Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Recent SC verdicts needed, but they went too far: Jaitley

ANALYSING LAW Judges get ‘carried away and want to be part of history’ while writing epochal verdicts, says finance minister

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The path-breaking judgments of the Supreme Court on gay sex, adultery and the entry of women of all ages into Sabarimala were needed, and, in some cases, struck down or changed aspects of law that needed to be struck down or changed. At the same time, however, they are problemati­c because they ventured beyond the points of law being questioned, and linked these to larger constituti­onal rights.

That was the opinion of India’s finance minister, Arun Jaitley, who is also one of India’s best known legal minds and who said he had spent time studying all the judgments in detail. The minister was speaking at the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit on Saturday.

“While writing these historical judgments ,” the judges “get carried away and want to be part of history,” he said. “You go a step further.” For instance, explained Jaitley, referring to the gay sex case where the Supreme Court’s judgment made individual sexual activity a part of free speech (a fundamenta­l right). The court ruled in September that gay sex among consenting adults was not an offence, reading down British-era section 377 of the penal code that penalises people for their sexual orientatio­n. “Sexual activity as a part of free speech is excessive. The consequenc­es may not be on decriminal­isation. But free speech is an entirely different gambit. Free speech can be restrained on grounds of security, sovereignt­y and public order. And mind you, because there was a tendency to create new fundamenta­l rights every day ..., and say it’s free speech , then do you restrain any form of sexual activity, homosexual or bisexual, in a school, hostel, prison or army frontier – unless in a subsequent view it is clarified this fourth observatio­n that was not necessary for deciding the case. I think it requires further debate.”

In the case of adultery, too, the finance minister said the court ventured into areas best left alone.

He clarified that the quashing of the adultery law was in order and said it was “very badly worded”.

The old law said that a man could be tried under the adultery law for having a relationsh­ip with the wife of another man, without the permission of the latter.

But the court didn’t stop at scrapping this. “The court went a step further, when it said adultery was like other matrimonia­l offences, these are personal wrongs and not public wrongs therefore outside the criminal law. Now will it cover bigamy and polygamy also? Will it cover cruelty? Will it cover dowry offences – if this was the case, the judgment would be wholly anti women,” said Jaitley.

The judgment could, he observed, change the Indian family system into a western family system where the fragility of marriages may increase. And because India does not have the kind of social security systems the West has, and because it doesn’t have the kind of divorce settlement­s the West has, this judgment could actually be anti-women and even lead to their “destitutio­n,” Jaitley said.

Not everyone agreed. Senior advocate Sanjay Hedge said: “ The minister seems to harkening back to the glorious past and to values which are these days called ‘sanskari’. It reflects a patriarcha­l mindset which makes a marriage wholly dependent on ‘purity of women.’ Constituti­onal morality has outpaced such thinking and the judgment is much more reflective of the times India actually lives in.”

The court’s verdict on the entry of women of all ages into Sabarimala came in for special criticism from Jaitley who said the court has been selective in targeting one practice.

“If you want to take a progressiv­e step under article 14 and 21, it will apply uniformly against all religions. It cannot happen that you select a practice and apply it because that will have many social consequenc­es in a pluralisti­c society like India,” Jaitley said. For instance, it could mean polygamy, oral divorce, or other religions where women are not allowed entry into places of worship are no longer allowed, the minister added. “If you want to be progressiv­e and bold, you can’t be selectivel­y so,” Jaitley said. “If you are willing to proclaim you must be willing to strike -- not only willing to strike at one target but willing to uniformly strike.”

Jailtely attacked the 1952 Bombay HCjudgment of Narasu Appa, which he described as one of the worst judgments ever delivered in India.

He explained that this judgment holds that all laws and tenets, including personal and religious ones, must be tested on the touchstone of fundamenta­l rights.

According to Jaitley, the views expressed by MC Chagla and PB Gajendraga­dkar, whom he described as two legendary judges, held that this touchstone should not apply to religious practices and personal laws. “We have to make up our mind,” he said.

 ??  ?? ■Finance minister Arun Jaitley speaking on Day 2 of the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit in New Delhi on Saturday. SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO
■Finance minister Arun Jaitley speaking on Day 2 of the 16th Hindustan Times Leadership Summit in New Delhi on Saturday. SANCHIT KHANNA/HT PHOTO

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