Jaipur, Feb. 15 -- The state high court's Jaipur bench has refused to dissolve a 58-year-old marriage, holding that "trivial irritations, quarrels and normal wear and tear of married life" cannot amount to cruelty sufficient to grant divorce. A division bench comprising justices Anil Kumar Upman and Sudesh Bansal delivered the ruling on Friday, upholding a 2019 order of the family court in Bharatpur that had dismissed the husband's divorce petition. The court observed that minor disagreements and property disputes within a family do not justify breaking a long-standing marriage, particularly at an advanced age. "Ordinarily, trivial irritation, quarrels and normal wear and tear of married life, which ordinarily happens in day-to-day life in all families, do not constitute a ground of cruelty to pass a decree of divorce," the bench said. The couple married in 1967 and lived together until 2013 without any recorded dispute. They have three children, two sons and a daughter, all of whom are adults and married. The husband, now 75 and a retired principal of a government school, filed for divorce in 2014, months after his wife lodged an FIR against him under Sections 498A (dowry harassment), 406 (criminal breach of trust) and 323/34 (voluntarily causing hurt) of the erstwhile Indian Penal Code. Although police later filed a negative final report after investigation, the husband argued that the FIR caused him humiliation and damaged his reputation. In his petition, the husband further alleged that his wife was under the influence of their eldest son, Virendra Singh, and was inclined to transfer immovable property in the son's name, whereas he wanted the property divided equally between his sons. He claimed that his wife was residing happily with their eldest son, did not care for him. During arguments, the wife countered that her husband had been involved in several extramarital affairs. She alleged that on one occasion he locked himself in a room for several hours with another woman. When she objected, she was pushed and thrown out, prompting her to file the FIR. She also accused him of being cynical and in the habit of squandering family property. According to her, she and their eldest son protested to prevent misuse of property, which led to the divorce petition. She maintained that the disputed property was purchased and registered in her own name, and denied allegations of wrongdoing. The high court noted that the presence of another woman in the husband's room had been found to be true during the proceedings. While the allegations in the FIR did not result in criminal prosecution, the family court had also examined claims regarding the husband's alleged relationships with other women and financial dealings, and did not find them to be in his favor. The family court had concluded that the husband failed to establish cruelty prior to 2013, observing that the marriage had endured without significant dispute for more than four decades. "When the parties have reached such an advanced age and the marriage solemnized in 1967 has survived without dispute up to 2013, it is not just and proper to grant a decree of dissolution of marriage on the basis of such allegations," the family court had held. Affirming that reasoning, the high court said it was not the husband's case that the marriage had become unworkable. Finding no reason to interfere with the 2019 judgment, the bench dismissed the appeal....