The high court's observation came while upholding a family court's order allowing the estranged couple to divorce as the woman treated her husband with cruelty.
"We find that levelling of false allegations of illicit relations of such nature and magnitude causes mental pain, agony and suffering to the husband," the court said.
"Such allegations cause profound and lasting disruptions in the relationships and also causes deep hurt and reasonable apprehension that it would be dangerous to live with a wife, especially when she is also threatening to commit suicide," a bench of justices Siddharth Mridul and Deepa Sharma said.
"These unsubstantiated allegations are of the nature to cause mental suffering to a person against whom such allegations are levelled," it said.
"The woman has not only levelled such bald allegations against her husband, but also against her sister-in-law (wife of elder brother of the man) and thereby maligning her reputation as well. She has in fact indulged into an act of character assassination of her husband and his sister-in-law," it said.
The man and woman got married in July 2008 and a son was born to them in March 2010. The man alleged in his plea that his wife used to quarrel and abuse him and other family members and also threatened to commit suicide.
The woman, however, claimed that the man was having an illicit relationship with his sister-in-law and when she objected to it, they joined hands to get rid of her.
The bench, which did not find any fault with the family court's order and dismissed the woman's appeal, said the trial court judge had arrived at the conclusion that the husband has succeeded in proving the facts that the wife was abusive and was in the habit of picking up quarrel frequently and also threatened to commit suicide and implicated the husband and his family members in the suicide note.
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