On Mon, Jun 1, 2009 at 7:56 PM, Dr. John Marshall Johnson < [email protected]> wrote:
> > > Just a guess ! Most likely, 1% of the 90% use the Act, whereas 100% of the > 10% do. I think that's about right. > > > > In this case, one of them tried that, it looked like a compromise, but then > when he met her he was arrested, but managed bail after a week. > Now, both are on the run and currrently, nobody > (except his family members, maybe) don't know where they are. > It looks dramatic, a filmy story. Quite sad ! > Sad, but by no means filmy. Happens all the time in real life. One of the first cases I ever did was for a janitor at AIIMS (where my parents work) whose brother had just had a leg paralysed in an industrial accident. I was representing his brother in the compensation case. In the meanwhile his wife filed a cruelty complaint. As a 23-year old just registered at the bar it was very difficult for me to tell him to abscond. I did, He did not get arrested. Paid her what she wanted, got the divorce. The leg isn't paralysed anymore. He's back to work again. That is more filmy, no?
