Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Sexual act with wife is not rape, even if forced: Chhattisga­rh HC

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

SAYS IPC MAKES IT CLEAR THAT SEX BETWEEN A MAN AND HIS WIFE, AS LONG AS THE LATTER IS NOT UNDER 18, IS NOT RAPE

RAIPUR: The Chhattisga­rh high court has discharged a 37-yearold man from the charge of marital rape, saying that sex with a legally wedded wife is not rape under the Indian Penal Code (IPC).

The court, however, retained the charges against him under section 377 of the IPC for “unnatural sex”.

The order by Justice NK Chandravan­shi was issued on August 23 in a revision petition filed by the husband and his family on the charges framed against the man in the trial court, and was made public on Wednesday.

The woman -- the two were married in 2017 -- lodged a complaint of dowry harassment and rape against the man. She also accused her parentsin-law of dowry harassment.

The police, after a primary investigat­ion submitted a charge sheet under section 498-A (dowry harassment), 377 (unnatural sex), 376 (rape), and 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) against the three accused.

After hearing counsel for both parties, a trial court framed charges against the applicants under the sections, the order said.

Subsequent­ly, the three accused filed a petition with the high court seeking that the order of the trial court be set aside.

The HC in its order on August 23 discharged the husband from rape charges.

“Counsel for the applicants submits that the complainan­t and the applicant No. 1 are legally wedded wife and husband, therefore, none of the ingredient­s to constitute the offence punishable under Sections 376 and 377 of the IPC are spelt out against him, because, in India, marital rape is not recognized and the same is not an offence in view of Exception II of Section 375 of the IPC,” the judge said in his order.

The court said that the IPC makes it clear that sex between a man and his wife, as long as the latter is not under 18, is not rape.

“In this case, complainan­t is legally weeded wife of applicant No. 1, therefore, sexual intercours­e or any sexual act with her by the husband would not constitute an offence of rape, even if it was by force or against her wish. Therefore, charge under Section 376 of the IPC framed against the applicant husband is erroneous and illegal. Hence, he is entitled to be discharged from the charge under Section 376 of the IPC”, the order stated.

A 2013 report submitted by the Justice JS Verma Committee, which was set up after the December 2012 Delhi gang rape, recommende­d the removal of the marital rape immunity from the IPC but the statute is yet to be amended.

In the past, Indian courts have taken divergent and contradict­ory views in such cases.

In July 2019, the Delhi high court dismissed a petition urging it to direct the Centre to declare marital rape a ground for divorce. But earlier this

month, the Kerala high court backed marital rape as a valid ground for divorce. A few days later, a sessions court in Maharashtr­a gave pre-arrest bail to a man while concluding that forcible sex with his wife was not an “illegal thing” though she said it left her paralysed. In 2017, the Supreme Court declared that “sexual intercours­e with a girl below 18 years of age is rape regardless of whether she is married or not”. However, the top court refused to delve into the question of marital rape in this judgment.

On the woman’s allegation of her husband forced her into an unnatural sex act, the court upheld imposition of section 377 of IPC. The court also upheld the dowry harassment charge framed under section 498-A of the IPC saying the cruelty of the accused has been affirmed through several witnesses.

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