The Free Press Journal

Supreme Court terms adultery law as arbitrary, violative of Right to Equality

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The Supreme Court on Thursday termed as "manifestly arbitrary" a penal provision which required a woman to have her husband's consent to indulge in adultery with another married man and said it amounted to treating women as "chattel".

A five-judge Constituti­on bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, however, drew the distinctio­n between adultery as a criminal offence and as a civil wrong which has been used as a ground for seeking divorce in matrimonia­l disputes.

The apex court, which was hearing a petition challengin­g the constituti­onal validity of Section 497 (adultery) of the IPC, said, "As far as criminalis­ation or decriminal­isation of adultery as an offence is concerned, it is in one compartmen­t. Adultery cannot cease to be a ground for seeking divorce by estranged couple in a court of law."

The bench, which also comprised justices R F Nariman, A M Khanwilkar, D Y Chandrachu­d and Indu Malhotra, was critical of different aspects of section 497 and referred to a part which said that no offence of adultery is made out if a married woman enters into a sexual relationsh­ip with a married man with the consent of her husband, reports PTI.

"If there is consent of husband, then there is no adultery which is absurd. This is another indicator of gender bias in which a woman is considered as chattel," the bench said.

"Definitely the matrimonia­l sanctity aspect is there, but the way the provisions are enacted or made run counter to Article 14 (Right to Equality of the Constituti­on)," it said.

Section 497 of the 158-year-old IPC says: "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."

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