Caste Disabilities Removal Act 1850

Caste Disabilities Removal Act, 1850

An Act for extending the principle of section 9, Regulation VII, 1832, of the Bengal Code throughout the Territories subject to the Government of the East India Company
Enacted by Governor-General of India in Council
Date enacted 11 April 1850
Date assented to 11 April 1850

The Caste Disabilities Removal Act, 1850, also Act XXI of 1850, was a law passed in British India under East India Company rule, that abolished all laws affecting the rights of persons converting to another religion or caste. The new Act allowed Indians who converted from one religion to another religion equal rights under no law, especially in the case of inheritance.[1]

Text

ACT No. XXI Of 1850[2]
[11 April 1850.]
An Act for extending the principle of section 9, Regulation VII, 1832, of the Bengal Code throughout the Territories subject to the Government of the East India Company.1

Preamble.

WHEREAS it is enacted by section 9, Regulation VII, 1832, of the Bengal Code, that "whenever in any civil suit the parties to such suit may be of different persuasions, when one party shall be of the Hindu and the other of the Muhammadan persuasion, or where one or more of the parties to the suit shall not be either of the Muhammadan or Hindu persuasions, the laws of those religions shall not be permitted to operate to deprive such party or parties of any property to which, but for the operation of such laws, they would have been entitled; and whereas it will be beneficial to extend the principle of that enactment throughout the territories subject to the government of the East India Company ; It is enacted as follows :

1 Short title, "The Caste Disabilities Removal Act, 1860." See the Indian Short Titles Act, 1897 (XIV of 1897).

References

  1. Nagpal, Ramesh C. Modern Hindu Law. Allahabad: Manav Law House, 1983
  2. Government of India, Legislative Department (1893). The unrepealed general acts of the Governor General in Council: with chronological tables : from 1834 to 1903, both inclusive. 1. Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing. pp. 72–73. Retrieved 5 September 2011.


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