The provision which makes such woman from state lose property right also applies to her son the right to acquire immovable property.
A bench comprising justices Dipak Misra and A M Khanwilkar directed Additional Solicitor General P S Narasimha, appearing for the Centre, to verify whether this matter involved a similar issue in which the chief justice has referred the case to a larger bench.
The top court today directed the counsel appearing for the petitioner to serve the copies of the petition to the Centre and other parties in the case and posted the matter for hearing to August 14.
The apex court was hearing a plea filed by one Dr Charu Wali Khanna challenging Article 35 A of the Constitution and Section 6 of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution which dealt with "permanent residents" of the state.
"Section 6 of the Jammu and Kashmir Constitution restricts the basic right of women to marry a man of their choice by not giving the heirs any right to property if the woman marries a man not holding the Permanent Resident Certificate.
According to the petitioner, as per the provisions if a woman marries a person outside Jammu and Kashmir then she loses property rights as well as employment opportunities in the state.
While Jammu and Kashmir's Non-Permanent Resident Certificate holders can vote in Lok Sabha elections, the same individual is barred to vote in local elections in the state.
"The petitioner being a Kashmiri Pandit woman by ancestry desires to build a home in Jammu and Kashmir in order to rediscover her roots but due to the peculiar discriminatory laws is unable to purchase property in the state being a non- permanent resident and further married out of caste," it said.
"Despite being a Kashmiri Pandit by origin, the state does not recognise the petitioner as a citizen. Further in total violation of the cherished constitutional ideal of gender equality, the women of Jammu and Kashmir do not have equalrights as men when it comes to citizenship rights for spouses and their children," the petition said.
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