Marriage Equality Hearings: ‘We Aren’t Asking For a New Right,’ Petitioners Tell Supreme Court 

The exchange of views between senior counsels Mukul Rohatgi and Abhishek Manu Singhvi and the five-judge constitution bench today suggested that the recognition of the petitioners’ prayers is not necessarily a far off idea.

The second day of the hearing before the constitution bench of the Supreme Court on petitions seeking recognition of same-sex marriages began with the Solicitor General, Tushar Mehta, disclosing that the Union government has written to the Chief Secretaries of all the States and Union Territories about the hearing of the case, and making a request to the bench to issue a formal notice to the states. 

The petitioners’ senior counsel, Mukul Rohatgi, who continued his submissions this morning, however, doubted the government’s sincerity, saying that if it wanted to involve the states, it could have informed them about the pending case five months ago.   

The thrust of Rohatgi’s argument was that it was too late to leave the matter for parliament to decide or to wait for states to make their submissions, and even if the LGBTQI+ people involved a “minuscule minority”, (as they were disparagingly referred to by the two-judge bench in the Suresh Kumar Kaushal case), they deserved to be granted relief by the Supreme Court in this case. 

Rohatgi reiterated his view that citizens of a democracy cannot be compelled by an oppressive and colonial mindset. Relying extensively on the Supreme Court’s judgment in Justice K.S.Puttaswamy vs Union of India, delivered on August 24, 2017, Rohatgi emphasised his view that the society has evolved over the years. Although the court had struck down the barrier by decriminalising homosexual behaviour in Navtej Singh Johar in 2018, some sort of barrier still remains, he pointed out. 

“The colonial mindset is implicit in the ground whenever we go to public places. Wherever the terms, ‘husband’ and ‘wife’ are used, make it gender-neutral by substituting it with ‘spouse’.  If the reference is to a man and a woman, use ‘person’ instead”, he said. 

Also read: Marriage Equality: Highlights of What Was Said at the Supreme Court Today

Rohatgi also suggested that a “filtering down” of the orders of the Supreme Court in earlier cases is required. In several Acts, consequential effect should follow, he added.

He sought the bench’s indulgence in making its directions explicit. He thus suggested that the bench could direct that all laws, duties, and obligations flowing from marriage for heterosexual couples will also apply to LGBTQI+ people.

“Our struggle can’t end today in any case. If there is no explicit declaration, we have to come back to the court again and again,” he told the bench. 

Referring to deconstructing the heteronormative framework, Rohatgi argued that the LGBTQI+ people have been buried under the pressure of the majority.  

“That is not the law, but the mindset which is troubling us in our everyday life. Deconstructing involves, in the absence of right to privacy, a shield against forced homogeneity. Today, I have that shield (thanks to the Supreme Court’s declaration of right to privacy as a fundamental right). It should be made explicit, so that  I will not be stigmatised, traumatised,” he submitted.

Rohatgi contended that individual sexuality cannot be put in boxes.

“It is fluid. Sexuality cannot be construed as rigid marital procreational sex. Biological man, biological woman. Procreation. We are revisiting it. Human sexuality cannot be defined narrowly in terms of function, as a means to procreation. It is a narrow and pedantic view. Constitution protects fluidity of sexual experience and  right to intimacy,” he elaborated.

Rohatgi reminded the bench that in at least four of its judgments, it had laid down and reiterated that every person is entitled to marry a person of one’s choice. If it applies to heterosexual couple, it will apply equally to us (LGBTQI+ people), he said.  

The Supreme Court enjoys moral authority, enjoys public confidence. The prestige of court depends on public confidence, apart from Article 141 (which says that the law declared by the Supreme Court shall be binding), he submitted. Therefore, he suggested that the court’s ability to make a declaration stems from this public confidence, irrespective of what parliament intends to do in the same matter. 

Rohatgi told the court that today LGBTQI+ people are outside the closet, and their parents have by and large accepted them. “Their parents want them to settle, have a family. They don’t want them to be ostracised,” he said. He refuted the Union government’s submission that the same sex marriage is an “urban elitist concept,” by citing the example of Nepal

Also read: The Fight for Saving Queer-Trans Lives Is More Than Just Securing Equal Marriage Rights

Drawing from the experience of the LGBTQI+ struggle in the United States, Rohatgi said history is repeating itself in India. After the annulment of Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, it has to go forward, not stop there, he suggested. He said this can happen with a declaration from the court that the LGBTQI+ are entitled to the same rights as others. 

“If this is good for society as a whole, it has to be good for us,” he submitted. He added that in this, the state should come forward gracefully, not grudgingly.

“Decriminalisation is the first step. Affirmative steps remain. Our prayers are affirmative steps. Help us live a dignified life”, he told the bench in an emotional plea.   

Arguing that constitutional morality can become a habit only with a declaration from the Supreme Court, Rohatgi drew from the rich jurisprudence from the court on the choice of partner, desire for personal consensual intimacy, earning for love and fulfilment, and universal appeal. “The groundwork has already been cemented by this court; I seek no more as everything is already here,” he said. 

Members of the LGBTQI+ community are entitled to a full range of constitutional rights which include companionship, family, walking in public, etc., he told the bench. 

Minimum age

The bench was curious to know what will be the minimum age of the partners for a valid marriage, in the event of the court recognising the pleas of the petitioners. The responses of the counsel to the bench’s queries were far from satisfactory, as some suggested if it involved male couple, it would be 21, and if it is female couple it would be 18. Rohatgi suggested with the proposed reform of the law to increase the minimum age of women to get married from 18 to 21, this conundrum may be resolved. 

To a large extent, senior counsel Abhishek Manu Singhvi too adopted a similar contention that people of the LGBTQI+ communities are not seeking a new right. According to him, the Special Marriage Act (SMA) must be read in sync with the larger constitutional values, which would include the Preamble, the relevant articles, and non-discriminatory remedies. 

Referring to the notice and objection regime under the SMA, Singhvi emphasised that the right to choose is the most enduring of all the relationships, and therefore, he said, it should be regardless of sex and sexual orientation, gender and gender identities. 

He told the court that it is on the verge of removing the next brick of discrimination and exclusion after Navtej Singh Johar. 

“Little done, but vast undone,” as he put it. He suggested that it is not the state alone which threatens the core constitutional values, such as equality, liberty and fraternity. He suggested that the notice and objection regime under the SMA legitimised the threat from  non-state actors and the vigilante groups. 

Also read: 30-Day Notice Under Special Marriage Act Required to ‘Verify Credibility’ of Persons: Centre

Drawing an analogy with the offence of murder, he said murders are not eliminated simply by making it an offence under the law, but murder is recognised as wrong. Similarly, with the court declaring that same-sex marriages are valid, there would be necessary consequences, he suggested. “Once you declare that I am on the right side of the law, the state is bound to protect me; I am going further. I am invoking freedom of speech and expression under Article 19(1)(a) – right to express one’s gender identity in all its manifestations,” he explained.

Taking a cue from the government’s affidavit which claimed marriage is a vital foundation, community and social validation of relationships, institution, etc., Singhvi argued that because it provides security to couples, (much more so to vulnerable couples), it is important that the LGBTQI+ people are entitled to it. At this point, the CJI, D.Y. Chandrachud, remarked that if a person is in a gay or lesbian relationship, one of them can adopt. Therefore, the theory of psychological impact on children is not convincing enough, he suggested. 

Singhvi submitted that marital status is a source of dignity, self-respect, and fulfilment as a core member of society, apart from yielding the ability to have and enjoy family life. 

When it was pointed out that family group insurance is not available without marriage, Justice Ravindra Bhat suggested that if there is no prohibition in the law, it is easier to grant that right. The counsel answered that as a baseline, we need a declaration to address those concerns. Justice Bhat responded saying there are certain things which can be done straight away. You have to identify, he told the counsel.

Singhvi submitted that the right to express one’s gender identity is questioned by the state despite the intersection of Articles 14 and 19(1)(a). “If you can’t do it for heterosexual category, how can you justify this in the case of the LGBTQI+?” he asked. 

Singhvi explained how the marriage recognition plea is relevant for dignity which involves treating everyone with equal respect. As the ability to participate in the making and remaking of social institutions is central to dignity, removal of exclusions will advance the constitutional goal, he told the bench.  

The hearing will continue on Thursday, April 20.

At Least 11 of 21 Former Judges Opposing Same Sex Marriage Are Not as Sanskari as They Seem

Do judges have any business quoting Bharatiya traditions when their allegiance is to the Constitution alone?

New Delhi: It may come as a surprise to some people that at least 11 of the 21 retired high court judges who wrote an open letter opposing same-sex marriage on the grounds that it violates the “Bharatiya marriage traditions and family system” are not as virtuous as they seem.

One of these 11 former judges had once confined his 30-year-old daughter at home to stop her from marrying her boyfriend from a different caste. Another was referred to as an “uncle judge” by the Bar Council because a relative of his worked as an advocate in the same court. Yet another called a Supreme Court justice from the minority community “communal” purely on the basis of his religion. All 11 have worked for the government in various capacities after their retirement.

The 21 judges released their open letter on March 24 in response to a Supreme Court decision to hear the final arguments on granting recognition to same-sex marriages on April 18.

Aside from claiming that same-sex marriages pose a threat to Bharatiya traditions, the retired judges also said that the prevalence of HIV – the AIDS virus – would rise if same-sex marriages were to be legalised, basing this argument on data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which said that 70% of new HIV-AIDS cases are amongst gay and bisexual men. Other objections made by the 21 retired judges included the fear that children from homosexual marriages will suffer from grave emotional and psychological traumas and that same-sex marriages will lead to a population decline and weaken the gene pool. All of this, the letter said, will seriously impact the entire human race.

None of these fears are supported by facts or statistics. But to underline their objections, the learned judges once again returned to the topic of Bharatiyata, stating that mindless aping of the West would sound the death knell of the already crumbling Bharatiya family traditions. They ended the letter by saying that law-making is entrusted to the legislature, not the judiciary.

At least two of the objections made in the letter are similar to those made by the Narendra Modi government at the Centre. The government has also opposed the same-sex marriage petitions in the court on the grounds of preserving Bharatiyata and also said that granting legal sanction to relationships is a function of the legislature, not the judiciary.

The open letter by the 21 retired judges raises several pertinent questions. First, do judges have any business quoting Bharatiya traditions while passing judgment, or is their allegiance bound by the Constitution alone? Next, are the former judges only frightened by threats to Bharatiya culture or are they beholden to the government because many of them have or had post-retirement jobs?

Perhaps the following list will provide the answers.

Justice S.N. Jha.

Justice S.N. Jha, who retired as the chief justice of the Rajasthan high court in 2005, has held several government jobs thereafter. He served as the president of the Customs, Excise and Income Tax Tribunal almost immediately after his retirement and worked as the chairperson of the Bihar Human Rights Commission from 2008-2013. In 2016, the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government in Haryana appointed him as the head of a Commission of Enquiry to probe the Jat quota violence of January 2016 that had left 30 people dead. This led to the opposition accusing the then BJP government of nullifying the Prakash Singh Committee, which had been constituted in February 2016 to probe the same violence and which had indicted high-ranking officials of the police and state administration for their role in the agitation. The Jha Commission was to submit its report not later than six months after its appointment, but while it completed its investigation, it is yet to submit its report to the government even though the commission was wound up in September 2021.

Justice M.M. Kumar.

Justice M.M. Kumar retired as the chief justice of the Jammu and Kashmir high court in January 2015. The year before, Kumar had been named in a list of “uncle judges” in the Punjab and Haryana high court. ‘Uncle judges’ are those who have kin practicing law in the same court. In June 2015, Kumar was appointed as the chairperson of the Company Law Board for a year; he was then appointed as the first president of the National Company Law Tribunal till January 2021. In June 2021, he was appointed as a member of the National Human Rights Commission and is still in office.

Justice S.M. Soni.

Justice S.M. Soni, a retired judge of the Gujarat high court and a former Lokayukta, seems to be a serial writer of open letters. In August 2012, Soni wrote a letter to the then Chief Justice of India accusing Justice Aftab Alam of the Supreme Court of having a “communal mindset”. In the letter, he requested that Justice Aftab Alam be kept away from the “sensitive” Gujarat riot cases! In July 2022, Soni signed a letter written to then Chief Justice of India N.V. Ramana by 217 officials including retired judges, bureaucrats and army veterans, which castigated a Supreme Court bench for violating “judicial propriety and fairness” in their observations against BJP spokesperson Nupur Sharma. The Supreme Court judges had held Sharma responsible for single-handedly igniting emotions across the country with her utterances on the Prophet Mohammed. Soni also received a few assignments from the government, such as investigating irregularities in the functioning of an Ahmedabad cricket club, the Rajpath Club, in 2015.

Also read: The Paranoia of Former Judges Opposing Same-Sex Marriages on Civilisational Grounds

Justice S.N. Dhingra.

Justice S.N. Dhingra had also signed the July 2022 letter referring to Nupur Sharma. He has had several government assignments after his retirement in 2011 from the Delhi high court. The Haryana government appointed Dhingra for a one-man commission in 2015 to probe Robert Vadra’s land deals. A year later, while serving as a Delhi high court-appointed observer in a family business dispute, Dhingra himself came under the scanner for awarding contracts to his daughter’s firm from the very company he was monitoring. He resigned after the allegations arose. In 2018, Dhingra was appointed as the head of a Special Investigation Team appointed by the Supreme Court to renew a probe into 186 anti-Sikh riot cases in which closure reports had been filed. The report, which implicates several Delhi police personnel, was submitted in January 2020 to the home ministry. Last month, on March 15, the Supreme Court said it would soon hear the matter on the findings of the Dhingra report.

Justice Raghuvendra Singh Rathore.

In 2013, even as he served as a judge in the Rajasthan high court, Justice Raghuvendra Singh Rathore had to face the embarrassment of the Supreme Court ordering that his daughter, whom he had confined at his home, be allowed to marry her paramour. This did not stop the Modi government from appointing Rathore as a judicial member of the National Green Tribunal, where he served from 2016 to 2020.

Justice K.K. Trivedi, a former judge of the Madhya Pradesh high court, has been appointed to several bodies after his retirement, from the Gender Sensitisation complaints committee to heading a committee investigating a marksheet scam and yet another one probing financial irregularities at a medical college in the state. In latter case, Trivedi submitted his interim report in 2022, but the enquiry is still in progress.

Justice Karamchand Puri, a retired judge of the Punjab and Haryana high court, was cleared by the Centre in 2016 to take over the Srinagar-Jammu bench of the Armed Forces Tribunal (AFT), the body that hears all cases pertaining to the defence forces. As a claims commissioner, Puri was also appointed in 2018 by the BJP government in Haryana to assess damage caused to property during the Jat agitation. Later, he became a member of the Haryana Human Rights Commission.

Justice M.C. Garg, a former judge of the Delhi and Madhya Pradesh high courts, was cleared by the Modi government to take over as chairperson of the Appellate Authority, a government forum for the redressal of grievances against chartered accountants and so on. He was also a vociferous supporter of Union home minister Amit Shah’s Citizenship (Amendment) Act.

Justice P.N. Ravindran.

The loyalties of Justice P.N. Ravindran to Bharatiya traditions was revealed when he joined the BJP in March 2021 to deal with what he called “love jihad cases from both Hindu and Christian communities”. Ravindran, who had served as a Kerala high court judge from 2007 to 2018, said he was joining the BJP to protest the state government’s stand on the Sabarimala temple issue, which he said went against Hindu sentiments. Ravindran also hit out at those judges who raised the issue of nepotism in the appointment of judges. He referred to them as “publicity seekers”, apparently as a jibe aimed at his colleague, retired Justice B. Kemal Pasha, who himself later sought an election ticket from the Congress party.

Justice Sunil Hali.

Justice Sunil Hali, a former judge of the Jammu and Kashmir high court and the Allahabad court, was appointed by the Modi government only a fortnight ago as the chairperson of the Fee Fixation and Regulation Committee at Jammu. He took office on March 31 and will serve for three years.

Justice Rajiv Lochan Mehrotra, who retired from the Allahabad high court in 2018, surfaced in Goa as the ombudsman of the Goa Cricket Association, a position he holds till date.

In a footnote, it must be said that despite the protests against same-sex marriages, only a fortnight ago, on March 25, at the convocation ceremony in the Gujarat National Law University, Rohin Bhatt, an undergraduate who identifies as gay, received his degree wearing the pride scarf.

Vrinda Gopinath is a senior journalist.