Sreejith Kumar L.T vs Union Of India on 30 March, 2026

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    Kerala High Court

    Sreejith Kumar L.T vs Union Of India on 30 March, 2026

    WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026            1               2026:KER:32125
    
    
                  IN THE HIGH COURT OF KERALA AT ERNAKULAM
    
                                    PRESENT
    
                THE HONOURABLE MRS. JUSTICE M.B. SNEHALATHA
    
        MONDAY, THE 30TH DAY OF MARCH 2026 / 9TH CHAITHRA, 1948
    
                             WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026
    
    PETITIONERS:
    
         1       SREEJITH KUMAR L.T
                 AGED 59 YEARS, S/O.K.P.BALAN,
                 LAVATHARAMMAL HOUSE KALLIASSERI SOUTH .P.O
                 ANCHAMPEEDIKA , KANNUR, PIN - 670331
    
         2       NISHA L T
                 AGED 43 YEARS, D/O.L.T.KELU
                 LAVATHARAMMAL HOUSE, KALLIASSERI SOUTH .P.O
                 ANCHAMPEEDIKA , KANNUR, PIN - 670331
    
    
                 BY ADVS.
                 SMT.T.SWETHA
                 SMT.SHRUTHI BALAKRISHNAN
                 SMT.ATHEENA ANTONY
                 SMT.ANULAKSHMI L.
    
    
    
    
    RESPONDENTS:
    
    1        UNION OF INDIA
             REPRESENTED BY ITS SECRETARY MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND
             FAMILY WELFARE, SASTHRI BHAVAN, NEW DELHI, PIN - 110001
    
    2        THE DIRECTOR
             MEDICAL COUNCIL OF INDIA POCKET - 14, SECTOR 8 DWARAKA
             PHASE - I NEW DELHI, PIN - 110077
    
    3        THE STATE OF KERALA
             REPRESENTED BY ITS SECRETARY MINISTRY OF HEALTH AND
             FAMILY WELFARE, SECRETARIAT THIRUVANANTHAPURAM,
             PIN - 695001
     WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026            2                      2026:KER:32125
    
    
    4     THE DIRECTOR
          KERALA STATE MEDICAL COUNCIL COMBINED COUNCIL BUILDING,
          RED CROSS ROAD, NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL,
          THIRUVANANTHAPURAM, PIN - 695035
    
    5     THE MANAGING DIRECTOR
          ARMC IVF FERTILITY CENTER GRAND PLAZA, NEAR PRABATH
          JUNCTION FORT ROAD, KANNUR, PIN - 670001
    
    
                 BY ADV SMT.R.ASALATHA VARMA, CGC
                 ADV.SRI.SHEMEER P.M-GP
    
    
          THIS WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) HAVING COME UP FOR ADMISSION
    ON   30.03.2026,   THE   COURT   ON   THE   SAME   DAY    DELIVERED   THE
    FOLLOWING:
     WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026                3                     2026:KER:32125
    
    
    
    
                              M.B.SNEHALATHA, J.
                      -------------------------------------------
                            W.P(C) No.9750 of 2026
                       -------------------------------------------
                        Dated this the 30th March, 2026
    
                                     JUDGMENT
    

    Petitioners have approached this Court seeking the following

    reliefs:

    SPONSORED

    “i) Issue a writ of Mandamus or any other appropriate
    Writ or order directing commanding the respondents 2
    to 5 to accord sanction to provide ART Service to the
    petitioners.

    ii) Issue a Writ of Mandamus or any other appropriate
    Writ or order directing the respondents 2 to 5 to take
    immediate steps so as to require the 5 th respondent to
    provide ART service to the petitioners.

    Iii) Declare that the age of the husband cannot
    operate as a bar to the wife undergoing Assisted
    Reproductive Technology treatment when she is
    otherwise eligible and medically fit, and that any such
    restriction is violative of Articles 14 and 21 of the
    Constitution of India.

    iv) Declare that the provisions of the Assisted
    Reproductive Technology (Regulation) Act, 2021

    cannot be given retrospective effect so as to affect or
    invalidate Assisted Reproductive Technology
    procedures initiated prior to the commencement of the
    said Act.”

    2. According to the petitioners, 1st petitioner/husband is aged

    59 years whereas, the 2 nd petitioner wife is aged 43 years. Though they

    got married in the year 2002, they have no children and they have been

    undergoing treatment for infertility and they started assisted

    reproductive technology treatment to have a child of their own. It is
    WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026 4 2026:KER:32125

    contended by the petitioners that since the 2 nd petitioner uses male

    donor gametes and the 1st petitioner is not an active participant, she is

    eligible under Section 21(g) of the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act,

    2021 (for short ‘the Act’) to proceed with the treatment as a woman as

    defined under Clause 2(u) of the Act.

    3. It was contended by the learned counsel for the petitioners

    that the 5th respondent has hesitated to provide them necessary services

    under the Act, citing that the 1 st petitioner has crossed the statutory age

    limit of 55 years. It is also contended by the petitioners that unless the

    2nd petitioner is permitted to avail ART services by utilising the male

    donor gametes, they would be put to much hardship.

    4. 1st respondent entered appearance through DSGI.

    Respondents 2, 3 and 4 entered appearance through the Government

    Pleader. 5th respondent also entered appearance through counsel.

    5. Admittedly, the 1st petitioner has crossed the age limit as

    stipulated under Section 21(g) of the ART Act. But the 2 nd petitioner is

    below the age of 50 years. The question is whether the 2 nd petitioner

    wife, who is aged 43 years can avail the ART services by receiving donor

    gametes in the status as a woman despite the fact that her husband,

    who is the 1st petitioner herein has crossed the age of 55 years as

    prescribed under the Assisted Reproductive Technology Act, 2021.

    6. Section 2(1)(a) of the ART Act defines ‘Assisted Reproductive

    Technology’, which reads as under;

    WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026 5 2026:KER:32125

    “(a) “assisted reproductive technology” with its
    grammatical variations and cognate expressions,
    means all techniques that attempt to obtain a
    pregnancy by handling the sperm or the oocyte
    outside the human body and transferring the gamete
    or the embryo into the reproductive system of a
    woman.”

    7. Section 2(1)(e) defines ‘Commissioning Couple’ which is read

    as under;

    “(e) “commissioning couple” means an infertile
    married couple who approach an assisted reproductive
    technology clinic or assisted reproductive technology bank
    for obtaining the services authorised of the said clinic or
    bank.”

    8. The word ‘Woman’ is defined under Section 2 (1)(u) of the

    Act, which is extracted hereunder;

    “(u) “woman” means any woman above the age of
    twenty one years who approaches an assisted reproductive
    technology clinic or assisted reproductive technology bank
    for obtaining the authorised services of the clinic or bank.”

    9. Sections 21(g) of the Act read thus;

    Section 21(g) – the clinics shall apply the assisted
    reproductive technology services, —

    (i) to a woman above the age of twenty-one years and
    below the age of fifty years;

    (ii) to a man above the age of twenty-one years and below
    the age of fifty-five years;

    10. In the case on hand, the prayer sought is to permit the wife

    who is within the prescribed age under the Act to avail Assisted

    Reproductive Technology Services using male gametes at the 5th

    respondent hospital.

     WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026                  6                       2026:KER:32125
    
    
         11.   In Devayani.S and others v. Union of India                     (W.P(c)
    
    

    No.37687/2024), this Court held that when a woman wants to undergo

    an IVF procedure, only her age is to be considered as relevant,

    irrespective of the age of the husband and the same principle applies

    conversely to men. It was also held that the above interpretations lead

    to an inevitable conclusion that the legislature has treated men and

    women as distinct legal entity under the Act rather than imposing

    uniform couple centric legislation. It was also held that without any

    express provision in the Act restricting commissioning couples on the

    basis of their composite age, there is no legal bar for a woman who is

    otherwise eligible under Section 21(g)(i) from applying the ART

    procedure even if her husband has surpassed the age limit as prescribed

    under the Act.

    12. The Division Bench of this Court in Union of India v.

    Devayani.S and others, (WA No.2009/2025) upheld the judgment of the

    learned Single Judge and held as follows:

    “30. As rightly noticed by the learned Single Judge, the
    contention of the appellant that if the spouses
    approached the clinic for availing the ART service as a
    commissioning couple, both of them must satisfy the
    age criteria as stipulated under Section 21(g) of the ART
    Act, if accepted, it will be a discrimination among the
    married woman and unmarried woman and divorced
    woman. The learned counsel for respondents 1 and 2,
    during the course of arguments submitted that the
    respondents 1 and 2 herein are even gone to the extend
    of expressing readiness to avail the status of divorced
    persons, so as to make respondent 1 eligible to apply for
    ART procedure as a single woman, if the law does not
    permit them to avail the ART services as a
    commissioning couple. If the argument of the appellant
    is accepted, the 1st respondent will be eligible for the
    WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026 7 2026:KER:32125

    ART services the moment she acquires the status of a
    single woman, but immediately when she acquires the
    status of a married woman and approaches the clinic
    with her husband, even if she is ready to proceed with
    ART procedure by receiving male gametes from a third
    party, she will become ineligible for the treatment. On
    analysing the provisions under the ART Act, in the light
    of Ext.R1(a) report, Adoption Regulations 2022, and also
    the provisions under the Hindu Adoptions and
    Maintenance Act, 1956
    , as mentioned in the preceding
    paragraphs, we are of the considered opinion that the
    age restriction in the case of women mentioned in
    Section 21(g)(i) is applicable to all the six circumstances
    mentioned above, since that age restriction is prescribed
    considering the risk to maternal health, if the pregnancy
    is below or above the age suggested by the expert
    stakeholders and also the health of the child to be
    begotten, especially when the woman availing the ART
    procedure is the biological mother who has to carry the
    child in his womb, unlike that in the case of surrogacy.
    At the same time, the age restriction in the case of men
    prescribed under Section 21(g)(ii) of the ART Act, it can
    only be said that the same is applicable only to the
    circumstance of using his male gamete (sperm), either
    as one among the commissioning couple or as a third
    party male gamete provider. When the ART Act does not
    provide composite age criteria for the commissioning
    couple, or Section 21(g) of the ART Act does not speak
    about the age criterion there in as applicable to the
    persons approaching the ART clinic as a commissioning
    couple, prescribing such age restriction on mere
    assumptions is unwarranted and against what is
    intended by the legislature. A court of law cannot read
    between the lines when the statute is clear on this
    aspect. While considering all these aspects, we agree
    with the finding of the learned Single Judge that the
    classification of a married woman and a single woman
    differently, when they approach the ART clinic, either as
    one among the commissioning couple or as a single
    woman, would put married woman at an unfair
    disadvantage when compared to single woman. The
    learned Single Judge rightly found that the parliament
    never intended such an inequitable classification within a
    benevolent statute like the ART Act.”

    13. In the case at hand, 2 nd petitioner, namely, the woman, is

    aged 43 years and she is within the age limit to apply for Assisted

    Reproductive Technology services.

    WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026 8 2026:KER:32125

    In such circumstances, there shall be a direction to the 5 th

    respondent to provide Assisted Reproductive Technology services to the

    2nd petitioner using male donor gametes, after obtaining the consent of

    the 1st petitioner/husband.

    The Writ Petition is allowed as above.

    Sd/-

    
                                                       M.B.SNEHALATHA
                                                            JUDGE
    ab
     WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026            9                2026:KER:32125
    
    
                   APPENDIX OF WP(C) NO. 9750 OF 2026
    
    PETITIONER EXHIBITS
    
    Exhibit P1               A TRUE COPY OF MARRIAGE CERTIFICATE
    

    NUMBERED 154/2002 DATED 14.09.2002 ISSUED
    BY LOCAL REGISTRAR OF THALASSERY
    Exhibit P2 A TRUE COPY OF ADHAAR CARD OF THE 1ST
    PETITIONER BEARING NO.3911 5139 5985
    Exhibit P3 TRUE COPY OF ADHAAR CARD OF THE 2ND
    PETITIONER BEARING NO. 4042 3588 1271
    Exhibit P4 TEST REPORTS AND MEDICAL TREATMENT
    REPORTS ISSUED BY THE 6TH RESPONDENT TO
    THE PETITIONER ON 2014 AND 2015
    Exhibit P5 THE JUDGMENT IN WP(C) NO. 28631 OF 2024
    DATED 22.01.2026

    RESPONDENTS EXHIBITS: NIL



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