INDIA
Citation2010 CriLJ 94, (2009) 3 RCR (Criminal) 523
CourtDelhi High Court (Division Bench)
Date2 July 2009
Year2009
BenchAjit Prakash Shah CJ, S. Muralidhar J.
Acts/ArticlesArticle 14, Article 15, Article 21, IPC Section 377
CategoryConstitutional Law

Key Principle Established

Section 377 IPC unconstitutional insofar as it criminalizes consensual sexual acts between adults in private. Right to privacy and dignity includes sexual orientation.

Brief Facts

Naz Foundation, an NGO, filed a PIL challenging the constitutional validity of Section 377 IPC which criminalized “unnatural offences” including consensual homosexual acts between adults.

Ratio Decidendi

The Delhi High Court read down Section 377 to exclude consensual sexual acts between adults in private, holding that criminalization of homosexuality violates Articles 14 (equality), 15 (non-discrimination), and 21 (right to life and dignity).

Impact & Significance

This was the first judicial recognition of LGBT rights in India. Though later reversed by the Supreme Court in Suresh Kumar Koushal (2013), it was ultimately vindicated by the Constitution Bench in Navtej Singh Johar v. UOI (2018) which struck down Section 377.

Tags & Related Topics

Constitutional Law Article 14 Article 15 Article 21 IPC Section 377
← Previous Judgment Navneet Kaur v. State of NCT of Delhi (Bhullar Case)
Next Judgment → Neeraja Chaudhary v. State of M.P.

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Disclaimer

This judgment summary is for educational and research purposes. While care has been taken to accurately represent the ratio and findings, for authoritative reference always consult the original judgment text from official sources (SCC Online, AIR, Manupatra, or court websites).

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