How 'Consent', 'Agency' and 'Age' Play out across
the Complex Terrain of Family Laws in India:
A Socio-Legal Exploration
Flavia Agnes
Introduction
-
The central theme of this paper is an exploration of terms such as
'age', 'consent' and 'agency' and the manner in which they play out in
judicial discourse across different time zones, and the implications for
women from the Hindu and Muslim religious communities in India, who are
governed by their respective personal laws. The area explored is
matrimonial law, which is approached methodologically through
comparative analyses of rulings of the higher judiciary and grounding
them within their socio-political locations.
-
Part one contextualises the theme of the paper. Part two then describes
the political context of religion-based personal laws in India. The
following two parts explore the adverse implications for Hindu women of
viewing Hindu marriage as sacramental; and the advantages to Muslim
women of viewing Muslim marriage as a civil contract. When we examine
reported judgements, Muslim personal law appears to be far more
progressive and seems to grant a greater space for the negotiation of
rights than the Hindu law. This contradicts the popular perception that
Muslim law is regressive and denies Muslim women agency.
-
Continuing further, the fifth part of the paper offers a detailed
exploration of the various strands of the historical Rukhmabai case. The
case deals with the issue of a decree of restitution of conjugal rights
sought by the husband, in the case of a girl who was married when she
was a minor. The following section examines the implications of
religious conversions for Hindu and Muslim women. Here too, Muslim law
appears to provide women with greater scope for exercising an active
agency in matters of sexual desire.
-
While the above discussions deal with the colonial period, the next two
parts turn to the post-independence period. Even after the codification
of Hindu law which rendered Hindu marriages contractual, various court
judgements on the realm of restitution of conjugal rights continued to
stress the sacramental aspect of a Hindu marriage, to the disadvantage
of women. The final part considers the issue of elopement marriages of
minor Hindu girls where there is a rupture between age and consent. The
challenges this poses to contemporary feminist discourse in India are
examined in detail.
The context
-
Interrogating competing legal frames for the adjudication of
marriage—sacrament versus contract—the paper locates the trope of
women's rights within the politics of religion-based personal laws in
colonial and post-colonial India. The comparative arc of the paper takes
the focus away from the typical bifurcation of rights versus culture,
and introduces important questions about Hindu-majority and
Muslim-minority political discourses which impact on discussions about
women's rights across time. The trend of confusing modernity with
uniformity overshadows the post-colonial agenda of the nation-state, and
this affects the ways in which women's rights are projected in a linear
mode as though modernity and uniformity will bring in women's
emancipation and everything ancient or classical is anti-women. This
paper problematises the politics and discourses which influence the
manner in which women's rights are placed within a populist public
domain.
-
While tracing the legal development of Hindu and Muslim marriage laws
during the colonial period, the paper examines how the notion of the
contractual marriage came to be firmly established as integral to
Islamic law or Sharia. Sharia law invested Muslim women
with an agency to negotiate their rights, both within marriage and for
its dissolution, against the then prevailing European notion of a
'sacramental, status marriage'. However, as the Christian notion of the
sacramental marriage reverberated with the ancient Hindu law or the
Brahminical Smriti law, it served to deprive upper caste Hindu women of
their rights of negotiation. The colonial legal order failed to
recognise the plurality of Hindu law and elements of agency within it,
even while the English marriage laws were recast within the framework of
a dissoluble 'contract' in the latter half of nineteenth century. The
attempt made by Hindu social reformers to 'reform' Hindu marriage,
basing it within the context of the developments in the English laws,
introduced the notion of 'age' to denote 'consent', an essential
ingredient of the 'contract', which failed to invest Hindu women with an
'agency' to negotiate their rights within marriage. On the contrary,
the new legal order introduced by the British, served to strengthen
local patriarchies by criminalising the acts of Hindu women who strayed
away from the Hindu fold, while at the same time recognising the
autonomy of Muslim women to contract marriages of choice. Ironically,
the contractual marriage under Muslim law, which invested Muslim women
with autonomy, came to be devalued in the post-colonial period, with the
assumption that Hindu law was more progressive, and that it was now
Muslim women who needed protection. This set of associations serves to
unsettle what we have come to expect about both the 'modernity' of Hindu
law as well as tropes of cultural backwardness and gender inequality
within Muslim communities.
-
The distinctions between the two personal laws are further layered with
another set of complications around the perceptions of female desire
when it poses a challenge to the normative code of sexual expressions.
While tracing the shifting ideologies around how Hindu and Islamic
concepts of marriage came to be socially perceived, the paper implicates
not only the state and community, but enters into a disconcerting zone
by problematising the hazards of feminist interventions. It foregrounds
how in contemporary times, debates about age and consent to marriage are
located not merely within state and community controls but have also
impacted on questions of female desire and subjectivities for feminists
in the context of the marriages of choice of minors. It is within this
backdrop, that the paper examines how legal terms such as 'age',
'consent' and 'agency' are rendered fluid and lend credence to
prevailing social mores. It thereby urges for a more nuanced framework
of rights.
Contextualising the 'personal law' regime in India
-
The development of the personal law regime in India is intrinsically
linked to the history of colonialism on the Indian subcontinent. In the
early nineteenth century community-based laws, which operated with some
flexibility, were transformed into state-regulated 'personal laws'. In
order to apply 'their' personal laws, the diverse and pluralistic
communities had to be categorised along the religious binaries of
'Hindu' and 'Muslim'. A judicial system evolved on the model of English
courts and English legal principles refashioned customary practices into
linear and parallel systems of Hindu and Muslim personal law through a
process of trial and error. The extent of legal interference in local
practices depended on a variety of factors; political and economic. When
the administration shifted from the East India Company to the British
Crown, the Hindu and Muslim family laws went through great
transformations during the latter part of colonial rule. The British
interpretations of the ancient texts became binding legal principles and
made the law certain, rigid and uniform. The impact of the emerging
judge-made law and its precedent-focused methodology as stare decisis,
was characterised by unprecedented rigidity.[1]
The separate personal laws served to feed into the British policy of
divide and rule by rendering Hindus and Muslims as separate and mutually
hostile political constituencies. Ultimately, this resulted in the
partition of the country into two mutually antagonistic nations—India
and Pakistan—at the time of independence.
-
The political impediment of the nation-building scheme necessitated
reform of Hindu laws in order to bring the vast population of Hindus,
divided into castes, sects and tribes, under a uniform and
state-regulated code that would inscribe upon them the authority of a
secular state with the power to legislate over family matters and
interpret the Hindu sacred religious texts.[2]
This political scheme, however, was mounted on the plank of women's
rights, while the sub-text of the reforms was nation building.[3]
Laws governing minority communities such as Muslims, Christians and
Parsis were not reformed at this juncture, and they continue to be
governed by their separate state-enacted personal laws. Under these laws
women already had two most important rights—the right of divorce and
the right of property inheritance, which Hindu women lacked.
-
Tensions between the Hindu majority and Muslim minority continued to
reverberate within the political sphere in the post-independence period.
While Hindu marriages were rendered monogamous through the process of
codification during the first decade after independence, the
continuation of the uncodified Muslim Personal Law, which permitted
polygamy and arbitrary talaq, along with the reluctance of
successive Congress-led governments to enforce a Uniform Civil Code,
came to be viewed by the Hindu majority as concrete evidence of the
'Muslim appeasement' theory in both public perception, and judicial
discourse.[4] The 1985 Shahbano ruling[5]
which, in the context of the maintenance rights of a Muslim wife, while
urging the government to enforce the Uniform Civil Code (UCC), made
certain adverse comments against the Prophet and Islam which resulted in
a Muslim backlash. In the post-independence political climate, the
demand for the UCC acquired a political edge which fed into a popular
imagination of 'minority appeasement' by the ruling Congress party. The
rise of Hindu nationalism sustained itself drawing on this popular
sentiment. During this period, a territorial dispute over the question
of the location of a historical mosque on what was believed to be the
birth place of Hindu God Lord Ram was brewing in Ayodhya (Uttar
Pradesh). In 1992, the demolition of the 450-year-old mosque in
question, the Babri Masjid, by Hindu right-wing communal mobs, despite
an assurance to the court to the contrary, and the country-wide riots
that followed, caused a further rupture in Hindu–Muslim relationships.
It irrevocably changed discourses on Hindu–Muslim relations and brought
religious identity to the forefront of political rhetoric. A decade
later, in 2002, the communal carnage in the State of Gujarat which was
symbolised by gruesome sexual violence against Muslim women,
subsequently came to be marked as a moment of national shame causing a
serious setback to the secular fabric of the country. Within this
political climate, increasingly, support for the UCC came to be
construed as a betrayal of the cause of identity politics within
minority communities and secular human rights groups.
-
It is against this backdrop of communal disharmony and public
perceptions of 'minority appeasement' that I embark upon this journey of
exploring the relationship between religious personal law, women's
rights within marriage, and the shifting meanings and uses of 'consent'
within the Hindu and Muslim marriage laws at different historical
junctions.
The difference between the notion of 'consent' within Hindu and Muslim marriage codes
-
The ancient Hindu law (or Smriti law, or the Brahminical law) of
India viewed marriage as an essential sanskara (religious obligation).
Marriage was mandatory to discharge the debt to one's ancestors—the debt
of begetting offspring. It was also essential for the performance of
religious and spiritual duties. The sacrosanct marital bond was
considered indissoluble and eternal. Consent of the parties was not an
essential ingredient for the solemnisation of marriage. As per the
Brahminical traditions, a bedecked virgin bride was 'gifted' to the
bridegroom's family. This act of gifting a bedecked bride to the groom
automatically relegates the bride giver to a lower social status than
the bride taker. Women were governed by a strict code of sexual purity
based on the notions of Brahmincal patriarchy. Virginity and chastity
were valued possessions and in order to ensure the 'purity' of the girl,
child marriages were the norm.[6]
-
Under Muslim law, marriage was viewed as a civil contract. Consent was pivotal, as reflected in the terms ijab (proposal) and qabul (acceptance) which were essential characteristics of a Muslim marriage. The nikahnama
(the contract of marriage) provided clear proof of a valid marriage
having been performed. Minors were permitted to enter into these
contracts with the consent of their guardians (wali), who had the authority to contract on their behalf. Conditions could be stipulated in the nikahnama as well as the pre-nuptial contract, kabin-nama, to secure women's rights.[7]
-
The next part illustrates how the premise of a contractual marriage
among Muslims enlarged the scope for protecting women's rights, in
contrast to the notion of sanskara under the Hindu law or even the feudal European/Christian notion of an indissoluble sacramental marriage.[8]
Legal precedents emphasising the contractual nature of Muslim marriages
-
Some landmark rulings of the Privy Council and the various High Courts
during the colonial period from 1860 to the 1940s help us to better
comprehend the positive impact of the contractual nature of Muslim
marriage and its divergences from the sacramental understanding of a
Hindu marriage. These cases deal with a wide range of rights based on
women's active agency such as the validity of a pre-nuptial agreement,
the option of puberty, the right to matrimonial residence, rights over
separate property, the enforceability of contractual obligations entered
into for the benefit of a minor wife, the validity of the delegated
right of divorce, etc. These rulings not only safeguarded the rights of
Muslim women, but also served to expand the boundaries of matrimonial
law in general.
-
The Moonshee Buzloor Ruheem v Shumsoonisa Begum[9] case of 1867, was one of the earliest Indian disputes decided by the Privy Council.[10]
The case highlights the superior position of a Muslim wife over her
property. The wife had filed a suit to recover the properties misused by
her husband. In retaliation, the husband filed for restitution of
conjugal rights. The husband's suit was dismissed and the wife's suit
regarding her claim to her property was decreed in her favour by the
Calcutta High Court. Against this ruling, the husband appealed to the
Privy Council. In 1867, while upholding the wife's claim, the Privy
Council commented:
Distinction must be drawn between the rights of a Mohammedan and a Hindu
woman. In all that concerns her power over her property, the former is,
by law, far more independent, in fact even more independent than an
English woman. There is no doubt that a Mussulman woman, when married,
retains her dominion over her own property and is free from the control
of her husband in its disposition. The Mohammedan law is more favourable
than the Hindu law to women and their rights, and does not insist on
their dependence upon and subjugation to the stronger sex.[11]
-
In Badarannissa Bibi's case, decided by the Calcutta High Court in 1871,[12] the husband had entered into a kabin-nama
with his wife, authorising her to divorce him if he remarried without
her consent. After a few years when the husband did remarry, the wife
approached the court for redress. The trial court dismissed the wife's
plea on the grounds that Mohammedan law does not permit a wife to
divorce herself upon a private agreement. At this juncture, an Islamic
jurist, Moulvi Mahamat Hossein, represented the wife and pointed out the
relevant sections from legal texts that specified the delegated power
of the wife to divorce herself, and pleaded that such a provision is not
repugnant to Mohammedan law. The court concurred with this view,
reversed the lower court's ruling and upheld the woman's right to
divorce herself.
-
A later case in 1938 from the Calcutta High Court, Joygun Nessa Bibi v Mahammad Ali Biswas,[13]
emphasises the importance of consent under Muslim law and deals with
other avenues available to a Muslim wife to dissolve her marriage, such
as the Islamic principle of 'option of puberty'.[14]
In this case, the wife filed for a declaration that her marriage was
null and void and did not confer on her husband the right to a conjugal
relationship. She pleaded that in the alternative, even if the marriage
was not declared void ab initio, the nuptial tie was dissolved by her
exercising the delegated right of talaq bestowed upon her by the kabin-nama.[15]
She pleaded that she was barely 10 or 11 years old at the time of
marriage and had not attained the age of puberty, though in the marriage
register her age was falsely recorded as 15 years. The husband had
violated the terms of the kabin-nama and hence she had exercised the right of divorce as per the stipulated terms. The husband denied the kabin-nama, and pleaded further, that even if it could be proved, the terms of the kabin-nama
were illegal and opposed to public policy, and hence not binding on the
parties. The trial court ruled in the wife's favour, but the court of
first appeal reversed the ruling and held that Joygun Nessa Bibi had
attained the age of discretion, though not the age of puberty since she
was above seven years of age, and that her father's consent to the
marriage rendered it valid. Ironically the court also upheld the
husband's contention that the terms of the kabin-nama, which permitted the wife to divorce herself, were against public policy.
-
It was held that since the father had given his consent by approving the bridegroom and settling the terms of kabin-nama, his consent was implied. The court commented that the father did not act as a guardian to circumvent the provisions of the Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929.[16] However, even while upholding the validity of the marriage and disregarding the delegated right of divorce in the kabin-nama,
the court held that the woman is entitled to exercise the option of
puberty (or repudiation of marriage) under Islamic law, and the marriage
could be dissolved on this ground.
-
Under the English law of contract, a person who is not a party to a
contract cannot enforce it even when she/he is a beneficiary. However,
the Privy Council ruling of 1910 in Khwaja Mohammed v Husseini Begum[17]
laid down a new principle for enforcing contracts, which was a
departure from the established norms of English law, and took into
consideration the cultural reality of India. The Privy Council laid down
a new precedent by upholding a minor girl's right to enforce a contract
against her father-in-law, even though she was not a party to it. The
facts of the case make for interesting reading. In 1877, on the occasion
of the marriage of his son, the father-in-law executed an agreement
that he would pay the daughter-in-law Rs.500/- per month as kharch-i-pandan
(an allowance for personal expenses) in perpetuity. Thirteen years
later when the couple separated, the wife sued her father-in-law for
arrears. The trial court refused to enforce the agreement and held that
'[i]t is unreasonable to suppose that the wife can enforce her contract
against her father-in-law, even when she refuses to live with her
husband. To hold so would be repulsive to conscience and common sense.'[18]
Moreover, the Court also cast aspersions on the woman's character. On
appeal, the Allahabad High Court decreed in the wife's favour and held
that no condition had been attached to the payment of the annuity and
the chastity of the wife was not an issue under the agreement.
-
While upholding this ruling, the Privy Council commented:
Kharch-i-pandan, which literally means "betel box expenses," is a
personal allowance to the wife, customary among Mohammedan families of
rank, fixed either before or after the marriage. When they are minors,
as is frequently the case, the arrangement is made between the
respective parents or guardians on behalf of minors. Hence serious
injustice will be caused if the common law doctrine is applied to
agreements entered into in connection with such contracts.
-
Noor Bibi v Pir Bux[19] occurred at an important juncture of the political history of India. The Sharia had been established as the law of Indian Muslims through the Application of the Sharia Act of 1937.[20]
The right of a Muslim wife to dissolve her marriage was codified and
she had obtained a statutory right to divorce through the enactment of
the Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act of 1939. Hindu law was
yet to be codified, however, and the debate over codification was raging
among the nationalist Congress leaders. The significance of this case
also lies in the fact that it was decided by an Indian judge, the
renowned Islamic jurist and the great moderniser, Justice Tyabji, who
was Chief Justice of the High Court of Sindh in 1950, in
post-independent India, rather than during the Victorian era when
colonial officers were struggling to come to terms with the principles
of Islamic Family Law.
-
Distinguishing the Islamic Family Law from the Hindu tradition of sacramental marriage, the court held:
The Muslim marriage differs from the Hindu marriage in that it is not a
sacrament. A Muslim marriage is a covenant by which the parties enter
the state of marriage. The parties are permitted to stipulate the
conditions upon which they will do so, provided the conditions are not
illegal according to Muslim law. The subsistence of the marriage confers
certain essential rights and imposes certain duties upon the parties.
When a husband and a wife have been living apart, and the wife is not
being maintained by the husband, a dissolution is permitted not as a
punishment for the husband who had failed to fulfill one of the
obligations of marriage, or allowed, as a means of enforcing the wife's
rights to maintenance. In the Muslim law of dissolution, the failure to
maintain, when it continues for a prolonged period, is regarded as an
instance where a cessation has occurred. It will be seen therefore that
the wife's disobedience or refusal to live with her husband does not
affect the principle on which the dissolution is allowed.[21]
-
These judgments highlight the fact that under Muslim law, the 'consent'
and 'agency' of the woman while contracting the marriage and negotiating
her rights appear to have been of great significance. The legal
framework of contract enabled Muslim women to include several economic
rights in the marriage contract.
Introducing 'age' as an embodiment of 'consent' under the Hindu Law of Marriage
-
If 'consent' was being contested and redrawn in legal battles under
Muslim law, a similar set of challenges to Hindu family law was
unleashed by Hindu social reformers of the nineteenth century who
invoked 'age' as an embodiment of a modernist and liberal theory of
marriage.
-
The restraint upon child marriage emerged as the symbolic space through
which the notion of 'consent' could be introduced into Hindu marriage
using the premise of Western liberalism. Hence one of the earliest
reforms introduced after the power of administration was transferred
from the Company to the Crown in 1858 was the Age of Consent Act of 1860,
which stipulated a minimum age of 10 years for sexual intercourse in
order to prevent infant marriages. Sexual intercourse with a girl below
this age could be construed as rape.
-
The inadequacy of this legislation was highlighted in the Phulmonee case, Queen Empress v Huree Mohan Mythee,[22]
where a child of 11 years died due to the injuries caused to her during
forcible sexual intercourse by her husband. But the husband could not
be convicted for rape since he had a legal right to sexual intercourse
with his wife, who was above the age of 10. This incident became the
focal point for galvanising public opinion to demand the raising of the
age of consent to sexual intercourse from 10 to 12 years. The
conservative factions opposed this demand on the ground that it would
violate the religious dictate of pre-puberty marriage, through which the
virginity of the bride could be ensured. However, the public uproar
against the verdict finally led to the enactment of the Age of Consent Act of 1891, which increased the age of consent from 10 to 12 years.
-
This was a significant victory that disrupted the sacrosanct space of
Hindu marriage by symbolically equating 'age' with 'consent' as a means
of ensuring a limited measure of equality between the spouses.[23]
However, as Tanika Sarkar has argued, the definition of Hindu marriage
as a sacrament allowed Hindu conjugality to remain a 'family affair'.[24]
-
The Rukhmabai case, which was decided by the Bombay High Court in 1885,
brought Hindu conjugality (and the attendant contestations around
'consent') into the public domain. Questioning what was assumed to be
natural, Rukhmabai offered a subversive model of assertion, as a
desiring individual, in a terrain dominated by family, community and
imperial notions of justice and governance.[25]
By refusing to acknowledge a husband's uncontested 'conjugal right',
she foregrounded questions of individual agency and desire. While
increasingly, 'age' was used as a substitute for the slippery question
of female desire and 'consent', through a convergence of Hindu and
English legal principles, Rukhmabai was denied the options which a
Muslim woman could avail herselfe of, such as the 'option of puberty'
within the notion of a contractual marriage of the Anglo-Muhammedan law.[26]
-
The Rukhmabai case, discussed above, was a 1885 case for the restitution
of conjugal rights filed by her husband. Justice Pinhey of the Bombay
High Court had declined to pass a decree in his favour, declaring that
since conjugality had not been instituted, the question of granting the
relief of 'restoring conjugality' did not arise.[27]
The ruling met with opposition from the traditionalist lobby among the
Hindu nationalists known as revivalists, who viewed the judgment as an
interference in the sacrosanct arena of Hindu conjugality and as a
breach of the assurance of non-interference given in the Queen's
Proclamation. For the modernist segment known as reformers, the
intervention of the English courts and the importation of western
notions of liberalism was an armour in their campaign against archaic
Brahminical traditions and a step towards modernising Hindu family
relations by foregrounding 'age' as a symbol of 'contract' and
'consent'.
-
The litigation, the judgement and the controversy that followed, were
each laden with ironies. The husband's case was trumpeted by the
traditionalists and it is with their support that he had approached the
English courts, rather than the traditional non-state adjudication fora
such as the caste panchayat for the remedy of restoring his Hindu conjugality. Within both the traditional Smriti
law governing the upper castes as well as the pluralistic customary law
governing the lower castes, relief for the restoration of conjugality
was non-existent and the husband could not obtain any relief in this
sphere. In addition, the parties in the Rukhmabai case belonged to the
lower caste (carpenter caste) which recognised the right of the wife to
dissolve her marriage; a right denied upper-caste women. Most
importantly, Justice Pinhey had declined relief on the grounds that it
was an outdated medieval Christian remedy under the English law and
argued that the Hindu law did not recognise such a barbaric custom!
-
However, in the highly politicised climate, these subtle legal points
were rendered invisible. Succumbing to political pressure, in the
following year the Appellate Bench, presided over by Chief Justice Sir
Charles Sergeant, ruled in favour of the husband and rejected the
argument that there was no authority for a decree for 'institution' of
conjugal rights under Hindu law, commenting:
The gist of the action for restitution of conjugal rights is that
married persons are bound to live together. Whether the withdrawal is
before or after consummation, there has been a violation of conjugal
duty which entitles the injured party to the relief prayed.[28]
The verdict served to subvert the element of consent and agency, which
Rukhmabai had attempted to introduce into the domain of Hindu
sacramental conjugality.
-
Raising the age from 10 to 12 years through the Age of Consent Act of 1891
did not resolve the issue of child marriage and the debate continued
well into the twentieth century. Women's organisations that were formed
around this time, with a focus on women's health and education,
supported the demand raised by social reformers for a law restraining
child marriage. Finally the Child Marriage Restraint Act (CMRA)
was enacted in 1929, raising the minimum age of marriage of girls to 14
years. The Act imposed a punishment on parents and husbands for
arranging, contracting, performing, celebrating and participating in
child marriages, but did not invalidate child marriages performed
without consent of the parties. The status of Hindu conjugality as a
sacrament did not permit young girls, who were married while they were
minors, to repudiate their marriage upon attainment of puberty.[29]
While the CMRA attempted to raise the age of marriage, it did not
attempt to introduce an element of consent within the sacramental notion
of a Hindu marriage. Hence while age became synonymous with sexual
maturity, it did not foreground the active sexual agency of women within
marriage. The concern was only to protect a young girl from the
physical harm caused by sexual intercourse and pregnancy at an early
age, not to alter the character of Hindu marriage from sacrament to
consensual contract. This formulation viewed women as passive sexual
partners. Hence, despite the reforms, the question of women's agency
with regard to Hindu marriages remained unaddressed and unresolved. In
the next part I will discuss how conversion was used by Hindu women to
exercise a religio–legal strategy to escape from the rigidity of status
marriages and to contract marriages of choice.
Conversions to Islam: An illusory escape route
-
Apart from the grounds for divorce discussed earlier, Muslim women could
also use apostasy as a ground to dissolve their marriages. A change of
religion automatically dissolved their previous marriage, hence when
they married men from the new religion they could not be convicted for
bigamy. Hindu women used this strategy based on a mistaken assumption
that conversion to Islam provided them an escape route to rid themselves
of an unhappy marriage. Since the Islamic law of marriage was based on
the notion of consent, it appeared possible for women converting to
Islam to also avail themselves of this option. They believed that
apostasy ipso facto dissolved their previous marriages as was the case
with Muslim women. The case law however, renders their expectations a
fallacy. Colonial state power seemed to collude with native patriarchal
value systems to deny women their autonomy. The women became liable for
criminal prosecution under the newly enacted Indian Penal Code of 1860 on the basis of complaints filed by their husbands from the previous marriage, and they were convicted.
-
In 1895, in the case of Ram Kumari, [30]
the Calcutta High Court upheld the conviction of a Hindu woman married
according to Hindu rites who had converted to Islam and married a Muslim
man. The court explained that the proper course for the woman was to
file a declaratory suit under the Mohammedan law, which was her personal
law after conversion, give notice to her former husband, and obtain a
declaratory decree from the court that her earlier marriage was
dissolved upon conversion and that she was now competent to remarry.
Since she had failed to adopt this course, her original marriage
performed under Hindu law remained valid and she became liable for
prosecution under the provision of bigamy. In a subsequent case decided
by the Madras High Court, the court went further and declared that the
children of such unions were illegitimate.[31]
-
In 1919, the Lahore High Court in Emperor v t. Ruri,[32]
a Christian wife had renounced Christianity, embraced Islam, and
married a Muslim. The session's court at first instance acquitted the
woman on charges of bigamy on the ground that on conversion, the first
marriage was automatically dissolved. However on Appeal, the High Court
invoked the principle upheld in Ram Kumari and convicted the
woman on the ground that conversion did not dissolve the first marriage
solemnised as per the Christian law, and held the subsequent marriage to
be bigamous. The sacramental status of her previous marriage continued
even after conversion, and the woman was not free to contract another
marriage of her choice as per Islamic principles.
-
In the 1947 case of the Bombay High Court, Rabasa Khanum v Khodadad Bomanji Irani,[33]
the same principle was applied to a Parsi woman who had converted to
Islam. While the principles of the English law of marriage could not be
applied to a Parsi marriage, the Bombay High Court invoked principles of
English common law—justice, equity and good conscience—in convicting
the woman for bigamy. Thus it appears that conversion could not provide
an escape route for women from status marriages.
-
These complex and multiple contests over marriage and conversion draw
our attention to the consistent efforts made by women to dissolve their
status marriages through agentive action. However, these could
effectively be countered by husbands aided by the newly enacted penal
provisions of the criminal law. One can clearly see a convergence
between indigenous and colonial law and the reworking of a new and
modern patriarchy that endorsed and even perpetuated inequality in
gender relations. For the women, conversions were a way of exercising
consent in matrimonial relations, albeit in a convoluted manner. But the
courts continued to view all marriages, other than Muslim marriages, as
sacramental status marriages, and did not concede to women the agency
to exercise the choice of conversion to dissolve their marriages.
'Consent' and 'agency' under the codified Hindu Law
-
The Hindu Marriage Act (HMA) enacted in 1955 was the culmination
of a sustained struggle: its major outcome was that upper caste Hindu
women acquired an equal right of divorce on the same footing as their
husbands. Though the Act retained the sacramental aspects and
(recognised ritual) solemnisation of Hindu marriage, it rendered Hindu
marriages contractual and dissoluble unions between two consenting
adults, following developments under the English law. It provided for
the dissolution of marriage under certain stipulated conditions through a
judicial decree. Interestingly, the codification also gave legal
sanctity to the essential ceremonies of marriage. A marriage in
contravention to these stipulations could be declared void. It clearly
reconfirmed the Brahminical Hindu marriage practices.
-
Moreover, the Hindu Marriage Act could not rid itself of the
premise of male patriarchal privileges as the courts continued to embed
the 'Lord and Master' theory within contractual Hindu law, undermining a
woman's right to determine the choice of her marital home, or even
retain a job against her husband's wishes. The courts validated the
husband's rights to conjugality by introducing feudal concepts of
obedience into the modernised and codified Hindu law. If the woman was
employed at a place away from the matrimonial home, the husband could
claim restitution of conjugal rights against the wife. For decades after
its enactment, in a series of decisions, the courts held that Hindu
marriage was a sacrament and it was the sacred duty of the wife to
follow her husband and reside with him wherever he chose to reside, even
when the wife was gainfully employed at a place away from the
matrimonial residence, and contributing to the family income. Husbands
often used the legal ploy of 'restoring conjugality' in order to spite
the women.[34]
-
The 1977 Full Bench ruling of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in Kailash Wati v Ayodhia Parkash,[35]
which followed several other similar rulings of the sixties and
seventies exemplifies this trend. The wife was employed prior to the
marriage but after seven years of marriage, the husband asked the wife
to resign her job. Upon her refusal to do so, he filed for restitution
of conjugal rights. The wife pleaded that while prepared to honour her
matrimonial obligations, she was not prepared to resign her job.
Granting the decree in the husband's favour, the High Court held
that:li>
According to Hindu Law, marriage is a holy union for the performance of
marital duties with her husband wherever he may choose to reside and to
fulfill her duties in her husband's home. The wife's refusal to resign
her job amounts to withdrawal from the husband's society.[36]
-
In a subsequent case, where the wife had challenged the decree of
restitution granted to the husband that it violates the wife's
fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution (right to life
which includes right to a life with dignity), and Article 14 (right to
equality), the Delhi High Court upheld the constitutional validity of
the provision and held:
Introduction of constitutional law within the home is most
inappropriate. It is like introducing a bull in a china shop. It will
prove to be a ruthless destroyer of the marriage institution. In the
privacy of the home neither Article 21 (Right to Life) nor Article 14
(Right to Equality) have any place. In a sensitive sphere which is most
intimate and delicate, the introduction of the cold principles of
constitutional law will have the effect of weakening the marriage bond.[37]
-
Through this ruling the court deprived Hindu women of the right to
equality and dignity, by denying them the agency to withhold their
consent to forced sexual intercourse within marriage.
-
During the debate over reforms in Hindu family laws, opposition to
reforms from conservative forces was effectively countered by
foregrounding the urgency of granting rights to Hindu women who lacked
basic rights to divorce and property, as compared to women from other
minority communities. At this juncture, Muslim law, which granted women
these rights, was perceived as comparatively more modern, progressive
and pro-women and the movement for Hindu law reforms was mounted on this
premise. The entire endeavour was to reform Hindu laws and render them
contractual and give women the right of divorce and inheritance rights.
The contractual nature of Muslim law characterised by the notion of
consent became the defining feature of post-colonial Hindu law reforms.
Ironically, during the later decades, due to the Hindu right-wing’s
onslaught against Muslims, the Muslim personal law came to be projected
as pre-modern, obscurantist and anti-women.[38]
It is against this recent background of stereotyping Muslim women as
legally disempowered that one must examine the contemporary contest
between concepts of 'age' and 'consent' within the codified Hindu Marriage Act.
-
Despite consent now being integral to both Hindu and Muslim marriage
laws, the common practice followed by both communities in India
continues to be arranged marriages[39] within the confines of caste, class and religion.[40] The consent of the contracting individuals is more implied than explicit.
-
While child marriages continue to prevail, the concerns raised during
the nineteenth-century reformist movement are no longer valid. A shift
in perspectives must take place and the contemporary concern over child
marriage ought to be wider, and located within socio-economic factors
such as extreme poverty among the urban and rural poor, lack of
resources and access to education for girl children, the fear of rape
and sexual abuse of young unmarried girls in urban slums, etc. rather
than merely as a dictate of Brahminical patriarchy.
-
The denial of agency becomes even more evident while examining the issue
of marriages of minors. Though the prescribed age of marriage under HMA
in 1955 was 15 for girls and 18 for boys, at that time, being a minor
did not provide a defence against a suit for restitution of conjugal
rights. Neither could a marriage solemnised against the wishes of the
girl while she was a minor be dissolved upon her attaining majority.
This discrepancy within the law denied women the agency to contest the
validity of the marriage contracted when they were minors. This was
evident in the 1965 case of Premi v Daya Ram[41]
where the husband filed a suit for restitution of conjugal rights in
the lower court which was decreed in his favour. Against this, the wife
filed an appeal in the Himachal Pradesh High Court which declined to set
aside the decree of the lower court on the ground that since essential
ceremonies of marriage had been performed, the marriage is valid and the
husband is entitled to a decree of restitution of conjugal rights.[42] Even when the husband was much older than the girl, as in Naumi v Narotam,[43] the courts have declined to invalidate the marriage on the ground that if essential ceremonies stipulated under the Hindu Marriage Act
had been performed, the marriage is valid and the husband is entitled
to a decree of restitution of conjugal rights. These cases confirm that
even after codification, Hindu law could not rid itself of the
association of marriage as a sacrament, thus denying women essential
features of a modern marriage—contract, consent and agency.
-
It is only after the amendment to the Hindu Marriage Act in 1978
that we can discern 'consent' being incorporated into Hindu law through
adoption of the Islamic concept of 'option of puberty' according to
which a girl who was married while she was a minor under 15 could
repudiate her marriage upon majority. The remedy of a divorce by mutual
consent was also introduced at this juncture and grounds of obtaining
divorce were liberalised to include cruelty and desertion. Since age was
perceived to be synonymous with consent, the age of marriage was
increased from 15 to 18 for girls and from 18 to 21 for boys, and the Child Marriage Restraint Act was accordingly amended.
-
While superficially this may appear to be beneficial to women, the
flipside of this amendment was to criminalise an even larger number of
marriages by bringing them within the ambit of child marriage, resulting
in a skewed statistical profile. Thus the premise that 'age' is
synonymous with 'consent' needs to be problematised, since raising the
age of consent ironically resulted in criminalising a large number of
marriages of choice and in exerting greater family, community, and state
control over young women, a point to which I will return later.
-
At another level, in cases where a young wife is abandoned and
approaches the courts for maintenance, the plea of 'minority' is
advanced by husbands to invalidate marriages and to escape the liability
of paying women maintenance. Here the courts have been firm and have
ruled that being a minor does not invalidate the marriage.[44]
Interrogating 'consent' and 'agency' within juridical and feminist discourses over 'elopement marriages'
-
In this part, I examine how 'age' is pitted against 'agency' in the
context of elopement marriages, within the political climate of
religious and caste hostilities, in a complete turn-about from the
manner in which child marriage was first articulated by
nineteenth-century reformers.
-
The term 'elopement marriages' is used for marriages contracted without
the consent of the respective parents. At times, the girls are below the
permissible age of marriage, and at other times, they are projected as
minors by their parents in order to invoke state power by using the
provisions of the CMRA. The discussion on elopement marriages brings to
the fore ways in which multiple social subordinations—caste, region,
religion—intersect with patriarchy in order to reign in the sexual
choices of defiant young women within established social mores. It
appears that choice, or desire, as expressed by a woman is somehow
intrinsically illicit when it is against parental wishes and caste or
community norms, and therefore needs to be contained and controlled.[45]
-
From conversion marriages to elopement marriages, women who exercise
active agency to defy convention pose a threat to the established social
order and hence need to be confined by reframing consent itself. In
this discourse, 'consent' assumes a different dimension and gets
embedded in assumptions about rational choice and parental authority,
rather than choices made by women themselves. While this is problematic,
even more problematic is the way in which feminist discourse engages
with notions of age, agency and consent when there is a rupture between
these terms.
-
The situation becomes precarious when an upper-caste girl elopes with a
lower-caste boy or when a Hindu girl falls in love with a Muslim boy,
transgressing the boundaries of Hindu upper-caste dictates of purity and
pollution. In a strictly stratified society, riddled with prejudices
against lower castes and minorities, a young couple who dares to cross
the boundaries is severely punished. At times the price for choosing a
partner would be public humiliation or a gruesome murder. The notion of
women as the sexual property of their communities continues to be deeply
ingrained.[46]
-
The Rizwanur-Priyanka case of Kolkata in 2007, where the police
played an active role in separating a legally married upper-class Hindu
girl from a Muslim boy belonging to the lower social strata, is one such
glaring instance. Priyanka's rich and influential family were able to
draw the police into an active alliance. Rizwanur's subsequent death is
officially a suicide, but believed by many to be a murder carried out in
collusion with Priyanka's father and the police. The then Police
Commissioner of the city justified the involvement of the police in
separating the couple as a normal and routine affair! A complex network
of connections among the state, political parties, public institutions,
business and the underworld were implicated in this regulative
mechanism. Thus, marriage as a means of crossing community boundaries—by
conversion or interfaith marriages—remains a volatile political issue.[47]
-
One way of regulating such defiant behaviour by young women is to invoke
the provisions of the seemingly progressive statute, the CMRA. Its
provisions are invoked more often to prevent voluntary marriages and
augment patriarchal power than to pose a challenge to it. Hence, when
child marriages are performed by families and communities, the
provisions of this statute are seldom invoked. The patriarchal bastions
are too strong and well-fortified for a modernist feminist discourse to
enter and change social mores through legal dictates. The only sphere in
which these provisions come into play is when 'elopement' marriages,
contracted against the wishes of the respective family members and
defying norms of endogamy and exogamy, bring into sharp focus the
vagaries of the term, 'consent'. For the authorities, lack of age
becomes synonymous with lack of agency to express sexual desire and
bodily pleasure. This raises some new and challenging questions for a
feminist discourse. First, in cases of elopement marriages of adolescent
girls, when there is an active agency expressed by the girls, is it
possible to place consent on a superior plane, when there is disjuncture
between age and consent, as the courts have done? Second, is the
response of a seemingly conservative institution such as the judiciary
more nuanced and pro-women than that of feminists towards elopement
marriages? And third, will invoking the Islamic notion of the 'age of
discretion' rather than the 'age of majority' aid defiant young women
who challenge patriarchal authority, while exercising unconventional
sexual choices?[48] I will attempt to explore these questions in the following part.
-
Usually, an eloped couple is tracked and taken into custody by the
police under parental pressure. The provisions of the CMRA are invoked
to exert pressure on the girl and a criminal case of rape and kidnap is
foisted upon the boy since sexual intercourse, even with the consent of a
minor girl under the age of 16 constitutes statutory rape. In order to
criminalise the choice, even major girls are projected as minors,
lacking the agency to consent to marriage or the sexual act. Despite
being aware of the fact that it is a marriage of choice and voluntary
elopement, the police collude with the fathers to protect patriarchal
interests and community 'honour'. Only if the girl is able to provide
clear and unequivocal proof of her majority is she allowed to accompany
her husband and cohabit with him. Or else, the father's word regarding
her age is accepted and she is reverted to his custody. In cases where
the girls vehemently refuse to return to their parental home, they are
placed in government run 'protection' homes until they are majors. Even
thereafter the girls are not automatically released and the husbands are
compelled to initiate costly and protracted litigation to release them
from state custody. The state authorities decline to examine the element
of 'consent' and merely adhere to the prescription of 'age' while
determining the legal status of these marriages.
-
These cases come to the notice of the higher judiciary when the remedy
of habeas corpus, meant to curb abuse of state (police) power against
innocent citizens, is invoked by husbands for the production of their
wives who have been retained illegally by parents. Sensitive judges have
viewed these petitions as symptomatic of a changing social order, and
have advised the parties to avail themselves of counselling to resolve
the dispute rather than applying the stringent provisions of criminal
law.[49] In some cases, upholding
the wishes of the minor, the courts have permitted the girl to accompany
her husband, even against parental wishes, as the following cases
reveal.
-
In Manish Singh v State (NCT Delhi),[50]
in a habeas corpus writ petition filed by the husband of a minor girl,
the Delhi High Court held that marriages solemnised in contravention of
the age restriction are not void. The court commented that the
legislature was conscious of the fact that if such marriages are
rendered void, it could lead to serious consequences and exploitation of
women. The girl had deposed that she had married out of her own will
and was desirous of living with her husband. The court ruled that once a
girl or a boy attains the age of discretion and chooses a life partner,
the marriage cannot be nullified on the ground of minority and that it
is not an offence if a minor girl elopes and gets married against the
wishes of her parents.
-
In Sunil Kumar v State (NCT Delhi),[51] wherein the father had confined the girl illegally, it was held:
If a girl of around 17 years runs away from her parents' house to save
herself from their onslaught and joins her lover or runs away with him,
it is no offence either on the part of the girl or on the part of the
boy.
The girl was not willing to return to her parents, who were not amenable
to any reconciliation and wished to sever all relationship with her.
-
In Kokkula Suresh v State of Andhra Pradesh,[52]
the Andhra Pradesh High Court reaffirmed that the marriage of a minor
girl below 18 years is not a nullity and the father cannot claim her
custody. In Ashok Kumar v State,[53]
the Punjab and Haryana High Court commented that couples performing
love marriage are chased by police and the relatives, often accompanied
by musclemen and cases of rape and abduction are registered against the
boy. At times the couple faces the threat of being killed and such
killings are termed 'honour killings'.
-
These judgements, which restrain the police from performing arbitrary
actions such as forcing women into the protective custody of the state,
serve as a benchmark for a liberal interpretation of constitutional
safeguards of personal liberty and individual freedom. For instance, in Payal Sharma alias Kamla Sharma v Superintendent, Nari Niketan, Agra,[54]
the Allahabad High Court rejected the father's contention that the girl
was a minor and instead accepted the woman's own contention that she
was a major, declaring that she has a right to go anywhere and live with
anyone. The court commented:
In our opinion a man and a woman, even without getting married can live
together, if they wish. This can be regarded as immoral by society but
it is not illegal. There is a difference between law and morality.'[55]
-
These judicial pronouncements have been criticised by some women's
organisations on the ground that such a lax attitude towards child
marriage on the part of the judiciary would be instrumental in
increasing the incidents of child marriage in the country. This led to a
renewed campaign to render child marriages void and for compulsory
registration of marriages to curb the concern about child marriage. In
response to these demands, the CMRA was amended in 2006, but once again,
the state in its wisdom, declined to render such marriages 'void' but
merely voidable at the option of a contracting party. Challenging this,
Writ Petitions were filed by statutory bodies such as the National
Commission for Women for declaration of a uniform age of marriage (which
is 18) and sexual intercourse (which is 16) and for declaring all
under-age marriages as void.[56]
-
The feminist argument that 'the institution of patriarchy operates in
the name of culture for justifying child marriage of young girls' gets
problematised when we examine the agency which a young girl expresses in
an elopement marriage.[57] Here
the legal provision becomes a weapon to control sexuality and curb
marriages of choice. Even though the criminal provisions regarding
kidnapping and statutory rape appear to be protecting minor girls, these
provisions are used in a manner which augments the patriarchal parental
power over the minor girl. There are no exceptions in the laws on
abduction and kidnapping that allow a minor to opt out of guardianship,
or to leave her parental home on grounds of domestic abuse and neglect.[58]
The use and abuse of police power, at the instance of parents with
regard to marriages of choice, works in direct contrast to women's
autonomy, agency and free will.
-
These developments raise complex legal questions—since the girls were
minors, were they juridical persons invested with the agency to exercise
free choice and would the consent given by them to the marriage, be
deemed legally valid? At times, judges, with a concern for social
justice, have resolved the issue by resorting to basic principles of
human rights in order to save minor girls from the wrath of their
parents and from institutionalisation in state-run protective homes. The
only way they could do so was by upholding the validity of the
marriages by bestowing on the minor girls an agency and by distancing
the notion of 'age' from 'consent'.
-
We need to examine these judgements, which declared the marriages of
minor girls as valid, and acknowledged their agency to contract
marriages of choice, through the prism of women's rights. Can these
judicial interventions in aid of minor girls be termed as regressive and
the demand by women's groups to declare these marriages as null and
void be termed progressive? Alternatively, can we term the curbing of
the freedom of these minor girls to express their sexual choices by
their natal families, with the aid of the mighty power of the state,
within a sexually repressive society, be termed a progressive
intervention in support of the movement against child marriages?
-
It is important that contemporary feminist discourse becomes far more
nuanced than what one can discern through the recent campaign against
child marriages. Rather than blindly advocating a universally accepted
position framed by a first-world feminist discourse, women's rights
groups need to advance a position which is rooted within third-world
realities, contextualised within the urban–rural divide, and responsive
to other social realities such as caste prejudices and communal
conflicts. In conclusion, I urge that feminist voices lend credence to
the claims of the weak against the institutional authorities which hold
the might of the status quo. The agency exercised by a young teenage
girl and her voice of protest against the dictates of patriarchy needs
articulation and support. The claims of an Indian feminist jurisprudence
lie within this complex tapestry.
Conclusion
-
Age and consent within marriage laws appear to be fluid concepts when we
examine them across different time zones—from the historical to the
contemporary. They act out in myriad of different ways within the realm
of personal laws of Hindus and Muslims. Historically they have denied
Hindu women agency to negotiate their rights and sexual choices, while
the Muslim law grants women, greater scope to negotiate their rights.
This paper has focused elaborately on this issue. During the
contemporary period, in cases of elopement marriages, where girls defy
parental authority and contract marriages of choice, age is viewed as
synonymous with consent. The paper explores the disadvantages it poses
to minor girls who challenge patriarchal power and express sexual desire
through their active agency. In this discourse, the role of the
judiciary seems to be more progressive than the feminist voice which is
seeking to declare such marriages void.
-
The paper urges that a nuanced approach is to be adopted while
addressing the concerns of women who wish to enter into marriage or seek
its dissolution. Rather than adopting a universalist position, it is
important to keep in view whether the feminist voice lends credence to
the weaker against the might of patriarchal power that seeks to throttle
their voices.
Notes
All URLs in these references were operational when the paper was first published.
[1] Lucy Carroll has argued the
linear mould into which fluid customary practices were recast as per the
Brahminical norm resulted in loss of rights of lower caste widows to
property inheritance after remarriage. See Lucy Carroll, 'Law, custom,
and statutory social reform: The Hindu Widows’ Remarriage Act of 1856,' The Indian Economic & Social History Review 20(4) (December 1983): 363–88, DOI: 10.1177/001946468302000401.
[2] D.J.M. Derrett, Religion, Law and the State in India, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1999.
[3] Archana Parashar, Women and Family Law Reform in India, New Delhi: Sage Publications, 1992.
[4] This phrase is commonly used by
right wing Hindu fundamentalist against the Congress government which
provided certain protection to the poverty stricken Muslim population.
[5] Mohd Ahmed Khan v Shahbano Begam (1985), All India Reporter Supreme Court 945.
[6] The lower castes, who did not
follow the Brahminical law were not governed by this dictates and hence
marriages among them were more egalitarian as the communities did not
practice child marriage and the custom of dowry. They followed the
tradition of 'bride price' and women had the right to divorce and
remarriage.
[7] A.A.A. Fyzee, Outlines of Muslim Law, New Delhi: Oxford University Press 1974, 4th edn, p. 125.
[8] Flavia Agnes, 'Women, marriage, and the subordination of rights', in Community, Gender and Violence, Subaltern Studies Volume XI, edited by Partha Chatterjee and Pradeep Jeganathan, New Delhi: Permanent Black, 2000, pp. 106–37.
[9] Moonshee Buzloor Ruheem v Shumsoonisa Begum (1867), 11 Moore's Indian Appeals 551.
[10] After the new legal order was
introduced in 1860 (when the power to administer India was placed under
the direct rule of the British Parliament and Privy Council) it became
the final authority of adjudication with its decisions binding on the
High Courts in India.
[11] ibid.
[12] Badarannissa Bibi v Mafiattala (1871), 7 Bengal Law Reporter 442.
[13] Joygun Nessa Bibi v Mahammad Ali Biswas (1938), All India Reporter Calcutta 71.
[14] This provision was subsequently incorporated into the Hindu law through an amendment in 1976.
[15] The term kabin-nama can be roughly translated as a pre-nuptial contract between the parties .
[16] It was enacted on 28 September
1929 in the Imperial Legislative Council of India and came into force
on 1 April 1930. The Act fixed age of marriage for girls as 14 and for
boys as 18 years. This Act will be discussed later.
[17] Khwaja Mohammed v Husseini Begum (1910), 37 Indian Appeals 152.
[18] ibid., pp. 412–13.
[19] Noor Bibi v Pir Bux (1950), All India Reporter Sindh 8.
[20] While there is a continuity
between this judgment and the principles upheld in the earlier
judgments, Justice Tyabji draws a clear distinction between Hindu and
Muslim Family Law jurisprudence, placing Muslim law on a higher plank.
[21] ibid, pp. 11–12.
[22] Queen Empress v Huree Mohan Mythee (1891), Indian Law Reporter 17 Calcutta 49.
[23] Even as Hindu law was reified
as traditional, thereby reducing the flexibility of local custom and
modes of adjudication, the act of colonial codification staged a
conflict between reformers and revivalists, who responded to the efforts
to modernise/codify Hindu law very differently.
124] Tanika Sarkar, 'Rhetoric against age of consent', in Economic and Political Weekly xxviii(6) (1993): 1869–78.
[25] Sudhir Chandra, Enslaved Daughters, New Delhi: Oxford University Press 1998, p. 1.
[26] See Joygun Nessa Bibi discussed in the preceding part.
[27] Dadaji Bhikaji v Rukmabai (1885), Indian Law Reporter 9 Bombay 529.
[28] Dadaji Bhikaji v Rukhmabai (1886), Indian Law Reporter 10 Bombay 301.
[29] This option was made available to Hindu women only in 1978 through an amendment to the Hindu Marriage Act of 1955.
[30] Ram Kumari, (1895) Indian Law Reporter 18 Calcutta 264.
[31] Budansa Rowther v Fatima Bibi (1914), All India Reporter Madras 192.
[32] Emperor v t. Ruri (1919), All India Reporter Lahore 389.
[33] Rabasa Khanum v Khodadad Bomanji Irani (1947), All India Reporter Bombay 272.
[34] See Flavia Agnes, Family Law, Vol. II: Marriage, Divorce and Matrimonial Litigation, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2011, p. 22, DOI: 10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198072201.001.0001.
[35] Kailash Wati v Ayodhia Parkash (1977), Indian Law Reporter 1 Punjab & Haryana 642 Full Bench.
[36] ibid., p. 673.
[37] Harvinder Kaur v Harminder Singh (1984), All India Reporter Delhi 66.
[38] See comments in the Shah Bano ruling in 1985 discussed earlier.
[39] Marriage proposals would be settled by elders of the respective families.
[40] In modern times dowry has
become an integral part of marriage negotiations both among Hindus and
Muslims. The constant demand for dowry even after marriage and the
subsequent murder of suicide by married women has become a cause of deep
concern, leading to introduction of penal provisions to curb this evil
practice.
[41] Premi v Daya Ram (1965), All India Reporter Himachal Pradesh 15.
[42] The wife contested the
validity of her marriage on the grounds that she was under the
prescribed age of marriage. But the court rejected her plea on the
ground that a marriage contracted when a girl is minor is not void. The
court explained that though such marriages are discouraged by society
and law, the evil of child marriage was deep-rooted, and declaring such
marriages void would result in unfortunate consequences and unnecessary
hardship to the parties.
[43] Naumi v Narotam (1963),
All India Reporter Himachal Pradesh 15. In this case, a 13-year-old
girl pleaded that she had been forcibly married to a man of 60.
[44] See V. Mallikarjunaiah v H.C. Gowramma (1997), All India Reporter Karnataka 77, in this context.
[45] Uma Chakravarthi, 'From fathers to husbands: Of love, death and marriage in North India', in Honour Crimes, Paradigms, and Violence Against Women, edited by Lynn Welchman and Sara Hossain, London: Zed Press (2005) pp. 308–33.
[46] Prem Chowdhry, 'Private lives, state intervention: Cases of runaway marriage in rural North India', Modern Asian Studies 38(55) (2004): 55–84, DOI: 10.1017/S0026749X04001027.
[47] S. Sen, 'Crossing communities : Religious conversion, rights in marriage and personal law', in Negotiating Spaces: Legal Domains, Gender Concerns and Community Constructs, edited by Flavia Agnes and Shoba Ghosh, Oxford University Press, India, 2012, 77–109.
[48] It needs to be mentioned here
that parents have also wielded their power when young women have made
the unconventional choice of same sex relationships. I have not dwelt on
this, since the issue is not the focus of this paper.
[49] See Ajit Ranjan v State, II (2007)
Divorce and Matrimonial Cases 136 where the Delhi High Court commented
that the changing social scenario in the country was leading to a
situation where there were more inter-caste and inter-religious
marriages, which meet with societal and familial resistance and advised
the state administration to view these cases as a social problem than a
criminal offence.
[50] Manish Singh v State (NCT Delhi) I (2006), Divorce and Matrimonial Cases 1: All India Reporter 2006 Delhi 37.
[51] Sunil Kumar v State (NCT Delhi), I (2007), Divorce and Matrimonial Cases 786.
[52] Kokkula Suresh v State of Andhra Pradesh, I (2009), Divorce and Matrimonial Cases 646.
[53] Ashok Kumar v State, I (2009), Divorce and Matrimonial Cases 120.
[54] Payal Sharma alias Kamla Sharma v Superintendent, Nari Niketan, Agra (2001),All India Reporter Allahabad 254.
[55] ibid., para 1.
[56] Through an amendment to the rape law, the age of consent to sexual intercourse is now 18 years.
[57] J. Sagade, Child Marriage in India, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2005.
[58] P. Baxi, '"Till honour does us
apart": Legislating Women's Right to Marry', New Delhi: Centre for Law
and Governance, Jawaharlal Nehru University, 2009, unpublished paper,
copy in author's possession.
|