Divorce – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Wed, 19 Jun 2024 11:39:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://artifexnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png Divorce – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net 32 32 It Was Just Painful But Has Been Wonderful Since https://artifexnews.net/melinda-french-gates-on-divorce-it-was-just-painful-but-has-been-wonderful-since-5923830/ Wed, 19 Jun 2024 11:39:35 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/melinda-french-gates-on-divorce-it-was-just-painful-but-has-been-wonderful-since-5923830/ Read More “It Was Just Painful But Has Been Wonderful Since” »

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Melinda Gates talked about being able to navigate this process privately (File)

New Delhi:

Melinda French Gates recently opened up about her divorce from Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates.

Speaking to TIME magazine, Ms Gates revealed she initially separated from him before ultimately deciding to proceed with the divorce in 2021.

Melinda Gates talked about being able to navigate this process privately, especially while balancing responsibilities like caring for their children. In her words, “To be able to do that in private while I’m still trying to take care of the kids, while still making certain decisions about how you’re going to disentangle your life – thank God.”

Melinda French Gates described her divorce as an “awful” and “horrible thing”. However, “it has been wonderful” since then, she said. “I live in a neighbourhood. Now, I can walk to little stores. I can walk to the drugstore, I can walk to a restaurant,” adding that she “absolutely loves it”.

The divorce, finalised in August 2021 after 27 years of marriage, led her to step away from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, an organisation synonymous with global impact and philanthropy.

“I thought a lot about my three children. But I certainly thought about the effect on the foundation. Those are the three biggest buckets: me, the kids, and the foundation. And I wanted to make sure that when we came through it to the other side – all of those pieces were intact,” Melinda French Gates shared during the interview.

Following her exit from the foundation, Ms Gates redirected her efforts towards new initiatives aimed at empowering women on a global scale. She recently announced a billion-dollar funding initiative designed to promote women’s rights and economic empowerment.

Regarding Bill Gates’ association with Jeffrey Epstein, Ms Gates said she did not like that he would meet the sex offender. “I made that clear to him. I also met Jeffrey Epstein exactly one time. I wanted to see who this man was and I regretted it from the second I stepped in the door,” she said.

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Loss Of Trust Between Married Couple Not Mental Cruelty: Delhi High Court https://artifexnews.net/trivial-irritations-loss-of-trust-between-married-couple-not-mental-cruelty-delhi-hc-4528945rand29/ Mon, 30 Oct 2023 15:04:38 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/trivial-irritations-loss-of-trust-between-married-couple-not-mental-cruelty-delhi-hc-4528945rand29/ Read More “Loss Of Trust Between Married Couple Not Mental Cruelty: Delhi High Court” »

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New Delhi:

Trivial irritations and loss of trust between married couples cannot be confused with mental cruelty, the Delhi High Court said on Monday as it refused to uphold a lower court order granting divorce on a husband’s plea against his wife.

The husband sought divorce on account of mental cruelty by the wife, alleging that she was not interested in living with him in the matrimonial home and wanted him to live with her at her parental home as “ghar jamai”.

Their marriage was solemnised in 1996 according to Hindu rites and customs and they were blessed with a baby girl in 1998.

The man had claimed that his wife used to desert him on one pretext or the other, was only interested in running her coaching centre and even denied him sex.

Dealing with the wife’s appeal, a bench headed by Justice Sanjeev Sachdeva said although denial of sex can be considered a form of mental cruelty when it is persistent, intentional and for a considerable period of time, the court needs to “over-circumspect” while dealing with such a sensitive and delicate issue.

Such allegations, the court said, could not be proved merely on the basis of vague and unspecific averments, particularly when the marriage was also duly consummated.

It held that the husband had failed to prove any mental cruelty on him and the present instance was “simply a case of normal wear and tear of the matrimonial bond” and the evidence indicated that the “discord was between the wife and her mother-in-law”.

“There was nothing to affirmatively suggest that the conduct of the wife was of such a nature that it was no longer possible for her husband to stay with her. The trivial irritations and loss of trust cannot be confused with mental cruelty,” said the bench, also comprising Justice Manoj Jain.

The court also said the mere fact that the woman had approached police with a criminal complaint, resulting in an FIR against her husband who was eventually granted the benefit of the doubt in the matter, would not amount to cruelty.

“Thus, the picture which emerges out is very clear. There was loss of trust, faith and affection between the parties but despite that, they both were trying hard to save the family,” the court observed.

“Merely because the wife had knocked the doors of the court for redressal of her grievance, just like her husband also did, cannot tantamount to infliction of cruelty. The evidence led by the husband, when tested on the yardstick of preponderance of probabilities, does not seem compelling enough to prove cruelty on the part of his wife,” it added.

The court further rejected the husband’s plea to grant him divorce on account of an “irretrievable breakdown” of their marriage and said such power vests only with the Supreme Court and cannot be sought by any of the parties as a matter of right.

“The power to grant divorce on the ground of irretrievable breakdown of marriage is exercised by the Supreme Court under Article 142 of the Constitution of India to do complete justice to both the parties. Such a power is not vested in the high courts, leave alone the family courts,” it said.

“As an upshot of our foregoing discussion, we hold that the impugned judgment dated September 7, 2019 is not sustainable. The appeal is, resultantly, allowed and as a necessary corollary, the divorce petition filed by the husband stands dismissed,” the court ordered. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)



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