In a significant judgment that expands the influence of child protection jurisprudence beyond the confines of criminal law, the Supreme Court has held that the principles embedded in the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act, 2012 (POCSO Act) must also inform custody, visitation, and parental access proceedings involving children who are victims of sexual abuse. The ruling marks an important development in Indian child rights jurisprudence by recognizing that the welfare of a child cannot be compartmentalized between different legal forums and that protective safeguards applicable in criminal proceedings must continue to guide family law adjudication where the child’s psychological well-being remains at stake.
The judgment arose from a custody dispute involving a minor child who was also an alleged victim in pending proceedings under the POCSO Act. The controversy centered on whether the child could be subjected to repeated psychological evaluations and whether courts could direct intrusive assessment mechanisms at the request of a parent seeking restoration of access and visitation rights. While addressing these questions, the Supreme Court moved beyond the immediate facts and articulated broader principles governing the treatment of children in custody disputes involving allegations of abuse.
At the heart of the Court’s reasoning lies a simple but powerful proposition: the child cannot be treated merely as an object of competing parental claims. The Bench emphasized that custody proceedings must remain child-centric rather than parent-centric. The Court observed that the protective philosophy underlying the POCSO Act is not confined to criminal prosecution alone. Instead, it reflects a broader legislative recognition that legal processes themselves can inflict trauma upon children if not conducted with sensitivity. Consequently, principles designed to protect child victims from re-traumatization must also inform judicial decision-making in family courts.
The judgment is particularly significant because it acknowledges a reality often overlooked in custody litigation. Family disputes involving allegations of abuse frequently result in children becoming subjects of repeated interviews, evaluations, counselling sessions, expert examinations, and judicial interactions. While each intervention may be intended to assist the court, the cumulative effect can sometimes cause emotional distress greater than the benefit sought to be achieved. The Supreme Court recognized this danger and held that “minimum intrusion” into a child’s life should be the governing norm. Psychological assessments, according to the Court, should be ordered only where genuinely necessary and not as a routine evidentiary exercise.
A noteworthy aspect of the ruling is its reliance on the child-friendly architecture of the POCSO Act. The legislation was enacted not merely to punish offenders but to protect children throughout the legal process. Provisions such as Sections 33(5), 36, and 39 of the Act seek to ensure that children are not repeatedly exposed to stressful procedures, unnecessary confrontation, or circumstances that may aggravate psychological harm. The Supreme Court observed that these principles embody a larger legislative commitment to safeguarding the dignity, emotional security, and developmental needs of children. There is no reason, the Court implied, why such protections should disappear merely because the dispute is before a family court rather than a criminal court.
The decision also strengthens the jurisprudential shift from parental rights toward child rights. Historically, custody disputes often revolved around competing claims of parents. Modern child rights jurisprudence, however, increasingly recognizes that the primary inquiry must concern the welfare and best interests of the child. International instruments such as the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child have long emphasized that the child’s best interests should be a primary consideration in all decisions affecting children. The Supreme Court’s ruling aligns Indian law more closely with this evolving global understanding by placing the child’s emotional and psychological welfare at the center of judicial analysis.
The judgment further reflects the Court’s growing concern regarding secondary victimization. Child protection experts have frequently warned that legal proceedings themselves can become sources of trauma when children are repeatedly required to recount painful experiences or undergo intrusive scrutiny. By emphasizing necessity, proportionality, and minimum intervention, the Court has sought to ensure that judicial procedures do not inadvertently become instruments of psychological harm. This approach is consistent with broader trends in child rights jurisprudence where courts increasingly recognize that procedural fairness must include emotional fairness for vulnerable participants.
From a constitutional perspective, the ruling draws strength from Article 21 and the evolving jurisprudence surrounding dignity and personal liberty. The Court appears to have recognized that a child’s right to life encompasses not merely physical safety but also psychological security and emotional well-being. Such an interpretation is consistent with previous Supreme Court decisions emphasizing that constitutional rights must be understood in a manner that protects the holistic development of children. Child welfare, therefore, is no longer viewed as a matter of benevolence but as an enforceable legal and constitutional concern.
The implications of the judgment extend well beyond cases involving sexual abuse allegations. Family courts across India routinely confront situations involving domestic violence, parental conflict, emotional neglect, and allegations of coercive behavior. The principles articulated by the Supreme Court may influence how courts approach expert evidence, child interviews, psychological evaluations, and visitation arrangements in a wide range of custody disputes. The emphasis on minimizing trauma could lead to a more cautious and child-sensitive approach in family litigation generally.
Legal commentators have noted that the decision may also contribute to the development of trauma-informed adjudication in India. Courts increasingly encounter litigants who are children, survivors of abuse, or individuals affected by psychological distress. The judgment signals that adjudicatory processes must evolve to account for these realities. Rather than viewing children as passive participants in legal proceedings, courts are being encouraged to understand the long-term emotional consequences of judicial interventions themselves.
For legal practitioners, the ruling carries important practical implications. Lawyers involved in custody disputes will likely need to justify requests for psychological evaluations with greater specificity and demonstrate why less intrusive alternatives are inadequate. Family courts may become more cautious before directing multiple expert assessments, particularly where a child has already undergone evaluations in related criminal proceedings. The judgment therefore encourages a more disciplined and child-centric litigation strategy.
For law students and young professionals, the case provides an important lesson in the interconnected nature of legal principles. The decision illustrates how concepts originating in a criminal statute can influence family law, constitutional law, and child welfare jurisprudence. It demonstrates that modern legal adjudication increasingly transcends rigid doctrinal boundaries in pursuit of substantive justice.
Ultimately, the Supreme Court’s ruling represents an important step in the evolution of Indian child rights jurisprudence. By holding that POCSO’s protective principles should guide custody proceedings as well, the Court has reaffirmed that the welfare of the child cannot be fragmented across legal forums. Whether a child appears before a criminal court, a family court, or a constitutional court, the fundamental obligation remains the same: to ensure that the justice system protects rather than burdens those it is meant to serve. In placing the child’s dignity, emotional safety, and best interests above procedural convenience, the Court has reinforced a principle that may shape custody jurisprudence for years to come.

