Arathy Ramachandran (appellant-mother) and Bijay Raj Menon (respondent-father), both highly qualified professionals, married in 2014 and had two children, a daughter born in 2016 and a son in 2022. Following marital discord since 2017, the mother filed for permanent custody of the children in June 2024 under the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, in the Family Court, Thiruvananthapuram. The Family Court initially restrained the father from forcibly removing the children and later granted him visitation rights. The father then filed an Original Petition under Article 227 of the Constitution in the High Court of Kerala, which, in December 2024, granted him interim custody of the children. The appellant-mother appealed this High Court order to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court initially stayed the operation of the High Court order for the son, restoring the Family Court arrangement for him, while the arrangement for the daughter continued as per the High Court’s order. The Court also interacted with the daughter “in camera” and had an “in camera” interaction with the litigating parents.
Law Involved: The case involved the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, under which the mother sought permanent custody. The respondent-father had approached the High Court under Article 227 of the Constitution of India to challenge the Family Court’s order. The matter reached the Supreme Court as a Civil Appeal arising out of a Special Leave Petition.
Reasoning: The Supreme Court emphasized that the “welfare of the child” is the paramount consideration in custody cases . The Court found that the High Court’s interim arrangement, granting the father 15 days of custody each month, was “neither feasible nor conducive to the well-being, mental and physical, of the children” . Specifically, forcing a three-year-old son away from his mother for 15 days was deemed “totally uncalled for and unsustainable” and would cause “deep insecurity” . The Court observed that the periodic division of custody was “definitely adverse” to the children’s well-being and could cause “irreversible mental trauma” .
During interaction with the eight-year-old daughter, the Court found that the environment provided by the mother “fortifies the genuine concern” that the father’s environment was not conducive to the child’s physical and emotional well-being . Concerns were also raised about the food provided by the father (restaurants/hotels) and his failure to engage a nanny as directed by the High Court. The Court noted that the mother, working from home with support from her brother, could provide “manifold” emotional and moral support, unlike the father who had job and daily pursuits . The Court concluded that the father, while “doting,” had not shown an “equal and effective parenting role” and that depriving the mother of full custody would “destroy all chances of family bonding” .
Holding: The Supreme Court allowed the appeal and set aside the impugned order of the High Court dated 11th December 2024 . The Court directed the Family Court to expedite the decision on the Guardianship petition for permanent custody (O.P. (G&W) No. 1185 of 2024) . For interim custody, the Court ordered that the daughter shall be in interim custody of the father on alternate Saturdays and Sundays of every month . The son shall be in the interim custody of the father for a period of four hours, subject to the comfort of the child, supervised by a child counsellor with prior approval of the Family Court . The father was also directed to ensure home-cooked meals for the children during his interim custody and was entitled to 15-minute video calls with both children every Tuesday and Thursday .
Arathy Ramachandran V. Bijay Raj Menon
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 587: (DoJ 29-04-2025)




