Domestic violence cases in India are handled through a legal framework that most people have never had to think about until they are in the middle of one. The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, created a civil remedy that runs separately from the criminal process. Section 498-A IPC exists as a parallel criminal provision. Maintenance under Section 125 CrPC or Section 144 BNSS is a third independent proceeding. A child custody application is a fourth.
In practice, many domestic violence situations in Indore involve all four of these simultaneously. The best lawyer for a domestic violence case is not simply someone who knows the law. It is someone who understands how these parallel proceedings interact, what sequence to follow, and how to use each forum to its maximum protective effect for the client.
What the PWDVA 2005 Actually Covers
The Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, is broader in scope than most people realise. It covers not just physical violence but also:
- Emotional and verbal abuse: insults, ridicule, threats, and humiliation
- Economic abuse: deprivation of financial resources, property, or access to money
- Sexual abuse within marriage
- Harassment related to dowry demands
The Act applies to women in any domestic relationship, which includes not just married women but also women in live-in relationships, sisters, mothers, and daughters living in the same household.
Crucially, the PWDVA is a civil statute. The relief it provides includes:
- Protection orders restraining the respondent from committing further acts of violence
- Residence orders allowing the woman to remain in the shared household or directing the respondent to provide alternative accommodation
- Monetary relief for medical expenses, loss of earnings, and maintenance
- Custody orders for children
- Compensation orders for injury caused by domestic violence
Applications under the PWDVA are filed before a Magistrate’s Court. The Magistrate can pass interim orders at the first hearing without hearing the respondent, if the facts justify urgent protection.
Section 498-A IPC: The Criminal Route and Its Strategic Implications
Section 498-A of the Indian Penal Code (now continued under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita) criminalises cruelty by a husband or his relatives towards a wife. It is a cognisable, non-bailable offence.
Filing a police complaint under 498-A is a separate decision from filing a PWDVA application. Both can be pursued simultaneously, but the strategic implications of each are different.
A 498-A complaint triggers a criminal investigation, potential arrest of the husband and his family members, and criminal proceedings before a Magistrate or Sessions Court. This can create significant pressure on the other side to negotiate, but it also escalates the conflict and is difficult to withdraw from once initiated.
A PWDVA application focuses on protection and relief without necessarily triggering arrest. For women whose primary need is to remain safely in the matrimonial home, obtain maintenance, or secure custody, the PWDVA route is often the more immediately effective tool.
Nidhi Vaidya, Partner at Raghuvanshi Vaidya & Partners, specialises in matrimonial matters at the MP High Court. For clients dealing with domestic violence alongside divorce, custody, and maintenance proceedings, having a lawyer whose primary practice is matrimonial law at the High Court level is directly relevant. Practice details are on the areas of practice page.
Maintenance: A Separate Proceeding That Should Not Wait
Maintenance is often the most urgent practical concern for a woman leaving or separating from a domestic violence situation. It can be sought through multiple routes simultaneously:
- Section 125 CrPC (now Section 144 BNSS): Maintenance for wife, children, and dependent parents before a Magistrate Court. Interim maintenance can be ordered quickly after filing.
- Section 24 of the Hindu Marriage Act: Pendente lite maintenance during the pendency of divorce proceedings before the Family Court.
- PWDVA monetary relief: Maintenance as part of domestic violence relief before the Magistrate.
These three proceedings can run simultaneously and are not mutually exclusive. The amounts awarded may be adjusted if a party obtains maintenance through more than one route, but filing all three ensures that no avenue is left open.
Child Custody in Domestic Violence Situations
Where children are involved, custody is almost always contested in domestic violence cases. The Family Court applies the welfare of the child as the primary consideration. In domestic violence situations, the court will consider:
- The child’s current living arrangements and stability
- Any history of violence or abuse affecting the child
- The child’s relationship with each parent
- The ability of each parent to provide for the child’s needs
An interim custody order can be obtained from the Family Court or from the Magistrate under the PWDVA at the beginning of proceedings. Interim orders set the practical pattern that often persists through the case. Early legal action on custody is important.
The firm has been covered by Hindustan Times, Times of India, Dainik Bhaskar, and other publications. Coverage and legal resources are on the judgements and media page.
What to Do If You Are in an Unsafe Situation Right Now
If the situation involves immediate physical danger, the primary step is safety, not legal procedure. Once safety is secured:
- Contact a lawyer before making any statement that could affect future legal proceedings
- Document injuries through medical examination, if any
- Preserve any evidence of abuse: messages, photographs, medical records, witness contacts
- Note dates, times, and descriptions of specific incidents
- Identify all matrimonial assets and financial accounts, which are relevant to both maintenance and property proceedings
A lawyer advises on what to document and how, what to avoid doing before proceedings are filed, and which forum to approach first based on the specific circumstances.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: Can a woman be asked to leave her matrimonial home during a domestic violence case?
No. One of the specific protections under the PWDVA is the right of residence in the shared household. A protection order or residence order from the Magistrate can restrain the respondent from dispossessing the woman or interfering with her right to remain in the house. This applies even if the property is owned by the husband or his family.
Q2: Can the husband’s parents be named as respondents in a domestic violence case?
Yes. The PWDVA defines respondents broadly to include any adult male in a domestic relationship. In practice, in-laws who have participated in or facilitated the abuse are frequently named as respondents. The Magistrate can pass protection orders against them as well.
Q3: What is an interim protection order, and how quickly can it be obtained?
An interim protection order is passed by the Magistrate based on the application and supporting documents, without waiting for the respondent to be heard, if the court is satisfied that there is a prima facie case and urgent relief is needed. It can be obtained at the first hearing, sometimes on the same day as filing, if the facts justify it.
Q4: Does a domestic violence complaint affect the husband’s employment or professional standing?
A PWDVA civil complaint does not automatically affect employment. A criminal complaint under 498-A IPC can result in arrest, which may affect employment depending on the employer’s policies. The strategic decision about which route to pursue should factor in the likely consequences for both parties, and your lawyer should advise you on this specifically.
Q5: Can a woman pursue a domestic violence case if she has already left the matrimonial home?
Yes. The right to file a PWDVA application does not depend on current residence in the shared household. The application covers acts of domestic violence that occurred while the parties were in a domestic relationship, regardless of where the woman currently lives. The relevant question is whether the acts complained of occurred during the domestic relationship.







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