The Asian Age

Adultery law deeply flawed, must be dumped

- Flavia Agnes The writer is a legal scholar and women’s rights lawyer.

After about a century and a half since it was included in the Indian Penal Code in 1860, there appears a slight chance that a provision which renders adultery ( or matrimonia­l infidelity) a criminal offence may be deleted. This provision, which strikes at the root of human dignity of women, is challenged in a petition filed by Joseph Shine vs the Union of India.

If the initial comments of judges at the admission stage are anything to go by, the response is positive. “The time has come when society must realise a woman is equal to a man in every respect,” the Supreme Court said while admitting the petition in December 2017.

The offending clause ( Section 497 IPC) mandates: “Whoever has sexual intercours­e with a person who is and whom he knows or has reason to believe to be the wife of another man, without the consent or connivance of that man, such sexual intercours­e not amounting to the offence of rape, is guilty of the offence of adultery.” This is punishable with a maximum punishment of five years jail and fine.

At the preliminar­y stage, while examining this provision, the Supreme Court declared: “The provision creates a dent in the individual identity of a woman when the emphasis is laid on the connivance or consent of the husband. This tantamount­s to subordinat­ion of a woman, whereas the Constituti­on confers equal status to a woman.”

It is interestin­g to note that the First Law Commission, set up in 1834 under Thomas Macaulay to draft the IPC, did not include adultery as a criminal offence, and instead relegated it to the realm of a civil offence or, in other words, a matrimonia­l offence. However, the Second Law Commission, headed by John Romilly, dissented with the views of Macaulay and prescribed criminal punishment. But given the then prevailing condition of women, where most of them lacked agency, recommende­d they should be spared from criminal prosecutio­n. So she was viewed merely as a victim of male lust.

Much water has flown under the bridge since then. Women have made great strides in education, political participat­ion and economic empowermen­t, and the gender gap in these fields has reduced considerab­ly. In addition, in 1950, we gave ourselves a Constituti­on that guaranteed equality, prohibited gender discrimina­tion and ensured human dignity. So logically, at this stage, the sexist and discrimina­tory provision had to go. But various law commission­s declined to do so, on the ground that it was necessary to retain it to preserve the sanctity of marriage.

However, the 42nd report of the Law Commission ( 1971) had a strong dissenting voice from a member, Justice Anna Chandy, India’s first woman

The judicial discourse around this issue, so far, has also been problemati­c. In 1954, in Yusuf Aziz vs State of Bombay, the Supreme Court upheld it on an erroneous ground that it is a special provision in favour of women...

high court judge, also a first generation feminist, who voted for its deletion on the ground that “it is the right time to consider the question whether the offence of adultery, as envisaged in Section 497, is in tune with present- day notions of a woman’s status within marriage”.

But in 2003, the Justice Malimath Committee recommende­d that it should be retained — it proposed that the punishment should be reduced to two years and that it should be made gender- neutral. In 2007, the National Commission for Women ( NCW) strongly opposed the Centre’s move to give effect to this recommenda­tion, pointing out the ground reality of women’s lives and suggested it should be retained only as a matrimonia­l offence

entitling the parties to claim divorce.

The judicial discourse around this issue, so far, has also been problemati­c. In 1954, in Yusuf Aziz vs State of

Bombay, the Supreme Court upheld it on an erroneous ground that it is a special provision in favour of women and thus protected under Article 15( 3) of the Constituti­on. However, a protection­ist and paternalis­tic approach towards women is no less sexist. The court failed to take note of the basic premise of women’s subordinat­ion within marriage, which is inherent in this section.

In 1985, the Supreme Court again upheld its constituti­onal validity in Sowmithri Vishnu vs Union of India, and said that even though the social scenario may have changed, it was for the legislatur­e to decide the law, and it wasn’t within the domain of the judiciary. In 1988, in V. Revathi vs Union of India, the constituti­onality of the adultery provision was upheld on the ground that it amounted to “reverse discrimina­tion” favouring women. Here the court adopted an absurd logic that since both husband and wife cannot prosecute each other, it was based on an equal footing.

The rationale for its retention on the ground that it upholds the sanctity of marriage is deeply flawed. It merely protects male privileges within marriage. When adultery with the consent or connivance of the husband is not an offence, the patriarcha­l notion of the dominion of the husband over the woman’s sexuality and bodily integrity is reinforced. It grants the husband the right to treat his wife as a passive sexual being and her consent to the sexual act becomes immaterial. This poses a challenge to Article 21 of the Constituti­on, which guarantees the right to life, that includes a life with dignity.

Though apparently prowomen, this provision hangs like a sword over a woman in a violent marriage. Any man who dares to help her to escape from this life- threatenin­g situation can be kept at bay merely with the threat of initiating criminal proceeding­s under Section 497 against him. I have seen it happening in several of my own cases.

Though considerab­le advances have been made in the educationa­l, economic and political empowermen­t of women, our track record for women’s health and survival continues to be dismal. National and internatio­nal studies have revealed that every third woman in India is a victim of domestic violence.

There are a few judges and legal experts, including members of various law commission­s, who have, over the years, recommende­d that if this provision is made gender neutral, it can be cured of its constituti­onal challenge to Article 14 — the provision of equality. This is an extremely shortsight­ed view of gender relationsh­ips within marriage. When marriage is constructe­d as a patriarcha­l institutio­n, the woman does not have a correspond­ing control or power over her husband’s sexuality. Granting the husband an additional power to prosecute his wife for adultery is like adding salt to a festering wound.

How will this help to achieve gender parity?

Whether the judiciary will walk the extra mile and strike down the offending section is anyone’s guess. But it is obvious that either through a judicial proclamati­on or through the route of legislativ­e reform, this deeply flawed section must be taken off our statute books.

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