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Home » Divorce by Mutual Consent (13B HMA)

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Divorce by Mutual Consent (13B HMA)

4 min read

Divorce by Mutual Consent (Section 13B, Hindu Marriage Act, 1955) #

1) Meaning and idea #

Divorce by mutual consent is a “no-fault” form of divorce where both spouses jointly request the court to dissolve the marriage because they have lived separately, cannot live together, and have mutually agreed to end the marriage.

Section 13B was inserted by the Marriage Laws (Amendment) Act, 1976.

2) Statutory requirements under Section 13B #

A. First motion: Section 13B(1) #

A joint petition may be presented by both parties on the ground that:

  1. they have been living separately for at least 1 year;
  2. they have not been able to live together; and
  3. they have mutually agreed that the marriage should be dissolved.

“Living separately” does not necessarily mean living in different houses; it means not living like husband and wife (no marital cohabitation), even if under the same roof.

B. Second motion: Section 13B(2) #

After filing the joint petition, the parties must make a second motion:

  • Not earlier than 6 months after the date of filing the petition, and
  • Not later than 18 months after that date,
    and the petition should not have been withdrawn in the meantime. Then the court, after hearing and inquiry, may pass a decree of divorce.

This 6-month period is commonly called the “cooling-off period”—meant to give parties time to reconsider and explore reconciliation.

3) Cooling-off period: Can it be waived? #

Leading case: Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur (2017) #

Issue: Is the 6-month waiting period in Section 13B(2) mandatory?
Held: It is directory, not mandatory; the court can waive it where continuing the waiting period serves no purpose.

Guidelines/conditions (illustrative) for waiver (court may consider):

  1. The one year separation under 13B(1) plus the 6 months (in substance) is already over before the first motion;
  2. All efforts at mediation/conciliation (including under Section 23(2) HMA / Section 9 Family Courts Act / Order 32-A CPC) have failed and there is no chance of reunion;
  3. Parties have genuinely settled all disputes—alimony/maintenance, custody/visitation, property, pending cases, etc.;
  4. Waiting will only prolong agony.

The waiver application can be moved soon after first motion (Amardeep mentions even one week after first motion, with reasons).

Clarification: Amit Kumar v. Suman Beniwal (2021) #

What the Supreme Court clarified: Courts should not treat the Amardeep factors as rigid “checkboxes”; they are illustrative, and the key is whether reconciliation is impossible and delay is pointless.
(Here, the Court noted the marriage was effectively a non-starter; the parties had lived together only for a very short time and were separated thereafter.)

4) Can a spouse withdraw consent after filing? #

Landmark case: Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash (1991) #

Issue: Can one party withdraw consent before the final decree?
Held: Yes. Mutual consent must exist at the time of the second motion / inquiry; if one party withdraws consent, the court cannot grant divorce by mutual consent.

Reaffirmed: Hitesh Bhatnagar v. Deepa Bhatnagar (2011) #

Held (in substance): The right to withdraw consent before decree is settled; consent must continue till the decree. The Court reiterated Sureshta Devi and explained “living separately” as “not living like husband and wife.”

5) Role of Supreme Court’s special powers #

Anil Kumar Jain v. Maya Jain (2009) #

Point of law: While the Supreme Court (in appropriate cases) may do “complete justice” under Article 142 and grant relief even without waiting, other courts (including High Courts) do not have Article 142 powers; and a decree of mutual consent divorce cannot be granted if consent is withdrawn before decree (ordinary rule).

Constitution Bench context: Shilpa Sailesh v. Varun Sreenivasan (2023) #

A Constitution Bench authoritatively discussed the Supreme Court’s Article 142 power to dissolve marriages on irretrievable breakdown and also noted that the 6-month period in mutual consent cases can be dispensed with subject to the Amardeep framework.

6) Practical Procedure #

  1. Joint petition under 13B(1) in competent court (usually Family Court/District Court).
  2. First motion statements recorded; court may refer parties to counselling/mediation.
  3. After 6 months, and within 18 months, parties move second motion under 13B(2).
  4. Court verifies: free consent, settlement, truth of pleadings → decree of divorce.
  5. If conditions fit, parties may file waiver application for cooling-off period as per Amardeep/Amit Kumar.
  6. If either party withdraws consent before decree → no mutual consent divorce (Sureshta Devi).

Conclusion #

Section 13B creates a structured, two-stage mechanism for mutual consent divorce: one year separation + joint petition (first motion) + second motion after a cooling period. The cooling-off period is waivable in appropriate cases (Amardeep; clarified in Amit Kumar), but mutual consent must subsist till the final decree, and either spouse can withdraw consent before that stage (Sureshta Devi; reaffirmed in Hitesh Bhatnagar).

Updated on 20 January 2026
Divorce by Mutual Consent Family Law I (Hindu Law) Hindu Marriage Act Section 13B HMA

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Table of Contents
  • Divorce by Mutual Consent (Section 13B, Hindu Marriage Act, 1955)
    • 1) Meaning and idea
  • 2) Statutory requirements under Section 13B
    • A. First motion: Section 13B(1)
    • B. Second motion: Section 13B(2)
  • 3) Cooling-off period: Can it be waived?
    • Leading case: Amardeep Singh v. Harveen Kaur (2017)
    • Clarification: Amit Kumar v. Suman Beniwal (2021)
  • 4) Can a spouse withdraw consent after filing?
    • Landmark case: Sureshta Devi v. Om Prakash (1991)
    • Reaffirmed: Hitesh Bhatnagar v. Deepa Bhatnagar (2011)
  • 5) Role of Supreme Court’s special powers
    • Anil Kumar Jain v. Maya Jain (2009)
    • Constitution Bench context: Shilpa Sailesh v. Varun Sreenivasan (2023)
  • 6) Practical Procedure
  • Conclusion

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