Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Too early to give prenups a legal backing, says govt

- Moushumi Das Gupta moushumi.gupta@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: THE CONTRACT SPELLS OUT DETAILS OF HOW THE PROPERTY WILL BE DIVIDED, GUARDIANSH­IP RIGHTS AND OTHERS IN CASE OF A DIVORCE

Ruling out any immediate change in law to recognise prenuptial agreement, the government has taken a view that it’s an “urban concept” and “too early” to give it a legal backing.

The government’s position emerged from a stakeholde­rs’ meeting on Monday called by the Union women and child developmen­t ministry to deliberate on whether such agreement should have a legal standing. Officials who attended the meeting said the law ministry’s representa­tives also were not in favour of legalising prenup agreements.

“It is too early to reach a conclusion on this matter. One of the suggestion­s given was to amend the Special Marriage Act to allow prenuptial agreements to be registered if a couple wants their rights to be pre-determined before marriage. We will have to assess its feasibilit­y,” said WCD secretary Rakesh Srivastava.

Prenuptial agreement is common in western countries, where couples enter into a contract before marriage. The contract spells out details of how the property will be divided, guardiansh­ip rights etc. in case of divorce. Gender right activists see such agreements as beneficial to women as it protects their right and cuts down litigation in case of dissolutio­n of marriage.

The general view in the meeting, Srivastava said, was that such agreements are an urban concept. “Many of the stakeholde­rs expressed apprehensi­on that it might result in women getting deprived of her other rights such as Stree Dhan,” he added.

The WCD ministry has decided to set up a group to study the Goa law, which recognizes pre-nuptial agreement, and see its feasibilit­y. Goa is the only state in India, which provides for such an agreement in its family law but it’s hardly used, said a senior WCD ministry official who did not want to be named

Besides senior officials from WCD and law ministry, the meeting was attended by advocates Prashant Mehndiratt­a and Anu Narula, activist Flavia Agnes and representa­tives from Un-Women and National Law University.

The suggestion to amend the Special Marriage Act came from Delhi high court advocate Prashant Mehndiratt­a, who said that people who want their rights to be pre-determined before marriage, should be given a choice.

“Having such an agreement helps in cutting short litigation. But there has to be adequate safeguards to ensure that a woman is not deprived of her natural rights under personal laws,” he said.

Feminist scholar and women activist Flavia Agnes said it’s premature to talk of pre-nuptial agreements without amending personal law that does not treat marriage as a contract. “How do you contract for a marriage under the Hindu Marriage Act? Wherever there is a statute, it can’t be undermined by a contract, it can only be improved,” she said.

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