LAWS(PVC)-1933-2-111

MT JALSI KUAR Vs. EMPEROR

Decided On February 13, 1933
MT JALSI KUAR Appellant
V/S
EMPEROR Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) These rules have been issued to consider the convictions and sentences of Mt. Jalsi Kuer, Jagnarain Singh and Krishnadev Jha who have been convicted under Secs.6, 4 and 5 respectively of the Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929, and sentenced to fines of Rs. 100, Rs. 300 and Rs. .100 respectively. The facts found are as follows: Jalsi is a widow who has two daughters of whom the elder Rampa is about seven years old. On the evening of 27 January 1932, Jalsi left home surreptitiously with her two daughters and Bhagwat Dube who is an ague or marriage broker, and proceeded to the village of Kusumbarhanda, a mile from home, where Jagnarain Singh lives. At Jagnarain's house the marriage of Rampa with Jagnarain was performed by Krishnadev in spite of protests from the complainant Lakhinarain, a close relative of Jalsi s, deceased husband, who intervened with others of his village and one Ramsaran Singh of Kusumbarhanda.

(2.) It was found that Jalsi, the person-having charge of the minor Rampa as parent, took the child to Jagnarain's house and promoted a marriage or permitted a marriage to be solemnised between Rampa and Jagnarain, a man who gave his age as twenty four but who on the evidence is much older, and that Krishnadev was the priest who conducted the child marriage between the contracting parties in the courtyard of the bridegroom's house. The Courts below have negatived the defence that a marriage did not take place and the mendacious plea of enmity advanced by the male petitioners. In support of the rule Mr. Lakshmi Kant Jha has raised the two pleas, first, that a marriage has not been proved; and, secondly, that the enactment mentioned is invalid.

(3.) In respect of the marriage, it is urged that the saptbedi is not held to have taken place. But although there is no mention of that special part of the ceremony, it is, as the learned Sessions Judge has observed, quite clear upon the evidence as a whole that all the essential ceremonies were duly performed up to the sinduran, at which Jalsi on whose lap Rampa was sitting, handed some sindur to Jagnarain who then applied it to the forehead of Rampa. The plea is on the evidence unfounded. The second contention is that the Child Marriage Restraint Act is ultra vires of the legislature inasmuch as under Section 67(2)(b) of the Government of India Act (5 and 6 Geo. V Ch. 61 and 9 and 10 Geo. V. Ch. 101). "it shall not be lawful, without the, previous sanction of the Governor General in Council, to introduce at any meeting of either chamber of the Indian Legislature any measure affecting . . . . (b) the religion or religious rules and usages of any class of British subjects in India," and such previous sanction was not given to the introduction of the measure which became the Child Marriage Restraint Act, 1929. The argument is that though the first Bill introduced was merely one to regulate marriages of children amongst the Hindus by providing that no marriage of a Hindu girl or a Hindu boy should be valid unless the former had completed , her twelfth and the latter his fifteenth year (with certain exceptions in regard to girls between the age of eleven and twelve), yet the Select Committee on that Bill having accepted a suggestion that: The Bill should effect its purpose of restraining child marriages, not by declaring such marriages to be invalid, but by imposing punishments upon those who participate in them recast it out of all semblance of the original Bill to which previous sanction had been given, not only by changing the method of restraining child marriages but by making the measure applicable to all classes and communities in British India, with the result that a new measure emerged in respect of which the previous sanction accorded under Section 67(2)(b) to the original Bill, wherein there was no penal provision and which applied only to one religion, could not possibly be applicable.