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The Delhi High Court has posted for final hearing on November 30 pleas seeking recognition to same-sex marriages in India under the Hindu Marriage Act, the Special Marriages Act and the Foreign Marriage Act. On the date the court will also hear a connected plea seeking Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) status for a same-sex spouse in a marriage registered in Canada.
Appearing in the latter case today, Adv. Karuna Nundy for the petitioner, stated that no counter affidavit has been filed by the Union of India till date even though on the previous date of hearing Additional Central Government Standing Counsel Kirtiman Singh had accepted notice on the plea and sought time to file a reply.
Appearing for the Union of India today, Solicitor General Tushar Mehta informed court that the plea revolves purely around a question of law and pleadings are complete from their end, they are ready to argue the matter.
He added that the Navtej Singh Johar judgment which had been relied upon by the petitioners merely decriminalizes same-sex marriages in India and does not provide for any recognition or right of registration to same-sex marriage partners.
He said, "The law is clear, marriage implies a relationship between a biological man and a biological woman."
Replying, Nundy argued that, "Section 7A(1)(d) of the Citizenship Act, 1955 entitles a spouse of foreign origin of an OCI Cardholder, whose marriage has been registered and subsisting for at least two years to apply for OCI status."
The section is silent on the gender of the spouse she pointed out, and therefore the petitioner is seeking OCI status.
Blaine Stephens being the spouse of an OCI cardholder, i.e, Joydeep Sengupta, was keen to apply for OCI status through this procedure, as they are expecting their first child together and are desirous of visiting the grandparents of the child who reside in India.
The petitioners had submitted in support of their prayer that consensual sexual acts between persons of the same sex have already been decriminalized by the Supreme Court in Navtez Singh Johar's case.
The petitioners had also contented that the right to marry a person of one’s choice as an essential component of the right to autonomy, privacy within Article 21 has been recognized by a catena of judgments in India as well as by foreign courts. Specifically, the right to legal recognition of same sex or non-heterosexual marriages has also been upheld as a fundamental right in a number of judgments by foreign courts, such as the Supreme Court of the United States and the Constitutional Court of South Africa.
They pointed out that even though Indian law is silent on the recognition of same sex marriages, it is a settled principle that where a marriage has been solemnized in a foreign jurisdiction, the law to be applied to such marriage or matrimonial disputes is the law of that jurisdiction. Thus, a marriage like that of Petitioners being validly registered under US law, must necessarily meet the requirements of the term ‘registered’ under Section 7A(1)(d) of the Citizenship Act.
The court was also hearing pleas seeking recognition to same-sex marriages under the Hindu Marriage Act, Foreign Marriage Act and the Special Marriage Act, upon which the government has replied earlier stating that such recognition would result in “a complete havoc with the delicate balance of personal laws in the country”.
“Living together as partners and having sexual relationship by same sex individuals is not comparable with the Indian family unit concept of a husband, a wife and children which necessarily presuppose a biological man as a ‘husband’, a biological woman as a ‘wife’ and the children born out of the union between the two,” the Centre had stated in its reply earlier in the same-sex marriage plea.
Cause Title: Mr. Joydeep Sengupta & Ors vs Union of India and Ors & Abhijit Iyer Mitra vs Union of India & Ors
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