Widow can’t be denied family pension: HC

Excelsior Correspondent
JAMMU, Apr 5: The Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh High Court has allowed a plea moved by a woman seeking family pension after the demise of her husband with whom she had litigation for divorce going on.
A bench of Justice Rahul Bharti observed, “the matter of earning family pension is a law given right which can be deprived to a person only in case the law is enabling/permitting such disentitlement, which was not the present case”.
The woman had filed the writ petition in 2017 after her application for sanctioning and release of the family pension and other benefits had been rejected. The husband of deceased was serving in the Border Security Force (BSF) as Constable and had retired in 2015. A year later, he died.
Thereafter, the woman moved an application for the family pension to be released in her favour before the Commanding Officer of the concerned Battalion in BSF. However, the Commanding Officer responded that as the woman’s name was not found in the pension record of the deceased and on account of the pendency of the petitioner’s divorce petition, the case for process of family pension in favour of the widow was not to be taken up.
The counsel for the woman argued that she was entitled to the family pension as she had not re-married. However, opposing the petition, the respondent authorities submitted that she was earning monthly maintenance awarded by the court out of maintenance proceedings against her deceased husband during the course of his life. They also stressed that her name was not mentioned in the pension papers of the deceased.
High Court observed, “there was not even a single provision of law quoted in the reply/objections by the respondents as to on what basis they were denying her claim. If read between the lines, the respondents are, at best, reading it to be a will of Vinay Kumar Sharma (the deceased) not to grant family pension after his demise in favour of the petitioner but that situation cannot be allowed to be used by the respondents”.
The High Court held the stand taken by the respondent authorities was nothing but frivolous without any legal basis. The court allowed the woman’s petition and directed the respondent authorities to sanction and grant the family pension under the rules in her favour along with all retrospective benefits.