A married daughter cannot be denied a fair price shop (ration shop) dependant allotment, or a similar dependant-quota benefit, only because she is married. What decides eligibility is genuine dependency, local residence and need, not marital status. The Supreme Court in Kulsum Nisha v. State of U.P. (2026 INSC 617) struck down a rule that excluded married daughters as arbitrary and unconstitutional.
If your application for a dependant-quota or welfare allotment was rejected with the line “married daughters are not eligible,” that rejection now stands on weak ground. This guide tells you who it helps, what to argue, and how to challenge such a refusal.
The Court looked at what the scheme was actually for, and separated the factors that decide eligibility from the factor that does not.
| Factor | Does it matter? |
|---|---|
| Genuine dependency on the family | Yes - this is the core test |
| Local residence / belonging to the area | Yes - where the scheme requires it |
| Financial need and the object of the scheme | Yes |
| Whether the daughter is married | No - marriage alone cannot disqualify |
| Whether she lives with her husband | No - residence and dependency are judged on facts, not status |
The rule: a scheme can ask for dependency, residence and need. It cannot use marriage as an automatic cut-off when marriage has no link to those tests.
In Kulsum Nisha v. State of U.P. (2026 INSC 617), decided on 2 June 2026 by Justice Pamidighantam Sri Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe, the Court examined a fair price shop dependant quota scheme that excluded married daughters from the definition of “family.”
The Court held, in its own words:
The exclusion of married daughters from the definition of “family” fails the test of reasonable classification and is manifestly arbitrary. The distinction lacks any intelligible differentia having a rational nexus with the object of the scheme.
The Court found this exclusion violated Article 14 (equality before law) and Article 15(1) (no discrimination on the ground of sex). Marital status, it reasoned, has no rational connection to dependency, financial need or residence, which are the real governing criteria of the scheme. It directed that the scheme provisions be read to include married daughters who satisfy the eligibility conditions, and ordered the appellant's allotment to be issued within four weeks.
If you have been refused, or expect to be, follow these steps in order. Move up the ladder only if the lower step fails.
For a deeper walkthrough of using information law to unlock a stuck benefit, see The RTI Playbook.
This ruling is powerful, but read it honestly. The case itself was about a fair price shop dependant quota in Uttar Pradesh, and the Court read married daughters into that scheme.
What carries across is the constitutional principle, not automatic entry into every scheme. The principle: a welfare or dependant-quota rule that excludes a woman only because she is married, where marriage has no rational link to the scheme's purpose, is arbitrary and challengeable under Articles 14 and 15(1).
Each scheme still has its own conditions. If a scheme genuinely turns on dependency, residence or income, you must still meet those. What you can now fight is the blanket “married daughter, therefore disqualified” line. This judgment does not hand every married daughter every benefit. It removes an unfair filter, so your real eligibility is judged on merit.
No. It means she cannot be refused only for being married. She still has to meet the real tests - dependency, local residence and the scheme's other conditions. The ruling removes the marriage barrier; it does not waive genuine eligibility.
Treat that as a marital-status exclusion that Kulsum Nisha v. State of U.P. (2026 INSC 617) has called arbitrary. File a written representation citing the case, attach proof of dependency and residence, and escalate to the grievance authority or a High Court writ if the department refuses to budge.
The decided case was a fair price shop scheme in U.P. But the reasoning rests on the Constitution, so the same logic applies to similar dependant-quota or welfare schemes elsewhere that exclude married daughters without any rational reason. You still argue scheme by scheme.
Yes. Dependency and need are valid tests. The Court did not strike those down. It struck down using marriage as a stand-in for dependency. So expect to prove you genuinely depend on or reside with the household.
Quote the holding: the exclusion of married daughters “fails the test of reasonable classification and is manifestly arbitrary” and “lacks any intelligible differentia having a rational nexus with the object of the scheme” (Kulsum Nisha v. State of U.P., 2026 INSC 617).
After exhausting the departmental representation and grievance route, file a writ petition under Article 226 before your High Court. Because the dispute is now about Articles 14 and 15(1), the High Court is the right forum and Kulsum Nisha is directly on point.
Full judgment: https://indiankanoon.org/doc/91672902/
This guide explains the law in plain terms and is not a substitute for advice on your specific case. Where figures, dates or scheme clauses matter, confirm them against the official scheme notification and the judgment itself.