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Joseph Shine vs Union Of India on 27 September, 2018

1

REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 194 OF 2017

Joseph Shine …Petitioner(s)

VERSUS

Union of India …Respondent(s)

JUDGMENT

Dipak Misra, CJI (For himself and A.M. Khanwilkar, J.)

The beauty of the Indian Constitution is that it includes ‗I‘

‗you‘ and ‗we‘. Such a magnificent, compassionate and

monumental document embodies emphatic inclusiveness which

has been further nurtured by judicial sensitivity when it has

developed the concept of golden triangle of fundamental rights. If

we have to apply the parameters of a fundamental right, it is an

expression of judicial sensibility which further enhances the

beauty of the Constitution as conceived of. In such a situation,
Signature Not Verified

Digitally signed by
CHETAN KUMAR
Date: 2018.09.27

the essentiality of the rights of women gets the real requisite
14:10:12 IST
Reason:

space in the living room of individual dignity rather than the
2

space in an annexe to the main building. That is the

manifestation of concerned sensitivity. Individual dignity has a

sanctified realm in a civilized society. The civility of a civilization

earns warmth and respect when it respects more the

individuality of a woman. The said concept gets a further accent

when a woman is treated with the real spirit of equality with a

man. Any system treating a woman with indignity, inequity and

inequality or discrimination invites the wrath of the Constitution.

Any provision that might have, few decades back, got the stamp

of serene approval may have to meet its epitaph with the efflux of

time and growing constitutional precepts and progressive

perception. A woman cannot be asked to think as a man or as

how the society desires. Such a thought is abominable, for it

slaughters her core identity. And, it is time to say that a

husband is not the master. Equality is the governing parameter.

All historical perceptions should evaporate and their obituaries

be written. It is advisable to remember what John Stuart Mill had

observed:-

―The legal subordination of one sex to another –
is wrong in itself, and now one of the chief
hindrances to human improvement; and that it
ought to be replaced by a system of perfect
3

equality, admitting no power and privilege on
the one side, nor disability on the other.‖1

We are commencing with the aforesaid prefatory note as we

are adverting to the constitutional validity of Section 497 of the

Indian Penal Code (IPC) and Section 198 of the Code of Criminal

Procedure (CrPC).

2. At this juncture, it is necessary to state that though there is

necessity of certainty of law, yet with the societal changes and

more so, when the rights are expanded by the Court in respect of

certain aspects having regard to the reflective perception of the

organic and living Constitution, it is not apposite to have an

inflexible stand on the foundation that the concept of certainty of

law should be allowed to prevail and govern. The progression in

law and the perceptual shift compels the present to have a

penetrating look to the past.

3. When we say so, we may not be understood that precedents

are not to be treated as such and that in the excuse of perceptual

shift, the binding nature of precedent should not be allowed to

retain its status or allowed to be diluted. When a constitutional

court faces such a challenge, namely, to be detained by a

precedent or to grow out of the same because of the normative

1
On the Subjection of Women, Chapter 1 (John Stuart Mill, 1869)
4

changes that have occurred in the other arenas of law and the

obtaining precedent does not cohesively fit into the same, the

concept of cohesive adjustment has to be in accord with the

growing legal interpretation and the analysis has to be different,

more so, where the emerging concept recognises a particular

right to be planted in the compartment of a fundamental right,

such as Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution. In such a

backdrop, when the constitutionality of a provision is assailed,

the Court is compelled to have a keen scrutiny of the provision in

the context of developed and progressive interpretation. A

constitutional court cannot remain entrenched in a precedent,

for the controversy relates to the lives of human beings who

transcendentally grow. It can be announced with certitude that

transformative constitutionalism asserts itself every moment and

asserts itself to have its space. It is abhorrent to any kind of

regressive approach. The whole thing can be viewed from

another perspective. What might be acceptable at one point of

time may melt into total insignificance at another point of time.

However, it is worthy to note that the change perceived should

not be in a sphere of fancy or individual fascination, but should

be founded on the solid bedrock of change that the society has
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perceived, the spheres in which the legislature has responded

and the rights that have been accentuated by the constitutional

courts. To explicate, despite conferring many a right on women

within the parameters of progressive jurisprudence and

expansive constitutional vision, the Court cannot conceive of

women still being treated as a property of men, and secondly,

where the delicate relationship between a husband and wife does

not remain so, it is seemingly implausible to allow a criminal

offence to enter and make a third party culpable.

4. We may presently state the nature of the lis.

5. The instant writ petition has been filed under Article 32 of

the Constitution of India challenging the validity of Section 497

IPC. A three-Judge Bench, on the first occasion, taking note of

the authorities in Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay2,

Sowmithri Vishnu v. Union of India and another3, V.

Revathi v. Union of India and others4 and W. Kalyani v.

State through Inspector of Police and another5 and

appreciating the submissions advanced by the learned counsel

for the petitioner, felt the necessity to have a re-look at the

2
1954 SCR 930 : AIR 1954 SC 321
3
(1985)Supp SCC 137 : AIR 1985 SC 1618
4
(1988)2 SCC 72
5
(2012) 1 SCC 358
6

constitutionality of the provision. At that juncture, the Court

noted that:-

“Prima facie, on a perusal of Section 497 of
the Indian Penal Code, we find that it grants
relief to the wife by treating her as a victim.
It is also worthy to note that when an
offence is committed by both of them, one is
liable for the criminal offence but the other
is absolved. It seems to be based on a
societal presumption. Ordinarily, the
criminal law proceeds on gender neutrality
but in this provision, as we perceive, the
said concept is absent. That apart, it is to be
seen when there is conferment of any
affirmative right on women, can it go to the
extent of treating them as the victim, in all
circumstances, to the peril of the husband.
Quite apart from that, it is perceivable from
the language employed in the Section that
the fulcrum of the offence is destroyed once
the consent or the connivance of the
husband is established. Viewed from the
said scenario, the provision really creates a
dent on the individual independent identity
of a woman when the emphasis is laid on
the connivance or the consent of the
husband. This tantamounts to
subordination of a woman where the
Constitution confers equal status. A time
has come when the society must realise that
a woman is equal to a man in every field.
This provision, prima facie, appears to be
quite archaic. When the society progresses
and the rights are conferred, the new
generation of thoughts spring, and that is
why, we are inclined to issue notice.‖

That is how the matter has been placed before us.

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6. At this stage, one aspect needs to be noted. At the time of

initial hearing before the three-Judge Bench, the decision in

Yusuf Abdul Aziz (supra) was cited and the cited Law Report

reflected that the judgment was delivered by four learned Judges

and later on, it was noticed, as is reflectible from the Supreme

Court Reports, that the decision was rendered by a Constitution

Bench comprising of five Judges of this Court.

7. The said factual discovery will not detain us any further. In

Yusuf Abdul Aziz (supra), the Court was dealing with the

controversy that had travelled to this Court while dealing with a

different fact situation. In the said case, the question arose

whether Section 497 contravened Articles 14 and 15 of the

Constitution of India. In the said case, the appellant was being

prosecuted for adultery under Section 497 IPC. As soon as the

complaint was filed, the husband applied to the High Court of

Bombay to determine the constitutional question under Article

228 of the Constitution. The Constitution Bench referring to

Section 497 held thus:-

―3. Under Section 497 the offence of
adultery can only be committed by a man
but in the absence of any provision to the
contrary the woman would be punishable as
an abettor. The last sentence in Section 497
prohibits this. It runs—
8

―In such case the wife shall not be
punishable as an abettor.‖ It is said that
this offends Articles 14 and 15.

The portion of Article 15 on which the
appellant relies is this:

―The State shall not discriminate against
any citizen on grounds only of … sex.‖

But what he overlooks is that that is subject
to clause (3) which runs—

―Nothing in this article shall prevent the
State from making any special provision for
women ….‖

The provision complained of is a special
provision and it is made for women,
therefore it is saved by clause (3).

4. It was argued that clause (3) 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.

5. Article 14 is general and must be read
with the other provisions which set out the
ambit of fundamental rights. Sex is a sound
classification and although there can be no
discrimination in general on that ground,
the Constitution itself provides for special
provisions in the case of women and
children. The two articles read together
validate the impugned clause in Section 497
of the Indian Penal Code.

9

6. The appellant is not a citizen of India. It
was argued that he could not invoke Articles
14 and 15 for that reason. The High Court
held otherwise. It is not necessary for us to
decide this question in view of our decision
on the other issue.‖

On a reading of the aforesaid passages, it is manifest that

the Court treated the provision to be a special provision made for

women and, therefore, saved by clause (3) of Article 15. Thus, the

Court proceeded on the foundation of affirmative action.

8. In this context, we may refer to the observation made by the

Constitution Bench in Central Board of Dawoodi Bohra

Community and another v. State of Maharashtra and

another6 while making a reference to a larger Bench. The said

order reads thus:-

―12. Having carefully considered the
submissions made by the learned Senior
Counsel for the parties and having
examined the law laid down by the
Constitution Benches in the above said
decisions, we would like to sum up the legal
position in the following terms:

(1) The law laid down by this Court in a
decision delivered by a Bench of larger
strength is binding on any subsequent
Bench of lesser or coequal strength.

(2) A Bench of lesser quorum cannot
disagree or dissent from the view of the law
taken by a Bench of larger quorum. In case
6
(2005) 2 SCC 673
10

of doubt all that the Bench of lesser quorum
can do is to invite the attention of the Chief
Justice and request for the matter being
placed for hearing before a Bench of larger
quorum than the Bench whose decision has
come up for consideration. It will be open
only for a Bench of coequal strength to
express an opinion doubting the correctness
of the view taken by the earlier Bench of
coequal strength, whereupon the matter
may be placed for hearing before a Bench
consisting of a quorum larger than the one
which pronounced the decision laying down
the law the correctness of which is doubted.

(3)The above rules are subject to two
exceptions: (i) the abovesaid rules do not
bind the discretion of the Chief Justice in
whom vests the power of framing the roster
and who can direct any particular matter to
be placed for hearing before any particular
Bench of any strength; and (ii) in spite of the
rules laid down hereinabove, if the matter
has already come up for hearing before a
Bench of larger quorum and that Bench
itself feels that the view of the law taken by
a Bench of lesser quorum, which view is in
doubt, needs correction or reconsideration
then by way of exception (and not as a rule)
and for reasons given by it, it may proceed
to hear the case and examine the
correctness of the previous decision in
question dispensing with the need of a
specific reference or the order of the Chief
Justice constituting the Bench and such
listing. Such was the situation in Raghubir
Singh7 and Hansoli Devi8.‖

7
Union of India and Anr. v. Raghubir Singh (dead) by Lrs. etc., (1989) 2 SCC 754
8 Union of India Anr. v. Hansoli Devi Ors., (2002) 7 SCC 273
11

In the light of the aforesaid order, it was necessary to list

the matter before a Constitution Bench consisting of five Judges.

As noted earlier, considering the manner in which we intend to

deal with the matter, it is not necessary to refer to a larger

Bench.

9. Sections 497 and 498 of IPC read thus:-

―Section 497 : Adultery

Whoever has sexual intercourse with a
person who is and whom he knows or has
reason to believe to be the wife of another
man, without the consent or connivance of
that man, such sexual intercourse not
amounting to the offence of rape, is guilty of
the offence of adultery, and shall be
punished with imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to
five years, or with fine, or with both. In such
case the wife shall not be punishable as an
abettor.

Section 498 : Enticing or taking away or
detaining with criminal intent a married
woman
Whoever takes or entices away any woman
who is and whom he knows or has reason to
believe to be the wife of any other man, from
that man, or from any person having the
care of her on behalf of that man, with
intent that she may have illicit intercourse
with any person, or conceals or detains with
that intent any such woman, shall be
punished with imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to
two years, or with fine, or with both.‖
12

10. Section 198 of CrPC provides for prosecution for offences

against marriage. Section 198 is reproduced below:-

―198. Prosecution for offences against
marriage.—(1) No Court shall take
cognizance of an offence punishable under
Chapter XX of the Indian Penal Code (45 of
1860) except upon a complaint made by
some person aggrieved by the offence:
Provided that-

(a) Where such person is under the age of
eighteen years or is an idiot or a lunatic, or
is from sickness or infirmity unable to make
a complaint, or is a woman who, according
to the local customs and manners, ought
not to be compelled to appear in public,
some other person may, with the leave of
the Court, make a complaint on his or her
behalf;

(b) where such person is the husband and
he is serving in any of the Armed Forces of
the Union under conditions which are
certified by his Commanding Officer as
precluding him from obtaining leave of
absence to enable him to make a complaint
in person, some other person authorised by
the husband in accordance with the
provisions of sub- section (4) may make a
complaint on his behalf;

(c) where the person aggrieved by an offence
punishable under section 494 or section
495 of the Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860 ) is
the wife, complaint may be made on her
behalf by her father, mother, brother, sister,
son or daughter or by her father’ s or
mother’ s brother or sister 2, or, with the
leave of the Court, by any other person
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related to her by blood, marriage or
adoption.

(2) For the purposes of sub-section (1), no
person other than the husband of the
woman shall be deemed to be aggrieved by
any offence punishable under section 497 or
section 498 of the said Code: Provided that
in the absence of the husband, some person
who had care of the woman on his behalf at
the time when such offence was com- mitted
may, with the leave of the Court, make a
complaint on his behalf.

(3) When in any case falling under clause (a)
of the proviso to sub-section (1), the
complaint is sought to be made on behalf of
a person under the age of eighteen years or
of a lunatic by a person who has not been
appointed or declared by a competent
authority to be the guardian of the person of
the minor or lunatic, and the Court is
satisfied that there is a guardian so
appointed or declared, the Court shall,
before granting the application for leave,
cause notice to be given to such guardian
and give him a reasonable opportunity of
being heard.

(4) The authorisation referred to in clause

(b) of the proviso to sub-section (1), shall be
in writing, shall be signed or otherwise
attested by the husband, shall contain a
statement to the effect that he has been
informed of the allegations upon which the
complaint is to be founded, shall be
countersigned by his Commanding Officer,
and shall be accompanied by a certificate
signed by that Officer to the effect that leave
of absence for the purpose of making a
complaint in person cannot for the time
being be granted to the husband.

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(5) Any document purporting to be such an
authorisation and complying with the
provisions of sub-section (4), and any
document purporting to be a certificate
required by that sub-section shall, unless
the contrary is proved, be presumed to be
genuine and shall be received in evidence.

(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 intercourse by a man with
his own wife, the wife being under 3
[eighteen years of age], if more than one
year has elapsed from the date of the
commission of the offence.

(7) The provisions of this section apply to
the abetment of, or attempt to commit, an
offence as they apply to the offence.‖

11. On a perusal of the aforesaid provision, it is clear that the

husband of the woman has been treated to be a person aggrieved

for the offences punishable under Sections 497 and 498 of the

IPC. The rest of the proviso carves out an exception as to who is

entitled to file a complaint when the husband is absent. It may

be noted that the offence is non-cognizable.

12. The three-Judge Bench, while referring the matter, had

briefly dwelled upon the impact of the provision. To appreciate

the constitutional validity, first, we shall deal with the earlier

pronouncements and the principles enunciated therein and how

we can have a different perspective of such provisions. We have
15

already referred to what has been stated in Yusuf Abdul Aziz

(supra).

13. In Sowmithri Vishnu (supra), a petition preferred under

Article 32 of the Constitution challenged the validity of Section

497 IPC. We do not intend to advert to the factual matrix. It was

contended before the three-Judge Bench that Section 497 confers

upon the husband the right to prosecute the adulterer but it does

not confer any right upon the wife to prosecute the woman with

whom her husband has committed adultery; that Section 497

does not confer any right on the wife to prosecute the husband

who has committed adultery with another woman; and that

Section 497 does not take in cases where the husband has

sexual relations with an unmarried woman with the result that

husbands have a free licence under the law to have extramarital

relationships with unmarried women. That apart, the submission

was advanced that Section 497 is a flagrant instance of ‗gender

discrimination‘, ‗legislative despotism‘ and ‗male chauvinism‘. At

first blush, it may appear as if it is a beneficial legislation

intended to serve the interests of women but, on closer

examination, it would be found that the provision contained in

the section is a kind of ―romantic paternalism‖ which stems from
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the assumption that women, like chattels, are the property of

men.

14. The Court referred to the submissions and held thus:-

―…..The argument really comes to this that
the definition should be recast by extending
the ambit of the offence of adultery so that,
both the man and the woman should be
punishable for the offence of adultery. Were
such an argument permissible, several
provisions of the penal law may have to be
struck down on the ground that, either in
their definition or in their prescription of
punishment, they do not go far enough. For
example, an argument could be advanced as
to why the offence of robbery should be
punishable with imprisonment for ten years
under Section 392 of the Penal Code but the
offence of adultery should be punishable
with a sentence of five years only: ―Breaking
a matrimonial home is no less serious a
crime than breaking open a house.‖ Such
arguments go to the policy of the law, not to
its constitutionality, unless, while
implementing the policy, any provision of
the Constitution is infringed. We cannot
accept that in defining the offence of
adultery so as to restrict the class of
offenders to men, any constitutional
provision is infringed. It is commonly
accepted that it is the man who is the
seducer and not the woman. This position
may have undergone some change over the
years but it is for the Legislature to consider
whether Section 497 should be amended
appropriately so as to take note of the
―transformation‖ which the society has
undergone….‖
17

Proceeding further, the three-Judge Bench held that the

offence of adultery as defined in that Section can only be

committed by a man, not by a woman. Indeed, the Section

expressly provides that the wife shall not be punishable even as

an abettor. No grievance can then be made that the Section does

not allow the wife to prosecute the husband for adultery. The

contemplation of the law, evidently, is that the wife, who is

involved in an illicit relationship with another man, is a victim

and not the author of the crime. The offence of adultery, as

defined in Section 497, is considered by the Legislature as an

offence against the sanctity of the matrimonial home, an act

which is committed by a man, as it generally is. Therefore, those

men who defile that sanctity are brought within the net of the

law. In a sense, the same point is reverted to; who can prosecute

whom for which offence depends, firstly, on the definition of the

offence and, secondly, upon the restrictions placed by the law of

procedure on the right to prosecute.

15. The Court further held:-

―…..Since Section 497 does not contain a
provision that she must be impleaded as a
necessary party to the prosecution or that
she would be entitled to be heard, the
section is said to be bad. Counsel is right
that Section 497 does not contain a
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provision for hearing the married woman
with whom the accused is alleged to have
committed adultery. But, that does not
justify the proposition that she is not
entitled to be heard at the trial. We have no
doubt that if the wife makes an application
in the trial court that she should be heard
before a finding is recorded on the question
of adultery, the application would receive
due consideration from the court. There is
nothing, either in the substantive or the
adjectival criminal law, which bars the court
from affording a hearing to a party, which is
likely to be adversely affected, directly and
immediately, by the decision of the court. In
fact, instances are not unknown in criminal
law where, though the prosecution is in the
charge of the Public Prosecutor, the private
complainant is given permission to oversee
the proceedings. One step more, and the
wife could be allowed a hearing before an
adverse finding is recorded that, as alleged
by her husband, the accused had
committed adultery with her. The right of
hearing is a concomitant of the principles of
natural justice, though not in all situations.

That right can be read into the law in
appropriate cases. Therefore, the fact that a
provision for hearing the wife is not
contained in Section 497 cannot render that
section unconstitutional as violating Article

21.‖

After so stating, the Court placed reliance on Yusuf Abdul

Aziz (supra) and held that the same does not offend Articles 14

and 15 of the Constitution and opined that the stability of

marriages is not an ideal to be scorned. Being of this view, the

Court dismissed the petition.

19

16. In V. Revathi v. Union of India and others9, the Court

analysed the design of the provision and ruled:-

―…..Thus the law permits neither the
husband of the offending wife to prosecute
his wife nor does the law permit the wife to
prosecute the offending husband for being
disloyal to her. Thus both the husband and
the wife are disabled from striking each
other with the weapon of criminal law. The
petitioner wife contends that whether or not
the law permits a husband to prosecute his
disloyal wife, the wife cannot be lawfully
disabled from prosecuting her disloyal
husband…..‖

It placed heavy reliance on the three-Judge Bench in

Sowmithri Vishnu (supra) and proceeded to state that the

community punishes the ‗outsider‘ who breaks into the

matrimonial home and occasions the violation of sanctity of the

matrimonial tie by developing an illicit relationship with one of

the spouses subject to the rider that the erring ‗man‘ alone can

be punished and not the erring woman. It further went on to say

that it does not arm the two spouses to hit each other with the

weapon of criminal law. That is why, neither the husband can

prosecute the wife and send her to jail nor can the wife prosecute

the husband and send him to jail. There is no discrimination

9
(1988) 2 SCC 72
20

based on sex. While the outsider who violates the sanctity of the

matrimonial home is punished, a rider has been added that if the

outsider is a woman, she is not punished. There is, thus, reverse

discrimination in ―favour‖ of the woman rather than ―against‖

her. The law does not envisage the punishment of any of the

spouses at the instance of each other. Thus, there is no

discrimination against the woman insofar as she is not permitted

to prosecute her husband. A husband is not permitted because

the wife is not treated as an offender in the eye of law. The wife is

not permitted as Section 198(1) read with Section 198(2) does not

permit her to do so. In the ultimate analysis, the law has meted

out even-handed justice to both of them in the matter of

prosecuting each other or securing the incarceration of each

other. Thus, no discrimination has been practised in

circumscribing the scope of Section 198(2) CrPC and fashioning

it in such a manner that the right to prosecute the adulterer is

restricted to the husband of the adulteress but has not been

extended to the wife of the adulterer. Expressing this view, the

Court held that the provision is not vulnerable to the charge of

hostile discrimination.

21

17. In W. Kalyani v. State Thro’ Inspector of Police and

another10, the Court held:-

―10. The provision is currently under
criticism from certain quarters for showing
a strong gender bias for it makes the
position of a married woman almost as a
property of her husband. But in terms of the
law as it stands, it is evident from a plain
reading of the section that only a man can
be proceeded against and punished for the
offence of adultery. Indeed, the section
provides expressly that the wife cannot be
punished even as an abettor. Thus, the
mere fact that the appellant is a woman
makes her completely immune to the charge
of adultery and she cannot be proceeded
against for that offence.‖

Be it noted, the issue of constitutional validity did not arise

in the said case.

18. At this juncture, we think it seemly to state that we are only

going to deal with the constitutional validity of Section 497 IPC

and Section 198 CrPC. The learned counsel for the petitioner

submits that the provision by its very nature is arbitrary and

invites the frown of Article 14 of the Constitution. In Shayara

Bano v. Union of India and others11, the majority speaking

through Nariman, J., ruled thus :-

10

(2012) 1 SCC 358
11
(2017) 9 SCC 1
22

―60. Hard as we tried, it is difficult to
discover any ratio in this judgment, as one
part of the judgment contradicts another
part. If one particular statutory enactment
is already under challenge, there is no
reason why other similar enactments which
were also challenged should not have been
disposed of by this Court. Quite apart from
the above, it is a little difficult to appreciate
such declination in the light of Prem Chand
Garg (supra). This judgment, therefore, to
the extent that it is contrary to at least two
Constitution 346 Bench decisions cannot
possibly be said to be good law.

61. It is at this point that it is necessary to
see whether a fundamental right has been
violated by the 1937 Act insofar as it seeks
to enforce Triple Talaq as a rule of law in the
Courts in India.

62. Article 14 of the Constitution of India is
a facet of equality of status and opportunity
spoken of in the Preamble to the
Constitution. The Article naturally divides
itself into two parts- (1) equality before the
law, and (2) the equal protection of the law.
Judgments of this Court have referred to the
fact that the equality before law concept has
been derived from the law in the U.K., and
the equal protection of the laws has been
borrowed from the 14th Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States of
America. In a revealing judgment, Subba
Rao, J., dissenting, in State of U.P. v.

Deoman Upadhyaya, (1961) 1 SCR 14 at 34
further went on to state that whereas
equality before law is a negative concept, the
equal protection of the law has positive
content. The early judgments of this Court
referred to the ―discrimination‖ aspect of
Article 14, and evolved a rule by which
subjects could be classified. If 347 the
23

classification was ―intelligible‖ having regard
to the object sought to be achieved, it would
pass muster under Article 14‘s anti-

discrimination aspect. Again, Subba Rao, J.,
dissenting, in Lachhman Das v. State of
Punjab, (1963) 2 SCR 353 at 395, warned
that:

―50……Overemphasis on the doctrine
of classification or an anxious and
sustained attempt to discover some
basis for classification may gradually
and imperceptibly deprive the Article of
its glorious content.‖
He referred to the doctrine of classification
as a ―subsidiary rule‖ evolved by courts to
give practical content to the said Article.

63. In the pre-1974 era, the judgments of
this Court did refer to the ―rule of law‖ or
―positive‖ aspect of Article 14, the
concomitant of which is that if an action is
found to be arbitrary and, therefore,
unreasonable, it would negate the equal
protection of the law contained in Article 14
and would be struck down on this ground.

In S.G. Jaisinghani v. Union of India, (1967)
2 SCR 703, this Court held:

―In this context it is important to
emphasize that the absence of
arbitrary power is the first essential of
the rule of law upon which our whole
constitutional system is based. In a
system governed by rule of law, 348
discretion, when conferred upon
executive authorities, must be confined
within clearly defined limits. The rule
of law from this point of view means
that decisions should be made by the
application of known principles and
rules and, in general, such decisions
24

should be predictable and the citizen
should know where he is. If a decision
is taken without any principle or
without any rule it is unpredictable
and such a decision is the antithesis of
a decision taken in accordance with
the rule of law. (See Dicey — ―Law of
the Constitution‖ — 10th Edn.,
Introduction cx). ―Law has reached its
finest moments‖, stated Douglas, J. in
United States v. Wunderlick [342 US
98],

―9…..when it has freed man from the
unlimited discretion of some ruler….

Where discretion, is absolute, man has
always suffered‖. It is in this sense
that the rule of law may be said to be
the sworn enemy of caprice.

Discretion, as Lord Mansfield stated it
in classic terms in the case of John
Wilkes [(1770) 4 Burr. 2528 at 2539],
―…..means sound discretion
guided by law. It must be
governed by rule, not by humour
: it must not be arbitrary, vague,
and fanciful……‖.‖
This was in the context of service rules
being seniority rules, which applied to the
Income Tax Department, being held to be
violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of
India.‖

19. Thereafter, our learned brother referred to the authorities in

State of Mysore v. S.R. Jayaram12, Indira Nehru Gandhi v.

Raj Narain13, E.P. Royappa v. State of Tamil Nadu14, Maneka

12
(1968) 1 SCR 349
13
(1975) Supp SCC 1
25

Gandhi v. Union of India15, A.L. Kalra v. Project and

Equipment Corporation of India Ltd.16, Ajay Hasia v. Khalid

Mujib Sehravardi17, K.R. Lakshmanan v. State of T.N.18 and

two other Constitution Bench judgments in Mithu v. State of

Punjab19 and Sunil Batra v. Delhi Administration20 and,

eventually, came to hold thus:-

―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‖.‖

And again:-

―…..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

14
(1974) 4 SCC 3
15
(1978) 1 SCC 248
16
(1984) 3 SCC 316
17
(1981) 1 SCC 722
18
(1996) 2 SCC 226
19
(1983) 2 SCC 277
20
(1978) 4 SCC 494
26

pointed out by us above would apply to
negate legislation as well under Article 14.‖

20. We respectfully concur with the said view.

21. In Yusuf Abdul Aziz (supra), the Court understood the

protection of women as not discriminatory but as being an

affirmative provision under clause (3) of Article 15 of the

Constitution. We intend to take the path of expanded horizon as

gender justice has been expanded by this Court.

22. We may now proceed to test the provision on the touchstone

of the aforesaid principles. On a reading of the provision, it is

demonstrable that women are treated as subordinate to men

inasmuch as it lays down that when there is connivance or

consent of the man, there is no offence. This treats the woman

as a chattel. It treats her as the property of man and totally

subservient to the will of the master. It is a reflection of the

social dominance that was prevalent when the penal provision

was drafted.

23. As we notice, the provision treats a married woman as a

property of the husband. It is interesting to note that Section 497

IPC does not bring within its purview an extra marital

relationship with an unmarried woman or a widow. The

dictionary meaning of ―adultery‖ is that a married person
27

commits adultery if he has sex with a woman with whom he has

not entered into wedlock. As per Black‘s Law Dictionary,

‗adultery‘ is the voluntary sexual intercourse of a married person

with a person other than the offender‘s husband or wife.

However, the provision has made it a restricted one as a

consequence of which a man, in certain situations, becomes

criminally liable for having committed adultery while, in other

situations, he cannot be branded as a person who has committed

adultery so as to invite the culpability of Section 497 IPC.

Section 198 CrPC deals with a ―person aggrieved‖. Sub-section

(2) of Section 198 treats the husband of the woman as deemed to

be aggrieved by an offence committed under Section 497 IPC and

in the absence of husband, some person who had care of the

woman on his behalf at the time when such offence was

committed with the leave of the court. It does not consider the

wife of the adulterer as an aggrieved person. The offence and the

deeming definition of an aggrieved person, as we find, is

absolutely and manifestly arbitrary as it does not even appear to

be rational and it can be stated with emphasis that it confers a

licence on the husband to deal with the wife as he likes which is

extremely excessive and disproportionate. We are constrained to
28

think so, as it does not treat a woman as an abettor but protects

a woman and simultaneously, it does not enable the wife to file

any criminal prosecution against the husband. Indubitably, she

can take civil action but the husband is also entitled to take civil

action. However, that does not save the provision as being

manifestly arbitrary. That is one aspect of the matter. If the

entire provision is scanned being Argus-eyed, we notice that on

the one hand, it protects a woman and on the other, it does not

protect the other woman. The rationale of the provision suffers

from the absence of logicality of approach and, therefore, we have

no hesitation in saying that it suffers from the vice of Article 14

of the Constitution being manifestly arbitrary.

24. Presently, we shall address the issue against the backdrop

of Article 21 of the Constitution. For the said purpose, it is

necessary to devote some space with regard to the dignity of

women and the concept of gender equality.

25. In Arun Kumar Agrawal and another v. National

Insurance Company Limited and others21, the issue related to

the criteria for determination of compensation payable to the

dependents of a woman who died in road accident. She did not

21
(2010) 9 SCC 218
29

have a regular income. Singhvi, J. rejected the stand relating to

determination of compensation by comparing a house wife to that

of a house keeper or a servant or an employee who works for a

fixed period. The learned Judge thought it unjust, unfair and

inappropriate. In that context, the learned Judge stated:-

―26. In India the courts have recognised that
the contribution made by the wife to the
house is invaluable and cannot be
computed in terms of money. The gratuitous
services rendered by the wife with true love
and affection to the children and her
husband and managing the household
affairs cannot be equated with the services
rendered by others. A wife/mother does not
work by the clock. She is in the constant
attendance of the family throughout the day
and night unless she is employed and is
required to attend the employer‘s work for
particular hours. She takes care of all the
requirements of the husband and children
including cooking of food, washing of
clothes, etc. She teaches small children and
provides invaluable guidance to them for
their future life. A housekeeper or
maidservant can do the household work,
such as cooking food, washing clothes and
utensils, keeping the house clean, etc., but
she can never be a substitute for a
wife/mother who renders selfless service to
her husband and children.‖

26. Ganguly, J., in his concurring opinion, referred to the

Australian Family Property Law and opined that the said law
30

had adopted a very gender sensitive approach. The learned

Judge reproduced:-

―the contribution made by a party to the
marriage to the welfare of the family
constituted by the parties to the marriage
and any children of the marriage, including
any contribution made in the capacity of a
homemaker or parent.‖

27. In State of Madhya Pradesh v. Madanlal22, the Court

held:-

―Dignity of a woman is a part of her non-
perishable and immortal self and no one
should ever think of painting it in clay.
There cannot be a compromise or settlement
as it would be against her honour which
matters the most. It is sacrosanct.

Sometimes solace is given that the
perpetrator of the crime has acceded to
enter into wedlock with her which is nothing
but putting pressure in an adroit manner;
and we say with emphasis that the Courts
are to remain absolutely away from this
subterfuge to adopt a soft approach to the
case, for any kind of liberal approach has to
be put in the compartment of spectacular
error. Or to put it differently, it would be in
the realm of a sanctuary of error.‖

28. In Pawan Kumar v. State of Himachal Pradesh23, the

Court, dealing with the concept of equality and dignity of a

woman, observed:-

22

(2015) 7 SCC 681
23
(2017) 7 SCC 780
31

―47 …in a civilized society eve-teasing is
causing harassment to women in
educational institutions, public places,
parks, railways stations and other public
places which only go to show that requisite
sense of respect for women has not been
socially cultivated. A woman has her own
space as a man has. She enjoys as much
equality under Article 14 of the Constitution
as a man does. The right to live with dignity
as guaranteed under Article 21 of the
Constitution cannot be violated by indulging
in obnoxious act of eve-teasing. It affects the
fundamental concept of gender sensitivity
and justice and the rights of a woman
under Article 14 of the Constitution. That
apart it creates an incurable dent in the
right of a woman which she has
under Article 15 of the Constitution. One is
compelled to think and constrained to
deliberate why the women in this country
cannot be allowed to live in peace and lead a
life that is empowered with a dignity and
freedom. It has to be kept in mind that she
has a right to life and entitled to love
according to her choice. She has an
individual choice which has been legally
recognized. It has to be socially respected.
No one can compel a woman to love. She
has the absolute right to reject.

48. In a civilized society male chauvinism
has no room. The Constitution of India
confers the affirmative rights on women and
the said rights are perceptible from Article
15 of the Constitution. When the right is
conferred under the Constitution, it has to
be understood that there is no
condescendation. A man should not put his
ego or, for that matter, masculinity on a
pedestal and abandon the concept of civility.
Egoism must succumb to law. Equality has
32

to be regarded as the summum bonum of
the constitutional principle in this context.‖

29. Lord Keith in R v. R24 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.‖

30. Lord Denning25 states:-

―A wife is no longer her husband‘s chattel.
She is beginning to be regarded by the laws
as a partner in all affairs which are their
common concern.‖

31. In Shamima Farooqui v. Shahid Khan26, the Court

ruled:-

―Chivalry, a perverse sense of human
egotism, and clutching of feudal
megalomaniac ideas or for that matter, any
kind of condescending attitude have no
room. They are bound to be sent to the
ancient woods, and in the new horizon
people should proclaim their own ideas and
authority.‖

And again:-

―Any other idea floated or any song sung in
the invocation of male chauvinism is the
proposition of an alien, a total stranger – an
outsider. That is the truth in essentiality.‖

24
[1991] 4 All ER 481 at p. 484
25
The Due Process of Law (London, Butterworths, 1980, at page 212)
26
(2015) 5 SCC 705
33

32. In Voluntary Health Association of Punjab v. Union of

India27, one of us (Dipak Misra, J.), in his concurring opinion,

stated that women have to be regarded as equal partners in the

lives of men and it has to be borne in mind that they have equal

role in the society, that is, in thinking, participating and

leadership. The issue related to female foeticide and it was

stated thus:-

―21. When a female foeticide takes place,
every woman who mothers the child must
remember that she is killing her own child
despite being a mother. That is what
abortion would mean in social terms.

Abortion of a female child in its conceptual
eventuality leads to killing of a woman. Law
prohibits it; scriptures forbid it; philosophy
condemns it; ethics deprecate it, morality
decries it and social science abhors it.

Henrik Ibsen emphasised on the
individualism of woman. John Milton
treated her to be the best of all God‘s work.
In this context, it will be appropriate to
quote a few lines from Democracy in America
by Alexis de Tocqueville:

―If I were asked … to what the singular
prosperity and growing strength of that
people [Americans] ought mainly to be
attributed, I should reply: To the superiority
of their women.‖

22. At this stage, I may with profit
reproduce two paragraphs from Ajit Savant

27
(2013) 4 SCC 1
34

Majagvai v. State of Karnataka28: (SCC pp.

113-14, paras 3 4)

―3. Social thinkers, philosophers,
dramatists, poets and writers have

eulogised the female species of the human
race and have always used beautiful
epithets to describe her temperament and
personality and have not deviated from that
path even while speaking of her odd
behaviour, at times. Even in sarcasm, they
have not crossed the literary limit and have
adhered to a particular standard of nobility
of language. Even when a member of her
own species, Madame De Stael, remarked ‗I
am glad that I am not a man; for then I
should have to marry a woman‘, there was
wit in it. When Shakespeare wrote, ‗Age
cannot wither her; nor custom stale, her
infinite variety‘, there again was wit.
Notwithstanding that these writers have
cried hoarse for respect for ‗woman‘,
notwithstanding that Schiller said ‗Honour
women! They entwine and weave heavenly
roses in our earthly life‘ and
notwithstanding that the Mahabharata
mentioned her as the source of salvation,
crime against ‗woman‘ continues to rise and
has, today undoubtedly, risen to alarming
proportions.

4. It is unfortunate that in an age where
people are described as civilised, crime
against „female‟ is committed even when the
child is in the womb as the „female‟ foetus is
often destroyed to prevent the birth of a
female child. If that child comes into
existence, she starts her life as a daughter,
then becomes a wife and in due course, a
mother. She rocks the cradle to rear up her

28
(1997) 7 SCC 110
35

infant, bestows all her love on the child and
as the child grows in age, she gives to the
child all that she has in her own personality.

She shapes the destiny and character of the
child. To be cruel to such a creature is
unthinkable. To torment a wife can only be
described as the most hated and derisive act
of a human being.‖
[Emphasis supplied]

And again:-

―23. In Madhu Kishwar v. State of Bihar29
this Court had stated that Indian women
have suffered and are suffering
discrimination in silence.

―28. … Self-sacrifice and self-denial are their
nobility and fortitude and yet they have
been subjected to all inequities, indignities,
inequality and discrimination.‖ (SCC p. 148,
para 28)

24. The way women had suffered has been
aptly reflected by an author who has spoken
with quite a speck of sensibility:

―Dowry is an intractable disease for women,
a bed of arrows for annihilating self-respect,
but without the boon of wishful death.‖

25. Long back, Charles Fourier had stated:

―The extension of women‘s rights is the
basic principle of all social progress.‖

26. Recapitulating from the past, I may refer
to certain sayings in the Smritis which put
women in an elevated position. This Court
29
(1996) 5 SCC 125
36

in Nikku Ram case4 had already reproduced
the first line of the shloka. The second line
of the same which is also significant is as
follows:

Yatra tastu na pujyante sarvastatraphalah kriyah

A free translation of the aforesaid is reproduced
below:

―All the actions become unproductive in a place,
where they are not treated with proper respect and
dignity.‖

27. Another wise man of the past had his own way
of putting it:

Bhartr bhratr pitrijnati
swasruswasuradevaraih
Bandhubhisca striyah pujyah
bhusnachhadanasnaih

A free translation of the aforesaid is as
follows:

―The women are to be respected equally on a
par with husbands, brothers, fathers,
relatives, in-laws and other kith and kin
and while respecting, the women gifts like
ornaments, garments, etc. should be given
as token of honour.‖

28. Yet again, the sagacity got reflected in
following lines:

37

Atulam yatra tattejah sarvadevasarirajam
Ekastham tadabhunnari vyaptalokatrayam
tvisa

A free translation of the aforesaid is
reproduced below:

―The incomparable valour (effulgence) born
from the physical frames of all the gods,
spreading the three worlds by its radiance
and combining together took the form of a
woman.‖

29. From the past, I travel to the present
and respectfully notice what Lord Denning
had to say about the equality of women and
their role in the society:

―A woman feels as keenly, thinks as clearly,
as a man. She in her sphere does work as
useful as man does in his. She has as much
right to her freedom — to develop her
personality to the full as a man. When she
marries, she does not become the husband‘s
servant but his equal partner. If his work is
more important in life of the community,
her‘s is more important of the family.
Neither can do without the other. Neither is
above the other or under the other. They are
equals.‖

33. In Charu Khurana and others v. Union of India and

others30, speaking about the dignity of women, the Court held:-

―33. … Be it stated, dignity is the
quintessential quality of a personality and a
human frame always desires to live in the

30
(2015) 1 SCC 192
38

mansion of dignity, for it is a highly
cherished value. Clause (j) has to be
understood in the backdrop that India is a
welfare State and, therefore, it is the duty of
the State to promote justice, to provide
equal opportunity to all citizens and see
that they are not deprived of by reasons of
economic disparity. It is also the duty of the
State to frame policies so that men and
women have the right to adequate means of
livelihood. It is also the duty of the citizen to
strive towards excellence in all spheres of
individual and collective activity so that the
nation constantly rises to higher levels of
endeavour and achievement.‖

34. In Shakti Vahini v. Union of India and others31, the lis

was in a different context. The Court reproduced a passage from

Joseph J. Ellis which is also relevant for the present purpose. It

reads:-

―We don‘t live in a world in which there
exists a single definition of honour anymore,
and it‘s a fool that hangs onto the
traditional standards and hopes that the
world will come around him.‖

35. In the said case, a contention was advanced that the

existence of a woman is entirely dependent on the male view of

the reputation of the family, the community and the milieu. The

Court, in that context, observed:-

―5. …The collective behaves like a
patriarchal monarch which treats the wives,

31
(2018) 7 SCC 192
39

sisters and daughters subordinate, even
servile or self-sacrificing, persons moving in
physical frame having no individual
autonomy, desire and identity. The concept
of status is accentuated by the male
members of the community and a sense of
masculine dominance becomes the sole
governing factor of perceptive honour.‖

36. We have referred to the aforesaid as we are of the view that

there cannot be a patriarchal monarchy over the daughter or, for

that matter, husband‘s monarchy over the wife. That apart, there

cannot be a community exposition of masculine dominance.

37. Having stated about the dignity of a woman, in the context

of autonomy, desire, choice and identity, it is obligatory to refer

to the recent larger Bench decision in K.S. Puttaswamy and

another v. Union of India and others32 which, while laying

down that privacy is a facet of Article 21 of the Constitution, lays

immense stress on the dignity of an individual. In the said

judgment, it has been held:-

―108. Over the last four decades, our
constitutional jurisprudence has recognised the
inseparable relationship between protection of
life and liberty with dignity. Dignity as a
constitutional value finds expression in the
Preamble. The constitutional vision seeks the
realisation of justice (social, economic and
political); liberty (of thought, expression, belief,
faith and worship); equality (as a guarantee

32
(2017) 10 SCC 1
40

against arbitrary treatment of individuals) and
fraternity (which assures a life of dignity to every
individual). These constitutional precepts exist in
unity to facilitate a humane and compassionate
society. The individual is the focal point of the
Constitution because it is in the realisation of
individual rights that the collective well-being of
the community is determined. Human dignity is
an integral part of the Constitution. Reflections
of dignity are found in the guarantee against
arbitrariness (Article 14), the lamps of freedom
(Article 19) and in the right to life and personal
liberty (Article 21).

xxx xxxx xxx

119. To live is to live with dignity. The draftsmen
of the Constitution defined their vision of the
society in which constitutional values would be
attained by emphasising, among other freedoms,
liberty and dignity. So fundamental is dignity
that it permeates the core of the rights
guaranteed to the individual by Part III. Dignity
is the core which unites the fundamental rights
because the fundamental rights seek to achieve
for each individual the dignity of existence…‖

xxx xxx xxx

―298. Privacy of the individual is an essential
aspect of dignity. Dignity has both an intrinsic
and instrumental value. As an intrinsic value,
human dignity is an entitlement or a
constitutionally protected interest in itself. In its
instrumental facet, dignity and freedom are
inseparably inter-twined, each being a facilitative
tool to achieve the other. The ability of the
individual to protect a zone of privacy enables
the realization of the full value of life and liberty.

Liberty has a broader meaning of which privacy
is a subset. All liberties may not be exercised in
privacy. Yet others can be fulfilled only within a
41

private space. Privacy enables the individual to
retain the autonomy of the body and mind. The
autonomy of the individual is the ability to make
decisions on vital matters of concern to life.
Privacy has not been couched as an independent
fundamental right. But that does not detract
from the constitutional protection afforded to it,
once the true nature of privacy and its
relationship with those fundamental rights
which are expressly protected is understood.
Privacy lies across the spectrum of protected
freedoms. The guarantee of equality is a
guarantee against arbitrary state action. It
prevents the state from discriminating between
individuals. The destruction by the state of a
sanctified personal space whether of the body or
of the mind is violative of the guarantee against
arbitrary state action. Privacy of the body entitles
an individual to the integrity of the physical
aspects of personhood. The intersection between
one’s mental integrity and privacy entitles the
individual to freedom of thought, the freedom to
believe in what is right, and the freedom of self-

determination.‖

xxx xxx xxx

―525. But most important of all is the cardinal
value of fraternity which assures the dignity of
the individual.359 The dignity of the individual
encompasses the right of the individual to
develop to the full extent of his potential. And
this development can only be if an individual has
autonomy over fundamental personal choices
and control over dissemination of personal
information which may be infringed through an
unauthorized use of such information. It is clear
that Article 21, more than any of the other
Articles in the fundamental rights chapter,
reflects each of these constitutional values in
full, and is to be read in consonance with these
values and with the international covenants that
42

we have referred to. In the ultimate analysis, the
fundamental right of privacy, which has so many
developing facets, can only be developed on a
case to case basis. Depending upon the
particular facet that is relied upon, either Article
21 by itself or in conjunction with other
fundamental rights would get attracted.‖

38. In this context, we may profitably refer to National Legal

Services Authority v. Union of India and others33 wherein A.K.

Sikri, J., in his concurring opinion, emphasizing on the concept

of dignity, has opined:-

―The basic principle of the dignity and freedom
of the individual is common to all nations,
particularly those having democratic set up.
Democracy requires us to respect and develop
the free spirit of human being which is
responsible for all progress in human history.
Democracy is also a method by which we
attempt to raise the living standard of the
people and to give opportunities to every person
to develop his/her personality. It is founded on
peaceful co-existence and cooperative living. If
democracy is based on the recognition of the
individuality and dignity of man, as a fortiori we
have to recognize the right of a human being to
choose his sex/gender identity which is integral
his/her personality and is one of the most basic
aspect of self-determination dignity and
freedom. In fact, there is a growing recognition
that the true measure of development of a
nation is not economic growth; it is human
dignity.‖

33
(2014) 5 SCC 438
43

39. Very recently, in Common Cause (A Registered Society) v.

Union of India and another34, one of us has stated:-

―… Human dignity is beyond definition. It may at
times defy description. To some, it may seem to be in
the world of abstraction and some may even
perversely treat it as an attribute of egotism or
accentuated eccentricity. This feeling may come from
the roots of absolute cynicism. But what really
matters is that life without dignity is like a sound
that is not heard. Dignity speaks, it has its sound, it
is natural and human. It is a combination of thought
and feeling, and, as stated earlier, it deserves respect
even when the person is dead and described as a
―body‖…..‖

And again:-

―The concept and value of dignity requires
further elaboration since we are treating it as an
inextricable facet of right to life that respects all
human rights that a person enjoys. Life is
basically self-assertion. In the life of a person,
conflict and dilemma are expected to be normal
phenomena. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in one of
his addresses, quoted a line from a Latin poet
who had uttered the message, ―Death plucks
my ear and says, Live- I am coming‖ . That is
the significance of living. But when a patient
really does not know if he/she is living till death
visits him/her and there is constant suffering
without any hope of living, should one be
allowed to wait? Should she/he be cursed to die
as life gradually ebbs out from her/his being?
Should she/he live because of innovative
medical technology or, for that matter, should
he/she continue to live with the support system
as people around him/her think that science in
its progressive invention may bring about an
innovative method of cure? To put it differently,
34
(2018) 5 SCC 1
44

should he/she be ―guinea pig for some kind of
experiment? The answer has to be an emphatic
―Not because such futile waiting mars the
pristine concept of life, corrodes 139 the essence
of dignity and erodes the fact of eventual choice
which is pivotal to privacy.‖

In Mehmood Nayyar Azam v. State of
Chhattisgarh and others, a two-Judge Bench
held thus:-

―1…… Albert Schweitzer, highlighting on
Glory of Life, pronounced with conviction and
humility, “the reverence of life offers me my
fundamental principle on morality”. The
aforesaid expression may appear to be an
individualistic expression of a great
personality, but, when it is understood in the
complete sense, it really denotes, in its
conceptual essentiality, and connotes, in its
macrocosm, the fundamental perception of a
thinker about the respect that life commands.
The reverence of life is insegragably
associated with the dignity of a human being
who is basically divine, not servile. A human
personality is endowed with potential infinity
and it blossoms when dignity is sustained.
The sustenance of such dignity has to be the
superlative concern of every sensitive soul.
The essence of dignity can never be treated as
a momentary spark of light or, for that
matter, ‘a brief candle’, or ‘a hollow bubble’.
The spark of life gets more resplendent when
man is treated with dignity sans humiliation,
for every man is expected to lead an
honourable life which is a splendid gift of
“creative intelligence”

40. In the said judgment, A.K. Sikri, J. reproduced a passage

from Professor Upendra Baxi‘s lecture in First Justice H.R.

Khanna Memorial Lecture which reads as follows:-
45

―I still need to say that the idea of dignity is a
metaethical one, that is it marks and maps a
difficult terrain of what it may mean to say
being ‘human’ and remaining ‘human’, or put
another way the relationship between ‘self’,
‘others’, and ‘society’. In this formulation the
word ‘respect’ is the keyword: dignity is respect
for an individual person based on the principle
of freedom and capacity to make choices and a
good or just social order is one which respects
dignity via assuring ‘contexts’ and ‘conditions’
as the ‘source of free and informed choice’.

Respect for dignity thus conceived is
empowering overall and not just because it,
even if importantly, sets constraints state, law,
and regulations.‖

41. From the aforesaid analysis, it is discernible that the Court,

with the passage of time, has recognized the conceptual equality

of woman and the essential dignity which a woman is entitled to

have. There can be no curtailment of the same. But, Section

497 IPC effectively does the same by creating invidious

distinctions based on gender stereotypes which creates a dent in

the individual dignity of women. Besides, the emphasis on the

element of connivance or consent of the husband tantamounts to

subordination of women. Therefore, we have no hesitation in

holding that the same offends Article 21 of the Constitution.

42. Another aspect needs to be addressed. The question we

intend to pose is whether adultery should be treated as a

criminal offence. Even assuming that the new definition of
46

adultery encapsules within its scope sexual intercourse with an

unmarried woman or a widow, adultery is basically associated

with the institution of marriage. There is no denial of the fact

that marriage is treated as a social institution and regard being

had to various aspects that social history has witnessed in this

country, the Parliament has always made efforts to maintain the

rights of women. For instance, Section 498-A IPC deals with

husband or relative of husband of a woman subjecting her to

cruelty. The Parliament has also brought in the Protection of

Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005. This enactment

protects women. It also enters into the matrimonial sphere. The

offences under the provisions of the said enactment are different

from the provision that has been conceived of under Section 497

IPC or, for that matter, concerning bringing of adultery within the

net of a criminal offence. There can be no shadow of doubt that

adultery can be a ground for any kind of civil wrong including

dissolution of marriage. But the pivotal question is whether it

should be treated as a criminal offence. When we say so, it is not

to be understood that there can be any kind of social licence that

destroys the matrimonial home. It is an ideal condition when the

wife and husband maintain their loyalty. We are not
47

commenting on any kind of ideal situation but, in fact, focusing

on whether the act of adultery should be treated as a criminal

offence. In this context, we are reminded of what Edmund

Burke, a famous thinker, had said, ―a good legislation should be

fit and equitable so that it can have a right to command

obedience‖. Burke would like to put it in two compartments,

namely, ‗equity‘ and ‗utility‘. If the principle of Burke is properly

understood, it conveys that laws and legislations are necessary to

serve and promote a good life.

43. Dealing with the concept of crime, it has been stated in

―Principles of Criminal Liability‖35 thus :-

―1. Definition of crime.—There is no
satisfactory definition of crime which will
embrace the many acts and omissions
which are criminal, and which will at the
same time exclude all those acts and
omissions which are not. Ordinarily a crime
is a wrong which affects the security or well-
being of the public generally so that the
public has an interest in its suppression. A
crime is frequently a moral wrong in that it
amounts to conduct which is inimical to the
general moral sense of the community. It is,
however, possible to instance many crimes
which exhibit neither of the foregoing
characteristics. An act may be made
criminal by Parliament simply because it is
criminal process, rather than civil, which

35
Halsbury‟s Laws of England, 4th Edn., Vol. 11 p.11,
48

offers the more effective means of
controlling the conduct in question.‖

44. In Kenny‟s Outlines of Criminal Law, 19th Edn., 1966 by

J.W. Cecil Turner, it has been stated that:-

―There is indeed no fundamental or inherent
difference between a crime and a tort. Any
conduct which harms an individual to some
extent harms society, since society is made
up of individuals; and therefore although it
is true to say of crime that is an offence
against society, this does not distinguish
crime from tort. The difference is one of
degree only, and the early history of the
common law shows how words which now
suggest a real distinction began rather as
symbols of emotion than as terms of
scientific classification.‖

And again:-

―So long as crimes continue (as would seem
inevitable) to be created by government
policy the nature of crime will elude true
definition. Nevertheless it is a broadly
accurate description to say that nearly every
instance of crime presents all of the three
following characteristics: (1) that it is a
harm, brought about by human conduct,
which the sovereign power in the State
desires to prevent; (2) that among the
measures of prevention selected is the
threat of punishment; (3) that legal
proceedings of a special kind are employed
to decide whether the person accused did in
fact cause the harm, and is, according to
law, to be held legally punishable for doing
so.‖
49

45. Stephen defines a ―crime‖ thus:-

―A crime is an unlawful act or default which
is an offence against the public, rendering
the person guilty of such act or default
liable to legal punishment. The process by
which such person is punished for the
unlawful act or default is carried on in the
name of the Crown; although any private
person, in the absence of statutory provision
to the contrary, may commence a criminal
prosecution. Criminal proceedings were
formerly called pleas of the Crown, because
the King, in whom centres the majesty of
the whole community, is supposed by the
law to be the person injured by every
infraction of the public rights belonging to
that community. Wherefore he is, in all
cases, the proper prosecutor for every public
offence.‖

46. Blackstone, while discussing the general nature of crime,

has defined crime thus:-

―A crime, or misdemeanour, is an act
committed or omitted, in violation of a
public law, either forbidding or commanding
it. This general definition comprehends both
crimes and misdemeanours; which, properly
speaking, are mere synonym terms: though,
in common usage, the word ―crimes‖ is
made to denote such offences as are of a
deeper and more atrocious dye; while
smaller faults, and omissions of less
consequence, are comprised under the
gentler name of ―misdemeanours‖ only.‖

47. In this regard, we may reproduce a couple of

paragraphs from Central Inland Water Transport
50

Corporation Limited and another v. Brojo Nath

Ganguly36. They read as under:-

―25. The story of mankind is punctuated by
progress and retrogression. Empires have risen
and crashed into the dust of history.

Civilizations have nourished, reached their
peak and passed away. In the year 1625,
Carew, C.J., while delivering the opinion of the
House of Lords in Re the Earldom of Oxford in
a dispute relating to the descent of that
Earldom, said:

―… and yet time hath his revolution, there
must be a period and an end of all
temporal things, finis rerum, an end of
names and dignities, and whatsoever is
terrene….‖

The cycle of change and experiment, rise and
fall, growth and decay, and of progress and
retrogression recurs endlessly in the history of
man and the history of civilization. T.S. Eliot in
the First Chorus from ―The Rock‖ said:

O perpetual revolution of configured stars,
O perpetual recurrence of determined seasons,
O world of spring and autumn, birth and dying;
The endless cycle of idea and action,
Endless invention, endless experiment.‖

26. The law exists to serve the needs of the
society which is governed by it. If the law is to
play its allotted role of serving the needs of the
society, it must reflect the ideas and ideologies
of that society. It must keep time with the
heartbeats of the society and with the needs and
aspirations of the people. As the society
changes, the law cannot remain immutable. The

36
(1986) 3 SCC 156
51

early nineteenth century essayist and wit,
Sydney Smith, said: ―When I hear any man talk
of an unalterable law, I am convinced that he is
an unalterable fool.‖ The law must, therefore, in
a changing society march in tune with the
changed ideas and ideologies.”

48. Reproducing the same, the Court in Common Cause (A

Registered Society) (supra), has observed :-

―160. The purpose of saying so is only to
highlight that the law must take cognizance of
the changing society and march in consonance
with the developing concepts. The need of the
present has to be served with the interpretative
process of law. However, it is to be seen how
much strength and sanction can be drawn from
the Constitution to consummate the changing
ideology and convert it into a reality. The
immediate needs are required to be addressed
through the process of interpretation by the
Court unless the same totally falls outside the
constitutional framework or the constitutional
interpretation fails to recognize such
dynamism.‖

49. We have referred to the aforesaid theories and authorities to

understand whether adultery that enters into the matrimonial

realm should be treated as a criminal offence. There can be

many a situation and we do not intend to get into the same.

Suffice it to say, it is different from an offence committed under

Section 498-A or any violation of the Protection of Women from

Domestic Violence Act, 2005 or, for that matter, the protection

conceived of under Section 125 of the Code of Criminal Procedure
52

or Sections 306 or 304B or 494 IPC. These offences are meant to

sub-serve various other purposes relating to a matrimonial

relationship and extinction of life of a married woman during

subsistence of marriage. Treating adultery an offence, we are

disposed to think, would tantamount to the State entering into a

real private realm. Under the existing provision, the husband is

treated as an aggrieved person and the wife is ignored as a

victim. Presently, the provision is reflective of a tripartite

labyrinth. A situation may be conceived of where equality of

status and the right to file a case may be conferred on the wife.

In either situation, the whole scenario is extremely private. It

stands in contradistinction to the demand for dowry, domestic

violence, sending someone to jail for non-grant of maintenance or

filing a complaint for second marriage. Adultery stands on a

different footing from the aforesaid offences. We are absolutely

conscious that the Parliament has the law making power. We

make it very clear that we are not making law or legislating but

only stating that a particular act, i.e., adultery does not fit into

the concept of a crime. We may repeat at the cost of repetition

that if it is treated as a crime, there would be immense intrusion

into the extreme privacy of the matrimonial sphere. It is better to
53

be left as a ground for divorce. For any other purpose as the

Parliament has perceived or may, at any time, perceive, to treat it

as a criminal offence will offend the two facets of Article 21 of the

Constitution, namely, dignity of husband and wife, as the case

may be, and the privacy attached to a relationship between the

two. Let it be clearly stated, by no stretch of imagination, one

can say, that Section 498-A or any other provision, as mentioned

hereinbefore, also enters into the private realm of matrimonial

relationship. In case of the said offences, there is no third party

involved. It is the husband and his relatives. There has been

correct imposition by law not to demand dowry or to treat women

with cruelty so as to compel her to commit suicide. The said

activities deserve to be punished and the law has rightly provided

so.

50. In this regard, we may also note how the extramarital

relationship cannot be treated as an act for commission of an

offence under Section 306 IPC. In Pinakin Mahipatray Rawal

v. State of Gujarat37, the Court has held :-

―27. Section 306 refers to abetment of suicide
which says that if any person commits suicide,
whoever abets the commission of such suicide,
shall be punished with imprisonment for a term

37
(2013) 10 SCC 48
54

which may extend to 10 years and shall also be
liable to fine. The action for committing suicide
is also on account of mental disturbance caused
by mental and physical cruelty. To constitute an
offence under Section 306, the prosecution has
to establish that a person has committed
suicide and the suicide was abetted by the
accused. The prosecution has to establish
beyond reasonable doubt that the deceased
committed suicide and the accused abetted the
commission of suicide. But for the alleged extra-
marital relationship, which if proved, could be
illegal and immoral, nothing has been brought
out by the prosecution to show that the accused
had provoked, incited or induced the wife to
commit suicide.”
[Emphasis added]

51. In the context of Section 498-A, the Court, in Ghusabhai

Raisangbhai Chorasiya v. State of Gujarat38, has opined that

even if the illicit relationship is proven, unless some other

acceptable evidence is brought on record to establish such high

degree of mental cruelty, the Explanation (a) to Section 498-A

IPC, which includes cruelty to drive the woman to commit

suicide, would not be attracted. The relevant passage from the

said authority is extracted below :-

―21. …True it is, there is some evidence about
the illicit relationship and even if the same is
proven, we are of the considered opinion that
cruelty, as envisaged under the first limb of
Section 498-A IPC would not get attracted. It
would be difficult to hold that the mental cruelty

38
(2015) 11 SCC 753
55

was of such a degree that it would drive the wife
to commit suicide. Mere extra-marital
relationship, even if proved, would be illegal and
immoral, as has been said in Pinakin
Mahipatray Rawal, but it would take a different
character if the prosecution brings some
evidence on record to show that the accused
had conducted in such a manner to drive the
wife to commit suicide. In the instant case, the
accused may have been involved in an illicit
relationship with Appellant 4, but in the
absence of some other acceptable evidence on
record that can establish such high degree of
mental cruelty, the Explanation to Section 498-
A IPC which includes cruelty to drive a woman
to commit suicide, would not be attracted.‖
[Emphasis added]

52. The purpose of referring to the aforesaid authorities is to

highlight how adultery has not been granted separate exclusive

space in the context of Sections 306 and 498-A IPC.

53. In case of adultery, the law expects the parties to remain

loyal and maintain fidelity throughout and also makes the

adulterer the culprit. This expectation by law is a command

which gets into the core of privacy. That apart, it is a

discriminatory command and also a socio-moral one. Two

individuals may part on the said ground but to attach criminality

to the same is inapposite.

54. We may also usefully note here that adultery as a crime is

no more prevalent in People‘s Republic of China, Japan,
56

Australia, Brazil and many western European countries. The

diversity of culture in those countries can be judicially taken note

of. Non-criminalisation of adultery, apart from what we have

stated hereinabove, can be proved from certain other facets.

When the parties to a marriage lose their moral commitment of

the relationship, it creates a dent in the marriage and it will

depend upon the parties how they deal with the situation. Some

may exonerate and live together and some may seek divorce. It is

absolutely a matter of privacy at its pinnacle. The theories of

punishment, whether deterrent or reformative, would not save

the situation. A punishment is unlikely to establish

commitment, if punishment is meted out to either of them or a

third party. Adultery, in certain situations, may not be the cause

of an unhappy marriage. It can be the result. It is difficult to

conceive of such situations in absolute terms. The issue that

requires to be determined is whether the said ‗act‘ should be

made a criminal offence especially when on certain occasions, it

can be the cause and in certain situations, it can be the result. If

the act is treated as an offence and punishment is provided, it

would tantamount to punishing people who are unhappy in

marital relationships and any law that would make adultery a
57

crime would have to punish indiscriminately both the persons

whose marriages have been broken down as well as those

persons whose marriages are not. A law punishing adultery as a

crime cannot make distinction between these two types of

marriages. It is bound to become a law which would fall within

the sphere of manifest arbitrariness.

55. In this regard, another aspect deserves to be noted. The

jurisprudence in England, which to a large extent, is adopted by

this country has never regarded adultery as a crime except for a

period of ten years in the reign of Puritanical Oliver Cromwell. As

we see the international perspective, most of the countries have

abolished adultery as a crime. We have already ascribed when

such an act is treated as a crime and how it faces the frown of

Articles 14 and 21 of the Constitution. Thinking of adultery from

the point of view of criminality would be a retrograde step. This

Court has travelled on the path of transformative

constitutionalism and, therefore, it is absolutely inappropriate to

sit in a time machine to a different era where the machine moves

on the path of regression. Hence, to treat adultery as a crime

would be unwarranted in law.

58

56. As we have held that Section 497 IPC is unconstitutional

and adultery should not be treated as an offence, it is

appropriate to declare Section 198 CrPC which deals with the

procedure for filing a complaint in relation to the offence of

adultery as unconstitutional. When the substantive provision

goes, the procedural provision has to pave the same path.

57. In view of the foregoing analysis, the decisions in

Sowmithri Vishnu (supra) and V. Revathi (supra) stand

overruled and any other judgment following precedents also

stands overruled.

58. Consequently, the writ petition is allowed to the extent

indicated hereinbefore.

.………………………….CJI.

(Dipak Misra)

.…………………………….J.

(A.M. Khanwilkar)
New Delhi;

September 27, 2018
REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 194 OF 2017

JOSEPH SHINE … PETITIONER

VERSUS

UNION OF INDIA … RESPONDENT

JUDGMENT

R.F. Nariman, J. (Concurring)

1. What is before us in this writ petition is the constitutional

validity of an archaic provision of the Indian Penal Code (―IPC‖),

namely, Section 497, which makes adultery a crime. Section

497 appears in Chapter XX of the IPC, which deals with

offences relating to marriage. Section 497 reads as follows:-

―497. Adultery.—Whoever has sexual intercourse
with a person who is and whom he knows or has
reason to believe to be the wife of another man,
without the consent or connivance of that man, such
sexual intercourse not amounting to the offence of
rape, is guilty of the offence of adultery, and shall be
1
punished with imprisonment of either description for
a term which may extend to five years, or with fine,
or with both. In such case the wife shall not be
punishable as an abettor.‖

The offence of bigamy, which is contained in Section 494 in the

same Chapter, is punishable with a longer jail term which may

extend to 7 years, but in this case, the husband or the wife, as

the case may be, is liable to be prosecuted and convicted.

Section 494 reads as follows:

―494. Marrying again during lifetime of husband
or wife.—Whoever, having a husband or wife living,
marries in any case in which such marriage is void
by reason of its taking place during the life of such
husband or wife, shall be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term which
may extend to seven years, and shall also be liable
to fine.

Exception.—This section does not extend to any
person whose marriage with such husband or wife
has been declared void by a Court of competent
jurisdiction,
nor to any person who contracts a marriage during
the life of a former husband or wife, if such husband
or wife, at the time of the subsequent marriage, shall
have been continually absent from such person for
the space of seven years, and shall not have been
heard of by such person as being alive within that
time provided the person contracting such
subsequent marriage shall, before such marriage
takes place, inform the person with whom such
2
marriage is contracted of the real state of facts so
far as the same are within his or her knowledge.‖

It will be noticed that the crime of adultery punishes only a third-

party male offender as against the crime of bigamy, which

punishes the bigamist, be it a man or a woman. What is

therefore punished as ‗adultery‘ is not ‗adultery‘ per se but the

proprietary interest of a married man in his wife.

Almost all ancient religions/civilizations punished the sin of

adultery. In one of the oldest, namely, in Hammurabi‘s Code,

death by drowning was prescribed for the sin of adultery, be it

either by the husband or the wife. In Roman law, it was not a

crime against the wife for a husband to have sex with a slave or

an unmarried woman. The Roman lex Iulia de adulteriis

coercendis of 17 B.C., properly so named after Emperor

Augustus‘ daughter, Julia, punished Julia for adultery with

banishment. Consequently, in the case of adulterers generally,

both guilty parties were sent to be punished on different islands,

and part of their property was confiscated.

3

2. In Judaism, which again is an ancient religion, the Ten

Commandments delivered by the Lord to Moses on Mount Sinai

contains the Seventh Commandment – ―Thou shalt not commit

adultery‖ – set out in the book of Exodus in the Old Testament.1

Equally, since the wages of sin is death, the book of Leviticus in

the Old Testament prescribes the death penalty for the

adulterer as well as the adulteress.2

3. In Christianity, we find adultery being condemned as

immoral and a sin for both men and women, as is evidenced by

St. Paul‘s letter to the Corinthians.3 Jesus himself stated that a

man incurs sin the moment he looks at a woman with lustful

intent.4 However, when it came to punishing a woman for

adultery, by stoning to death in accordance with the ancient

Jewish law, Jesus uttered the famous words, ―let him who has

not sinned, cast the first stone.‖5

1
Exodus 20:14 (King James Version).

2

Leviticus 20:10 (King James Version).

3

1 Corinthians 6:9-10 (King James Version).
4
Matthew 5:27-28 (King James Version).

5

John, 8:7 (English Standard Version).

4

4. In this country as well, in the Manusmriti, Chapters 4.1346

and 8.3527 prescribes punishment for those who are addicted

to intercourse with wives of other men by punishments which

cause terror, followed by banishment. The Dharmasutras speak

with different voices. In the Apastamba Dharmasutra, adultery

is punishable as a crime, the punishment depending upon the

class or caste of the man and the woman.8 However, in the

Gautama Dharmasutra, if a man commits adultery, he should

observe a life of chastity for two years; and if he does so with

the wife of a vedic scholar, for three years.9

5. In Islam, in An-Nur, namely, Chapter 24 of the Qur‘an,

Verses 2 and 6 to 9 read as follows:

―2. The adulteress and the adulterer, flog each of
them (with) a hundred stripes, and let not pity for
them detain you from obedience to Allah, if you
believe in Allah and the Last Day, and let a party of
believers witness their chastisement.‖10
xxx xxx xxx

6
THE LAWS OF MANU 150 (Translation by G. Buhler, Clarendon Press, UK, 1886).

7

Id., 315.

8

DHARMASUTRAS – THE LAW CODES OF APASTAMBA, GAUTAMA, BAUDHAYANA, AND VASISTHA 70-71
(Translation by Patrick Olivelle, Oxford University Press 1999).
9
Id., 116-117.

10

THE KORAN (AL–QUR‘AN): ARABIC-ENGLISH BILINGUAL EDITION WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY MOHAMED A.
‗ARAFA 363 (Maulana Muhammad Ali Translation, TellerBooks, 2018).

5
―6. And those who accuse their wives and have no
witnesses except themselves, let one of them testify
four times, bearing Allah to witness, that he is of
those who speak the truth.

7. And the fifth (time) that the curse of Allah be on
him, if he is of those who lie.

8. And it shall avert the chastisement from her, if she
testify four times, bearing Allah to witness, that he is
of those who lie.

9. And the fifth (time) that the wrath of Allah to be on
her, if he is of those who speak the truth.‖11

What is interesting to note is that if there are no witnesses other

than the husband or the wife, and the husband testifies four

times that his wife has committed adultery, which is met by the

wife testifying four times that she has not, then earthly

punishment is averted. The wrath of Allah alone will be on the

head of he or she who has given false testimony – which wrath

will be felt only in life after death in the next world.

6. In sixth-century Anglo-Saxon England, the law created

―elaborate tables of composition‖ which the offended husband

could accept in lieu of blood vengeance. These tables were

schemes for payment of compensation depending upon the

11
Id.

6

degree of harm caused to the cuckolded husband. However, as

Christianity spread in England, adultery became morally wrong

and therefore, a sin, as well as a wrong against the husband.

Post 1066, the Normans who took over, viewed adultery not as

a crime against the State, but rather as an ecclesiastical

offence dealt with by the Church. The common law of England

prescribed an action in tort for loss of consortium based on the

property interest a husband had in his wife. Thus, the action for

conversation, which is compensation or damages, usually

represented a first step in obtaining divorce in medieval

England. In fact, adultery was the only ground for divorce in

seventeenth-century England, which had to be granted only by

Parliament. Interestingly enough, it was only after King Charles

I was beheaded in 1649, that adultery became a capital offence

in Cromwell‘s Puritanical England in the year 1650, which was

nullified as soon as King Charles II came back in what was

known as the ‗restoration of the monarchy‘. It will be seen

therefore, that in England, except for an eleven-year period

when England was ruled by the Puritans, adultery was never

considered to be a criminal offence. Adultery was only a tort for
7
which damages were payable to the husband, given his

proprietary interest in his wife.12 This tort is adverted to by a

1904 judgment of the Supreme Court of the United States in

Charles A. Tinker v. Frederick L. Colwell, 193 US 473

(1904), as follows:

―…… We think the authorities show the husband
had certain personal and exclusive rights with
regard to the person of his wife which are interfered
with and invaded by criminal conversation with her;

that such an act on the part of another man
constitutes an assault even when, as is almost
universally the case as proved, the wife in fact
consents to the act, because the wife is in law
incapable of giving any consent to affect the
husband‘s rights as against the wrongdoer, and that
an assault of this nature may properly be described
as an injury to the personal rights and property of
the husband, which is both malicious and willful……
The assault vi et armis is a fiction of law, assumed
at first, in early times, to give jurisdiction of the
cause of action as a trespass, to the courts, which
then proceeded to permit the recovery of damages
by the husband for his wounded feelings and
honour, the defilement of the marriage bed, and for
the doubt thrown upon the legitimacy of children.‖13
―We think that it is made clear by these references
to a few of the many cases on this subject that the
cause of action by the husband is based upon the
12
Linda Fitts Mischler, Personal Morals Masquerading as Professional Ethics: Regulations Banning Sex
between Domestic Relations Attorneys and Their Clients, 23 HARVARD W OMEN‘S LAW JOURNAL 1, 21-22
(2000) [―Linda Fitts Mischler‖].

13

Tinker v. Colwell, 193 U.S. 473, 481 (1904).
8
idea that the act of the defendant is a violation of the
marital rights of the husband in the person of his
wife, and so the act of the defendant is an injury to
the person and also to the property rights of the
husband.‖14

To similar effect is the judgment in Pritchard v. Pritchard and

Sims, [1966] 3 All E.R. 601, which reconfirmed the origins of

adultery or criminal conversation as under:

―In 1857, when marriage in England was still a union
for life which could be broken only by private Act of
Parliament, there existed side by side under the
common law three distinct causes of action
available to a husband whose rights in his wife were
violated by a third party, who enticed her away, or
who harboured her or who committed adultery with
her. …… In the action for adultery known as criminal
conversation, which dates from before the time of
BRACTON, and consequently lay originally in
trespass, the act of adultery itself was the cause of
action and the damages punitive at large. It lay
whether the adultery resulted in the husband‘s
losing his wife‘s society and services or not. All
three causes of action were based on the
recognition accorded by the common law to the
husband‘s propriety interest in the person of his
wife, her services and earnings, and in the property
which would have been hers had she been feme
sole.‖15

14
Id., 485.

15

[1966] 3 All E.R. 601, 607.

9

7. In England, Section LIX of the Divorce and Matrimonial

Causes Act, 1857 abolished the common law action for criminal

conversation while retaining, by Section XXXIII of the same Act,

the power to award the husband damages for adultery

committed by the wife. This position continued right till 1923,

when the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1923 made adultery a

ground for divorce available to both spouses instead of only the

husband. The right of a husband to claim damages for adultery

was abolished very recently by the Law Reforms

(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1970.16

8. In the United States, however, Puritans who went to make

a living in the American colonies, carried with them Cromwell‘s

criminal law, thereby making adultery a capital offence.

Strangely enough, this still continues in some of the States in

the United States. The American Law Institute, however, has

dropped the crime of adultery from its Model Penal Code as

adultery statutes are in general vague, archaic, and sexist.

None of the old reasons in support of such statutes, namely,

16
Section 4, Law Reforms (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1970.
10
the controlling of disease, the preventing of illegitimacy, and

preserving the traditional family continue to exist as of today. It

was also found that criminal adultery statutes were rarely

enforced in the United States and were, therefore, referred to

as ―dead letter statutes‖. This, plus the potential abuses from

such statutes continuing on the statute book, such as extortion,

blackmail, coercion etc. were stated to be reasons for removing

adultery as a crime in the Model Penal Code.17

9. When we come to India, Lord Macaulay, in his draft Penal

Code, which was submitted to the Law Commissioners, refused

to make adultery a penal offence. He reasoned as follows:

―The following positions we consider as fully
established: first, that the existing laws for the
punishment of adultery are altogether inefficacious
for the purpose of preventing injured husbands of
the higher classes from taking the law into their own
hands; secondly, that scarcely any native of the
higher classes ever has recourse to the Courts of
law in a case of adultery for redress against either
his wife, or her gallant; thirdly, that the husbands
who have recourse in cases of adultery to the
Courts of law are generally poor men whose wives
have run away, that these husbands seldom have
any delicate feelings about the intrigue, but think
themselves injured by the elopement, that they
17
Linda Fitts Mischler, supra n. 12, 23-25.

11

consider their wives as useful members of their
small household, that they generally complain not of
the wound given to their affections, not of the stain
on their honor, but of the loss of a menial whom they
cannot easily replace, and that generally their
principal object is that the woman may be sent back.
The fiction by which seduction is made the subject
of an action in the English Courts is, it seems, the
real gist of most proceedings for adultery in the
Mofussil. The essence of the injury is considered by
the sufferer as lying in the ―per quod servitium
amisit.‖ Where the complainant does not ask to
have his wife again, he generally demands to be
reimbursed for the expenses of his marriage.
These things being established it seems to us that
no advantage is to be expected from providing a
punishment for adultery. The population seems to
be divided into two classes- those whom neither the
existing punishment nor any punishment which we
should feel ourselves justified in proposing will
satisfy, and those who consider the injury produced
by adultery as one for which a pecuniary
compensation will sufficiently atone. Those whose
feelings of honor are painfully affected by the
infidelity of their wives will not apply to the tribunals
at all. Those whose feelings are less delicate will be
satisfied by a payment of money. Under such
circumstances we think it best to treat adultery
merely as a civil injury.‖
xxx xxx xxx
―These arguments have not satisfied us that
adultery ought to be made punishable by law. We
cannot admit that a Penal code is by any means to
be considered as a body of ethics, that the
legislature ought to punish acts merely because
those acts are immoral, or that because an act is not
punished at all it follows that the legislature
12
considers that act as innocent. Many things which
are not punishable are morally worse than many
things which are punishable. The man who treats a
generous benefactor with gross in gratitude and
insolence, deserves more severe reprehension than
the man who aims a blow in a passion, or breaks a
window in a frolic. Yet we have punishments for
assault and mischief, and none for ingratitude. The
rich man who refuses a mouthful of rice to save a
fellow creature from death may be a far worse man
than the starving wretch who snatches and devours
the rice. Yet we punish the latter for theft, and we do
not punish the former for hard-heartedness.‖
xxx xxx xxx
―There is yet another consideration which we cannot
wholly leave out of sight. Though we well know that
the dearest interests of the human race are closely
connected with the chastity of women, and the
sacredness of the nuptial contract, we cannot but
feel that there are some peculiarities in the state of
society in this country which may well lead a
humane man to pause before he determines to
punish the infidelity of wives. The condition of the
women of this country is unhappily very different
from that of the women of England and France.
They are married while still children. They are often
neglected for other wives while still young. They
share the attentions of a husband with several
rivals. To make laws for punishing the inconstancy
of the wife while the law admits the privilege of the
husband to fill his zenana with women, is a course
which we are most reluctant to adopt. We are not so
visionary as to think of attacking by law an evil so
deeply rooted in the manners of the people of this
country as polygamy. We leave it to the slow, but we
trust the certain operation of education and of time.
But while it exists, while it continues to produce its
never failing effects on the happiness and
13
respectability of women, we are not inclined to throw
into a scale already too much depressed the
additional weight of the penal law. We have given
the reasons which lead us to believe that any
enactment on this subject would be nugatory. And
we are inclined to think that if not nugatory it would
be oppressive. It would strengthen hands already
too strong. It would weaken a class already too
weak. It will be time enough to guard the
matrimonial contract by penal sanctions when that
contract becomes just, reasonable, and mutually
beneficial.‖18

10. However, when the Court Commissioners reviewed the

Penal Code, they felt that it was important that adultery be

made an offence. The reasons for so doing are set out as

follows:

―353. Having given mature consideration to the
subject, we have, after some hesitation, come to the
conclusion that it is not advisable to exclude this
offence from the Code. We think the reasons for
continuing to treat it as a subject for the cognizance
of the criminal courts preponderate. We conceive
that Colonel Sleeman is probably right in regarding
the difficulty of proving the offence according to the
requirement of the Mohammedan law of evidence,
which demands an amount of positive proof that is
scarcely ever to be had in such a case, as having
some effect in deterring the Natives from
prosecuting adulterers in our courts, although the

18
A PENAL CODE PREPARED BY THE INDIAN LAW COMMISSIONERS, AND PUBLISHED BY COMMAND OF THE
GOVERNOR GENERAL OF INDIA IN COUNCIL 91-93 (G.H. Huttmann, The Bengal Military Orphan Press,
1837).

14

Regulations allow of a conviction upon strong
presumption arising from circumstantial evidence.
This difficulty, if it has had the effect supposed, will
be removed, should the Code be adopted. Colonel
Sleeman‘s representation of the actual
consequences of the present system, which, while it
recognizes the offence, renders it, in the opinion of
the Natives, almost impossible to bring an offender
to justice, it will be observed, coincides with and
confirms practically Mr. Livingstone‘s view of the
result to be expected when the law refuses to
punish this offence. The injured party will do it for
himself; great crimes, assassinations, poisonings,
will be the consequence. The law here does not
refuse, but it fails to punish the offence, says
Colonel Sleeman, and poisonings are the
consequence.

354. Colonel Sleeman thinks that the
Commissioners have wrongly assumed that it is the
lenity of the existing law that it is complained of by
the Natives, and believes that they would be
satisfied with a less punishment for the offence than
the present law allows; viz. imprisonment for seven
years, if it were certain to follow the offender. He
proposes that the punishment of a man ―convicted
of seducing the wife of another‖ shall be
imprisonment which may extend to seven years, or
a fine payable to the husband or both imprisonment
and fine. The punishment of a married woman
―convicted of adultery‖ he would limit to
imprisonment for two years. We are not aware
whether or not he intends the difference in the terms
used to be significant of a difference in the nature of
the proof against the man and the woman
respectively.

355. While we think that the offence of adultery
ought not to be omitted from the Code, we would
limit its cognizance to adultery committed with a
15
married woman, and considering that there is much
weight in the last remark in Note Q, regarding the
condition of a women of this country, in deference to
it we would render the male offender alone liable to
punishment. We would, however, put the parties
accused of adultery on trial together, and empower
the Court, in the event of their conviction, to
pronounce a decree of divorce against the guilty
woman, if the husband sues for it, at the same time
that her paramour is sentenced to punishment by
imprisonment or fine. By Mr. Livingstone‘s Code, the
woman forfeits her ―matrimonial gains‖, but is not
liable to other punishment.

356. We would adopt Colonel Sleeman‘s
suggestion as to the punishment of the male
offender, limiting it to imprisonment not exceeding
five years, instead of seven years allowed at
present, and sanctioning the imposition of a fine
payable to the husband as an alternative, or in
addition.

357. The punishment prescribed by the Code of
Louisiana is imprisonment not more than six
months, or fine not exceeding 2,000 dollars, or both.
By the French Code, the maximum term of
imprisonment is two years, with fine in addition,
which may amount to 2,000 francs.

358. If the offence of adultery is admitted into the
Penal Code, there should be a provision in the Code
of Procedure to restrict the right of prosecuting to
the injured husband, agreeably to Section 2, Act II of
1845.‖19
(emphasis supplied)

19
COPIES OF THE SPECIAL REPORTS OF THE INDIAN LAW COMMISSIONERS 76 (James C. Melvill, East India
House, 1847).

16
These are some of the reasons that led to the enactment of

Section 497, IPC.

11. At this stage, it is important to note that by Section 199 of

the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, it was only the husband

who was to be deemed to be aggrieved by an offence

punishable under Section 497, IPC. Thus, Section 199 stated:

―199. Prosecution for adultery or enticing a
married woman.— No Court shall take cognizance
of an offence under section 497 or section 498 of
the Indian Penal Code (XLV of 1860), except upon a
complaint made by the husband of the woman, or, in
his absence, by some person who had care of such
woman on his behalf at the time when such offence
was committed.‖

12. Even when this Code was replaced by the Code of

Criminal Procedure (―CrPC‖), 1973, Section 198 of the CrPC,

1973 continued the same provision with a proviso that in the

absence of the husband, some person who had care of the

woman on his behalf at the time when such offence was

committed may, with the leave of the Court, make a complaint

on his behalf. The said Section reads as follows:

17

―198. Prosecution for offences against
marriage.— (1) No Court shall take cognizance of
an offence punishable under Chapter XX of the
Indian Penal Code (45 of 1860) except upon a
complaint made by some person aggrieved by the
offence:

Provided that—

(a) where such person is under the age of
eighteen years, or is an idiot or a lunatic, or
is from sickness or infirmity unable to make
a complaint, or is a woman who, according
to the local customs and manners, ought
not to be compelled to appear in public,
some other person may, with the leave of
the Court, make a complaint on his or her
behalf;

(b) where such person is the husband and
he is serving in any of the Armed Forces of
the Union under conditions which are
certified by his Commanding Officer as
precluding him from obtaining leave of
absence to enable him to make a
complaint in person, some other person
authorised by the husband in accordance
with the provisions of sub-section (4) may
make a complaint on his behalf;

(c) where the person aggrieved by an
offence punishable under Section 494 or
Section 495 of the Indian Penal Code (45
of 1860) is the wife, complaint may be
made on her behalf by her father, mother,
brother, sister, son or daughter or by her
father‘s or mother‘s brother or sister, or,
with the leave of the Court, by any other
person related to her by blood, marriage or
adoption.

18

(2) For the purposes of sub-section (1), no person
other than the husband of the woman shall be
deemed to be aggrieved by any offence punishable
under Section 497 or Section 498 of the said Code:
Provided that in the absence of the husband,
some person who had care of the woman on his
behalf at the time when such offence was
committed may, with the leave of the Court, make a
complaint on his behalf.

(3) When in any case falling under clause (a) of the
proviso to sub-section (1), the complaint is sought to
be made on behalf of a person under the age of
eighteen years or of a lunatic by a person who has
not been appointed or declared by a competent
authority to be the guardian of the person of the
minor or lunatic, and the Court is satisfied that there
is a guardian so appointed or declared, the Court
shall, before granting the application for leave,
cause notice to be given to such guardian and give
him a reasonable opportunity of being heard.
(4) The authorisation referred to in clause (b) of the
proviso to sub-section (1), shall be in writing, shall
be signed or otherwise attested by the husband,
shall contain a statement to the effect that he has
been informed of the allegations upon which the
complaint is to be founded, shall be countersigned
by his Commanding Officer, and shall be
accompanied by a certificate signed by that Officer
to the effect that leave of absence for the purpose of
making a complaint in person cannot for the time
being be granted to the husband.

(5) Any document purporting to be such an
authorisation and complying with the provisions of
sub-section (4), and any document purporting to be
a certificate required by that sub-section shall,
unless the contrary is proved, be presumed to be
genuine and shall be received in evidence.
19
(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
intercourse 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.

(7) The provisions of this section apply to the
abetment of, or attempt to commit, an offence as
they apply to the offence.‖

At this stage, it is important to advert to some of the judgments

of the High Courts and our Court. In Yusuf Abdul Aziz v.

State, 1952 ILR Bom 449, a Division Bench of the Bombay

High Court, consisting of M.C. Chagla, C.J. and P.B.

Gajendragadkar, J. held that Section 497 of the IPC did not

contravene Articles 14 and 15 of the Constitution. However, in

an instructive passage, the learned Chief Justice stated:

―…… Mr. Peerbhoy is right when he says that the
underlying idea of Section 497 is that wives are
properties of their husbands. The very fact that this
offence is only cognizable with the consent of the
husband emphasises that point of view. It may be
argued that Section 497 should not find a place in
any modern Code of law. Days are past, we hope,
when women were looked upon as property by their
husbands. But that is an argument more in favour of
doing away with Section 497 altogether.‖20

20
1952 ILR Bombay 449, 454.

20

An appeal to this Court in Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of

Bombay, 1954 SCR 930, (―Yusuf Abdul Aziz‖), met with the

same result.

This Court, through Vivian Bose, J., held that the last part of

Section 497, which states that the wife shall not be punishable

as an abettor of the offence of adultery, does not offend Articles

14 and 15 in view of the saving provision contained in Article

15(3), being a special provision made in favour of women.

This is an instance of Homer nodding. Apart from a limited ratio

based upon a limited argument, the judgment applies a

constitutional provision which is obviously inapplicable as

Article 15(3), which states that, ―nothing in this article shall

prevent the State from making a special provision for women‖,

would refer to the ―State‖ as either Parliament or the State

Legislatures or the Executive Government of the Centre or the

States, set up under the Constitution after it has come into

force. Section 497 is, in constitutional language, an ―existing

law‖ which continues, by virtue of Article 372(1), to apply, and

21
could not, therefore, be said to be a law made by the ―State‖,

meaning any of the entities referred to above.

13. We have noticed a judgment of the Division Bench of the

Bombay High Court in Dattatraya Motiram More v. State of

Bombay, AIR 1953 Bom 311, in which the Division Bench

turned down a submission that Article 15(3) is confined to laws

made after the Constitution of India comes into force and would

also apply to existing law thus:

―8. An argument was advanced by Mr. Patel that Art.
15(3) only applies to future legislation and that as far
as all laws in force before the commencement of the
Constitution were concerned, those laws can only
be tested by Art. 15(1) and not by Art. 15(1) read
with Art. 15(3). Mr. Patel contends that Art. 15(3)
permits the State in future to make a special
provision for women and children, but to the extent
the laws in force are concerned Art. 15(1) applies,
and if the laws in force are inconsistent with Art.
15(1), those laws must be held to be void. Turning
to Art. 13(1), it provides:

―All laws in force in the territory of India
immediately before the commencement of this
Constitution, in so far as they are inconsistent
with the provisions of this Part, shall, to the
extent of such inconsistency, be void.‖
Therefore, before a law in force can be declared to
be void it must be found to be inconsistent with one
of the provisions of Part III which deals with
22
Fundamental Rights, and the fundamental right
which is secured to the citizen under Art. 15 is not
the unlimited right under Art. 15(1) but the right
under Art. 15(1) qualified by Art. 15(3). It is
impossible to argue that the Constitution did not
permit laws to have special provision for women if
the laws were passed before the Constitution came
into force, but permitted the Legislature to pass laws
in favour of women after the Constitution was
enacted. If a law discriminating in favour of women
is opposed to the fundamental rights of citizens,
there is no reason why such law should continue to
remain on the statute book. The whole scheme of
Art. 13 is to make laws, which are inconsistent with
Part III, void, not only if they were in force before the
commencement of the Constitution, but also if they
were enacted after the Constitution came into force.

Mr. Patel relies on the various provisos to Art. 19
and he says that in all those provisos special
mention is made to existing laws and also to the
State making laws in future. Now, the scheme of Art.
19 is different from the scheme of Art. 15. Provisos
to Art. 19 in terms deal with law whether existing or
to be made in future by the State, whereas Art.
15(3) does not merely deal with laws but deals
generally with any special provision for women and
children, and therefore it was not necessary in Art.
15(3) to mention both existing laws and laws to be
made in future. But the exception made to Art. 15(1)
by Art. 15(3) is an exception which applies both to
existing laws and to laws which the State may make
in future.‖

14. We are of the view that this paragraph does not represent

the law correctly. In fact, Article 19(2)-(6) clearly refers to

―existing law‖ as being separate from ―the State making any
23
law‖, indicating that the State making any law would be laws

made after the Constitution comes into force as opposed to

―existing law‖, which are pre-constitutional laws enacted before

the Constitution came into force, as is clear from the definition

of ―existing law‖ contained in Article 366(10), which reads as

under:

―366. Definitions.—In this Constitution, unless the
context otherwise requires, the following
expressions have the meanings hereby respectively
assigned to them, that is to say—
xxx xxx xxx
(10) ―existing law‖ means any law, Ordinance, order,
bye-law, rule or regulation passed or made before
the commencement of this Constitution by any
Legislature, authority or person having power to
make such a law, Ordinance, order, bye-law, rule or
regulation;‖

15. Article 15(3) refers to the State making laws which

therefore, obviously cannot include existing law. Article 15(3) is

in this respect similar to Article 16(4), which reads as follows:

―16. Equality of opportunity in matters of public
employment.—
xxx xxx xxx

24
(4) Nothing in this article shall prevent the State
from making any provision for the reservation of
appointments or posts in favour of any backward
class of citizens which, in the opinion of the State, is
not adequately represented in the services under
the State.

The vital difference in language between Articles 15(3) and

16(4) on the one hand, and Article 19(2)-(6) on the other, must

thus be given effect.

16. Coming back to Yusuf Abdul Aziz (supra), the difference

in language between Article 15(3) and Article 19(2)-(6) was not

noticed. The limited ratio of this judgment merely refers to the

last sentence in Section 497 which it upholds. Its ratio does not

extend to upholding the entirety of the provision or referring to

any of the arguments made before us for striking down the

provision as a whole.

17. We then come to Sowmithri Vishnu v. Union of India

and Anr., (1985) Supp SCC 137, (―Sowmithri Vishnu‖). In this

case, an Article 32 petition challenged the constitutional validity

of Section 497 of the Penal Code on three grounds which are

set out in paragraph 6 of the judgment. Significantly, the
25
learned counsel in that case argued that Section 497 is a

flagrant instance of ‗gender discrimination‘, ‗legislative

despotism‘, and ‗male chauvinism‘. This Court repelled these

arguments stating that they had a strong emotive appeal but no

valid legal basis to rest upon. The first argument, namely, an

argument of discrimination was repelled by stating that the

ambit of the offence of adultery should make the woman

punishable as well. This was repelled by saying that such

arguments go to the policy of the law and not its

constitutionality. This was on the basis that it is commonly

accepted that it is the man who is the seducer and not the

woman. Even in 1985, the Court accepted that this archaic

position may have undergone some change over the years, but

it is for the legislature to consider whether Section 497 be

amended appropriately so as to take note of the transformation

that society has undergone.

The Court then referred to the 42nd Law Commission Report,

1971, which recommended the retention of Section 497, with

the modification that, even the wife, who has sexual relations

26
with a person other than her husband, should be made

punishable for adultery. The dissenting note of Mrs. Anna

Chandi was also taken note of, where the dissenter stated that

this is the right time to consider the question whether the

offence of adultery, as envisaged in Section 497, is in tune with

our present-day notions of women‘s status in marriage.

The second ground was repelled stating that a woman is the

victim of the crime, and as the offence of adultery is considered

as an offence against the sanctity of the matrimonial home, only

those men who defile that sanctity are brought within the net of

the law. Therefore, it is of no moment that Section 497 does not

confer any right on the wife to prosecute the husband who has

committed adultery with another woman.

The third ground, namely, that Section 497 is underinclusive

inasmuch as a husband who has sexual relations with an

unmarried woman is not within the net of the law, was repelled

stating that an unfaithful husband may invite a civil action by the

wife for separation, and that the Legislature is entitled to deal

with the evil where it is felt and seen most.

27
A challenge on the ground of Article 21 was also repelled,

stating that the fact that a provision for hearing the wife is not

contained in Section 497 cannot render that Section

unconstitutional. This Court then referred to the judgment in

Yusuf Abdul Aziz (supra) and stated that since it was a 1954

decision, and 30 years had passed since then, this Court was

examining the position afresh. The Court ended with the

sermon, ―stability of marriages is not an ideal to be scorned.‖

18. In V. Revathi v. Union of India and Ors., (1988) 2 SCC

72, this Court, after referring to Sowmithri Vishnu (supra),

repelled a similar challenge to Section 198 of the CrPC, 1973.

After referring to Sowmithri Vishnu (supra), since Section 497,

IPC and Section 198, CrPC go hand in hand and constitute a

‗legislative packet‘ to deal with the offence of adultery

committed by an outsider, the challenge to the said Section

failed.

19. International trends worldwide also indicate that very few

nations continue to treat adultery as a crime, though most

28
nations retain adultery for the purposes of divorce laws. Thus,

adultery continues to be a criminal offence in Afghanistan,

Bangladesh, Indonesia, Iran, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan,

Philippines, United Arab Emirates, some states of the United

States of America, Algeria, Democratic Republic of Congo,

Egypt, Morocco, and some parts of Nigeria.

On the other hand, a number of jurisdictions have done away

with adultery as a crime. The People‘s Republic of China,

Japan, Brazil, New Zealand, Australia, Scotland, the

Netherlands, Denmark, France, Germany, Austria, the Republic

of Ireland, Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago,

Seychelles etc. are some of the jurisdictions in which it has

been done away with. In South Korea21 and Guatemala,22

provisions similar to Section 497 have been struck down by the

constitutional courts of those nations.

21
2009 Hun-Ba 17, (26.02.2015) [Constitutional Court of South Korea].
22
Expediente 936-95, (07.03.1996), República de Guatemala Corte de Constitucionalidad [Constitutional
Court of Guatemala].

29

20. The Supreme Court of Namibia, in an instructive

judgment,23 went into whether the criminal offence of adultery

would protect marriages and reduce the incidence of adultery. It

said:

―[45] But does the action protect marriages from
adultery? For the reasons articulated by both the
SCA and the Constitutional Court, I do not consider
that the action can protect marriage as it does not
strengthen a weakening marriage or breathe life into
one which is in any event disintegrating. [DE v. RH,
2015 (5) SA 83 (CC) (Constitutional Court of South
Africa) para 49]. The reasoning set out by the SCA
is salutary and bears repetition:

‗But the question is: if the protection of marriage
is one of its main goals, is the action successful
in achieving that goal? The question becomes
more focused when the spotlight is directed at
the following considerations:

(a) First of all, as was pointed out by the
German Bundesgericht in the passage
from the judgment (JZ 1973, 668) from
which I have quoted earlier, although
marriage is —
‗a human institution which is
regulated by law and protected by
the Constitution and which, in turn,
creates genuine legal duties. Its
essence . . . consists in the

23
James Sibongo v. Lister Lutombi Chaka and Anr. (Case No. SA77-14) (19.08.2016) [Supreme Court of
Namibia].

30
readiness, founded in morals, of the
parties to the marriage to create and
to maintain it.‘
If the parties to the marriage have lost
that moral commitment, the marriage will
fail, and punishment meted out to a third
party is unlikely to change that.

(b) Grave doubts are expressed by many
about the deterrent effect of the action.

In most other countries it was concluded
that the action (no longer) has any
deterrent effect and I have no reason to
think that the position in our society is all
that different. Perhaps one reason is that
adultery occurs in different
circumstances. Every so often it
happens without any premeditation,
when deterrence hardly plays a role. At
the other end of the scale, the adultery is
sometimes carefully planned and the
participants are confident that it will not
be discovered. Moreover, romantic
involvement between one of the spouses
and a third party can be as devastating
to the marital relationship as (or even
more so than) sexual intercourse.

(c) If deterrence is the main purpose,
one would have thought that this could
better be achieved by retaining the
imposition of criminal sanctions or by the
grant of an interdict in favour of the
innocent spouse against both the guilty
spouse and the third party to prevent
future acts of adultery. But, as we know,
the crime of adultery had become
abrogated through disuse exactly 100
31
years ago while an interdict against
adultery has never been granted by our
courts (see, for example, Wassenaar v
Jameson, supra at 352H – 353H). Some
of the reasons given in Wassenaar as to
why an interdict would not be
appropriate are quite enlightening and
would apply equally to the
appropriateness of a claim for damages.

These include, firstly, that an interdict
against the guilty spouse is not possible
because he or she commits no delict.

Secondly, that as against a third party —
‗it interferes with, and restricts the
rights and freedom that the third
party ordinarily has of using and
disposing of his body as he
chooses; . . . it also affects the
relationship of the third party with
the claimant’s spouse, who is and
cannot be a party to the interdict,
and therefore indirectly interferes
with, and restricts her rights and
freedom of, using and disposing of
her body as she chooses‘. [At
353E.]

(d) In addition the deterrence argument
seems to depart from the assumption
that adultery is the cause of the
breakdown of a marriage, while it is now
widely recognised that causes for the
breakdown in marriages are far more
complex. Quite frequently adultery is
found to be the result and not the cause
of an unhappy marital relationship.

Conversely stated, a marriage in which
the spouses are living in harmony is
32
hardly likely to be broken up by a third
party.‘‖24

21. Coming back to Section 497, it is clear that in order to

constitute the offence of adultery, the following must be

established:

(i) Sexual intercourse between a married woman and a

man who is not her husband;

(ii) The man who has sexual intercourse with the married

woman must know or has reason to believe that she

is the wife of another man;

(iii) Such sexual intercourse must take place with her

consent, i.e., it must not amount to rape;

(iv) Sexual intercourse with the married woman must

take place without the consent or connivance of her

husband.

22. What is apparent on a cursory reading of these

ingredients is that a married man, who has sexual intercourse

24
Id., 17-19.

33
with an unmarried woman or a widow, does not commit the

offence of adultery. Also, if a man has sexual intercourse with a

married woman with the consent or connivance of her husband,

he does not commit the offence of adultery. The consent of the

woman committing adultery is material only for showing that the

offence is not another offence, namely, rape.

23. The background in which this provision was enacted now

needs to be stated. In 1860, when the Penal Code was

enacted, the vast majority of the population in this country,

namely, Hindus, had no law of divorce as marriage was

considered to be a sacrament. Equally, a Hindu man could

marry any number of women until 1955. It is, therefore, not far

to see as to why a married man having sexual intercourse with

an unmarried woman was not the subject matter of the offence.

Since adultery did not exist as a ground in divorce law, there

being no divorce law, and since a man could marry any number

of wives among Hindus, it was clear that there was no sense in

punishing a married man in having sex with an unmarried

woman as he could easily marry her at a subsequent point in

34
time. Two of the fundamental props or bases of this archaic law

have since gone. Post 1955-1956, with the advent of the ―Hindu

Code‖, so to speak, a Hindu man can marry only one wife; and

adultery has been made a ground for divorce in Hindu Law.

Further, the real heart of this archaic law discloses itself when

consent or connivance of the married woman‘s husband is

obtained – the married or unmarried man who has sexual

intercourse with such a woman, does not then commit the

offence of adultery. This can only be on the paternalistic notion

of a woman being likened to chattel, for if one is to use the

chattel or is licensed to use the chattel by the ―licensor‖,

namely, the husband, no offence is committed. Consequently,

the wife who has committed adultery is not the subject matter of

the offence, and cannot, for the reason that she is regarded

only as chattel, even be punished as an abettor. This is also for

the chauvinistic reason that the third-party male has ‗seduced‘

her, she being his victim. What is clear, therefore, is that this

archaic law has long outlived its purpose and does not square

with today‘s constitutional morality, in that the very object with

35
which it was made has since become manifestly arbitrary,

having lost its rationale long ago and having become in today‘s

day and age, utterly irrational. On this basis alone, the law

deserves to be struck down, for with the passage of time,

Article 14 springs into action and interdicts such law as being

manifestly arbitrary. That legislation can be struck down on the

ground of manifest arbitrariness is no longer open to any doubt,

as has been held by this Court in Shayara Bano v. Union of

India and Ors., (2017) 9 SCC 1, as follows:

―101. …… 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.‖

24. It is clear, therefore, that the ostensible object of Section

497, as pleaded by the State, being to protect and preserve the

sanctity of marriage, is not in fact the object of Section 497 at

all, as has been seen hereinabove. The sanctity of marriage

can be utterly destroyed by a married man having sexual
36
intercourse with an unmarried woman or a widow, as has been

seen hereinabove. Also, if the husband consents or connives at

such sexual intercourse, the offence is not committed, thereby

showing that it is not sanctity of marriage which is sought to be

protected and preserved, but a proprietary right of a husband.

Secondly, no deterrent effect has been shown to exist, or ever

to have existed, which may be a legitimate consideration for a

State enacting criminal law. Also, manifest arbitrariness is writ

large even in cases where the offender happens to be a

married woman whose marriage has broken down, as a result

of which she no longer cohabits with her husband, and may in

fact, have obtained a decree for judicial separation against her

husband, preparatory to a divorce being granted. If, during this

period, she has sex with another man, the other man is

immediately guilty of the offence.

25. The aforesaid provision is also discriminatory and

therefore, violative of Article 14 and Article 15(1). As has been

held by us hereinabove, in treating a woman as chattel for the

purposes of this provision, it is clear that such provision

37
discriminates against women on grounds of sex only, and must

be struck down on this ground as well. Section 198, CrPC is

also a blatantly discriminatory provision, in that it is the husband

alone or somebody on his behalf who can file a complaint

against another man for this offence. Consequently, Section

198 has also to be held constitutionally infirm.

26. We have, in our recent judgment in Justice K.S.

Puttaswamy (Retd.) and Anr. v. Union of India and Ors.,

(2017) 10 SCC 1, (―Puttaswamy‖), held:

―108. Over the last four decades, our constitutional
jurisprudence has recognised the inseparable
relationship between protection of life and liberty
with dignity. Dignity as a constitutional value finds
expression in the Preamble. The constitutional
vision seeks the realisation of justice (social,
economic and political); liberty (of thought,
expression, belief, faith and worship); equality (as a
guarantee against arbitrary treatment of individuals)
and fraternity (which assures a life of dignity to
every individual). These constitutional precepts exist
in unity to facilitate a humane and compassionate
society. The individual is the focal point of the
Constitution because it is in the realisation of
individual rights that the collective well-being of the
community is determined. Human dignity is an
integral part of the Constitution. Reflections of
dignity are found in the guarantee against
arbitrariness (Article 14), the lamps of freedom
38
(Article 19) and in the right to life and personal
liberty (Article 21).‖

xxx xxx xxx

―298. Privacy of the individual is an essential aspect
of dignity. Dignity has both an intrinsic and
instrumental value. As an intrinsic value, human
dignity is an entitlement or a constitutionally
protected interest in itself. In its instrumental facet,
dignity and freedom are inseparably intertwined,
each being a facilitative tool to achieve the other.

The ability of the individual to protect a zone of
privacy enables the realisation of the full value of life
and liberty. Liberty has a broader meaning of which
privacy is a subset. All liberties may not be
exercised in privacy. Yet others can be fulfilled only
within a private space. Privacy enables the
individual to retain the autonomy of the body and
mind. The autonomy of the individual is the ability to
make decisions on vital matters of concern to life.
Privacy has not been couched as an independent
fundamental right. But that does not detract from the
constitutional protection afforded to it, once the true
nature of privacy and its relationship with those
fundamental rights which are expressly protected is
understood. Privacy lies across the spectrum of
protected freedoms. The guarantee of equality is a
guarantee against arbitrary State action. It prevents
the State from discriminating between individuals.
The destruction by the State of a sanctified personal
space whether of the body or of the mind is violative
of the guarantee against arbitrary State action.
Privacy of the body entitles an individual to the
integrity of the physical aspects of personhood. The
intersection between one’s mental integrity and
privacy entitles the individual to freedom of thought,
the freedom to believe in what is right, and the
freedom of self-determination. When these
39
guarantees intersect with gender, they create a
private space which protects all those elements
which are crucial to gender identity. The family,
marriage, procreation and sexual orientation are all
integral to the dignity of the individual. Above all, the
privacy of the individual recognises an inviolable
right to determine how freedom shall be exercised.
An individual may perceive that the best form of
expression is to remain silent. Silence postulates a
realm of privacy. An artist finds reflection of the soul
in a creative endeavour. A writer expresses the
outcome of a process of thought. A musician
contemplates upon notes which musically lead to
silence. The silence, which lies within, reflects on
the ability to choose how to convey thoughts and
ideas or interact with others. These are crucial
aspects of personhood. The freedoms under Article
19 can be fulfilled where the individual is entitled to
decide upon his or her preferences. Read in
conjunction with Article 21, liberty enables the
individual to have a choice of preferences on
various facets of life including what and how one will
eat, the way one will dress, the faith one will
espouse and a myriad other matters on which
autonomy and self-determination require a choice to
be made within the privacy of the mind. The
constitutional right to the freedom of religion under
Article 25 has implicit within it the ability to choose a
faith and the freedom to express or not express
those choices to the world. These are some
illustrations of the manner in which privacy facilitates
freedom and is intrinsic to the exercise of liberty.
The Constitution does not contain a separate article
telling us that privacy has been declared to be a
fundamental right. Nor have we tagged the
provisions of Part III with an alpha-suffixed right to
privacy: this is not an act of judicial redrafting.
Dignity cannot exist without privacy. Both reside
within the inalienable values of life, liberty and
40
freedom which the Constitution has recognised.
Privacy is the ultimate expression of the sanctity of
the individual. It is a constitutional value which
straddles across the spectrum of fundamental rights
and protects for the individual a zone of choice and
self-determination.‖

xxx xxx xxx

―482. Shri Sundaram has argued that rights have to
be traced directly to those expressly stated in the
fundamental rights chapter of the Constitution for
such rights to receive protection, and privacy is not
one of them. It will be noticed that the dignity of the
individual is a cardinal value, which is expressed in
the Preamble to the Constitution. Such dignity is not
expressly stated as a right in the fundamental rights
chapter, but has been read into the right to life and
personal liberty. The right to live with dignity is
expressly read into Article 21 by the judgment
in Jolly George Varghese v. Bank of Cochin [Jolly
George Varghese v. Bank of Cochin, (1980) 2 SCC
360], at para 10. Similarly, the right against bar
fetters and handcuffing being integral to an
individual’s dignity was read into Article 21 by the
judgment in Sunil Batra v. Delhi Admn. [Sunil
Batra v. Delhi Admn., (1978) 4 SCC 494 : 1979 SCC
(Cri) 155], at paras 192, 197-B, 234 and 241 and
Prem Shankar Shukla v. Delhi Admn. [Prem
Shankar Shukla v. Delhi Admn., (1980) 3 SCC 526 :
1980 SCC (Cri) 815], at paras 21 and 22. It is too
late in the day to canvas that a fundamental right
must be traceable to express language in Part III of
the Constitution. As will be pointed out later in this
judgment, a Constitution has to be read in such a
way that words deliver up principles that are to be
followed and if this is kept in mind, it is clear that the
concept of privacy is contained not merely in

41
personal liberty, but also in the dignity of the
individual.‖

xxx xxx xxx

―525. But most important of all is the cardinal value
of fraternity which assures the dignity of the
individual. [In 1834, Jacques-Charles DuPont de
l’Eure associated the three terms liberty, equality
and fraternity together in the Revue Républicaine,
which he edited, as follows: ―Any man aspires to
liberty, to equality, but he cannot achieve it without
the assistance of other men, without fraternity.‖
Many of our decisions recognise human dignity as
being an essential part of the fundamental rights
chapter. For example, see Prem Shankar Shukla v.
Delhi Admn., (1980) 3 SCC 526 at para 21, Francis
Coralie Mullin v. UT of Delhi, (1981) 1 SCC 608 at
paras 6, 7 and 8, Bandhua Mukti Morcha v. Union of
India, (1984) 3 SCC 161 at para 10, Maharashtra
University of Health Sciences v. Satchikitsa
Prasarak Mandal, (2010) 3 SCC 786 at para
37, Shabnam v. Union of India, (2015) 6 SCC 702 at
paras 12.4 and 14 and Jeeja Ghosh v. Union of
India, (2016) 7 SCC 761 at para 37.] The dignity of
the individual encompasses the right of the
individual to develop to the full extent of his
potential. And this development can only be if an
individual has autonomy over fundamental personal
choices and control over dissemination of personal
information which may be infringed through an
unauthorised use of such information. It is clear that
Article 21, more than any of the other articles in the
fundamental rights chapter, reflects each of these
constitutional values in full, and is to be read in
consonance with these values and with the
international covenants that we have referred to. In
the ultimate analysis, the fundamental right to
privacy, which has so many developing facets, can
42
only be developed on a case-to-case basis.

Depending upon the particular facet that is relied
upon, either Article 21 by itself or in conjunction with
other fundamental rights would get attracted.‖

The dignity of the individual, which is spoken of in the Preamble

to the Constitution of India, is a facet of Article 21 of the

Constitution. A statutory provision belonging to the hoary past

which demeans or degrades the status of a woman obviously

falls foul of modern constitutional doctrine and must be struck

down on this ground also.

27. When we come to the decision of this Court in Yusuf

Abdul Aziz (supra), it is clear that this judgment also does not,

in any manner, commend itself or keep in tune with modern

constitutional doctrine. In any case, as has been held above, its

ratio is an extremely limited one as it upheld a wife not being

punishable as an abettor which is contained in Section 497,

IPC. The focus on whether the provision as a whole would be

constitutionally infirm was not there in the aforesaid judgment.

At this stage, it is necessary to advert to Chief Justice Chagla‘s

foresight in the Bombay High Court judgment which landed up

43
in appeal before this Court in Yusuf Abdul Aziz’s (supra).

Chief Justice Chagla had stated that since the underlying idea

of Section 497 is that wives are properties of their husbands,

Section 497 should not find a place in any modern Code of law,

and is an argument in favour of doing away with Section 497

altogether. The day has long since arrived when the Section

does, in fact, need to be done away with altogether, and is

being done away with altogether.

28. In Sowmithri Vishnu (supra), this Court upheld Section

497 while repelling three arguments against its continuance, as

has been noticed hereinabove. This judgment also must be

said to be swept away by the tidal wave of recent judgments

expanding the scope of the fundamental rights contained in

Articles 14, 15, and 21. Ancient notions of the man being the

seducer and the woman being the victim permeate the

judgment, which is no longer the case today. The moving times

have not left the law behind as we have just seen, and so far as

engaging the attention of law makers when reform of penal law

is undertaken, we may only hasten to add that even when the
44
CrPC was fully replaced in 1973, Section 198 continued to be

on the statute book. Even as of today, Section 497 IPC

continues to be on the statute book. When these sections are

wholly outdated and have outlived their purpose, not only does

the maxim of Roman law, cessante ratione legis, cessat ipsa

lex, apply to interdict such law, but when such law falls foul of

constitutional guarantees, it is this Court‘s solemn duty not to

wait for legislation but to strike down such law. As recently as in

Shayara Bano (supra), it is only the minority view of Khehar,

C.J.I. and S. Abdul Nazeer, J., that one must wait for the law to

change legislatively by way of social reform. The majority view

was the exact opposite, which is why Triple Talaq was found

constitutionally infirm and struck down by the majority. Also, we

are of the view that the statement in this judgment that stability

of marriages is not an ideal to be scorned, can scarcely be

applied to this provision, as we have seen that marital stability

is not the object for which this provision was enacted. On all

these counts, therefore, we overrule the judgment in Sowmithri

Vishnu (supra). Equally, the judgment in V. Revathi (supra),

which upheld the constitutional validity of Section 198 must, for
45
similar reasons, be held to be no longer good law. We,

therefore, declare that Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code,

1860 and Section 198 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973

are violative of Articles 14, 15(1), and 21 of the Constitution of

India and are, therefore, struck down as being invalid.

……………………………..J.

(R.F. Nariman)

New Delhi;

September 27, 2018.

46
REPORTABLE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO 194 OF 2017

JOSEPH SHINE …Petitioner
VERSUS

UNION OF INDIA …Respondent

JUDGMENT

Index

A Gender: the discursive struggle

B Judicial discourse on adultery

C Relics of the past

D Across frontiers

E Confronting patriarchy

F ‘The Good Wife’

F.1 The entrapping cage

G Denuding identity – women as sexual property

G.1 Exacting fidelity: the intimacies of marriage

H Towards transformative justice

1
PART A

Dr Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud, J

A Gender: the discursive struggle

1 Our Constitution is a repository of rights, a celebration of myriad freedoms

and liberties. It envisages the creation of a society where the ideals of equality,

dignity and freedom triumph over entrenched prejudices and injustices. The

creation of a just, egalitarian society is a process. It often involves the

questioning and obliteration of parochial social mores which are antithetical to

constitutional morality. The case at hand enjoins this constitutional court to make

an enquiry into the insidious permeation of patriarchal values into the legal order

and its role in perpetuating gender injustices.

2 Law and society are intrinsically connected and oppressive social values

often find expression in legal structures. The law influences society as well but

societal values are slow to adapt to leads shown by the law. The law on adultery

cannot be construed in isolation. To fully comprehend its nature and impact,

every legislative provision must be understood as a ‘discourse’ about social

structuring.1 However, the discourse of law is not homogenous.2 In the context

particularly of Section 497, it regards individuals as ‘gendered citizens’.3 In doing

so, the law creates and ascribes gender roles based on existing societal

1
Ratna Kapur and Brenda Cossman, Subversive Sites: Feminist Engagements with Law in India, Sage Publications
(1996) at page 40
2 Ibid at page 41
3 Ibid

2
PART A

stereotypes. An understanding of law as a ‘discourse’ would lead to the

recognition of the role of law in creating ‘gendered identities’.4

3 Over the years, legal reform has had a significant role in altering the

position of women in societal orderings. This is seen in matters concerning

inheritance and in the protection against domestic violence. However, in some

cases, the law operates to perpetuate an unequal world for women. Thus,

depending on the manner in which it is used, law can act as an agent of social

change as well as social stagnation. Scholar Patricia Williams, who has done

considerable work on the critical race theory, is sanguine about the possibility of

law engendering progressive social transformation:

“It is my deep belief that theoretical legal understanding and
social transformation need not be oxymoronic”5

The Constitution, both in text and interpretation, has played a significant role in

the evolution of law from being an instrument of oppression to becoming one of

liberation. Used in a liberal perspective, the law can enhance democratic values.

As an instrument which preserves the status quo on the other hand, the law

preserves stereotypes and legitimises unequal relationships based on pre-

existing societal discrimination. Constantly evolving, law operates as an

important “site for discursive struggle”, where ideals compete and new visions

are shaped.6. In regarding law as a “site of discursive struggle”, it becomes

4
Ibid
5 Patricia Williams, The Alchemy of Race and Rights, Cambridge: Harvard University Press (1991)
6 Ratna Kapur and Brenda Cossman, Subversive Sites: Feminist Engagements with Law in India, Sage Publications

(1996) at page 41

3
PART A

imperative to examine the institutions and structures within which legal discourse

operates:7

“The idea of neutral dialogue is an idea which denies history,
denies structure, denies the positioning of subjects.”8

In adjudicating on the rights of women, the Court must not lose sight of the

institutions and values which have forced women to a shackled existence so far.

To fully recognise the role of law and society in shaping the lives and identities of

women, is also to ensure that patriarchal social values and legal norms are not

permitted to further obstruct the exercise of constitutional rights by the women of

our country.

4 In the preceding years, the Court has evolved a jurisprudence of rights-

granting primacy to the right to autonomy, dignity and individual choice. The right

to sexual autonomy and privacy has been granted the stature of a Constitutional

right. In confronting the sources of gendered injustice which threaten the rights

and freedoms promised in our Constitution, we set out to examine the validity of

Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code. In doing so, we also test the

constitutionality of moral and societal regulation of women and their intimate lives

through the law.

7 Ibid
8 Gayatri Spivak, The Post Colonial Critic: Interviews, Strategies, Dialogies, Routledge (1990)

4
PART B

B Judicial discourse on adultery

5 This Court, on earlier occasions, has tested the constitutionality of Section

497 of the Indian Penal Code as well as Section 198(2) of the Code of Criminal

Procedure.

Section 497 reads thus:

“Whoever has sexual intercourse with a person who is and
whom he knows or has reason to believe to be the wife of
another man, without the consent or connivance of that man,
such sexual intercourse not amounting to the offence of rape,
is guilty of the offence of adultery, and shall be punished with
imprisonment of either description for a term which may
extend to five years, or with fine, or with both. In such case
the wife shall not be punishable as an abettor.”

Section 198(2) of the Code of Criminal Procedure reads thus:

“(2) For the purposes of sub- section (1), no person other
than the husband of the woman shall be deemed to be
aggrieved by any offence punishable under section 497 or
section 498 of the said Code: Provided that in the absence of
the husband, some person who had care of the woman on his
behalf at the time when such offence was com- mitted may,
with the leave of the Court, make a complaint on his behalf.”

6 The decision of the Constitution Bench in Yusuf Abdul Aziz v State of

Bombay9, arose from a case where the appellant was being prosecuted for

adultery under Section 497. On a complaint being filed, he moved the High Court

to determine the constitutional question about the validity of the provision, under

9 1954 SCR 930

5
PART B

Article 228. The High Court decided against the appellant10, but Chief Justice

Chagla made an observation about the assumption underlying Section 497:

“Mr Peerbhoy is right when he says that the underlying idea
of Section 497 is that wives are properties of their husbands.

The very fact that the offence is only cognizable with the
consent of the husband emphasises that point of view. It may
be argued that Section 497 should not find a place in any
modern Code of law. Days are past, when women were
looked upon as property by their husbands.”

A narrow challenge was addressed before this Court. The judgment of Justice

Vivian Bose records the nature of the challenge:

“3. Under Section 497 the offence of adultery can only be
committed by a man but in the absence of any provision to
the contrary the woman would be punishable as an abettor.
The last sentence in Section 497 prohibits this. It runs—
“In such case the wife shall not be punishable as an abettor”.

It is said that this offends Articles 14 and 15.”

Hence, the challenge was only to the prohibition on treating the wife as an

abettor. It was this challenge which was dealt with and repelled on the ground

that Article 14 must be read with the other provisions of Part III which prescribe

the ambit of the fundamental rights. The prohibition on treating the wife as an

abettor was upheld as a special provision which is saved by Article 15(3). The

conclusion was that:

“5. Article 14 is general and must be read with the other
provisions which set out the ambit of fundamental rights. Sex
is a sound classification and although there can be no
discrimination in general on that ground, the Constitution itself
provides for special provisions in the case of women and
children. The two articles read together validate the impugned
clause in Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code.”

10 AIR 1951 Bom 470

6
PART B

7 The challenge was to a limited part of Section 497: that which prohibited a

woman from being prosecuted as an abettor. Broader issues such as whether (i)

the punishment for adultery violates Article 21; (ii) the statutory provision suffers

from manifest arbitrariness; (iii) the legislature has, while ostensibly protecting

the sanctity of marriage, invaded the dignity of women; and (iv) Section 497

violates Article 15(1) by enforcing gender stereotypes were neither addressed

before this Court nor were they dealt with.

This Court construed the exemption granted to women from criminal sanctions as

a ‘special provision’ for the benefit of women and thus, protected under Article

15(3) of the Constitution. In Union of India v Elphinstone Spinning and

Weaving Co. Ltd,11 a Constitution Bench of this Court held:

“17…When the question arises as to the meaning of a certain
provision in a statute it is not only legitimate but proper to
read that provision in its context. The context means the
statute as a whole, the previous state of law, other statutes in
pari materia, the general scope of the statute and the mischief
that it was intended to remedy…”12

It is of particular relevance to examine the mischief that the provision intends to

remedy. The history of Section 497 reveals that the law on adultery was for the

benefit of the husband, for him to secure ownership over the sexuality of his wife.

It was aimed at preventing the woman from exercising her sexual agency. Thus,

Section 497 was never conceived to benefit women. In fact, the provision is

steeped in stereotypes about women and their subordinate role in marriage. The

11 (2001) 4 SCC 139
12 Ibid. at page 164

7
PART B

patriarchal underpinnings of the law on adultery become evident when the

provision is considered as a whole.

8 In the subsequent decision of the three judge Bench in Sowmithri Vishnu

v Union of India13, the court proceeded on the basis that the earlier decision in

Yusuf Abdul Aziz had upheld Section 497 against a challenge based on Articles

14 and 15 of the Constitution. This is not a correct reading or interpretation of the

judgment.

9 Sowmithri Vishnu did as a matter of fact consider the wider constitutional

challenge on the ground that after the passage of thirty years, “particularly in the

light of the alleged social transformation in the behavioural pattern of women in

matters of sex”, it had become necessary that the matter be revisited. Sowmithri

Vishnu arose in a situation where a petition for divorce by the appellant against

her husband on the ground of desertion was dismissed with the finding that it

was the appellant who had deserted her husband. The appellant’s husband then

sued for divorce on the ground of desertion and adultery. Faced with this petition,

the appellant urged that a decree for divorce on the ground of desertion may be

passed on the basis of the findings in the earlier petition. She, however, opposed

the effort of the husband to urge the ground of adultery. While the trial court

accepted the plea of the husband to assert the ground of adultery, the High Court

held in revision that a decree of divorce was liable to be passed on the ground of

desertion, making it unnecessary to inquire into adultery. While the petition for
13 1985 Supp SCC 137

8
PART B

divorce was pending against the appellant, her husband filed a complaint under

Section 497 against the person with whom the appellant was alleged to be in an

adulterous relationship. The appellant then challenged the constitutional validity

of Section 497.

The judgment of the three judge Bench indicates that three grounds of challenge

were addressed before this Court : first, while Section 497 confers a right on the

husband to prosecute the adulterer, it does not confer upon the wife to prosecute

the woman with whom her husband has committed adultery; second, Section

497 does not confer a right on the wife to prosecute her husband who has

committed adultery with another woman; and third, Section 497 does not cover

cases where a man has sexual relations with an unmarried woman. The

submission before this Court was that the classification under Section 497 was

irrational and ‘arbitrary’. Moreover, it was also urged that while facially, the

provision appears to be beneficial to a woman, it is in reality based on a notion of

paternalism “which stems from the assumption that women, like chattels, are the

property of men.”

10 The decision in Sowmithri Vishnu dealt with the constitutional challenge

by approaching the discourse on the denial of equality in formal, and rather

narrow terms. Chandrachud, CJ speaking for the three judge Bench observed

that by definition, the offence of adultery can be committed by a man and not by

a woman. The court construed the plea of the petitioner as amounting to a

9
PART B

suggestion that the definition should be recast in a manner that would make the

offence gender neutral. The court responded by observing that this was a matter

of legislative policy and that the court could invalidate the provision only if a

constitutional violation is established. The logic of the court, to the effect that

extending the ambit of a statutory definition is a matter which requires legislative

change is unexceptionable. The power to fashion an amendment to the law lies

with the legislature. But this only leads to the conclusion that the court cannot

extend the legislative prescription by making the offence gender neutral. It does

not answer the fundamental issue as to whether punishment for adultery is valid

in constitutional terms. The error in Sowmithri Vishnu lies in holding that there

was no constitutional infringement. The judgment postulates that:

“7…It is commonly accepted that it is the man who is the
seducer and not the woman. This position may have
undergone some change over the years but it is for the
Legislature to consider whether Section 497 should be
amended appropriately so as to take note of the
“transformation” which the society has undergone. The Law
Commission of India in its Forty-second Report, 1971,
recommended the retention of Section 497 in its present form
with the modification that, even the wife, who has sexual
relations with a person other than her husband, should be
made punishable for adultery. The suggested modification
was not accepted by the Legislature. Mrs Anna Chandi, who
was in the minority, voted for the deletion of Section 497 on
the ground that “it is the right time to consider the question
whether the offence of adultery as envisaged in Section 497
is in tune with our present-day notions of woman’s status in
marriage”. The report of the Law Commission shows that
there can be two opinions on the desirability of retaining a
provision like the one contained in Section 497 on the statute
book. But, we cannot strike down that section on the ground
that it is desirable to delete it.”14

14 Ibid. at page 141

10
PART B

These observations indicate that the constitutional challenge was addressed

purely from the perspective of the argument that Section 497 is not gender

neutral, in allowing only the man but not to the woman in a sexual relationship to

be prosecuted. The court proceeded on the assumption, which it regards as

“commonly accepted that it is the man who is the seducer and not the woman.”

Observing that this position may have undergone some change, over the years,

the decision holds that these are matters for the legislature to consider and that

the desirability of deleting Section 497 is not a ground for invalidation.

11 The decision in Sowmithri Vishnu has left unanswered the fundamental

challenge which was urged before the Court. Under Article 14, the challenge was

that the statutory provision treats a woman purely as the property of her

husband. That a woman is regarded no more than as a possession of her

husband is evidenced in Section 497, in more than one context. The provision

stipulates that a man who has sexual intercourse with the wife of another will not

be guilty of offence if the husband of the woman were to consent or, (worse still,

to connive. In this, it is evident that the legislature attributes no agency to the

woman. Whether or not a man with whom she has engaged in sexual intercourse

is guilty of an offence depends exclusively on whether or not her husband is a

consenting individual. No offence exists if her husband were to consent. Even if

her husband were to connive at the act, no offence would be made out. The

mirror image of this constitutional infirmity is that the wife of the man who has

engaged in the act has no voice or agency under the statute. Again, the law does

11
PART B

not make it an offence for a married man to engage in an act of sexual

intercourse with a single woman. His wife is not regarded by the law as a person

whose agency and dignity is affected. The underlying basis of not penalising a

sexual act by a married man with a single woman is that she (unlike a married

woman) is not the property of a man (as the law would treat her to be if she is

married). Arbitrariness is writ large on the provision. The problem with Section

497 is not just a matter of under inclusion. The court in Sowmithri Vishnu

recognised that an under-inclusive definition is not necessarily discriminatory and

that the legislature is entitled to deal with the evil where it is felt and seen the

most. The narrow and formal sense in which the provisions of Article 14 have

been construed is evident again from the following observations:

“8…The contemplation of the law, evidently, is that the wife,
who is involved in an illicit relationship with another man, is a
victim and not the author of the crime. The offence of
adultery, as defined in Section 497, is considered by the
Legislature as an offence against the sanctity of the
matrimonial home, an act which is committed by a man, as it
generally is. Therefore, those men who defile that sanctity are
brought within the net of the law. In a sense, we revert to the
same point: Who can prosecute whom for which offence
depends, firstly, on the definition of the offence and, secondly,
upon the restrictions placed by the law of procedure on the
right to prosecute.”15

The decision of the three judge Bench does not address the central challenge to

the validity of Section 497. Section 497, in its effort to protect the sanctity of

marriage, has adopted a notion of marriage which does not regard the man and

the woman as equal partners. It proceeds on the subjection of the woman to the

will of her husband. In doing so, Section 497 subordinates the woman to a

15 Ibid. at page 142

12
PART B

position of inferiority thereby offending her dignity, which is the core of Article 21.

Significantly, even the challenge under Article 21 was addressed on behalf of the

petitioner in that case in a rather narrow frame. The argument before this Court

was that at the trial involving an offence alleged to have been committed under

Section 497, the woman with whom the accused is alleged to have had sexual

intercourse would have no right of being heard. It was this aspect alone which

was addressed in Sowmithri Vishnu when the court held that such a right of

being heard can be read in an appropriate case. Ultimately, the court held that:

“12…It is better, from the point of view of the interests of the
society, that at least a limited class of adulterous relationships
is punishable by law. Stability of marriages is not an ideal to
be scorned.”16

Sowmithri Vishnu has thus proceeded on the logic that in specifying an offence,

it is for the legislature to define what constitutes the offence. Moreover, who can

prosecute and who can be prosecuted, are matters which fall within the domain

of the law. The inarticulate major premise of the judgment is that prosecution for

adultery is an effort to protect the stability of marriages and if the legislature has

sought to prosecute only a limited class of ‘adulterous relationships’, its choice

could not be questioned. ‘Sowmithri Vishnu’ fails to deal with the substantive

aspects of constitutional jurisprudence which have a bearing on the validity of

Section 497: the guarantee of equality as a real protection against arbitrariness,

the guarantee of life and personal liberty as an essential recognition of dignity,

autonomy and privacy and above all gender equality as a cornerstone of a truly

equal society. For these reasons, the decision in Sowmithri Vishnu cannot be

16 Ibid. at page 144

13
PART B

regarded as a correct exposition of the constitutional position. Sowmithri Vishnu

is overruled.

12 The decision of a two judge Bench in V Revathi v Union of India17

involved a challenge to Section 497 (read with Section 198(2) of the Code of

Criminal Procedure) which disables a wife from prosecuting her husband for

being involved in an adulterous relationship. The court noted that Section 497

permits neither the husband of the offending wife to prosecute her nor does it

permit the wife to prosecute her offending husband for being disloyal. This

formal sense of equality found acceptance by the court. The challenge was

repelled by relying on the decision in Sowmithri Vishnu. Observing that Section

497 and Section 198(2) constitute a “legislative packet”, the court observed that

the provision does not allow either the wife to prosecute an erring husband or a

husband to prosecute the erring wife. In the view of the court, this indicated that

there is no discrimination on the ground of sex. In the view of the court :

“5…The law does not envisage the punishment of any of the
spouses at the instance of each other. Thus there is no
discrimination against the woman insofar as she is not
permitted to prosecute her husband. A husband is not
permitted because the wife is not treated as an offender in the
eye of law. The wife is not permitted as Section 198(1) read
with Section 198(2) does not permit her to do so. In the
ultimate analysis the law has meted out even-handed justice
to both of them in the matter of prosecuting each other or
securing the incarceration of each other. Thus no
discrimination has been practised in circumscribing the scope
of Section 198(2) and fashioning it so that the right to
prosecute the adulterer is restricted to the husband of the
adulteress but has not been extended to the wife of the
adulterer.”18

17 (1988) 2 SCC 72
18 Ibid. at page 76

14
PART C

13 The decision in Revathi is a reiteration of Sowmithri Vishnu. It applies

the doctrine of equality and the prohibition against discrimination on the ground

of sex in a formalistic sense. The logic of the judgment is that since neither of the

spouses (man or woman) can prosecute the erring spouse, the provision does

not discriminate on the ground of sex. Apart from reading equality in a narrow

confine, the judgment does not deal with crucial aspects bearing on the

constitutionality of the provision. Revathi, like Sowmithri Vishnu does not lay

down the correct legal principle.

C Relics of the past

“Our Massachusetts magistracy…have not been bold to put in
force the extremity of our righteous law against her. The
penalty thereof is death. But in their great mercy and
tenderness of heart they have doomed Mistress Prynne to
stand only a space of three hours on the platform of the
pillory, and then and thereafter, for the remainder of her
natural life to wear a mark of shame upon her bosom.”19

14 Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 makes adultery a punishable

offence against “whoever has sexual intercourse with a person who is and whom

he knows or has reason to believe to be the wife of another man, without the

consent or connivance of that man.” It goes on to state that, “in such case the

wife shall not be punishable as an abettor.” The offence applies only to the man

committing adultery. A woman committing adultery is not considered to be an

19 Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter, Bantam Books (1850), at page 59

15
PART C

“abettor” to the offence. The power to prosecute for adultery rests only with the

husband of the woman.

Understanding the gendered nature of Section 497 needs an inquiry into the

origins of the provision itself as well as the offence of adultery more broadly. The

history of adultery throws light upon disparate attitudes toward male and female

infidelity, and reveals the double standard in law and morality that has been

applied to men and women.20

15 Throughout history, adultery has been regarded as an offence; it has been

treated as a religious transgression, as a crime deserving harsh punishment, as

a private wrong, or as a combination of these.21 The earliest recorded injunctions

against adultery are found in the ancient code of the Babylonian king

Hammurabi, dating from circa 1750 B.C. The code prescribed that a married

woman caught in adultery be bound to her lover and thrown into water so that

they drown together.22 By contrast, Assyrian law considered adultery to be a

private wrong for which the husband or father of the woman committing adultery

could seek compensation from her partner.23 English historian Faramerz

Dabhoiwala notes that the primary purpose of these laws was to protect the

property rights of men:

20
See David Turner, Adultery in The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History (2008)
21 Ibid
22 James A. Brundage, Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe, at page 10
23 Ibid, at page 11

16
PART C

“Indeed, since the dawn of history every civilisation had
prescribed severe laws against at least some kind of sexual
immorality. The oldest surviving legal codes (c.2100-1700
BCE), drawn up by the kings of Babylon made adultery
punishable by death and most other near Eastern and
classical culture also treated it as a serious offence…The
main concern of such laws was usually to uphold the honour
and property rights of fathers, husbands and higher status
groups…”24

16 In Ancient Greco-Roman societies, there existed a sexual double standard

according to which adultery constituted a violation of a husband’s exclusive

sexual access to his wife, for which the law allowed for acts of revenge. 25 In 17

B.C., Emperor Augustus passed the Lex Julia de adulteriis coercendis, which

stipulated that a father was allowed to kill his daughter and her partner when

caught committing adultery in his or her husband’s house.26 While in the Judaic

belief adultery merited death by stoning for both the adulteress and her partner, 27

Christianity viewed adultery more as a moral and spiritual failure than as a public

crime.28 The penalties of the Lex Julia were made more severe by Christian

emperors. Emperor Constantine, for instance, introduced the death penalty for

adultery, which allowed the husband the right to kill his wife if she committed

adultery.29 Under the Lex Julia, adultery was primarily a female offence, and the

law reflected the sentiments of upper-class Roman males.30

24 Faramerz Dabhoiwala, The Origins of Sex: A History of the First Sexual Revolution (2012), at page 5
25 David Turner, Adultery in The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History (2008), at page 30
26 Vern Bullough, Medieval Concepts of Adultery, at page 7
27 The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History, (Bonnie G Smith ed.), Oxford, at page 27
28
Martin Siegel, For Better or for Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Vol. 30, Journal of Family Law (1991), at
page 46
29 Vern Bullough, Medieval Concepts of Adultery, at page 7
30 James A. Brundage, Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe, at page 27

17
PART C

17 Once monogamy came to be accepted as the norm in Britain between the

fourth and fifth centuries, adultery came to be recognized as a serious wrong that

interfered with a husband’s “rights” over his wife.31 The imposition of criminal

sanctions on adultery was also largely based on ideas and beliefs about sexual

morality which acquired the force of law in Christian Europe during the Middle

Ages.32 The development of canon law in the twelfth century enshrined the

perception of adultery as a spiritual misdemeanour. In the sixteenth century,

following the Reformation, adultery became a crucial issue because Protestants

placed new emphasis on marriage as a linchpin of the social and moral order. 33

Several prominent sixteenth century reformers, including Martin Luther and John

Calvin, argued that a marriage was irreparably damaged by infidelity, and they

advocated divorce in such cases.34

Concerned with the “moral corruption” prevalent in England since the

Reformation, Puritans in the Massachusetts Bay Colony introduced the death

penalty for committing adultery.35 The strict morality of the early English colonists

is reflected in the famous 1850 novel ‘The Scarlet Letter’ by Nathaniel

Hawthorne, in which an unmarried woman who committed adultery and bore a

child out of wedlock was made to wear the letter A (for adulterer) when she went

out in public; her lover was not so tagged, suggesting that women were punished

31 Jeremy D. Weinstein, Adultery, Law, and the State: A History, Vol. 38, Hastings Law Journal (1986), at page 202;
R. Huebner, A History of Germanic Private Law (F. Philbrick trans. 1918)
32
James A. Brundage, Law, Sex, and Christian Society in Medieval Europe, at page 6
33 David Turner, Adultery in The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History (2008), at page 30
34 Ibid.

35 The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History, (Bonnie G Smith ed.), Oxford, at page 30

18
PART C

more severely than men for adultery, especially when they had a child as

evidence.36

18 In 1650, England enacted the infamous Act for Suppressing the Detestable

Sins of Incest, Adultery and Fornication, which introduced the death penalty for

sex with a married woman.37 The purpose of the Act was as follows:

“For the suppressing of the abominable and crying sins
of…adultery… wherewith this Land is much defiled, and
Almighty God highly displeased; be it enacted…That in case
any married woman shall…be carnally known by any man
(other than her husband)…as well the man as the
woman…shall suffer death.”

The Act was a culmination of long-standing moral concerns about sexual

transgressions, sustained endeavours to regulate conjugal matters on a secular

plain, and a contemporaneous political agenda of socio-moral reform.38 It was

repealed in 1660 during the Restoration. The common law, however, was still

concerned with the effect of adultery by a married woman on inheritance and

property rights. It recognized the “obvious danger of foisting spurious offspring

upon her unsuspecting husband and bringing an illegitimate heir into his

family.”39 Accordingly, secular courts treated adultery as a private injury and a tort

36 James R. Mellow, Hawthorne’s Divided Genius, The Wilson Quarterly (1982)
37
Mary Beth Norton, Founding Mothers and Fathers: Gendered Power and the Forming of American Society (1996).

38 Keith Thomas, The Puritans and Adultery: The Act of 1650 Reconsidered, in Puritans and Revolutionaries: Essays

in Seventeenth-Century History Presented to Christopher Hill (Donald Pennington, Keith Thomas, eds.), at page 281
39 Charles E. Torcia, Wharton’s Criminal Law, Section 218, (1994) at page 528

19
PART C

for criminal conversation was introduced in the late 17th century, which allowed

the husband to sue his wife’s lover for financial compensation.40

19 In 19th century Britain, married women were considered to be chattel of

their husbands in law, and female adultery was subjected to ostracism far worse

than male adultery because of the problem it could cause for property inheritance

through illegitimate children.41 Consequently, many societies viewed chastity,

together with related virtues such as modesty, as more central components of a

woman’s honor and reputation than of a man’s.42 The object of adultery laws was

not to protect the bodily integrity of a woman, but to allow her husband to

exercise control over her sexuality, in order to ensure the purity of his own

bloodline. The killing of a man engaged in an adulterous act with one’s wife was

considered to be manslaughter, and not murder.43 In R v Mawgridge,44 Judge

Holt wrote that:

“…[A] man is taken in adultery with another man’s wife, if the
husband shall stab the adulterer, or knock out his brains, this
is bare manslaughter: for Jealousy is the Rage of a Man and
Adultery is the highest invasion of property.”
(Emphasis supplied)

20 In his Commentaries on the Laws of England, William Blackstone wrote

that under the common law, “the very being or legal existence of the woman

40 J. E. Loftis, Congreve’s Way of the World and Popular Criminal Literature, Studies in English Literature, 1500 –
1900 36(3) (1996), at page 293
41
Joanne Bailey, Unquiet Lives: Marriage and Marriage Breakdown in England, 1660–1800 (2009), at page 143
42 David Turner, Adultery in The Oxford Encyclopaedia of Women in World History (2008), at page 28
43 Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book IV (1778), at page 191-192
44 (1707) Kel. 119

20
PART C

[was] suspended during the marriage, or at least [was] incorporated and

consolidated into that of the husband: under whose wing, protection and cover,

she performe[d] everything.”45 In return for support and protection, the wife owed

her husband “consortium” of legal obligations, which included sexual

intercourse.46 Since adultery interfered with the husband’s exclusive entitlements,

it was considered to be the “highest possible invasion of property,” similar to

theft.47 In fact, civil actions for adultery evolved from actions for enticing away a

servant from a master and thus depriving the master of the quasi-proprietary

interest in his services.48

Faramerz Dabhoiwala notes that a man’s wife was considered to be his property,

and that another man’s “unlawful copulation” with her warranted punishment:

“…[T]he earliest English law codes, which date from this time,
evoke a society where women were bought and sold and
lived constantly under the guardianship of men. Even in
cases of consensual sex, its system of justice was mainly
concerned with the compensation one man should pay to
another for unlawful copulation with his female chattel.”

21 When the IPC was being drafted, adultery was not a criminal offence in

common law. It was considered to be an ecclesiastical wrong “left to the feeble

coercion of the Spiritual Court, according to the rules of Canon Law.” 49 Lord

Thomas Babington Macaulay, Chairman of the First Law Commission of India
45 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England. Vol. I (1765), at pages 442 445
46 Vera Bergelson, Rethinking Rape-By-Fraud in Legal Perspectives on State Power: Consent and Control (Chris
Ashford, Alan Reed and Nicola Wake, eds.) (2016), at page 161
47
R v. Mawgridge, (1707) Kel. 119
48 Vera Bergelson, Rethinking Rape-By-Fraud in Legal Perspectives on State Power: Consent and Control (Chris

Ashford, Alan Reed and Nicola Wake, eds.) (2016), at page 161
49 Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book IV (1778), at pages 64-65

21
PART C

and principal architect of the IPC, considered the possibility of criminalizing

adultery in India, and ultimately concluded that it would serve little purpose. 50

According to Lord Macaulay, the possible benefits from an adultery offence could

be better achieved through pecuniary compensation.51 Section 497 did not find a

place in the first Draft Penal Code prepared by Lord Macaulay. On an appraisal

of the facts and opinions collected from all three Presidencies about the

feasibility criminalizing adultery, he concluded in his Notes to the IPC that:

“…All the existing laws for the punishment of adultery are
altogether inefficacious for the purpose of preventing injured
husbands of the higher classes from taking the law into their
own hands; secondly; that scarcely any native of higher
classes ever has recourse to the courts of law in a case of
adultery for redress against either his wife, or her gallant;

thirdly, that the husbands who have recourse in case of
adultery to the Courts of law are generally poor men whose
wives have run away, that these husbands seldom have any
delicate feelings about the intrigue, but think themselves
injured by the elopement, that they consider wives as useful
members of their small households, that they generally
complain not of the wound given to their affections, not of the
stain on their honor , but of the loss of a menial whom they
cannot easily replace, and that generally their principal object
is that the women may be sent back.” These things being
established, it seems to us that no advantage is to be
expected from providing a punishment for adultery. We
think it best to treat adultery merely as a civil injury.”52
(Emphasis supplied)

22 The Law Commissioners, in their Second Report on the Draft Penal Code,

disagreed with Lord Macaulay’s view. Placing heavy reliance upon the status of

women in India, they concluded that:

50

Abhinav Sekhri, The Good, The Bad, And The Adulterous: Criminal Law And Adultery In India, Socio-Legal Review
(2016), at page 52
51 Ibid.

52 Macaulay’s Draft Penal Code (1837), Note Q

22
PART C

“While we think that the offence of adultery ought not to be
omitted from the code, we would limit its cognizance to
adultery committed with a married woman, and considering
that there is much weight in the last remark in note Q,
regarding the condition of the women, in this country, in
deference to it, we would render the male offender alone
liable to punishment. We would, however, put the parties
accused of adultery on trial “together”, and empower the
Court in the event of their conviction to pronounce a decree of
divorce against the guilty woman, if the husband sues for it, at
the same time that her paramour is sentenced to punishment
by imprisonment or fine.”53

The Law Commissioners’ decision to insert Section 497 into the IPC was rooted

in their concern about the possibility of the “natives” resorting to illegal measures

to avenge the injury in cases of adultery:

“The backwardness of the natives to have recourse to the
courts of redress in cases of adultery, [Colonel Sleeman]
asserts, “arises from the utter hopelessness on their part of
ever getting a conviction in our courts upon any evidence that
such cases admit of;” that is to say, in courts in which the
Mahommedan law is observed. “The rich man…not only feels
the assurance that he could not get a conviction, but dreads
the disgrace of appearing publicly in one court after another,
to prove…his own shame and his wife’s dishonor. He has
recourse to poison secretly, or with his wife’s consent; and
she will generally rather take it than be turned out into the
streets a degraded outcast. The seducer escapes with
impunity, he suffers nothing, while his poor victim suffers all
that human nature is capable of enduring…The silence of the
Penal Code will give still greater impunity to the seducers,
while their victims will, in three cases out of four, be
murdered, or driven to commit suicide. Where husbands are
in the habit of poisoning their guilty wives from the want of
legal means of redress, they will sometimes poison those who
are suspected upon insufficient grounds, and the innocent will
suffer.”54

53
Second Report on the Indian Penal Code (1847), at pages 134-35, cited from, Law Commission of India, Forty-

second Report: Indian Penal Code, at page 365
54 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners (1838), The Second Report on the Indian Penal Code,

at page 74

23
PART C

Section 497 and Section 198 are seen to treat men and women unequally, as

women are not subject to prosecution for adultery, and women cannot prosecute

their husbands for adultery. Additionally, if there is “consent or connivance” of the

husband of a woman who has committed adultery, no offence can be

established. In its 42nd Report, the Law Commission of India considered the

legislative history of Section 497 and the purported benefit of criminal sanctions

for adultery. The Committee concluded that, “though some of us were personally

inclined to recommend repeal of the section, we think on the whole that the time

has not yet come for making such a radical change in the existing position.” 55 It

recommended that Section 497 be retained, but with a modification to make

women who commit adultery liable as well.

23 In its 156th Report, the Law Commission made a proposal which it believed

reflected the “‘transformation’ which the society has undergone,” by suggesting

removing the exemption from liability for women under Section 497. 56 In 2003,

the Justice Malimath Committee recommended that Section 497 be made

gender-neutral, by substituting the words of the provision with “whosoever has

sexual intercourse with the spouse of any other person is guilty of adultery.” 57

The Committee supported earlier proposals to not repeal the offence, but to

equate liability for the sexes:

“The object of the Section is to preserve the sanctity of
marriage. Society abhors marital infidelity. Therefore, there is
no reason for not meting out similar treatment to the wife who

55 Law Commission of India, 42nd Report: Indian Penal Code (1971), at page 326
56 Law Commission of India, 156th Report: Indian Penal Code (1997) at page 172
57 Report of the Committee on Reforms of Criminal Justice System (2003), at page 190

24
PART C

has sexual intercourse with a man (other than her
husband).”58

Neither the recommendations of the Law Commission nor those of the Malimath

Committee have been accepted by the Legislature. Though women are

exempted from prosecution under Section 497, the underlying notion upon which

the provision rests, which conceives of women as property, is extremely harmful.

The power to prosecute lies only with the husband (and not to the wife in cases

where her husband commits adultery), and whether the crime itself has been

committed depends on whether the husband provides “consent for the allegedly

adulterous act.”

24 Women, therefore, occupy a liminal space in the law: they cannot be

prosecuted for committing adultery, nor can they be aggrieved by it, by virtue of

their status as their husband’s property. Section 497 is also premised upon

sexual stereotypes that view women as being passive and devoid of sexual

agency. The notion that women are ‘victims’ of adultery and therefore require the

beneficial exemption under Section 497 has been deeply criticized by feminist

scholars, who argue that such an understanding of the position of women is

demeaning and fails to recognize them as equally autonomous individuals in

society.59 Effectively, Indian jurisprudence has interpreted the constitutional

guarantee of sex equality as a justification for differential treatment: to treat men

58 Ibid.

59 Abhinav Sekhri, The Good, The Bad, And The Adulterous: Criminal Law And Adultery In India, Socio-Legal Review
(2016), at page 63

25
PART C

and women differently is, ultimately, to act in women’s interests. 60 The status of

Section 497 as a “special provision”61 operating for the benefit of women,

therefore, constitutes a paradigmatic example of benevolent patriarchy.

25 Throughout history, the law has failed to ask the woman question. 62 It has

failed to interrogate the generalizations or stereotypes about the nature,

character and abilities of the sexes on which laws rest, and how these notions

affect women and their interaction with the law. A woman’s ‘purity’ and a man’s

marital ‘entitlement’ to her exclusive sexual possession may be reflective of the

antiquated social and sexual mores of the nineteenth century, but they cannot be

recognized as being so today. It is not the “common morality” of the State at any

time in history, but rather constitutional morality, which must guide the law. In any

democracy, constitutional morality requires the assurance of certain rights that

are indispensable for the free, equal, and dignified existence of all members of

society. A commitment to constitutional morality requires us to enforce the

constitutional guarantees of equality before law, non-discrimination on account of

sex, and dignity, all of which are affected by the operation of Section 497.

60 Brenda Cossman and Ratna Kapur, Subversive Sites: Feminist Engagements with Law in India (1996)
61
Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay, 1954 SCR 930
62 The ‘Woman Question’ was one of the great issues that occupied the middle of the nineteenth century, namely the

social purpose of women. It is used as a tool to enquire into the status of women in the law and how they interact
with and are affected by it; See Katherine T. Bartlett, Feminist Legal Methods, Harvard Law Review (1990)

26
PART D

D Across frontiers

26 The last few decades have been characterized by numerous countries

around the world taking measures to decriminalize the offence of adultery due to

the gender discriminatory nature of adultery laws as well as on the ground that

they violate the right to privacy. However, progressive action has primarily been

taken on the ground that provisions penalising adultery are discriminatory against

women either patently on the face of the law or in their implementation. Reform

towards achieving a more egalitarian society in practice has also been driven by

active measures taken by the United Nations and other international human

rights organizations, where it has been emphasized that even seemingly gender-

neutral provisions criminalising adultery cast an unequal burden on women:63

“Given continued discrimination and inequalities faced by
women, including inferior roles attributed to them by
patriarchal and traditional attitudes, and power imbalances in
their relations with men, the mere fact of maintaining adultery
as a criminal offence, even when it applies to both women
and men, means in practice that women mainly will continue
to face extreme vulnerabilities, and violation of their human
rights to dignity, privacy and equality.”

The abolishing of adultery has been brought about in equal measure by

legislatures and courts. When decisions have been handed down by the judiciary

across the world, it has led to the creation of a rich body of transnational

jurisprudence. This section will focus on a few select comparative decisions

emanating from the courts of those countries where the provision criminalizing

adultery has been struck down through judicial action. The decisions of these
63 U N Working Group on Women’s Human Rights: Report (18 October, 2012), available at:

http://newsarchive.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID12672LangIDE

27
PART D

courts reflect how the treatment of the law towards adultery has evolved with the

passage of time and in light of changing societal values.

27 In 2015, the South Korean Constitutional Court,64 by a majority of 7-2

struck down Article 241 of the Criminal Law; a provision which criminalized

adultery with a term of imprisonment of two years as unconstitutional. In doing

so, South Korea joined a growing list of countries in Asia and indeed around the

world that have taken the measure of effacing the offence of adultery from the

statute books, considering evolving public values and societal trends. The

Constitutional Court had deliberated upon the legality of the provision four times

previously65, but chose to strike it down when it came before it in 2015, with the

Court’s judgement acknowledging the shifting public perception of individual

rights in their private lives.

The majority opinion of the Court was concurred with by five of the seven

judges66 who struck down the provision. The majority acknowledged that the

criminal provision had a legitimate legislative purpose in intending “to promote

the marriage system based on good sexual culture and practice and monogamy

and to preserve marital fidelity between spouses.” However, the Court sought to

strike a balance between the legitimate interest of the legislature in promoting the

64Case No: 2009Hun-Ba17, (Adultery Case), South Korea Constitutional Court (February 26, 2015), available at
http://english.ccourt.go.kr/cckhome/eng/decisions/majordecisions/majorDetail.do
65
Firstpost, South Korean court abolishes law that made adultery illegal, (February 26, 2015), available at
https://www.firstpost.com/world/south-korean-court-abolishes-law-saying-adultery-is-illegal-2122935.html
66 Opinion of Justice Park Han-Chul, Justice Lee Jin-Sung, Justice Kim Chang-Jong, Justice Seo Ki-Seog and Justice

Cho Yong-Ho (Adultery is Unconstitutional)

28
PART D

institution of marriage and marital fidelity vis-à-vis the fundamental right of an

individual to self-determination, which included sexual-self-determination, and

was guaranteed under Article 10 of their Constitution.67 The Court held:

“The right to self-determination connotes the right to sexual
self-determination that is the freedom to choose sexual
activities and partners, implying that the provision at issue
restricts the right to sexual self-determination of individuals. In
addition, the provision at Issue also restricts the right to
privacy protected under Article 17 of the Constitution in that it
restricts activities arising out of sexual life belonging to the
intimate private domain.”

The Court used the test of least restrictiveness, and began by acknowledging

that there no longer existed public consensus on the criminalization of adultery,

with the societal structure having changed from holding traditional family values

and a typeset role of family members to sexual views driven by liberal thought

and individualism. While recognizing that marital infidelity is immoral and

unethical, the Court stated that love and sexual life were intimate concerns, and

they should not be made subject to criminal law. Commenting on the balance

between an individual’s sexual autonomy vis-à-vis societal morality, the Court

remarked:

“…the society is changing into one where the private interest
of sexual autonomy is put before the social interest of sexual
morality and families from the perspective of dignity and
happiness of individuals.”68

67 Article 10 of the South Korean Constitution “All citizens are assured of human worth and dignity and have the right
to pursue happiness. It is the duty of the State to confirm and guarantee the fundamental and inviolable human
rights of individuals.”
68 Supra, note 64, Part V- A (3)(1) (‘Change in Public’s Legal Awareness’ under the head of ‘Appropriateness of

Means and Least Restrictiveness’)

29
PART D

Next, the Court analysed the appropriateness and effectiveness of criminal

punishment in curbing the offence of adultery. Addressing the question of

whether adultery should be regulated, the Court stated that modern criminal law

dictated that the State should not seek to interfere in an act that is not socially

harmful or deleterious to legal interests, simply because it is repugnant to

morality. Moreover, it held that the State had no business in seeking to control

an individual’s actions which were within the sphere of his or her constitutionally

protected rights of privacy and self-determination.

Moving on to the effectiveness of the provision at hand, the Court remarked that

criminalizing adultery did not help save a failing marriage. The Court remarked

that it was obvious that once a spouse was accused of adultery, the

consequence was generally intensified spousal conflict as opposed to the

possibility of family harmony:

“Existing families face breakdown with the invoking of the
right to file an accusation. Even after cancellation of the
accusation, it is difficult to hope for emotional recovery
between spouses. Therefore, the adultery crime can no
longer contribute to protecting the marital system or family
order. Furthermore, there is little possibility that a person who
was punished for adultery would remarry the spouse who had
made an accusation against himself/herself. It is neither
possible to protect harmonious family order because of the
intensified conflict between spouses in the process of criminal
punishment of adultery.”69

69 Supra, note 64, Part V- A (3)(3) (‘Effectiveness of Criminal Punishment’, under the head of ‘Appropriateness of
Means and Least Restrictiveness’)

30
PART D

Addressing the concern that an abolition of a penal consequence would result in

“chaos in sexual morality” or an increase of divorce due to adultery, the Court

concluded that there was no data at all to support these claims in countries

where adultery is repealed, stating:

“Rather, the degree of social condemnation for adultery has
been reduced due to the social trend to value the right to
sexual self-determination and the changed recognition on
sex, despite of the punishment of adultery. Accordingly, it is
hard to anticipate a general and special deterrence effect for
adultery from the perspective of criminal policy as it loses the
function of regulating behaviour.”70

The Court also analysed the argument that adultery provisions protected women:

“It is true that the existence of adultery crimes in the past
Korean society served to protect women. Women were
socially and economically underprivileged, and acts of
adultery were mainly committed by men. Therefore, the
existence of an adultery crime acted as psychological
deterrence for men, and, furthermore, enabled female
spouses to receive payment of compensation for grief or
divided assets from the male spouse on the condition of
cancelling the adultery accusation.

However, the changes of our society diluted the justification of
criminal punishment of adultery. Above all, as women’s
earning power and economic capabilities have improved with
more active social and economic activities, the premise that
women are the economically disadvantaged does not apply to
all married couples.”

Finally, the Court concluded its analysis by holding that the interests of enforcing

monogamy, protecting marriage and promoting marital fidelity, balanced against

70 Ibid.

31

PART D

the interference of the State in the rights to privacy and sexual autonomy were

clearly excessive and therefore failed the test of least restrictiveness.71

28 In 2007, the Ugandan Constitutional Court in Law Advocacy for Women

in Uganda v Attorney General of Uganda72, was called upon to rule on the

constitutionality of Section 154 of the Penal Code, on, the grounds that it violated

various protections granted by the Ugandan Constitution and meted out

discriminatory treatment between women and men. The law as it stood allowed a

married man to have a sexual relationship with an unmarried woman. Moreover,

only a man could be guilty of the offence of adultery when he had sexual

intercourse with a married woman. The same provision, however, penalized a

married woman who engaged in a sexual relationship with an unmarried or

married man outside of the marriage. The penalties for the offence also

prescribed a much stricter punishment for women as compared to their male

counterparts.73 The challenge was brought primarily under Article 21 of the

Ugandan Constitution, which guaranteed equality under the law, Article 24 which

mandates respect for human dignity and protection from inhuman treatment and
74
Article 33(1), which protected the rights of women under the Constitution.

71 Supra, note 64, Part V- A (5) (‘Balance of Interests Conclusion’)
72 Constitutional Petitions Nos. 13 /05 / 05 /06 in Law Advocacy for Women in Uganda v. Attorney General of
Uganda, (2007) UGCC 1 (5 April, 2007), available at

73 Reuters: ‘Uganda scraps “sexist” adultery law’, (April 5, 2007), available at

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-uganda-adultery/uganda-scraps-sexist-adultery-law-idUSL0510814320070405
74 Constitutional Petitions Nos. 13 /05 / 05 /06 in Law Advocacy for Women in Uganda v. Attorney General of

Uganda, [2007] UGCC 1 (5 April, 2007), available at

32
PART D

The Respondent prayed that the Court consider making the provision of adultery

equal in its treatment of men and women, instead of striking it down completely.

However, in its holding, the Court denied this request, holding it could not

prescribe a punishment under penal law to change the statute. The Court held

that Section 154 of the Penal Code was wholly unconstitutional as being violative

of the provisions of the Constitution, and remarked:

“…the respondent did not point out to us areas that his Court
can or should modify and adapt to bring them in conformity
with the provisions of the Constitution. The section is a penal
one and this Court in our considered opinion cannot create a
sentence that the courts can impose on adulterous spouses.

Consequently, it is our finding that the provision of section
154 of the Penal Code Act is inconsistent with the stated
provisions of the Constitution and it is void.”75

29 In 2015, in DE v RH,76 the Constitutional Court of South Africa held that an

aggrieved spouse could no longer seek damages against a third party in cases of

adultery. Madlanga J poignantly remarked on the preservation of marriage:

“…although marriage is ‘a human institution which is
regulated by law and protected by the Constitution and which,
in turn, creates genuine legal duties . . . Its essence . . .

consists in the readiness, founded in morals, of the parties to
the marriage to create and to maintain it’. If the parties to the
marriage have lost that moral commitment, the marriage will
fail and punishment meted out to a third party is unlikely to
change that.”77

75 Ibid.

76 DE v RH, [2015] ZACC 18
77 Ibid, at para 34

33
PART D

The decisions of the US Supreme Court bearing on the issue of privacy have

been analysed in an incisive article, titled “For Better or for Worse: Adultery,

Crime and The Constitution”78, by Martin Siegel. He presents three ways in which

adultery implicates the right to privacy. The first is that adultery must be viewed

as a constitutionally protected marital choice. Second, that certain adulterous

relationships are protected by the freedom of association and finally, that adultery

constitutes an action which is protected by sexual privacy.79 A brief study is also

undertaken on whether action penalizing adultery constitutes a legitimate interest

of the State.

The first privacy interest in adultery is the right to marital choice. The U.S.

Supreme Court has upheld the values of ‘fundamental liberty’, ‘freedom of

choice’ and ‘the ‘right to privacy’ in marriage. With this jurisprudence, the author

argues, it would be strange if a decision to commit adultery is not a treated as a

matter of marriage and family life as expressed in Cleveland Board80, ‘an act

occurring in marriage’, as held in Griswold81 or a ‘matter of marriage and family

life’ as elucidated in Carey.82

78 Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
45
79
Ibid, at page 46
80 Cleveland Board of Education v. LaFleur, 414 U.S. 623 (1973)
81 Griswold, 381 U.S. 1 (1967)
82 Carey, v. Population Serv. Int’l, 431 U.S. 678

34
PART D

Siegel posits that a decision to commit adultery is a decision ‘relating to marriage

and family relationships’ and therefore, falls within the domain of protected

private choices. He observes that the essence of the offence is in fact the

married status of one of the actors, and the mere fact that the commission of the

act consisted of a mere sexual act or a series of them is legally irrelevant. If the

argument that adultery, though unconventional, is an act related to marriage and

therefore fundamentally private is accepted, then it deserves equal protection.

Siegel cites Laurence Tribe, on accepting the ‘unconventional variants’ that also

form a part of privacy:

“Ought the “right to marriage,” as elucidated by Griswold,
Loving v. Virginia, Zablocki, Boddie v. Connecticut and
Moore, also include marriage’s “unconventional variants”-in
this case the adulterous union?”83

The mere fact that adultery is considered unconventional in society does not

justify depriving it of privacy protection. The freedom of making choices also

encompasses the freedom of making an ‘unpopular’ choice. This was articulated

by Justice Blackmun in his dissent in Hardwick84:

“A necessary corollary of giving individuals freedom to choose
how to conduct their lives is acceptance of the fact that
different individuals will make different choices.”85

Siegel concludes that the privacy protections afforded to marriage must extend to

all choices made within the marriage:

83

Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
70
84 Hardwick, 478 U.S.205
85 Ibid, at page 206

35
PART D

“The complexity and diversity among marriages make it all
the more important that the privacy associated with that
institution be construed to include all kinds of marriages,
sexually exclusive as well as open, ‘good’, as well as ‘bad’.”86

Siegel then proceeds to examine the next privacy interest in adultery, that of the

right to association. The right to freedom of association he states is ‘a close

constitutional relative of privacy’87, and they often interact in an intertwined

manner. Siegel proceeds to explain that adultery must not simply be looked at as

an act of consensual adult sexual activity, as sexual activity may simply be one

element in a continuum of interactions between people:

“Sexual activity may be preliminary or incidental to a
developing association, or it may be its final culmination and
solidification. In either case, it is simply one more element of
the relationship. Two people may have sex upon first
meeting. In this case, associational interests seem less
important, although “loveless encounters are sometimes
prerequisites for genuine love relationships; to forbid the
former is, therefore, to inhibit the latter.”‘ 88

Next, Siegel examines the plausible protection of adultery through the lens of the

freedom of expression. Since the act of engaging in sexual activity can be

interpreted as being expressive, Siegel claims adultery might also implicate First

Amendment rights. In support he cites a body of case law89,where courts have

held that First Amendment rights are not limited to merely verbal expression but

also encompass the right to ‘expressive association’.

86 Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
74
87 Ibid, at page 77
88 Ibid, at, page 78
89 Roberts v. United States Jaycees, 468 U.S. 609, 618 (1984)

36
PART D

In concluding his section on the right to associate, Siegel warns against the

dangers of classifying adultery solely as a sexual activity, as doing so would be

akin to protecting a part of the relationship and criminalizing the other. This would

be manifestly unjust:

“It is difficult, both theoretically and practically, to single out
the sexual contacts two people may have from the rest of
their relationship- to criminalize the one and constitutionally
protect as fundamental the other”. 90

Lastly, Siegel discusses the connection between adultery and the right to sexual

privacy. It is accepted that a right to privacy safeguards an individual’s deeply

personal choices which includes a recognition accorded to the inherently private

nature of all consensual adult sexual activity.91 This understanding of sexual

privacy found favour with the U.S. Supreme Court, which in Thornburgh v

American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists92 quoted Charles

Fried with approval:

“The concept of privacy embodies the moral fact that a
person belongs to himself and not to others nor to society as
a whole.”93

Siegel reiterates the underlying intangible value of adult consensual sexual

activity:

90 Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
78
91
Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
82
92 Thornburgh v. American College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, 476 U.S. 747 (1986)
93 Ibid, at Page 777

37
PART D

“The real importance of sexuality to humans, more so in
today’s world of effective birth control than ever, lies in the
possibilities for self-realization and definition inherent in
sexual choices. Sexual experience offers “self-
transcendence, expression of private fantasy, release of inner
tensions, and meaningful and acceptable expression of
regressive desires to be again the free child – unafraid to lose
control, playful, vulnerable, spontaneous, sensually loved.”94

Reflecting on the relationship between marital privacy and associational freedom,

Spiegel remarks the “heterogeneity of experience”, resulting in a variety of

choices, necessarily include the adulterous union which must be protected since

it is unrealistic to expect all individuals to conform to society’s idea of sexuality:

“Because sex is so much a part of our personhood, we should
not expect that people different in so many other ways will be
identical sexually. For some, adultery is a cruel betrayal, while
for others it is just comeuppance for years of spousal neglect.

In some marriages, sex is the epitome of commitment, while
in others spouses jointly and joyfully dispense with sexual
monogamy.”95

In concluding the author states that the foregoing three-layered analysis left no

room for doubt that adultery was a matter of marriage. It therefore deserved to be

protected like all other affairs occurring in marriage and implicated routine

privacy-based freedoms, and it was imperative to treat is as such. Spiegel

concludes by quoting the U.S. Supreme Court in Eisenstadt v Braid, on the

importance of protecting the power to make a ‘bad’ choice in a marriage:

“A marriage’s privacy and autonomy are the best routes to
safeguarding liberty and pluralism. This is no less true when

94 Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
at page 85
95 Ibid, at Page 86

38
PART D

the power to choose, as it inevitably will, results in bad
choices. It is a confidence in nothing less than the theory
underscoring our entire political order: Our system of
government requires that we have faith in the ability of the
individual to decide wisely, if only he is fully appraised of the
merits of the controversy.”96

While acknowledging the interest that the State has in preserving the institution

of marriage, Siegel precisely points out the inefficacy of attaching criminal

sanctions to adultery in the following words:

“Even if we accept that a state is trying to foster the interests
of specific deceived spouses by its laws criminalizing
adultery, it is impossible to believe that a criminal penalty
imposed on one of the spouses would somehow benefit a
marriage instead of representing the final nail in its coffin. And
if deterrence of adultery is the goal, then the state’s failure to
arrest and prosecute offenders has long since removed any
fear of legal sanction.”97

Deborah L Rhode in her book titled “Adultery” argues that “intermittent

idiosyncratic invocations of adultery prohibitions do little to enforce marital vows

or reinforce confidence in the rule of law. There are better ways to signal respect

for the institution of marriage and better uses of law enforcement than policing

private, consensual sexual activity.”98

96
Eisenstadt v. Baird , 405 U.S. 438, 457 (1972)
97 Martin J. Siegel, For Better or For Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, Journal of Family Law, Vol.30, (1991)
89
98 Deborah Rhode, Adultery: Infidelity and the Law, (Harvard University Press, 2016)

39
PART E

E Confronting patriarchy

“Norms and ideals arise from the yearning that it is an
expression of freedom: it does not have to be this way, it
could be otherwise.”99

30 The petitioner urged that (i) The full realisation of the ideal of equality

enshrined in Article 14 of the Constitution ought to be the endeavour of this

Court; (ii) the operation of Section 497 is a denial of equality to women in

marriage; and (iii) the provision is manifestly arbitrary and amounts to a violation

of the constitutional guarantee of substantive equality.

The act which constitutes the offence under Section 497 of the Penal Code is a

man engaging in sexual intercourse with a woman who is the “wife of another

man”. For the offence to arise, the man who engages in sexual intercourse must

either know or have reason to believe that the woman is married. Though a man

has engaged in sexual intercourse with a woman who is married, the offence of

adultery does not come into being where he did so with the consent or

connivance of her husband.

These ingredients of Section 497 lay bare several features which bear on the

challenge to its validity under Article 14. The fact that the sexual relationship

between a man and a woman is consensual is of no significance to the offence, if

the ingredients of the offence are established. What the legislature has

99 Iris Marion Young, Justice and the Politics of Difference, Princeton University Press, 1990

40
PART E

constituted as a criminal offence is the act of sexual intercourse between a man

and a woman who is “the wife of another man”. No offence exists where a man

who has a subsisting marital relationship engages in sexual intercourse with a

single woman. Though adultery is considered to be an offence relating to

marriage, the legislature did not penalise sexual intercourse between a married

man and a single woman. Even though the man in such a case has a spouse,

this is considered to be of no legal relevance to defining the scope of the offence.

That is because the provision proceeds on the notion that the woman is but a

chattel; the property of her husband. The fact that he is engaging in a sexual

relationship outside marriage is of no consequence to the law. The woman with

whom he is in marriage has no voice of her own, no agency to complain. If the

woman who is involved in the sexual act is not married, the law treats it with

unconcern. The premise of the law is that if a woman is not the property of a

married man, her act would not be deemed to be ‘adulterous’, by definition.

31 The essence of the offence is that a man has engaged in an act of sexual

intercourse with the wife of another man. But if the man to whom she is married

were to consent or even to connive at the sexual relationship, the offence of

adultery would not be established. For, in the eyes of law, in such a case it is for

the man in the marital relationship to decide whether to agree to his spouse

engaging in a sexual act with another. Indeed, even if the two men (the spouse

of the woman and the man with whom she engages in a sexual act) were to

connive, the offence of adultery would not be made out.

41
PART E

32 Section 497 is destructive of and deprives a woman of her agency,

autonomy and dignity. If the ostensible object of the law is to protect the

‘institution of marriage’, it provides no justification for not recognising the agency

of a woman whose spouse is engaged in a sexual relationship outside of

marriage. She can neither complain nor is the fact that she is in a marital

relationship with a man of any significance to the ingredients of the offence. The

law also deprives the married woman who has engaged in a sexual act with

another man, of her agency. She is treated as the property of her husband. That

is why no offence of adultery would be made out if her husband were to consent

to her sexual relationship outside marriage. Worse still, if the spouse of the

woman were to connive with the person with whom she has engaged in sexual

intercourse, the law would blink. Section 497 is thus founded on the notion that a

woman by entering upon marriage loses, so to speak, her voice, autonomy and

agency. Manifest arbitrariness is writ large on the provision.

33 The test of manifest arbitrariness is rooted in Indian jurisprudence. In E P

Royappa v State of Tamil Nadu100, Justice Bhagwati characterised equality as a

“dynamic construct” which is contrary to arbitrariness:

“85…Now, what is the content and reach of this great
equalising principle? It is a founding faith, to use the words of
Bose. J., “a way of life”, and it must not be subjected to a
narrow pedantic or lexicographic approach. We cannot
countenance any attempt to truncate its all-embracing scope
and meaning, for to do so would be to violate its activist
magnitude. Equality is a dynamic concept with many
aspects and dimensions and it cannot be “cribbed,

100 (1974) 4 SCC 3

42
PART E

cabined and confined” within traditional and doctrinaire
limits. 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…”101
(Emphasis supplied)

The Constitution Bench in Shayara Bano v Union of India102 held the practice of

Triple Talaq to be unconstitutional. Justice Rohinton Nariman, in his concurring

opinion, applied the test of manifest arbitrariness to hold that the practice does

not pass constitutional muster:

“87. The thread of reasonableness runs through the
entire fundamental rights chapter. What is manifestly
arbitrary is obviously unreasonable and being contrary to
the rule of law, would violate Article 14. Further, there is an
apparent contradiction in the three-Judge Bench decision
in McDowell [State of A.P. v. McDowell and Co., (1996) 3
SCC 709] when it is said that a constitutional challenge can
succeed on the ground that a law is “disproportionate,
excessive or unreasonable”, yet such challenge would fail on
the very ground of the law being “unreasonable, unnecessary
or unwarranted”. The arbitrariness doctrine when applied to
legislation obviously would not involve the latter challenge but
would only involve a law being disproportionate, excessive or
otherwise being manifestly unreasonable. All the aforesaid
grounds, therefore, do not seek to differentiate between State
action in its various forms, all of which are interdicted if they
fall foul of the fundamental rights guaranteed to persons and
citizens in Part III of the Constitution.”103
(Emphasis supplied)

101 Ibid. at page 38
102 (2017) 9 SCC 1
103 Ibid. at pages 91-92

43
PART E

On the application of the test of manifest arbitrariness to invalidate legislation, the

learned Judge held thus:

“ 101…there is no rational distinction between the two types
of legislation when it comes to this ground of challenge under
Article 14. 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.”104

34 The decision in Shayara Bano, holds that legislation or state action which

is manifestly arbitrary would have elements of caprice and irrationality and would

be characterized by the lack of an adequately determining principle. An

“adequately determining principle” is a principle which is in consonance with

constitutional values. With respect to criminal legislation, the principle which

determines the “act” that is criminalized as well as the persons who may be held

criminally culpable, must be tested on the anvil of constitutionality. The principle

must not be determined by majoritarian notions of morality which are at odds with

constitutional morality.

104 Ibid. at page 99

44
PART E

In Navtej Singh Johar v Union of India, (“Navtej”)105 Justice Indu Malhotra

emphasized the need for a “sound” or “rational principle” underlying a criminal

provision:

“ …Section 377 insofar as it criminalises consensual sexual
acts between adults in private, is not based on any sound or
rational principle…

Further, the phrase “carnal intercourse against the order of
nature” in Section 377 as a determining principle in a penal
provision, is too open-ended, giving way to the scope for
misuse against members of the LGBT community.”

35 The hypothesis which forms the basis of the law on adultery is the

subsistence of a patriarchal order. Section 497 is based on a notion of morality

which fails to accord with the values on which the Constitution is founded. The

freedoms which the Constitution guarantees inhere in men and women alike. In

enacting Section 497, the legislature made an ostensible effort to protect the

institution of marriage. ‘Ostensible’ it is, because the provision postulates a

notion of marriage which subverts the equality of spouses. Marriage in a

constitutional regime is founded on the equality of and between spouses. Each

of them is entitled to the same liberty which Part III guarantees. Each of them is

entitled to take decisions in accordance with his and her conscience and each

must have the ability to pursue the human desire for fulfilment. Section 497 is

based on the understanding that marriage submerges the identity of the woman.

It is based on a notion of marital subordination. In recognising, accepting and

enforcing these notions, Section 497 is inconsistent with the ethos of the

Constitution. Section 497 treats a woman as but a possession of her spouse. The

105 Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 76 OF 2016

45
PART E

essential values on which the Constitution is founded – liberty, dignity and

equality – cannot allow such a view of marriage. Section 497 suffers from

manifest arbitrariness.

36 While engrafting the provision into Chapter XX of the Penal Code – “of

offences relating to marriage” – the legislature has based the offence on an

implicit assumption about marriage. The notion which the law propounds and to

which it imposes the sanctions of penal law is that the marital tie subordinates

the role and position of the woman. In that view of marriage, the woman is bereft

of the ability to decide, to make choices and give free expression to her

personality. Human sexuality is an essential aspect of identity. Choices in

matters of sexuality are reflective of the human desire for expression. Sexuality

cannot be construed purely as a physiological attribute. In its associational

attributes, it links up with the human desire to be intimate with a person of one’s

choice. Sharing of physical intimacies is a reflection of choice. In allowing

individuals to make those choices in a consensual sphere, the Constitution

acknowledges that even in the most private of zones, the individual must have

the ability to make essential decisions. Sexuality cannot be dis-associated from

the human personality. For, to be human involves the ability to fulfil sexual

desires in the pursuit of happiness. Autonomy in matters of sexuality is thus

intrinsic to a dignified human existence. Human dignity both recognises and

protects the autonomy of the individual in making sexual choices. The sexual

choices of an individual cannot obviously be imposed on others in society and

46
PART E

are premised on a voluntary acceptance by consenting parties. Section 497

denudes the woman of the ability to make these fundamental choices, in

postulating that it is only the man in a marital relationship who can consent to his

spouse having sexual intercourse with another. Section 497 disregards the

sexual autonomy which every woman possesses as a necessary condition of her

existence. Far from being an equal partner in an equal relationship, she is

subjugated entirely to the will of her spouse. The provision is proffered by the

legislature as an effort to protect the institution of marriage. But it proceeds on a

notion of marriage which is one sided and which denies agency to the woman in

a marital tie. The ability to make choices within marriage and on every aspect

concerning it is a facet of human liberty and dignity which the Constitution

protects. In depriving the woman of that ability and recognising it in the man

alone, Section 497 fails to meet the essence of substantive equality in its

application to marriage. Equality of rights and entitlements between parties to a

marriage is crucial to preserve the values of the Constitution. Section 497

offends that substantive sense of equality and is violative of Article 14.

37 The procedural law which has been enacted in Section 198 of the Code of

Criminal Procedure 1973 re-enforces the stereotypes implicit in Section 497.

Cognizance of an offence under Chapter XX of the Penal Code can be taken by

a Court only upon a complaint of a person aggrieved. In the case of an offence

punishable under Section 497, only the husband of the woman is deemed to be

aggrieved by the offence. In any event, once the provisions of Section 497 are

47
PART E

held to offend the fundamental rights, the procedure engrafted in Section 198 will

cease to have any practical relevance.

38 Section 497 amounts to a denial of substantive equality. The decisions in

Sowmithri and Revathi espoused a formal notion of equality, which is contrary

to the constitutional vision of a just social order. Justness postulates equality. In

consonance with constitutional morality, substantive equality is “directed at

eliminating individual, institutional and systemic discrimination against

disadvantaged groups which effectively undermines their full and equal social,

economic, political and cultural participation in society.”106 To move away from a

formalistic notion of equality which disregards social realities, the Court must take

into account the impact of the rule or provision in the lives of citizens.

The primary enquiry to be undertaken by the Court towards the realisation of

substantive equality is to determine whether the provision contributes to the

subordination of a disadvantaged group of individuals.107 The disadvantage must

be addressed not by treating a woman as ‘weak’ but by construing her

entitlement to an equal citizenship. The former legitimizes patronising attitudes

towards women. The latter links true equality to the realisation of dignity. The

focus of such an approach is not simply on equal treatment under the law, but

106
Kathy Lahey, Feminist Theories of (In)equality, in Equality and Judicial Nuetrality (S.Martin and K.Mahoney (eds.)
(1987)
107 Ratna Kapur On Woman, Equality and the Constitution: Through the Looking Glass of Feminism in Gender and

Politics in India (Nivedita Menon ed.) (1993)

48
PART E

rather on the real impact of the legislation.108 Thus, Section 497 has to be

examined in the light of existing social structures which enforce the position of a

woman as an unequal participant in a marriage.

Catherine Mackinnon implores us to look more critically at the reality of this

family sphere, termed ‘‘personal,’’ and view the family as a “crucible of women’s

unequal status and subordinate treatment sexually, physically, economically, and

civilly.”109 In a social order which has enforced patriarchal notions of sexuality

upon women and which treats them as subordinate to their spouses in

heterosexual marriages, Section 497 perpetuates an already existing inequality.

39 Facially, the law may be construed to operate as an exemption from

criminal sanctions. However, when viewed in the context of a social structure

which considers the husband as the owner of the wife’s sexuality, the law

perpetuates a deeply entrenched patriarchal order. The true realisation of the

substantive content of equality must entail an overhaul of these social structures.

When all visible and invisible forms of inequality- social, cultural, economic,

political or sexual- are recognised and obliterated; a truly egalitarian existence

can be imagined.

108 Maureen Maloney, An Analysis of Direct Taxes in India: A Feminist Perspective, Journal of the Indian Law Institute
(1988)
109 Catherine A Mackinnon, Sex equality under the Constitution of India: Problems, prospects, and ‘personal laws’,

Oxford University Press and New York University School of Law (2006)

49
PART F

F ‘The Good Wife’

Article 15 of the Constitution reads thus:

“15. (1) The State shall not discriminate against any citizen on
grounds only of religion, race, caste, sex, place of birth or any
of them.”
(Emphasis supplied)

40 Article 15 prohibits the State from discriminating on grounds only of sex.

The Petitioners contend that (i) Section 497, in so far as it places a husband and

wife on a different footing in a marriage perpetuates sex discrimination; (ii)

Section 497 is based on the patriarchal conception of the woman as property,

entrenches gender stereotypes, and is consequently hit by Article 15.

From a joint reading of Section 497 of the Indian Penal Code and Section 198(2)

of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the following propositions emerge:

i. Sexual relations by a married woman with another man outside her

marriage without the consent of her husband is criminalized;

ii. In an ‘adulterous relationship’, the man is punished for adultery, while the

woman is not (even as an abettor);

iii. Sexual relations by a married man with an unmarried woman are not

criminalized;

iv. Section 497 accords primacy to the consent of the husband to determine

whether criminality is attached to the man who has consensual sexual

50
PART F

relations with the spouse of the former. Consent or willingness of the

woman is irrelevant to the offence;

v. A man who has sexual relations with the spouse of another man is relieved

of the offence only if her spouse has consented or, even connived; and

vi. Section 497, IPC, read with Section 198, Cr.PC, gives the man the sole

right to lodge a complaint and precludes a woman from initiating criminal

proceedings.

41 The operation of Section 497, by definition, is confined to the sexual

relations of a woman outside her marriage. A man who has sexual intercourse

with a married woman without the consent or connivance of her husband, is

liable to be prosecuted under the Section. However, a married man may engage

in sexual relations outside marriage with a single woman without any

repercussion in criminal law. Though granted immunity from prosecution, a

woman is forced to consider the prospect of the penal action that will attach upon

the individual with whom she engages in a sexual act. To ensure the fidelity of

his spouse, the man is given the power to invoke the criminal sanction of the

State. In effect, her spouse is empowered to curtail her sexual agency. The

consent of the husband serves as the key to the exercise of the sexual agency of

his spouse. That the married woman is in a consensual relationship, is of no

consequence to the possible prosecution.

51
PART F

A married man may engage in sexual relations with an unmarried woman who is

not his wife without the fear of opening his partner to prosecution and without the

consent of his spouse. No recourse is provided to a woman against her husband

who engages in sexual relations outside marriage. The effect of Section 497 is to

allow the sexual agency of a married woman to be wholly dependent on the

consent or connivance of her husband. Though Section 497 does not punish a

woman engaging in adultery as an abettor, a married man and a married woman

are placed on different pedestals in respect to their actions. The effect of Section

497, despite granting immunity from prosecution to the married woman, is to

attach a notion of wrongdoing to the exercise of her sexual agency. Despite

exempting her from prosecution, the exercise of her sexual agency is contingent

on the consent or connivance of the husband. A husband is considered an

aggrieved party by the law if his wife engages in sexual intercourse with another

man, but the wife is not, if her husband does the same. Viewed from this angle,

Section 497 discriminates between a married man and a married woman to her

detriment on the ground of sex. This kind of discrimination is prohibited by the

non-discrimination guarantee in Article 15 of the Constitution. Section 497 also

places a woman within marriage and the man with whom she shares a sexual

relationship outside marriage on a different footing.

42 Section 497 criminalizes the conduct of the man who has sexual

intercourse with the wife of another without his consent. It exempts women from

criminal liability. Underlying this exemption is the notion that women, being

52
PART F

denuded of sexual agency, should be afforded the ‘protection’ of the law. In

criminalizing the accused who engages in the sexual relationship, the law

perpetuates a gender stereotype that men, possessing sexual agency are the

seducers, and that women, as passive beings devoid of sexual agency, are the

seduced. The notion that a woman is ‘submissive’, or worse still ‘naïve’ has no

legitimacy in the discourse of a liberal constitution. It is deeply offensive to

equality and destructive of the dignity of the woman. On this stereotype, Section

497 criminalizes only the accused man.

43 Pertinent to the present enquiry, is that the provision allows only the

husband to initiate a prosecution for adultery. The consent or connivance of the

husband precludes prosecution. If a husband consents, his spouse is effectively

granted permission to exercise her sexual agency with another individual. This

guarantees a degree of control to the husband over the sexual agency of his

spouse. As a relic of Victorian morality, this control over the sexual agency of the

spouse, views the wife as the property of the husband. Fidelity of the woman,

and the husband’s control over it, is seen as maintaining the ‘property’ interest of

a husband in his wife.110 In this view, a woman is confounded with things that can

be possessed. In construing the spouse as a passive or inanimate object, the law

on adultery seeks to punish a person who attempts theft on the property of the

husband. Coontz and Henderson write that the stabilization of property rights and

110Phyllis Coleman, Who’s Been Sleeping in My Bed? You and Me, and the State Makes Three, Vol. 24, Indian Law
Review (1991)

53
PART F

the desire to pass on one’s property to legitimate heirs, were what motivated men

to restrict the sexual behavior of their wives.111

44 Underlying Section 497 is a gender stereotype that the infidelity of men is

normal, but that of a woman is impermissible. In condemning the sexual agency

of the woman, only the husband, as the ‘aggrieved’ party is given the right to

initiate prosecution. The proceedings once initiated, would be geared against the

person who committed an act of ‘theft’ or ‘trespass’ upon his spouse. Sexual

relations by a man with another man’s wife is therefore considered as theft of the

husband’s property. Ensuring a man’s control over the sexuality of his wife was

the true purpose of Section 497.

Implicit in seeking to privilege the fidelity of women in a marriage, is the

assumption that a woman contracts away her sexual agency when entering a

marriage. That a woman, by marriage, consents in advance to sexual relations

with her husband or to refrain from sexual relations outside marriage without the

permission of her husband is offensive to liberty and dignity. Such a notion has

no place in the constitutional order. Sexual autonomy constitutes an inviolable

core of the dignity of every individual. At the heart of the constitutional rights

guaranteed to every individual is a primacy of choice and the freedom to

determine one’s actions. Curtailing the sexual autonomy of a woman or

111 Women’s Work, Men’s Property: The Origins of Gender and Class (S Coontz and P Henderson eds.) (1986)

54
PART F

presuming the lack of consent once she enters a marriage is antithetical to

constitutional values.

45 A provision of law must not be viewed as operating in isolation from the

social, political, historical and cultural contexts in which it operates. In its

operation, law “permeates and is inseparable from everyday living and knowing,

and it plays an important role in shaping (legal) consciousness.”112 A contextual

reading of the law shows that it influences social practices, and makes

“asymmetries of power seem, if not invisible, natural and benign”. 113 Section 497

has a significant social impact on the sexual agency of women. It builds on

existing gender stereotypes and bias and further perpetuates them. Cultural

stereotypes are more forgiving of a man engaging in sexual relations than a

woman. Women then are expected to be chaste before and faithful during

marriage. In restricting the sexual agency of women, Section 497 gives legal

recognition to socially discriminatory and gender-based norms. Sexual relations

for a woman were legally and socially permissible when it was within her

marriage. Women who committed adultery or non-marital sex were labeled

immoral, shameful, and were criminally condemned.

112
Rosemary Coombe, Is There a Cultural Studies of Law?, in A Companion to Cultural Studies, Toby Miller (ed.),
Oxford, (2001)
113 Austin Sarat, Jonathan Simon, Beyond Legal Realism?: Cultural Analysis, Cultural Studies, and the Situation of

Legal Scholarship, Yale Journal of Law the Humanities, (2001), at page 19

55
PART F

In Anuj Garg v Hotel Association of India,114 this Court struck down Section 30

of the Punjab Excise Act, 1914 which prohibited the employment of women in

premises where liquor or other intoxicating drugs were consumed by the public.

Holding that the law suffered from “incurable fixations of stereotype morality and

conception of sexual role”, the Court took into account “traditional cultural norms

as also the state of general ambience in the society” and held that “no law in its

ultimate effect should end up perpetuating the oppression of women.”

In Navtej, one of us (Chandrachud J.) held thus:

“A discriminatory act will be tested against constitutional
values. A discrimination will not survive constitutional scrutiny
when it is grounded in and perpetuates stereotypes about a
class constituted by the grounds prohibited in Article 15(1). If
any ground of discrimination, whether direct or indirect is
founded on a stereotypical understanding of the role of the
sex, it would not be distinguishable from the discrimination
which is prohibited by Article 15 on the grounds only of sex. If
certain characteristics grounded in stereotypes, are to be
associated with entire classes of people constituted as groups
by any of the grounds prohibited in Article 15(1), that cannot
establish a permissible reason to discriminate. Such a
discrimination will be in violation of the constitutional
guarantee against discrimination in Article 15(1).”

46 Section 497 rests on and perpetuates stereotypes about women and

sexual fidelity. In curtailing the sexual agency of women, it exacts sexual fidelity

from women as the norm. It perpetuates the notion that a woman is passive and

incapable of exercising sexual freedom. In doing so, it offers her ‘protection’ from

prosecution. Section 497 denudes a woman of her sexual autonomy in making its

114 (2008) 3 SCC 1

56
PART F

free exercise conditional on the consent of her spouse. In doing so, it

perpetuates the notion that a woman consents to a limited autonomy on entering

marriage. The provision is grounded in and has a deep social effect on how

society perceives the sexual agency of women. In reinforcing the patriarchal

structure which demands her controlled sexuality, Section 497 purports to serve

as a provision envisaged for the protection of the sanctity of marriage. In the

context of a constitutional vision characterized by the struggle to break through

the shackles of gender stereotypes and guarantee an equal citizenship, Section

497 entrenches stereotypes and existing structures of discrimination and has no

place in a constitutional order.

F.1        The entrapping cage

47 Section 497 exempts a woman from being punished as an abettor.

Underlying this exemption is the notion that a woman is the victim of being

seduced into a sexual relationship with a person who is not her husband. In

assuming that the woman has no sexual agency, the exemption seeks to be

justified on the ground of being a provision that is beneficial to women and

protected under Article 15(3) of the Constitution. This is contrary to the remedy

which Article 15(3) sought to embody. In Government of A P v P B

Vijayakumar,115 a two judge Bench of this Court dealt with a challenge to sub-

rule (2) of Rule 22-A of the Andhra Pradesh State and Subordinate Service

115 (1995) 4 SCC 520

57
PART F

Rules, which gave women a preference in the matter of direct recruitment.

Speaking for the Court, Justice Sujata V Manohar held thus:

“7. 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 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…”116

In Independent Thought v Union of India,117 Justice Madan B Lokur, speaking

for a two judge Bench of this Court, adverted to the drafting history of Article

15(3) and held thus:

“55. The response given by Dr. Ambedkar suggests that he
certainly favoured special provisions for women and children
with a view to integrate them into society and to take them out
of patriarchal control…118

56. 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.”119

48 Article 15(3) encapsulates the notion of ‘protective discrimination’. The

constitutional guarantee in Article 15(3) cannot be employed in a manner that

entrenches paternalistic notions of ‘protection’. This latter view of protection only

serves to place women in a cage. Article 15(3) does not exist in isolation. Articles

116
Ibid. at page 525
117 (2017) 10 SCC 800
118 Ibid. at page 837
119 Ibid. at page 837

58
PART G

14 to 18, being constituents of a single code on equality, supplement each other

and incorporate a non-discrimination principle. Neither Article 15(1), nor Article

15(3) allow discrimination against women. Discrimination which is grounded in

paternalistic and patriarchal notions cannot claim the protection of Article 15(3).

In exempting women from criminal prosecution, Section 497 implies that a

woman has no sexual agency and that she was ‘seduced’ into a sexual

relationship. Given the presumed lack of sexual agency, criminal exemption is

then granted to the woman in order to ‘protect’ her. The ‘protection’ afforded to

women under Section 497 highlights the lack of sexual agency that the section

imputes to a woman. Article 15(3) when read with the other Articles in Part III,

serves as a powerful remedy to remedy the discrimination and prejudice faced by

women for centuries. Article 15(3) as an enabling provision is intended to bring

out substantive equality in the fullest sense. Dignity and autonomy are crucial to

substantive equality. Hence, Article 15(3) does not protect a statutory provision

that entrenches patriarchal notions in the garb of protecting women.

G Denuding identity – women as sexual property

49 Charles Jean Marie wrote in 1911120 about the central forms of adultery as

an offence. The criminalisation of adultery came at a social cost: of disregarding

the agency of a woman as a sentient being.

120 Charles Jean Marie Letorneau, The Evolution of Marriage (2011)

59
PART G

“In all legislations the married woman is more or less openly
considered as the property of the husband and is very often
confounded, absolutely confounded, with things possessed.
To use her, therefore, without the authority of her owner is
theft…But adultery is not a common theft. An object, an inert
possession, are passive things; their owner may well punish
the thief who has taken them, but him only. In adultery, the
object of larceny, the wife, is a sentient and thinking
being- that is to say, an accomplice in the attempt on her
husband’s property in her own person; moreover he
generally has her in his keeping…”

The law on adultery is but a codified rule of patriarchy. Patriarchy has permeated

the lives of women for centuries. Ostensibly, society has two sets of standards of

morality for judging sexual behaviour.121 One set for its female members and

another for males.122 Society ascribes impossible virtues to a woman and

confines her to a narrow sphere of behaviour by an expectation of conformity.123

Raising a woman to a pedestal is one part of the endeavour. The second part is

all about confining her to a space. The boundaries of that space are defined by

what a woman should or should not be. A society which perceives women as

pure and an embodiment of virtue has no qualms of subjecting them to virulent

attack: to rape, honour killings, sex-determination and infanticide. As an

embodiment of virtue, society expects the women to be a mute spectator to and

even accepting of egregious discrimination within the home. This is part of the

process of raising women to a pedestal conditioned by male notions of what is

right and what is wrong for a woman. The notion that women, who are equally

entitled to the protections of the Constitution as their male counterparts, may be

121
Nandita Haksar, Dominance, Suppression and the Law in Women and the Law: Contemporary Problems (Lotika
Sarkar and B. Sivaramayya eds.), Vikas Publishing House (1994)
122 Ibid
123 Ibid

60
PART G

treated as objects capable of being possessed, is an exercise of subjugation and

inflicting indignity. Anachronistic conceptions of ‘chastity’ and ‘honour’ have

dictated the social and cultural lives of women, depriving them of the guarantees

of dignity and privacy, contained in the Constitution.

50 The right to privacy depends on the exercise of autonomy and agency by

individuals. In situations where citizens are disabled from exercising these

essential attributes, Courts must step in to ensure that dignity is realised in the

fullest sense. Familial structures cannot be regarded as private spaces where

constitutional rights are violated. To grant immunity in situations when rights of

individuals are in siege, is to obstruct the unfolding vision of the Constitution.

The opinion delivered on behalf of four judges in K S Puttaswamy v Union of

India124 has recognised the dangers of the “use of privacy as a veneer for

patriarchal domination and abuse of women.” On the delicate balance between

the competing interests of protecting privacy as well dignity of women in the

domestic sphere, the Court held:

“The challenge in this area is to enable the state to take the
violation of the dignity of women in the domestic sphere
seriously while at the same time protecting the privacy
entitlements of women grounded in the identity of gender and
liberty.”

124 (2017) 10 SCC 1

61
PART G

51 In “Seeing like a Feminist”, Nivedita Menon has recognized the patriarchal

family as the “basis for the secondary status of women in society.”125 Menon

notes that ‘the personal is political’.126 Her scholarly work implores us to

recognise spaces which may be considered personal such as the bedroom and

kitchen. These spaces are immersed in power relations, but with ramifications for

the public sphere.127

Control over women’s sexuality is the key patriarchal assumption that underlies

family and marriage.128 When it shifts to the ‘public’ as opposed to the ‘private’,

the misogyny becomes even more pronounced.129 Section 497 embodies this. By

the operation of the provision, women’s sexuality is sought to be controlled in a

number of ways. First, the husband and he alone is enabled to prosecute the

man with whom his wife has sexual relations. Even in cases where the

relationship is based on the consent of the woman, the law treats it as an

offence, denying a woman who has voluntarily entered into a consensual

relationship of her sexual agency. Second, such a relationship would be beyond

the reach of penal law if her husband consents to it. The second condition is a

telling reflection of the patriarchal assumption underlying the criminal provision:

that the husband is the owner of the wife’s sexual agency.

125 Nivedita Menon, Seeing like a Feminist, Zubaan Books (2012) at page 35
126
Ibid.

127 Ibid.

128 Ibid.

129 Ibid.

62
PART G

52 In remedying injustices, the Court cannot shy away from delving into the

‘personal’, and as a consequence, the ‘public’. It becomes imperative for us to

intervene when structures of injustice and persecution deeply entrenched in

patriarchy are destructive of constitutional freedom. But, in adjudicating on the

rights of women, the Court is not taking on a paternalistic role and “granting”

rights. The Court is merely interpreting the text of the Constitution to re-state

what is already set in ink- women are equal citizens of this nation, entitled to the

protections of the Constitution. Any legislation which results in the denial of these

Constitutional guarantees to women, cannot pass the test of constitutionality.

Patriarchy and paternalism are the underpinnings of Section 497. It needs no

iteration that misogyny and patriarchal notions of sexual control find no place in a

constitutional order which has recognised dignity as intrinsic to a person,

autonomy being an essential component of this right. The operation of Section

497 denotes that ‘adulterous women’ virtually exercise no agency; or at least not

enough agency to make them criminally liable.130 They are constructed as

victims. As victims, they are to be protected by being exempt from sanctions of a

criminal nature.131 Not only is there a denial of sexual agency, women are also

not seen to be harmed by the offence.132 Thus, the provision is not simply about

protecting the sanctity of the marital relationship. It is all about protecting a

husband’s interest in his “exclusive access to his wife’s sexuality”.133

130 Ratna Kapur and Brenda Cossman, Subversive Sites: Feminist Engagements with Law in India, Sage Publications
(1996) at page 119
131 Ibid.

132 Ibid.

133 Ibid. at page 120

63
PART G

53 Section 497 chains the woman to antediluvian notions of sexuality. Chief

Justice Dipak Misra in Navtej emphasised the importance of sexual autonomy as

a facet of individual liberty, thus protected under Article 21 of the Constitution:

“The sexual autonomy of an individual to choose his/her
sexual partner is an important pillar and an insegregable facet
of individual liberty. When the liberty of even a single person
of the society is smothered under some vague and archival
stipulation that it is against the order of nature or under the
perception that the majority population is peeved when such
an individual exercises his/her liberty despite the fact that the
exercise of such liberty is within the confines of his/her private
space, then the signature of life melts and living becomes a
bare subsistence and resultantly, the fundamental right of
liberty of such an individual is abridged.”

In Navtej, one of us (Chandrachud J.) held that the recognition of the autonomy

of an individual is an acknowledgement of the State’s respect for the capacity of

the individual to make individual choices:

“The right to privacy enables an individual to exercise his or
her autonomy, away from the glare of societal expectations.

The realisation of the human personality is dependent on the
autonomy of an individual. In a liberal democracy, recognition
of the individual as an autonomous person is an
acknowledgment of the State’s respect for the capacity of the
individual to make independent choices. The right to privacy
may be construed to signify that not only are certain acts no
longer immoral, but that there also exists an affirmative moral
right to do them.”

To characterise a woman as a passive object, denuded of agency, is a denial of

autonomy. The same judgment in Navtej has recognized sexual choices as an

essential attribute of autonomy, intimately connected to the self-respect of the

individual:

64

PART G

“In order to understand how sexual choices are an essential
attribute of autonomy, it is useful to refer to John Rawls’
theory on social contract. Rawls’ conception of the ‘Original
Position’ serves as a constructive model to illustrate the
notion of choice behind a “partial veil of ignorance.” Persons
behind the veil are assumed to be rational and mutually
disinterested individuals, unaware of their positions in society.
The strategy employed by Rawls is to focus on a category of
goods which an individual would desire irrespective of what
individuals’ conception of ‘good’ might be. These neutrally
desirable goods are described by Rawls as ‘primary social
goods’ and may be listed as rights, liberties, powers,
opportunities, income, wealth, and the constituents of self-
respect. Rawls's conception of self-respect, as a primary
human good, is intimately connected to the idea of
autonomy. Self-respect is founded on an individual's
ability to exercise her native capacities in a competent
manner.”
(Emphasis supplied)

G.1 Exacting fidelity: the intimacies of marriage

54 Marriage as a social institution has undergone changes. Propelled by

access to education and by economic and social progress, women have found

greater freedom to assert their choices and preferences. The law must also

reflect their status as equals in a marriage, entitled to the constitutional

guarantees of privacy and dignity. The opinion delivered on behalf of four judges

in Puttaswamy held thus:

“130…As society evolves, so must constitutional doctrine.

The institutions which the Constitution has created must
adapt flexibly to meet the challenges in a rapidly growing
knowledge economy. Above all, constitutional interpretation is
but a process in achieving justice, liberty and dignity to every
citizen.”134

134 Ibid. at page 414

65
PART G

In Navtej, Justice Rohinton Nariman countered the assertion that the Court must

“not indulge in taking upon itself the guardianship of changing societal mores” by

holding thus:

“…The very purpose of the fundamental rights chapter in the
Constitution of India is to withdraw the subject of liberty and
dignity of the individual and place such subject beyond the
reach of majoritarian governments so that constitutional
morality can be applied by this Court to give effect to the
rights, among others, of ‘discrete and insular’ minorities.One
such minority has knocked on the doors of this Court as this
Court is the custodian of the fundamental rights of citizens.

These fundamental rights do not depend upon the
outcome of elections. And, it is not left to majoritarian
governments to prescribe what shall be orthodox in
matters concerning social morality. The fundamental
rights chapter is like the north star in the universe of
constitutionalism in India. Constitutional morality always
trumps any imposition of a particular view of social
morality by shifting and different majoritarian regimes.”
(Emphasis supplied)

55 Section 497 seeks the preservation of a construct of marriage in which

female fidelity is enforced by the letter of the law and by the coercive authority of

the state. Such a conception goes against the spirit of the rights-based

jurisprudence of this Court, which seeks to protect the dignity of an individual and

her “intimate personal choices”. It cannot be held that these rights cease to exist

once the woman enters into a marriage.

56 The identity of the woman must be as an ‘individual in her own right’. In

that sense, her identity does not get submerged as a result of her marriage.

Section 497 lays down the norm that the identity of a married woman is but as

the wife of her spouse. Underlying the norm is a notion of control over and

subjugation of the woman. Such notions cannot withstand scrutiny under a liberal
66
PART G

constitution. Chief Justice Dipak Misra in Navtej has drawn on the

interrelationship between ‘identity’ and ‘autonomy’:

“…Autonomy is individualistic. Under the autonomy principle,
the individual has sovereignty over his/her body. He/she can
surrender his/her autonomy wilfully to another individual and
their intimacy in privacy is a matter of their choice. Such
concept of identity is not only sacred but is also in recognition
of the quintessential facet of humanity in a person‘s nature.
The autonomy establishes identity and the said identity, in the
ultimate eventuate, becomes a part of dignity in an individual.

This dignity is special to the man/woman who has a right to
enjoy his/her life as per the constitutional norms and should
not be allowed to wither and perish like a mushroom. It is a
directional shift from conceptual macrocosm to cognizable
microcosm. When such culture grows, there is an affirmative
move towards a more inclusive and egalitarian society.”

This Court in Puttaswamy has elucidated that privacy is the entitlement of every

individual, with no distinction to be made on the basis of the individual’s position

in society.

“271.Every individual in society irrespective of social class or
economic status is entitled to the intimacy and autonomy
which privacy protects. It is privacy as an intrinsic and core
feature of life and personal liberty which enables an individual
to stand up against a programme of forced sterilization. Then
again, it is privacy which is a powerful guarantee if the State
were to introduce compulsory drug trials of non-consenting
men or women. The sanctity of marriage, the liberty of
procreation, the choice of a family life and the dignity of being
are matters which concern every individual irrespective of
social strata or economic well being. The pursuit of happiness
is founded upon autonomy and dignity. Both are essential
attributes of privacy which makes no distinction between the
birth marks of individuals.”135

57 It would be useful to refer to decisions of this Court which have

emphasised on the freedoms of individuals with respect to choices in

relationships. In Navtej, Chief Justice Misra highlighted the indignity suffered by

135 Ibid. at page 484

67
PART G

an individual when “acts within their personal sphere” are criminalised on the

basis of regressive social attitudes:

“An individual's choice to engage in certain acts within their
private sphere has been restricted by criminalising the same
on account of the age old social perception. To harness such
an essential decision, which defines the individualism of a
person, by tainting it with criminality would violate the
individual's right to dignity by reducing it to mere letters
without any spirit.”

The Chief Justice observed that the “organisation of intimate relations” between

“consenting adults” is a matter of complete personal choice and characterised

the “private protective sphere and realm of individual choice and autonomy” as a

personal right:

“It is true that the principle of choice can never be absolute
under a liberal Constitution and the law restricts one
individual‘s choice to prevent harm or injury to others.

However, the organisation of intimate relations is a
matter of complete personal choice especially between
consenting adults. It is a vital personal right falling within
the private protective sphere and realm of individual
choice and autonomy. Such progressive proclivity is
rooted in the constitutional structure and is an
inextricable part of human nature.”
(Emphasis supplied)

.

In Shakti Vahini, this Court has recognised the right to choose a partner as a

fundamental right under Articles 19 and 21 of the Constitution. In Shafin Jahan,

“intimate personal choices” were held to be a protected sphere, with one of us

(Chandrachud J) stating:

“88.The choice of a partner whether within or outside
marriage lies within the exclusive domain of each individual.

68
PART G

Intimacies of marriage lie within a core zone of privacy, which
is inviolable.”

58 In Navtej, one of us (Chandrachud J) held that the right to sexual privacy

is a natural right, fundamental to liberty and a soulmate of dignity. The application

of Section 497 is a blatant violation of these enunciated rights. Will a trial to prove

adultery lead the wife to tender proof of her fidelity? In Navtej, the principle was

elucidated thus:

“In protecting consensual intimacies, the Constitution adopts
a simple principle: the state has no business to intrude into
these personal matters.”

In so far as two individuals engage in acts based on consent, the law cannot

intervene. Any intrusion in this private sphere would amount to deprivation of

autonomy and sexual agency, which every individual is imbued with.

In Puttaswamy, it was recognised that a life of dignity entails that the “inner

recesses of the human personality” be secured from “unwanted intrusion”:

“127.The right to privacy is an element of human dignity. The
sanctity of privacy lies in its functional relationship with
dignity. Privacy ensures that a human being can lead a life of
dignity by securing the inner recesses of the human
personality from unwanted intrusion. Privacy recognises the
autonomy of the individual and the right of every person to
make essential choices which affect the course of life. In
doing so privacy recognises that living a life of dignity is
essential for a human being to fulfil the liberties and freedoms
which are the cornerstone of the Constitution.”136

136 Ibid. at page 413

69
PART G

59 In criminalizing adultery, the legislature has imposed its imprimatur on the

control by a man over the sexuality of his spouse. In doing that, the statutory

provision fails to meet the touchstone of Article 21. Section 497 deprives a

woman of her autonomy, dignity and privacy. It compounds the encroachment on

her right to life and personal liberty by adopting a notion of marriage which

subverts true equality. Equality is subverted by lending the sanctions of the penal

law to a gender biased approach to the relationship of a man and a woman. The

statute confounds paternalism as an instrument for protecting marital stability. It

defines the sanctity of marriage in terms of a hierarchical ordering which is

skewed against the woman. The law gives unequal voices to partners in a

relationship.

This judgment has dwelt on the importance of sexual autonomy as a value which

is integral to life and personal liberty under Article 21. Individuals in a

relationship, whether within or outside marriage, have a legitimate expectation

that each will provide to the other the same element of companionship and

respect for choices. Respect for sexual autonomy, it must be emphasized is

founded on the equality between spouses and partners and the recognition by

each of them of the dignity of the other. Control over sexuality attaches to the

human element in each individual. Marriage – whether it be a sacrament or

contract – does not result in ceding of the autonomy of one spouse to another.

70
PART G

60 Recognition of sexual autonomy as inhering in each individual and of the

elements of privacy and dignity have a bearing on the role of the state in

regulating the conditions and consequences of marital relationships. There is a

fundamental reason which militates against criminalization of adultery. Its

genesis lies in the fact that criminalizing an act is not a valid constitutional

response to a sexual relationship outside the fold of marriage. Adultery in the

course of a subsisting marital relationship may, and very often does question the

commitment of the spouse to the relationship. In many cases, a sexual

relationship of one of the spouses outside of the marriage may lead to the end of

the marital relationship. But in other cases, such a relationship may not be the

cause but the consequence of a pre-existing disruption of the marital tie. All too

often, spouses who have drifted apart irrevocably may be compelled for reasons

personal to them to continue with the veneer of a marriage which has ended for

all intents and purposes. The interminably long delay of the law in the resolution

of matrimonial conflicts is an aspect which cannot be ignored. The realities of

human existence are too complex to place them in closed categories of right and

wrong and to subject all that is considered wrong with the sanctions of penal law.

Just as all conduct which is not criminal may not necessarily be ethically just, all

conduct which is inappropriate does not justify being elevated to a criminal

wrongdoing.

61 The state undoubtedly has a legitimate interest in regulating many aspects

of marriage. That is the foundation on which the state does regulate rights,

71
PART G

entitlements and duties, primarily bearing on its civil nature. Breach by one of the

spouses of a legal norm may constitute a ground for dissolution or annulment.

When the state enacts and enforces such legislation, it does so on the postulate

that marriage as a social institution has a significant bearing on the social fabric.

But in doing so, the state is equally governed by the norms of a liberal

Constitution which emphasise dignity, equality and liberty as its cardinal values.

The legitimate aims of the state may, it must be recognized, extend to imposing

penal sanctions for certain acts within the framework of marriage. Physical and

emotional abuse and domestic violence are illustrations of the need for legislative

intervention. The Indian state has legitimately intervened in other situations such

as by enacting anti dowry legislation or by creating offences dealing with the

harassment of women for dowry within a marital relationship. The reason why

this constitutes a legitimate recourse to the sovereign authority of the state to

criminalize conduct is because the acts which the state proscribes are

deleterious to human dignity. In criminalizing certain types of wrongdoing against

women, the state intervenes to protect the fundamental rights of every woman to

live with dignity. Consequently, it is important to underscore that this judgment

does not question the authority and even the duty of the state to protect the

fundamental rights of women from being trampled upon in unequal societal

structures. Adultery as an offence does not fit that paradigm. In criminalizing

certain acts, Section 497 has proceeded on a hypothesis which is deeply

offensive to the dignity of women. It is grounded in paternalism, solicitous of

patriarchal values and subjugates the woman to a position where the law

72
PART H

disregards her sexuality. The sexuality of a woman is part of her inviolable core.

Neither the state nor the institution of marriage can disparage it. By reducing the

woman to the status of a victim and ignoring her needs, the provision penalizing

adultery disregards something which is basic to human identity. Sexuality is a

definitive expression of identity. Autonomy over one’s sexuality has been central

to human urges down through the ages. It has a constitutional foundation as

intrinsic to autonomy. It is in this view of the matter that we have concluded that

Section 497 is violative of the fundamental rights to equality and liberty as

indeed, the right to pursue a meaningful life within the fold of Articles 14 and 21.

62 The hallmark of a truly transformative Constitution is that it promotes and

engenders societal change. To consider a free citizen as the property of another

is an anathema to the ideal of dignity. Section 497 denies the individual identity

of a married woman, based on age-old societal stereotypes which characterised

women as the property of their spouse. It is the duty of this Court to break these

stereotypes and promote a society which regards women as equal citizens in all

spheres of life- irrespective of whether these spheres may be regarded as ‘public’

or ‘private’.

H      Towards transformative justice

63 Constitutional values infuse the letter of the law with meaning. True to its

transformative vision, the text of the Constitution has, time and again, been

interpreted to challenge hegemonic structures of power and secure the values of

73
PART H

dignity and equality for its citizens. One of the most significant of the battles for

equal citizenship in the country has been fought by women. Feminists have

overcome seemingly insurmountable barriers to ensure a more egalitarian

existence for future generations. However, the quest for equality continues.

While there has been a considerable degree of reform in the formal legal system,

there is an aspect of women’s lives where their subordination has historically

been considered beyond reproach or remedy. That aspect is the family. Marriage

is a significant social institution where this subordination is pronounced, with

entrenched structures of patriarchy and romantic paternalism shackling women

into a less than equal existence.

64 The law on adultery, conceived in Victorian morality, considers a married

woman the possession of her husband: a passive entity, bereft of agency to

determine her course of life. The provision seeks to only redress perceived harm

caused to the husband. This notion is grounded in stereotypes about permissible

actions in a marriage and the passivity of women. Fidelity is only expected of the

female spouse. This anachronistic conception of both, a woman who has entered

into marriage as well as the institution of marriage itself, is antithetical to

constitutional values of equality, dignity and autonomy.

In enforcing the fundamental right to equality, this Court has evolved a test of

manifest arbitrariness to be employed as a check against state action or

legislation which has elements of caprice, irrationality or lacks an adequate

74
PART H

determining principle. The principle on which Section 497 rests is the

preservation of the sexual exclusivity of a married woman – for the benefit of her

husband, the owner of her sexuality. Significantly, the criminal provision exempts

from sanction if the sexual act was with the consent and connivance of the

husband. The patriarchal underpinnings of Section 497 render the provision

manifestly arbitrary.

65 The constitutional guarantee of equality rings hollow when eviscerated of

its substantive content. To construe Section 497 in a vacuum (as did Sowmithri

Vishnu) or in formalistic terms (as did Revathi) is a refusal to recognise and

address the subjugation that women have suffered as a consequence of the

patriarchal order. Section 497 is a denial of substantive equality in that it re-

inforces the notion that women are unequal participants in a marriage; incapable

of freely consenting to a sexual act in a legal order which regards them as the

sexual property of their spouse.

66 This Court has recognised sexual privacy as a natural right, protected

under the Constitution. To shackle the sexual freedom of a woman and allow the

criminalization of consensual relationships is a denial of this right. Section 497

denudes a married woman of her agency and identity, employing the force of law

to preserve a patriarchal conception of marriage which is at odds with

constitutional morality:

“Infidelity was born on the day that natural flows of sexual
desire were bound into the legal and formal permanence of
marriage; in the process of ensuring male control over

75
PART H

progeny and property, women were chained within the fetters
of fidelity.”137

Constitutional protections and freedoms permeate every aspect of a citizen’s life

- the delineation of private or public spheres become irrelevant as far as the

enforcement of constitutional rights is concerned. Therefore, even the intimate

personal sphere of marital relations is not exempt from constitutional scrutiny.

The enforcement of forced female fidelity by curtailing sexual autonomy is an

affront to the fundamental right to dignity and equality.

67 Criminal law must be in consonance with constitutional morality. The law

on adultery enforces a construct of marriage where one partner is to cede her

sexual autonomy to the other. Being antithetical to the constitutional guarantees

of liberty, dignity and equality, Section 497 does not pass constitutional muster.

We hold and declare that:

1) Section 497 lacks an adequately determining principle to criminalize

consensual sexual activity and is manifestly arbitrary. Section 497 is a

denial of substantive equality as it perpetuates the subordinate status

ascribed to women in marriage and society. Section 497 violates Article 14

of the Constitution;

137Nivedita Menon, Seeing like a Feminist, Zubaan Books (2012) at page 135; quoting Archana Verma, Stree
Vimarsh Ke Mahotsav (2010)

76
PART H

2) Section 497 is based on gender stereotypes about the role of women and

violates the non-discrimination principle embodied in Article 15 of the

Constitution;

3) Section 497 is a denial of the constitutional guarantees of dignity, liberty,

privacy and sexual autonomy which are intrinsic to Article 21 of the

Constitution; and

4) Section 497 is unconstitutional.

The decisions in Sowmithri Vishnu and Revathi are overruled.

…..…..….............................................J
[Dr Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud]

New Delhi;

September 27, 2018.

77
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

CRIMINAL ORIGINAL JURISDICTION

WRIT PETITION (CRIMINAL) NO. 194 OF 2017

Joseph Shine …Petitioner

Versus

Union of India …Respondent

JUDGMENT

INDU MALHOTRA, J.

1. The present Writ Petition has been filed to challenge the

constitutional validity of Section 497 of the Indian Penal

Code (hereinafter referred to as I.P.C.) which makes

„adultery‟ a criminal offence, and prescribes a

punishment of imprisonment upto five years and fine.

Section 497 reads as under:

―497. Adultery — Whoever has sexual
intercourse with a person who is and
whom he knows or has reason to
believe to be the wife of another man,
without the consent or connivance of
that man, such sexual intercourse not

1
amounting to the offence of rape, is
guilty of the offence of adultery, and
shall be punished with imprisonment of
either description for a term which may
extend to five years, or with fine, or
with both. In such case the wife shall
not be punishable as an abettor.‖

2. The Petitioner has also challenged Section 198(2) of the

Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, (hereinafter referred to

as “Cr.P.C”). Section 198(2) reads as under:

―For the purpose of sub-section (1), no
person other than the husband of the
woman shall be deemed to be
aggrieved by any offence punishable
under section 497 or section 498 of the
said Code.

Provided that in the absence of the
husband, some person who had care
of the woman on his behalf at the time
when such offence was committed
may, with the leave of the Court, make
a complaint on his behalf.‖

3. The word „adultery‟1 derives its origin from the French

word „avoutre‘, which has evolved from the Latin verb

„adulterium‘ which means “to corrupt.” The concept of a

wife corrupting the marital bond with her husband by

1 The New international Webster‟s Comprehensive Dictionary of the English Language,
Deluxe Encyclopedic Edition, Trident Press International (1996 Edn.) at page 21.

2
having a relationship outside the marriage, was termed

as „adultery‟.

This definition of adultery emanated from the historical

context of Victorian morality, where a woman considered

to be the „property‟ of her husband; and the offence was

committed only by the adulterous man. The adulterous

woman could not be proceeded against as an „abettor‟,

even though the relationship was consensual.

4. THE DOCTRINE OF COVERTURE

Adultery, as an offence, was not a crime under

Common Law, in England. It was punishable by the

ecclesiastical courts which exercised jurisdiction over

sacramental matters that included marriage, separation,

legitimacy, succession to personal property, etc.2

In England, coverture determined the rights of married

women, under Common Law. A „feme sole‘ transformed

into a „feme covert‘ after marriage. „Feme covert‘ was

based on the doctrine of „Unity of Persons‟ – i.e. the

husband and wife were a single legal identity. This was

2 Outhwaite, R.B. (2007). The Rise and Fall of the English Ecclesiastical Courts, 1500–1860.
Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press

3
based on notions of biblical morality that a husband and

wife were „one in flesh and blood‟. The effect of „coverture‟

was that a married woman‟s legal rights were subsumed

by that of her husband. A married woman could not own

property, execute legal documents, enter into a contract,

or obtain an education against her husband's wishes, or

retain a salary for herself.3

The principle of „coverture‟ was described in William

Blackstone's Commentaries on the Laws of England as

follows:4

― By marriage, the husband and wife
are one person in law: that is, the very
being or legal existence of the woman is
suspended during the marriage, or at
least is incorporated and consolidated
into that of the husband: under whose
wing, protection, and cover, she
performs everything; and is therefore
called in our law-French a feme-covert;

is said to be covert-baron, or under the
protection and influence of her
husband, her baron, or lord; and her
condition during her marriage is called
her coverture. Upon this principle, of a
union of person in husband and wife,
depend almost all the legal rights,
duties, and disabilities, that either of
them acquires by the marriage. I speak
3 Fernandez, Angela “Tapping Reeve, Nathan Dane, and James Kent: Three Fading
Federalists on Marital Unity.” Married Women and the Law: Coverture in England and the
Common Law World, edited by Tim Stretton and Krista J. Kesselring, McGill-Queen's
University Press, 2013, pp. 192–216.

4 Blackstone‘s Commentaries on the Laws of England, Books III IV (8th Edn.), 1778

4
not at present of the rights of property,
but of such as are merely personal. For
this reason, a man cannot grant
anything to his wife, or enter into
covenant with her: for the grant would
be to suppose her separate existence;

and to covenant with her, would be only
to covenant with himself: and therefore
it is also generally true, that all
contracts made between husband and
wife, when single, are voided by the
intermarriage.‖
(Emphasis supplied)

On this basis, a wife did not have an individual legal

liability for her misdeeds, since it was legally assumed

that she was acting under the orders of her husband, and

generally a husband and wife were not allowed to testify

either for, or against each other.

Medieval legal treatises, such as the Bracton5,

described the nature of „coverture‟ and its impact on

married women's legal actions. Bracton (supra) states

that husbands wielded power over their wives, being their

„rulers‟ and „custodians of their property‟. The institution

of marriage came under the jurisdiction of ecclesiastical

courts. It made wives live in the shadow of their

husbands, virtually „invisible‟ to the law.

5 Bracton: De Legibus Et Consuetudinibus Angliæ (Bracton on the Laws and Customs of
England attributed to Henry of Bratton, c. 1210-1268) Vol III, pg. 115
Available at http://bracton.law.harvard.edu/index.html

5
The principle of coverture subsisted throughout the

marriage of the couple. It was not possible to obtain a

divorce through civil courts, which refused to invade into

the jurisdiction of the church. Adultery was the only

ground available to obtain divorce.

The origin of adultery under Common Law was

discussed in the English case Pritchard v. Pritchard and

Sims6, wherein it was held that:

―In 1857, when marriage in England
was still a union for life which could be
broken only by private Act of
Parliament, under the common law,
three distinct causes of action available
to a husband whose rights in his wife
were violated by a third party, who
enticed her away, or who harboured
her or who committed adultery with
her…In the action for adultery, known
as criminal conversation, which dates
from before the time of BRACTON, and
consequently lay originally in trespass,
the act of adultery itself was the cause
of action and the damages punitive at
large. It lay whether the adultery
resulted in the husband‘s losing his
wife‘s society and services or not. All
three causes of action were based on
the recognition accorded by the common
law to the husband‘s propriety which
would have been hers had she been
feme sole.‖
(Emphasis supplied)

6 [1966] 3 All E.R. 601

6
In the Victorian Era7, women were denied the exercise

of basic rights and liberties, and had little autonomy over

their choices. Their status was pari materia with that of

land, cattle and crop; forming a part of the „estate‟ of their

fathers as daughters prior to marriage, and as the „estate‟

of their husband post-marriage.8

Lord Wilson in his Speech titled “Out of his shadow:

The long struggle of wives under English Law”9 speaks of

the plight of women during this era:

―8. An allied consequence of the wife‘s
coverture was that she was not legally
able to enter into a contract. Apart from
anything else, she had no property
against which to enforce any order
against her for payment under a
contract; so it was only a small step for
the law to conclude that she did not
have the ability to enter into the
contract in the first place. If, however,
the wife went into a shop and ordered
goods, say of food or clothing, which the
law regarded as necessary for the
household, the law presumed, unless
the husband proved to the contrary,
that she had entered into the contract

7 1807 – 1901 A.D.
8 Margot Finn (1996). Women, Consumption and Coverture in England, c. 1760–1860.

The Historical Journal, 39, pp 703-722
9 The High Sheriff of Oxfordshire‟s Annual Law Lecture given by Lord Wilson on 9 October
2012
Available at: https://www.supremecourt.uk/docs/speech-121009.pdf

7
as his authorised agent. So the
shopkeeper could sue him for the price
if the wife had obtained the goods on
credit.

9. In the seventeenth century there was
a development in the law relating to this
so-called agency of necessity. It was an
attempt to serve the needs of wives
whose husbands had deserted them.

The law began to say that, if a deserted
wife had not committed adultery, she
could buy from the shopkeeper all such
goods as were necessary for her and,
even if (as was highly likely) the
husband had not authorised her to buy
them, he was liable to pay the
shopkeeper for them. But the
shopkeeper had a problem. How was
he to know whether the wife at the
counter had been deserted and had not
committed adultery? Sometimes a
husband even placed a notice in the
local newspaper to the effect, true or
untrue, that his wife had deserted him
or had committed adultery and that
accordingly he would not be liable to
pay for her purchase of necessaries.….‖

The remnants of „coverture‟ sowed the seeds for the

introduction of „Criminal Conversation‟ as an actionable

tort by a husband against his wife‟s paramour in

England.

Criminal Conversation as a tort, gave a married man

the right to claim damages against the man who had

entered into a sexual relationship with his wife. The
8
consent of the wife to the relationship, did not affect the

entitlement of her husband to sue.

The legal position of matrimonial wrongs underwent a

significant change with the passing of the Matrimonial

Causes Act, 1857 in England.10 Section 59 of this Act

abolished the Common Law action for “criminal

conversation”.11 Section 33 empowered the Courts to

award damages to the husband of the paramour for

adultery.12 The claim for damages for adultery was to be

tried on the same principles, and in the same manner, as

actions for „criminal conversation‟ which were formerly

tried at Common Law.13

The status of the wife, however, even after the passing

of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1857 remained as

10 Matrimonial Causes Act 1857; 1857 (20 21 Vict.) C. 85
11 LIX. No Action for Criminal Conversation:
“After this Act shall have come into operation no Action shall be maintainable in England for
Criminal Conversation.”
12 XXXIII. Husband may claim Damages from Adulterers:

“Any Husband may, either in a Petition for Dissolution of Marriage or for Judicial
Separation, or in a Petition limited to such Object only, claim Damages from any Person on
the Ground of his having committed Adultery with the Wife of such Petitioner, and such
Petition shall be served on the alleged Adulterer and the Wife, unless the Court shall
dispense with such Service, or direct some other Service to be substituted; and the Claim
made by every such Petition shall be heard and tried on the same principle, in the same
manner, and subject to the same or the like rules and regulations as actions for criminal
conversations are now tried and decided in Courts of Common Law; and all the enactments
herein contain with reference to the hearing and decision of Petitions to the Courts shall, so
far as may be necessary, be deemed applicable to the hearing and decision of Petitions
presented under this enactment..‖
13 Id.

9
„property of the husband‟, since women had no right to

sue either their adulterous husband or his paramour.

Gender equality between the spouses came to be

recognised in some measure in England, with the passing

of the Matrimonial Causes Act, 1923 which made

„adultery‟ a ground for divorce, available to both spouses,

instead of only the husband of the adultrous wife. The

right of the husband to claim damages from his wife‟s

paramour came to be abolished by The Law Reform

(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act of 1970 on January 1,

1971. In England, adultery has always been a civil wrong,

and not a penal offence.

5. SECTION 497 – HISTORICAL BACKGROUND

5.1. The Indo-Brahmanic traditions prevalent in India

mandated the chastity of a woman to be regarded

as her prime virtue, to be closely guarded to

ensure the purity of the male bloodline. The

objective was not only to protect the bodily

integrity of the woman, but to ensure that the

husband retains control over her sexuality,

10
confirming her „purity‟ in order to ensure the

purity of his own bloodline.14

5.2. The first draft of the I.P.C. released by the Law

Commission of India in 1837 did not include

“adultery” as an offence. Lord Macaulay was of

the view that adultery or marital infidelity was a

private wrong between the parties, and not a

criminal offence.15

The views of Lord Macaulay were, however,

overruled by the other members of the Law

Commission, who were of the opinion that the

existing remedy for „adultery‟ under Common Law

would be insufficient for the „poor natives‟, who

would have no recourse against the paramour of

their wife.16

5.3. The debate that took place in order to determine

whether „adultery‟ should be a criminal offence in

India was recorded in „Note Q‟ of „A Penal Code

14 Uma Chakravarti, Gendering Caste Through a Feminist Lens, STREE Publications (2003)
at page 71.

15 156th Report on the Indian Penal Code (Vol. I), Law Commission of India at para 9.43 at

page 169
Available at: http://lawcommissionofindia.nic.in/101-169/Report156Vol1.pdf
16 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), The Second Report on

the Indian Penal Code

11
prepared by the Indian Law Commissioners‘ 17.

The existing laws18 for the punishment of

adultery were considered to be altogether

inefficacious for preventing the injured husband

from taking matters into his own hands.

The Law Commissioners considered that by

not treating „adultery‟ as a criminal offence, it

may give sanction to immorality. The Report19

states:

― Some who admit that the penal
law now existing on this subject is
in practice of little or no use, yet
think that the Code ought to
contain a provision against
adultery. They think that such a
provision, though inefficacious for
the repressing of vice, would be
creditable to the Indian
Government, and that by omitting
such a provision we should give a
sanction to immorality. They say,
and we believe with truth, that the
higher class of natives consider
the existing penal law on the
subject as far too lenient, and are
unable to understand on what
principle adultery is treated with

17 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), Notes of Lord Thomas
Babington Macaulay, Note Q
18 The laws governing adultery in the Colonial areas were laid down in Regulation XVII of

1817, and Regulation VII of 1819; the Law Commissioners observed that the strict
evidentiary and procedural requirements, deter the people from seeking redress.

19 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), The Second Report on

the Indian Penal Code

12
more tenderness than forgery or
perjury.

…That some classes of the natives
of India disapprove of the lenity
with which adultery is now
punished we fully believe, but this
in our opinion is a strong
argument against punishing
adultery at all. There are only two
courses which in our opinion can
properly be followed with respect
to this and other great
immoralities. They ought to be
punished very severely, or they
ought not to be punished at all.

The circumstance that they are left
altogether unpunished does not
prove that the Legislature does not
regard them with disapprobation.

But when they are made
punishable the degree of severity
of the punishment will always be
considered as indicating the
degree of disapprobation with
which the Legislature regards
them. We have no doubt that the
natives would be far less shocked
by the total silence of the penal
law touching adultery than by
seeing an adulterer sent to prison
for a few months while a coiner is
imprisoned for fourteen years.‖
(Emphasis supplied)

The Law Commissioners in their Report (supra)

further stated:

―…..The population seems to be
divided into two classes – those

13
whom neither the existing
punishment nor any punishment
which we should feel ourselves
justified in proposing will satisfy,
and those who consider the injury
produced by adultery as one for
which a pecuniary compensation
will sufficiently atone. Those
whose feelings of honour are
painfully affected by the infidelity
of their wives will not apply to the
tribunals at all. Those whose
feelings are less delicate will be
satisfied by a payment of money.

Under such circumstances we
think it best to treat adultery
merely as a civil injury.

…No body proposes that adultery
should be punished with a
severity at all proportioned to the
misery which it produces in cases
where there is strong affection and
a quick sensibility to family
honour. We apprehend that among
the higher classes in this country
nothing short of death would be
considered as an expiation for
such a wrong. In such a state of
society we think it far better that
the law should inflict no
punishment than that it should
inflict a punishment which would
be regarded as absurdly and
immorally lenient.‖
(Emphasis supplied)

The Law Commissioners considered the plight

of women in this country, which was much worse

than that of women in France and England. „Note
14
Q‟ (surpa) records this as the reason for not

punishing women for the offence of adultery.

The relevant extract of „Note Q‟ is reproduced

herein below:

― There is yet another consideration
which we cannot wholly leave out
of sight. Though we well know that
the dearest interests of the human
race are closely connected with the
chastity of women, and the
sacredness of the nuptial contract,
we cannot but feel that there are
some peculiarities in the state of
society in this country which may
well lead a humane man to pause
before he determines to punish the
infidelity of wives. The condition of
the women of this country is
unhappily very different from that
of the women of England and
France. They are married while still
children. They are often neglected
for other wives while still young.

They share the attention (sic) of a
husband with several rivals. To
make laws for punishing the
inconstancy of the wife while the
law admits the privilege of the
husband to fill his zenana with
women, is a course which we are
most reluctant to adopt. We are not
so visionary as to think of attacking
by law an evil so deeply rooted in
the manners of the people of this
country as polygamy. We leave it to
the slow, but we trust the certain
operation of education and of time.

But while it exists, while it

15
continues to produce its never
failing effects on the happiness and
respectability of women, we are not
inclined to throw into a scale
already too much depressed the
additional weight of the penal law.

We have given the reasons which
lead us to believe that any
enactment on this subject would be
nugatory. And we are inclined to
think that if not nugatory it would
be oppressive. It would strengthen
hands already too strong. It would
weaken a class already too weak.

It will be time enough to guard the
matrimonial contract by penal
sanctions when that contract
becomes just, reasonable, and
mutually beneficial.‖
(Emphasis supplied)

Colonel Sleeman opposed the reasoning of the

Law Commissioners on this subject. The

„backwardness of the natives‟ to take recourse to

the courts for redress in cases of adultery, arose

from „the utter hopelessness on their part of

getting a conviction.‟ He was of the view that if

adultery is not made a crime, the adulterous

wives will alone bear the brunt of the rage of their

husbands. They might be tortured or even

poisoned. In his view, offences such as adultery

16
were inexcusable and must be punished. Colonel

Sleeman observed:

“ The silence of the Penal Code
will give still greater impunity to
the seducers, while their victims
will, in three cases out of four, be
murdered, or driven to commit
suicide. Where husbands are in
the habit of poisoning their guilty
wives from the want of legal
means of redress, they will
sometimes poison those who are
suspected upon insufficient
grounds, and the innocent will
suffer.

…Sometimes the poorest
persons will refuse pecuniary
compensations; but generally they
will be glad to get what the heads
of their caste or circle of society
may consider sufficient to defray
the expenses of a second
marriage. They dare not live in
adultery, they would be outcasts if
they did; they must be married
according to the forms of their
caste, and it is reasonable that the
seducer of the wife should be
made to defray these expenses for
the injured husband. The rich will,
of course, always refuse
pecuniary compensation, and for
the same reason that they would
never prosecute the seducer in a
civil court. The poor could never
afford so to prosecute in such a
court; and, as I have said, the
silence of the Penal Code would be
a solemn pledge of impunity to the

17
guilty seducer, under the efficient
government like ours, that can
prevent the husband and father
from revenging themselves except
upon the females.‖ 20
(Emphasis supplied)

This debate along with the recommendation of

the Law Commissioners was considered by the

Indian Law Commissioners while drafting the

Indian Penal Code.

5.4. The relevant extract from the discussion on

whether to criminalize adultery was as follows:

“We have observed that adultery is
recognised as an offence by the existing
laws of all the Presidencies, and that
an Act has been lately passed by the
Governor-General of India in Council for
regulating the punishment of the offence
in the Bombay territories. Adultery is
punishable by the Code Penal of
France. It is provided for in the Code of
Louisiana. The following are Mr.
Livingston‘s observations on the
subject. ―Whether adultery should be
considered as an offence against public
morality, or left to the operation of the
civil laws, has been the subject of much
discussion. As far as I am informed, it
figures in the penal law of all nations
except the English; and some of their
most celebrated lawyers have
considered the omission as a defect.

20 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), The Second Report on
the Indian Penal Code

18
Neither the immorality of the act, nor
its injurious consequences on the
happiness of females, and very
frequently on the peace of society and
the lives of its members, can be denied.

The reason then why it should go
unpunished does not seem very clear. It
is emphatically one of that nature to
which I have just referred, in which the
resentment of the injured party will
prompt him to take vengeance into his
own hands, and commit a greater
offence, if the laws of his country refuse
to punish the lesser. It is the nature of
man, and no legislation can alter it, to
protect himself where the laws refuse
their aid; very frequently where they do
not; but where they will not give
protection against injury, it is in vain
that they attempt to punish him who
supplies by his own energy their
remissness. Where the law refuses to
punish this offence, the injured party
will do it for himself, he will break the
public peace, and commit the greatest of
all crimes, and he is rarely or never
punished. Assaults, duels,
assassinations, poisonings, will be the
consequence. They cannot be
prevented; but, perhaps, by giving the
aid of the law to punish the offence
which they are intended to avenge, they
will be less frequent; and it will, by
taking away the pretext for the
atrocious acts, in a great measure
insure the infliction of the punishment
they deserve. It is for these reasons
that the offence of adultery forms a
chapter of this title.‖

Having given mature consideration to
the subject, we have, after some

19
hesitation, come to the conclusion that it
is not advisable to exclude this offence
from the Code. We think the reasons for
continuing to treat it as a subject for the
cognizance of the criminal courts
preponderate.….

…While we think that the offence of
adultery ought not to be omitted from
the Code, we would limit its cognizance
to adultery committed with a married
woman, and considering that there is
much weight in the last remark in Note
Q, regarding the condition of the women
of this country, in deference to it we
would render the male offender alone
liable to punishment. We would,
however, put the parties accused of
adultery on trial together, and empower
the Court, in the event of their
conviction, to pronounce a decree of
divorce against the guilty woman, if the
husband sues for it, at the same time
that her paramour is sentenced to
punishment by imprisonment or fine. By
Mr. Livingstone‘s Code, the woman
forfeits her ‗matrimonial gains‘, but is
not liable to other punishment.

We would adopt Colonel Sleeman‘s
suggestion as to the punishment of the
male offender, limiting it to
imprisonment not exceeding five years,
instead of seven years allowed at
present, and sanctioning the imposition
of a fine payable to the husband as an
alternative, or in addition.‖21
(Emphasis supplied)

21 A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), The Second Report on
the Indian Penal Code

20
5.5. It was in this backdrop that Section 497 came to

be included in the I.P.C.

6. THE QUEST FOR REFORM

6.1. In June 1971, the 42nd Report of the Law

Commission of India22 analysed various

provisions of the I.P.C. and made several

important recommendations. With respect to the

offence of „adultery‟, the Law Commission

recommended that the adulterous woman must

be made equally liable for prosecution, and the

punishment be reduced from 5 years to 2 years.

This was however, not given effect to.

6.2. In August 1997, the Law Commission of India in

its 156th Report23 noted that the offence of

adultery under Section 497 is very limited in

scope in comparison to the misconduct of

adultery in divorce (civil proceedings). The section

confers only upon the husband the right to

22 42nd Report on the Indian Penal Code, Law Commission of India
Available at: http://lawcommissionofindia.nic.in/1-50/report42.pdf
23 156th Report on the Indian Penal Code (Vol. I), Law Commission of India, pages 169 - 172

Available at: http://lawcommissionofindia.nic.in/101-169/Report156Vol1.pdf

21
prosecute the adulterous male, but does not

confer any right on the aggrieved wife to

prosecute her adultererous husband. It was

recommended to introduce an amendment to

incorporate the concept of equality between sexes

in marriage vis-à-vis the offence of adultery. The

proposed change was to reflect the

transformation of women‟s status in Indian

society.

                          However,        the     recommendation           was      not

accepted.

6.3. In March 2003, the Malimath Committee on

Reforms of Criminal Justice System24, was

constituted by the Government of India, which

considered comprehensive measures for

revamping the Criminal Justice System. The

Malimath Committee made the following

recommendation with respect to “Adultery”:

“16.3.1 A man commits the offence
of adultery if he has sexual

24 Report of the Committee on Reforms of Criminal Justice System, Government of India,
Ministry of Home Affairs, chaired by Justice V.S. Malimath, (2003)
Available at:https://mha.gov.in/sites/default/files/criminal_justice_system.pdf

22
intercourse with the wife of
another man without the consent
or connivance of the husband.

The object of this Section is to
preserve the sanctity of the
marriage. The society abhors
marital infidelity. Therefore, there
is no good reason for not meting
out similar treatment to wife who
has sexual intercourse with a
married man.

16.3.2 The Committee therefore
suggests that Section 497 of the
I.P.C. should be suitably amended
to the effect that ―whosoever has
sexual intercourse with the spouse
of any other person is guilty of
adultery……‖
(Emphasis supplied)

The recommendations of the Malimath

Committee on the amendment of Section 497

were referred to the Law Commission of India,

which took up the matter for study and

examination. The same is pending consideration.

7. CONTEMPORARY INTERNATIONAL JURISPRUDENCE

Before addressing the issue of the constitutional

validity of Section 497 I.P.C., it would be of interest to

review how „adultery‟ is treated in various jurisdictions

around the world.

23

Adultery has been defined differently across various

jurisdictions. For instance, adultery charges may require

the adulterous relationship to be “open and notorious,”25

or be more than a single act of infidelity, or require

cohabitation between the adulterer and the adulteress.

Such a definition would require a finding on the degree of

infidelity.26 In other instances, the spouses may also be

punishable for adultery. Such a provision raises a doubt

as to how that may secure the relationship between the

spouses and the institution of marriage. Another

variation, in some jurisdictions is that cognizance of the

offence of adultery is taken only at the instance of the

State, and its enforcement is generally a rarity.

7.1. Various legal systems have found adulterous

conduct sufficiently injurious to justify some form

of criminal sanction. Such conduct is one, which

the society is not only unwilling to approve, but

also attaches a criminal label to it.

 United States of America

25 Illinois Criminal Code, 720 ILCS 5/11-35, Adultery
“(a) A person commits adultery when he or she has sexual intercourse with another not his or
her spouse, if the behavior is open and notorious,…”
26 Martin Siegel, For Better or for Worse: Adultery, Crime the Constitution, 30 Journal Of

Family Law 45, 51-52 (1991)

24
In the United States of America, 17 out of 50

States continue to treat „adultery‟ as a criminal

offence under the State law.27 The

characterization of the offence differs from State

to State.

In the case of Oliverson v. West Valley City28,

the constitutionality of the Utah adultery

statute29 was challenged. It was contended that

the statute offends the right to privacy and

violates substantive due process of law under the

U.S. Constitution. The U.S. Court held that

adultery is a transgression against the

relationship of marriage which the law endeavors

to protect. The State of Utah had an interest in

preventing adultery. Whether to use criminal

sanction was considered a matter particularly

within the ambit of the legislature. Given the

special interest of the State, it was considered

rational to classify adultery as a crime.

27 Abhinav Sekhri, The Good, The Bad, and The Adulterous: Criminal Law and Adultery in
India, 10 Socio Legal Review 47 (2014)
28 875 F. Supp. 1465
29 Utah Code Ann. 76-7-103, ―(1) A married person commits adultery when he voluntarily has

sexual intercourse with a person other than his spouse. (2) Adultery is a class B
misdemeanour.‖

25
A similar provision exists in the State of New

York, wherein adultery is treated as a Class B

misdemeanor.30

By way of contrast, in the State of North

Carolina, it was held in the Judgment of Hobbs v.

Smith31, that adultery should not be treated as a

criminal offence. The Superior Court of North

Carolina, relied on the judgment of the U.S.

Supreme Court, in Lawrence v. Texas32 wherein it

was recognized that the right to liberty provides

substantial protection to consenting adults with

respect to decisions regarding their private sexual

conduct. The decision of an individual to commit

adultery is a personal decision, which is

sufficiently similar to other personal choices

regarding marriage, family, procreation,

contraception, and sexuality, which fall within

the area of privacy. Following this reasoning in

Lawrence, the Superior Court of the State of

30 New York Penal Laws, Article 255.17-Adultery, “A person is guilty of adultery when he
engages in sexual intercourse with another person at a time when he has a living spouse, or
the other person has a living spouse. Adultery is a class B misdemeanour.”
31 No. 15 CVS 5646 (2017) [Superior Court of North Carolina)
32 539 US 558 (2003)

26
North Carolina held that the State Law

criminalizing adultery violated the substantive

due process, and the right to liberty under the

Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution,

and the provision criminalizing adultery was

declared unconstitutional.

 Canada

In Canada, the Criminal Code of Canada under

Section 172 imposes criminal sanctions for

adulterous conduct. This provision was

introduced in 191833, and continues to remain on

the Criminal Code.

The Criminal Code of Canada prohibits

endangering the morals of children in a home

where one “participates in adultery or sexual

immorality or indulges in habitual drunkenness

or any other form of vice.”

33 Criminal Code of Canada, 1985, Section 172, “(1) Every one who, in the home of a child,
participates in adultery or sexual immorality or indulges in habitual drunkenness or any
other form of vice, and thereby endangers the morals of the child or renders the home an
unfit place for the child to be in, is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment
for a term not exceeding two years.

(2) For the purposes of this section, ―child‖ means a person who is or appears to be under
the age of eighteen years.‖

27
Furthermore, Canada has a provision for

granting divorce in cases of “breakdown of

marriages”, and adultery is a ground for

establishing the same.34

 Malaysia

In Malaysia, adultery is punishable as a crime

under the Islamic Laws. However, the Law Reform

(Marriage and Divorce) Act, 1976 made it a civil

wrong, for all non-Muslims. Similar to the

position in Canada, this Act makes adultery a

ground for granting divorce, as it is a proof of

“Breakdown of Marriage”.35 Interestingly though,

the Act also allows either spouse, to be an

aggrieved party and claim damages from the

adulterer or adulteress.36

34 Divorce Act, 1968, ―Section 8 (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may, on application by
either or both spouses, grant a divorce to the spouse or spouses on the ground that there
has been a breakdown of their marriage.

(2) Breakdown of a marriage is established only if:

(a) …..

(b) the spouse against whom the divorce proceeding is brought has, since celebration of the
marriage,

(i) committed adultery, or …..‖
35 S. 54(1)(a), Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act, 1976. [Malaysia] states,

“54. (1) In its inquiry into the facts and circumstances alleged as causing or leading to the
breakdown of the marriage, the court shall have regard to one or more of the following facts,
that is to say:

(a) that the respondent has committed adultery and the petitioner finds it intolerable to live
with the respondent…..‖
36 S. 58, Law Reform (Marriage and Divorce) Act, 1976. [Malaysia] states,

28
 Japan

In Japan, the provision for adultery was

somewhat similar to the present Section 497 of

I.P.C.; it punished the woman and the adulterer

only on the basis of the complaint filed by the

husband. In case the act of adultery was

committed with the consent of the husband, there

would be no valid demand for prosecution of the

offence37. This provision has since been deleted.38

Adultery is now only a ground for divorce in

Japan under the Civil Code.39

 South Africa

―58. (1) On a petition for divorce in which adultery is alleged, or in the answer of a party to
the marriage praying for divorce and alleging adultery, the party shall make the alleged
adulterer or adulteress a co-respondent, unless excused by the court on special grounds
from doing so.

(2) A petition under subsection (1) may include a prayer that the co-respondent be
condemned in damages in respect of the alleged adultery.
(3) Where damages have been claimed against a co-respondent— (a) if, after the close of the
evidence for the petitioner, the court is of the opinion that there is not sufficient evidence
against the co-respondent to justify requiring him or her to reply, the co-respondent shall be
discharged from the proceedings; or (b) if, at the conclusion of the hearing, the court is
satisfied that adultery between the respondent and co-respondent has been proved, the
court may award the petitioner such damages as it may think fit, but so that the award
shall not include any exemplary or punitive element.‖
37 S. 183, Penal Code, 1907 [Japan], “Whoever commits adultery with a married woman will

be punished by prison upto two years. The same applies to the other party of the adultery.
These offences are only prosecuted on demand of the husband. If the husband has allowed
the Adultery, his demand is not valid.‖ [ as translated by Karl-Friedrich Lenz, in History of
Law in Japan since 1868, ed. Wilhelm Rohl, published by Brill, 2005, at page 623]
38 H. Meyers, ―Revision of Criminal Code of Japan‖ Washington Law Review State Bar

Journal, Vol. 25, (1950) at pp. 104-134
39 Article 770, Civil Code, 1896. [Japan], ―Article 770 (1) Only in the cases stated

in the following items may either husband or wife file a suit for divorce: (i) if a spouse has
committed an act of unchastity; ….‖

29
In South Africa, in the case of DE v. RH40 The

Constitutional Court of South Africa struck down

adultery as a ground for seeking compensation by

the aggrieved persons. The Court relied on an

earlier judgment of Green v. Fitzgerald41 wherein

it was held that the offence of adultery has fallen

in disuse, and ―has ceased to be regarded as a

crime‖.42 The Court noted that even though

adultery was of frequent occurrence in South

Africa, and the reports of divorce cases were daily

published in the newspapers in South Africa, the

authorities took no notice of the offence.

 Turkey

In Turkey, the decision of the Constitutional

Court of Turkey from 199643 is another instance

where the Court struck down the provision of

adultery as a criminal offence from the Turkish

Penal Code of 1926. The Court noted that the

provision was violative of the Right to Equality, as

40 RH v. DE (594/2013) [2014] ZASCA 133 (25 September 2014)
411914 AD 88
42 Id.

43 Anayasa Mahkemesi, 1996/15; 1996/34 (Sept. 23, 1996)
See also, Anayasa Mahakemsi, 1998/3; 1998/28 (June 23, 1998) and Anayasa
Mahakemsi, 1997/45. 1998/48 (July 16, 1998)

30
guaranteed by the Turkish Constitution since it

treated men and women differently for the same

act.

 South Korea

In South Korea, adultery as a criminal offence

was struck down by the Constitutional Court of

Korea in, what is popularly known as, the

Adultery Case of February 26, 201544. The

Constitutional Court of Korea held that Article

241, which provided for the offence of adultery,

was unconstitutional as it violated Article 10 of

the Constitution, which promotes the right to

personality, the right to pursue happiness, and

the right to self-determination. The right to self-

determination connotes the right to sexual self-

determination that is the freedom to choose

sexual activities and partners. Article 241 was

considered to restrict the right to privacy

protected under Article 17 of the Constitution

since it restricts activities arising out of sexual

44 Adultery Case, 27-1 (A) KCCR 20, February 26, 2015

31
life belonging to the intimate private domain.

Even though the provision had a legitimate object

to preserve marital fidelity between spouses, and

monogamy, the court struck it down as the

provision failed to achieve the “appropriateness of

means and least restrictiveness” The Court held

as follows:

―In recent years, the growing
perception of the Korean society
has changed in the area of
marriage and sex with the
changes of the traditional family
system and family members‘ role
and position, along with rapid
spread of individualism and
liberal views on sexual life. Sexual
life and love is a private matter,
which should not be subject to the
control of criminal punishment.

Despite it is unethical to violate
the marital fidelity, it should not
be punished by criminal law….

…..

…The exercise of criminal
punishment should be the last
resort for the clear danger against
substantial legal interests and
should be limited at least. It
belongs to a free domain of
individuals for an adult to have
voluntary sexual relationships, but
it may be regulated by law when
it is expressed and it is against
the good sexual culture and

32
practice. It would infringe on the
right to sexual self-determination
and to privacy for a State to
intervene and punish sexual life
which should be subject to sexual
morality and social orders.

The tendency of modern criminal
law directs that the State should
not exercise its authority in case
an act, in essence, belongs to
personal privacy and is not
socially harmful or in evident
violation of legal interests, despite
the act is in contradiction to
morality. According to this
tendency, it is a global trend to
abolish adultery crimes.

(Emphasis supplied)

The Court concluded that it was difficult to see

how criminalization of adultery could any longer

serve the public interest of protecting the

monogamy-based marriage system, maintain

good sexual culture, and the marital fidelity

between spouses. A consideration of Article 241

which punishes adultery failed to achieve the

appropriateness of means and least

restrictiveness. Since the provision excessively

restricted a person‟s sexual autonomy and

privacy by criminally punishing the private and

33
intimate domain of sexual life, the said penal

provision was said to have lost the balance of

State interest and individual autonomy.

8. PREVIOUS CHALLENGES TO ADULTERY IN INDIA

This court has previously considered challenges to

Section 497 inter alia on the ground that the impugned

Section was violative of Articles 14 and 15 of the

Constitution.

8.1. In Yusuf Abdul Aziz v. State of Bombay45, Section

497 was challenged before this Court inter alia on

the ground that it contravened Articles 14 and 15

of the Constitution, since the wife who is pari

delicto with the adulterous man, is not

punishable even as an “abettor.” A Constitution

Bench of this Court took the view that since

Section 497 was a special provision for the benefit

of women, it was saved by Article 15(3) which is

an enabling provision providing for protective

discrimination.

45 1954 SCR 930

34
In Yusuf Aziz (supra), the Court noted that

both Articles 14 and 15 read together validated

Section 497.

8.2. Later, in Sowmithri Vishnu v. Union of India

Anr.46, a three-judge bench of this Court

addressed a challenge to Section 497 as being

unreasonable and arbitrary in the classification

made between men and women, unjustifiably

denied women the right to prosecute her husband

under Section 497.

It was contended that Section 497 conferred a

right only upon the husband of the adulterous

woman to prosecute the adulterer; however, no

such right was bestowed upon the wife of an

adulterous man. The petitioners therein

submitted that Section 497 was a flagrant

violation of gender discrimination against women.

The Court opined that the challenge had no legal

basis to rest upon. The Court observed that the

argument really centred on the definition, which

46 (1985) Supp SCC 137

35
was required to be re-cast to punish both the

male and female offender for the offence of

adultery.

  After     referring   to     the   recommendations

contained in the 42nd Report of the Law

Commission of India, the Court noted that there

were two opinions on the desirability of retaining

Section 497. However it concluded by stating that

Section 497 could not be struck down on the

ground that it would be desirable to delete it from

the statute books.

The Court repelled the plea on the ground that

it is commonly accepted that it is the man who is

the „seducer‟, and not the woman. The Court

recognized that this position may have undergone

some change over the years, but it is for the

legislature to consider whether Section 497

should be amended appropriately so as to take

note of the „transformation‟ which the society has

undergone.

36
8.3. In V. Revathi v. Union of India47, a two-judge

bench of this court upheld the constitutional

validity of Section 497, I.P.C. and Section 198(2)

of the Cr.P.C. The petitioner contended that

whether or not the law permitted a husband to

prosecute his disloyal wife, a wife cannot be

lawfully disabled from prosecuting her disloyal

husband. Section 198(2) Cr.P.C. operates as a

fetter on the wife in prosecuting her adulterous

husband. Hence, the relevant provision is

unconstitutional on the ground of obnoxious

discrimination.

This Court held that Section 497 I.P.C. and

Section 198(2) Cr.P.C. together form a legislative

package. In essence, the former being

substantive, and the latter being largely

procedural. Women, under these provisions,

neither have the right to prosecute, as in case of a

wife whose husband has an adulterous

47 (1988) 2 SCC 72

37
relationship with another woman; nor can they be

prosecuted as the pari delicto.

8.4. The view taken by the two-judge bench in Revathi

(supra), that the absence of the right of the wife of

an adulterous husband to sue him, or his

paramour, was well-balanced by the inability of

the husband to prosecute his adulterous wife for

adultery, cannot be sustained. The wife‟s inability

to prosecute her husband and his paramour,

should be equated with the husband‟s ability to

prosecute his wife‟s paramour.

9. In the present case, the constitutionality of Section 497 is

assailed by the Petitioners on the specific grounds that

Section 497 is violative of Articles 14, 15 and 21.

9.1. Mr. Kaleeswaram Raj learned Counsel appearing

for the Petitioners and Ms. Meenakshi Arora,

learned Senior Counsel appearing for the

Intervenors inter alia submitted that Section 497

criminalizes adultery based on a classification

made on sex alone. Such a classification bears no

38
rational nexus with the object sought to be

achieved and is hence discriminatory.

It was further submitted that Section 497

offends the Article 14 requirement of equal

treatment before the law and discriminates on the

basis of marital status. It precludes a woman

from initiating criminal proceedings. Further, the

consent of the woman is irrelevant to the offence.

Reliance was placed in this regard on the

judgment of this Court in W. Kalyani v. State48.

The Petitioners submit that the age-old concept

of the wife being the property of her husband,

who can easily fall prey to seduction by another

man, can no longer be justified as a rational basis

for the classification made under Section 497.

An argument was made that the „protection‟

given to women under Section 497 not only

highlights her lack of sexual autonomy, but also

ignores the social repercussions of such an

offence.

48 (2012) 1 SCC 358

39
The Petitioners have contended that Section

497 of the I.P.C. is violative of the fundamental

right to privacy under Article 21, since the choice

of a partner with whom she could be intimate,

falls squarely within the area of autonomy over a

person‟s sexuality. It was submitted that each

individual has an unfettered right (whether

married or not; whether man or woman) to

engage in sexual intercourse outside his or her

marital relationship.

The right to privacy is an inalienable right,

closely associated with the innate dignity of an

individual, and the right to autonomy and self-

determination to take decisions. Reliance was

placed on the judgment in Shafin Jahan v.

Asokan K.M. Ors.49 where this Court observed

that each individual is guaranteed the freedom in

determining the choice of one‟s partner, and any

interference by the State in these matters, would

49 2018 SCC Online SC 343

40
have a serious chilling effect on the exercise of

the freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution.

The Petitioners placed reliance on the

judgment of K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India50

wherein a nine-judge bench of this Court held

that the right to make decisions on vital matters

concerning one‟s life are inviolable aspects of

human personality. This Court held that:

― 169. ….. The autonomy of the
individual is the ability to make
decisions on vital matters of concern
to life. Privacy has not been couched
as an independent fundamental
right. But that does not detract from
the constitutional protection afforded
to it, once the true nature of privacy
and its relationship with those
fundamental rights which are
expressly protected is understood.

Privacy lies across the spectrum of
protected freedoms. The guarantee of
equality is a guarantee against
arbitrary state action. It prevents the
state from discriminating between
individuals. The destruction by the
state of a sanctified personal space
whether of the body or of the mind is
violative of the guarantee against
arbitrary state action….‖
(Emphasis supplied)

50 (2017) 10 SCC 1

41
The Petitioners and Intervenors have prayed

for striking down Section 479 I.P.C. and Section

198(2) of the Cr.P.C. as being unconstitutional,

unjust, illegal, arbitrary, and violative of the

Fundamental Rights of citizens.

9.2. On the other hand, Ms. Pinky Anand, learned

ASG forcefully submitted that adultery must be

retained as a criminal offence in the I.P.C. She

based her argument on the fact that adultery has

the effect of breaking up the family which is the

fundamental unit in society. Adultery is

undoubtedly morally abhorrent in marriage, and

no less an offence than the offences of battery, or

assault. By deterring individuals from engaging in

conduct which is potentially harmful to a marital

relationship, Section 497 is protecting the

institution of marriage, and promoting social well-

being.

The Respondents submit that an act which

outrages the morality of society, and harms its

42
members, ought to be punished as a crime.

Adultery falls squarely within this definition.

The learned ASG further submitted that

adultery is not an act that merely affects just two

people; it has an impact on the aggrieved spouse,

children, as well as society. Any affront to the

marital bond is an affront to the society at large.

The act of adultery affects the matrimonial rights

of the spouse, and causes substantial mental

injury.

Adultery is essentially violence perpetrated by

an outsider, with complete knowledge and

intention, on the family which is the basic unit of

a society.

It was argued on behalf of the Union of India

that Section 497 is valid on the ground of

affirmative action. All discrimination in favour of

women is saved by Article 15(3), and hence were

exempted from punishment. Further, an under-

inclusive definition is not necessarily

discriminatory. The contention that Section 497

43
does not account for instances where the

husband has sexual relations outside his

marriage would not render it unconstitutional.

It was further submitted that the sanctity of

family life, and the right to marriage are

fundamental rights comprehended in the right to

life under Article 21. An outsider who violates and

injures these rights must be deterred and

punished in accordance with criminal law.

It was finally suggested that if this Court finds

any part of this Section violative of the

Constitutional provisions, the Court should read

down that part, in so far as it is violative of the

Constitution but retain the provision.

DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS

10. Section 497 is a pre-constitutional law which was

enacted in 1860. There would be no presumption of

constitutionality in a pre-constitutional law (like Section

497) framed by a foreign legislature. The provision would

44
have to be tested on the anvil of Part III of the

Constitution.

11. Section 497 of the I.P.C. it is placed under Chapter XX

of “Offences Relating to Marriage”.

The provision of Section 497 is replete with anomalies

and incongruities, such as:

i. Under Section 497, it is only the male-paramour

who is punishable for the offence of adultery.

The woman who is pari delicto with the

adulterous male, is not punishable, even as an

„abettor‟.

The adulterous woman is excluded solely on

the basis of gender, and cannot be prosecuted

for adultery51.

ii. The Section only gives the right to prosecute to

the husband of the adulterous wife. On the

other hand, the wife of the adulterous man, has

no similar right to prosecute her husband or his

paramour.

51 W Kalyani v. State, (2012) 1 SCC 358; at para 10.

45
iii. Section 497 I.P.C. read with Section 198(2) of

the Cr.P.C. only empowers the aggrieved

husband, of a married wife who has entered into

the adulterous relationship to initiate

proceedings for the offence of adultery.

iv. The act of a married man engaging in sexual

intercourse with an unmarried or divorced

woman, does not constitute „adultery‟ under

Section 497.

v. If the adulterous relationship between a man

and a married woman, takes place with the

consent and connivance of her husband, it

would not constitute the offence of adultery.

The anomalies and inconsistencies in Section 497

as stated above, would render the provision liable to be

struck down on the ground of it being arbitrary and

discriminatory.

12. The constitutional validity of section 497 has to be

tested on the anvil of Article 14 of the Constitution.

46
12.1. Any legislation which treats similarly situated

persons unequally, or discriminates between

persons on the basis of sex alone, is liable to be

struck down as being violative of Articles 14 and

15 of the Constitution, which form the pillars

against the vice of arbitrariness and

discrimination.

12.2. Article 14 forbids class legislation; however, it

does not forbid reasonable classification. A

reasonable classification is permissible if two

conditions are satisfied:

i. The classification is made on the basis of an

„intelligible differentia‟ which distinguishes

persons or things that are grouped together, and

separates them from the rest of the group; and

ii. The said intelligible differentia must have a

rational nexus with the object sought to be

achieved by the legal provision.

The discriminatory provisions in Section 497

have to be considered with reference to the

classification made. The classification must have

47
some rational basis,52 or a nexus with the object

sought to be achieved.

With respect to the offence of adultery

committed by two consenting adults, there ought

not to be any discrimination on the basis of sex

alone since it has no rational nexus with the

object sought to be achieved.

                             Section       497       of    the     I.P.C.,     makes         two

classifications:

i. The first classification is based on who has the

right to prosecute:

It is only the husband of the married woman

who indulges in adultery, is considered to be

an aggrieved person given the right to

prosecute for the offence of adultery.

Conversely, a married woman who is the

wife of the adulterous man, has no right to

prosecute either her husband, or his

paramour.

52 E.V. Chinnaiah v. State of A.P., (2005) 1 SCC 394 (A legislation may not be amenable to a
challenge on the ground of violation of Article 14 of the Constitution if its intention is to
give effect to Articles 15 and 16 or when the differentiation is not unreasonable or
arbitrary).

48
ii. The second classification is based on who can

be prosecuted.

It is only the adulterous man who can be

prosecuted for committing adultery, and not

the adulterous woman, even though the

relationship is consensual; the adulterous

woman is not even considered to be an

“abettor” to the offence.

The aforesaid classifications were based on the

historical context in 1860 when the I.P.C. was

enacted. At that point of time, women had no

rights independent of their husbands, and were

treated as chattel or „property‟ of their husbands.

Hence, the offence of adultery was treated as

an injury to the husband, since it was considered

to be a „theft‟ of his property, for which he could

proceed to prosecute the offender.

The said classification is no longer relevant or

valid, and cannot withstand the test of Article 14,

and hence is liable to be struck down on this

ground alone.

49
12.3. A law which deprives women of the right to

prosecute, is not gender-neutral. Under Section

497, the wife of the adulterous male, cannot

prosecute her husband for marital infidelity. This

provision is therefore ex facie discriminatory

against women, and violative of Article 14.

Section 497 as it stands today, cannot hide in

the shadows against the discerning light of Article

14 which irradiates anything which is

unreasonable, discriminatory, and arbitrary.

13. A law which could have been justified at the time of its

enactment with the passage of time may become out-

dated and discriminatory with the evolution of society

and changed circumstances.53 What may have once been

a perfectly valid legislation meant to protect women in the

historical background in which it was framed, with the

passage of time of over a century and a half, may become

obsolete and archaic.

53Motor General Traders v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (1984) 1 SCC 222;
See also Ratan Arya v. State of Tamil Nadu, (1986) 3 SCC 385

50
A provision previously not held to be unconstitutional,

can be rendered so by later developments in society,

including gender equality.54

Section 497 of the I.P.C. was framed in the historical

context that the infidelity of the wife should not be

punished because of the plight of women in this country

during the 1860‟s. Women were married while they were

still children, and often neglected while still young,

sharing the attention of a husband with several rivals.55

This situation is not true 155 years after the provision

was framed. With the passage of time, education,

development in civil-political rights and socio-economic

conditions, the situation has undergone a sea change.

The historical background in which Section 497 was

framed, is no longer relevant in contemporary society.

It would be unrealistic to proceed on the basis that

even in a consensual sexual relationship, a married

woman, who knowingly and voluntarily enters into a

sexual relationship with another married man, is a

„victim‟, and the male offender is the „seducer‟.

54 John Vallamattom v. Union of India, (2003) 6 SCC 611
55 ‗A Penal Code prepared by The Indian Law Commissioners, (1838), Notes of Lord Thomas
Babington Macaulay, Note Q

51
Section 497 fails to consider both men and women as

equally autonomous individuals in society.

In Anuj Garg v. Hotel Assn. of India,56 this Court held

that:

―20. At the very outset we want to
define the contours of the discussion
which is going to ensue. Firstly, the
issue floated by the State is very
significant, nonetheless it does not fall
in the same class as that of rights
which it comes in conflict with,
ontologically. Secondly, the issue at
hand has no social spillovers. The
rights of women as individuals rest
beyond doubts in this age. If we
consider (various strands of) feminist
jurisprudence as also identity politics, it
is clear that time has come that we take
leave of the theme encapsulated under
Section 30. And thirdly we will also
focus our attention on the interplay of
doctrines of self-determination and an
individual's best interests.

……..

26. When a discrimination is sought to
be made on the purported ground of
classification, such classification must
be founded on a rational criteria. The
criteria which in absence of any
constitutional provision and, it will bear
repetition to state, having regard to the
societal conditions as they prevailed in
early 20th century, may not be a
rational criteria in the 21st century. In
the early 20th century, the hospitality
sector was not open to women in

56 (2008) 3 SCC 1

52
general. In the last 60 years, women in
India have gained entry in all spheres
of public life. They have also been
representing people at grassroot
democracy. They are now employed as
drivers of heavy transport vehicles,
conductors of service carriages, pilots,
et. al. ...‖
(Emphasis supplied)

The time when wives were invisible to the law, and

lived in the shadows of their husbands, has long since

gone by. A legislation that perpetuates such stereo-types

in relationships, and institutionalises discrimination is a

clear violation of the fundamental rights guaranteed by

Part III of the Constitution.

There is therefore, no justification for continuance of

Section 497 of the I.P.C. as framed in 1860, to remain on

the statute book.

14. Article 15(3) of the Constitution is an enabling

provision which permits the State to frame beneficial

legislation in favour of women and children, to protect

and uplift this class of citizens.

Section 497 is a penal provision for the offence of

adultery, an act which is committed consensually

53
between two adults who have strayed out of the marital

bond. Such a provision cannot be considered to be a

beneficial legislation covered by Article 15(3) of the

Constitution.

The true purpose of affirmative action is to uplift

women and empower them in socio-economic spheres. A

legislation which takes away the rights of women to

prosecute cannot be termed as „beneficial legislation‟.

This Court in Thota Sesharathamma and Anr. v. Thota

Manikyamma (Dead) by Lrs. And Ors.57 held that:

―Art. 15(3) relieves from the rigour of
Art. 15(1) and charges the State to
make special provision to accord to
women socio-economic equality. As a
fact Art. 15(3) as a fore runner to
common code does animate to make
law to accord socio-economic equality to
every female citizen of India,
irrespective of religion, race, caste or
religion.‖

In W. Kalyani v. State58 this Court has recognised the

gender bias in Section 497. The court in Kalyani (supra)

observed that “The provision is currently under criticism

from certain quarters for showing a string gender bias for it

57 (1991) 4 SCC 312
58 (2012) 1 SCC 358

54
makes the position of a married woman almost as a

property of her husband.”

The purpose of Article 15(3) is to further socio-

economic equality of women. It permits special legislation

for special classes. However, Article 15(3) cannot operate

as a cover for exemption from an offence having penal

consequences.

A Section which perpetuates oppression of women is

unsustainable in law, and cannot take cover under the

guise of protective discrimination.

15. The Petitioners have contended that the right to

privacy under Article 21 would include the right of two

adults to enter into a sexual relationship outside

marriage.

The right to privacy and personal liberty is, however,

not an absolute one; it is subject to reasonable

restrictions when legitimate public interest is involved.

It is true that the boundaries of personal liberty are

difficult to be identified in black and white; however, such

liberty must accommodate public interest. The freedom to

55
have a consensual sexual relationship outside marriage

by a married person, does not warrant protection under

Article 21.

In the context of Article 21, an invasion of privacy by

the State must be justified on the basis of a law that is

reasonable and valid. Such an invasion must meet a

three-fold requirement as set held in Justice K. S.

Puttaswamy (Retd.) Anr. v. UOI Anr. (supra): (i)

legality, which postulates the existence of law; (ii) need,

defined in terms of a legitimate State interest, and (iii)

proportionality, which ensures a rational nexus between

the object and the means adopted. Section 497 as it

stands today, fails to meet the three-fold requirement,

and must therefore be struck down.

16. The issue remains as to whether „adultery‟ must be

treated as a penal offence subject to criminal sanctions,

or marital wrong which is a valid ground for divorce.

16.1. One view is that family being the fundamental

unit in society, if the same is disrupted, it would

impact stability and progress. The State,

56
therefore, has a legitimate public interest in

preserving the institution of marriage.

Though adultery may be an act committed in

private by two consenting adults, it is

nevertheless not a victim-less crime. It violates

the sanctity of marriage, and the right of a spouse

to marital fidelity of his/her partner. It impacts

society as it breaks the fundamental unit of the

family, causing injury not only to the spouses of

the adulteror and the adulteress, it impacts the

growth and well-being of the children, the family,

and society in general, and therefore must be

subject to penal consequences.

Throughout history, the State has long

retained an area of regulation in the institution of

marriage. The State has regulated various aspects

of the institution of marriage, by determining the

age when an adult can enter into marriage; it

grants legal recognition to marriage; it creates

rights in respect of inheritance and succession; it

provides for remedies like judicial separation,

57
alimony, restitution of conjugal rights; it

regulates surrogacy, adoption, child custody,

guardianship, partition, parental responsibility;

guardianship and welfare of the child. These are

all areas of private interest in which the State

retains a legitimate interest, since these are areas

which concern society and public well-being as a

whole.

Adultery has the effect of not only jeopardising

the marriage between the two consenting adults,

but also affects the growth and moral fibre of

children. Hence the State has a legitimate public

interest in making it a criminal offence.

16.2. The contra view is that adultery is a marital

wrong, which should have only civil

consequences. A wrong punishable with criminal

sanctions, must be a public wrong against society

as a whole, and not merely an act committed

against an individual victim.

To criminalize a certain conduct is to declare

that it is a public wrong which would justify

58
public censure, and warrant the use of criminal

sanction against such harm and wrong doing.

The autonomy of an individual to make his or

her choices with respect to his/her sexuality in

the most intimate spaces of life, should be

protected from public censure through criminal

sanction. The autonomy of the individual to take

such decisions, which are purely personal, would

be repugnant to any interference by the State to

take action purportedly in the „best interest‟ of

the individual.

Andrew Ashworth and Jeremy Horder in their

commentary titled „Principles of Criminal Law‟59

have stated that the traditional starting point of

criminalization is the „harm principle‟ the essence

of which is that the State is justified in

criminalizing a conduct which causes harm to

others. The authors opine that the three elements

for criminalization are: (i) harm, (ii) wrong doing,

and (iii) public element, which are required to be

59 Oxford University Press, (7th Edn.) May 2013

59
proved before the State can classify a wrongful

act as a criminal offence.

John Stuart Mill states that ―the only purpose

for which power can be rightly exercised over the

member of a civilized community against his will is

to prevent harm to others.‖ 60

The other important element is wrongfulness.

Andrew Simester and Andreas von Hirsch opine

that a necessary pre-requisite of criminalization

is that the conduct amounts to a moral wrong.61

That even though sexual infidelity may be morally

wrong conduct, this may not be a sufficient

condition to criminalize the same.

17. In my view, criminal sanction may be justified where

there is a public element in the wrong, such as offences

against State security, and the like. These are public

wrongs where the victim is not the individual, but the

community as a whole.

60 Mill, John S., Chapter I: Introductory, On Liberty, Published London: Longman, Roberts,
Green Co. 1869, 4th Edn.

61 A P Simester and Andreas von Hirsch, Crimes, Harms, And Wrongs: On The Principles Of

Criminalisation, Oxford: Hart Publishing (2011)

60
Adultery undoubtedly is a moral wrong qua the spouse

and the family. The issue is whether there is a sufficient

element of wrongfulness to society in general, in order to

bring it within the ambit of criminal law?

The element of public censure, visiting the delinquent

with penal consequences, and overriding individual

rights, would be justified only when the society is directly

impacted by such conduct. In fact, a much stronger

justification is required where an offence is punishable

with imprisonment.

The State must follow the minimalist approach in the

criminalization of offences, keeping in view the respect for

the autonomy of the individual to make his/her personal

choices.

The right to live with dignity includes the right not to

be subjected to public censure and punishment by the

State except where absolutely necessary. In order to

determine what conduct requires State interference

through criminal sanction, the State must consider

whether the civil remedy will serve the purpose. Where a

61
civil remedy for a wrongful act is sufficient, it may not

warrant criminal sanction by the State.

18. In view of the aforesaid discussion, and the anomalies

in Section 497, as enumerated in para 11 above, it is

declared that :

(i) Section 497 is struck down as unconstitutional

being violative of Articles 14, 15 and 21 of the

Constitution.

(ii) Section 198(2) of the Cr.P.C. which contains the

procedure for prosecution under Chapter XX of the

I.P.C. shall be unconstitutional only to the extent

that it is applicable to the offence of Adultery under

Section 497.

(iii) The decisions in Sowmithri Vishnu (supra), V.

Rewathi (supra) and W. Kalyani (supra) hereby

stand overruled.

……………………..J.

(INDU MALHOTRA)

New Delhi
September 27, 2018

62

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