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Delhi High Court Landmark Ruling: “If Wife Suspects Husband is Cheating, She Can Access Husband’s Call Records & Hotel Location Data”

Delhi High Court landmark ruling holds that if a wife suspects her husband is cheating, she can legally access his call records and hotel location data to prove adultery.

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Delhi High Court Landmark Ruling: "If Wife Suspects Husband is Cheating, She Can Access Husband’s Call Records & Hotel Location Data"

NEW DELHI: In a landmark ruling, the Delhi High Court has upheld a wife’s right to seek her husband’s call detail records (CDRs) and tower location data, along with that of his alleged paramour, to substantiate charges of adultery in divorce proceedings.

A Division Bench of Justice Anil Kshetarpal and Justice Harish Vaidyanathan Shankar delivered the judgment while deciding a batch of appeals arising out of a matrimonial dispute pending before the Family Court in Delhi.

Background of the Case

The couple, married in 2002 and parents of two children, entered into conflict when the wife filed for divorce on grounds of cruelty and adultery. She impleaded the alleged paramour (R-2) as a co-respondent, alleging that her husband and R-2 maintained an illicit relationship and stayed together at multiple hotels and guest houses since January 2020.

The Family Court, in April 2025, allowed the wife’s plea for preservation and production of the husband’s CDRs, tower location data, and certain financial records, while rejecting some demands as a “fishing enquiry.” Both the husband and the alleged paramour challenged this order before the High Court.

Arguments by the Parties

Arguments of R-2 (Alleged Paramour):

Arguments of the Wife:

Arguments of the Husband:

Observations by the High Court

    The Court ruled that in divorce cases based on adultery, impleading the alleged paramour is not optional but necessary and proper. This requirement flows from the principles of natural justice, as allegations of adultery carry serious stigma, and therefore, the alleged participant must be given a right of hearing before any finding is recorded against them.

    The Court held that call detail records (CDRs) and tower location data are neutral business records maintained by telecom providers, and such information can provide corroborative circumstantial evidence in adultery cases. It clarified that ordering disclosure of CDRs and tower data is not a roving or fishing inquiry, but is directly connected to the pleadings. Citing Sharda v. Dharmpal (2003), the Bench reaffirmed that limited incursions into privacy are permissible in matrimonial disputes if necessary to discover the truth.

    “Therefore, the direction to disclose CDRs and tower location data is not a speculative fishing exercise, but one directly tied to the pleadings. Being neutral business records maintained by telecom operators, such data can provide corroborative circumstantial evidence, without trenching upon the substantive content of private communications,”

    the Court observed.

    While recognising informational privacy as a fundamental right under K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, the Court stressed the importance of proportionality. It directed that disclosure of CDRs and tower data must be confined to the specific period pleaded and should be produced in sealed cover with confidentiality safeguards, thereby balancing the right to privacy with the right to a fair trial.

    The Court upheld the direction requiring the husband to produce bank statements, credit card records, UPI transactions, and ESOP details, as these were relevant to assessing maintenance and alimony claims. It further directed disclosure of hotel booking records from 2021–2022, where the husband and R-2 were alleged to have stayed together. However, the Court rejected the wife’s requests for WhatsApp chats, Microsoft Teams logs, and leave records, holding that such demands were speculative and amounted to fishing enquiries.

    Final Directions:

    The Court ordered:

    Case Title:
    X vs Y
    MAT.APP.(F.C.) 251/2025 and CM APPL. 50033/2025

    READ JUDGMENT HERE

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