SC balances childās right to know paternity and alleged fatherās right to privacy
The Supreme Court in a ruling last week upheld the use of DNA test in a long-running paternity dispute, addressing the complex question of whether
The Supreme Court in a ruling last week upheld the use of DNA test in a long-running paternity dispute, addressing the complex question of whether an individualās right to privacy overrides the need to determine parentage. Earlier, the top court had consistently held in various judgments that DNA tests should not be ordered routinely, but there has never been a conclusive answer to when they should be permitted. Paternity cases largely revolved around the concerns of legitimacy and the need to avoid illegitimising children. However, after the Supreme Courtās landmark decision of Justice K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India in 2017 which ruled that the right to privacy is a fundamental right under Article 21 of the Constitution, the court has continuously ruled that compulsory DNA testing interferes with an individualās right to privacy and bodily autonomy. In the present case, Justice Sanjay Karol and N. Kotiswar Singh upheld the trial court order directing a DNA test to prove paternity. The alleged father, appellant in this matter, approached the court to overturn the trial order. In addition to this, there is Section 112 of the Evidence Act 1872 (Section 116 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam), which states that a child is presumed to be legitimate unless the party disputing paternity proves that there was non-access for the relevant period of the marriage and it is upon the alleged father to prove the non-access.
The legal footprint If we look into a series of older cases, the court has pulled back from using the DNA test to prove paternity. Especially since the above said section was enacted in 1872, when there was no scientific means to determine paternity. However, the DNA testing method became commercially available in India by the 1980s. In Kunhiraman v. Manoj, the Kerala High Court in 1991 accepted the results of a DNA paternity test after a magistrate had ordered its use to determine paternity. IN this particular case, Section 112 was not applicable as there was no legal marriage between the parties. In 1993, in the case of Goutam Kundu v. State of West Bengal, the top court rejected the use of blood testing which is a much older method, to prove paternity, as the court ruled that Section 112ās burden of proof on the husband was far stronger, and a blood test could not be the first resort. It would first require the husband to make a prima facie case of ānon-accessā. In 2005, in the case of Banarsi Dass v Teeku Dutta, the Supreme Court upheld the high courtās decision, refusing to order a DNA test.
