RR1
RR1
IN THE MATTER OF
UNION OF INDIA....................................................APPELLANT
Versus
TABLE OF CONTENT....................................................................................................................
INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS.......................................................................................................
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES.............................................................................................................
CASES CITED
BOOKS REFERRED
STATUTES
ARTICLES AND LEGAL JOURNALS
TREATIES AND CONVENTIONS
LEGAL DATABASE
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION.................................................................................................
STATEMENT OF FACTS...............................................................................................................
STATEMENT OF ISSUES..............................................................................................................
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS......................................................................................................
ARGUMENTS ADVANCED..........................................................................................................
PRAYER...........................................................................................................................................
INDEX OF ABBREVIATIONS
& And
AIR All India Reporter
All. Allahabad High Court
Art. Article
Bom. Bombay High Court
Anr. Another
CAL Calcutta High Court
CBI Central Bureau of Investigation
Cr.P.C. Code of Criminal Procedure
Cri. L. J. / Cr. L. Criminal Law Journal
J.
Delhi Law Review
DLR
Edition
Ed.
Honorable
HON’BLE
That Is
i.e.
Indian Penal Code
I.P.C.
Ibidem
ibid.
Idem
id.
Indian Law Reports
ILR
Others
Ors.
Rajasthan
RAJ
Supreme Court
SC
Supreme Court Cases
SCC
Supreme Court Journal
SCJ
Supreme Court Reporter
SCR
Supplementary
SUPP.
Universal Declaration on Human Rights
UDHR
Union of India
UOI
Versus
V.
Volume
Vol.
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
CASES CITED
Abdul Rehman v. Pinto, AIR 1951 Hyd. 11.
Anuj Garg v. Hotel Association of India, AIR 2008 SC 663.
Ashok Kumar Sahu v. UOI, (2006) 6 SCC 704.
Ashutosh Gupta v. State of Rajasthan, (2002) 4 SCC 34: AIR 2002 SC 1533.
Avtar Singh Sekhon v. UOI, AIR 1980 SC 2041.
Bijoe Emmanuel v. State of Kerala, (1986) 3 SCC 615: AIR 1987 SC 748.
CBI and Ors. v. Keshub Mahindra, (1996) 6 SCC 129.
Chandra Kanta v. Sheik Habib, AIR 1975 SC 1500: (1975) 1 SCC 674.
Charu Khurana and others v. Union of India and others, (2015) 1 SCC 192.
Chiranjit Lal v. Union of India, AIR 1981 SC 41.
Col. Avtar Singh Sekhon v.Union of India, AIR 1980 SC 2041.
Common Cause, a Registerd Society v. UOI, AIR 1999 SC 2979.
Gobind v. State of Madhya Pradesh, 1975 AIR 1378: 1975 SCR (3) 946.
Gopalan v. State of Madras, AIR 1950 SC 2746: 1950 SCR 88.
Green View Tea & Industries v. Collector, Golaghat and Another, (2002) 1 SCC 109.
Gurdeep Singh v. State of Punjab, (2005) 10 SCC.
Harakchand v. UOI, AIR 1970 SC 1453: (1969) 2 SCC 166.
Hinds v. R, (1976) 1 All ER 355.
Hiral P Harsora v. Kusum Narottamdas Harsora, (2016) 10 SCC 165 : AIR 2016 SC
4774 : 2016 (9) SCJ 204.
Hoystead v. Commr. of taxation, (1925) AC 155, (1925) All ER 56, (1926) 42 TLR 207, 67
ER 313.
Indira Sawhney v. UOI, (1992) SUPP. 3 SCC 217.
J Srinivas Raju v. State of Orissa, 113 (2012) Cut LT 13 (22) (Ori).
Jagjit Singh v. State, AIR 1954 Hyd. 28.
James Sibongo v. Lister Lutombi Chaka and Another, CASE NO: SA 77/2014.
John Vallamattom v. UOI, Writ Petition (Civil) 242 of 1997.
Joseph Shine v.UOI, Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 194 of 2017.
Justice K. S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, (2017) 10 SCC 1.
Kameshwar Pd. v. State of Bihar, AIR 1962 SC 1166: 1962 SUPP (3) SCR 369.
Kesav Nanda Bharati v. State of Kerala, (1973) 4 SCC 225.
Kharak Singh v. State of U.P., 1963 AIR 1295: 1964 SCR (1) 332.
Khoday Distilleries Ltd. And Another v. Registrar General, Supreme Court of India,
(1996) 3 SCC 114.
Kihota Hollohon v. Zachilhu & Ors., AIR 1993 SC 412: 1992 SUPP. (2) SCC 651.
Laxmi Khandsari v. State of U.P., AIR 1981 SC 873, 891: (1981) 2 SCC 600.
Lily Thomas v. Union of India, AIR 2000 SC 1650.
M. G. Badappanabar v. State of Karnataka, (2000) SUPP. 5 SCR 302.
M. Nagaraj v. UOI, (2006) 8 SCC 212.
M/S Northern India Caterers (India) Ltd. v. Lt. Governor of Delhi, (1980) 2 SCC 167.
Malak Singh v. State of Punjab, AIR 1981 SC 760: (1981) 1 SCC 420.
Manganese Ore (India) Ltd. v. The Regional Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax,
Jabalpur, (1976) 4 SCC 124.
Mohd. Aslam v. Union of India & Others, (1996) 2 SCC 749.
Motor General Traders v. State of A.P., AIR 1984 SC 121.
Nar Singh Pal v. UOI, (2000) 3 SCC 589,594: AIR 2000 SC 1401.
National Human Rights Commission v. State of Arunachal Pradesh, AIR 1996 SC 1234.
National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India and others, (2014) 5 SCC 438.
Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India, [WP (CRL.) No. 76/2016].
Navtej Singh Johar & Ors. v. Union of India thr. Secretary Ministry of Law and Justice, W.
P. (Crl.) No. 76 of 2016 D. No. 14961/201.
Neera Mathur v. L.I.C, 1992 AIR 392: 1991 SCR Supp. (2) 146.
Northern India Caterers v. Lt. Governor of Delhi, AIR 1980 SC 674: (1980) 2 SCC 167.
Nupur Talwar v. C.B.I., AIR 2012 SC 1921.
Pawan Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh, (2017) 7 SCC 780.
Payal Sharma v. Supdt, Nari Niketan kalindri vihar, agra, AIR 2001 All 254.
People’s Union for Civil Liberties v. Union of India, (1997) 1 SCC 301.
Pn Eswara Iyer v. Registrar, Supreme Court of India, AIR 1980 SC
808. 54. R v. R., (1991) 4 All ER 481.
R. K. Garg v. Union of India, AIR 1981 SC 2138: (1981) 4 SCC 675.
R. Rajagopal v. State of T.N., 1995 AIR 265: (1994) SCC 6 632.
R.D. Sugar v. V. Nagary, AIR 1976 SC 2183.
R.M.D.C. v. UOI, AIR 1957 SC 628.
Rajasthan State Board Transport Corporation v. BalMukund Bairwa, (2) (2009) 4 SCC
229: (2009) 2 JT 423.
Roop Chand Adlakha v. Delhi Development Authority, (1989) SUPP 1 SCC 116: AIR 1989
SC 307.
Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra, JT (2002) 3 SC 609: (2002) 4 SCC 388.
Sanaboina Satyanarayan v. Govt. of A. P, (2003) 10 SCC 78.
Sewpujanrai v. Customs Collector, AIR 1958 SC 845: 1959 SCR 821.
Shafin Jahan v. Asokan K. M. & Ors, 2018 SCC: 2018 SC 343.
Shaukat Hussain Guru v. State, (2008) 6 SCC: AIR 2008 SC 2419.
Shayara Bano v. Union of India, 2017 SCC 963.
Sidram S. Patil and others v. Gurunath Shivappa Patil and others, (2005) 2 SCC 358.
Sow Chandra Kanta v. Sk. Habib, (1975) 1 SCC 674, 1975 SCC (Cri) 305, (1975) 3 SCR 933).
State of M.P. v. Ranojirao Shinde, AIR 1968 SC 1053: (1968) 3 SCR 489.
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Madanlal, (2015) 7 SCC 681.
State of Maharashtra v. Bharat Shanti Lal Shah, (2008) 13 SCC 5.
Sumer v. State of Uttar Pradesh, (2005) Cri. LJ 540.
Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration, (1978) 4 SCC 494.
Sunil Kumar v. State of J & K and Another, 14 Dec., 2018.
Sushil Kumar v. Union of India, AIR 2005 SC 3100.
Textile Labour Association v. Official Liquidator, AIR 2004 SC 3272.
Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 476 U.S. 747 (1986).
Union Carbide Corp. v. Union of India, 1990 AIR 273: 1989 SCC.
Union of India & Another v. Raghubir Singh (Dead) By L.R.S., (1989) 2 SCC 754.
Unni Krishnan, J.P. v. State of A. P., (1993) 1 SCC 645, 66.
UOI v. International Trading Corporation, AIR 2003 SC 3983.
V. M. Elangovan v. Inspector, (2014) 5 SCC 859.
Varinder Singh@ RAJA v. State of Punjab and Anr. AIR 2014 SC 1892.
W. Kalyani v. State Thro’ Inspector of Police and Another, (2012) 1 SCC 358.
Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay, AIR 1951 Bom. 470.
Zahira v. State of Gujarat, (2004) 5 SCALE 397.
BOOKS REFERRED
1. Batuk Lal, the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Central Law Agency, 2017).
2. Dr. J.N. Pandey, Dr. Surendra Sahai Srivastava (ed.), Constitutional Law of India (Central Law
Agency, 54th Edition, 2016).
3. Dr. Narendra Kumar, Constitutional Law of India (Allahabad Law Agency, 9th Edition, Re.
2016).
4. K.D. Gaur, Textbook on I.P.C. (Universal Law Publications, 6th Edition, 2016).
5. M.P. Jain, Indian Constitutional Law (Lexis Nexis, 8th Edition, 2018).
6. Mulla, the Code of Civil Procedure (Lexis Nexis, 19th Edition, 2017).
7. P.S.A. Pillai, Dr. K. I. Vibhute, Criminal Law (Lexis Nexis, 12th Edition, Re. 2016).
8. Paras Diwan & P. Diwan, Modern Hindu law, (Allahabad law agency, 23rd edition, Re. 2018).
9. Ratanlal & Dhirajlal, I.P.C. ( L e x i s N e x i s , Nagpur, 30 th Ed., 2008).
10. Ratanlal & Dhirajlal, the Code of Criminal Procedure (Lexis Nexis, 22nd Edition, 2017).
11. S.N. Mishra, the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Central Law Publications, 20 th
Edition, 2016).
12. Surya Narayan Mishra, Shriniwas Gupta (ed.), I.P.C. (Central Law Agency, Allahabad, 20th Edi,
2016).
LEGAL DATABASE
Manupatra.
SCC Online.
STATEMENT OF JURISDICTION
The appellant in the present case has approached the hon’ble Supreme Court of India to initiate
the present appeal under article 137 of the Constitution of India. The Respondent most humbly
and respectfully submits to the jurisdiction of the hon’ble Supreme Court in the present matter.
4. WHETHER SECTION 497, I.P.C. READ WITH SECTION 198 (2) Cr.P.C. IS
CONSTITUTIONAL?
SUMMARY OF ARGUMENTS
1
Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra, JT (2002) 3 SC 609: (2002) 4 SCC 388.
ISSUE 3. WHETHER THE EXEMPTION GRANTED TO MARRIED WOMEN UNDER
SECTION 497, I.P.C. VIOLATES FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT GUARANTEED UNDER
THE CONSTITUTION?
It is humbly submitted before this Hon’ble Court that the said provision of Section 497, I.P.C. is
violative of the fundamental rights guaranteed by the Constitution of India. The exemption
granted to women is based on the notion of women being the ‘victim’ and men the ‘seducer’
which is no longer relevant or applicable in the contemporary societal aspect. Also, the provision
by completely exempting women from punishment under adultery as an abettor discriminates
against men as it puts both men and women under similar circumstances and fault on different
pedestals. The Section is in no way protected under Article 15 (3) of the Constitution of India
which does not provides for exemption of women from criminal liability on the baseless
presumption of weak status.
ISSUE 4. WHETHER SECTION 497, I.P.C. READ WITH SECTION 198 (2) Cr.P.C. IS
CONSTITUTIONAL?
It is humbly submitted before this Hon’ble Court that the Section 497, I.P.C. along with Section
198 (2), Cr.P.C. shall be held unconstitutional as they are in violation of Article 14, 15 and 21 of
the Constitution of India. The Section is manifestly arbitrary as it treats women as property of
husband and creates unreasonable categorization between genders. The law intrudes in the
privacy of the individual and hurts the dignity of women by allowing her husband to control her
sexual activities. Also, there can’t be any segregation of valid provision from given provisions as
it would then lead to a residue having no practical application. Hence, it needs to be annulled as
a whole owing to doctrine of severability, which in this case is that if law be made gender
neutral it would no longer have any efficacy.
ARGUMENTS ADVANCED
Furthermore, it has been held that the power of review can be exercised for correction of a
mistake and not to substitute view. It cannot be treated as an appeal in disguise. 5 Filing of review
petitions in casual and irresponsible manner is an abuse of the process of the Court. Such
2
M. P. Jain, Indian Constitutional Law, 293 (lexis Nexis, 8th Edition, 2018).
3
Gurdeep Singh v. State of Punjab, (2005) 10 SCC 468-470; Shaukat Husain Guru v. State, (2008) 6 SCC 776, at P.
779: AIR 2008 SC 2419.
4
Union Carbide Corp. v. Union of India etc , 1990 AIR 273: 1989 SCC (2540), CBI and Ors .v. Keshub Mahindra,
(1996) 6 SCC 129.
5
Lily Thomas v. Union of India, AIR 2000 SC 1650.
practice is deprecated by the Court.6 It may evoke exemplary costs.7 It can’t be exercised merely
because there is a possibility of taking a different view.8
However, in the present case no such strong grounds exist for entertaining the curative petition
filed by the petitioner. Thus, the court has rightly struck down 158 year old adultery law and
observed that the husband is not the master of wife.
The intention of the constitutional bench in Rupa Hurra’s,12 case was that the curative petition
will be filed in only exceptional cases,13 however, in practice it is just opposite. Since its
evolvement in the year 2002, many litigants across the country have filed number of curative
petitions, So far only a handful of curative petitions have been able to make out a case within the
parameters of Rupa Hurra case. Litigants, irrespective of the fact that whether their case actually
fulfils the prerequisites of curative petition or not, they file a curative petition with a hope that
the Supreme Court will adjudicate and pronounce favorable judgment.
6
Zahira v. State of Gujarat, (2004) 5 SCALE 397.
7
Nupur Talwar v. C.B.I., AIR 2012 SC 1921.
8
Ibid.
9
Dhruv Tiwari & Anand Vardhan Narayan, “Recolouring The Colored Walls of Constitution: A Futile Judicial
Exercise of Creating The Curative Petition “, IJLPP2.2E.
10
Ibid.
11
Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra, JT (2002) 3 SC 609: (2002) 4 SCC 388.
12
Ibid.
13
Sidram S. Patil and others v. Gurunath Shivappa Patil and others (2005) 2 SCC 358; Col. Avtar Singh
Sekhon v.Union of India, AIR 1980 SC 2041; V.M. Elangovan v. Inspector; Varinder Singh@ RAJA v.
State of Punjab and Anr., (2014) 5 SCC 859.
In Sumer v. State of Uttar Pradesh,14 an aggrieved party filed a curative petition on the ground
that the evidence and the factors taken into account by the High Court have not been properly
appreciated by the Court when it allowed the appeal of the State against the judgment of
acquittal. The Court held that grounds taken in the curative petition by the aggrieved party makes
it obvious that an attempt is made to have another opportunity for re-appreciation of evidence.
By rejecting and strongly criticizing such curative petition, the Supreme Court said that such re-
appreciation of evidence is impermissible.
Thus, it can be inferred from the above that curative petitions is for rarest of rare cases,
meritorious cases will invoke the inherent jurisdiction and only such matters will be entertained
where the judgment genuinely suffers from any miscarriage of justice.
A departure from the principle of finality can only be justified in circumstances of a substantial
and compelling character makes it necessary to do so. A judgment is not reconsidered except
“where a glaring omission or patent mistake or like grave error has crept in the earlier
decision.”16
It is rare that in an adversarial system, despite the judges of the highest court doing their best,
one or more parties may remain unsatisfied with the most correct decision. Opening door for a
14
Sumer v. State Of Uttar Pradesh, 2005 CRILJ 540.
15
Dhruv Tiwari & Anand Vardhan Narayan, “Recolouring the Colored Walls of Constitution: A Futile Judicial
Exercise of Creating the Curative Petition “, IJLPP2.2E; Hoystead v. Commr.of taxation, [1926] AC 155, [1925]
All ER 56, (1926) 42 TLR 207, 67 ER 313.
16
Chandra Kanta v. Sheikh Habib, AIR 1975 SC 1500: (1975) 1 SCC 674; PN Eswara Iyer v. Registrar, Supreme
Court Of India, AIR 1980 SC 808; Avtar Singh Sekhon v. UOI, AIR 1980 SC 2041: 1980 Supp SCC 562, Northern
India Caterers v. Lt. Governor of Delhi, AIR 1980 SC 674: (1980) 2 SCC 167; Sow Chandra Kanta v. Sk. Habib
(1975) 1 SCC 674, 1975 SCC (Cri) 305, (1975) 3 SCR 933); R.D. Sugar v. V.Nagary, AIR 1976 SC 2183.
further appeal could be opening a flood gate which will cause more wrongs in the society at large
at the cost of rights.
In Manganese Ore India Ltd v. The Regional Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax, Jabalpur, 17
and this court held that the doctrine of stare decisis is a very valuable principle of precedent
which cannot be departed from unless there are extraordinary or special reasons to do so.
A three-Judge Bench of this court in M/s Northern India Caterers (India) Ltd. v. Lt. Governor of
Delhi,18 held that a party is not entitled to seek a review of this court's judgment merely for the
purpose of rehearing and for a fresh decision of the case. Departure from the normal principle
that the court's judgment is final would be justified only when compelling our substantial
circumstances make it necessary to do so. Such circumstances may be that a material statutory
provision was not drawn to the court's attention at the original hearing or a manifest wrong has
been done.
In Union of India & Another v. Raghubir Singh (Dead),19 this Court held that the plea for
reconsideration is not to be entertained merely because the petitioner chooses to reagitate the
points concluded by the earlier decision in Sub-committee on Judicial Accountability.
In Khoday Distilleries Ltd. and Another v. Registrar General, Supreme Court of India, 20 the
Court held the reconsideration of the final decision of the Supreme Court after review petition is
dismissed by way of writ petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution cannot be sustained.
Thus, permitting the parties to reopen the concluded judgments of this court by filing repeated
interlocutory applications is clearly an abuse of the process of law and would have far reaching
adverse impact on the administration of justice.
17
Manganese Ore (India) Ltd v. The Regional Assistant Commissioner of Sales Tax, Jabalpur, (1976) 4 SCC 124.
18
M/S Northern India Caterers (India) Ltd. v. Lt. Governor of Delhi, (1980) 2 SCC 167; Green View Tea &
Industries v. Collector, Golaghat and Another, (2002) 1 SCC 109.
19
Union of India & Another v. Raghubir Singh (Dead) By L.Rs., (1989) 2 SCC 754
20
Khoday Distilleries Ltd. and Anr. v. Registrar General, Supreme Court of India, (1996) 3 SCC 114; Mohd Aslam
v. Union of India & Others, (1996) 2 SCC 749.
ISSUE 2. WHETHER SECTION 497 I.P.C. PROTECTS THE SANCTITY OF
MARRIAGE?
It is humbly submitted before this Hon’ble court that the said provision does not protect the
sanctity of marriage and instead treats women as property of husband and undermines the status
of women in marriage.
Moreover, it uses the same analogy that is used for the offence of trespass. There is no doubt
22
then that this Section treats a woman like a man’s chattel. The way a person is not expected to
enter on the property of the other without his consent, another man is not expected to have sexual
intercourse with someone’s wife without his consent. Adultery therefore is not an offence against
the matrimonial home but against the husband himself.
Further, the notion that Sec. 497, I.P.C. was intended to preserve fidelity between partners is not
true as the provision does not bother about a husband having sex outside marriage with an
unmarried woman. The concern of the provision was with sexual intercourse with wife of
another man, and hence the provision was majorly addressing the 'harm' felt by the other man. It
is all about protecting a husband’s interest in his “exclusive access to his wife’s sexuality”.23
21
Macaulay, Macleod, Anderson And Millett, A Penal Code Prepared By The Indian Law Commissioners, Pelham
Richardson,
22
1838, Note ‘Q’, P.175.
R. v. R., (1991) 4 ALL ER 481; at p.484.
23
Ratna Kapur and Brenda Cossman, Subversive Sites: Feminist Engagements with Law in India, Sage Publications
(1996), at Page 120.
It is important to note that Sec. 497, I.P.C. does not bring within its purview an extra marital
relationship with an unmarried woman or a widow, the law treats it with unconcern. Thus, a
married man may engage in sexual relations outside marriage with a single woman without any
repercussion in criminal law.
It is clear, therefore, that this archaic law has long outlived its purpose and does not square with
today‘s constitutional morality, in that the very object with which it was made has since become
manifestly arbitrary, having lost its rationale long ago and having become in today‘s day and
age, utterly irrational.
Sec. 497 disregards the sexual autonomy which every woman possesses as a necessary condition
of her existence. Implicit in seeking to privilege the fidelity of women in a marriage is the
assumption that a woman contracts away her sexual agency when entering a marriage.
Far from being an equal partner in an equal relationship, she is subjugated entirely to the will of
her spouse. Sec. 497 is based on the understanding that marriage submerges the identity of the
woman, based on a notion of marital subordination.25
As it is contended that the adultery laws are needed to protect the divine and pure institution of
marriage. In this regard, it is essential for the judiciary to recognize that a “divinely sanctioned”
24
Mulla’s Principles of Hindu Law; Aqil Ahmad, Prof. Iqbal Ali Khan (ed.), Text Book of Mohammedan
Law
25
(Central law Agency, 15th Edition, 1992).
UN Women, Preventing Conflict, Transforming Justice, Securing the Peace: A Global Study on the
Implementation of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325, Pp. 83-84, (New York, 2015).
contract which needs unending legislation to keep one partner from abusing the other, is perhaps
not all that divine.
In Payal Sharma v. Supdt, Nari Niketan kalindri vihar, agra,26 the court had observed:
“A women who is a major has a right to go anywhere and live with anyone she likes
without getting married. This may be regarded immoral by society but it is not illegal.
There is a difference between law and morality.”
The effect of Sec. 497 is to allow the sexual agency of a married woman to be wholly dependent
on the consent or connivance of her husband. Sexual autonomy constitutes an inviolable core of
the dignity of every individual. Sexuality cannot be dis-associated from the human personality.
For, to be human involves the ability to fulfill sexual desires in the pursuit of happiness.
Autonomy in matters of sexuality is thus intrinsic to a dignified human existence. Human dignity
both recognizes and protects the autonomy of the individual in making sexual choices. Women
does not pledge her sexual autonomy to her husband after marriage and depriving her of choice
to have consensual sex with anyone outside marriage cannot be curbed.27
Thus, a woman's 'purity' and a man's marital 'entitlement' to her exclusive sexual possession
may be reflective of the antiquated social and sexual mores of the nineteenth century, but is
not relevant to the contemporary perspective where men and women in marriage are conferred
equal rights and liabilities. Sec. 497 is thus founded on the notion that a woman by entering upon
marriage loses, so to speak, her voice, autonomy and agency. Manifest arbitrariness is writ large
on the provision. Such a notion has no place in the constitutional order.
26
Payal Sharma v. Supdt, Nari Niketan kalindri vihar, agra, AIR 2001 All 254.
27
Joseph Shine v. Union of India, 2018 SCC: SC 1676.
intents and purposes. In such a situation, Penalizing adultery doesn’t serve as deterrence but a
final nail in the coffin.
In James Sibongo v. Lister Lutombi Chaka and Anr.,28 The Supreme Court of Namibia, in an
instructive judgment decriminalising adultery, went into whether the criminal offence of adultery
would protect marriages and reduce the incidence of adultery. It said:
“But does the action protect marriages from adultery? The question becomes more
focused when the spotlight is directed at the following considerations:
(a) First of all, as was pointed out by the German Bundesgericht in the passage from the
judgment (JZ 1973, 668) from which I have quoted earlier, although marriage is — ‘a
human institution which is regulated by law and protected by the Constitution and which,
in turn, creates genuine legal duties. Its essence . . . consists in readiness, founded in
morals, of the parties to the marriage to create and to maintain it.’
If the parties to the marriage have lost that moral commitment, the marriage will fail,
and punishment meted out to a third party is unlikely to change that.
(b) Grave doubts are expressed by many about the deterrent effect of the action. In most
other countries it was concluded that the action (no longer) has any deterrent effect and I
have no reason to think that the position in our society is all that different. Perhaps one
reason is that adultery occurs in different circumstances. Every so often it happens
without any premeditation, when deterrence hardly plays a role. At the other end of the
scale, the adultery is sometimes carefully planned and the participants are confident that
it will not be discovered. Moreover, romantic involvement between one of the spouses
and a third party can be as devastating to the marital relationship as (or even more so
than) sexual intercourse.
(c) If deterrence is the main purpose, one would have thought that this could better be
achieved by retaining the imposition of criminal sanctions or by the grant of an
interdict
28
James Sibongo v. Lister Lutombi Chaka and Another, (Case No. SA77-14) (19.08.2016) [Supreme Court of
Namibia] cited in Joseph Shine v. UOI, 2018 SCC SC 1676.
in favour of the innocent spouse against both the guilty spouse and the third party to
prevent future acts of adultery…firstly, that an interdict against the guilty spouse is not
possible because he or she commits no delict. Secondly, that as against a third party —
‘it interferes with, and restricts the rights and freedom that the third party ordinarily
has of using and disposing of his body as he chooses; . . . it also affects the relationship
of the third party with the claimant's spouse, who is and cannot be a party to the
interdict, and therefore indirectly interferes with, and restricts her rights and freedom
of, using and disposing of her body as she chooses‘. [At353E.]
(d) In addition the deterrence argument seems to depart from the assumption that
adultery is the cause of the breakdown of a marriage, while it is now widely recognised
that causes for the breakdown in marriages are far more complex. Quite frequently
adultery is found to be the result and not the cause of an unhappy marital relationship.
Conversely stated, a marriage in which the spouses are living in harmony is hardly
likely to be broken up by a third party.”
Moreover, the Sec. also criminalizes consensual sexual act between wife and third person, even
in cases where the spouses have taken judicial separation and are going to take divorce where
there can be no scope for protection of marriage. As adultery is marked as an offence against
marriage, in that perspective too it is in no way protecting the marriage as the sanctity of
marriage can be utterly destroyed by a married man having sexual intercourse with an unmarried
woman or a widow which is not included in the provision under Sec. 497, I.P.C. As far as
sanctity of marriage is concerned, it is still a ground for divorce in India which is equal for both
men and women then there is no logic in putting women in exempted category in criminal
offence.
Furthermore, Adultery is more of a social and civil offense and depicts a more arbitrary and
infidelity of trust not only the spouse but the whole family. Adultery is a consequence of the
collapse of faith and conscience in a relationship and requires corrective action rather than
penalize. The sanctions imposed by the laws can bring relief to the injured party for a short time,
but destroys the sanctity of marriage and family life in the long term ruins.
ISSUE3. WHETHER THE EXEMPTION GRANTED TO MARRIED WOMEN UNDER
SECTION 497, I.P.C. VIOLATES FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS GUARANTEED UNDER
THE CONSTITUTION?
It is humbly submitted before the Hon’ble Supreme Court that the exemption granted to married
women from prosecution under Sec. 497, I.P.C. is violative of the fundamental rights guaranteed
under the constitution of India and is not protected by Art. 15 (3) of the constitution of India.
The constitutional guarantee in Art. 15 (3) cannot be employed in a manner that entrenches
paternalistic notions of ‘protection’. This view of protection only serves to place women in a
cage. Discrimination which is grounded in paternalistic and patriarchal notions cannot claim the
protection of Art. 15 (3).
The invocation of Art. 15 (3) as a carte blanche to uphold laws that impose differential benefits
and burden upon men and women, ostensibly to the advantage of women, is unjustified.
In Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay,29 The Bombay High Court, relied upon the carte
blanche approach to Art. 15 (3): In this case, the Supreme Court rejected a constitutional
challenge to the adultery provision in the I.P.C., which is asymmetrical in that women cannot be
prosecuted for adultery. The Court upheld the law by a simple invocation of Art. 15 (3), ignoring
the fact that the basis of the adultery provision was precisely the kind of stereotypical gender-
based assumptions that the Constitution intended to do away with: i.e., that women are passive
partners, lacking in sexual autonomy. This inattention to how Art. 15 (3) ought not to end up
29
Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay, AIR 1951 Bom. 470.
becoming a shield to perpetuate sexual and gender-role based stereotypes has plagued the
Court’s jurisprudence ever since.
Moreover, Art. 15 (3) is not a stand-alone constitutional provision, but nestled within the Articles
14-15-16 equality scheme. The use of the phrase “nothing in this Art.”, as a precursor to Art. 15
(3) suggests that where a legislative classification might otherwise have fallen foul of the non-
discrimination guarantee of Art. 15 (1), Art. 15 (3) would save it. However, given that Art. 15 (3)
is itself a part of Art. 15 suggests that the goal of such classification must also fit within the
concept of equality. Art. 15 (3) does not exist in isolation. Articles 14 to 18, being constituents of
a single code on equality, supplement each other and incorporate a non-discrimination principle.
Consequently, laws making “special provisions” for women (and children) ought to be judicially
reviewed for whether or not they bear some connection with remedying the historical and
structural subordination of women. However, this form of reasoning has been entirely absent
from Indian sex discrimination jurisprudence.
The same was endorsed by the Fifth Law Commission which recommended that the wife, who
has sexual intercourse with a person other than her husband, should be punished for committing
adultery as the reasons that prompted authors of the Penal Code in the nineteenth century for
exempting her from punishment are ‘not valid’ and there is ‘hardly any Justification for not
treating the guilty pair alike’.31 Again In 2003, the Justice Malimath Committee also suggested
30
State of Madhya Pradesh v. Madanlal, (2015) 7 SCC 681; Charu Khurana and others v. Union of India and
others,
31
(2015) 1 SCC 192; National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India and others, (2014) 5 SCC 438.
Law Commission of India ’42nd Report: The Indian Penal Code’, Government of India, 1972, Para 20.18.
that suitable amendments to Sec. 497, I.P.C., should be made to bring adulterous woman within
its purview as the object of Sec. 497 is to preserve the sanctity of the marriage.32
Hence, Art. 15 (3) does not protect a statutory provision that entrenches patriarchal notions in the
garb of protecting women. It is vehemently argued that special provisions can be made for
women as under Art. 15 (3) of the Constitution, but same cannot be used to give them a license
to commit and abet crimes. Any provision which prohibits punishment is tantamount to a license
to commit the offence of which punishment has been prohibited.33
Further, there also exists a disparity of the right even under S.198 (2) of the Cr.P.C. which denies
a wife the right to prosecute her adulterous husband, reserving this power only for the husband of
the woman involved in the relationship. So, only the husband of the woman involved enjoys the
right to prosecute while the wife of the involved man has no resort to take any action.
Furthermore, the judgment in Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay,35 applies a constitutional
provision which is obviously inapplicable as Article 15 (3), which states that, “nothing in this
article shall prevent the State from making a special provision for women”, would refer to the
“State” as either Parliament or the State Legislatures or the Executive Government of the Centre
or the States, set up under the Constitution after it has come into force. Section 497 is, in
constitutional language, an existing law which continues, by virtue of Article 372 (1), to apply,
and could not, therefore, be said to be a law made by the State.36
32
Ministry of Home Affairs, “Committee on Reforms of Criminal Justice System” Government of India, 2003, Para
16.
33
Joseph Shine v. Union of India, Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 194 of 2017.
34
Roop Chand Adlakha v. Delhi Development Authority, 1989 Supp (1) SCC 116: AIR 1989 SC307.
35
Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay, AIR 1951 Bom. 470.
36
Joseph Shine v. Union of India, Writ Petition (Crl.) No. 194 of 2017.
Thus, only such provisions can be made in favor of women under Art. 15 (3) as are reasonable
and which do not altogether obliterate or render illusory the constitutional guarantee mentioned
under Art. 16 (2).37
37
38
M.P. Jain, Indian Constitutional Law (Lexis Nexis, 8th Edition, 2018).
Pawan Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh, (2017) 7 SCC 780.
39
Sunil Kumar v. State of J&K and Anr, 14 Dec., 2018.
It has been held that perpetrators cannot be restricted to “adult male person” but also include a
female member and non-adults, as it fails the test of reasonable classification in section 2(q) of
the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005.40
Thus, Ancient notions of the man being the seducer and the woman being the victim permeate
the judgment, which is no longer the case today. 42 Also, the Constitution is an organic living
document. Its outlook and expression as perceived and expressed by the interpreters of the
Constitution must be dynamic and keep pace with the changing times.43
ISSUE4. WHETHER SECTION 497, I.P.C. READ WITH SECTION 198 (2) Cr.P.C. IS
CONSTITUTIONAL OR NOT?
It is humbly submitted before this honorable Court that Sec. 497, I.P.C. read with Sec. 198 (2)
Cr.P.C. is unconstitutional.
40
Hiral P Harsora v. Kusum Narottamdas Harsora, (2016) 10 SCC 165 : AIR 2016 SC 4774 : 2016 (9)
SCJ
41
204.
Joseph Shine v. Union of India, 2018 SCC SC 1676.
42
Nariman J. in Joseph Shine v. Union of India, 2018 SCC SC 1676.
43
M.P. Jain, Indian Constitutional Law, 5, (lexis nexis, 8th Edition, 2018).
SECTION 497 VIOLATES OF ARTICLE 14, 15 AND 21 OF THE INDIAN
CONSTITUTION
Art. 14 strikes at arbitrary state action, both administrative and legislative. There has been a
significant shift towards equating arbitrary or unreasonableness as the yardstick by which
administrative as well as legislative actions are to be judged.44 All persons in similar
circumstances shall be treated alike both in privileges and liabilities imposed.45
The doctrine of equality before law is a necessary corollary of rule of law which pervades the
Indian Constitution.46 The right to equality has been declared by the Supreme Court as the basic
feature of the constitution.47 This means that neither the parliament nor any state legislature can
transgress the principle of equality.48
Art. 26 of ICCPR,49 and Art. 7 of the UDHR, 50 1948, declares that all are equal before the law
and are entitled without any discrimination to the equal protection of the laws.
The Constitution Bench in Shayara Bano v Union of India,51 held the practice of Triple Talaq to
be unconstitutional. Justice Rohinton Nariman, in his concurring opinion, applied the test of
manifest arbitrariness to hold that the practice does not pass constitutional muster:
“The thread of reasonableness runs through the entire fundamental rights chapter. What
is manifestly arbitrary is obviously unreasonable and being contrary to the rule of law,
would violate Article 14.”
44
Union of India v. International Trading Corporation, AIR 2003 SC 3983; Sunil Batra v. Delhi
Administration, (1978) 4 SCC 494.
45
John Vallamattom v.UOI, (Writ Petition (Civil) 242 Of 1997).
46
Ashutosh Gupta v. State of Rajasthan, (2002) 4 SCC 34: AIR 2002 SC 1533; National Human Rights Commission
v. State of Arunachal Pradesh, AIR 1996 SC 1234.
47
M. Nagaraj v. UOI, (2006) 8 SCC 212; M. G. Badappanabar v. State of Karnataka, (2000) Supp 5 SCR.
302; R. K. Garg v. Union of India, AIR 1981 SC 2138: (1981) 4 SCC 675; Jagjit Singh v. State, AIR 1954
Hyd. 28.
48
Kesav Nanda Bharati v. State of Kerala, (1973) 4 SCC 225; Indira Sawhney v.UOI, (1992) Supp 3 SCC 217.
49
https://treaties.un.org/doc/publication/unts/volume%20999/volume-999-i-14668-english.pdf;
50
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/UDHR/Documents/UDHR_Translations/eng.pdf.
51
Shayara Bano v. Union of India, 2017 SCC SC 963; Sanaboina Satyanarayan v. Govt. of A .P, (2003)
10 SCC 78; Chiranjit Lal v. Union Of India AIR 1981 SC 41; Abdul Rehman v. Pinto, AIR 1951Hyd. 11.
Under Section 497, it is only the male-paramour who is punishable for the offence of adultery.
The woman, who is pari delicto with the adulterous male, is not punishable, even as an “abettor”,
even though the relationship is consensual. The adulterous woman is excluded solely on the
basis of gender, and cannot be prosecuted for adultery. Thus, it is discriminatory against men as
it violates their fundamental right of equality before law.52
Art.15 also stands violated as such penal provision not only creates a categorization among the
two sexes but in fact metes out unequal treatment amongst the males as well. A married man
who has an affair with an unmarried woman is not prosecutable under the existing adultery law
while the same man if indulges in such activity with a married woman would be at the risk of
facing a prosecution. There exists an inequality in the treatment being mete out depending upon
the marital status of the woman.
In Navtej Singh Johar,53 Justice Chandrachud had held that a provision of law which perpetuates
gender stereotypes will be bad for discrimination on grounds of sex, and hence will fall foul of
Article 15 (1). Same approach was extended here; upon identification of patriarchal and
paternalistic undertones of the provision. Section 497 has a significant social impact on the
sexual agency of women. It builds on existing gender stereotypes and bias and further
perpetuates them.
It also violates Article 21 of the Indian Constitution. The Right to Privacy has been recognized
as a fundamental right guaranteed under Art. 21 of the Indian Constitution.54
In K M Puttaswamy v. Union of India,55 a nine-judge Constitution Bench declared that the right
to privacy is a fundamental right under Art. 21, stating: “Sexual privacy is an integral part
of
52
W. Kalyani v. State Thro’Inspector of Police and another, (2012) 1 SCC 358.
53
Navtej Singh Johar v. Union of India, [WP (Crl.) No. 76/2016]; J Srinivas Raju v. State of Orissa, 113 (2012) Cut
LT 13 (22) (Ori).
54
Gobind v. State of Madhya Pradesh, 1975 AIR 1378: 1975 SCR (3) 946; Kharak Singh v. State of U.P., 1963 AIR
1295, 1964 SCR (1) 332; R. Rajagopal v. State of T.N., 1995 AIR 265; 1994 SCC (6) 632; People’s Union For Civil
Liberties v. Union of India, (1997) 1 SCC 301; State of Maharashtra v. Bharat Shanti Lal Shah, (2008)13 SCC 5.
55
Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, (2017) 10 SCC 1; Neera Mathur v. LIC, 1992 AIR 392: 1991
SCR Supl. (2) 146: 1992 SCC (1) 286; Bijoe Emmanuel v. State of Kerala, (1986) 3 SCC 615: AIR 1987
SC 748; Unni Krishnan, J.P. v. State of A. P., (1993) 1 SCC 645, 66.
right to privacy.” The Apex court unreservedly held that privacy safeguards individual
autonomy and recognizes the ability of the individual to control vital aspects of his or her life.
While acknowledging decisional privacy, it upholds the cognitive decisions of every individual
including the ability to make intimate decisions primarily consists one’s sexual or procreative
nature and decisions in respect of intimate relations.
In Anuj Garg v. Hotel Association of India58, this Court held that personal autonomy includes
both the negative right of not to be subject to interference by others and the positive right of
individuals to make decisions about their life, to express themselves and to choose which
activities to take part in.
In Shafin Jahan v. Asokan K .M. & Ors.,59 this Court observed that each individual is guaranteed
the freedom in determining the choice of one’s partner, and any interference by the State in these
matters, would have a serious chilling effect on the exercise of the freedoms guaranteed by the
Constitution.
Both, Art. 8 of European Convention of Human Rights,60 and Art. 17 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights Act, 1966,61 provide for protection from arbitrary or
56
Chandrachud J. in Joseph Shine v. Union of India, 2018 SCC: SC 1676.
57
Nar Singh Pal v. UOI, (2000) 3 SCC 589,594: AIR 2000 SC 1401.
58
Anuj Garg v. Hotel Association of India, AIR 2008 SC 663; Malak Singh v. State of Punjab, AIR 1981 SC 760:
(1981) 1 SCC 420; Sunil Batra v. Delhi Admn., AIR 1980 SC 1675: (1980) 3 SCC 488.
59
Shafin Jahan v. Asokan K. M. & Ors, 2018 SCC SC 343.
60
https://www.echr.coe.int/Documents/Convention_ENG.pdf.
unlawful interference neither with his privacy, family, home and correspondence nor to unlawful
attacks on his honour and reputation.
Secrecy is an essential adjunct to the private life. The exercise of secrecy in relation to facts that
bear a highly personal character is the very essence of personal autonomy. Such view renders the
provision criminalizing sexual intercourse between two consenting and willing adults as being
illegal and unconstitutional. The mutual decision of two agreeable adults to participate in sexual
activity goes to the very core of the privacy jurisprudence and calls for removal of any
restrictions on a person’s decision to participate or not participate in a sexual activity.62
International trends worldwide also indicate that very few nations continue to treat adultery as a
crime, though most nations retain adultery for the purposes of divorce laws. In South Korea63
and Guatemala,64 provisions similar to Sec. 497 have been struck down by the constitutional
courts of those nations.UN Women has called for the decriminalization of adultery.65
A Joint Statement by the United Nations Working Group on discrimination against women in
law and in practice in 2012, stated:66
“The United Nations Working Group on discrimination against women in law and in
practice is deeply concerned at the criminalization and penalization of adultery whose
enforcement leads to discrimination and violence against women.”
Thus, this provision which treats similarly situated persons unequally and discriminates between
persons on the basis of sex alone, is liable to be struck down as being violative of Articles 14 and
15, 21 of the Constitution, which form the pillars against the vice of arbitrariness and
discrimination.
61
62
https://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx.
Sushil Kumar v. Union of India, AIR 2005 SC 3100; Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists, 476 U.S. 747 (1986).
63
Constitutional Court of South Korea: 2009 Hun-Ba 17(26.02.2015).
64
Expediente 936-95, (07.03.1996), República De Guatemala Corte De Constitucionalidad [Constitutional
Court Of Guatemala].
65
"Decriminalization of Adultery and defenses" http://Endvawnow.Org.
66
"Statement by the United Nations working group on discrimination against women in law and in practice"
Furthermore, Sec. 198 (2) Cr.P.C. which provides that no person other than the husband of the
woman shall be deemed to be aggrieved party and woman are denied right to prosecute for the
sexual act committed by her husband. Hence, the right to prosecute the adulterer is restricted to
the husband of the adulteress but has not been extended to the wife of the adulterer. Thus, it
violates the principle of natural justice.67 Sec. 198 (2) Cr.P.C. operates as a fetter on the wife in
prosecuting her adulterous husband. The procedural law which has been enacted in Sec. 198 of
the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 re-enforces the stereotypes implicit in Sec. 497.68
Therefore, when the substantive provision goes, the procedural provision has to pave the same
path.
Hence, the provisions of Sec. 497, I.P.C. are held to offend the fundamental rights, the procedure
engrafted in Sec. 198 (2) will cease to have any practical relevance. Hence, the relevant
provision is unconstitutional on the ground of obnoxious discrimination.
SECTION 497, I.P.C. READ WITH SECTION 198 (2), Cr.P.C. HAS BEEN RIGHTLY
STRUCK DOWN AS UNCONSTITUTIONAL IN ITS’ ENTIRETY
It is submitted that Sec. 497, I.P.C. read with Sec. 198 (2) Cr.P.C. is unconstitutional in its
entirety and has been rightly struck down by this court.
Art. 13 Clause (1) and (2) of the Indian Constitution declare that laws inconsistent with or in
contravention of the fundamental rights shall be void to the extent of inconsistency or
contravention, as the case may be. If, however, it is not possible to separate the valid from the
invalid portion, then the whole of the statue will have to go.69
Further, In Navtej Singh Johar & Ors. v. Union of India thr. Secretary Ministry of Law and
Justice,70 has held that there is no presumption of constitutionality attaches to a pre-constitutional
statute like Indian Penal Code.
67
68
Rajasthan State Board Transport Corporation v. Bal Bukund Bairwa, (2) (2009) 4 SCC 229: (2009) 2 JT 423.
Joseph Shine v. Union of India, 2018 SCC SC 1676.
69
Kameshwar Pd. v. State of Bihar, AIR 1962 SC 1166: 1962 Supp (3) SCR 369; State of M.P. v. Ranojirao
Shinde, AIR 1968 SC 1053: (1968)3 SCR 489.
70
Navtej Singh Johar & Ors. v. Union of India thr. Secretary Ministry of Law and Justice, W. P. (Crl.)
No. 76 of 2016 D. No. 14961/201.
The Supreme Court laid down the following propositions as regards the doctrine of severability
in R.M.D.C. v. Union of India.71 The whole provision being unconstitutional being violative of
Art. 14, 15 and 21 of the constitution of India, the question of striking down the unconstitutional
part or severability does not arise.
Furthermore, the contention of the appellant that if this Court finds any part of this section
violative of the Constitutional provisions, the Court should read down that part, in so far as it is
violative of the Constitution but retain the provision, 72 is not tenable as the power under Art. 142
being curative in nature, cannot be used to supplant the substantive law, or to fill lacuna in a
statue or by-pass the provision thereof.73 The apex court has even went on to say that it may
refuse to exercise its jurisdiction under Art. 142, although it would be lawful to do so.74
In Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra, 75 the apex court has observed in this regard:
“This power could not be used to supplant substantive law applicable to the case
or cause under consideration. Even, with the width of its amplitude, Article 142 could not
be used to build a new edifice where none existed earlier. By ignoring express statutory
provisions dealing with a subject and thereby to achieve something indirectly, which
could not be achieved directly.”
Consequently, Section 497, I.P.C. read with Section 198 (2) Cr.P.C. has been rightly
struck down by this court in its entirety.
71
R.M.D.C. v. UOI, AIR 1957 SC 628, at 633; These Propositions Have Been Reiterated With Approval by the
Supreme Court in Motor General Traders v. State of A. P., AIR 1984 SC 121; Gopalan v. State of Madras, AIR
1950 SC 27,4 6: 1950 SCR 88.; Kihota Hollohon, Supra, Chapter II Section F(A); Hinds v. R, (1976) 1 All ER 355;
Laxmi Khandsari v. State of U.P., AIR 1981 SC 873, 891 : (1981) 2 SCC 600; Sewpujanrai v. Customs Collector,
AIR 1958 SC 845: 1959 SCR 821; Kihota Hollohon v. Zachilhu & ors, AIR 1993 SC 412: 1992 Supp (2) SCC 651;
Harakchand
72
v. UOI, AIR 1970 SC 1453: (1969) 2 SCC 166.
Page no. 3 of Moot Proposition.
73
Textile Labour Association v. Official liquidator, AIR 2004 SC 3272.
74
Ashok Kumar Sahu v.UOI, (2006) 6 SCC 704.
75
Rupa Ashok Hurra v. Ashok Hurra, JT (2002) 3 SC 609: (2002) 4 SCC 388; Common cause, a
Registered Society v. UOI, AIR 1999 SC 2979.
PRAYER
That the present Curative Petition filed by the Appellant is not maintainable.
To uphold the decree of this Court in W.F.U. v. U.O.I.
AND MAY PASS ANY SUCH ORDER, OTHER ORDER THAT IT DEEMS FIT IN THE
INTEREST OF JUSTICE, EQUITY AND GOOD CONSCIENCE.
AND FOR THIS, RESPONDENT AS IN DUTY BOUND SHALL HUMBLY PRAY.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED BY
COUNSELS ON BEHALF OF THE RESPONDENT