Independent Thought V Union of India (Child Marital Rape)

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REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 382 OF 2013

Independent Thought ..Petitioner

versus

Union of India and Anr. .Respondents

JUDGMENT

Madan B. Lokur, J.

1. The issue before us is limited but one of considerable public

importance whether sexual intercourse between a man and his wife being a

girl between 15 and 18 years of age is rape? Exception 2 to Section 375 of

the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (the IPC) answers this in the negative, but in

our opinion sexual intercourse with a girl below 18 years of age is rape

regardless of whether she is married or not. The exception carved out in the

IPC creates an unnecessary and artificial distinction between a married girl


Signature Not Verified

child and an unmarried girl child and has no rational nexus with any unclear
Digitally signed by
SANJAY KUMAR
Date: 2017.10.11
16:20:29 IST
Reason:

objective sought to be achieved. The artificial distinction is arbitrary and

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 1


discriminatory and is definitely not in the best interest of the girl child. The

artificial distinction is contrary to the philosophy and ethos of Article 15(3)

of the Constitution as well as contrary to Article 21 of the Constitution and

our commitments in international conventions. It is also contrary to the

philosophy behind some statutes, the bodily integrity of the girl child and

her reproductive choice. What is equally dreadful, the artificial distinction

turns a blind eye to trafficking of the girl child and surely each one of us

must discourage trafficking which is such a horrible social evil.

2. We make it clear that we have refrained from making any observation

with regard to the marital rape of a woman who is 18 years of age and above

since that issue is not before us at all. Therefore we should not be understood

to advert to that issue even collaterally.

The writ petition

3. The petitioner is a society registered on 6th August, 2009 and has since

been working in the area of child rights. The society provides technical and

hand-holding support to non-governmental organizations as also to

government and multilateral bodies in several States in India. It has also

been involved in legal intervention, research and training on issues

concerning children and their rights. The society has filed a petition under

Article 32 of the Constitution in public interest with a view to draw attention


W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 2
to the violation of the rights of girls who are married between the ages of 15

and 18 years.

4. According to the petitioner, Section 375 of the IPC prescribes the age

of consent for sexual intercourse as 18 years meaning thereby that any

person having sexual intercourse with a girl child below 18 years of age

would be statutorily guilty of rape even if the sexual activity was with her

consent. Almost every statute in India recognizes that a girl below 18 years

of age is a child and it is for this reason that the law penalizes sexual

intercourse with a girl who is below 18 years of age. Unfortunately, by virtue

of Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC, if a girl child between 15 and 18

years of age is married, her husband can have non-consensual sexual

intercourse with her, without being penalized under the IPC, only because

she is married to him and for no other reason. The right of such a girl child

to bodily integrity and to decline to have sexual intercourse with her

husband has been statutorily taken away and non-consensual sexual

intercourse with her husband is not an offence under the IPC.

5. Learned counsel for the petitioner submitted that absolutely nothing is

achieved by entitling the husband of a girl child between 15 and 18 years of

age to have non-consensual sexual intercourse with her. It was also

submitted that whatever be the (unclear) objective sought to be achieved by

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 3


this, the marital status of the girl child between 15 and 18 years of age has

no rational nexus with that unclear object. Moreover, merely because a girl

child between 15 and 18 years of age is married does not result in her

ceasing to be a child or being mentally or physically capable of having

sexual intercourse or indulging in any other sexual activity and conjugal

relations. It was submitted that to this extent Exception 2 to Section 375 of

the IPC is not only arbitrary but is also discriminatory and contrary to the

beneficial intent of Article 15(3) of the Constitution which enables

Parliament to make special provision for women and children. In fact, by

enacting Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC in the statute book, the girl

child is placed at a great disadvantage, contrary to the visionary and

beneficent philosophy propounded by Article 15(3) of the Constitution.

Law Commission of India 84th Report

6. Learned counsel for the petitioner drew our attention to the 84 th report

of the Law Commission of India (LCI) presented on 25 th April, 1980 dealing

with the rape of a girl child below the prescribed minimum age. The report

considered the anomalies in the law relating to rape, particularly in the

context of the age of consent for sexual intercourse with a girl child. The

view expressed by the LCI is quite explicit and is to be found in paragraph

2.18, 2.19 and 2.20 of the report. The view is that since the Child Marriage

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 4


Restraint Act, 1929 prohibits the marriage of a girl below 18 years of age,

sexual intercourse with a girl child below 18 years of age should also be

prohibited and the IPC should reflect that position thereby making sexual

intercourse with a girl child below 18 years of age an offence. These

paragraphs read as follows:

2.18. Section 375, fifth clause. The discussion in the few


preceding paragraphs was concerned with rape constituted by sexual
intercourse without consent. The fifth clause of section 375 may
now be considered. It is concerned with sexual intercourse with a
woman under 16 years of age. Such sexual intercourse is an offence
irrespective of the consent of the woman.
2.19. History. The age of consent has been subjected to increase
more than once in India. The historical development may, for
convenience, be indicated in the form of a chart as follows:-
Year Age of Age Minimum age of
consent mentioned in marriage under
under sec. the Exception the Child
375, 5th to sec. 375, Marriage
clause, I.P.C. I.P.C Restraint Act,
1929
1860 10 years 10 years __
1891 (Act 10 of 1891) 12 years 12 years __
(after the amendment of
I.P.C.
1925 (after the 14 years 13 years __
amendment of I.P.C.)
1929 (after the passing 14 years 13 years 14 years
of the Child Marriage
Act)
1940 (after the 16 years 15 years 15 years
amendment of the Penal
Code and the Child
Marriage Act)
1978 16 years 15 years 18 years
[as of 2017]* [Age of [15 years] [Minimum age of
*The bracketed portion consent under marriage under the
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 5
in this row has been Sec. 375, PCMA, 2006
inserted by us. Sixthly of the 18(F)/21(M)
IPC - 18 years]
years]

2.20. Increase in minimum age. The question to be considered is


whether the age should be increased to 18 years. The minimum age
of marriage now laid down by law (after 1978) is 18 years in the
case of females and the relevant clause of Section 375 should reflect
this changed attitude. Since marriage with a girl below 18 years is
prohibited (though it is not void as a matter of personal law),
sexual intercourse with a girl below 18 years should also be
prohibited. (Emphasis supplied by us).

Law Commission of India 172nd Report

7. The issue was re-considered by the LCI in its 172 nd report presented

on 25th March, 2000. In that report, it is recommended that an exception be

added to Section 375 of the IPC to the effect that sexual intercourse by a

man with his own wife, the wife not being under 16 years of age, is not

sexual assault. In other words, the earlier recommendation made by the LCI

was not approved.

8. Apparently at the stage of discussions, the recommendation of the LCI

(still at the stage of proposal) did not find favour with an NGO called Sakshi

who suggested deletion of the exception. According to the NGO, where a

husband causes some physical injury to his wife, he is punishable under the

appropriate offence and the fact that he is the husband of the victim is not an

extenuating circumstance recognized by law. Therefore, there is no reason

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 6


why a concession should be made in the matter of an offence of rape/sexual

assault only because the wife happens to be above 15/16 years of age. The

LCI did not agree with the NGO and the reason given is that if the exception

that is recommended is deleted, it may amount to excessive interference

with the marital relationship. In other words, according to the LCI the

husband of a girl child who is not below 16 years of age can sexually assault

and even rape his wife and the assault or rape would not be punishable - and

if it is made punishable, then it would amount to excessive interference with

the marital relationship. (It may be mentioned that Exception 2 to Section

375 of the IPC has not increased the age to 16 years from 15 years as

recommended by the LCI but has retained it at 15 years. According to the

counter affidavit filed on behalf of the Union of India, the age of 15 years

has been kept to give protection to the husband and the wife against

criminalizing the sexual activity between them).

Counter affidavit of the Union of India

9. Since we have adverted to the counter affidavit filed by the Union of

India opposing the writ petition, we propose to make a very brief reference

to it. A somewhat more detailed reference is made to the counter affidavit of

the Union of India at a later stage.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 7


10. For the present, the counter affidavit of the Union of India refers to

the National Family Health Survey - 3 (of 2005) in which it is stated that

46% of women in India between the ages of 18 and 29 years were married

before the age of 18 years. It is also estimated, interestingly but disturbingly,

that there are about 23 million child brides in the country. As far as any

remedy available to a child bride is concerned, the counter affidavit draws

attention to Section 3 of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006 (the

PCMA). Under Section 3(1) of the PCMA a child marriage is voidable at the

option of any contracting party who was a child at the time of the marriage.

The marriage can be declared a nullity in terms of the proviso to Section

3(1) of the PCMA through an appropriate petition filed by the child within

two years of attaining majority and by approaching an appropriate court of

law. It is also stated that in terms of Section 13(2)(iv) of the Hindu Marriage

Act, 1955 a child bride can petition for a divorce on the ground that her

marriage (whether consummated or not) was solemnized before she attained

the age of 15 years and she has repudiated the marriage after attaining that

age but before attaining 18 years of age. In other words a child marriage is

sought to be somehow legitimized by the Union of India and the onus for

having it declared voidable or a nullity is placed on the child bride or the

child groom.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 8


Documentary material

11. Apart from but in addition to the legal issue, learned counsel for the

petitioner and learned counsel for the intervener (The Child Rights Trust)

relied on a large amount of documentary material to highlight several

adverse challenges that a girl child might face on her physical and mental

health and some of them could even have an inter-generational impact if a

girl child is married below 18 years of age. The girl child could also face

adverse social consequences that might impact her for the rest of her life.

(a) Reference was made to a report Delaying Marriage for Girls in

India: A Formative Research to Design Interventions for

Changing Norms. This report was prepared in March 2011 under

the supervision of UNICEF India.

(b) Reference was also made to a report Reducing Child Marriage in

India: A Model to Scale up Results. This report was prepared in

January 2016 and also under the supervision and guidance of UNICEF

India. The report contains statistics of widowed, separated and

divorced girls who were married between 10 and 18 years of age

based on Census 2011.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 9


(c) Reference was also made to a useful study Economic Impacts of

Child Marriage: Global Synthesis Report released in June 2017.

This report is a collaborative effort by the International Centre for

Research on Women and the World Bank and it deals with the impact

of child marriages on (i) fertility and population growth; (ii) health,

nutrition, and intimate partner violence; (iii) educational attainment;

(iv) labour force participation, earnings and welfare, and (v) womens

decision-making and other impacts. The economic cost of child

marriages and implications has also been discussed in detail in the

report. A child marriage is defined as a marriage or union taking place

before the age of 18 years and this definition has been arrived at by

relying on a number of conventions, treaties and international

agreements as well as resolutions of the UN Human Rights Council

and the UN General Assembly.

(d) Another extremely useful report referred to is A Statistical Analysis

of Child Marriage in India based on Census 2011. This report is

prepared by a collaborative organization called Young Lives and the

National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights and was

released quite recently in June 2017.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 10


12. This refers to the consequences of child marriage in Chapter 5.

Broadly, it is stated :

Child marriage is not only a violation of human rights, but is also


recognized as an obstacle to the development of young people. The
practice of child marriage cut shorts a critical stage of self-discovery
and exploring ones identity. Child marriage is an imposition of a
marriage partner on children or adolescents who are in no way ready
and matured, and thus, are at a loss to understand the significance of
marriage. Their development gets comprised due to being deprived
of freedom, opportunity for personal development, and other rights
including health and well-being, education, and participation in civic
life and nullifies their basic rights as envisaged in the United
Nations Convention on the Right of the Child ratified by India in
1989. Marriage at a young age prevents both girls and boys from
exercising agency in making important life decisions and securing
basic freedoms, including pursuing opportunities for education,
earning a sustainable livelihood and accessing sexual health and
rights. ..
The key consequences of child marriage of girls may include
early pregnancy; maternal and neonatal mortality; child health
problems; educational setbacks; lower employment/livelihood
prospects; exposure to violence and abuse, including a range of
controlling and inequitable behaviours, leading to inevitable
negative physical and psychological consequences; and limited
agency of girls to influence decisions about their lives.
Census data have demonstrated an upswing of female deaths in the
age group of 15-19 years. This high mortality rate could be attributed
to the deaths of teenage mothers. Child marriage virtually works
like a double-edged sword; lower age at marriage is significantly
associated with worse outcomes for the child and worse pregnancy
outcomes for the mother. All these factors push girls and their
families into perpetuation of intergenerational poverty and
marginalization. The impact of early marriage on girls - and to a
lesser extent on boys - is wide-ranging, opines the Innocenti Digest
on child marriage. Child brides often experience overlapping
vulnerabilities - they are young, often poor and undereducated. This
affects the resources and assets they can bring into their marital
household, thus reducing their decision-making ability. Child
marriage places a girl under the control of her husband and often

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 11


in-laws, limiting her ability to voice her opinions and form and
pursue her own plans and aspirations. While child marriage is
bound to have a detrimental effect on boys who would need to
shoulder the responsibility of a wife and in most cases, have to also
discontinue their education, there is very little research evidence to
capture the long term economic and psychological effect on boys
who are married early. The Lancet 2015 acknowledges that
adolescent boys are not important and neglected part of the equation.
The assumption that girls need more attention than boys is now
being challenged.
Looking at the impact of early marriage from rights perspective, it
can be said that the key concerns are denial of childhood and
adolescence, curtailment of personal freedom, deprivation of
opportunities to develop a full sense of selfhood and denial of
psychosocial and emotional well-being reproductive health and
educational opportunity along with consequences described earlier.
(Emphasis supplied by us).

13. There is a specific discussion in the Statistical Analysis on the impact

of early child birth on health in which it is stated that girls aged 15 to 19

[years] are twice more likely than older women to die from childbirth and

pregnancy, making pregnancy the leading cause of death in poor countries

for these age groups. Girls from the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes

were on an average 10 per cent more likely (after accounting for other

variables) to give birth earlier than girls from the other castes. It has been

found that girls most likely to have had a child by 19 years (as compared

with all other married and unmarried girls) were from the poorest groups;

were more likely to live in rural areas; had the least educated mothers; had

earlier experiences of menarche; had lower education aspirations; and were

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 12


less likely to be enrolled in school between the age of 12 and 15 years.

Being young and immature mothers, they have little say in decision-making

about the number of children they want, nutrition, health-care etc. Lack of

self-esteem or of a sense of ownership of her own body exposes a woman to

repeated unwanted pregnancies.

14. There is also a useful discussion on violence, neglect and

abandonment; psychosocial disadvantage; low self-esteem; low education

and limited employability; human trafficking and under-nutrition, all of

which are of considerable importance for the well-being of a girl child.

We are not dealing with these reports in any detail but draw attention to

them since they support the view canvassed by learned counsel. All that we

need say is that a reading of these reports gives a good idea of the variety

and magnitude of problems that a girl child who is married between 15 and

18 years of age could ordinarily encounter, including those caused by having

sexual intercourse and child-bearing at an early age.

In-depth Study on all forms of violence against women

15. On 6th July, 2006 the Secretary-General of the United Nations

submitted a report to the General Assembly called the In-depth Study on

all forms of violence against women. In the chapter relating to violence

against women within the family and harmful traditional practices, early
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 13
marriage was one of the commonly identified forms of violence.1 Similarly,

early marriage was considered a harmful traditional practice 2 - a thought

echoed a year later in the Study on Child Abuse: India 2007 (referred to

later) by the Government of India.

16. An early marriage is explained as involving the marriage of a child,

that is, a person below the age of 18 years. It is stated that Minor girls have

not achieved full maturity and capacity to act and lack ability to control their

sexuality. When they marry and have children, their health can be adversely

affected, their education impeded and economic autonomy restricted. Early

marriage also increases the risk of HIV infection. Among the

under-documented forms of violence against women are included traditional

harmful practices, prenatal sex selection, early marriage, acid throwing and

dowry or honour related violence etc.3

17. On the concern of appropriate legislation to deal with issues of

violence against women, the right of a woman to bodily integrity and

legislations that allow early marriages, the Secretary General had this to say:

The treaty bodies have expressed concerns about the scope and
coverage of existing legislation, in particular in regard to:

1 Paragraph 111

2 Paragraph 118

3 Paragraph 222

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 14


definitions of rape that require use of force and violence rather than
lack of consent; definitions of domestic violence that are limited
to physical violence; treatment of sexual violence against women as
crimes against the honour of the family or crimes against decency
rather than violations of womens right to bodily integrity; use of
the defence of honour in cases of violence against women and the
related mitigation of sentences; provisions allowing mitigation of
sentences in rape cases where the perpetrator marries the victim;
inadequacy of protective measures for trafficked women, as well as
their treatment as criminals rather than victims; termination of
criminal proceedings upon withdrawal of a case by the victim;
penalization of abortion in rape cases; laws that allow early or
forced marriage; inadequate penalties for acts of violence against
women; and discriminatory penal laws.4 (Emphasis supplied by us)

National Policy and National Plan

18. What has been the response of the Government of India to studies

carried out from time to time and views expressed? The National Charter for

Children, 2003 was notified on 9th February, 2004. While it failed to define

a child, we assume that it was framed keeping in mind the generally

accepted definition of a child as being someone below 18 years of age.

Proceeding on this basis, for the present purposes, Clause 11 of the National

Charter is of relevance in the context of child marriages. It recognized that

child marriage is a crime and an atrocity committed against the girl child. It

also provided for taking serious measures to speedily abolish the practice

of child marriage. Clause 11 reads:

4 Paragraph 277

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11. a. The State and community shall ensure that crimes and
atrocities committed against the girl child, including child marriage,
discriminatory practices, forcing girls into prostitution and
trafficking are speedily eradicated.
b. The State shall in partnership with the community undertake
measures, including social, educational and legal, to ensure that
there is greater respect for the girl child in the family and society.
c. The State shall take serious measures to ensure that the practice of
child marriage is speedily abolished.

19. As a first step in this direction, child marriages were criminalized by

enacting the PCMA in 2006 but no corresponding amendment was made in

Section 375 of the IPC, as it existed in 2006, to decriminalize marital rape of

a girl child.

20. The National Charter was followed by the National Policy for

Children notified on 26th April, 2013. The National Policy explicitly

recognized in Clause 2.1 that every person below the age of 18 years is a

child. Among the Guiding Principles for the National Policy was the

recognition that every child has universal, inalienable and indivisible human

rights; every child has the right to life, survival, development, education,

protection and participation; the best interest of a child is the primary

concern in all decisions and actions affecting the child, whether taken by

legislative bodies, courts of law, administrative authorities, public, private,

social, religious or cultural institutions.

21. The large to do list in the National Policy led to the National Plan
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 16
of Action for Children, 2016: Safe Children Happy Childhood. The

National Plan appears to have been made available on 24 th January, 2017.

While dealing with child marriage, it is stated as follows:

In India, between NFHS-3 (2005-06) to RSOC (2013-14), there has


been a considerable decline in the percentage of women, between the
ages 20-24, who were married before the age of 18 (from 47.4% to
30.3%). The incidence is higher among SC (34.9%) and ST (31%)
and in families with lowest wealth index (44.1%). Child marriage
violates childrens basic rights to health, education, development,
and protection and is also used as a means of trafficking of young
girls.
Child marriage leads to pregnancy during adolescence, posing
life-threatening risks to both mother and child. It is indicated by the
Age-specific Marital Fertility Rate (ASMFR) which is measured as a
number of births per year in a given age group to the total number of
married women in that age group. SRS 2013 reveals that in the age
group of 15-19 years; there has been an upward trend during the
period 2001-2013. ASMFR is higher in the age group 15-19 years in
comparison to 25-29 years.

22. The National Plan of Action for Children recognizes that the early

marriage of girls is one of the factors for neo-natal deaths; early marriage

poses various risks for the survival, health and development of young girls

and to children born to them and most unfortunately it is also used as a

means of trafficking.

23. A reading of the National Policy and the National Plan of Action for

Children reveals, quite astonishingly, that even though the Government of

India realizes the dangers of early marriages, it is merely dishing out

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 17


platitudes and has not taken any concrete steps to protect the girl child from

marital rape, except enacting the Protection of Children from Sexual

Offences Act, 2012.

Human Rights Council

24. The Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review

for India (issued on 17th July, 2017 without formal editing) for the 36th

Session of the Human Rights Council refers to recommendations made by

several countries to remove the exception relating to marital rape from the

definition of rape in Section 375 of the I.P.C. In other words, the issue

raised by the petitioner has attracted considerable international attention and

discussion and ought to be taken very seriously by the Union of India.

25. In our opinion, it is not necessary to detail the contents of every report

or study placed before us except to say that there is a strong established link

between early marriage and sexual intercourse with a married girl child

between 15 and 18 years of age. There is a plethora of material to clearly

indicate that sexual intercourse with a girl child below the age of 18 years

(even within marriage) is not at all advisable for her for a variety of reasons,

including her physical and mental well-being and her social standing all of

which should ordinarily be of paramount importance to everybody,

particularly the State.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 18


26. The social cost of a child marriage (and therefore of sexual

intercourse with a girl child) is itself quite enormous and in the long run

might not even be worth it. This is in addition to the economic cost to the

country which would be obliged to take care of infants who might be

malnourished and sickly; the young mother of the infant might also require

medical assistance in most cases. All these costs eventually add up and

apparently only for supporting a pernicious practice.

27. We can only express the hope that the Government of India and the

State Governments intensively study and analyze these and other reports and

take an informed decision on the effective implementation of the PCMA and

actively prohibit child marriages which encourages sexual intercourse with

a girl child. Welfare schemes and catchy slogans are excellent for awareness

campaigns but they must be backed up by focused implementation

programmes, other positive and remedial action so that the pendulum swings

in favour of the girl child who can then look forward to a better future.

Provisions of the Indian Penal Code (IPC)

28. Section 375 of the IPC defines rape. This section was inserted in the

IPC in its present form by an amendment carried out on 3 rd February, 2013

and it provides that a man is said to commit rape if, broadly speaking, he has

sexual intercourse with a woman under circumstances falling under any of


W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 19
the seven descriptions mentioned in the section. (A woman is defined under

Section 10 of the IPC as a female human being of any age). Among the

seven descriptions is sexual intercourse against the will or without the

consent of the woman; clause Sixthly of Section 375 makes it clear that if

the woman is under 18 years of age, then sexual intercourse with her - with

or without her consent - is rape. This is commonly referred to as statutory

rape in which the willingness or consent of a woman below the age of 18

years for having sexual intercourse is rendered irrelevant and

inconsequential.

29. However, Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC provides that it is not

rape if a man has sexual intercourse with a girl above 15 years of age and if

that girl is his wife. In other words, a husband can have sexual intercourse

with his wife provided she is not below 15 years of age and this is not rape

under the IPC regardless of her willingness or her consent.

30. However, sexual intercourse with a girl under 15 years of age is rape,

whether it is with or without her consent, against her will or not, whether it

is by her husband or anybody else. This is clear from a reading of Section

375 of the IPC including Exception 2.

31. Therefore, Section 375 of the IPC provides for three circumstances

relating to rape. Firstly sexual intercourse with a girl below 18 years of


W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 20
age is rape (statutory rape). Secondly and by way of an exception, if a

woman is between 15 and 18 years of age then sexual intercourse with her is

not rape if the person having sexual intercourse with her is her husband. Her

willingness or consent is irrelevant under this circumstance. Thirdly sexual

intercourse with a woman above 18 years of age is rape if it is under any of

the seven descriptions given in Section 375 of the IPC (non-consensual

sexual intercourse).

32. The result of the above three situations is that the husband of a girl

child between 15 and 18 years of age has blanket liberty and freedom to

have non-consensual sexual intercourse with his wife and he would not be

punishable for rape under the IPC since such non-consensual sexual

intercourse is not rape for the purposes of Section 375 of the IPC. Very

strangely, and as pointed out by Sakshi before the LCI, the husband of a girl

child does not have the liberty and freedom under the IPC to commit a lesser

sexual act with his wife, as for example, if the husband of a girl child

assaults her with the intention of outraging her modesty, he would be

punishable under the provisions of Section 354 of the IPC. In other words,

the IPC permits a man to have non-consensual sexual intercourse with his

wife if she is between 15 and 18 years of age but not to molest her. This

view is surprisingly endorsed by the LCI in its 172nd report adverted to

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 21


above.

Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993

33. The Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993 defines human rights in

Section 2(d) as meaning the rights relating to life, liberty, equality and

dignity of the individual guaranteed by the Constitution or embodied in

international covenants and enforceable by courts in India. There can be no

doubt that if a girl child is forced by her husband into sexual intercourse

against her will or without her consent, it would amount to a violation of her

human right to liberty or her dignity guaranteed by the Constitution or at

least embodied in international conventions accepted by India such as the

Convention on the Rights of the Child (the CRC) and the Convention on the

Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (the CEDAW).

Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 (DV Act)

34. Section 3 of the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act,

2005 (for short the DV Act) provides that if the husband of a girl child

harms or injures or endangers the health, safety, life, limb or well being,

whether mental or physical, of his wife including by causing physical abuse

and sexual abuse, he would be liable to have a protection order issued

against him and pay compensation to his wife. Explanation I (ii) of Section

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 22


3 defines sexual abuse as including any conduct of a sexual nature that

abuses, humiliates, degrades or otherwise violates the dignity of a woman.

Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006 (PCMA)

35. One of the more important legislations on the subject of protective

rights of children is the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act, 2006 (for short

the PCMA). For the purposes of the PCMA, a child is a male who has not

completed 21 years of age and a female who has not completed 18 years of

age and a child marriage means a marriage to which either contracting

party is a child.

36. Section 3 of the PCMA provides that a child marriage is voidable at

the option of any one of the parties to the child marriage a child marriage

is not void, but only voidable. Interestingly, and notwithstanding the fact that

a child marriage is only voidable, Parliament has made a child marriage an

offence and has provided punishments for contracting a child marriage. For

instance, Section 9 of the PCMA provides that any male adult above 18

years of age marrying a child shall be punishable with rigorous

imprisonment which may extend to two years or with fine which may extend

to one lakh rupees or with both. Therefore regardless of his age, a male is

penalized under this section if he marries a girl child. Section 10 of the

PCMA provides that whoever performs, conducts, directs or abets any child

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 23


marriage shall be punishable with rigorous imprisonment which may extend

to two years and shall be liable to fine which may extend to one lakh rupees;

Section 11 of the PCMA provides punishment for promoting or permitting

solemnization of a child marriage; and finally Section 13 of the PCMA

provides that the jurisdictional judicial officer may injunct the performance

of a child marriage while Section 14 of the PCMA provides that any child

marriage solemnized in violation of an injunction under Section 13 shall be

void.

37. It is quite clear from the above that Parliament is not in favour of child

marriages per se but is somewhat ambivalent about it. However, Parliament

recognizes that although a child marriage is a criminal activity, the reality of

life in India is that traditional child marriages do take place and as the

studies (referred to above) reveal, it is a harmful practice. Strangely, while

prohibiting a child marriage and criminalizing it, a child marriage has not

been declared void and what is worse, sexual intercourse within a child

marriage is not rape under the IPC even though it is a punishable offence

under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012.

Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (POCSO)

38. The Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (for short

the POCSO Act) is an important statute for the purposes of our discussion.
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 24
The Statement of Objects and Reasons necessitating the enactment of the

POCSO Act makes a reference to data collected by the National Crime

Records Bureau (NCRB) which indicated an increase in sexual offences

against children. The data collected by the NCRB was corroborated by the

Study on Child Abuse: India 2007 conducted by the Ministry of Women

and Child Development of the Government of India.

39. While the above Study focuses on child abuse, it does refer to the

harmful traditional practice of child marriage and in this context adverts to

child marriage as being a subtle form of violence against children. The Study

notes that there is a realization that if issues of child marriage are not

addressed, it would affect the overall progress of the country.

40. The above Study draws attention to the Convention on the

Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)

to which India is a signatory. Article 16.2 thereof provides The betrothal

and the marriage of a child shall have no legal effect, and all necessary

action, including legislation, shall be taken to specify a minimum age for

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 25


marriage and to make the registration of marriages in an official registry

compulsory. 5

41. The above Study also makes a reference to gender equity to the effect

that discrimination against girls results in child marriages and such an

imbalance needs to be addressed by bringing about attitudinal changes in

people regarding the value of the girl child.

42. The Preamble to the POCSO Act states that it was enacted with

reference to Article 15(3) of the Constitution. The Preamble recognizes that

the best interest of a child should be secured, a child being defined under

Section 2(d) as any person below the age of 18 years. In fact, securing the

best interest of the child is an obligation cast upon the Government of India

having acceded to the Convention on the Rights of the Child (the CRC).

The Preamble to the POCSO Act also recognizes that it is imperative that the

law should operate in a manner that the best interest and well being of the

child are regarded as being of paramount importance at every stage, to

ensure the healthy, physical, emotional, intellectual and social development

5 India became a signatory to the CEDAW Convention on 30th July, 1980 (ratified on 9th July,
1993) but with a reservation to the extent of making registration of marriage compulsory
stating that it is not practical in a vast country like India with its variety of customs, religions
and level of literacy. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court in the case of Seema (Smt.) v.
Ashwani Kumar, (2006) 2 SCC 578 directed the States and Central Government to notify
Rules making registration of marriages compulsory. However, the same has not been
implemented in full.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 26


of the child. Finally, the Preamble also provides that sexual exploitation

and sexual abuse of children are heinous crimes and need to be effectively

addressed. This is directly in conflict with Exception 2 to Section 375 of

the IPC which effectively provides that the sexual exploitation or sexual

abuse of a girl child is not even a crime, let alone a heinous crime on the

contrary, it is a perfectly legitimate activity if the sexual exploitation or

sexual abuse of the girl child is by her husband.

43. Under Article 34 of the CRC, the Government of India is bound to

undertake all appropriate national, bilateral and multi-lateral measures to

prevent the coercion of a child to engage in any unlawful sexual activity.

The key words are unlawful sexual activity but the IPC declares that a girl

child having sexual intercourse with her husband is not unlawful sexual

activity within the provisions of the IPC, regardless of any coercion.

However, for the purposes of the POCSO Act, any sexual activity engaged in

by any person (husband or otherwise) with a girl child is unlawful and a

punishable offence. This dichotomy is certainly not in the spirit of Article 34

of the CRC.

44. Further, in terms of our international obligations under Article 1 and

Article 34 of the CRC, the Government of India must undertake all

appropriate measures to prevent the sexual exploitation or sexual abuse of

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 27


any person below 18 years of age since such sexual exploitation or sexual

abuse is a heinous crime. What has the Government of India done? It has

persuaded Parliament to convert what is otherwise universally accepted as a

heinous crime into a legitimate activity for the purposes of Section 375 of

the IPC if the exploiter or abuser is the husband of the girl child. But,

contrarily the rape of a married girl child (called aggravated penetrative

sexual assault in the POCSO Act) is made an offence for the purposes of the

POCSO Act.

45. Section 3 of the POCSO Act defines penetrative sexual assault.

Clause (n) of Section 5 provides that if a person commits penetrative sexual

assault with a child, then that person actually commits aggravated

penetrative sexual assault if that person is related to the child, inter alia,

through marriage. Therefore, if the husband of a girl child commits

penetrative sexual assault on his wife, he actually commits aggravated

penetrative sexual assault as defined in Section 5(n) of the POCSO Act

which is punishable under Section 6 of the POCSO Act by a term of rigorous

imprisonment of not less than ten years and which may extend to

imprisonment for life and fine.

46. The duality therefore is that having sexual intercourse with a girl child

between 15 and 18 years of age, the husband of the girl child is said to have

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 28


not committed rape as defined in Section 375 of the IPC but is said to have

committed aggravated penetrative sexual assault in terms of Section 5(n) of

the POCSO Act.

47. There is no real or material difference between the definition of rape

in the terms of Section 375 of the IPC and penetrative sexual assault in the

terms of Section 3 of the POCSO Act.6 The only difference is that the

definition of rape is somewhat more elaborate and has two exceptions but

the sum and substance of the two definitions is more or less the same and the

punishment (under Section 376(1) of the IPC) for being found guilty of

committing the offence of rape is the same as for penetrative sexual assault

(under Section 4 of the POCSO Act). Similarly, the punishment for

6 3. Penetrative sexual assault.A person is said to commit penetrative sexual assault


if
(a) he penetrates his penis, to any extent, into the vagina, mouth, urethra or anus of a
child or makes the child to do so with him or any other person; or
(b) he inserts, to any extent, any object or a part of the body, not being the penis, into
the vagina, the urethra or anus of the child or makes the child to do so with him or
any other person; or
(c) he manipulates any part of the body of the child so as to cause penetration into the
vagina, urethra, anus or any part of body of the child or makes the child to do so with
him or any other person; or
(d) he applies his mouth to the penis, vagina, anus, urethra of the child or makes the
child to do so to such person or any other person.

375. Rape.A man is said to commit rape if he


(a) penetrates his penis, to any extent, into the vagina, mouth, urethra or anus of a
woman or makes her to do so with him or any other person; or
(b) inserts, to any extent, any object or a part of the body, not being the penis, into the
vagina, the urethra or anus of a woman or makes her to do so with him or any other
person; or
(c) manipulates any part of the body of a woman so as to cause penetration into the
vagina, urethra, anus or any part of body of such woman or makes her to do so with
him or any other person; or
(d) applies his mouth to the vagina, anus, urethra of a woman or makes her to do so with
him or any other person,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 29


aggravated rape under Section 376(2) of the IPC is the same as for

aggravated penetrative sexual assault under Section 6 of the POCSO Act.

Consequently, it is immaterial if a person is guilty of the same sexual

activity under the provisions of the POCSO Act or the provisions of the IPC

the end result is the same and only the forum of trial changes. In a

violation of the provisions of the POCSO Act, a Special Court constituted

under Section 28 of the said Act would be the Trial Court but the ordinary

criminal court would be the Trial Court for an offence under the IPC.

48. At this stage it is necessary to refer to Section 42-A inserted in the

POCSO Act by an amendment made on 3 rd February, 2013. This section

reads:

42-A. Act not in derogation of any other law.The provisions of


this Act shall be in addition to and not in derogation of the
provisions of any other law for the time being in force and, in case of
any inconsistency, the provisions of this Act shall have overriding
effect on the provisions of any such law to the extent of the
inconsistency.

The consequence of this amendment is that the provisions of the POCSO Act

will override the provisions of any other law (including the IPC) to the

extent of any inconsistency.

49. One of the questions that arises for our consideration is whether there

is any incongruity between Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC and

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 30


Section 5(n) of the POCSO Act and which provision overrides the other. To

decide this, it would be necessary to keep Section 42-A of the POCSO Act in

mind as well as Sections 5 and 41 of the IPC which read:

5. Certain laws not to be affected by this Act.Nothing in this Act shall affect
the provisions of any Act for punishing mutiny and desertion of officers, soldiers,
sailors or airmen in the service of the Government of India or the provisions of
any special or local law.

41. Special law.A special law is a law applicable to a particular subject.

50. These two provisions are of considerable importance in resolving the

controversy and conflict presented before us.

Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (JJ Act)

51. The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 (the

JJ Act) is also relatable to Article 15(3) of the Constitution. Section 2(12) of

the JJ Act defines a child as a person who has not completed 18 years of age.

A child in need of care and protection is defined in Section 2(14) of the JJ

Act, inter alia, as a child who is at imminent risk of marriage before

attaining the age of marriage and whose parents, family members, guardian

and any other persons are likely to be responsible for solemnization of such

marriage. Clearly a girl child below 18 years of age and who is sought to be

married is a child in need of care and protection. She is therefore, required to

be produced before a Child Welfare Committee constituted under Section 27

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 31


of the JJ Act so that she could be cared for, protected and appropriately

rehabilitated or restored to society.

Brief summary of the existing legislations

52. It is obvious from a brief survey of the various statutes referred to

above that a child is a person below 18 years of age who is entitled to the

protection of her human rights including the right to live with dignity; if she

is unfortunately married while a child, she is protected from domestic

violence, both physical and mental, as well as from physical and sexual

abuse; if she is unfortunately married while a child, her marriage is in

violation of the law and therefore an offence and such a marriage is voidable

at her instance and the person marrying her is committing a punishable

offence; the husband of the girl child would be committing aggravated

penetrative sexual assault when he has sexual intercourse with her and is

thereby committing a punishable offence under the POCSO Act. The only

jarring note in this scheme of the pro-child legislations is to be found in

Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC which provides that sexual intercourse

with a girl child between 15 and 18 years of age is not rape if the sexual

intercourse is between the girl child and her husband. Therefore, the

question of punishing the husband simply does not arise. A girl child placed

in such circumstances is a child in need of care and protection and needs to

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 32


be cared for, protected and appropriately rehabilitated or restored to society.

All these child-friendly statutes are essential for the well-being of the girl

child (whether married or not) and are protected by Article 15(3) of the

Constitution. These child-friendly statutes also link child marriages and

sexual intercourse with a girl child and draw attention to the adverse

consequences of both.

Article 15(3) of the Constitution

53. Article 15(3) of the Constitution enables and empowers the State to

make special provision for the benefit of women and children. The

Constituent Assembly debated this provision [then Article 9(2) of the draft

Constitution] on 29th November, 1948. Prof. K.T. Shah suggested an

amendment to the said Article (Nothing in this article shall prevent the

State from making any special provision for women and children) so that it

would read: Nothing in this article shall prevent the State from making any

special provision for women and children or for Scheduled Castes or

backward tribes, for their advantage, safeguard or betterment. The view

expressed was:

Sir, it must be distinguished from the preceding article. I read it, at


any rate, that this is a provision for discrimination in favour of
women and children, to which I have added the Scheduled Castes or
backward tribes. This discrimination is in favour of particular classes
of our society which, owing to an unfortunate legacy of the past,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 33


suffer from disabilities or handicaps. Those, I think, may require
special treatment; and if they do require it, they should be permitted
special facilities for some time so that real equality of citizens be
established.
The rage for equality which has led to provide equal citizenship and
equal rights for women has sometimes found exception in regard to
special provisions that, in the long range, in the interest of the
country or of the race, exclude women from certain dangerous
occupations, certain types of work. That, I take it, is not intended in
any way to diminish their civic equality or status as citizens. It is
only intended to safeguard, protect or lead to their betterment in
general; so that the long-range interests of the country may not
suffer.

The amendment was negatived by Dr. Ambedkar in the following manner:

With regard to amendment No. 323 moved by Professor K.T. Shah,


the object of which is to add Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes along with women and children, I am afraid it may have just
the opposite effect.

The object which all of us have in mind is that the Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes should not be segregated from the general
public.

For instance, none of us, I think, would like that a separate school
should be established for the Scheduled Castes when there is a
general school in the village open to the children of the entire
community. If these words are added, it will probably give a handle
for a State to say, Well, we are making special provision for the
Scheduled Castes. To my mind they can safely say so by taking
shelter under the article if it is amended in the manner the Professor
wants it. I therefore think that it is not a desirable amendment.

The response given by Dr. Ambedkar suggests that he certainly favoured

special provisions for women and children with a view to integrate them into

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 34


society and to take them out of patriarchal control. But a similar integration

could not be achieved by making special provisions for Scheduled Castes

and Scheduled Tribes it would have the opposite effect and further

segregate them from the general public.

54. What clearly emerges from this discussion is that Article 9(2) of the

draft Constitution [now Article 15(3)] was intended to discriminate in favour

of women and children a form of affirmative action to their advantage.

This intention has been recognized by decisions of this Court and of some

High Courts. The earliest such decision is of the Calcutta High Court in Sri

Mahadeb Jiew v. Dr. B.B. Sen7 in which it was said that: The special

provision for women in Article 15(3) cannot be construed as authorizing a

discrimination against women, and the word for in the context means in

favour of.

55. In Government of A.P. v. P.B. Vijayakumar8 affirmative action for

women (and children) was recognized in paragraphs 7 and 8 of the Report in

the following words:

The insertion of clause (3) of Article 15 in relation to women is a


recognition of the fact that for centuries, women of this country have

7 AIR 1951 Cal 563

8 (1995) 4 SCC 520

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 35


been socially and economically handicapped. As a result, they are
unable to participate in the socio-economic activities of the nation on
a footing of equality. It is in order to eliminate this socio-economic
backwardness of women and to empower them in a manner that
would bring about effective equality between men and women
that Article 15(3) is placed in Article 15. Its object is to
strengthen and improve the status of women
What then is meant by any special provision for women in Article
15(3)? This special provision, which the State may make to
improve womens participation in all activities under the supervision
and control of the State can be in the form of either affirmative
action or reservation. .(Emphasis supplied by us)

56. Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay 9 is a Constitution Bench

decision of this Court in which the constitutional validity of Section 497 of

the IPC was challenged on the ground that it unreasonably exempts a wife

from being punishable for an offence of adultery and therefore should be

interpreted restrictively. Rejecting the contention that Article 15(3) of the

Constitution places any restriction on the legislative power of Parliament, it

was said:

It was argued that clause (3) [of Article 15 of the Constitution]


should be confined to provisions which are beneficial to women and
cannot be used to give them a licence to commit and abet crimes. We
are unable to read any such restriction into the clause; nor are we
able to agree that a provision which prohibits punishment is
tantamount to a licence to commit the offence of which punishment
has been prohibited.

57. The view that Article 15(3) is intended to benefit women has also

9 1954 SCR 930

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 36


been accepted in Cyril Britto v. Union of India10 wherein it was held that

prohibition from arrest or detention of women in execution of a money

decree under Section 56 of the Civil Procedure Code is a special provision

calculated to ensure that a woman judgment-debtor is not put to the

ignominy or arrest and detention in civil prison in execution of a money

decree and that this provision is referable to Article 15(3) of the

Constitution. A similar view was taken in respect of the same provision in

the Civil Procedure Code in Shrikrishna Eknath Godbole v. Union of

India.11

58. It is quite clear therefore that Article 15(3) of the Constitution cannot

and ought not to be interpreted restrictively but must be given its full play.

Viewed from this perspective, it seems to us that legislation intended for

affirmative action in respect of a girl child must not only be liberally

construed and interpreted but must override any other legislation that seeks

to restrict the benefit made available to a girl child. This would only

emphasize the spirit of Article 15(3) of the Constitution.

Right to bodily integrity and reproductive choice

10 AIR 2003 Ker 259

11 PIL No. 166/2016 decided on 21st October, 2016

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 37


59. The right to bodily integrity and the reproductive choice of any

woman has been the subject of discussion in quite a few decisions of this

Court. The discussion has been wide-ranging and several facets of these

concepts have been considered from time to time. The right to bodily

integrity was initially recognized in the context of privacy in State of

Maharashtra v. Madhukar Narayan Mardikar12 wherein it was observed

that no one has any right to violate the person of anyone else, including of an

unchaste woman. It was said:

The High Court observes that since Banubi is an unchaste woman it


would be extremely unsafe to allow the fortune and career of a
government official to be put in jeopardy upon the uncorroborated
version of such a woman who makes no secret of her illicit intimacy
with another person. She was honest enough to admit the dark side
of her life. Even a woman of easy virtue is entitled to privacy and
no one can invade her privacy as and when he likes. So also it is
not open to any and every person to violate her person as and
when he wishes. She is entitled to protect her person if there is
an attempt to violate it against her wish. She is equally entitled to
the protection of law. (Emphasis supplied by us)

60. In Suchita Srivastava v. Chandigarh Administration 13 the right to

make a reproductive choice was equated with personal liberty under Article

21 of the Constitution, privacy, dignity and bodily integrity. It includes the

right to abstain from procreating. In paragraph 22 of the Report it was held:

12 (1991) 1 SCC 57

13 (2009) 9 SCC 1

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 38


There is no doubt that a womans right to make reproductive
choices is also a dimension of personal liberty as understood under
Article 21 of the Constitution of India. It is important to recognise
that reproductive choices can be exercised to procreate as well as
to abstain from procreating. The crucial consideration is that a
womans right to privacy, dignity and bodily integrity should be
respected. This means that there should be no restriction
whatsoever on the exercise of reproductive choices such as a
womans right to refuse participation in sexual activity or
alternatively the insistence on use of contraceptive methods.
Furthermore, women are also free to choose birth control methods
such as undergoing sterilisation procedures. Taken to their logical
conclusion, reproductive rights include a womans entitlement to
carry a pregnancy to its full term, to give birth and to subsequently
raise children. However, in the case of pregnant women there is also
a compelling State interest in protecting the life of the prospective
child. Therefore, the termination of a pregnancy is only permitted
when the conditions specified in the applicable statute have been
fulfilled. Hence, the provisions of the MTP Act, 1971 can also be
viewed as reasonable restrictions that have been placed on the
exercise of reproductive choices. (Emphasis supplied by us)

61. In issues of criminal law, investigations and recording of statements,

the bodily integrity of a witness has been accepted by this Court in Selvi v.

State of Karnataka14wherein it was held in paragraph 103 of the Report:

The concerns about the voluntariness of statements allow a more


comprehensive account of this right. If involuntary statements were
readily given weightage during trial, the investigators would have a
strong incentive to compel such statementsoften through methods
involving coercion, threats, inducement or deception. Even if such
involuntary statements are proved to be true, the law should not
incentivise the use of interrogation tactics that violate the dignity
and bodily integrity of the person being examined. (Emphasis
supplied by us)

14 (2010) 7 SCC 263

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 39


62. Ritesh Sinha v. State of Uttar Pradesh 15 was a case relating to the

collection of a voice sample during the course of investigation by the police.

Relying of Selvi it was held that: In a country governed by the rule of law,

police actions which are likely to affect the bodily integrity of a person or

likely to affect his personal dignity must have legal sanction.

63. Finally, in Devika Biswas v. Union of India16 it was observed that

Over time, there has been recognition of the need to respect and protect the

reproductive rights and reproductive health of a person. This is all the more

so in the case of a girl child who has little or no say in reproduction after an

early marriage. As observed in Suchita Srivastava . the best interests

test requires the Court to ascertain the course of action which would serve

the best interests of the person in question.

64. The discussion on the bodily integrity of a girl child and the

reproductive choices available to her is important only to highlight that she

cannot be treated as a commodity having no say over her body or someone

who has no right to deny sexual intercourse to her husband. The human

rights of a girl child are very much alive and kicking whether she is married

or not and deserve recognition and acceptance.

15 (2013) 2 SCC 357

16 (2016) 10 SCC 726

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 40


Rape or penetrative sexual assault

65. Whether sexual intercourse that a husband has with his wife who is

between 15 and 18 years of age is described as rape (not an offence under

Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC) or aggravated penetrative sexual

assault (an offence under Section 5(n) of the POCSO Act and punishable

under Section 6 of the POCSO Act) the fact is that it is rape as

conventionally understood, though Parliament in its wisdom has chosen to

not recognize it as rape for the purposes of the IPC. That it is a heinous

crime which also violates the bodily integrity of a girl child, causes trauma

and sometimes destroys her freedom of reproductive choice is a composite

issue that needs serious consideration and deliberation.

66. There have been several decisions rendered by this Court highlighting

the horrors of rape. In State of Karnataka v Krishnappa17 an 8 year girl was

raped and it was held in paragraph 15 of the Report:

Sexual violence apart from being a dehumanising act is an unlawful


intrusion of the right to privacy and sanctity of a female. It is a
serious blow to her supreme honour and offends her self-esteem and
dignity - it degrades and humiliates the victim and where the
victim is a helpless innocent child, it leaves behind a traumatic
experience. (Emphasis supplied by us)

17 (2000) 4 SCC 75

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 41


67. In Bodhisattwa Gautam v. Subhra Chakraborty18 it was observed by

this Court that rape is a crime not only against a woman but against society.

It was held in paragraph 10 of the Report that:

Rape is thus not only a crime against the person of a woman


(victim), it is a crime against the entire society. It destroys the
entire psychology of a woman and pushes her into deep
emotional crisis. It is only by her sheer will-power that she
rehabilitates herself in the society which, on coming to know of the
rape, looks down upon her in derision and contempt. Rape is,
therefore, the most hated crime. It is a crime against basic human
rights and is also violative of the victims most cherished of the
Fundamental Rights, namely, the Right to Life contained in Article
21. To many feminists and psychiatrists, rape is less a sexual offence
than an act of aggression aimed at degrading and humiliating
women. The rape laws do not, unfortunately, take care of the social
aspect of the matter and are inept in many respects. (Emphasis
supplied by us)

68. About a month later, it was pithily stated in State of Punjab v. Gurmit

Singh19

We must remember that a rapist not only violates the victims


privacy and personal integrity, but inevitably causes serious
psychological as well as physical harm in the process. Rape is not
merely a physical assault it is often destructive of the whole
personality of the victim. A murderer destroys the physical body of
his victim, a rapist degrades the very soul of the helpless female.
(Emphasis supplied by us)

69. There are several decisions in which similar observations have been

made by this Court and it is not necessary to multiply the cases. However,

18 (1996) 1 SCC 490

19 (1996) 2 SCC 384

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 42


reference may be made to a fairly recent decision in State of Haryana v.

Janak Singh20 wherein reference was made to Bodhisattwa Gautam and it

was observed in paragraph 7 of the Report:

Rape is one of the most heinous crimes committed against a


woman. It insults womanhood. It violates the dignity of a woman
and erodes her honour. It dwarfs her personality and reduces her
confidence level. It violates her right to life guaranteed under Article
21 of the Constitution of India. (Emphasis supplied by us)

70. If such is the traumatic impact that rape could and does have on an

adult victim, we can only guess what impact it could have on a girl child

and yet it is not a criminal offence in the terms of Exception 2 to Section 375

of the IPC but is an offence under the POCSO Act only. An anomalous state

of affairs exists on a combined reading of the IPC and the POCSO Act. An

unmarried girl below 18 years of age could be a victim of rape under the IPC

and a victim of penetrative sexual assault under the POCSO Act. Such a

victim might have the solace (if we may say so) of prosecuting the rapist. A

married girl between 15 and 18 years of age could be a victim of aggravated

penetrative sexual assault under the POCSO Act, but she cannot be a victim

of rape under the IPC if the rapist is her husband since the IPC does not

recognize such penetrative sexual assault as rape. Therefore such a girl child

has no recourse to law under the provisions of the IPC notwithstanding that

20 (2013) 9 SCC 431

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 43


the marital rape could degrade and humiliate her, destroy her entire

psychology pushing her into a deep emotional crisis and dwarf and destroy

her whole personality and degrade her very soul. However, such a victim

could prosecute the rapist under the POCSO Act. We see no rationale for

such an artificial distinction.

71. While we are not concerned with the general question of marital rape

of an adult woman but only with marital rape of a girl child between 15 and

18 years of age in the context of Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC, it is

worth noting the view expressed by the Committee on Amendments to

Criminal Law chaired by Justice J.S. Verma (Retired). In paragraphs 72, 73

and 74 of the Report it was stated that the out-dated notion that a wife is no

more than a subservient chattel of her husband has since been given up in

the United Kingdom. Reference was also made to a decision of the European

Commission of Human Rights which endorsed the conclusion that a rapist

remains a rapist regardless of his relationship with the victim. The relevant

paragraphs of the Report read as follows:

72. The exemption for marital rape stems from a long out-dated
notion of marriage which regarded wives as no more than the
property of their husbands. According to the common law of
coverture, a wife was deemed to have consented at the time of the
marriage to have intercourse with her husband at his whim.
Moreover, this consent could not be revoked. As far back as 1736,
Sir Matthew Hale declared: The husband cannot be guilty of rape
committed by himself upon his lawful wife, for by their mutual
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 44
matrimonial consent and contract the wife hath given herself up in
this kind unto her husband which she cannot retract.
73. This immunity has now been withdrawn in most major
jurisdictions. In England and Wales, the House of Lords held in 1991
that the status of married women had changed beyond all recognition
since Hale set out his proposition. Most importantly, Lord Keith,
speaking for the Court, declared, marriage is in modern times
regarded as a partnership of equals, and no longer one in which the
wife must be the subservient chattel of the husband.
74. Our view is supported by the judgment of the European
Commission of Human Rights in C.R. v UK [C.R. v UK Publ.
ECHR, Ser.A, No. 335-C] which endorsed the conclusion that a
rapist remains a rapist regardless of his relationship with the
victim. Importantly, it acknowledged that this change in the common
law was in accordance with the fundamental objectives of the
Convention on Human Rights, the very essence of which is respect
for human rights, dignity and freedom. This was given statutory
recognition in the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994.
(Emphasis supplied by us)

72. In Eisenstadt v. Baird21 the US Supreme Court observed that a

marital couple is not an independent entity with a mind and heart of its

own, but an association of two individuals each with a separate intellectual

and emotional makeup.

73. On a combined reading of C.R. v. UK and Eisenstadt v. Baird it is

quite clear that a rapist remains a rapist and marriage with the victim does

not convert him into a non-rapist. Similarly, a rape is a rape whether it is

described as such or is described as penetrative sexual assault or aggravated

21 405 US 438, 31 L Ed 2d 349, 92 S Ct 1092

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 45


penetrative sexual assault. A rape that actually occurs cannot legislatively be

simply wished away or legislatively denied as non-existent.

Harmonizing the IPC, the POCSO Act, the JJ Act and the PCMA

74. There is an apparent conflict or incongruity between the provisions of

the IPC and the POCSO Act. The rape of a married girl child (a girl child

between 15 and 18 years of age) is not rape under the IPC and therefore not

an offence in view of Exception 2 to Section 375 thereof but it is an offence

of aggravated penetrative sexual assault under Section 5(n) of the POCSO

Act and punishable under Section 6 of that Act. This conflict or incongruity

needs to be resolved in the best interest of the girl child and the provisions of

various complementary statutes need to be harmonized and read purposively

to present an articulate whole.

75. The most obvious and appropriate resolution of the conflict has been

provided by the State of Karnataka the State Legislature has inserted

sub-Section (1A) in Section 3 of the PCMA (on obtaining the assent of the

President on 20th April, 2017) declaring that henceforth every child marriage

that is solemnized is void ab initio. Therefore, the husband of a girl child

would be liable for punishment for a child marriage under the PCMA, for

penetrative sexual assault or aggravated penetrative sexual assault under the

POCSO Act and if the husband and the girl child are living together in the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 46


same or shared household for rape under the IPC. The relevant extract of the

Karnataka amendment reads as follows:

(1A) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) [of


Section of the PCMA] every child marriage solemnized on or after
the date of coming into force of the Prohibition of Child Marriage
(Karnataka Amendment) Act, 2016 shall be void ab initio.

76. It would be wise for all the State Legislatures to adopt the route taken

by Karnataka to void child marriages and thereby ensure that sexual

intercourse between a girl child and her husband is a punishable offence

under the POCSO Act and the IPC. Assuming all other State Legislatures do

not take the Karnataka route, what is the correct position in law?

77. There is no doubt that pro-child statutes are intended to and do

consider the best interest of the child. These statutes have been enacted in

the recent past though not effectively implemented. Given this situation, we

are of opinion that a few facts need to be acknowledged and accepted.

Firstly, a child is and remains a child regardless of the description or

nomenclature given to the child. It is universally accepted in almost all

relevant statutes in our country that a child is a person below 18 years of

age. Therefore, a child remains a child whether she is described as a street

child or a surrendered child or an abandoned child or an adopted child.

Similarly, a child remains a child whether she is a married child or an

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 47


unmarried child or a divorced child or a separated child or a widowed child.

At this stage we are reminded of Shakespeares eternal view that a rose by

any other name would smell as sweet - so also with the status of a child,

despite any prefix. Secondly, the age of consent for sexual intercourse is

definitively 18 years and there is no dispute about this. Therefore, under no

circumstance can a child below 18 years of age give consent, express or

implied, for sexual intercourse. The age of consent has not been specifically

reduced by any statute and unless there is such a specific reduction, we must

proceed on the basis that the age of consent and willingness to sexual

intercourse remains at 18 years of age. Thirdly, Exception 2 to Section 375

of the IPC creates an artificial distinction between a married girl child and an

unmarried girl child with no real rationale and thereby does away with

consent for sexual intercourse by a husband with his wife who is a girl child

between 15 and 18 years of age. Such an unnecessary and artificial

distinction if accepted can again be introduced for other occasions for

divorced children or separated children or widowed children.

78. What is sought to be achieved by this artificial distinction is not at all

clear except perhaps to acknowledge that child marriages are taking place in

the country. Such child marriages certainly cannot be in the best interest of

the girl child. That the solemnization of a child marriage violates the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 48


provisions of the PCMA is well-known. Therefore, it is for the State to

effectively implement and enforce the law rather than dilute it by creating

artificial distinctions. Can it not be said, in a sense, that through the artificial

distinction, Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC encourages violation of

the PCMA? Perhaps yes and looked at from another point of view, perhaps

no for it cannot reasonably be argued that one statute (the IPC) condones

an offence under another statute (the PCMA). Therefore the basic question

remains - what exactly is the artificial distinction intended to achieve?

Justification given by the Union of India

79. The only justification for this artificial distinction has been culled out

by learned counsel for the petitioner from the counter affidavit filed by

Union of India. This is given in the written submissions filed by learned

counsel for the petitioner and the justification (not verbatim) reads as

follows:

i) Economic and educational development in the country is still uneven


and child marriages are still taking place. It has been, therefore,
decided to retain the age of 15 years under Exception 2 of Section
375 of IPC so as to give protection to husband and wife against
criminalizing the sexual activity between them.
ii) As per National Family Health Survey-III, 46% of women between
the ages 18-29 years in India were married before the age of 18. It is
also estimated that there are 23 million child brides in the country.
Hence, criminalizing the consummation of a marriage union with a
serious offence such as rape would not be appropriate and practical.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 49


iii) Providing punishment for child marriage with consent does not
appear to be appropriate in view of socio-economic conditions of the
country. Thus, the age prescribed in Exception 2 of Section 375 of
IPC has been retained considering the basic facts of the still evolving
social norms and issues.
iv) The Law Commission also recommended for raising the age from 15
years to 16 years and it was incorporated in the Criminal Law
(Amendment) Ordinance, 2013. However, after wide ranging
consultations with various stakeholders it was further decided to
retain the age at 15 years.
v) Exception 2 of Section 375 of IPC envisages that if the marriage is
solemnized at the age of 15 years due to traditions, it should not be a
reason to book the husband in the case of offence of rape under the
IPC.
vi) It is also necessary that the provisions of law should be in such a
manner that it cannot affect a particular class of society. Retaining
the age of 15 years in Exception 2 of Section 375 of IPC has been
provided considering the social realities of the nation.

80. The above justifications given by the Union of India are really

explanations for inserting Exception 2 in Section 375 of the IPC. Besides,

they completely side track the issue and overlook the provisions of the

PCMA, the provisions of the JJ Act as well as the provisions of the POCSO

Act. Surely, the Union of India cannot be oblivious to the existence of the

trauma faced by a girl child who is married between 15 and 18 years of age

or to the three pro-child statutes and other human rights obligations. That

these facts and statutes have been overlooked confirms that the distinction is

artificial and makes Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC all the more

arbitrary and discriminatory.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 50


81. During the course of oral submissions, three further but more

substantive justifications were given by learned counsel for the Union of

India for making this distinction. The first justification is that by virtue of

getting married, the girl child has consented to sexual intercourse with her

husband either expressly or by necessary implication. The second

justification is that traditionally child marriages have been performed in

different parts of the country and therefore such traditions must be respected

and not destroyed. The third justification is that paragraph 5.9.1 of the 167th

report of the Parliamentary Standing Committee of the Rajya Sabha

(presented in March 2013) records that several Members felt that marital

rape has the potential of destroying the institution of marriage.

82. In law, it is difficult to accept any one of these justifications. There is

no question of a girl child giving express or implied consent for sexual

intercourse. The age of consent is statutorily and definitively fixed at 18

years and there is no law that provides for any specific deviation from this.

Therefore unless Parliament gives any specific indication (and it has not

given any such indication) that the age of consent could be deviated from for

any rational reason, we cannot assume that a girl child who is otherwise

incapable of giving consent for sexual intercourse has nevertheless given

such consent by implication, necessary or otherwise only by virtue of being

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 51


married. It would be reading too much into the mind of the girl child and

assuming a state of affairs for which there is neither any specific indication

nor any warrant. It must be remembered that those days are long gone when

a married woman or a married girl child could be treated as subordinate to

her husband or at his beck and call or as his property. Constitutionally a

female has equal rights as a male and no statute should be interpreted or

understood to derogate from this position. If there is some theory that

propounds such an unconstitutional myth, then that theory deserves to be

completely demolished.

83. Merely because child marriages have been performed in different

parts of the country as a part of a tradition or custom does not necessarily

mean that the tradition is an acceptable one nor should it be sanctified as

such. Times change and what was acceptable the few decades ago may not

necessarily be acceptable today. This was noted by a Constitution Bench of

this Court (though in a different context) in State of Madhya Pradesh v.

Bhopal Sugar Industries Ltd.22 that:

But, by the passage of time, considerations of necessity and


expediency would be obliterated, and the grounds which justified
classification of geographical regions for historical reasons may
cease to be valid.

22 [1964] 6 SCR 846

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 52


84. Similarly, in Rattan Arya v. State of Tamil Nadu 23 it was observed that

judicial notice could be taken of a change in circumstances. It was held:

It certainly cannot be pretended that the provision is intended to


benefit the weaker sections of the people only. We must also observe
here that whatever justification there may have been in 1973 when
Section 30(ii) [of the Tamil Nadu Buildings (Lease and Rent
Control) Act, 1960] was amended by imposing a ceiling of Rs 400
on rent payable by tenants of residential buildings to entitle them to
seek the protection of the Act, the passage of time has made the
ceiling utterly unreal. We are entitled to take judicial notice of the
enormous multifold increase of rents throughout the country,
particularly in urban areas. It is common knowledge today that
the accommodation which one could have possibly got for Rs 400
per month in 1973 will today cost at least five times more. In
these days of universal, day to day escalation of rentals any ceiling
such as that imposed by Section 30(ii) in 1973 can only be
considered to be totally artificial and irrelevant today. As held by this
court in Motor General Traders v. State of A.P.24 a provision which
was perfectly valid at the commencement of the Act could be
challenged later on the ground of unconstitutionality and struck
down on that basis. What was once a perfectly valid legislation, may
in course of time, become discriminatory and liable to challenge on
the ground of its being violative of Article 14. (Emphasis supplied
by us)
85. In Anuj Garg v. Hotel Association of India 25 this Court was

concerned with the constitutional validity of Section 30 of the Punjab Excise

Act, 1914 which prohibited employment of any man under the age of 25

years or any woman in any part of such premises in which liquor or an

intoxicating drug is consumed by the public. While upholding the view of

23 (1986) 3 SCC 385

24 (1984) 1 SCC 222

25 (2008) 3 SCC 1

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 53


the Delhi High Court striking down the provision as unconstitutional, this

Court held in paragraphs 46 and 47 of the Report:

It is to be borne in mind that legislations with pronounced


protective discrimination aims, such as this one, potentially serve
as double-edged swords. Strict scrutiny test should be employed
while assessing the implications of this variety of legislations.
Legislation should not be only assessed on its proposed aims but
rather on the implications and the effects. The impugned legislation
suffers from incurable fixations of stereotype morality and
conception of sexual role. The perspective thus arrived at is
outmoded in content and stifling in means.
No law in its ultimate effect should end up perpetuating the
oppression of women. Personal freedom is a fundamental tenet
which cannot be compromised in the name of expediency until and
unless there is a compelling State purpose. Heightened level of
scrutiny is the normative threshold for judicial review in such cases.
(Emphasis supplied by us)

86. Similarly, it was observed by this Court in Satyawati Sharma v.

Union of India26 in paragraph 32 of the Report that legislation which might

be reasonable at the time of its enactment could become unreasonable with

the passage of time. It was observed as follows:

It is trite to say that legislation which may be quite reasonable


and rational at the time of its enactment may with the lapse of
time and/or due to change of circumstances become arbitrary,
unreasonable and violative of the doctrine of equality and even if
the validity of such legislation may have been upheld at a given
point of time, the Court may, in subsequent litigation, strike down
the same if it is found that the rationale of classification has become
non-existent. (Emphasis supplied by us)

26 (2008) 5 SCC 287

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 54


There is therefore no doubt that the impact and effect of Exception 2 to

Section 375 of the IPC has to be considered not with the blinkered vision of

the days gone by but with the social realities of today. Traditions that might

have been acceptable at some historical point of time are not cast in stone. If

times and situations change, so must views, traditions and conventions.

87. We have adverted to the wealth of documentary material which goes

to show that an early marriage and sexual intercourse at an early age could

have detrimental effects on the girl child not only in terms of her physical

and mental health but also in terms of her nutrition, her education, her

employability and her general well-being. To make matters worse, the

detrimental impact could pass on to the children of the girl child who may be

malnourished and may be required to live in an impoverished state due to a

variety of factors. An early marriage therefore could have an

inter-generational adverse impact. In effect therefore the practice of early

marriage or child marriage even if sanctified by tradition and custom may

yet be an undesirable practice today with increasing awareness and

knowledge of its detrimental effects and the detrimental effects of an early

pregnancy. Should this traditional practice still continue? We do not think so

and the sooner it is given up, it would be in the best interest of the girl child

and for society as a whole.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 55


88. We must not and cannot forget the existence of Article 21 of the

Constitution which gives a fundamental right to a girl child to live a life of

dignity. The documentary material placed before us clearly suggests that an

early marriage takes away the self esteem and confidence of a girl child and

subjects her, in a sense, to sexual abuse. Under no circumstances can it be

said that such a girl child lives a life of dignity. The right of a girl child to

maintain her bodily integrity is effectively destroyed by a traditional practice

sanctified by the IPC. Her husband, for the purposes of Section 375 of the

IPC, effectively has full control over her body and can subject her to sexual

intercourse without her consent or without her willingness since such an

activity would not be rape. Anomalously, although her husband can rape her

but he cannot molest her for if he does so he could be punished under the

provisions of the IPC. This was recognized by the LCI in its 172 nd report but

was not commented upon. It appears therefore that different and irrational

standards have been laid down for the treatment of the girl child by her

husband and it is necessary to harmonize the provisions of various statutes

and also harmonize different provisions of the IPC inter-se.

89. We have also adverted to the issue of reproductive choices that are

severely curtailed as far as a married girl child is concerned. There is every

possibility that being subjected to sexual intercourse, the girl child might

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 56


become pregnant and would have to deliver a baby even though her body is

not quite ready for procreation. The documentary material shown to us

indicates that there are greater chances of a girl child dying during childbirth

and there are greater chances of neonatal deaths. The results adverted to in

the material also suggest that children born out of early marriages are more

likely to be malnourished. In the face of this material, would it be wise to

continue with a practice, traditional though it might be, that puts the life of a

girl child in danger and also puts the life of the baby of a girl child born from

an early marriage at stake? Apart from constitutional and statutory

provisions, constitutional morality forbids us from giving an interpretation to

Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC that sanctifies a tradition or custom

that is no longer sustainable.

90. The view that marital rape of a girl child has the potential of

destroying the institution of marriage cannot be accepted. Marriage is not

institutional but personal nothing can destroy the institution of marriage

except a statute that makes marriage illegal and punishable. A divorce may

destroy a marriage but does it have the potential of destroying the

institution of marriage? A judicial separation may dent a marital

relationship but does it have the potential of destroying the institution of

marriage or even the marriage? Can it be said that no divorce should be

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 57


permitted or that judicial separation should be prohibited? The answer is

quite obvious.

91. Looked at from another perspective, the PCMA actually makes child

marriages voidable and makes the parties to a child marriage (other than the

girl child) punishable for an offence under the said Act. For someone who

supports the institution of marriage, nothing could be more destructive of the

institution of marriage than the PCMA which makes a child marriage

voidable and punishable on the one hand and on the other, it otherwise

collaterally legitimizes the pernicious practice of child marriages. It is

doubtful if the Parliamentary Standing Committee intended such a situation

along with its attendant adverse and detrimental impacts and so we leave it

at that.

92. Assuming some objective is sought to be achieved by the artificial

distinction, the further question is: what is the rational nexus between

decriminalizing sexual intercourse under the IPC with a married girl child

and an unclear and uncertain statutory objective? There is no intelligible

answer to this question particularly since sexual intercourse with a married

girl child is a criminal offence of aggravated penetrative sexual assault under

the POCSO Act. Therefore, while the husband of a married girl child might

not have committed rape for the purposes of the IPC but he would

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 58


nevertheless have committed aggravated penetrative sexual assault for the

purposes of the POCSO Act. The punishment for rape (assuming it is

committed) and the punishment for penetrative sexual assault is the same,

namely imprisonment for a minimum period of 7 years which may extend to

imprisonment for life. Similarly, for an aggravated form of rape the

punishment is for a minimum period of 10 years imprisonment which may

extend to imprisonment for life (under the IPC) and the punishment for

aggravated penetrative sexual assault (which is what is applicable in the case

of a married girl child) is the same (under the POCSO Act). In other words,

the artificial distinction merely takes the husband of the girl child out of the

clutches of the IPC while retaining him within the clutches of the POCSO

Act. We are unable to understand why this is so and no valid justification or

explanation is forthcoming from the Union of India.

Application of special laws

93. Whatever be the explanation, given the context and purpose of their

enactment, primacy must be given to pro-child statutes over the IPC as

provided for in Sections 5 and 41 of the IPC. There are several reasons for

this including the absence of any rationale in creating an artificial

distinction, in relation to sexual offences, between a married girl child and

an unmarried girl child. Statutes concerning the rights of children are special

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 59


laws concerning a special subject of legislation and therefore the provisions

of such subject-specific legislations must prevail and take precedence over

the provisions of a general law such as the IPC. It must also be remembered

that the provisions of the JJ Act as well as the provisions of the POCSO Act

are traceable to Article 15(3) of the Constitution which enables Parliament to

make special provisions for the benefit of children. We have already

adverted to some decisions relating to the interpretation of Article 15(3) of

the Constitution in a manner that is affirmative, in favour of children and for

children and we have also adverted to the discussion in the Constituent

Assembly in this regard. There can therefore be no other opinion regarding

the pro-child slant of the JJ Act as well as the POCSO Act.

94. A rather lengthy but useful discussion on this subject of special laws is

to be found in Life Insurance Corporation of India v. D.J. Bahadur 27 in

paragraphs 52 and 53 of the Report. Briefly, it was held that the

subject-matter and the perspective of the statute are determinative of the

question whether a statute is a general law or a special law. Therefore, for

certain purposes a statute might be a special law but for other purposes, as

compared to another statute, it might be a general law. In respect of a dispute

between the Life Insurance Corporation and its workmen qua workmen, the

27 (1981) 1 SCC 315

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 60


Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 would be a special law vis--vis the Life

Insurance Corporation Act, 1956; but, when compensation on

nationalisation is the question, the LIC Act is the special statute. It was held

as follows:

In determining whether a statute is a special or a general one, the


focus must be on the principal subject-matter plus the particular
perspective. For certain purposes, an Act may be general and for
certain other purposes it may be special and we cannot blur
distinctions when dealing with finer points of law. In law, we have a
cosmos of relativity, not absolutes so too in life. The ID Act is a
special statute devoted wholly to investigation and settlement of
industrial disputes which provides definitionally for the nature of
industrial disputes coming within its ambit. It creates an
infrastructure for investigation into, solution of and adjudication
upon industrial disputes. It also provides the necessary machinery
for enforcement of awards and settlements. From alpha to omega the
ID Act has one special mission the resolution of industrial
disputes through specialised agencies according to specialised
procedures and with special reference to the weaker categories of
employees coming within the definition of workmen. Therefore,
with reference to industrial disputes between employers and
workmen, the ID Act is a special statute, and the LIC Act does not
speak at all with specific reference to workmen. On the other hand,
its powers relate to the general aspects of nationalisation, of
management when private businesses are nationalised and a plurality
of problems which, incidentally, involve transfer of service of
existing employees of insurers. The workmen qua workmen and
industrial disputes between workmen and the employer as such, are
beyond the orbit of and have no specific or special place in the
scheme of the LIC Act. And whenever there was a dispute between
workmen and management the ID Act mechanism was resorted to.
What are we confronted with in the present case, so that I may
determine as between the two enactments which is the special? The
only subject which has led to this litigation and which is the bone of
contention between the parties is an industrial dispute between the
Corporation and its workmen qua workmen. If we refuse to be
obfuscated by legal abracadabra and see plainly what is so obvious,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 61


the conclusion that flows, in the wake of the study I have made, is
that vis-a-vis industrial disputes at the termination of the
settlement as between the workmen and the Corporation, the ID Act
is a special legislation and the LIC Act a general legislation.
Likewise, when compensation on nationalisation is the question, the
LIC Act is the special statute. An application of the generalia maxim
as expounded by English textbooks and decisions leaves us in no
doubt that the ID Act being special law, prevails over the LIC Act
which is but general law.

The scope and amplitude of the two significant pro-child statutes may now

be examined in light of the law laid down by this Court including Sections 5

and 41 of the IPC.

(i) The JJ Act

95. A cursory reading of the JJ Act gives a clear indication that a girl child

who is in imminent risk of marriage before attaining the age of 18 years of

age is a child in need of care and protection (Section 2 (14) (xii) of the JJ

Act). In our opinion, it cannot be said with any degree of rationality that

such a girl child loses her status as a child in need of care and protection

soon after she gets married. The JJ Act provides that efforts must be made

to ensure the care, protection, appropriate rehabilitation or restoration of a

girl child who is at imminent risk of marriage and therefore a child in need

of care and protection. If this provision is ignored or given a go by, it would

put the girl child in a worse off situation because after marriage she could be

subjected to aggravated penetrative sexual assault for which she might not

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 62


be physically, mentally or psychologically ready. The intention of the JJ Act

is to benefit a child rather than place her in difficult circumstances. A

contrary view would not only destroy the purpose and spirit of the JJ Act but

would also take away the importance of Article 15(3) of the Constitution.

Surely, such an interpretation and understanding cannot be given to the

provisions of the JJ Act.

(ii) The POCSO Act

96. Similarly, the provisions of the POCSO Act make it quite explicit that

the dignity and rights of a child below 18 years of age must be recognized

and respected. For this purpose, special provisions have been made in the

POCSO Act as for example Section 28 thereof which provides for the

establishment of a Special Court to try offences under the Act. Section 29 of

the POCSO Act provides that where a person is prosecuted for committing

or abetting or attempting to commit an offence under Section 3 (penetrative

sexual assault) or under Section 5 (aggravated penetrative sexual assault)

then the Special Court shall presume that such a person has committed or

abetted or attempted to commit the offence unless the contrary is proved.

Similarly, the procedure and powers of a Special Court have been delineated

in Section 33 of the POCSO Act and this section provides for not only a

child friendly atmosphere in the Special Court but also child friendly

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 63


procedures, some of which are given in subsequent sections of the statute.

Once again the legislative slant is in favour of a child thereby giving

substantive meaning to Article 15(3) of the Constitution.

97. However, of much greater importance and significance is Section

42-A of the POCSO Act. This section provides that the provisions of the

POCSO Act are in addition to and not in derogation of the provisions of any

other law in force which includes the IPC. Moreover, the section provides

that in the event of any inconsistency between the provisions of the POCSO

Act and any other law, the provisions of the POCSO Act shall have

overriding effect. It follows from this that even though the IPC

decriminalizes the marital rape of a girl child, the husband of the girl child

would nevertheless be liable for punishment under the provisions of the

POCSO Act for aggravated penetrative sexual assault.

98. Prima facie it might appear that since rape is an offence under the IPC

(subject to Exception 2 to Section 375) while penetrative sexual assault or

aggravated penetrative sexual assault is an offence under the POCSO Act

and both are distinct and separate statutes, therefore there is no inconsistency

between the provisions of the IPC and the provisions of the POCSO Act.

However the fact is that there is no real distinction between the definition of

rape under the IPC and the definition of penetrative sexual assault under the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 64


POCSO Act. There is also no real distinction between the rape of a married

girl child and aggravated penetrative sexual assault punishable under Section

6 of the POCSO Act. Additionally, the punishment for the respective

offences is the same, except that the marital rape of a girl child between 15

and 18 years of age is not rape in view of Exception 2 to Section 375 of the

IPC. In sum, marital rape of a girl child is effectively nothing but aggravated

penetrative sexual assault and there is no reason why it should not be

punishable under the provisions of the IPC. Therefore, it does appear that

only a notional or linguistic distinction is sought to be made between rape

and penetrative sexual assault and rape of a married girl child and

aggravated penetrative sexual assault. There is no rationale for this

distinction and it is nothing but a completely arbitrary and discriminatory

distinction.

Harmonious and purposive interpretation

99. The entire issue of the interpretation of the JJ Act, the POCSO Act,

the PCMA and Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC can be looked at from

yet another perspective, the perspective of purposive and harmonious

construction of statutes relating to the same subject matter. Long ago, it was

said by Lord Denning that when a defect appears, a judge cannot fold his

hands and blame the draftsman but must also consider the social conditions

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 65


and give force and life to the intention of the Legislature. It was said in

Seaford Court Estates Ltd. v. Asher28 that:

A judge, believing himself to be fettered by the supposed rule that


he must look to the language and nothing else, laments that the
draftsmen have not provided for this or that, or have been guilty of
some or other ambiguity. It would certainly save the judges trouble if
Acts of Parliament were drafted with divine prescience and perfect
clarity. In the absence of it, when a defect appears a judge cannot
simply fold his hands and blame the draftsman. He must set to work
on the constructive task of finding the intention of Parliament, and
he must do this not only from the language of the statute, but also
from a consideration of the social conditions which gave rise to it,
and of the mischief which it was passed to remedy, and then he must
supplement the written word so as to give force and life to the
intention of the legislature.

100. Similarly, in Collector of Customs v. Digvijaya Singhji Spinning &

Weaving Mills29 it was said that where an alternative construction is open,

that alternative should be chosen which is consistent with the smooth

working of the system which the statute purports to regulate. It was said that:

It is one of the well-established Rules of construction that if the


words of a statute are in themselves precise and unambiguous no
more is necessary than to expound those words in their natural and
ordinary sense, the words themselves in such case best declaring the
intention of the legislature. It is equally well-settled principle of
construction that Where alternative constructions are equally open
that alternative is to be chosen which will be consistent with the
smooth working of the system which the statute purports to be
regulating; and that alternative is to be rejected which will introduce
uncertainty, friction or confusion into the working of the system.

28 [1949] 2 K.B. 481 affirmed in [1950] A.C. 508

29 AIR 1961 SC 1549

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 66


101. That a constructive attitude should be adopted in interpreting statutes

was endorsed in Jugal Kishore v. State of Maharashtra30 when it was said

that:

.. Unless the Acts [Maharashtra Agricultural Land (Ceiling on


Holdings) Act, 1961 and the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural
Lands (Vidarbha Region) Act, 1958], with the intention of
implementing various socio-economic plans, are read in such
complementary manner, the operation of the different Acts in the
same field would create contradiction and would become impossible.
It is, therefore, necessary to take a constructive attitude in
interpreting provisions of these types and determine the main aim of
the particular Act in question for adjudication before the court.

102. Finally, from the purposive and harmonious construction point of

view as well as the social context point of view, we may only draw attention

to the opinion expressed by the Constitution Bench in Abhiram Singh v.

C.D. Commachen31 by one of us (Lokur, J) to supplement our view. It is not

necessary to repeat the observations made and conclusions given therein.

103. Viewed from any perspective, there seems to be no reason to

arbitrarily discriminate against a girl child who is married between 15 and

18 years of age. On the contrary, there is every reason to give a harmonious

and purposive construction to the pro-child statutes to preserve and protect

the human rights of the married girl child.

30 1989 Supp (1) SCC 589

31 (2017) 2 SCC 629

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 67


Implementation of laws

104. The Preamble to our Constitution brings out our commitment to social

justice, but unfortunately, this petition clearly brings out that social justice

laws are not implemented in the spirit in which they are enacted by

Parliament. Young girls are married in thousands in the country, and as

Section 13 of the PCMA indicates, there is an auspicious day Akshaya

Trutiya - when mass child marriages are performed. Such young girls are

subjected to sexual intercourse regardless of their health, their ability to bear

children and other adverse social, economic and psychological

consequences. Civil society can do just so much for preventing such child

marriages but eventually it is for the Government of India and the State

Governments to take proactive steps to prevent child marriages so that

young girls in our country can aspire to a better and healthier life. We hope

the State realizes and appreciates this.

Conclusion

105. On a complete assessment of the law and the documentary material, it

appears that there are really five options before us: (i) To let the incongruity

remain as it is this does not seem a viable option to us, given that the lives

of thousands of young girls are at stake; (ii) To strike down as

unconstitutional Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC in the present case

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 68


this is also not a viable option since this relief was given up and no such

issue was raised; (iii) To reduce the age of consent from 18 years to 15

years this too is not a viable option and would ultimately be for Parliament

to decide; (iv) To bring the POCSO Act in consonance with Exception 2 to

Section 375 of the IPC this is also not a viable option since it would

require not only a retrograde amendment to the POCSO Act but also to

several other pro-child statutes; (v) To read Exception 2 to Section 375 of

the IPC in a purposive manner to make it in consonance with the POCSO

Act, the spirit of other pro-child legislations and the human rights of a

married girl child. Being purposive and harmonious constructionists, we are

of opinion that this is the only pragmatic option available. Therefore, we are

left with absolutely no other option but to harmonize the system of laws

relating to children and require Exception 2 to Section 375 of the IPC to now

be meaningfully read as: Sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man with

his own wife, the wife not being under eighteen years of age, is not rape. It

is only through this reading that the intent of social justice to the married girl

child and the constitutional vision of the framers of our Constitution can be

preserved and protected and perhaps given impetus.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 69


106. We make it clear that we have not at all dealt with the larger issue of

marital rape of adult women since that issue was not raised before us by the

petitioner or the intervener.

107. We express our gratitude to Mr. Gaurav Agrawal, Advocate and Ms.

Jayna Kothari, Advocate for the effort that they have put in and the able

assistance that they have given us for the purpose of deciding this case.

J
New Delhi; (Madan B. Lokur)
October 11, 2017

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 70


REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA


CIVIL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) NO. 382 OF 2013

INDEPENDENT THOUGHT ...PETITIONER(S)

Versus

UNION OF INDIA & ANR. ...RESPONDENT(S)

JUDGMENT

Deepak Gupta, J.

1. I have gone through the extremely erudite and well written judgment of my

learned brother Lokur, J.. I fully agree with both the reasoning given by him and

the conclusions arrived at. However, I am expressing my own views in this

separate concurring judgment wherein I have given some other reasons while

reaching the same conclusion.

2. Whether Exception 2 to Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code, in so far as it

relates to girls aged 15 to 18 years, is unconstitutional and liable to be struck

down is the question for consideration in this writ petition.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 71


3. At the outset, it may be mentioned that in the main petition the challenge is

laid to the entire Exception 2. However, during the course of arguments Mr.

Gaurav Agarwal, learned counsel for the petitioner, Independent Thought, a

registered Society and Ms. Jayna Kothari, learned counsel for the intervener, the

Child Rights Group, submitted that they are limiting their challenge to Exception 2

only in so far as it deals with the girl child aged 15 to 18 years.

4. Section 375 of the Indian Penal IPC (for short IPC) defines rape and reads

as follows:

375. Rape.- A man is said to commit "rape" if he-


a. penetrates his penis, to any extent, into the vagina, mouth,
urethra or anus of a woman or makes her to do so with him or
any other person; or
b. inserts, to any extent, any object or a part of the body, not
being the penis, into the vagina, the urethra or anus of a woman
or makes her to do so with him or any other person; or
c. manipulates any part of the body of a woman so as to cause
penetration into the vagina, urethra, anus or any part of body of
such woman or makes her to do so with him or any other
person; or
d. applies his mouth to the vagina, anus, urethra of a woman
or makes her to do so with him or any other person,
under the circumstances falling under any of the following
seven descriptions:
First.Against her will.
Secondly.Without her consent.
Thirdly.With her consent, when her consent has been obtained
by putting her or any person in whom she is interested, in fear of
death or of hurt.
Fourthly.With her consent, when the man knows that he is not
her husband and that her consent is given because she believes
that he is another man to whom she is or believes herself to be
lawfully married.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 72


Fifthly.With her consent when, at the time of giving such
consent, by reason of unsoundness of mind or intoxication or
the administration by him personally or through another of any
stupefying or unwholesome substance, she is unable to
understand the nature and consequences of that to which she
gives consent.
Sixthly.With or without her consent, when she is under
eighteen years of age.
Seventhly.When she is unable to communicate consent.
Explanation 1.For the purposes of this section, "vagina" shall
also include labia majora.
Explanation 2.Consent means an unequivocal voluntary
agreement when the woman by words, gestures or any form of
verbal or non-verbal communication, communicates willingness
to participate in the specific sexual act:
Provided that a woman who does not physically resist to the act
of penetration shall not by the reason only of that fact, be
regarded as consenting to the sexual activity.
Exception 1.A medical procedure or intervention shall not
constitute rape.
Exception 2.Sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man with
his own wife, the wife not being under fifteen years of age, is
not rape.

5. A husband who commits rape on his wife, as defined under Section 375 of

the IPC, cannot be charged with the said offence as long as the wife is over 15

years of age. It may be made clear that this Court is not going into the issue of

marital rape of women aged 18 years and above and the discussion is limited

only to wives aged 15 to 18 years. A man is guilty of rape if he commits any act

mentioned in Section 375 IPC, without the consent of the women if she is above

18 years of age. If a man commits any of the acts mentioned in Section 375 IPC,

with a girl aged less than 18 years, then the act will amount to rape even if done

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 73


with the consent of the victim. However, as per Exception 2 of Section 375 IPC, if

the man is married to the woman and if the wife is aged more than 15 years then

the man cannot be held guilty of commission of the offence defined under Section

375, whether the wife consented to the sexual act or not.

6. Section 375 of the IPC creates three classes of victims:

(i) The first class of victims are girls aged less than 18

years. In those cases, if the acts contemplated under

Section 375 IPC are committed with or without consent of

the victim, the man committing such an act is guilty of rape.


(ii) The second class of victims are women aged 18 years

or above. Such women can consent to having consensual

sex. If the sexual act is done with the consent of the

woman, unless the consent is obtained in circumstances

falling under clauses thirdly, fourthly and fifthly of Section

375 IPC no offence is committed. The man can be held

guilty of rape, only if the sexual act is done in absence of

legal and valid consent.


(iii) The third category of victims is married women. The

exception exempts a man from being charged and convicted

under Section 375 IPC for any of the acts contemplated

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 74


under this section if the victim is his wife aged 15 years

and above.

To put it differently, under Section 375 IPC a man cannot even have consensual

sex with a girl if she is below the age of 18 years and the girl is by law deemed

unable to give her consent. However, if the girl child is married and she is aged

above 15 years, then such consent is presumed and there is no offence if the

husband has sex with his wife, who is above 15 years of age. If the wife is

below 15 then the husband would be guilty of such an offence.

7. The issue is whether a girl below 18 years who is otherwise unable to give

consent can be presumed to have consented to have sex with her husband for all

times to come and whether such presumption in the case of a girl child is

unconscionable and violative of Articles 14, 16 and 21 of the Constitution of India.

THE LEGISLATIVE BACKGROUND

8. The IPC was enacted in the year 1860 and the age given in Exception 2 of

Section 375 has been changed from time to time. Till 1929, no minimum age of

marriage was legally fixed. It was only after passing of the Child Marriage

Restraint Act, 1929 (for short the Restraint Act) that the minimum age for

marriage was fixed. The Restraint Act was repealed by the Prohibition of Child

Marriage Act, 2006 (for short the PCMA). A chart showing the ages of consent,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 75


from time to time, under clause Sixthly of Section 375 IPC, in Exception 2 to

Section 375 IPC and the Restraint Act/PCMA is as follows:

Year IPC Age of Age under Minimum


Consent under Exception 2 Age of
Section 375, to Sec. 375 Marriage
6th Clause I.P.C under the
I.P.C Restraint
Act/PCM
A
1860 - 10 Years 10 Years -

1891 Act 10 of 1891 12 Years 12 Years -


(After the
Amendment of
IPC)
1925 (After the 14 Years 13 Years -
Amendment of
IPC)
1929 (After Passing of 14 Years 13 Years 14 Years
Child Marriage
Restraint Act )
1940 After the 16 Years 15 Years 15 Years
Amendment of the
I.P.C and Child
Marriage Act
1978 - 16 Years 15 Years 18 Years
2013 - 18 Years 15 Years 18 Years
9. A perusal of the aforementioned chart clearly shows that when the IPC was

originally enacted in the year 1860, the age of consent under clause Sixthly of

Section 375 IPC and under Exception 2 of Section 375 IPC was 10 years. In this

regard, the IPC was amended in 1891 and the age under both the provisions was

raised to 12 years. In 1925, the age of consent was raised under clause Sixthly to

14 years but under the Exception 2 the age was retained at 13 years. In 1929, the

Child Marriage Restraint Act was enacted. Section 3 of this Act provided that the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 76


minimum age of the girl child, to be eligible for marriage, was 14 years. In 1940,

the IPC was again amended and the age of consent under clause Sixthly was raised

to 16 years, but under Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC, the age was raised to 15

years and the minimum age of marriage under the Restraint Act was also 15 years.

In 1978, the IPC was again amended and the age of consent was raised to 16 years

but under Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC, no change was made. In 1978, the

minimum age for marriage of the girl child was raised to 18 years but no

consequential amendment was made in the IPC. In 2013, after the unfortunate

Nirbhaya incident took place, the Parliament raised the age of consent under

clause Sixthly to 18 years. The minimum age for marriage of a girl child remained

at 18 years, but no change was made in Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC and a girl

child who was married before the minimum age of marriage, could be subjected to

sexual intercourse (forcible or otherwise) by her husband and if she was over 15

years of age, the husband could not be charged with any offence.

10. At this stage, reference may be made to the Hindu Marriage Act. In the

Hindu Marriage Act, as originally enacted in 1955, the minimum age for marriage

of a bride was 15 years and of a groom 18 years. The Hindu Marriage Act was

amended in 1978 and the minimum age of marriage for a bride was enhanced to

18 years and for a groom to 21 years. Identical amendment was made in the

Restraint Act.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 77


11. The Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929 was repealed by the Prohibition of

Child Marriage Act, 2006 and this Act defines a child as follows:

2. Definitions.In this Act, unless the context otherwise


requires,

(e) child means a person who, if a male, has not completed


twenty-one years of age, and if a female, has not completed
eighteen years of age.

12. Section 3 of the PCMA makes child marriages voidable at the option of the

contracting party who is a child and reads as follows:

3. Child marriages to be voidable at the option of contracting


party being a child.(1) Every child marriage, whether solemnised
before or after the commencement of this Act, shall be voidable at the
option of the contracting party who was a child at the time of the
marriage:

Provided that a petition for annulling a child marriage by a decree of


nullity may be filed in the district court only by a contracting party to
the marriage who was a child at the time of the marriage.

(2) If at the time of filing a petition, the petitioner is a minor, the


petition may be filed through his or her guardian or next friend
alongwith the Child Marriage Prohibition Officer.

(3) The petition under this section may be filed at any time but before
the child filing the petition completes two years of attaining majority.

(4) While granting a decree of nullity under this section, the district
court shall make an order directing both the parties to the marriage
and their parents or their guardians to return to the other party, his or
her parents or guardian, as the case may be, the money, valuables,
ornaments and other gifts received on the occasion of the marriage by
them from the other side, or an amount equal to the value of such
valuables, ornaments, other gifts and money:

Provided that no order under this section shall be passed unless the
concerned parties have been given notices to appear before the district
court and show cause why such order should not be passed.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 78


13. It would be pertinent to note that under the Restraint Act the punishment

under Section 3 for a male aged 18 years to 21 years, contracting a child marriage

was simple imprisonment, which could extend up to 15 days or with fine up to

Rs.1000/- or both and under Section 4, if a male over 21 years contracted a

marriage with a female child, the punishment was simple imprisonment which

could extend up to 3 months. Section 5 provided punishment of simple

imprisonment up to 3 months and fine with regard to those who performed,

conducted or directed any child marriage. Similar provisions existed in Section 6

with regard to the punishment of parents or guardians, who acted to promote child

marriage or permitted it to be solemnized or negligently failed to prevent the child

marriage to be solemnized. Surprisingly, the proviso to Section 6 provided that no

women could be punished with imprisonment. The punishments provided under

the Restraint Act were virtually illusory and no minimum punishment was

prescribed.

14. The Restraint Act was repealed and replaced by the PCMA. The provisions

of the PCMA are slightly more stringent. Under Section 9 of the PCMA, if a male

adult above 18 years of age contracts a child marriage, he can be sentenced to

rigorous imprisonment up to 2 years or fine which may extend up to one lakh

rupees or both. However, no minimum sentence is provided even under this Act.

Section 10 of the PCMA provides punishment for those persons who perform,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 79


conduct, direct or abet a child marriage and the same sentence is provided. As far

as the guardians and parents are concerned, the punishment for them is provided

under Section 11 and it is the same. Again, the proviso lays down that no woman

shall be punishable with imprisonment. Though this Court is not dealing with this

question directly in the present petition, it is obvious that a woman would be

placed in the forefront by any person who gets a child marriage conducted. Such a

woman cannot be sentenced to undergo imprisonment and at the most, a fine can

be levied. The punishments provided are neither sufficiently punitive nor

deterrent. Therefore, the PCMA has been breached with impunity. I think the

time has come when this Act needs serious reconsideration, especially in view of

the harsh reality that a lot of child trafficking is taking place under the garb of

marriage including child marriage. More stringent punishments should be

provided and some minimum punishment should definitely be provided especially

to those mature adults who promote such marriages and who perform, conduct,

direct or abet any such marriage. Otherwise, this legislation will never act as a

sufficient deterrent to prevent or even reduce child marriages.

15. Under Section 2(k) of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children)

Act, 2000, a juvenile or child was defined to mean a person, who had not

completed 18 years of age. The Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children)

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 80


Act, 2015 defines a child under section 2(12) to mean a person who has not

completed 18 years of age.

16. Under the Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, a child

has been defined under Section 2(b) to mean any person below the age of 18 years.

17. Section 2(vii) of the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act, 1939 entitles a

women married under Muslim law to obtain a decree of dissolution of marriage if

she is given in marriage by her father or other guardian before she attained the age

of 15 years and she repudiates the marriage before attaining the age of 18 years

provided that the marriage has not been consummated. This provision deals with

girls below the age of 15 years who are got married. Such a girl is required to

repudiate her marriage before she attains majority and she can only repudiate the

marriage if the marriage has not been consummated. This virtually makes

mockery of the PCMA. Therefore, even in a marriage which is void under

PCMA, the girl will have to obtain a decree for dissolution of her marriage, that

too before she attains the age of majority and only if the marriage has not been

consummated. Another anomalous situation is that if the husband has forcible sex

with such a girl, the marriage is consummated and the girl child is deprived of her

right to get the marriage annulled.

18. Similarly under Section 13(2)(iv) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, a Hindu

girl can file a petition for divorce on the ground that her marriage, whether

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 81


consummated or not, was solemnized before she attained the age of 15 years and

she has repudiated her marriage after attaining the age of 15 years but before

attaining the age of 18 years. This is also not in consonance with the provisions of

PCMA, according to which marriage of a child bride below the age of 15 years is

void and there is no question of seeking a divorce. A void marriage is no

marriage. Another anomaly is that whereas a child bride, who is above 15 years

under PCMA, can apply for annulment of marriage up to the age of 20 years,

under Section 13(2)(iv) of the Hindu Marriage Act, a child bride under the age of

15 years must repudiate the marriage after attaining the age of 15 years but before

she attains the age of 18 years, i.e. even before she attains majority. The question

that remains unanswered is who will represent or help this child, who has been

forced to marry to approach the Courts.

19. It is obvious that while making amendments to various laws, some laws are

forgotten and consequential amendments are not made in those laws. After the

PCMA was enacted both the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 and the Dissolution of

Muslim Marriages and Divorce Act, 1939 also should have been suitably

amended, but this has not been done. In my opinion, the PCMA is a secular Act

applicable to all. It being a special Act dealing with children, the provisions of

this Act will prevail over the provisions of both the Hindu Marriage Act and the

Muslim Marriages and Divorce Act, in so far as children are concerned.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 82


20. Section 3 of the Majority Act, 1875 provides that a person shall attain the

age of majority on completing the age of 18 years and not before. It would,

however, be pertinent to mention that Section 2 of the Indian Majority Act

contains a non-obstante clause excluding laws relating to marriage, divorce, dower

and adoption from the provisions of that Act. Under Section 4(i) of the Guardians

and Wards Act, 1890 a minor has been defined to mean a person, who has not

attained majority under the Majority Act. Under Section 4(a) of the Hindu

Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956 a minor has been defined to mean a person

who has not completed the age of 18 years. Under the Representation of the

People Act, 1951 a person is entitled to vote only after he attains the age of 18

years.

21. Under the provisions of the aforesaid Acts a person, who is a minor and not

a major, is not entitled to deal with his property. The property of such a minor can

be sold or transferred only if such sale or transfer is for the benefit of the minor

and after the permission of the court. Section 11 of the Indian Contract Act, 1872

provides that only a person who has attained the age of majority and is of a sound

mind is competent to enter into a contract. A contract entered into by a minor is

treated to be a void contract.

22. Keeping in view the mounting crimes against children, regardless of the sex

of the victim, Parliament enacted the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 83


Act, 2012 (for short POCSO), which came into force on 14.11.2012. The

Statement of Objects and Reasons of this Act reads as follows:

STATEMENT OF OBJECTS AND REASONS 1. Article 15 of the


Constitution, inter alia, confers upon the State powers to make special
provision for children. Further, article 39, inter alia, provides that the
State shall in particular direct its policy towards securing that the
tender age of children are not abused and their childhood and youth
are protected against exploitation and they are given facilities to
develop in a healthy manner and in conditions of freedom and dignity.
2. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Children, ratified
by India on 11th December, 1992, requires the State Parties to
undertake all appropriate national, bilateral and multilateral measures
to prevent (a) the inducement or coercion of a child to engage in any
unlawful sexual activity; (b) the exploitative use of children in
prostitution or other unlawful sexual practices; and (c) the exploitative
use of children in pornographic performances and materials.
3. The data collected by the National Crime Records Bureau shows
that there has been increase in cases of sexual offences against
children. This is corroborated by the Study on Child Abuse: India
2007 conducted by the Ministry of Women and Child Development.
Moreover, sexual offences against children are not adequately
addressed by the existing laws. A large number of such offences are
neither specifically provided for nor are they adequately penalised.
The interests of the child, both as a victim as well as a witness, need to
be protected. It is felt that offences against children need to be defined
explicitly and countered through commensurate penalties as an
effective deterrence.
4. It is, therefore, proposed to enact a self contained comprehensive
legislation inter alia to provide for protection of children from the
offences of sexual assault, sexual harassment and pornography with
due regard for safeguarding the interest and well being of the child at
every stage of the judicial process, incorporating child-friendly
procedures for reporting, recording of evidence, investigation and trial
of offences and provision for establishment of Special Courts for
speedy trial of such offences.
5. The Bill would contribute to enforcement of the right of all children
to safety, security and protection from sexual abuse and exploitation.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 84


23. POCSO is a landmark legislation for protection of child rights and to prevent

the sexual abuse and exploitation of children. This Act deals with sexual offences

committed against a child and a child has been defined to be a person below the

age of 18 years under Section 2(d). POCSO does not define rape, but it defines

penetrative sexual assault under Section 3 and aggravated penetrative sexual

assault under Section 5 and the punishments are provided for them under Section 4

and 6 respectively. Section 7 of the POCSO defines sexual assault, Section 9

defines aggravated sexual assault and punishments for those offences are provided

under Section 8 and 10 respectively. Section 11 defines sexual harassment and

Section 12 provides the punishment for sexual harassment. Chapter III of the

POCSO deals with use of children for pornographic purposes with which we are

not concerned in the instant case. This Act creates Special Courts to deal with

offences against children. Section 42 of the POCSO is very important for our

purpose and it provides that where an offence is punishable both under POCSO

and under IPC, then the offender found guilty would be liable for that punishment,

which is more severe.

24. Section 42 and Section 42A of the POCSO read as follows:

42.Alternate punishment. - Where an act or omission constitutes an


offence punishable under this Act and also under sections 166A,
354A, 354B, 354C, 354D, 370, 370A, 375, 376, 376A, 376C, 376D,
376E or section 509 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860), then,
notwithstanding anything contained in any law for the time being in
force, the offender found guilty of such offence shall be liable to

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 85


punishment under this Act or under the Indian Penal Code as provides
for punishment which is greater in degree.
42A. Act not in derogation of any other law. The provisions
of this Act shall be in addition to and not in derogation of the
provisions of any other law for the time being in force and, in case of
any inconsistency, the provisions of this Act shall have overriding
effect on the provisions of any such law to the extent of the
inconsistency.

25. Section 42A provides that the provisions of POCSO shall be in addition to

and not in derogation of the provisions of any other Act. Therefore, the

legislature, in its wisdom, thought that POCSO would supplant and would be in

addition to the other criminal provisions and where there was any inconsistency,

the provisions of POCSO would override any other law to the extent of

inconsistency.

26. Another important provision to which reference may be made is Section

198(6) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (for short the Code). The same reads

as follows:

198. Prosecution for offences against marriage:


xxx xxx xxx
(6) No Court shall take cognizance of an offence under section 376 of
the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860), where such offence consists of
sexual inter-course by a man with his own wife, the wife being under
eighteen years of age, if more than one year has elapsed from the date
of the commission of the offence.

The age eighteen was substituted for fifteen by Act 5 of 2009 w.e.f.

31.12.2009. A perusal of the aforesaid provision also makes it clear that a

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 86


complaint with regard to commission of offence under Section 375 IPC punishable

under Section 376 IPC can be taken cognizance of by a court within one year of

the commission of the offence even where the wife is below 18 years of age. It

is, therefore, apparent that while amending Section 198 of the Code, the legislature

was visualising that there can be marital rape with a wife aged less than 18 years

but was prescribing a limitation of one year, for taking cognizance of such an

offence. However, no consequential amendment was made to Exception 2 of

Section 375 IPC.

WHO IS A CHILD?

27. If one analyses the provisions of all the laws which have been referred to

above, it is apparent that the legislature, in its wisdom, has universally enacted that

a person below the age of 18 years is deemed to be a child unable to look after his

or her own interests. It would be very important to note that, in 2013 the IPC was

amended, post the unfortunate Nirbhaya incident and the age of consent under

clause Sixthly of Section 375 IPC was increased to 18 years. The position as on

date is that under the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012,

Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, Child Marriage Restraint

Act, 1929, Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005, The Majority

Act, 1875, The Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, The Indian Contract Act, 1872

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 87


and many other legislations, a person below the age of 18 years is considered to be

a child unable to look after his or her own interests.

28. As far as marriage laws are concerned, as far back as 1978, the minimum

age of marriage of a girl child was increased to 18 years. The Restraint Act, was

replaced by the PCMA wherein also marriage of a girl child aged below 18 years

is prohibited. However, Section 3 of the PCMA makes a child marriage voidable

at the option of that party, who was a child at the time of marriage. The petition

for annulling the child marriage must be filed within 2 years of the child attaining

majority. Therefore, a girl who was married before she attained the age of 18

years, can get her marriage annulled before she attains the age of 20 years.

Similarly, a male child can get the marriage annulled before attaining the age of 23

years. Even when the child is minor, a petition for annulment can be filed by the

guardian or next friend of the child along with the Child Marriage Prohibition

Officer. Unfortunately, both the number of prosecutions and the number of cases

for annulment of marriage filed under PCMA are abysmally low.

THE ILL EFFECTS OF A CHILD MARRIAGE

29. A lot of material has been placed before us both by Mr. Gaurav Agarwal,

learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and Ms. Jayna Kothari, learned

Counsel appearing for the Intervener, to indicate that child marriage is not in the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 88


interest of the girl child. In my opinion, it is not necessary to refer to all the

material cited by learned counsel. The fact that child marriage is a reprehensible

practice; that it is an abhorrent practice; that it violates the human rights of a child,

cannot be seriously disputed. I am not oblivious to the harsh reality that most of

the child brides are even below the age of 15 years. There is a practice in many

parts of the country where children, both girls and boys, are married off, even

before they attain puberty. They are innocent children, who do not even

understand what marriage is. The practice which is widely prevalent is that a girl

who is married pre-puberty is normally kept at her parents home and is sent to her

matrimonial home after she attains puberty in a ceremony which is commonly

referred to as gauna. Can the marriage of a child aged 3-4 years, by any stretch

of imagination, be called a legal and valid marriage?

30. A Child marriage will invariably lead to early child birth and this will

adversely affect the health of the girl child. In a report by the UNICEF 32, there is

an article on ending child marriage and the ill effects of child marriage have been

set out thus:-

Married girls are among the worlds most vulnerable people. When
their education is cut short, girls lose the chance to gain the skills and
knowledge to secure a good job and provide for themselves and their
families. They are socially isolated. As I observed among my former
schoolmates who were forced to get married, the consciousness of
their isolation is in itself painful.

32 Report of UNICEF ON THE STATE OF THE WORLDS CHILDREN 2016.


A fair chance for girls - End Child Marriage by Angelique Kidjo

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 89


Subordinate to their husbands and families, married girls are more
vulnerable to domestic violence, and not in a position to make
decisions about safe sex and family planning which puts them at
high risk of sexually transmitted infections, including HIV, and of
pregnancy and childbearing before their bodies are fully mature.
Already risky pregnancies become even riskier, as married girls are
less likely to get adequate medical care. During delivery, mothers
who are still children are at higher risk of potentially disabling
complications, like obstetric fistula, and both they and their babies are
more likely to die.

31. In a study conducted on child marriages in India, based on the census of

201133, it was found that 3% girls in the age group of 10 to 14 years were got

married and about 20% girls were married before attaining the age of 19 years.

Unfortunately, this report deals with girls below the age of 19 years and not 18

years, but the report does indicate that more than 20% girls in this country are

married before attaining the age of 18 years. Therefore, more than one out of

every 5 marriages violates the provisions of the PCMA and the Hindu Marriage

Act, 1955.

32. The World Health Organisation, in a Report34 dealing with the issue of child

brides found that though 11% of the births worldwide are amongst adolescents,

they account for 23% of the overall burden of diseases. Therefore, a child bride is

more than doubly prone to health problems than a grown up woman.

33 A Statistical analysis of CHILD MARRIAGE IN INDIA, Based on Census 2011 published by


Young Lives and National Commission for Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR)

34 World Health Organisation Report on Early Marriages, Adolescent and Young


Pregnancies, Sixty- Fifth World Health Assembly dated 16th March, 2012

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 90


33. In the Report of the Convention on the Rights of the Child 35, certain

recommendations have been made and the relevant portion of the Report is as

follows:-

Harmful Practices

51. The Committee is deeply concerned at the high prevalence of


child marriages in the State party, despite the enactment of the
Prohibition of Child Marriage Act (PCMA, 2006). It is further
concerned at barriers impeding the full implementation of the PCMA,
such as the prevalence of social norms and traditions over the legal
framework, the existence of different Personal Status Laws
establishing their own minimum age of marriage applicable to their
respective religious community as well as the lack of awareness about
the PCMA by enforcement officers. It is also concerned about the
prevalence of other harmful practices against girls such as dowry and
devadasi.
52. The Committee urges the State party to ensure the effective
implementation of the Prohibition of Child Marriage Act (PCMA,
2006), including by clarifying that the PCMA supersede the different
religious-based Personal Status Laws. It also recommends that the
State party take the necessary measures to combat dowry, child
marriage and devadasi including by conducting awareness-raising
programmes and campaigns with a view to changing attitudes, as well
as counselling and reproductive education, to prevent and combat
child marriages, which are harmful to the health and well-being of
girls.

34. The General Assembly of United Nations adopted a Resolution 36, relevant

portion of which, reads as follows:

Expressing concern about the continued prevalence of child, early and


forced marriage worldwide, including the fact that there are still
approximately 15 million girls married every year before they reach 18

35 Report of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) on the
Convention of the Rights of the Child, dated 13th June, 2014 , dealing with India

36 Resolution adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 19th December, 2016
on Child, early and forced marriage, Seventy-first session, Agenda Item 64(a)

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 91


years of age and that more than 720 million women and girls alive
today were married before their eighteenth birthday.

Recognizing that child, early and forced marriage is a harmful practice


that violates, abuses or impairs human rights and is linked to and
perpetuates other harmful practices and human rights violations and
that such violations have a disproportionately negative impact on
women and girls, and underscoring the human rights obligations and
commitments of States to promote and protect the human rights and
fundamental freedoms of women and girls and to prevent and
eliminate the practice of child, early and forced marriage.

35. In the National Family Health Survey-4, 2015-201637 some startling figures

are revealed. It was found that at the time of carrying out the survey in 2014,

amongst women in the age group of 20-24 years, almost 26.8% women were

married before they attained the age of 18 years, i.e. more than one out of 4

marriages was of a girl child. In the urban areas the percentage is 17.5% and it

rises to 31.5% in the rural areas.

36. In the National Plan of Action for Children, 201638, the Government of

India itself has recognised the high rate of child marriages prevalent in the country

and the fact that a child marriage violates the basic rights of health, development

and protection of the child. Relevant portion of the report reads as follows:

A large number of children, especially girls are married before the


legal age in India. According to NFHS 3 (2005-06), 47.4 percent of
women in the age 20-24 were married before 18, the percentage being
higher for rural areas. The situation has improved in 2013-14 as the
RSOC data shows that 30.3 percent women in the age 20-24 were
37 India Fact Sheet- Issued by Government of India, Ministry of Health and Family Welfare

38 Drawn up by the Ministry of Women and Child Development, Government of


India,
(Published on 14th January, 2017)

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 92


married before their legal age. Early marriage poses various risks for
the survival, health and development of young girls and to children
born to them. It is also used as a means of trafficking.

37. In a Report39 based on the Census, 2011, the consequences of child

marriages have been dealt with in the following terms:

5.1 Consequences
Child marriage is not only a violation of human rights, but is also
recognized as an obstacle to the development of young people. The
practice of child marriage cut shorts a critical stage of self-discovery
and exploring ones identity. Child marriage is an imposition of a
marriage partner on children or adolescents who are in no way ready
and matured, and thus, are at a loss to understand the significance of
marriage. Their development gets comprised due to being deprived of
freedom, opportunity for personal development, and other rights
including health and well-being, education; and participation in civic
life and nullifies their basic rights as envisaged in the United Nations
Convention on the Right of the Child ratified by India in 1989.
Marriage at a young age prevents both girls and boys from exercising
agency in making important life decisions and securing basic
freedoms, including pursuing opportunities for education, earning a
sustainable livelihood and accessing sexual health and rights.
The prevalent practice of child marriage has detrimental
consequences for both boys and girls, but has more grave and
far-reaching adverse effects on girls. Within a patriarchal family
structure, girls have relatively little power, but young and newly
married women are particularly powerless, secluded and voiceless.
Adolescent girls have little choice about whom and when to marry,
whether or not to have sexual relations, and when to bear children.
This is well elaborated in a study of girls in the age group 10-16
years. It was found that they were oppressed in several ways such as:

They had to submit unquestioningly to the parents decision


regarding their marriage.
They were over-burdened with household chores.
They had limited knowledge of their body and its functioning.
They were unaware of sexual changes, contraception, child
bearing and rearing.

39 A Statistical Analysis of Child Marriage in India, Based on Census, 2011


(Published by Young Lives and National Commission for Protection of Child Rights(NCPCR)
June 2017, New Delhi

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 93


They dropped out of school on attaining puberty.
They had no time for leisure and social interaction.
They were discriminated in matters of food intake and expressing
their views within the family.

Imagine the fate of a young girl with the above profile if she is to face
marital life and its challenges during adolescence. The adolescent
married girl is more at risk. She is less likely to be allowed out of the
house, to have access to services and usually, not be given space or
freedom to exert agency. Within the marital home, which in majority
of the cases is a joint family, she will probably not have much
communication with her husband, and will end up socially isolated,
with very little contact with her parental home.

38. This Report40 also notices upswing of female deaths during pregnancy in the

age groups of 15-19 years and attributes these deaths to the death of teenage

mothers. The relevant portion of the report reads as follows:

Census data have demonstrated an upswing of female deaths in the


age group of 15-19 years. This high mortality rate could be attributed
to the deaths of teenage mothers. Child marriage virtually works like
a double-edged sword; lower age at marriage is significantly
associated with worse outcomes for the child and worse pregnancy
outcomes for the mother. All these factors push girls and their
families into perpetuation of intergenerational poverty and
marginalisation.....

39. This Report41 deals with various other aspects and some apposite

observations are as follows:

A young girl who is still struggling to understand her own anatomy,


when forced to make conjugal relations, often shows signs of
post-traumatic stress and depression owing to sexual abuse by her
40 A Statistical Analysis of Child Marriage in India, Based on Census, 2011
(Published by Young Lives and National Commission for Protection of Child Rights(NCPCR), June 2017, New Delhi

41 A Statistical Analysis of Child Marriage in India, Based on Census, 2011


(Published by Young Lives and National Commission for Protection of Child Rights(NCPCR)
June 2017, New Delhi

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 94


older partner. Neither the bodies of these young brides nor their
innocent little minds are prepared, therefore, forced sexual encounters
can lead to irreversible physical and psychological damage. A study
conducted in 2013 showed that young girls are three times more likely
to experience marital rape.

This report reveals a shocking aspect that girls below the age of 18 years are

subjected to three times more marital rape as compared to the grown up women.

40. A perusal of the various reports and data placed before us clearly shows that

marriage of the child not only violates the human rights of a child but also affects

the health of the child.

41. Reference may be made to certain decisions cited before us. The Delhi High

Court in Association for Social Justice & Research v. Union of India & Ors. 42,

was dealing with a case where a girl aged between 16 to 18 years was married off

to a man stated to be over 40 years of age. The Court noted the ill effects of child

marriage and gave a direction that the child will remain with her parents and her

marriage will not be consummated till she attains the age of 18 years. Thereafter,

a Full Bench of the Delhi High Court in Court on its own motion (Lajja Devi) &

Ors. v. State & Ors.43, while dealing with the provisions of PCMA and also

referring to the provisions of Sections 375 and 376 IPC and after noticing the

judgment passed in the case of Association For Social Justice & Research

(supra), again reiterated that child marriage is a social evil, which endangers the

42 [2010 (118) DRJ 324(DB)]

43 W.P.(Crl.) No.338 of 2008

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 95


life and health of the child. The ill effects of child marriage have been

summarised in the following manner:

(i) Girls who get married at an early age are often more susceptible
to the health risks associated with early sexual initiation and
childbearing, including HIV and obstetric fistula.
(ii) Young girls who lack status, power and maturity are often
subjected to domestic violence, sexual abuse and social isolation.
(iii) Early marriage almost always deprives girls of their education or
meaningful work, which contributes to persistent poverty.
(iv) Child Marriage perpetuates an unrelenting cycle of gender
inequality, sickness and poverty.
(v) Getting the girls married at an early age when they are not
physically mature, leads to highest rates of maternal and child
mortality.

42. The Full Bench, with regard to Section 375 IPC before its amendment in

2013, made the following observations:

32. It is distressing to note that the Indian Penal Code, 1860


acquiesces child marriage. The exception to Section 375 specifically
lays down that sexual intercourse of man with his own wife, the wife
not being under fifteen years of age is not rape, thus ruling out the
possibility of marital rape when the age of wife is above fifteen years.
On the other hand, if the girl is not the wife of the man, but is below
sixteen, then the sexual intercourse even with the consent of the girl
amounts to rape? It is rather shocking to note the specific relaxation is
given to a husband who rapes his wife, when she happens to be
between 15-16 years. This provision in the Indian Penal Code, 1860
is a specific illustration of legislative endorsement and sanction to
child marriages.

43. A Full Bench of Madras High Court in T. Sivakumar v. Inspector of

Police44, dealt with the provisions of the PCMA. It held that a marriage contracted

44 H.C.P. No. 907 of 2011, vide its judgment dated 3rd November, 2011

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 96


with a female less than 18 years and more than 15 years is not a void marriage but

is only a voidable marriage. However, the Court went on to hold that stricto sensu

the marriage could not be called a valid marriage since the child bride had the

option of getting the marriage annulled till she attains the age of 20 years. It held

as follows:

The marriage contracted by a person with a female of less than 18


years is voidable and the same shall be subsisting until it is annulled by
a competent Court under Section 3 of the Prohibition of Child
Marriage Act. The said marriage is not a valid marriage stricto
sensu as per the classification but it is not invalid. The male
contracting party shall not enjoin all the rights which would otherwise
emanate from a valid marriage stricto sensu, instead he will enjoin
only limited rights.

Reference to these judgments has been made only for the purpose of highlighting

the concern shown by the Courts with regard to child marriage and the manner in

which the Courts have consistently held that the child marriage is an evil which

should be avoided.

THE KARNATAKA EXPERIENCE

44. A writ petition45 was filed in the Karnataka High Court, raising the issue of

validity of child marriages. In its order dated 10th November, 2010 the Karnataka

High Court noted as follows:

45 Writ Petition No.11154/2006 (GM-RES-PIL), Muthamma Devaya & Anr. v. Union of India &
Ors.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 97


The narration of facts in the present writ petition is heart rendering.
The photographs appended to the writ petition have been a cause of
deep distress to us. The photographs reveal, the marriage of minor
girls, not yet in their teens, to fully grown men. In one of the
photographs, the girl has been made to stand on a chair, so that she
could garland her tall and fully grown groom. Forced marriage of the
girl child, one realises, is one of the manifestations of cruelty, possibly
without any equivalent comparison. It seems that the practice is
common place in this part of the world. It may have remained
unchecked for a variety of reasons including, poverty, lack of
education, culture and ignorance. We are of the view that allowing the
evil to continue without redressing it, would make us a party to the
disgraceful activity.

45. After making the aforesaid observations, the Karnataka High Court

constituted a four Member committee, headed by Dr. Justice Shivraj V. Patil,

former Judge of this Court, to expose the extent of practice of child marriage. The

Committee was also requested to suggest ways and means to root out the evil of

child marriage from society and to prevent it to the maximum extent possible. The

Core Committee submitted its report and made various recommendations. One of

its recommendations was that marriage of a girl child below the age of 18 years

should be declared void ab initio. Pursuant to the report of the Core Committee, in

the State of Karnataka an amendment was made in the PCMA and Section 1(A)

has been inserted after sub-section 2 Section 3, which reads as under:

(1A) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1) every


child marriage solemnized on or after the date of coming into force of
the Prohibition of Child Marriage (Karnataka Amendment) Act, 2016
shall be void ab initio.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 98


46. Therefore, any marriage of a child, i.e. a female aged below 18 years and a

male below 21 years is void ab initio in the State of Karnataka. This is how the

law should have been throughout the country. Where the marriage is void, there

cannot be a husband or a wife and I have no doubt that protection of Exception 2

to Section 375 IPC cannot be availed of by those persons, who claim to be

husband of child brides pursuant to a marriage which is illegal and void.

47. This leads to an anomalous situation. In Karnataka, if a husband has sexual

intercourse with his wife aged below 18 years, since such marriage would be

void ab initio, the wife cannot be treated to be a legal wife and, therefore, the

husband cannot get the benefit of Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC whereas in rest

of the country he would be entitled to the benefit of such exception and be

immune from prosecution.

THE DEFENCE OF SOCIAL REALITY

48. The main defence raised on behalf of the Union of India is that though the

practice of child marriage may be reprehensible, though it may have been made

illegal, the harsh reality is that 20% to 30% of female children below the age of 18

years are got married in total violation of the PCMA. According to the Union of

India, keeping in view this stark reality and also keeping in view the sanctity

which is attached to a union like marriage, the Parliament, in its wisdom, thought

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 99


it fit to retain the age of fifteen in Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC. It has also been

urged that when Parliament enacts any law which falls within its jurisdiction, then

this Court should not normally interfere with that Act. When any law is passed,

the Court must presume that the Parliament has gone into all aspects of the matter.

Though it was faintly urged before us by learned counsel for the petitioner that the

Parliament did not go into certain aspects, this Court is clearly of the view that

such ignorance cannot be imputed to Parliament. In our constitutional framework,

where there is division of powers, each repository of power must respect the other

and this Court must extend to the Parliament the respect it deserves. One cannot

and should not impute ignorance to the legislature.

49. The stand of the Union of India may be summarised as follows:-


(i) Economic and educational development in the country is still
uneven and child marriages are still taking place. It has been,
therefore, decided to retain the age of 15 years under Exception 2 of
Section 375 of IPC so as to give protection to husband and wife
against criminalizing the sexual activity between them.

(ii) As per National Family Health Survey-III, 46% of women


between the ages 18-29 years in India were married before the age of
18. It is also estimated that there are 23 million child brides in the
country. Hence, criminalizing the consummation of a marriage union
with a serious offence such as rape would not be appropriate and
practical.

(iii) Providing punishment for child marriage with consent does not
appear to be appropriate in view of socio-economic conditions of the
country. Thus, the age prescribed in Exception 2 of Section 375 of
IPC has been retained considering the basic facts of the still evolving
social norms and issues.

(iv) The Law Commission also recommended for raising the age from
15 years to 16 years and it was incorporated in the Criminal Law
(Amendment) Ordinance, 2013. However, after wide ranging

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 100


consultations with various stakeholders it was further decided to retain
the age at 15 years.

(v) Exception 2 of Section 375 of IPC envisages that if the marriage is


solemnized at the age of 15 years due to traditions, it should not be a
reason to book the husband in the case of offence of rape under the
IPC.

(vi) It is also necessary that the provisions of law should be in such a


manner that it cannot affect a particular class of society. Retaining the
age of 15 years in Exception 2 of Section 375 of IPC has been
provided considering the social realities of the nation.

50. Certain other facts may be noted which, though not strictly necessary for

deciding the legal issues, are necessary to decide the background in which

amendment to Section 375 IPC and other criminal laws were carried out. These

facts clearly show that Parliament knowingly took a decision not to criminalize

sexual activity between husband and wife. In the 84th Report of the Law

Commission, it was recommended that the age of consent under clause Sixthly of

Section 375 IPC, should be increased to 18 years and Exception 2 should be

deleted. In the 172nd Report of the Law Commission, it was recommended that the

age of consent under clause Sixthly should be retained at 16 years, but the Law

Commission specifically opined that there should be no distinction on account of

marriage of the girl child and the age in Exception 2 be raised from 15 to 16 years.

The Justice Verma Committee did not make any recommendation to change the

age of consent under clause Sixthly. However Parliament, while amending the IPC

in the year 2014, in the wake of the Nirbhaya incident, decided to increase the

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 101


age of consent to 18 years under clause Sixthly, but did not make any change in

Exception 2 of Section 375 IPC.

51. Interestingly, though the Verma Committee did not recommend that the age

of consent should be increased under clause Sixthly from 16 to 18 years, but it did

recommend that Exception 2 should be completely deleted. The Parliament took

note of the Verma Committee report. It also took note of the recommendations of

the Law Commission and a Standing Committee was constituted and Parliament

enacted this law pursuant to the recommendations of the Standing Committee. It

would also be pertinent to mention that one Member of Parliament, Mr. Saugata

Roy moved a Private Members Bill to fix the age at 18 years in Exception 2 of

Section 375 IPC, but that amendment was not carried. Interestingly, the

amendment to Section 375 IPC and other sections relating to offences against

women and the POCSO were incorporated by one Amending Act i.e., The

Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 2013. After the Nirbhaya case, the Juvenile

Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015 was also amended in 2016 and

a child in conflict with law over the age of 16 years, if charged with a heinous

offence, can be tried in a court of law if the Juvenile Justice Board feels that he

was mature enough to commit a crime.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 102


POWER OF THE COURT TO INTERFERE

52. It is a well settled principle of law that when the constitutional validity of the

law enacted by the legislature is under challenge and there is no challenge to the

legislative competence, the Court will always raise a presumption of the

constitutionality of the legislation. The courts are reluctant to strike down laws as

unconstitutional unless it is shown that the law clearly violates the constitutional

provisions or the fundamental rights of the citizens. The Courts must show due

deference to the legislative process.

53. There can be no dispute with the proposition that Courts must draw a

presumption of constitutionality in favour of laws enacted by the legislature. In

Sub-Divisional Magistrate v. Ram Kali46, this Court observed as follows:

.....The presumption is always in favour of the constitutionality of an


enactment, since it must be assumed that the legislature understands
and correctly appreciates the needs of its own people, and its laws are
directed to problems made manifest by experience and its
discriminations are based on adequate grounds.

54. Thereafter, in Pathumma & Ors. v. State of Kerala & Ors.47, this Court held

that the Court would interfere only when the statute clearly violates the rights of

the citizens provided under Part III of the Constitution or where the Act is beyond

46 (1968) 1 SCR 205

47 (1978) 2 SCC 1

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 103


the legislative competence or such similar grounds. The relevant observations are

as follows:

6. It is obvious that the Legislature is in the best position to


understand and appreciate the needs of the people as enjoined by the
Constitution to bring about social reforms for the upliftment of the
backward and the weaker sections of the society and for the
improvement of the lot of poor people. The Court will, therefore,
interfere in this process only when the statute is clearly violative of the
right conferred on the citizen under Part III of the Constitution or
when the Act is beyond the legislative competence of the legislature or
such other grounds. It is for this reason that the Courts have
recognised that there is always a presumption in favour of the
constitutionality of a statute and the onus to prove its invalidity lies on
the party which assails the same...

55. In Government of A.P. v. P. Laxmi Devi48, this Court held thus:

66. As observed by the Privy Council in Shell Co. of Australia v.


Federal Commr. of Taxation [1931 AC 275:1930 All ER Rep 671
(PC)] (All ER p. 680 G-H)
...unless it becomes clear beyond reasonable doubt that the legislation
in question transgresses the limits laid down by the organic law of the
Constitution, it must be allowed to stand as the true expression of the
national will...
67. Hence if two views are possible, one making the provision in the
statute constitutional, and the other making it unconstitutional, the
former should be preferred vide Kedar Nath Singh v. State of Bihar
[AIR 1962 SC 955]. Also, if it is necessary to uphold the
constitutionality of a statute to construe its general words narrowly or
widely, the court should do so vide G.P. Singhs Principles of
Statutory Interpretation, 9th Edn., 2004, p. 497......

56. In Subramanian Swamy v. Director, CBI49, a Constitution Bench of this

Court laid down the following principle:


48 (2008) 4 SCC 720

49 (2014) 8 SCC 682

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 104


Courts approach
49. Where there is challenge to the constitutional validity of a law
enacted by the legislature, the Court must keep in view that there is
always a presumption of constitutionality of an enactment, and a clear
transgression of constitutional principles must be shown. The
fundamental nature and importance of the legislative process needs to
be recognised by the Court and due regard and deference must be
accorded to the legislative process. Where the legislation is sought to
be challenged as being unconstitutional and violative of Article 14 of
the Constitution, the Court must remind itself to the principles relating
to the applicability of Article 14 in relation to invalidation of
legislation. The two dimensions of Article 14 in its application to
legislation and rendering legislation invalid are now well recognised
and these are: (i) discrimination, based on an impermissible or invalid
classification, and (ii) excessive delegation of powers; conferment of
uncanalised and unguided powers on the executive, whether in the
form of delegated legislation or by way of conferment of authority to
pass administrative orders if such conferment is without any
guidance, control or checks, it is violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. The Court also needs to be mindful that a legislation
does not become unconstitutional merely because there is another
view or because another method may be considered to be as good or
even more effective, like any issue of social, or even economic policy.
It is well settled that the courts do not substitute their views on what
the policy is.

57. I am conscious of the self imposed limitations laid down by this Court while

deciding the issue whether a law is constitutional or not. However, if the law is

discriminatory, arbitrary or violative of the fundamental rights or is beyond the

legislative competence of the legislature then the Court is duty bound to invalidate

such a law.

58. Justice H.R. Khanna in the case of State of Punjab v. Khan Chand 50 held

that when Courts strike down laws they are only doing their duty and no element

50 (1974) 1 SCC 549

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 105


of judicial arrogance should be attributed to the Courts when they do their duty

under the Constitution and determine whether the law made by the legislature is in

conformity with the provisions of the Constitution or not. The relevant

observations are as follows:

12. It would be wrong to assume that there is an element of judicial


arrogance in the act of the Courts in striking down an enactment. The
Constitution has assigned to the Courts the function of determining as
to whether the laws made by the Legislature are in conformity with
the provisions of the Constitution. In adjudicating the constitutional
validity of statutes, the Courts discharge an obligation which has been
imposed upon them by the Constitution. The Courts would be shirking
their responsibility if they hesitate to declare the provisions of a
statute to be unconstitutional, even though those provisions are found
to be violative of the Articles of the Constitution. Articles 32 and 226
are an integral part of the Constitution and provide remedies for
enforcement of fundamental rights and other rights conferred by the
Constitution. Hesitation or refusal on the part of the Courts to declare
the provisions of an enactment to be unconstitutional, even though
they are found to infringe the Constitution because of any notion of
judicial humility would in a large number of cases have the effect of
taking away or in any case eroding the remedy provided to the
aggrieved parties by the Constitution. Abnegation in matters affecting
ones own interest may sometimes be commendable but abnegation in
a matter where power is conferred to protect the interest of others
against measures which are violative of the Constitution is fraught
with serious consequences. It is as much the duty of the Courts to
declare a provision of an enactment to be unconstitutional if it
contravenes any Article of the Constitution as it is theirs to uphold its
validity in case it is found to suffer from no such infirmity.

59. Therefore, the principle is that normally the Courts should raise a

presumption in favour of the impugned law; however, if the law under challenge

violates the fundamental rights of the citizens, the law is arbitrary, or is

discriminatory, the Courts can either hold the law to be totally unconstitutional and

strike down the law or the Court may read down the law in such a manner that the
W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 106
law when read down does not violate the Constitution. While the Courts must

show restraint while dealing with such issues, the Court cannot shut its eyes to the

violations of the fundamental rights of the citizens. Therefore, if the legislature

enacts a law which is violative of the fundamental rights of the citizens, is

arbitrary and discriminatory, then the Court would be failing in its duty if it does

not either strike down the law or read down the law in such a manner that it falls

within the four corners of the Constitution.

60. It is not the job of the Court to decide whether a law is good or bad. Policy

matters fall within the realm of legislature and not of the Courts. The Court,

however, is empowered and has the jurisdiction to decide whether a law is

unconstitutional or not.

61. The law is an ass said Mr. Bumble51. That may be so. The law, however,

cannot be arbitrary or discriminatory. Merely because a law is asinine, it cannot

be set aside. However, if the law is arbitrary, discriminatory and violates the

fundamental rights guaranteed to the citizens of the country, then the law can

either be struck down or can be read down to make it in consonance with the

Constitution of India.

51 Oliver Twist: Author Charles Dickens

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 107


WHETHER EXCEPTION 2 TO SECTION 375 IPC IS ARBITRARY?

62. Before dealing with this issue, it would be necessary to point out that earlier

there was divergence of opinion as to whether a law could be struck down only on

the ground that it was arbitrary. In Indira Nehru Gandhi v. Raj Narain52 the

Court struck down clauses 4 and 5 of Article 329A of the Constitution on the

ground of arbitrariness. Reliance was placed on the celebrated judgment of this

Court passed in the case of Keshavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala53. In Para

681 of Raj Narain (supra), Chandrachud J., held as follows:

681. It follows that clauses (4) and (5) of Article 329A are arbitrary
and are calculated to damage or destroy the rule of law. Imperfections
of language hinder a precise definition of the rule of law as of the
definition of law itself. And the Constitutional Law of 1975 has
undergone many changes since A.V. Dicey, the great expounder of the
rule of law, delivered his lectures as Vinerian Professor of English
Law at Oxford, which were published in 1885 under the title,
Introduction to the Study of the Law of the Constitution. But so
much, I suppose, can be said with reasonable certainty that the rule of
law means that the exercise of powers of government shall be
conditioned by law and that subject to the exceptions to the doctrine of
equality, no one shall be exposed to the arbitrary will of the
Government. Dicey gave three meanings to rule of law: Absence of
arbitrary power, equality before the law or the equal subjection of all
classes to the ordinary law of the land administered by ordinary law
courts and that the Constitution is not the source but the consequence
of the rights of individuals, as defined and enforced by the
courts.

52 1975 (Supp.) SCC 1

53 (1973) 4 SCC 225.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 108


63. The aforesaid case was one of the first cases in which a law was set aside on
54
the ground of being arbitrary. In E.P. Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu the

doctrine of arbitrariness was further expanded. Bhagwati, J., eruditely explained

the principle in the following terms.

85.............From a positivistic point of view, equality is antithetic to


arbitrariness. In fact equality and arbitrariness are sworn enemies; one
belongs to the rule of law in a republic while the other, to the whim
and caprice of an absolute monarch. Where an act is arbitrary, it is
implicit in it that it is unequal both according to political logic and
constitutional law and is therefore violative of Article 14, and if it
affects any matter relating to public employment, it is also violative of
Article 16. Articles 14 and 16 strike at arbitrariness in State action and
ensure fairness and equality of treatment. They require that State
action must be based on valid relevant principles applicable alike to
all similarly situate and it must not be guided by any extraneous or
irrelevant considerations because that would be denial of equality.
Where the operative reason for State action, as distinguished from
motive inducing from the antechamber of the mind, is not legitimate
and relevant but is extraneous and outside the area of permissible
considerations, it would amount to mala fide exercise of power and
that is hit by Articles 14 and 16. Mala fide exercise of power and
arbitrariness are different lethal radiations emanating from the same
vice: in fact the latter comprehends the former. Both are inhibited by
Articles 14 and 16.

64. The doctrine developed in Royappas case (supra) was further advanced in

the case of Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India55. In this case, the test of

reasonableness was introduced and it was held that a law which is not right, just

and fair is arbitrary. The following observations are apposite:-

7...........The principle of reasonableness, which legally as well as


philosophically, is an essential element of equality or non-arbitrariness

54 (1974) 4 SCC 3

55 (1978) 1 SCC 248

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 109


pervades Article 14 like a brooding omnipresence and the procedure
contemplated by Article 21 must answer the test of reasonableness in
order to be in conformity with Article 14. It must be right and just
and fair and not arbitrary, fanciful or oppressive; otherwise, it would
be no procedure at all and the requirement of Article 21 would not be
satisfied.

65. This principle was followed in the cases of A.L. Kalra v. Project and

Equipment Corpn.56, Babita Prasad v. State of Bihar57, Ajay Hasia v. Khalid

Mujib Sehravardi58 and Dr. K.R. Lakshmanan v. State of Tamil Nadu59. In the

case of Ajay Hasia (supra), a Constitution Bench of this Court held as follows:

16......Wherever therefore there is arbitrariness in State action


whether it be of the legislature or of the executive or of an authority
under Article 12, Article 14 immediately springs into action and strikes
down such State action. In fact, the concept of reasonableness and
non-arbitrariness pervades the entire constitutional scheme and is a
golden thread which runs through the whole of the fabric of the
Constitution.

66. In State of A.P. v. McDowell & Co.60, a three-Judge Bench of this Court

struck a discordant note and rejected the plea of the Amending Act being arbitrary.

The Court held that an enactment could be struck down if it is being challenged as

violative of Article 14 only if it is found that it is violative of equality clause, equal

protection clause or violative of fundamental rights. The Court went on to hold

56 (1984) 3 SCC 316,

57 1993 Supp (3) SCC 268

58 (1981) 1 SCC 722

59 ( 1996) 2 SCC 226

60 (1996) 3 SCC 709

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 110


that an enactment cannot be stuck down only on the ground that the Court thinks

that it is unjustified. This judgment need not detain us for long because in

Shayara Bano v. Union of India & Ors.61 popularly known as the Triple Talaq

case, this Court held that this judgment did not take note of binding judgments of

this Court passed by a Constitution Bench, in the case of Ajay Hasia (supra) and a

three-Judge Bench in the case of Dr.K.R. Lakshmanan (supra). After discussing

the entire law on the subject, Nariman, J., in his judgment held as follows:

It is, therefore, clear from a reading of even the aforesaid two


Constitution Bench judgments that Article 14 has been referred to
in the context of the constitutional invalidity of statutory law to
show that such statutory law will be struck down if it is found to be
arbitrary.

xxx xxx xxx

xxx xxx xxx

55.........The test of manifest arbitrariness, therefore, as laid down in


the aforesaid judgments would apply to invalidate legislation as well
as subordinate legislation under Article 14. Manifest arbitrariness,
therefore, must be something done by the legislature capriciously,
irrationally and/or without adequate determining principle. Also, when
something is done which is excessive and disproportionate, such
legislation would be manifestly arbitrary. We are, therefore, of the
view that arbitrariness in the sense of manifest arbitrariness as pointed
out by us above would apply to negate legislation as well under
Article 14.

Therefore, there can be no dispute that a law can be struck down if the Court

find it is arbitrary and falls foul of Article 14 and other fundamental rights.

61 WP(C) No.118/2016 and connected matters [(2017) Vol. 8 SCALE 178]

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 111


67. In this case, we are concerned mainly with Article 14 and 21 of the

Constitution of India. The legislative history given above clearly indicates that a

child has universally been defined as a person below 18 years of age in all the

enactments. This has been done for the reason that it is perceived that a person

below the age of 18 years is not fully developed and does not know the

consequences of his/her actions. Not only is a person below the age of 18 years

treated to be a child, but is also not even entitled to deal with his property, enter

into a contract or even vote.

68. The fact that child marriage is an abhorrent practice and is violative of

human rights of the child is not seriously disputed by the Union of India. The only

justification given is that since a large number of child marriages are taking place,

it would not be proper to criminalize the consummation of such child marriages.

It is urged that, keeping in view age old traditions and evolving social norms, the

practice of child marriage cannot be wished away and, therefore, legislature in its

wisdom has thought it fit not to criminalize the consummation of such child

marriages.

69. I am not impressed with the arguments raised by the Union of India. Merely

because something is going on for a long time is no ground to legitimise and

legalise an activity which is per se illegal and a criminal offence. No doubt, it is

totally within the realm of Parliament to decide what should be the age of consent

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 112


under clause Sixthly of Section 375 IPC. It is also within the domain of the

Parliament to decide what should be the minimum age of marriage. The

Parliament has decided in both the enactments that a girl below 18 years is not

capable of giving consent to have sex and legally she cannot marry. Parliament

has also, in no uncertain terms, prohibited child marriage and come to the

conclusion that child marriage is an activity which must come to an end. If that be

so, can the practice of child marriage which is admittedly an evil, and is also a

criminal offence be set up as an exception in a case of a girl child, who is

subjected to sexual intercourse by her so called husband. Shockingly, even if this

sexual intercourse is forcible and without the consent of the girl child, then also

the husband is not liable for any offence. This law is definitely not right, just and

fair and is, therefore, arbitrary.

70. There can be no dispute that every citizen of this country has the right to get

good healthcare. Every citizen can expect that the State shall make best

endeavours for ensuring that the health of the citizen is not adversely affected. By

now it is well settled by a catena of judgments of this Court that the right to life

envisaged in Article 21 of the Constitution of India is not merely a right to live an

animal existence. This Court has repeatedly held that right to life means a right to

live with human dignity. Life should be meaningful and worth living. Life has

many shades. Good health is the raison detre of a good life. Without good health

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 113


there cannot be a good life. In the case of a minor girl child good health would

mean her right to develop as a healthy woman. This not only requires good

physical health but also good mental health. The girl child must be encouraged to

bloom into a healthy woman. The girl child must not be deprived of her right of

choice. The girl child must not be deprived of her right to study further. When the

girl child is deprived of her right to study further, she is actually deprived of her

right to develop into a mature woman, who can earn independently and live as a

self sufficient independent woman. In the modern age, when we talk of gender

equality, the girl child must be given equal opportunity to develop like a male

child. In fact, in my view, because of the patriarchal nature of our society, some

extra benefit must be showered upon the girl child to ensure that she is not

deprived of her right to life, which would include her right to grow and develop

physically, mentally and economically as an independent self sufficient female

adult.

71. It is true that at times the State, because of paucity of funds, or other reasons

beyond its control, cannot live up to the expectations of the people. At the same

time, it is not expected that the State should frame a law, which adversely affects

the health of a citizen, that too a minor girl child. The State, under Article 15 of

the Constitution, is in fact, empowered to make laws favouring women.

Reservation for women is envisaged under Article 15 of the Constitution. In

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 114


Vishakha v. State of Rajasthan62, this Court held that sexual harassment of

working women amounts to violation of the rights guaranteed by Articles 14, 15

and 23 of the Constitution.

72. When a girl is compelled to marry before she attains the age of 18 years, her

health is put in serious jeopardy. As is evident from various reports referred to

above, girls who were married before the age of 19 years are likely to suffer

medical and psychological problems. A 15 or 16 year old girl, when forcibly

subjected to sexual intercourse by her husband, undergoes a trauma, which her

body and mind is not ready to face. The girl child is also twice as more likely to

die in child birth than a grown up woman. The least, that one would expect in

such a situation, is that the State would not take the defence of tradition and

sanctity of marriage in respect of girl child, which would be totally violative of

Article 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution. Therefore, this Court is of the view that

Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC is arbitrary since it is violative of the principles

enshrined in Article 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution of India.

73. Approaching this aspect from another angle. As is evident from various

reports filed in this case, child marriages are not restricted to girls aged above 15

years. Even as per the National Plan of Action for Children, 2016 prepared by the

Ministry of Women and Child Development, Government of India, 30.3%

62 (1997) 6 SCC 241

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 115


marriages i.e. almost 1 in every 3 marriage takes place in violation of the PCMA.

Many of these relate to child brides aged less than 15 years. A girl may be married

when she is 3-4 years or may be 10-11 years old. She may be sent to her

matrimonial home on attaining the age of puberty, which may be well before she

attains the age of 15 years. In such an eventuality, what is the reason for fixing the

magic figure of 15 years. This figure had relevance when under the criminal law

and the marriage laws the age was similar. In the year 1940, the age of consent

was 16 years, the age of marriage was 15 years and the age under the exception

was also 15 years; in 1975, the age of consent was 16 years, the age of marriage

was 18 years, but the age under the exception remained 15 years. That may have

been there because there was no change in the age of consent under Clause

Sixthly. Now when the age of consent is changed to 18 years, the minimum age of

marriage is also 18 years and, therefore, fixing a lower age under Exception 2 is

totally irrational. It strikes against the concept of equality. It violates the right of

fair treatment of the girl child, who is unable to look after herself. The magic

figure of 15 years is not based on any scientific evaluation, but is based on the

mere fact that it has been existing for a long time. The age of 15 years in

Exception 2 was fixed in the year 1940 when the minimum age for marriage was

also 15 and the age of consent under clause Sixthly was 16. In the present context

when the age for marriage has been fixed at 18 years and when the age of consent

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 116


is also fixed at 18 years, keeping the age under Exception 2 at 15 years, cannot be

said to be right, just and fair. In fact, it is arbitrary and oppressive to the girl child.

74. Law cannot be hidebound and static. It has to evolve and change with the

needs of the society. Recognising these factors, the Parliament increased the

minimum age for marriage. The Parliament also increased the minimum age of

consent but the inaction in raising the age in Exception 2 is by itself an arbitrary

non-exercise of power. When the age was being raised in all other laws, the age

under Exception 2 should also have been raised to bring it in line with the

evolving laws especially the laws to protect women and the girl child aged below

18 years. Therefore, I have no hesitation in holding that the Exception 2, in so far

as it relates to the girl child below eighteen years, is unreasonable, unjust, unfair

and violative of the rights of the girl child. To that extent the same is arbitrary and

liable to be set aside.

WHETHER EXCEPTION 2 TO SECTION 375 IPC IS


DISCRIMINATORY?

75. There can be no dispute that a law can be set aside if it is discriminatory.

Some elements of discrimination have already been dealt with while dealing with

the issue of arbitrariness. However, there are certain other aspects which make

Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC in so far as it deals with the girl child totally

discriminatory. The law discriminates between a girl child aged less than 18 years,

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 117


who may be educated and has sexual intercourse with her consent and a girl child

who may be married even before the age of 15 years, but her marriage has been

consummated after 15 years even against her consent. This is invidious

discrimination which is writ large. The discrimination is between a consenting girl

child, who is almost an adult and non-consenting child bride. To give an example,

if a girl aged 15 years is married off by her parents without her consent and the

marriage is consummated against her consent, then also this girl child cannot file a

criminal case against her husband. The State is talking of the reality of the child

marriages. What about the reality of the rights of the girl child? Can this helpless,

underprivileged girl be deprived of her rights to say yes or no to marriage? Can

she be deprived of her right to say yes or no to having sex with her husband,

even if she has consented for the marriage? In my view, there is only one answer

to this and the answer must be a resounding NO. While interpreting such a law

the interpretation which must be preferred is the one which protects the human

rights of the child, which protects the fundamental rights of the child, the one

which ensures the good health of the child and not the one which tries to say that

though the practice is evil but since it is going on for a long time, such

criminal acts should be decriminalised.

76. The State is entitled and empowered to fix the age of consent. The State can

make reasonable classification but while making any classification it must show

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 118


that the classification has been made with the object of achieving a certain end.

The classification must have a reasonable nexus with the object sought to be

achieved. In this case the justification given by the State is only that it does not

want to punish those who consummate their marriage. The stand of the State is

that keeping in view the sanctity attached to the institution of marriage, it has

decided to make a provision in the nature of Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC. This

begs the question as to why in this exception the age has been fixed as 15 years

and not 18 years. As pointed out earlier, a girl can legally consent to have sex only

after she attains the age of 18 years. She can legally enter into marriage only after

attaining the age of 18 years. When a girl gets married below the age of 18 years,

the persons who contract such a marriage or abet in contracting such child

marriage, commit a criminal offence and are liable for punishment under the

PCMA. In view of this position there is no rationale for fixing the age at 15 years.

This age has no nexus with the object sought to be achieved viz., maintaining the

sanctity of marriage because by law such a marriage is not legal. It may be true

that this marriage is voidable and not void ab initio (except in the State of

Karnataka) but the fact remains that if the girl has got married before the age of 18

years, she has right to get her marriage annulled. Irrespective of the fact that the

right of the girl child to get her marriage annulled, it is indisputable that a criminal

offence has been committed and other than the girl child, all other persons

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 119


including her husband, and those persons who were involved in getting her

married are guilty of having committed a criminal act. In my opinion, when the

State on the one hand, has, by legislation, laid down that abetting child marriage is

a criminal offence, it cannot, on the other hand defend this classification of girls

below 18 years on the ground of sanctity of marriage because such classification

has no nexus with the object sought to be achieved. Therefore, also Exception 2 in

so far as it relates to girls below 18 years is discriminatory and violative of Article

14 of the Constitution.

77. One more ground for holding that Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC is

discriminatory is that this is the only provision in various penal laws which gives

immunity to the husband. The husband is not immune from prosecution as far as

other offences are concerned. Therefore, if the husband beats a girl child and has

forcible sexual intercourse with her, he may be charged for offences under

Sections 323, 324, 325 IPC etc. but he cannot be charged with rape. This leads to

an anomalous and astounding situation where the husband can be charged with

lesser offences, but not with the more serious offence of rape. As far as sexual

crimes against women are concerned, these are covered by Sections 354, 354A,

354B, 354C, 354D of the IPC. These relate to assault or use of criminal force

against a woman with intent to outrage her modesty; sexual harassment and

punishment for sexual harassment; assault or use of criminal force to woman with

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 120


intent to disrobe; voyeurism; and stalking respectively. There is no exception

clause giving immunity to the husband for such offences. The Domestic Violence

Act will also apply in such cases and the husband does not get immunity. There

are many other offences where the husband is either specifically liable or may be

one of the accused. The husband is not given the immunity in any other penal

provision except in Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC. It does not stand to reason

that only for the offence of rape the husband should be granted such an immunity

especially where the victim wife is aged below 18 years i.e. below the legal age

of marriage and is also not legally capable of giving consent to have sexual

intercourse. Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC is, therefore, discriminatory and

violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India, on this count also.

78. The discrimination is absolutely patent and, therefore, in my view, Exception

2, in so far as it relates to the girl child between 15 to 18 years is not only arbitrary

but also discriminatory, against the girl child.

LAW IN CONFLICT WITH POCSO

79. Another aspect of the matter is that the POSCO was enacted by Parliament

in the year 2012 and it came into force on 14th November, 2012. Certain

amendments were made by Criminal Law Amendment Act of 2013, whereby

Section 42 and Section 42A, which have been enumerated above, were added. It

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 121


would be pertinent to note that these amendments in POCSO were brought by the

same Amendment Act by which Section 375, Section 376 and other sections of

IPC relating to crimes against women were amended. The definition of rape was

enlarged and the punishment under Section 375 IPC was made much more severe.

Section 42 of POCSO, as mentioned above, makes it clear that where an offence is

punishable, both under POCSO and also under IPC, then the offender, if found

guilty of such offence, is liable to be punished under that Act, which provides for

more severe punishment. This is against the traditional concept of criminal

jurisprudence that if two punishments are provided, then the benefit of the lower

punishment should be given to the offender. The legislature knowingly introduced

Section 42 of POCSO to protect the interests of the child. As the objects and

reasons of the POCSO show, this Act was enacted as a special provision for

protection of children, with a view to ensure that children of tender age are not

abused during their childhood and youth. These children were to be protected

from exploitation and given facilities to develop in a healthy manner. When a girl

is married at the age of 15 years, it is not only her human right of choice, which is

violated. She is also deprived of having an education; she is deprived of leading a

youthful life. Early marriage and consummation of child marriage affects the

health of the girl child. All these ill effects of early marriage have been recognised

by the Government of India in its own documents, referred to hereinabove.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 122


80. Section 42A of POCSO has two parts. The first part of the Section provides

that the Act is in addition to and not in derogation of any other law. Therefore, the

provisions of POCSO are in addition to and not above any other law. However,

the second part of Section 42A provides that in case of any inconsistency between

the provisions of POCSO and any other law, then it is the provisions of POCSO,

which will have an overriding effect to the extent of inconsistency. POCSO

defines a child to be a person below the age of 18 years. Penetrative sexual assault

and aggravated penetrative sexual assault have been defined in Section 3 and

Section 5 of POCSO. Provisions of Section 3 and 5 are by and large similar to

Section 375 and Section 376 of IPC. Section 3 of the POCSO is identical to the

opening portion of Section 375 of IPC whereas Section 5 of POCSO is similar to

Section 376(2) of the IPC. Exception 2 to Section 375 of IPC, which makes

sexual intercourse or acts of consensual sex of a man with his own wife not

being under 15 years of age, not an offence, is not found in any provision of

POCSO. Therefore, this is a major inconsistency between POCSO and IPC. As

provided in Section 42A, in case of such an inconsistency, POCSO will prevail.

Moreover, POCSO is a special Act, dealing with the children whereas IPC is the

general criminal law. Therefore, POCSO will prevail over IPC and Exception 2 in

so far as it relates to children, is inconsistent with POCSO.

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 123


IS THE COURT CREATING A NEW OFFENCE?

81. One of the doubts raised was if this Court strikes down, partially or fully,

Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC, is the Court creating a new offence. There can be

no cavil of doubt that the Courts cannot create an offence. However, there can be

no manner of doubt that by partly striking down Section 375 IPC, no new offence

is being created. The offence already exists in the main part of Section 375 IPC as

well as in Section 3 and 5 of POCSO. What has been done is only to read down

Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC to bring it in consonance with the Constitution and

POCSO.

82. In this behalf, reference may be made to some English decisions. In

England, there was never any such statutory exception granting immunity to the

husband from the offence of marital rape. However, Sir Mathew Hale, who was

Chief Justice of England for five years prior to his death in 1676, was credited

with having laid down the following principle:

But the husband cannot be guilty of a rape committed by himself


upon his lawful wife, for by their mutual matrimonial consent and
contract the wife hath given up herself in this kind unto her husband
which she cannot retract.

83. The aforesaid principle, commonly known as Hales principle, was recorded

in the History of the Pleas of the Crown 63 and was followed in England for many

years. Under Hales principle a husband could not be held guilty of raping his
63 (1736), Vol. 1, Ch. 58, P. 629

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 124


wife. This principle was based on the proposition that the wife gives up her body

to her husband at the time of marriage. Women, at that time, were considered to be

chattel. It was also presumed that on marriage, a woman had given her irrevocable

consent to have sexual intercourse with her husband.

84. The aforesaid principle was followed in England for more than two

centuries. For the first time in Reg v. Clarence64, some doubts were raised by

Justice Wills with regard to this proposition. In Rex v. Clarke65, Hales principle

was given the burial it deserved and it was held that the husbands immunity as

expounded by Hale, no longer exists. Dealing with the creation of new offence,

the House of Lords held as follows:

The remaining and no less difficult question is whether, despite that


view, this is an area where the court should step aside to leave the
matter to the Parliamentary process. This is not the creation of a new
offence, it is the removal of a common law fiction which has become
anachronistic and offensive and we consider that it is our duty having
reached that conclusion to act upon it.

85. In my view, as far as this case is concerned, this Court is not creating any

new offence but only removing what was unconstitutional and offensive.

THE PRIVACY DEBATE

86. Ms. Jayna Kothari, learned counsel for the Intervener, had raised the issue of

privacy and made reference to the judgment of this Court in the case of Justice

64 (1888) 22 Q.B.D. 23

65 (1949) 2 All E.R. 448

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 125


K.S. Puttaswamy (Retd.) & Anr. v. Union of India and Ors.66 to urge that the right

of privacy of the girl child is also violated by Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC. I

have purposely not gone into this aspect of the matter because anything said or

urged in this behalf would affect any case being argued on marital rape even in

relation to women over 18 years of age. In this case, the issue raised is only

with regard to the girl child and, therefore, I do not think it proper to deal with this

issue which may have wider ramifications especially when the case of girl child

can be decided without dealing with the issue of privacy.

RELIEF

87. Since this Court has not dealt with the wider issue of marital rape,

Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC should be read down to bring it within the four

corners of law and make it consistent with the Constitution of India.

88. In view of the above discussion, I am clearly of the opinion that Exception 2

to Section 375 IPC in so far as it relates to a girl child below 18 years is liable to

be struck down on the following grounds:

(i) it is arbitrary, capricious, whimsical and violative of the rights

of the girl child and not fair, just and reasonable and, therefore,

violative of Article 14, 15 and 21 of the Constitution of India;

(ii) it is discriminatory and violative of Article 14 of the

Constitution of India and;


66 (2017) 10 SCALE 1

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 126


(iii) it is inconsistent with the provisions of POCSO, which must

prevail.

Therefore, Exception 2 to Section 375 IPC is read down as follows:


Sexual intercourse or sexual acts by a man with his own wife, the
wife not being 18 years, is not rape.

It is, however, made clear that this judgment will have prospective effect.

89. It is also clarified that Section 198(6) of the Code will apply to cases of rape

of wives below 18 years, and cognizance can be taken only in accordance with

the provisions of Section 198(6) of the Code.

90. At the cost of repetition, it is reiterated that nothing said in this judgement

shall be taken to be an observation one way or the other with regard to the issue of

marital rape.

91. Extremely valuable assistance was rendered to this Court by Mr. Gaurav

Agarwal, learned counsel appearing for the petitioner and Ms. Jayna Kothari,

learned counsel appearing for the intervener and I place on record my appreciation

and gratitude for the same.

.............................J.
(DEEPAK GUPTA)

New Delhi
October 11, 2017

W.P. (C) No. 382 of 2013 Page 127

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