CONMT. PET. (C) No.470 OF 2015 IN W.P.(C) NO.
494/2012
CONMT. PET. (C) No.444 OF 2016 IN W.P.(C) NO.494/2012
CONMT. PET. (C) No.608 OF 2016 IN W.P.(C) NO.494/2012
W.P.(CIVIL) NO.797/2016
CONMT. PET. (CIVIL) No.844 OF 2017 IN W.P.(C) NO.494/2012
AND
W.P. (CIVIL) No. 342 OF 2017
W.P. (CIVIL) No. 372 OF 2017
JUDGMENT
S. A. BOBDE, J.
The Origin of the Reference
1. This reference calls on us to answer questions that would go to
the very heart of the liberty and freedom protected by the Constitution
of India. It arises in the context of a constitutional challenge to the
Aadhaar project, which aims to build a database of personal identity and
biometric information covering every Indian the worlds largest
endeavour of its kind. To the Petitioners argument therein that Aadhaar
would violate the right to privacy, the Union of India, through its
Attorney General, raised the objection that Indians could claim no
2
constitutional right of privacy in view of a unanimous decision of 8
Judges of this Court in M.P. Sharma v. Satish Chandra1 and a decision
by a majority of 4 Judges in Kharak Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh2.
2. The question, which was framed by a Bench of three of us and
travels to us from a Bench of five, was the following:
12. We are of the opinion that the cases on hand
raise far-reaching questions of importance involving
interpretation of the Constitution. What is at stake is
the amplitude of the fundamental rights including
that precious and inalienable right under Article 21.
If the observations made in MP Sharma and Kharak
Singh are to be read literally and accepted as the law
of this country, the fundamental rights guaranteed
under the Constitution of India and more particularly
right to liberty under Article 21 would be denuded of
vigour and vitality. At the same time, we are also of
the opinion that the institutional integrity and judicial
discipline require that pronouncements made by
larger Benches of this Court cannot be ignored by
smaller Benches without appropriately explaining the
reasons for not following the pronouncements made
by such larger Benches. With due respect to all the
learned Judges who rendered subsequent judgments
where right to privacy is asserted or referred to
their Lordships concern for the liberty of human
beings, we are of the humble opinion that there
appears to be certain amount of apparent unresolved
contradiction in the law declared by this Court.
13. Therefore, in our opinion to give quietus to the
kind of controversy raised in this batch of cases once
and for all, it is better that the ratio decidendi of MP
Sharma and Kharak Singh is scrutinized and the
1
MP Sharma v. Satish Chandra, 1954 SCR 1077
2
Kharak Singh v. State of UttarPradesh, AIR 1963 SC 1295
3
jurisprudential correctness of the subsequent
decisions of this Court where the right to privacy is
either asserted or referred be examined and
authoritatively decided by a Bench of appropriate
strength3.
3. We have had the benefit of submissions from Shri Soli Sorabjee,
Shri Gopal Subramanium, Shri Shyam Divan, Shri Arvind Datar,
Shri Anand Grover, Shri Sajan Poovayya, Ms. Meenakshi Arora,
Shri Kapil Sibal, Shri P.V. Surendranath and Ms. Aishwarya Bhati for the
Petitioners, and Shri K.K. Venugopal, learned Attorney General for the
Union of India, Shri Tushar Mehta, learned Additional Solicitor General
for the Union, Shri Aryama Sundaram for the State of Maharashtra,
Shri Rakesh Dwivedi for the State of Gujarat, Shri Arghya Sengupta for
the State of Haryana, Shri Jugal Kishore for the State of Chattisgarh and
Shri Gopal Sankaranarayanan for an intervenor supporting the
Respondents. We would like to record our appreciation for their able
assistance in a matter of such great import as the case before us.
3
Justice KS Puttaswamy (Retd.) v. Union of India, W.P. (Civil) No. 494 of 2012, Order dated
11 August 2015
4
The Effect of M.P. Sharma and Kharak Singh
4. The question of whether Article 21 encompasses a fundamental
right to privacy did not fall for consideration before the 8 Judges in the
M.P. Sharma Court. Rather, the question was whether an improper
search and seizure operation undertaken against a company and its
directors would violate the constitutional bar against testimonial
compulsion contained in Article 20(3) of the Constitution. This Court
held that such a search did not violate Article 20(3). Its reasoning
proceeded on the footing that the absence of a fundamental right to
privacy analogous to the Fourth Amendment to the United States
constitution in our own constitution suggested that the Constituent
Assembly chose not to subject laws providing for search and seizure to
constitutional limitations. Consequently, this Court had no defensible
ground on which to import such a right into Article 20(3), which was, at
any event, a totally different right.
5. M.P. Sharma is unconvincing not only because it arrived at its
conclusion without enquiry into whether a privacy right could exist in
our Constitution on an independent footing or not, but because it
5
wrongly took the United States Fourth Amendment which in itself is no
more than a limited protection against unlawful surveillance to be a
comprehensive constitutional guarantee of privacy in that jurisdiction.
6. Neither does the 4:2 majority in Kharak Singh v. State of Uttar
Pradesh (supra) furnish a basis for the proposition that no constitutional
right to privacy exists. Ayyangar, J.s opinion for the majority found that
Regulation 236 (b) of the Uttar Pradesh Police Regulations, which inter
alia enabled the police to make domiciliary visits at night was plainly
violative of Article 214. In reasoning towards this conclusion, the Court
impliedly acknowledged a constitutional right to privacy. In particular, it
began by finding that though India has no like guarantee to the Fourth
Amendment, an unauthorised intrusion into a persons home and the
disturbance caused to him thereby, is as it were the violation of a
common law right of a man an ultimate essential of ordered liberty, if
not of the very concept of civilization5. It proceeded to affirm that the
statement in Semaynes case6 that the house of everyone is to him as
4
Id., at p. 350
5
Id., at p. 349
6
(1604) 5 Coke 91
6
his castle and fortress as well as for his defence against injury and
violence as for his repose articulated an abiding principle which
transcends mere protection of property rights and expounds a concept
of personal liberty. Thus far, the Kharak Singh majority makes out the
case of the Attorney General. But, in its final conclusion, striking down
Regulation 236 (b) being violative of Article 21 could not have been
arrived at without allowing that a right of privacy was covered by that
guarantee.
7. The M.P. Sharma Court did not have the benefit of two
interpretative devices that have subsequently become indispensable
tools in this Courts approach to adjudicating constitutional cases. The
first of these devices derives from R.C. Cooper v. Union of India7 and its
progeny including Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India8 which require
us to read Part IIIs guarantees of rights together. Unlike AK Gopalan v.
State of Madras9 which held the field in M.P. Sharmas time, rights
demand to be read as overlapping rather than in silos, so that Part III is
now conceived as a constellation of harmonious and mutually reinforcing
7
(1970) 1 SCC 248
8
(1978) 1 SCC 248
9
AIR 1950 SC 27
7
guarantees. Part III does not attempt to delineate rights specifically.
I take the right to privacy, an indispensable part of personal liberty, to
have this character. Such a view would have been wholly untenable in
the AK Gopalan era.
8. M.P. Sharma also predates the practice of the judicial
enumeration of rights implicit in a guarantee instantiated in the
constitutional text. As counsel for the Petitioners correctly submitted,
there is a whole host of rights that this court has derived from Article 21
to evidence that enumeration is a well-embedded interpretative practice
in constitutional law. Article 21s guarantee to the right to life is home
to such varied rights as the right to go abroad (Maneka Gandhi v. Union
of India), the right to livelihood (Olga Tellis v. Bombay Municipal
Corporation10) and the right to medical care (Paramanand Katara v.
Union of India11).
9. Therefore, nothing in M.P. Sharma and Kharak Singh supports
the conclusion that there is no fundamental right to privacy in our
10
(1985) 3 SCC 545
11
(1989) 4 SCC 286
8
Constitution. These two decisions and their inconclusiveness on the
question before the Court today have been discussed in great detail in
the opinions of Chelameswar J., Nariman J., and Chandrachud J.,
I agree with their conclusion in this regard. To the extent that stray
observations taken out of their context may suggest otherwise, the shift
in our understanding of the nature and location of various fundamental
rights in Part III brought about by R.C. Cooper and Maneka Gandhi has
removed the foundations of M.P. Sharma and Kharak Singh.
10. Petitioners submitted that decisions numbering atleast 30
beginning with Mathews, J.s full-throated acknowledgement of the
existence and value of a legal concept of privacy in Gobind v. State of
M.P.12 form an unbroken line of cases that affirms the existence of a
constitutional right to privacy. In view of the foregoing, this view should
be accepted as correct.
The Form of the Privacy Right
11. It was argued for the Union by Mr. K.K. Venugopal, learned
Attorney General that the right of privacy may at best be a common law
12
(1975) 2 SCC 148
9
right, but not a fundamental right guaranteed by the Constitution. This
submission is difficult to accept. In order to properly appreciate the
argument, an exposition of the first principles concerning the nature and
evolution of rights is necessary.
12. According to Salmond, rights are interests protected by rules of
right, i.e., by moral or legal rules13. When interests are worth
protecting on moral grounds, irrespective of the existence of a legal
system or the operation of law, they are given the name of a natural
right. Accordingly, Roscoe Pound refers to natural law as a theory of
moral qualities inherent in human beings, and to natural rights as
deductions demonstrated by reason from human nature14. He defines
natural rights, and distinguishes them from legal rights (whether at
common law or under constitutions) in the following way:
Natural rights mean simply interests which we think
ought to be secured demands which human beings
may make which we think ought to be satisfied. It is
perfectly true that neither law nor state creates
them. But it is fatal to all sound thinking to treat
them as legal conceptions. For legal rights, the
devices which law employs to secure such of these
13
PJ FITZGERALD, SALMOND ON JURISPRUDENCE 217 (Twelfth Edition, 1966)
14
ROSCOE POUND, THE SPIRIT OF THE COMMON LAW 88 (1921)
10
interests as it is expedient to recognize, are the work
of the law and in that sense the work of the state.15
Privacy, with which we are here concerned, eminently qualifies as an
inalienable natural right, intimately connected to two values whose
protection is a matter of universal moral agreement: the innate dignity
and autonomy of man.
13. Legal systems, which in India as in England, began as
monarchies, concentrated the power of the government in the person of
the king. English common law, whether it is expressed in the laws of the
monarch and her Parliament, or in the decisions of the Courts, is the
source of what the Attorney General correctly takes to be our own
common law. Semaynes case16, in which it was affirmed that a mans
home is his castle and that even the law may only enter it with warrant,
clearly shows that elements of the natural right of privacy began to be
received into the common law as early as in 1604. Where a natural law
right could not have been enforced at law, the common law right is
15
Id., at p. 92
16
(1604) 5 Coke 91
11
evidently an instrument by which invasions into the valued interest in
question by ones fellow man can be addressed. On the very same
rationale as Seymayne, Chapter 17 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860,
treats trespass against property as a criminal offence17.
14. With the advent of democracy and of limited constitutional
government came the state, a new actor with an unprecedented capacity
to interfere with natural and common law rights alike. The state differs in
two material ways from the monarch, the previous site in which
governmental power (including the power to compel compliance through
penal laws) was vested. First, the state is an abstract and diffuse entity,
while the monarch was a tangible, single entity. Second, the advent of
the state came with a critical transformation in the status of the
governed from being subjects under the monarch to becoming citizens,
17
Several other pre-constitutional enactments which codify the common law also
acknowledge a right to privacy, both as between the individuals and the government, as
well as between individuals inter se. These include:
1. S. 126-9, The Indian Evidence Act, 1872 (protecting certain classes of
communication as privileged)
2. S. 4, The Indian Easements Act, 1882 (defining easements as the right to
choose how to use and enjoy a given piece of land)
3. S. 5(2), The Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 (specifying the permissible grounds for
the Government to order the interception of messages)
4. S. 5 and 6, The Bankers Books (Evidence) Act, 1891 (mandating a court order for
the production and inspection of bank records)
5. S. 25 and 26, The Indian Post Office Act, 1898 (specifying the permissible
grounds for the interception of postal articles)
12
and themselves becoming agents of political power qua the state.
Constitutions like our own are means by which individuals the
Preambular people of India create the state, a new entity to serve
their interests and be accountable to them, and transfer a part of their
sovereignty to it. The cumulative effect of both these circumstances is
that individuals governed by constitutions have the new advantage of a
governing entity that draws its power from and is accountable to them,
but they face the new peril of a diffuse and formless entity against whom
existing remedies at common law are no longer efficacious.
15. Constitutions address the rise of the new political hegemon that
they create by providing for a means by which to guard against its
capacity for invading the liberties available and guaranteed to all civilized
peoples. Under our constitutional scheme, these means declared to be
fundamental rights reside in Part III, and are made effective by the
power of this Court and the High Courts under Articles 32 and 226
respectively. This narrative of the progressive expansion of the types of
rights available to individuals seeking to defend their liberties from
invasion from natural rights to common law rights and finally to
13
fundamental rights is consistent with the account of the development
of rights that important strands in constitutional theory present18.
16. This court has already recognized the capacity of constitutions to
be the means by which to declare recognized natural rights as applicable
qua the state, and of constitutional courts to enforce these declarations.
In Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala19, Mathew, J. borrows from
Roscoe Pound to explain this idea in the following terms:
While dealing with natural rights, Roscoe
Pound states on p. 500 of Vol. I of his Jurisprudence:
Perhaps nothing contributed so much to create and
foster hostility to courts and law and constitutions as
this conception of the courts as guardians of
individual natural rights against the State and
against society; this conceiving of the law as a final
and absolute body of doctrine declaring these
individual natural rights; this theory of constitutions
as declaratory of common law principles, which are
also natural-law principles, anterior to the State and
of superior validity to enactments by the authority of
the state; this theory of Constitutions as having
for their purpose to guarantee and maintain the
natural rights of individuals against the
Government and all its agencies.In effect, it set
up the received traditional social, political, and
economic ideals of the legal profession as a super-
constitution, beyond the reach of any agency but
judicial decision. (Emphasis supplied)
18
MARTIN LOUGHLIN, THE FOUNDATIONS OF PUBLIC LAW 344-46 (2010)
19
(1973) 4 SCC 225, 1461 at p. 783
14
This Court also recognizes the true nature of the relation between the
citizen and the state as well as the true character and utility of Part III.
Accordingly, in Peoples Union of Civil Liberties v. Union of India20, it has
recently been affirmed that the objective of Part III is to place citizens at
centre stage and make the state accountable to them. In Society for
Unaided Private Schools of Rajasthan v. Union of India21, it was held that
[f]undamental rights have two aspects, firstly, they act as fetter on
plenary legislative powers, and secondly, they provide conditions for
fuller development of our people including their individual dignity.
17. Once we have arrived at this understanding of the nature of
fundamental rights, we can dismantle a core assumption of the Unions
argument: that a right must either be a common law right or a
fundamental right. The only material distinctions between the two
classes of right of which the nature and content may be the same lie
in the incidence of the duty to respect the right and in the forum in which
a failure to do so can be redressed. Common law rights are horizontal in
20
(2005) 2 SCC 436
21
(2012) 6 SCC 1 at 27
15
their operation when they are violated by ones fellow man, he can be
named and proceeded against in an ordinary court of law. Constitutional
and fundamental rights, on the other hand, provide remedy against the
violation of a valued interest by the state, as an abstract entity,
whether through legislation or otherwise, as well as by identifiable public
officials, being individuals clothed with the powers of the state. It is
perfectly possible for an interest to simultaneously be recognized as a
common law right and a fundamental right. Where the interference with
a recognized interest is by the state or any other like entity recognized
by Article 12, a claim for the violation of a fundamental right would lie.
Where the author of an identical interference is a non-state actor, an
action at common law would lie in an ordinary court.
18. Privacy has the nature of being both a common law right as well
as a fundamental right. Its content, in both forms, is identical. All that
differs is the incidence of burden and the forum for enforcement for each
form.
16
The Content of the Right of Privacy
19. It might be broadly necessary to determine the nature and
content of privacy in order to consider the extent of its constitutional
protection. As in the case of life under Article 21, a precise definition of
the term privacy may not be possible. This difficulty need not detain us.
Definitional and boundary-setting challenges are not unique to the rights
guaranteed in Article 21. This feature is integral to many core rights,
such as the right to equality. Evidently, the expansive character of any
right central to constitutional democracies like ours has nowhere stood in
the way of recognizing a right and treating it as fundamental where there
are strong constitutional grounds on which to do so.
20. The existence of zones of privacy is felt instinctively by all
civilized people, without exception. The best evidence for this proposition
lies in the panoply of activities through which we all express claims to
privacy in our daily lives. We lock our doors, clothe our bodies and set
passwords to our computers and phones to signal that we intend for our
places, persons and virtual lives to be private. An early case in the
17
Supreme Court of Georgia in the United States describes the natural and
instinctive recognition of the need for privacy in the following terms:
The right of privacy has its foundation in the
instincts of nature. It is recognized intuitively,
consciousness being the witness that can be called to
establish its existence. Any person whose intellect is
in a normal condition recognizes at once that as to
each individual member of society there are matters
private and there are matters public so far as the
individual is concerned. Each individual as
instinctively resents any encroachment by the public
upon his rights which are of a private nature as he
does the withdrawal of those of his rights which are
of a public nature22.
The same instinctive resentment is evident in the present day as well.
For instance, the non-consensual revelation of personal information such
as the state of ones health, finances, place of residence, location, daily
routines and so on efface ones sense of personal and financial security.
In District Registrar and Collector v. Canara Bank23, this Court observed
what the jarring reality of a lack of privacy may entail:
...If the right is to be held to be not attached to
the person, then we would not shield our account
balances, income figures and personal telephone and
address books from the public eye, but might instead
go about with the information written on our
foreheads or our bumper stickers.
22
Pavesich v. New England Life Insurance co. et al., 50 S.E. 68 (Supreme Court of Georgia)
23
(2005) 1 SCC 496 at 48
18
21. Privacy is [t]he condition or state of being free from public
attention to intrusion into or interference with ones acts or decisions24.
The right to be in this condition has been described as the right to be let
alone25. What seems to be essential to privacy is the power to seclude
oneself and keep others from intruding it in any way. These intrusions
may be physical or visual, and may take any of several forms including
peeping over ones shoulder to eavesdropping directly or through
instruments, devices or technological aids.
22. Every individual is entitled to perform his actions in private. In
other words, she is entitled to be in a state of repose and to work
without being disturbed, or otherwise observed or spied upon. The
entitlement to such a condition is not confined only to intimate spaces
such as the bedroom or the washroom but goes with a person wherever
he is, even in a public place. Privacy has a deep affinity with seclusion
(of our physical persons and things) as well as such ideas as repose,
solitude, confidentiality and secrecy (in our communications), and
24
BLACKS LAW DICTIONARY (Bryan Garner, ed.) 3783 (2004)
25
Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis, The Right To Privacy, 4 HARV. L. REV. 193
(1890)
19
intimacy. But this is not to suggest that solitude is always essential to
privacy. It is in this sense of an individuals liberty to do things privately
that a group of individuals, however large, is entitled to seclude itself
from others and be private. In fact, a conglomeration of individuals in a
space to which the rights of admission are reserved as in a hotel or a
cinema hall must be regarded as private. Nor is the right to privacy lost
when a person moves about in public. The law requires a specific
authorization for search of a person even where there is suspicion26.
Privacy must also mean the effective guarantee of a zone of internal
freedom in which to think. The disconcerting effect of having another
peer over ones shoulder while reading or writing explains why
individuals would choose to retain their privacy even in public. It is
important to be able to keep ones work without publishing it in a
condition which may be described as private. The vigour and vitality of
the various expressive freedoms guaranteed by the Constitution depends
on the existence of a corresponding guarantee of cognitive freedom.
26
Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances Act, 1985, s. 42
20
23. Even in the ancient and religious texts of India, a well-developed
sense of privacy is evident. A woman ought not to be seen by a male
stranger seems to be a well-established rule in the Ramayana. Grihya
Sutras prescribe the manner in which one ought to build ones house in
order to protect the privacy of its inmates and preserve its sanctity
during the performance of religious rites, or when studying the Vedas or
taking meals. The Arthashastra prohibits entry into anothers house,
without the owners consent27. There is still a denomination known as
the Ramanuj Sampradaya in southern India, members of which continue
to observe the practice of not eating and drinking in the presence of
anyone else. Similarly in Islam, peeping into others houses is strictly
prohibited28. Just as the United States Fourth Amendment guarantees
privacy in ones papers and personal effects, the Hadith makes it
reprehensible to read correspondence between others. In Christianity,
we find the aspiration to live without interfering in the affairs of others in
the text of the Bible29. Confession of ones sins is a private act30.
27
KAUTILYAS ARTHASHASTRA189-90 (R. Shamasastri, trans., 1915)
28
AA MAUDUDI , HUMAN RIGHTS IN ISLAM 27 (1982)
29
Thessalonians 4:11 THE BIBLE
21
Religious and social customs affirming privacy also find
acknowledgement in our laws, for example, in the Civil Procedure Codes
exemption of a pardanashin ladys appearance in Court31.
24. Privacy, that is to say, the condition arrived at after excluding
other persons, is a basic pre-requisite for exercising the liberty and the
freedom to perform that activity. The inability to create a condition of
selective seclusion virtually denies an individual the freedom to exercise
that particular liberty or freedom necessary to do that activity.
25. It is not possible to truncate or isolate the basic freedom to do
an activity in seclusion from the freedom to do the activity itself. The
right to claim a basic condition like privacy in which guaranteed
fundamental rights can be exercised must itself be regarded as a
fundamental right. Privacy, thus, constitutes the basic, irreducible
condition necessary for the exercise of personal liberty and freedoms
guaranteed by the Constitution. It is the inarticulate major premise in
Part III of the Constitution.
30
James 5:16 THE BIBLE
31
Code of Civil Procedure, 1989, S. 132
22
Privacys Connection to Dignity and Liberty
26. Undoubtedly, privacy exists, as the foregoing demonstrates, as a
verifiable fact in all civilized societies. But privacy does not stop at being
merely a descriptive claim. It also embodies a normative one. The
normative case for privacy is intuitively simple. Nature has clothed man,
amongst other things, with dignity and liberty so that he may be free to
do what he will consistent with the freedom of another and to develop his
faculties to the fullest measure necessary to live in happiness and peace.
The Constitution, through its Part III, enumerates many of these
freedoms and their corresponding rights as fundamental rights. Privacy is
an essential condition for the exercise of most of these freedoms.
Ex facie, every right which is integral to the constitutional rights to
dignity, life, personal liberty and freedom, as indeed the right to privacy
is, must itself be regarded as a fundamental right.
27. Though he did not use the name of privacy, it is clear that it is
what J.S. Mill took to be indispensable to the existence of the general
reservoir of liberty that democracies are expected to reserve to their
23
citizens. In the introduction to his seminal On Liberty (1859), he
characterized freedom in the following way:
This, then, is the appropriate region of human
liberty. It comprises, first, the inward domain
of consciousness; demanding liberty of
conscience, in the most comprehensive sense;
liberty of thought and feeling; absolute
freedom of opinion and sentiment on all
subjects, practical or speculative, scientific,
moral, or theological. The liberty of expressing
and publishing opinions may seem to fall under a
different principle, since it belongs to that part of the
conduct of an individual which concerns other
people; but, being almost of as much importance as
the liberty of thought itself, and resting in great part
on the same reasons, is practically inseparable from
it. Secondly, the principle requires liberty of
tastes and pursuits; of framing the plan of our
life to suit our own character; of doing as we like,
subject to such consequences as may follow: without
impediment from our fellow-creatures, so long as
what we do does not harm them, even though they
should think our conduct foolish, perverse, or wrong.
Thirdly, from this liberty of each individual, follows
the liberty, within the same limits, of combination
among individuals; freedom to unite, for any purpose
not involving harm to others: the persons combining
being supposed to be of full age, and not forced or
deceived.
No society in which these liberties are not, on
the whole, respected, is free, whatever may be
its form of government; and none is completely
free in which they do not exist absolute and
unqualified. The only freedom which deserves
the name, is that of pursuing our own good in
our own way, so long as we do not attempt to
deprive others of theirs, or impede their efforts
to obtain it. Each is the proper guardian of his
own health, whether bodily, or mental and
spiritual. Mankind are greater gainers by suffering
24
each other to live as seems good to themselves,
than by compelling each to live as seems good to the
rest.
Though this doctrine is anything but new, and, to
some persons, may have the air of a truism, there is
no doctrine which stands more directly opposed to
the general tendency of existing opinion and
practice. Society has expended fully as much effort
in the attempt (according to its lights) to compel
people to conform to its notions of personal, as of
social excellence.32 (Emphasis supplied)
28. The first and natural home for a right of privacy is in Article 21
at the very heart of personal liberty and life itself. Liberty and privacy
are integrally connected in a way that privacy is often the basic condition
necessary for exercise of the right of personal liberty. There are
innumerable activities which are virtually incapable of being performed at
all and in many cases with dignity unless an individual is left alone or is
otherwise empowered to ensure his or her privacy. Birth and death are
events when privacy is required for ensuring dignity amongst all civilized
people. Privacy is thus one of those rights instrumentally required if one
is to enjoy33 rights specified and enumerated in the constitutional text.
32
JOHN STUART MILL, ON LIBERTY AND OTHER ESSAYS 15-16 (Stefan Collini ed., 1989) (1859)
33
Laurence H. Tribe and Michael C. Dorf, Levels Of Generality In The Definition Of Rights,
57 U. CHI . L. REV. 1057 (1990) at 1068
25
29. This Court has endorsed the view that life must mean
something more than mere animal existence34 on a number of
occasions, beginning with the Constitution Bench in Sunil Batra (I) v.
Delhi Administration35. Sunil Batra connected this view of Article 21 to
the constitutional value of dignity. In numerous cases, including Francis
Coralie Mullin v. Administrator, Union Territory of Delhi36, this Court has
viewed liberty as closely linked to dignity. Their relationship to the effect
of taking into the protection of life the protection of faculties of
thinking and feeling, and of temporary and permanent impairments to
those faculties. In Francis Coralie Mullin, Bhagwati, J. opined as
follows37:
Now obviously, the right to life enshrined in Article
21 cannot be restricted to mere animal existence. It
means something much more than just physical
survival. In Kharak Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh,
Subba Rao J. quoted with approval the following
passage from the judgment of Field J. in Munn v.
Illinois to emphasize the quality of life covered by
Article 21:
By the term life as here used something more is
meant than mere animal existence. The inhibition
34
Munn v. Illinois, (1877) 94 US 113 (Per Field, J.) as cited In Kharak Singh at p. 347-8
35
(1978) 4 SCC 494
36
(1981) 1 SCC 608
37
Francis Coralie Mullin at 7
26
against its deprivation extends to all those limbs and
faculties by which life is enjoyed. The provision
equally prohibits the mutilation of the body or
amputation of an arm or leg or the putting out of an
eye or the destruction of any other organ of the body
through which the soul communicates with the outer
world.
and this passage was again accepted as laying down
the correct law by the Constitution Bench of this
Court in the first Sunil Batra case (supra). Every
limb or faculty through which life is enjoyed is
thus protected by Article 21 and a fortiori, this
would include the faculties of thinking and
feeling. Now deprivation which is inhibited by Article
21 may be total or partial, neither any limb or faculty
can be totally destroyed nor can it be partially
damaged. Moreover it is every kind of deprivation
that is hit by Article 21, whether such deprivation be
permanent or temporary and, furthermore,
deprivation is not an act which is complete once and
for all: it is a continuing act and so long as it lasts, it
must be in accordance with procedure established by
law. It is therefore clear that any act which
damages or injures or interferes with the use
of, any limb or faculty of a person, either
permanently or even temporarily, would be
within the inhibition of Article 21.
(Emphasis supplied)
Privacy is therefore necessary in both its mental and physical aspects as
an enabler of guaranteed freedoms.
30. It is difficult to see how dignity whose constitutional
significance is acknowledged both by the Preamble and by this Court in
its exposition of Article 21, among other rights can be assured to the
27
individual without privacy. Both dignity and privacy are intimately
intertwined and are natural conditions for the birth and death of
individuals, and for many significant events in life between these events.
Necessarily, then, the right of privacy is an integral part of both life and
personal liberty under Article 21, and is intended to enable the rights
bearer to develop her potential to the fullest extent made possible only
in consonance with the constitutional values expressed in the Preamble
as well as across Part III.
Privacy as a Travelling Right
31. I have already shown that the right of privacy is as inalienable as
the right to perform any constitutionally permissible act. Privacy in all its
aspects constitutes the springboard for the exercise of the freedoms
guaranteed by Article 19(1). Freedom of speech and expression is always
dependent on the capacity to think, read and write in private and is often
exercised in a state of privacy, to the exclusion of those not intended to
be spoken to or communicated with. A peaceful assembly requires the
exclusion of elements who may not be peaceful or who may have a
different agenda. The freedom to associate must necessarily be the
28
freedom to associate with those of ones choice and those with common
objectives. The requirement of privacy in matters concerning residence
and settlement is too well-known to require elaboration. Finally, it is not
possible to conceive of an individual being able to practice a profession
or carry on trade, business or occupation without the right to privacy in
practical terms and without the right and power to keep others away
from his work.
32. Ex facie, privacy is essential to the exercise of freedom of
conscience and the right to profess, practice and propagate religion vide
Article 25. The further right of every religious denomination to maintain
institutions for religious and charitable purposes, to manage its own
affairs and to own and administer property acquired for such purposes
vide Article 26 also requires privacy, in the sense of non-interference
from the state. Article 28(3) expressly recognizes the right of a student
attending an educational institution recognized by the state, to be left
alone. Such a student cannot be compelled to take part in any religious
instruction imparted in any such institution unless his guardian has
consented to it.
29
33. The right of privacy is also integral to the cultural and
educational rights whereby a group having a distinct language, script or
culture shall have the right to conserve the same. It has also always
been an integral part of the right to own property and has been treated
as such in civil law as well as in criminal law vide all the offences and
torts of trespass known to law.
34. Therefore, privacy is the necessary condition precedent to the
enjoyment of any of the guarantees in Part III. As a result, when it is
claimed by rights bearers before constitutional courts, a right to privacy
may be situated not only in Article 21, but also simultaneously in any of
the other guarantees in Part III. In the current state of things, Articles
19(1), 20(3), 25, 28 and 29 are all rights helped up and made
meaningful by the exercise of privacy. This is not an exhaustive list.
Future developments in technology and social ordering may well reveal
that there are yet more constitutional sites in which a privacy right
inheres that are not at present evident to us.
30
Judicial Enumeration of the Fundamental Right to Privacy
35. There is nothing unusual in the judicial enumeration of one right
on the basis of another under the Constitution. In the case of Article 21s
guarantee of personal liberty, this practice is only natural if Salmonds
formulation of liberty as incipient rights38 is correct. By the process of
enumeration, constitutional courts merely give a name and specify the
core of guarantees already present in the residue of constitutional
liberty. Over time, the Supreme Court has been able to imply by its
interpretative process, that several fundamental rights including the right
to privacy emerge out of expressly stated Fundamental Rights. In Unni
Krishnan, J.P. v. State of A.P.39, a Constitution Bench of this Court held
that several unenumerated rights fall within Article 21 since personal
liberty is of widest amplitude40 on the way to affirming the existence of
a right to education. It went on to supply the following indicative list of
such rights, which included the right to privacy:
30. The following rights are held to be covered
under Article 21:
38
SALMOND, at p. 228
39
(1993) SCC 1 645
40
Id. at 29
31
1. The right to go abroad. Satwant Singh v. D.
Ramarathnam A.P. O., New Delhi (1967) 3 SCR 525.
2. The right to privacy. Gobind v. State of M.P..,
(1975)2 SCC 148. In this case reliance was placed
on the American decision in Griswold v. Connecticut,
381 US 479 at 510.
3. The right against solitary confinement. Sunil Batra
v. Delhi Administration, (1978) 4 SCC 494 at 545.
4. The right against bar fetters. Charles Sobhraj v.
Supdt. (Central Jail0, (1978)4 SCR 104
5. The right to legal aid. MH Hoskot v. State of
Maharashtra, (1978) 3 SCC 544.
6. The right to speedy trial. Hussainara Khatoon v.
Home Secy, State of Bihar, (1980)1 SCC81
7. The right against hand cuffing. Prem Shankar v.
Delhi Administration (1980) 3 SCC 526
8. The right against delayed execution. TV
Vatheeswaran v. State of Tamil Nadu, (1983) 2 SCC
68.
9. The right against custodial violence. Sheela Barse v.
State of Maharashtra, (1983) 2 SCC 96.
10. The Right against public hanging. A.G. of India v.
Lachmadevi, (1989) Supp. 1 SCC264
11. Doctors Assistance. Paramananda Katra v.
Union of India, (1989) 4 SCC 286.
12. Shelter. Santistar Builder v. N.KI. Totame,
(1990) 1 SCC 520
In the case of privacy, the case for judicial enumeration is especially
strong. It is no doubt a fair implication from Article 21, but also more.
Privacy is be a right or condition, logically presupposed41 by rights
expressly recorded in the constitutional text, if they are to make sense.
41
Laurence H. Tribe And Michael C. Dorf, Levels Of Generality In The Definition Of
Rights, 57 U. CHI. L. REV. 1057 (1990) at p. 1068
32
As a result, privacy is more than merely a derivative constitutional right.
It is the necessary and unavoidable logical entailment of rights
guaranteed in the text of the constitution.
36. Not recognizing character of privacy as a fundamental right is
likely to erode the very sub-stratum of the personal liberty guaranteed
by the constitution. The decided cases clearly demonstrate that
particular fundamental rights could not have been exercised without the
recognition of the right of privacy as a fundamental right. Any
derecognition or diminution in the importance of the right of privacy will
weaken the fundamental rights which have been expressly conferred.
37. Before proceeding to the question of how constitutional courts
are to review whether a violation of privacy is unconstitutional, three
arguments from the Union and the states deserve to be dealt with
expressly.
38. The Learned Attorney General relied on cases holding that there
is no fundamental right to trade in liquor to submit by analogy that there
can be no absolute right to privacy. Apprehensions that the recognition
of privacy would create complications for the state in its exercise of
33
powers is not well-founded. The declaration of a right cannot be avoided
where there is good constitutional ground for doing so. It is only after
acknowledging that the right of privacy is a fundamental right, that we
can consider how it affects the plenary powers of the state. In any event,
the state can always legislate a reasonable restriction to protect and
effectuate a compelling state interest, like it may while restricting any
other fundamental right. There is no warrant for the assumption or for
the conclusion that the fundamental right to privacy is an absolute right
which cannot be reasonably restricted given a sufficiently compelling
state interest.
39. Learned Additional Solicitor General, Shri Tushar Mehta listed
innumerable statutes which protect the right of privacy wherever
necessary and urged that it is neither necessary nor appropriate to
recognize privacy as a fundamental right. This argument cannot be
accepted any more in the context of a fundamental right to privacy than
in the context of any other fundamental right. Several legislations
protect and advance fundamental rights, but their existence does not
make the existence of a corresponding fundamental right redundant.
34
This is obviously so because legislations are alterable and even
repealable unlike fundamental rights, which, by design, endure.
40. Shri Rakesh Dwivedi, appearing for the State of Gujarat, while
referring to several judgments of the Supreme Court of the United
States, submitted that only those privacy claims which involve a
reasonable expectation of privacy be recognized as protected by the
fundamental right. It is not necessary for the purpose of this case to
deal with the particular instances of privacy claims which are to be
recognized as implicating a fundamental right. Indeed, it would be
premature to do. The scope and ambit of a constitutional protection of
privacy can only be revealed to us on a case-by-case basis.
The Test for Privacy
41. One way of determining what a core constitutional idea is, could
be by considering its opposite, which shows what it is not. Accordingly,
we understand justice as the absence of injustice, and freedom as the
absence of restraint. So too privacy may be understood as the antonym
of publicity. In law, the distinction between what is considered a private
trust as opposed to a public trust illuminates what I take to be core and
35
irreducible attributes of privacy. In Deoki Nandan v. Murlidhar42, four
judges of this Court articulated the distinction in the following terms:
The distinction between a private trust and a
public trust is that whereas in the former the
beneficiaries are specific individuals, in the latter
they are the general public or a class thereof. While
in the former the beneficiaries are persons who are
ascertained or capable of being ascertained, in the
latter they constitute a body which is incapable of
ascertainment.
This same feature, namely the right of a member of public as such to
enter upon or use such property, distinguishes private property from
public property and private ways from public roads.
42. Privacy is always connected, whether directly or through its
effect on the actions which are sought to be secured from interference,
to the act of associating with others. In this sense, privacy is usually best
understood as a relational right, even as its content frequently concerns
the exclusion of others from ones society.
43. The trusts illustration also offers us a workable test for
determining when a constitutionally cognizable privacy claim has been
made, and the basis for acknowledging that the existence of such a claim
42
(1956) SCR 756
36
is context-dependent. To exercise ones right to privacy is to choose and
specify on two levels. It is to choose which of the various activities that
are taken in by the general residue of liberty available to her she would
like to perform, and to specify whom to include in ones circle when
performing them. It is also autonomy in the negative, and takes in the
choice and specification of which activities not to perform and which
persons to exclude from ones circle. Exercising privacy is the signaling
of ones intent to these specified others whether they are ones co-
participants or simply ones audience as well as to society at large, to
claim and exercise the right. To check for the existence of an actionable
claim to privacy, all that needs to be considered is if such an intent to
choose and specify exists, whether directly in its manifestation in the
rights bearers actions, or otherwise.
44. Such a formulation would exclude three recurring red herrings in
the Respondents arguments before us. Firstly, it would not admit of
arguments that privacy is limited to property or places. So, for example,
taking one or more persons aside to converse at a whisper even in a
public place would clearly signal a claim to privacy, just as broadcasting
37
ones words by a loudspeaker would signal the opposite intent. Secondly,
this formulation would not reduce privacy to solitude. Reserving the
rights to admission at a large gathering place, such as a cinema hall or
club, would signal a claim to privacy. Finally, neither would such a
formulation require us to hold that private information must be
information that is inaccessible to all others.
Standards of Review of Privacy Violations
45. There is no doubt that privacy is integral to the several
fundamental rights recognized by Part III of the Constitution and must
be regarded as a fundamental right itself. The relationship between the
right of privacy and the particular fundamental right (or rights) involved
would depend on the action interdicted by a particular law. At a
minimum, since privacy is always integrated with personal liberty, the
constitutionality of the law which is alleged to have invaded into a rights
bearers privacy must be tested by the same standards by which a law
which invades personal liberty under Article 21 is liable to be tested.
Under Article 21, the standard test at present is the rationality review
expressed in Maneka Gandhis case. This requires that any procedure by
38
which the state interferes with an Article 21 right to be fair, just and
reasonable, not fanciful, oppressive or arbitrary43.
46. Once it is established that privacy imbues every constitutional
freedom with its efficacy and that it can be located in each of them, it
must follow that interference with it by the state must be tested against
whichever one or more Part III guarantees whose enjoyment is curtailed.
As a result, privacy violations will usually have to answer to tests in
addition to the one applicable to Article 21. Such a view would be wholly
consistent with R.C. Cooper v. Union of India.
Conclusion
47. In view of the foregoing, I answer the reference before us in the
following terms:
a. The ineluctable conclusion must be that an inalienable
constitutional right to privacy inheres in Part III of the
Constitution. M.P. Sharma and the majority opinion in Kharak
Singh must stand overruled to the extent that they indicate to
the contrary.
43
Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India (1978) 1 SCC 248 at para 48
39
b. The right to privacy is inextricably bound up with all
exercises of human liberty both as it is specifically enumerated
across Part III, and as it is guaranteed in the residue under
Article 21. It is distributed across the various articles in Part III
and, mutatis mutandis, takes the form of whichever of their
enjoyment its violation curtails.
c. Any interference with privacy by an entity covered by
Article 12s description of the state must satisfy the tests
applicable to whichever one or more of the Part III freedoms the
interference affects.
................................. J.
[S. A. BOBDE]
New Delhi;
August 24, 2017
40