A quiet change is taking place in India’s matrimonial jurisprudence — not through loud reform or public campaigns, but through a series of well-reasoned judgments that are gradually reshaping how family law is argued, understood, and applied.
Among the developments attracting attention from legal observers are a set of decisions from the Delhi High Court, each revealing a more structured and pragmatic interpretation of matrimonial rights and remedies.
In Damini Manchanda v. Avinash Bhambhani, the Court reaffirmed the doctrines of comity of courts and forum conveniens, allowing flexibility in cross-border divorce matters while ensuring judicial restraint. The judgment has been widely noted for harmonizing domestic law with international realities — particularly relevant in an era where matrimonial relationships often straddle multiple jurisdictions.
Similarly, in In-Laws Can Seek Daughter-in-Law’s Eviction From Their House if Alternate Accommodation is Provided, the Court clarified the contours of a woman’s right to residence under the Domestic Violence Act, 2005 — acknowledging the fine balance between protection and property rights.
What has drawn attention across legal circles is the intellectual texture of arguments advanced in these cases — marked by rigorous statutory interpretation and strategic framing that invites courts to revisit long-standing presumptions. Observers note that this line of advocacy, seen in several recent matrimonial disputes, reflects a movement towards precision, evidence-based reasoning, and doctrinal clarity in an area of law once dismissed as emotional and unpredictable.
Behind this emerging method is a younger generation of family-law practitioners — among them, the team at PS Law, led by Dr. Preeti Singh, Advocate-on-Record, Supreme Court of India, and Sunklan Porwal — whose recent work has been consistently noticed for its structured approach and courtroom discipline. Their pleadings have been cited by colleagues as examples of how matrimonial litigation can combine compassion with conceptual strength.
For the first time in years, family law appears to be moving closer to mainstream legal discourse — no longer a soft corner of practice, but a serious, evolving field demanding the same intellectual sharpness as constitutional or commercial litigation.
If this trend continues, the coming decade may well be remembered as the period when matrimonial law in India found its method.