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Section 375

By Prakhar Tripathi

The doors of Delhi High Court have been fluttering since last one month with voices being raised to criminalize exception 2 Section 375 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC). All India Democratic Women Association, RIT Foundation and two other organizations are behind putting forth this initiative. The Court has been going through the legality of the exception and whether it serves any purpose in modern-day India or is it just a colonial provision still draping in the books of the criminal manual.

Exception 2 to section 375 of the Indian Penal Code reads as follows: –

Sexual intercourse by a man with his own wife, the wife not being under fifteen years of age, is not rape.

A majority of the common law countries have already done away with the draconian provision of marital rape wherein the husband considers the wife as his chattel and performs sexual acts with her even if it is against her will. In fact, India remains one of the only 32 countries in the world where this exception remains to prevail.

England and Wales outdid this provision in the case of R v R in the year 1991 by the Appellate committee of the House of Lords. In Germany, marital rape was outlawed in the year 1997 after female rights activists for 25 years protested against it. Australia criminalized this provision in the year 1991 in the case of R v L by stating that such law was not part of the Australian Law.

Henceforth, the originators of the common law have outdone with this provision, but it still remains an evil continuing to haunt Indian society.

Let us analyse how faintly this provision stands on the footholds of the legal bedrock.

Prima facie, there are three ingredients of rape :- ‘Sexual Intercourse’, ‘Against her will’ and ‘Without her consent. Any act satisfying these three criteria falls into the category of Rape. But then, a stalemate has been created in the same section by giving protection to a person who is legally wedded to the victim and whose act satisfies all of these criteria. The exception gives her husband the right to have sexual intercourse with her whether she is willing or not eventually becoming a subject to his whims and fancies thus, violating every right which the women as an individual possess.

Over the years, lots of women in India have been subjected to this social evil. The National Family health survey (NFHS) 2015- 2016 states that 99.1 percent of the sexual violence cases go unreported and an average Indian woman is 17 times more likely to encounter sexual violence from her husband than from others.

The legislators of the country put forth the argument that it might be detrimental for the Indian family structure if this change in the statute is allowed almost overlooking the fact that this exception is violative of the pristine fundamental rights that our constitution provides.

Violative of Article 14 and 21

Article 14 of the Indian constitution states that there shall be equality before the law but the State has to follow an intelligible differentia wherein like should be treated alike and different treatment of people who are in different circumstances. The test of intelligible differentia has been laid down in the case of State of West Bengal vs Anwar Ali Sarkar wherein it has been held that that the differentiation or classification needs to have cogent nexus with the purpose sought to be realized by the statute in question. The exception acts as a sledgehammer in the statute wherein it creates a stark difference between women who are married and those who are unmarried. By the creation of this exception, the section fails to deny the very protection to married women for which it has been devised. The distinction so created neither has a rational nexus with the statute so created nor does it serve the purpose sought by the section.

Similar has been the view of the J.S Verma committee report constituted to recommend changes in the criminal law system which emphasised highly that the exception related to the marital rape should be done away with and that marriage is never an irrevocable consent to sexual acts and that wife is never a subservient chattel of husband.

The exception also violates Article 21 of the constitution which provides for Right to life and personal liberty. The Apex Indian court has in various cases expanded the meaning of ‘life’ in Article 21 by quoting the observation of Field J in the American case of Munn v Illinois wherein it has been stated that the term ‘life’ means much more than an animal existence. The inhibition against its deprivation extends to all those limbs and faculties by which life is enjoyed. In the case of ‘State of Karnataka vs. Krishnappa it has been held that sexual violence is an intrusion of the right to privacy and sanctity of the female’. In the case of Suchitra Srivastav vs Chandigarh administration it has been held that Article 21 includes the right of a woman to make reproductive choices. None of these judgements differentiate between a woman who is married and the one unmarried. Also, none of the other offences mentioned in the IPC propagate such an arbitrary and repulsive differentiation between a married and unmarried woman. Section 375 is the only anomaly that remains. Henceforth, the contrast created by the section is violative of Article 14 and 21 of the Constitution.

Progressive Judicial Pronouncements

Time and again has the Indian Judiciary held that the exception is a dying provision and needs to be done away with. In the case of Sakshi vs Union of India reference was made to the case of R v R [1991] 4 All ER 481 in which it has ‘been held that a husband and wife are equal partners in a marriage, therefore a husband not being criminally liable for raping his wife if he has sexual intercourse with her no longer forms part of the law of England’

In the case of Satyawati Sharma vs Union of India it has been held that legislation that might have been reasonable and practical at the time of their enactment may become redundant, arbitrary and unreasonable with the lapse of time. Similarly, exception 2 of IPC over the years has become redundant and serves no purpose in modern day India. In the case of Nimeshbhai Bharatbhai Desai vs State of Gujrat it has been held that wilful perverted sexual acts with wife would amount to cruelty under 498A of the IPC because then the normal sexual relations which form the basis of a happy married life would come to a standstill and a husband having sexual intercourse with his wife is not using her just as her property but filling the marital consortium.

What we can discern from all these judgments is that sexual intimacy between the husband and wife is one of the major building blocks of their relationship. The kind of intimacy husband and wife want to have in their relationship needs to be thoroughly discussed and should be done with mutual consent of both of them. If the female is not willing to have any kind of perversion in their intimate life, then it is clearly her choice and she has all the rights to do so. Forcing her against her will, would amount to cruelty and eventually be violative of all the rights our virtuous constitution gives her.

The Way Forward

Therefore, it is high time that the polarity created between married and unmarried women by the statute needs to be done away with. The married daughters of our country need to have a life filled with dignity and respect; that the laws made to inoculate them do not act against them. Although, an act of caution has to be seen while enacting this provision. That is, men should not be at the receiving end of this new change in law. There has been an alarming rate of rise of false rape cases in India, because the only pre-requisite required to file a rape case is the statement of a women. Therefore, various innocent men in India suffer unknowingly that they might at the receiving end of section 375. What is to be seen is that after removal of exception 2, the section is handled with utmost care and precision which allows both men and women to be equally treated by the statute and that only genuine cases of marital rape come to the court retrenching its time and the value of the justice delivery system.

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By Pooja Bhattacharjee

Rape has been defined under Section 375 of the IPC (Indian Penal Code, 1860),  which states that rape is said to have been committed when a man has sexual intercourse with a woman against her will, without her consent, by coercion, misrepresentation, or fraud or at a time when she has been intoxicated or duped or is of unsound mental health and in any case if she is under 18 years of age.  Rape is a form of gender-motivated violence in India. In the case of Sakshi v. UOI, the Supreme Court shed light on the definition of rape and held that only penial and vaginal penetration will be considered as rape within the purview of Section 375 of the IPC, thus narrowing down the scope of sexual intercourse as defined in the IPC. However, in 2012, a bench of justices Swatanter Kumar and Gyan Sudha Misra held that even if there is no penetration, it does not necessarily mean that there is no rape, while upholding the conviction of a man for raping a 11-year-old girl, despite there being no evidence of penetration. (The Hindu)

The Verma Committee had recommended that non penetrative acts against women, like stalking and groping, which are also a violation of woman’s bodily integrity and sexual autonomy, should be termed as sexual assault and be punished as rape. The legislature, however, did not accept the recommendation and retained the offence of ‘outraging the modesty of a woman,’ which is the provision under which all non-penetrative sexual acts continue to be prosecuted under Section 354 of the IPC. (THE WIRE)

To prove that consent was absent, the law’s aim should be to reduce ambiguity and alter definitions to mitigate the historic imbalance of credibility afforded to males but not to females. The most important factor to be determined in a rape is whether the woman consented to the sexual act. The law presumes that the accused is innocent. The burden is on the prosecution- victim to prove beyond reasonable doubt that consent was absent. Under Section 375, ‘willingness to participate in the specific sexual act’ can be conveyed ‘through words, gestures or any form of verbal or non-verbal communication.’ The focus is more often on if these ‘gestures’ occurred and not on what they meant. 

Two recent cases shows that the Indian judiciary needs to be more sensitive in dealing with rape cases and not fall back on erstwhile sexist and misogynistic views that have emerged in numerous judgments. 

In the Guahati Rape Case, the Gauhati High Court granted bail to Utsav Kadam, a 21-year-old accused of rape on the ground that the he is a talented student and is the state’s ‘future asset.’ The police had arrested the accused, a student of IIT Guwahati on April 3, for allegedly sexually assaulting a female student of the institute on March 28. The bench of Justice Ajit Borthakur in an order passed on 13 August granting bail to Utsav Kadam, observed, “as the investigation in the case is completed and both the victim and the accused are the state’s future assets being talented students pursuing technical courses at the I.I.T., Guwahati, who are young in the age group of 19 to 21 years only and further, they are being hailed from two different states, a continuation of detention of the accused in the interest of trial of the case, if charges are framed, may not be necessary”. The order was passed despite the fact that the court noted that there is a clear prima facie case against Kadam. 

Last year, it was reported that a Civil Court in the Araria district of Bihar had sent a gang rape survivor to jail on grounds of disrupting court proceedings. Her only crime was having an emotional outburst and a nervous breakdown that emanated from the Court’s request to repeat her trauma over and over again. What seems to be a natural reaction for any rape survivor was misconstrued as ‘contempt of court’. The judiciary’s response to rape cases, specifically, rape survivors seem to fluctuate between insensitive and thoughtless to sexist and misogynistic. (ThePrint 2020)

In India, the class, and caste of the victim are used as means to discredit the victim. The colonizers used caste or class to gauge the reliability of the version of events stated by survivors and this is being continued to date. The rape adjudication cases in India involving a breach of promise to marry are also revealing.  In Kunal Mandaliya v. State of Maharashtra. 

Justice Mridula Bhatkar observed that an educated woman could not have been deceived, and thus was not raped on the pretext of marriage. The judgement read:

The prosecutrix at the time of filing the complaint was 30 years old and was nearly 25 to 26 years old when the first incident of sexual intercourse took place. Thus, she was aware of the consequences of keeping sexual relations with a man and she was also aware that there may be differences between two persons and they may find each other compatible. The girl was highly educated and also 25 years old. Therefore, the consent cannot be said to have been obtained by fraud.

The court’s comment on consent shows how in the absence of an affirmative standard, a negative standard invalidates the experience of the woman and improperly shifts the responsibility of the assault away from the perpetrator and onto the victim. 

Marital rape refers to sexual intercourse with one’s spouse without their consent. Recently, the Chhattisgarh High Court held that sexual intercourse by husband does not amount to rape, even if it’s by force. (Today 2021) 

The law, as inhumane as it is, however, is being defended by some eminent jurists who are in favour of leaving the provision untouched in order to protect the ‘Indian family values.’  It is important to acknowledge, however, that those assigned the female sex at birth are not the only survivors of rape in India, often, nonconformity with gender boundaries not only functions as a basis for sex crimes, including rape but also makes it harder for survivors to seek help. Section 375 of the IPC only conceptualizes the perpetrator as male and the victim as female. Its exclusivity in nature leaves out a large section of society who are being violated and are left with no discourse of getting justice. 

The status quo burdens victims and exonerates perpetrators of responsibility in sexual interactions. Indian statutes, legal decisions, and commentaries condemning rape primarily focus on it as a crime that lowers a woman’s dignity and scars her reputation, rather than a crime violative of a woman’s selfhood, individuality, or autonomy. 

The accounting of traditional notions of what an ‘Indian woman’ is and their defined ‘behaviors’ are, should be discarded. Even though change is visible, an overturning of the current structures will be brought about through a normative reconstruction of our laws and our social rationality only when people realize why the current laws are problematic and ancient and understand why new amendments to these laws are necessary.

It is necessary to take legal recourse if you’ve been abused of sexual harassment or have witnessed someone getting abused. Consecutively, you can register your complaint at the National Commission for Women   as investigations by the police will be expedited and monitored. 

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