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Special Marriage Act, 1954

  • The Madhya Pradesh High Court’s ruling, denying protection to a couple because a marriage between a Muslim man and a Hindu woman is invalid even if registered under the Special Marriage Act (SMA), 1954, showcases a severe misunderstanding of the law.

Special Marriage Act

Section 4: Conditions Relating to Solemnization of Special Marriages

  • Marriage must be between any two persons regardless of their religion or faith.
  • Both parties must be of a valid age (the groom must be at least 21 years old, and the bride must be at least 18 years old).
  • Neither party should have a spouse living.
  • The parties should not be within the degrees of prohibited relationship unless the custom governing at least one of the parties permits such a marriage.
  • The judge incorrectly used Muslim law, concluding a Muslim cannot marry an “idolatress or fire-worshipper.”
  • SMA allows inter-faith couples to marry without religious rituals.
  • The judge’s question on inter-faith marriage validity under Muslim law is irrelevant for police protection.
  • Despite the counsel’s argument, the judge focused on Muslim law instead of SMA.
  • The judge misinterpreted the SMA’s clause on prohibited relationships.
  • The judgment wrongly implies personal law affects SMA validity, meant only to prevent misuse for prohibited relationships.
  • The court imposed religious personal law on a secular marriage option.
  • This ruling undermines the SMA, hampers a uniform civil code, and privileges Muslim personal law over secular law.
  • It may drive people to convert religions to marry.
  • Comparison of Special Marriage Act, 1954 and Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
FeatureSpecial Marriage Act, 1954Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
ApplicabilityAll Indian citizens, irrespective of religionHindus, Buddhists, Jains, Sikhs
Marriage TypeInter-faith, inter-caste, secularWithin Hindu community, based on rituals
Notice Period30-day notice requiredNo mandatory notice period
Registration RequirementMandatoryOptional but recommended
Solemnization ProcedureThe Marriage Officer, with three witnessesAccording to Hindu rites and rituals
Conditions for MarriageGroom 21, bride 18; no living spouse; not within prohibited relationshipsGroom 21, bride 18; no living spouse; not within prohibited relationships
Divorce GroundsAdultery, desertion, cruelty, mutual consent, incurable diseasesAdultery, desertion, cruelty, conversion, mutual consent, mental disorder
Succession LawGoverned by the Indian Succession Act, of 1925Governed by the Hindu Succession Act, of 1956
Judicial SeparationAvailableAvailable
Annulment and RestitutionProvisions includedProvisions included

Dig Deeper: Read about the Supriya Chakraborty v Union of India judgement.

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