SC balances child’s right to know paternity, father’s right to privacy


SC Balances Child's Right to Know Paternity, Father's Right to Privacy


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Pre-Puttaswamy era (pre-2017): - Courts operated under Section 112, Indian Evidence Act, 1872: a child born during a valid marriage (or within 280 days of dissolution) is conclusively presumed legitimate unless the husband proves non-access (i.e., no sexual access to the wife at the time of conception). - DNA tests were sought as a shortcut to displace this presumption; courts resisted ordering them routinely to protect children from stigma of illegitimacy.

Key milestones: | Year | Development | |------|-------------| | 1872 | Section 112, Indian Evidence Act — presumption of legitimacy codified | | 2017 | K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India — Right to Privacy declared fundamental right under Article 21 by a 9-judge bench | | 2017 onwards | SC begins treating compulsory DNA testing as violating bodily autonomy and right to privacy | | 2023 | Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA), 2023 re-codifies Section 112 as Section 116 (substantively same) | | 2024 | Aparna Ajinkya Firodia v. Ajinkya Arun Firodia: SC holds DNA report alone cannot dislodge presumption of legitimacy without proof of non-access; recognises child's own privacy interest | | 2025 | Ivan Rathinam v. Milan Joseph: SC calls for balancing stigma of illegitimacy against right to know biological parentage | | June 2026 | Present ruling by Karol J. & Kotiswar Singh J. — upholds DNA test order, articulates framework for when tests may be permitted |

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4. Core Static Facts

Statutory Framework: - Section 112, Indian Evidence Act, 1872 = Section 116, Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 - Presumption: child born during valid subsisting marriage → legitimate child of husband - Presumption rebuttal: only by proving non-access between husband and wife during the relevant period - Burden of proof: on the party disputing legitimacy (i.e., the alleged father) - Article 21, Constitution of India: Right to life and personal liberty — includes right to privacy (Puttaswamy, 2017) and bodily autonomy

Key Cases: | Case | Year | Holding | |------|------|---------| | K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India | 2017 | Privacy = fundamental right under Art. 21; 9-judge bench | | Aparna Ajinkya Firodia | 2024 | DNA report ≠ automatic displacement of legitimacy presumption | | Ivan Rathinam v. Milan Joseph | 2025 | Balance: stigma of illegitimacy vs. right to know parentage | | Nikhat Parveen v. Rafique (2026 INSC 399) | 2026 | DNA test and disputed paternity | | Present case (Karol J. + Kotiswar Singh J.) | June 2026 | Upholds DNA test order; framework for permissibility |

Implementing/Adjudicating Bodies: - Supreme Court of India (constitutional jurisdiction) - Trial courts under Code of Civil Procedure / family courts under Family Courts Act, 1984 - DNA testing conducted under forensic labs / DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Act (pending full implementation)

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5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Social / Ethical

Historical / Jurisprudential

Administrative / Governance

Scientific / Technological


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. Section 112, Indian Evidence Act, 1872 creates a presumption of legitimacy for a child born during a valid marriage; the burden of rebuttal is on the party disputing legitimacy.
  2. Section 112 IEA 1872 is re-codified as Section 116 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (substantively unchanged).
  3. The presumption of legitimacy under Section 112/116 can only be rebutted by proving non-access between spouses at the time of conception — not merely by producing a DNA report.
  4. K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) was decided by a 9-judge constitutional bench; it declared right to privacy a fundamental right under Article 21.
  5. Post-Puttaswamy, the SC has held that compulsory DNA testing infringes bodily autonomy and the right to privacy.
  6. The June 2026 SC bench in the present paternity case comprised Justice Sanjay Karol and Justice N. Kotiswar Singh.
  7. A child also holds an independent right to privacy in paternity disputes — distinct from the father's privacy right.
  8. In Aparna Ajinkya Firodia (2024), the SC held DNA evidence alone cannot displace the statutory presumption of legitimacy.
  9. The Family Courts Act, 1984 governs jurisdiction of family courts where paternity/maintenance disputes are first heard.
  10. The SC's position is that DNA tests in paternity cases should not be ordered routinely — they require a demonstrated necessity.
  11. Article 21 (Right to Life and Personal Liberty) is the constitutional hook for right to privacy, bodily integrity, and right to know one's identity — all simultaneously relevant in paternity disputes.
  12. The DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Bill — a dedicated legislative framework for DNA testing — has been pending in Parliament (introduced 2019). [S4]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Indian Constitution — Fundamental Rights (Art. 21); Judiciary — SC judgments and evolving jurisprudence; Separation of Powers - GS-IV: Ethics — Conflict of rights; privacy vs. truth; competing duties of care (child welfare vs. individual liberty)

Specific syllabus headings: - GS-II: "Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation"; "Judiciary — structure, organisation and functioning" - GS-IV: "Ethical issues in human activities"; "Conflict of interest and dilemmas"

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The Supreme Court's post-Puttaswamy jurisprudence on DNA paternity testing reflects an unresolved tension between the right to know one's identity and the right to bodily autonomy. Critically examine." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Section 116 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 preserves the colonial-era presumption of legitimacy. In the age of DNA technology, does this provision protect children or shield biological truths? Discuss." (GS-II, 10 marks) 3. "When two fundamental rights guaranteed under Article 21 conflict, how should courts adjudicate? Illustrate with reference to paternity disputes." (GS-IV, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) The foundational privacy judgment underpinning this entire debate
Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 Replaced IEA 1872; need to know which sections changed and which were retained verbatim
DNA Technology (Use and Application) Regulation Bill, 2019 Pending legislation that would create a statutory framework for court-ordered DNA tests
Personal Laws — Hindu Marriage Act, Special Marriage Act Paternity/legitimacy questions arise within these frameworks
Right to Privacy — Article 21 jurisprudence Broader evolution: Gobind, NALSA, Navtej Johar, Puttaswamy line of cases
Bodily Autonomy in Constitutional Law Connects to medical ethics, forced testing, LGBTQ+ rights, surrogacy law
Maintenance and child custody laws (CrPC Sec. 125 / BNSS) Paternity disputes almost always arise in the context of maintenance claims

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Conflating Section 112 IEA with Section 116 BSA: They are substantively identical but aspirants must know the correct section numbers under both the old and new legislation. Section 112 IEA ≠ Section 116 BSA (different numbers, same rule).
  2. Thinking DNA test result = conclusive disproof of paternity: Wrong. The SC has repeatedly held that a DNA result alone does not automatically displace the presumption of legitimacy; proof of non-access is still required.
  3. Attributing Puttaswamy to a 5-judge bench: It was a 9-judge constitutional bench — this is a frequent Prelims trap.
  4. Assuming privacy always prevails over the child's right to identity: The present ruling shows courts can order DNA tests when necessity is established — privacy is not absolute.
  5. Confusing the burden of proof: Under Section 112/116, the burden of rebutting the legitimacy presumption lies on the party disputing legitimacy (usually the alleged father) — not on the mother or child.

11. Sources


Note: Tier 1/2 government and international institutional sources did not return directly relevant indexed content for this specific judicial ruling. The note is grounded in the article excerpt (primary Tier 4 source) and corroborated by Indian legal databases. Verify against official SC judgment text (main case citation not yet published on sci.gov.in as of search date).