In Ravi Kumar vs. Geeta Devi & Ors., the Delhi High Court upheld a Family Court’s order directing a DNA test to determine the paternity of three children born from an alleged relationship outside of the petitioner’s legal marriage. The Court ruled that an adult’s desire to avoid reputational harm or social discomfort cannot outweigh the fundamental right of children to know their biological parentage and assert their identity. Emphasizing the link between personal liberty and personal responsibility, Justice Swarana Kanta Sharma held that individuals cannot exercise the freedom to make personal choices and later disown the legal and human consequences of those choices when they become inconvenient.
- Factual Background
The petitioner, a resident of Bihar married since 1986, challenged a Family Court order directing him to undergo a DNA test. The proceedings originated from a maintenance petition under Section 125 Cr.P.C. filed by Respondent No. 1 (Geeta Devi), who claimed they married in 1991 and had three children (Respondents Nos. 2 to 4). She alleged they lived as husband and wife in Delhi until he abandoned them in 2005. The petitioner categorically denied the relationship, claiming the documents were forged and that the case was a political conspiracy to tarnish his reputation and that of his legally wedded wife, who holds a public office.
- Evidence and Prima Facie Case
The Court noted that the respondents had placed significant prima facie material on record to suggest a relationship existed:
- Photographs depicting the petitioner and Respondent No. 1’s marriage and celebrations of the children’s birthdays.
- Public Documents, including voter identity cards, ration cards, and school certificates, which reflected the petitioner as the father of the three children.
- Testimony from a landlady who deposed that the petitioner and Respondent No. 1 had resided together as a couple and that the children were born during this cohabitation.
- Paternity and Maintenance
The Court clarified that under Section 125 of the Cr.P.C., the right to maintenance extends to both legitimate and illegitimate children. Since the petitioner denied paternity to avoid this liability, the determination of biological parentage became “foundational” to the adjudication of the maintenance claim. The Court held that the DNA test was not a “mechanical exercise” but was essential to resolve a direct controversy where no other evidence could provide a categorical answer.
- Balancing Reputation vs. The Right to Identity
- Reputation as a Shield: The Court rejected the petitioner’s argument that a DNA test would cause irreparable injury to his reputation. It observed that if his denials were true, the test would vindicate his stand; his fear suggested the opposite.
- Children’s Welfare: The Court emphasized that children should not become “casualties of adult choices”. Knowing one’s parentage is vital for an individual’s emotional, psychological, and legal identity. The “constitutional conscience” of the Court favors the search for truth over an adult’s desire to avoid social embarrassment.
- Accountability: The Court ruled that the law cannot permit a citizen to enjoy the “privileges of choice” while transferring the resulting burdens onto the innocent children born from those choices.
- Legal Precedents and Section 112
The Court distinguished the present case from precedents like Goutam Kundu, noting that the presumption of legitimacy under Section 112 of the Evidence Act did not apply here. This was because the petitioner himself asserted he was married to another woman during the period in question, meaning the children were admittedly born outside his valid legal marriage. Thus, the DNA test was aimed at determining biological paternity, not unsettling a legal presumption of legitimacy.
- Final Conclusion
The High Court concluded that the Family Court’s order did not suffer from any illegality or perversity. It held that the interests of justice and the children’s right to identity necessitated the scientific determination of paternity. Consequently, the petition was dismissed, and the direction for the DNA test was upheld.
2026 DHC 5340
Ravi Kumar vs. Geeta Devi & Ors.(D.O.J. 03.07.2026)




