Permitting covert evidence in matrimonial conflicts is significant. It may influence other types of matrimonial matters, such as marital rape

- The Pursuit of Substantive Justice: Proving allegations such as cruelty, adultery, or desertion is notoriously difficult. Often, the only available evidence is in the form of private conversations, messages, or recordings. The Court’s ruling prioritises the need for truth-finding, arguing that excluding such crucial evidence could lead to a miscarriage of justice, particularly for victims of abuse who have no other means of substantiating their claims.
- Admissibility vs. Legality: The judgment appears to distinguish between the admissibility of evidence in court and the legality of the method used to obtain it. While the evidence may be admitted to prove a fact, the aggrieved party may still have a separate legal remedy against the violation of their privacy, for instance, under the Information Technology Act, 2000.
- Existing Legal Precedent: The Indian Evidence Act, 1872, traditionally focuses on the relevance of evidence rather than how it was procured. The ruling aligns with this long-standing principle, extending it to the digital domain.
- Erosion of a Fundamental Right: The judgment effectively carves out a “matrimonial exception” to the right to privacy. It risks creating a precedent where personal autonomy and dignity can be compromised in the name of litigation, weakening the very essence of the Puttaswamy verdict.
- Potential for Misuse and Harassment: The ruling may inadvertently encourage spouses to engage in illegal snooping, spying, and hacking, turning marital discord into a technological arms race. This could be weaponised by a dominant partner to gather selective evidence out of context, fabricate narratives, and engage in character assassination, disproportionately affecting women who may be more vulnerable to such surveillance.
- Chilling Effect on Personal Communication: The knowledge that any private conversation, intimate moment, or confidential disclosure can be recorded and presented in court can have a profound chilling effect. It undermines the trust and openness essential for any personal relationship and infringes upon an individual’s freedom of expression and association.
- Lack of Procedural Safeguards: The blanket allowance for such evidence without strong procedural checks and balances opens the door for doctored or manipulated digital evidence. The authenticity and integrity of such evidence become a major challenge for the courts.
- Applying the Proportionality Test: As laid down in the Puttaswamy case, any intrusion into privacy must be necessary, proportionate, and have a legitimate state aim. Courts should apply this test rigorously on a case-by-case basis, evaluating if the intrusion is justified by the probative value of the evidence and whether a less intrusive method was available.
- Legislative Reforms: There is an urgent need for Parliament to amend the Indian Evidence Act and the IT Act to create a clear framework for the admissibility of electronic evidence in a manner that respects privacy. This could include guidelines on authentication and stricter penalties for illegal data interception.
- Strengthening Judicial Discretion: The final decision on admissibility should rest with the judge, who must weigh the evidence’s relevance against the severity of the privacy violation.
- Promoting Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR): Encouraging mediation and counselling can help resolve matrimonial conflicts amicably, reducing the need for adversarial litigation where such invasive evidence-gathering becomes a tool.
