http://scroll.in/article/811065/triple-talaq-why-past-decisions-of-the-supreme-court-will-determine-the-future-course-of-action

OPINION

Triple talaq: Why past decisions of the Supreme Court will determine
the future course of action

With a fourth case on the contentious issue before the apex court, the
focus in once again on the true Islamic process for divorce.

Yesterday · 06:30 pm
Updated Yesterday · 06:31 pm

Tahir Mahmood

“We are straightaway not jumping to any conclusion. It has to be seen
if there is a need for any further consideration of law by the
Constitution Bench. If this issue has already been settled, we may not
have to examine it any further but if there are other issues, we will
have to decide if it would require a consideration by a larger Bench.”

This is what the Supreme Court of India reportedly observed on June
29, 2016 during a hearing of the “triple talaq” cases.

While a number of individuals and organisations have sought
intervention in the matter to support or oppose the archaic practice,
its latest victim to seek redress from the court is Gulshan Parveen, a
young postgraduate woman of Rampur whose three-year old marriage has
hit rough weather. As she refused to receive the customary
divorce-letter sent by her husband, he approached the city’s family
court for a declaratory order pronouncing that the marriage stands
dissolved. Outsmarting him, she has knocked at the doors of the apex
court. That some other women are already before the court seeking
similar relief is now widely known through the media and must have
emboldened her to follow suit.

The Supreme Court’s mid-hearing observation is quite meaningful and
indicates the concerned judges’ thought process on the issue. Their
refusal to straight away jump to any conclusion may have disappointed
the overzealous and pretentious feminists but is perfectly in accord
with the well-established judicial norms of equity, justice and good
conscience. Their words – “if this issue has already been settled…” –
implicitly allude to a number of decisions different benches of the
court have pronounced during the last 14 years on the true Islamic
process for divorce. Only after examining those decisions, the learned
judges have said, they will make up their mind on whether there really
are “other issues” requiring consideration by a larger bench.

Divorce as an afterthought

In the Muslim society divorce is often resorted to by married men as
an afterthought to defeat their estranged wives’ claims of legal dues.
Whenever a forsaken wife, after long years of waiting for better days,
seeks legal remedy of separate maintenance or restitution of conjugal
rights, the husband tries to defeat her claim by pretending to have
divorced her sometime in the past. It is this abominable practice on
which the Supreme Court put the brakes in the Shamim Ara case of 2002,
reiterating the legal principle established by it in several later
cases. These admirable decisions settle the law that just saying “I
divorced her in the past” by a husband, orally or in writing, will not
be acceptable to the courts for treating his marriage as dissolved so
as to absolve him of the legal liability to maintain his wife.

In regard to women’s maintenance right, recognising or not recognising
a talaq, however, does not mean much, as a divorced woman is also now
legally entitled to receive maintenance from her former husband both
under the Code of Criminal Procedure 1973 and the Muslim Women
(Protection of Rights on Divorce) Act 1986, both of which have been
liberally interpreted and used by the courts to award lavish grants to
divorced women. The real issue is if married Muslim women, young and
old, must live their entire married life under the threat of the sword
of Damocles called “triple talaq” hanging over them.

Careful judicial attention

The issue merits careful judicial attention as in most cases of triple
divorce both parties desperately want to stay in marital relationship
but the fatwa-givers –which even petty religious functionaries are
seen as – and fatwa-enforcers which all men known to the parties
believe they are, will not let them do that. The only way to stop this
tyranny is to recognise that the so-called “triple talaq” formula will
neither instantly dissolve the marriage foreclosing the man’s right to
revoke it during the iddat or waiting period (next three months) nor
put a ban on direct remarriage between the parties after the expiry of
that cooling off period. This will be eminently in conformity with the
true Islamic law. Elsewhere this issue has been resolved by
legislation. In India, no such possibility being in sight, it is
begging for judicial reform.

In Parveen Akhtar (2003), the Madras High Court seemingly said that
the issue of triple talaq had already been resolved by the Supreme
Court through its Shamim Ara judgment of the preceding year. Such an
extended view of Shamim Ara requires apex court’s affirmation. The
High Courts of Allahabad and Delhi have ruled, in Marium Alam (1979)
and Masroor Ahmad (2008) respectively, that every talaq (including a
triple talaq) will remain revocable during the iddat period. These
rulings need to be upheld by the Supreme Court through a clarification
of Shamim Ara to that effect.

Tahir Mahmood is Professor of Law, former Chair of Minorities
Commission and ex-Member. Law Commission of India

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