellant under Section 304B IPC but convicted him under Section 498A IPC. He was sentenced to three years of Rigorous Imprisonment with a fine of Rs. 10,000/-. His passport was also impounded.
- High Court Judgment: The Appellant preferred a criminal appeal against his conviction and a criminal revision seeking the return of his passport. By a common judgment, the Madras High Court dismissed his pleas and confirmed the conviction.
3. Arguments Raised by the Parties
- For the Appellant: Senior Counsel argued that the facts do not disclose an offense under Section 498A IPC. The couple only cohabited for 27 days before the husband went abroad. The sole substantial allegation against him was a lack of telephonic communication during her short stay at her parental home, which cannot logically or legally scale to statutory “cruelty”.
- For the Respondent: The State contended that the Appellant’s deliberate non-communication and isolation of the deceased directly caused severe mental cruelty, making him liable for driving her to take her own life.
4. Legal Assessment by the Supreme Court
The Court analyzed the statutory definition of “Cruelty” under the Explanation to Section 498A IPC, noting it splits into two limbs:
- Clause (a): Any willful conduct likely to drive a woman to commit suicide or cause grave injury to her physical or mental health.
- Clause (b): Harassment connected to enforcing unlawful demands for property or valuable security (dowry).
To evaluate “mental cruelty” under Clause (a), the Supreme Court relied upon two landmark precedents:
- Hoshan v. State of A.P. (2002): Established that mental cruelty is a subjective question of fact. Its impact depends heavily on individual sensitivity, background, environment, and the victim’s capacity to endure stress.
- Manju Ram Kalita v. State of Assam (2009): Clarified that “cruelty” under Section 498A must be continuous, persistent, or happen in close proximity to the event. The court explicitly emphasized that “petty quarrels cannot be termed as cruelty” unless the mental torture is pushed to an unbearable extent.
The Court reiterated that the boundaries of emotional resilience vary from person to person, and normal domestic friction or isolated non-communication must be meticulously distinguished from intentional, systemic criminal torture.
2026 INSC 615
Jayesh Kanna V. Assistant Commissioner Law And Order (West) Etc. (D.O.J. 07.05.2026)




