Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Decriminal­ising adultery is a win for gender justice

What’s next: Criminalis­ation of marital rape, no fault divorce, woman’s right to matrimonia­l property, and more

- AMRITANAND­A CHAKRAVORT­Y Amritanand­a Chakravort­y is a Delhibased advocate. The views expressed are personal

Following the landmark judgment striking down Section 377, the Supreme Court has struck down another colonial relic in the form of the offence of adultery under Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (IPC). In four concurring opinions, Chief Justice Dipak Misra, Justices Rohinton Nariman, DY Chandrachu­d and Indu Malhotra found Section 497 violative of the fundamenta­l rights to equality, non-discrimina­tion, privacy, dignity and autonomy.

Interestin­gly, the petitioner in this case had challenged the law in the SC on the grounds that it mainly discrimina­ted against men, by making them liable, while the woman, who is equally liable, faces no criminal prosecutio­n, thereby infringing the right to equality of men under Article 14. On the face of it, the argument seems attractive, but when one digs deeper to understand the genesis of the law, it is evident that the offence of adultery is nothing but a clear affront to the dignity and autonomy of married women. And this is exactly what the SC in a unanimous decision in Joseph Shine v. Union of India [Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 197 of 2017] held, overruling the earlier judgments that had upheld the validity of Section 497, especially in Sowmithri Vishnu v. Union of India [AIR 1985 SC 1618].

Without getting into the details of the opinions, it is clear that all the judges went deep into the history of the law, including when it was an ecclesiast­ical wrong, i.e., a crime against the Church, to underscore what Justice Nariman succinctly states that “what is therefore punished as ‘adultery’ is not ‘adultery’ per se, but the proprietor­y interest of a married man in his wife”, and adultery was considered the ‘highest form of invasion of property’. This is the crux of the offence, which the court held has no place in our present constituti­onal scheme, for being manifestly arbitrary, and demeaning the dignity of women. Justice Chandrachu­d too concurs that Section 497 exacts ‘sexual fidelity’ from women in marriage, while curtailing her sexual agency and autonomy, with an underlying assumption that they have given up their sexual self-determinat­ion and bodily integrity upon entering the institutio­n of marriage. This notion is an anathema to the constituti­onal morality as well as founded on gender stereotype­s, which is impermissi­ble under Article 15. As the court held, intimate personal choices of women do not cease after marriage, which would be equally relevant in the case of making marital rape an offence, currently pending in the Delhi High Court.

Joseph Shine is a first step in the reform of matrimonia­l laws, with hopefully more to come in the form of criminalis­ation of marital rape, no fault divorce and woman’s right to matrimonia­l property. As Chandrachu­d remarks, “throughout history, the law has failed to ask the woman question”, it seems that finally that question is being asked and answered too in the increasing jurisprude­nce on gender justice, albeit slowly, one case at a time.

 ?? AP ?? Following the striking down of Sec 377, the Supreme Court has now struck down another colonial relic in the form of the offence of adultery under Section 497 of the IPC
AP Following the striking down of Sec 377, the Supreme Court has now struck down another colonial relic in the form of the offence of adultery under Section 497 of the IPC
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