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Transcript of Illegitimacy: And illegitimate concept
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Submitted To and Guided By:
Dr.Shaiwal Satyarthi
Associate Professor, Faculty of Law,
Chanakya National Law University.
Family Law Project Report On:
ILLEGITIMACY
-an illegitimate concept
Submitted By: Anwesha Tripathy
IInd Year(3rd Sem),Roll No.724, Section- A.
Chanakya National Law University
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ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
It is my greatest pleasure to be able to present this project of Family Law. I found it very
interesting to work on this project. I would like to thank Dr.Shaiwal Satyarthi, Associate.Prof.,
Faculty of law,Chanakya National Law University for providing me with such an interesting
project topic,for his unmatched efforts in making learning an enjoyable process,for his immense
sincerity for the benefit of his students and for his constant unconditional support and guidance.
I would also like to thank my librarian for helping me in gathering data for the project. Above
all, I would like to thank my parents, elder sister and paternal aunt,who from such a great
distance have extended all possible moral and motivative support for me.
I hope the project is upto the mark and is worthy of appreciation.
Anwesha Tripathy
Patna
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgement
1. Introduction2. Void and Voidable Marriages3. Legitimacy of children born out of Void and Voidable Marriages4. Law to confer legitimacy5. Great need for reforms6. Conclusion
Bibliography
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INTRODUCTION
Marriages are regarded as a fundamental social institution, and instrumental in the process of
society building. Loaded with ethical, personal, social and religious values, marriages are a very
important affair in any individuals life. Therefore, this institution has come to be governed by
Personal Laws of all religions. Considering the importance of a marriage, it was necessary for it
to have procedures to be regarded as an authentic and recognized institution binding two
individuals and thus indirectly two families indirectly. Thus law has worked on authenticating
and validating marriages, and has subsequently laid down rules regarding the same and for any
contravention to the rules. Any marriage thus can fall into the category of either valid marriage if
solemnized in adherence to the laid down rules, or, void and voidable marriages in case of any
contravention to the rules. In a valid marriage, no complication or query regarding rights,
property, issues etc. is involved. However, several questions are attached to the void and
voidable marriages, the most important being that regarding the social status of children born out
of such marriages. Children born out of such marriages which the law either does not accept or
has rendered null are illegitimised for no fault of theirs. The social stigma attached to such a
child is a matter of concern both from legal and humanitarian grounds. The rights and benefits to
such a child becomes questionable and so does his/her very identity. Thus law had to intervene to
address this pertinent issue and design provisions for same. All personal laws have rules and
essentials for a valid marriage and any contravention shall make it a void marriage. In this
project we shall see the provisons for children born out of such marriages under various laws.
Research Methodology
For the purpose of research, the researcher has used the Doctrinal Method of Research. The
Research is entirely a Library-based Research, where the researcher has made use of books, law
journals, magazines, law reports, legislations, internet websites, etc., for the purpose of research.
Sources of Data
The entire research work has been done in the library and on the internet websites. Thus, the
sources of data include the books, e-books, law journals, online law journals, law reports, and
various concerned legislations.
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Aims and Objectives
The main purpose behind this Research work is to study the various instances of legitimacy of
children under void and voidable marriage. This project shall discuss in detail the situations
under various personal laws relating to conferring of legitimacy of the children born under void
and voidable marriage.
Scope
The Project shall be limited to the discussion on the status of the child under void and voidable
marriage, and shall not exceed to a further discussion on the rights of this child.
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VOID AND VOIDABLE MARRIAGES
A marriage, which is not valid, may be void or voidable. A void marriage is one which has no
legal status. The courts regard such marriage as never having taken place and no rights and
obligations ensue. It is void ab initio, i.e., right from its inception. Hence the parties are at liberty
to contract another marriage without seeking a decree of nullity of the first so-called marriage. A
voidable marriage on the other hand, is a marriage which is binding and valid, and continues to
subsist for all purposes until a decree is passed by the court annulling the same. Thus, so long as
such decree is not obtained, the parties enjoy all the rights and obligations which go with the
status of marriage. A remarriage by any of the parties without a decree of nullity is illegal as it
would amount to bigamy.
Distinction between Void and Voidable Marriage
The distinction between a void and voidable marriage, in a nutshell, is:
(i) A void marriage has no legal status right from the beginning, whereas a voidablemarriage has all the rights and obligations of matrimony until it is annulled by court.
(ii) A void marriage may be declared a nullity at the instance of either party, whereas, ina voidable marriage, the court can pass a decree of annulment at the instances of theaggrieved party.
Statutory provisions regarding Void, Voidable and Irregular Marriage
Hindu Law
A marriage solemnized in contravention of the following conditions is void under the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955,1
when:
(i) Either party has a spouse living at the time of marriage;(ii) Parties are within the degrees of prohibited relationship, unless custom or usage
governing them permits such marriage;
(iii) The parties are sapindas of each other, unless custom or usage permits such marriage.1
Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, s. 11 read with s. 5.
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A marriage is voidable under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 under the following conditions,2
viz:
(i) The marriage has not been consummated owing to the impotence of the respondent;or
(ii) Any of the parties is incapable of giving a valid consent because of unsoundness ofmind, or though capable of giving consent, has been suffering from mental disorder to
such an extent as to be unfit for marriage and pro-creation of children, or has been
subject to recurrent attacks of insanity;
(iii) The consent to the marriage has been obtained by force or fraud;(iv) The respondent was pregnant at the time of marriage by some other person other than
the petitioner.
Special Marriage Act, 1954
Under the Special Marriage Act, 1954, a marriage is null and void under s. 4 read with s. 24, if:
(i) It is in violation of the minimum age requirement, which is 21 years for a boy and 18years for a girl;
(ii) There is another spouse living;(iii) The parties are within the prohibited degrees of relationship, unless custom or usage
permits such marriage;
(iv) Any of the parties is incapable of giving valid consent due to unsoundness of mind, orthough capable of giving consent, is suffering from mental disorder of such kind as to
be unfit for marriage or procreation of children, or has been subject to recurrent
attacks of insanity;
(v) The respondent was impotent at the time of marriage and at the time of filing of thesuit.
A marriage under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 is voidable if the same has not been
consummated owing to willful refusal of the respondent, or the respondent was pregnant by
2Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, s. 12.
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some person other than the petitioner, or the consent of either party to the marriage was obtained
by coercion or fraud.3
Parsi Law
The Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936,4
lays down that a second marriage without divorce in
case of an earlier marriage is void.
A marriage where consummation of the marriage is impossible from natural causes, may, at the
instance of either party to the marriage, be declared null and void.
Christian Law
Under the Indian Divorce Act, 1869,5
a marriage may be declared null and void on the following
grounds, viz:
(i) The respondent was impotent at the time of marriage and at the time of institution ofthe suit;
(ii) The parties are within prohibited degree of consanguinity or affinity;(iii) Either party was a lunatic or idiot at the time of marriage;(iv) The former husband or wife of either party was living at the time of the marriage and
the earlier marriage was subsisting.
Muslim Law
Under the Muslim law, a marriage, which is not sahih, i.e., valid, may be either, batil, i.e., void,
or fasid, i.e., irregular.6
Batil: Such marriage being void does not create any rights or obligations, and the children born
of such union are illegitimate. A marriage will be void if it is with a mooharin, i.e., prohibited by
3Special Marriage Act, 1954, s. 25.
4Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936, s. 4.
5Indian Divorce Act, 1869, Ss. 18 and 19.
6Irregular marriage under Sunni Law is void under Shia Law.
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reasons of: (a) consanguinity, (b) affinity, or (c) fosterage. A marriage with the wife of another
man or remarriage with a divorced wife when the legal bar still exists, is also void.
Such marriage being void, there are no rights and obligations between the parties. A wife has no
right to dower unless there has been consummation, in which case she is entitled to customary
dower. Besides, if one of the parties dies, the other is not entitled to inherit from the deceased.
Fasid: Such marriage is irregular because of the lack of some formality, or the existence of some
impediment which can be rectified. Since the irregularity is capable of being removed, the
marriage is not unlawful in itself. Marriage in the following circumstances is fasid, viz., a
marriage that is:
(i) Without witnesses;(ii) With a fifth wife by a person having four wives;(iii) With a woman undergoing iddat;(iv) Prohibited by reason of difference of religion;(v) With a woman so related to the wife, that if one of them had been a male, they could
not have lawfully intermarried.
In the above situations, the prohibition against such marriages is temporary or relative or
accidental, and can be thus rectified:
(i) By subsequent acknowledgement before witnesses;(ii) By divorcing one of the four wives;(iii) By expiration of the iddat period;(iv) By the woman becoming a convert to Islam, Christianity or Jewish religion, or the
husband adopting Islam;
(v) By the man divorcing the wife who constitutes the obstacle.In Chand Patel v. Bismillah Begum,7 the issue was whether a person professing Muslim faith
who contracts second marriage with wifes sister during the subsistence of the earlier marriage is
obliged to pay maintenance to such woman under the provisions of s. 125 of the Cr.P.C. The
Court held that such a marriage was not void but only irregular; if it a temporarily prohibited
7AIR 2008 SC 1915: (2009) 4 SCC 774.
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marriage and could always become lawful by death of first wife or by husband divorcing the first
wife. Since a marriage which is temporarily prohibited may be rendered lawful once the
prohibition is removed, such a marriage is in our view irregular (fasid) and not void (batil), the
court observed.
An irregular marriage may be terminated by either party, either before or after consummation. It
has no legal effect before consummation. If, however, consummation has taken place, then:
(i) The wife is entitled to dower, prompt or specified, whichever is less;(ii) She is bound to observe iddat, the duration of which, in case of both divorce or death,
is three courses;
(iii) Children born of the marriage are legitimate.It is significant to note that an irregular marriage, even if consummated, does not create mutual
rights of inheritance between the parties.8
8Mulla, Principles of Mohammedan Law, 1972, pp. 261-63, paras 264(3) and 267.
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LEGITIMACY OF CHILDREN BORN OUT OF VOID AND VOIDABLE
MARRIAGES
The conditions for a void marriage are laid down under all personal law statutes. While breach of
some conditions is considered more serious and the marriage is rendered void, non-compliance
of others renders a marriage voidable only. The basic distinction between a void and voidable
marriage is that while in the former there is no legal status conferred on the parties and the
marriage is void ab initio, i.e., right from inception, in the latter, all rights and obligations of
matrimony subsist until the marriage is annulled by the court. Besides, a void marriage may be
declared a nullity at the instance of either party, but in case of voidable marriage, the decree of
annulment can be made by the court at the instance of the aggrieved party.
Hindu Law
As regards the status of children, while children of voidable marriage were legitimate, those born
out of void marriage were considered to be illegitimate under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955,9
(prior to 1976), unless the parties to such marriage obtain a decree of annulment in respect of the
marriage. In other words, if any of the parties to the marriage do not choose to make a petition
under s. 11, the children of such marriage remain illegitimate, and if any of the parties to such
marriage dies before any such decree is passed, the children would not be protected. Thus, in a
suit by the second wife of a deceased and her minor daughter against the children by the first
wife for partition of the estate of the deceased, it was held that the second marriage was void
since it had taken place after the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 came into force, and the first wife
being alive, the deceased could not have taken the second wife; it was also held that that the
child by the second wife was illegitimate and could not be regarded as legitimate under s. 16 of
the Act, since marriage was not declared void on a petition under s. 11.10
However, children of void and voidable marriage, which has been annulled by a decree, were
deemed to be the legitimate children of such properties for the purpose of inheriting their
parents property.
9Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, s. 16.
10Thulsi Ammal v. Gauri Ammal, AIR 1964 Mad 118.
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Though the provision in s. 16 aimed at protecting the rights of children whose parents marriage
suffered from a legal flaw, it did not serve this purpose as children could be legitimated only if
the parents obtained a decree of nullity. If the parents failed to go to court for such decree, the
children remained illegitimate.
This provision was criticized in several judgments, as it appeared to be inconsistent with the
intention of the legislature, which obviously was not to render children of a void marriage
illegitimate if a decree to that effect was not obtained. This issue was deliberated by the Law
Commission and there were two proposals made, viz:
(i) The condition of a decree of nullity should be done away with; and(ii) The section should apply only if at the time of intercourse resulting in birth (or at the
time of celebration of the marriage where marriage takes place after intercourse) both
or either of the parties reasonably believed that the marriage was valid.
The latter proposal did not find favor. It was pointed out that in the context of the status of
children born of a void marriage, four options could be possible:
(i) Such children should be regarded as filius nullius with no status;(ii) They should be deemed legitimate for purposes of succeeding to their parents,
provided the marriage was contracted bona fide without knowledge of any
impediment;
(iii) They should be entitled to succeed to their parents in all cases;(iv) They should be entitled to succeed to other relations in all cases.
The Law Commission found the third view as most acceptable, as it was fair to the innocent
children and also in harmony with changing social opinion. While it did not give legitimacy to
the marriage relationship as such, it sought to mitigate the hardship on children. The Commission
therefore, recommended revision of s. 16. In 1976, the section was amended.
11
Consequent to theamendment, the position under the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 and the Special Marriage Act,
1954 is that, notwithstanding that no decree of nullity has been obtained in the case of a void or
voidable marriage, the children would be deemed to be legitimate as if the marriage was valid.
11Vide Marriage Laws Amendment Act, 68 of 1976; Special Marriage Act, 1954, s. 26 was similarly amended.
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Section 16 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 reads as follows:
16. Legitimacy of children of void and voidable marriages- (1) notwithstanding that a
marriage is null and void under section 11, any child of such marriage who would have
been legitimate if the marriage had been valid, shall be legitimate, whether such child is
born before or after the commencement of the Marriage Laws. (Amendment) Act, 1976,
(68 of 1976.) and whether or not a decree of nullity is granted in respect of that marriage
under this Act and whether or not the marriage is held to be void otherwise than on a
petition under this Act.
(2) Where a decree of nullity is granted in respect of a voidable marriage under section 12,
any child begotten or conceived before the decree is made, who would have been the
legitimate child of the parties to the marriage if at the date of the decree it had been
dissolved instead of being annulled, shall be deemed to be their legitimate child
notwithstanding the decree of nullity.
(3) Nothing contained in sub-section (1) or sub-section (2) shall be construed as conferring
upon any child of a marriage which is null and void or which Is annulled by a decree of
nullity under section 12, any rights in or to the property of any person, other than the
parents, in any case where, but for the passing of this Act, such child would have been
incapable of possessing or acquiring any such rights by reason of his not being the
legitimate child of his parents.
At the outset it may be mentioned that the constitutional validity of this section was challenged
in P.E.K. Kalliani Amma v. K. Devi,12
wherein the Supreme Court held that s.16 is not ultra
vires the Constitution. In view of the legal fiction contained in s. 16, the illegitimate children, for
all practical purposes, including succession to the property of their parents, have to be treated as
legitimate, property rights, however are limited to the properties of the parents.
A mention may be made of a few cases on the point. In Rameshwari Devi v. State of Bihar,13
the
Supreme Court acknowledged children born of a legally valid marriage and children born of a
12AIR 1996 SC 1963: (1996) 4 SCC 76 appeal against Kerala High Court judgment in K.E.M. Kaliani v. K. Devi, AIR
1989 Ker 279.13
AIR 2000 SC 735: (2000) 2 SCC 431.
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void marriage on an equal status. The case concerned payment of family pension and death-cum-
retirement gratuity to two wives and their sons. The deceased had entered into a second marriage
while his first marriage was subsisting. He had one son from the first marriage and four sons
from the second bigamous marriage, and hence void marriage. The High Court held that sons of
both wives were equally entitled to a share in the family pension and death-cum-retirement
gratuity, while the second wife would not be entitled to anything. In appeal to the Supreme Court
against this order, the first wife argued that the second marriage being void and no marriage in
the eyes of the law, the children born of the relationship had no rights. The court, however, held
that though the second wife could not be termed as the widow of the deceased, the fact that she
lived with him for 24 years as his wife and had four sons from him was established. While she
would not be entitled to any share, her sons would get equal rights along with the first widow
and her son, the court held. Likewise, in G. Nirmalamma v. G. Seethapathi,14 where the marriage
was void as it took place during the subsistence of the earlier marriage of the deceased with the
mother of the son, it was held that the son has to be equated with the sons of the earlier marriage,
as legal heirs under ss. 8, 10 and the Schedule annexed to the Hindu Succession Act, 1956. The
son, according to the court, has to be treated as coparcener of property held by the father whether
the property was originally joint family property or not. The only limitation being that during the
lifetime of the father, son of a void marriage is not entitled to seek a partition.
In Jinia Keotin v. Kumar Sitaram Gounder,15 while reiterating that by a fiction of law children
born of void or voidable marriage are deemed to be legitimate emphasized that their property
rights are confined only to the parents. The argument that once status of legitimacy has been
conferred they should be treated at par for purposes of inheritance with children born in wedlock
was rejected. Any attempt to do so would amount to doing not only violence of the provision
specifically engrafted in sub-s. (3) of s. 16 of the Act, but also would attempt to court re-
legislating on the subject under the guise of interpretation against the will expressed in the
enactment, the court held.
14AIR 2001 AP 104
15(2008) 8 MLJ 985.
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Lamenting on this restrictive provision, the Kerala High Court in the case of Krishna Kumari
Thampuran v. Palace Admn. Board observed;16
For the indiscretion of the parents, the poor innocent children should not be made to suffer but
at the same time by that legal fiction the right of others shall not be affected, and therefore, the
rights of such children are confined to the property of parents who alone are responsible for the
difficult position children are put in.
Thus, in Shahaji Asme v. Sitaram Konde Asme,17
also which was a case of inheritance, it was
held that as per the provisions of s. 16(3) of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, illegitimate children
are entitled to inherit property of their parents alone and parents does not include grandparents.
Where, however, a father is the sole coparcener at the time of his death, the coparcenary property
held by him is his separate and exclusive property to which such child would be entitled.18
In Pashupati Nath Singh v. State of Bihar,19
the issue of compassionate appointment of the son of
second void marriage was involved; while the District Compassionate Appointment Authority
rejected his claim, on appeal the court held that the policy decision for compassionate
appointment refers only to a son and as son of second wife is also a legitimate son under s. 16,
his claim for compassionate appointment cannot be rejected.
The provision under the Special Marriage Act, 1954 is the same as under the Hindu Marriage
Act, 1955.20
Parsi Law
Under the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 193621
as amended in 1988: notwithstanding that a
marriage is invalid under any of the provisions of sub-s. (1) of s. 3 any child of such marriage
who would have been legitimate if the marriage had been valid, shall be legitimate. The
conditions prescribed for a marriage under s. 3(1) are that the parties should not be within the
prohibited degrees of consanguinity or affinity as prescribed; it should be solemnized according
162006(4) KLT 432.
17AIR 2010 Bom 24.
18Chikkamma v. N. Suresh, 2000(4) Kant LJ 468.
192005(3) PLJR 458 (Pat).
20Special Marriage Act, 1954, s. 26.
21Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act, 1936, s. 3(2).
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to the Parsi form of ceremony called Ashirvad and the parties should not be below the age of 21
in case of boy and 18 in case of girl. Thus only children born of a marriage solemnized in
contravention of any of these conditions would be deemed to be legitimate.
Christian Law
Under the Indian Divorce Act, 1869, children of marriage annulled on ground of bigamy
contracted in good faith and with full belief of the parties that the former spouse was dead, or on
the ground of insanity, are entitled to succeed in the same manner as legitimate children, to the
estate of the parent who, at the time of the marriage was competent to contract.22
Thus, if a father
is incompetent to enter into a marriage because of insanity or because his former wife was alive,
then the children will succeed only to the mother and not to the father. This is a very unfair and
illogical provision. It does not confer status of legitimacy, but only a concession under certain
situations, to succeed to the estate of a parent who is competent to contract the marriage.
It is pertinent to note that children born of a marriage which is void for reasons other than the
two mentioned above, have no legal status at all. Thus children born of a marriage prohibited
degrees of consanguinity or affinity, or of a marriage where the husband is impotent, are not
covered by s. 21 of the Indian Divorce Act, 1869 and therefore do not enjoy status of even partial
legitimacy like children of bigamous marriage or a marriage which is void for reasons of
insanity. Even the amendment of the Act in 2001 has not made any change in the original
provision.
Muslim Law
Muslim law does not recognize legitimation, and a child who is clearly illegitimate under the law
cannot be conferred a status of legitimacy. A child can, however be acknowledged as legitimate
in certain situations viz., where:
(i) Paternity of the child is either not known or is not established beyond doubt;22
Indian Divorce Act, 1869, s. 21.
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(ii) It is not proved that the child is the offspring of illicit intercourse (zina); and(iii) The circumstances are such that marriage between the acknowledger and the mother
is not impossibility.
This is known as the doctrine of acknowledgement of paternity. A valid acknowledgement is not
revocable and gives rights of inheritance to the child.
This doctrine of acknowledgement of paternity is, however, different from legitimation as
provided under the other personal laws.23
23Fyzee, Outlines of Mohammedan Law, 1974, p. 196; Mulla, Principles of Mohammedan Law, 1972, p. 328.
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LAW TO CONFER LEGITIMACY
In a situation when a child is in the danger of illegitimisation due to the fault in the marriage of
his/her parents, law comes to the rescue of the child which is/is to be illegitimised by the society
and ironically the law itself. Thus an illegitimate child becomes legitimate when law deems itlegitimate and confers on him/her the status of legitimacy.
The question here, however, is on what basis does the law grant this legitimacy to a child born
out of a void or voidable marriage. It does so on the basis of a legal fiction or hypothesis. Earlier
the hypothesis was the same for void and voidable marriages. But in the recent developments,
the law now confers legitimacy on children born out of void and voidable marriages basing on
two separate hypotheses.
When the fact in concern is that the marriage is void, then the law shall confer legitimacy on the
child basing on the fiction : IF THE MARRIAGE HAD BEEN VALID, THEN THE
CHILD WOULD HAVE BEEN LEGITIMATE. Marriage under any other provision than the
provision in question is also covered under this. It does not matter whether a decree of nullity has
been granted by the Court of Law or not.
When the fact in concern is that if the marriage is voidable, i.e, it is valid until annulled by the
Court of Law, then the legal fiction upon which law shall make the child legitimate will be:
THE CHILD WOULD HAVE BEEN LEGITIMATE IF THE MARRIAGE WOULD
HAVE BEEN DISSOLVED AT THE TIME OF THE ANNULMENT OF THE
MARRIAGE.
Therefore, the same law which makes a child born out of void and voidable marriages
illegitimate, later confers legitimacy on the innocent being.
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GREAT NEED FOR REFORMS
The law distinguishes between persons born in wedlock and persons born out of wedlock. The
distinctions are to the disadvantage of the person born out of wedlock, and we see no reason why
the law should not do what it can to remove that disadvantage. To that end, the legal distinction
between legitimate children and illegitimate children be done away with. The law should so far
as possible give equal treatment to all children, but it does not follow that it should apply
precisely the same rules to children born out of wedlock as it does to those born in wedlock. It
recognizesthe father and mother of a child born in wedlock as joint guardians of the child, but
we think that it is not necessarily in the best interest of children born out of wedlock that that rule
apply. Therefore the rule should be that the father and mother be joint guardians only if a stable
relationship exists between them at the birth of their child out of wedlock; in other cases the lawcan continue automatically to recognize only the mother as guardian, but it should allow the
father to become a guardian if he can show that that arrangement is in the best interest of the
child. In order to give effect to the principle of equal treatment by the law and to give effect to
the principle that guardianship should be conferred only in the best interest of the child, a
number of recommendations can be made. These could be that there be one status for all
children; that the legal relationship of child and parent be dependent on their biological
relationship; that, with the exception of parental guardianship, all rights and obligations of the
child born out of wedlock, of a parent, or of any other person be determined in the same way as
if the child were born in wedlock; that the father of a child born out of wedlock be a guardian if
there is a stable relationship between himself and the child's mother; and that in the absence of a
stable relationship the father have the right to be appointed guardian by the court if the
appointment is in the best interest of the individual child concerned.
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CONCLUSION
Marriage is the foundation of a stable family; it accords status and security to the parties and
their offspring. All legal systems provide for conditions for a valid marriage. It is, in the interest
of the society therefore, that families keep intact, and fewer situations of void or voidable
marriages arise. If, however, any such discrepancy arises, the Court tries to bring such a situation
where the interest of the child born of such illegitimate relation is protected. Keeping in mind the
notion that the welfare of child is paramount, the Court, by all means, has tried to confer
legitimacy to the child born of of such relations, as, it is only the relation that can be illegitimate
and not the child born out of it.
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
V.P. Bharatiya, Syed Khalid Rashids Muslim Law, (4th ED. : 2004) (Eastern BookCompany Lucknow)
Dr.Paras Diwan, Law of Marriage and Divorce, (5th ED. : 2008), (Universal LawPublishing Co)
M.N.Das, Marriage and Divorce, (6th ED. : 2002) (Eastern Law House New Delhi) A.G.Gupte, Hindu Law, (1st ED. : 2003) (Premier Publishers Delhi) S.P.Gupte, Hindu Law in British India, (2nd ED. : 1947) (Premier Publishers Delhi) Asaf A.A.Fyzee, Outlines of Muhammadan Law, (5th ED. : 2008) (Oxford University
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