Wednesday, 1 April 2026

From 'Outsider' to 'Legal Daughter': Resolving the Paradox of the Daughter-in-Law

The recent contradictory stance of the Allahabad High Court (in cases like Akul Rastogi) has reignited a critical debate on the status of women within the Indian family hierarchy.

On one hand, the judiciary affirms that a daughter-in-law holds no legal obligation to maintain her elderly parents-in-law. 

On the other, it mandates that a father-in-law must provide for his widowed daughter-in-law. 

These polar opposite rulings expose a deep-seated legal and social crisis that we must urgently address.


The Mirage of 'Female-Centric' Laws

There is a prevailing, somewhat naive, narrative that modern Indian laws are heavily biased in favor of women. This perception is often fuelled by sensationalized reports of the misuse of dowry or maintenance laws.

However, a closer look reveals a different reality. While the law provides for a woman’s survival (maintenance), it rarely grants her substance (authority or property). When a woman must plead in court for basic sustenance from her husband’s family, it is not a "privilege"—it is an admission that her fundamental rights to equality and dignity have been denied.

The Gold is Accepted, the Woman is Not

In our society, the dowry and gold a woman brings into her marital home are embraced with open arms. Yet, the woman herself is often denied the status of a blood relation.

The common refrain to "treat a daughter-in-law like a daughter" remains hollow rhetoric. When it comes to property rights and decision-making, she is still treated as an "outsider." This is precisely why the court continues to view her through a transactional lens: granting her the "right to be maintained" as a third party, while absolving her of the "duty to maintain" as a family member.

Restitution, Not 'Double Benefit'

Critics often argue that receiving property rights from both her biological parents and her marital family constitutes a "double benefit." We must refute this using the principle of Compensatory Justice.

For centuries, women have been systematically excluded from economic power. Much like the constitutional reservations designed to uplift socially marginalized groups, a specific legal framework for women is not an "extra perk"—it is an essential tool to reclaim stolen rights and balance the scales of patriarchy.

Power masquerading as Fear

A recurring defensive argument asks: "If a woman is given full rights and then leaves the family, isn't that a massive loss?" This is not a fear of the woman; it is an attachment to power. Why is this "loss" never feared when a son inherits property? It is because we still view a woman as an "object" to be guarded rather than a "subject" with agency. When we respect a woman as a human being and a partner, the concept of "loss" vanishes.

A Roadmap for Legal Transformation

We cannot wait for social attitudes to evolve organically. The law must lead the way:

1.Legal Status: Upon marriage, a woman should legally attain the status of a "Daughter by Law" in her new family, moving beyond the traditional, distant label of "daughter-in-law."

2.Reciprocal Rights and Duties: Once she is legally recognized as a daughter, the responsibility to care for her parents-in-law will naturally shift from a moral choice to a legal duty. Where there is a right to the home, there is a duty to the family.

3.Legislative Clarity: A unified legal definition of a woman’s status in her marital home is necessary to prevent inconsistent judicial interpretations.

Conclusion

Today, the law treats a woman in her marital home as a "protected tenant"—she may have a roof over her head, but she has no deed to the house. True social change will only occur when the law recognizes the daughter-in-law as a true daughter.

The culture of valuing a woman for the gold she brings must be replaced by a legal framework that values her as an equal member of the family. Only then will we move from superficial maintenance to genuine empowerment.

P.Sekar
Advocate

No comments:

Post a Comment