Sunday, 14 December 2025

Shri D. K. Basu v. State of West Bengal (1997) 1 SCC 416

 Case name: Shri D. K. Basu v. State of West Bengal; Ashok K. Johri v. State of U.P. 

Citation: (1997) 1 SCC 416; judgment dated 18 December 1996​

Date of judgment: 18 December 1996​

Bench / Judges: Kuldip Singh and A. S. Anand, JJ. (judgment by Dr A. S. Anand, J.)​

 

Facts

The Executive Chairman of Legal Aid Services, West Bengal, wrote to the Chief Justice of India in August 1986 highlighting newspaper reports of increasing deaths and torture in police custody, seeking development of “custody jurisprudence” and modalities for compensation and accountability. The letter was treated as a PIL writ petition under Article 32; soon after, another letter from Ashok Kumar Johri about a custodial death in Aligarh was also tagged. Notices issued to all States and the Law Commission produced affidavits and the 113th Report on “injuries in police custody.” The Court examined the extent of police powers of arrest, detention and interrogation and the constitutional protection against custodial violence under Articles 21 and 22.​

 

Judgment / Holding

The Court held that custodial torture and deaths violate Articles 21 and 22 and that no person loses fundamental rights on arrest; only reasonable restrictions “according to procedure established by law” are permitted. It laid down 11 mandatory requirements to be followed in all arrests and detentions (such as arrest memo with witness, notice to family, diary entries, periodic medical examination, police control room intimation, and limited right to meet a lawyer), declaring that these flow from Articles 21 and 22 and are binding on all police and similar agencies. The Court also affirmed that for established violations of Article 21 in custody, public law monetary compensation is available against the State on a strict‑liability basis, in addition to civil and criminal remedies, and that sovereign immunity is no defence.​

 

Key observations

  • The Court described custodial violence as a “naked violation of human dignity” that strikes at the rule of law, and noted the practical difficulties of prosecuting police personnel because evidence lies within police control and witnesses fear retaliation.​
  • Relying on earlier cases like Rudul Sah, Nilabati Behera, Bhim Singh and Saheli, and comparative jurisprudence from Ireland, Trinidad & Tobago and New Zealand, the Court developed a robust public law remedy: courts must not stop at declaratory relief but can grant compensation directly under Articles 32/226 for unconstitutional deprivation of life or liberty.​
  • The Court urged Parliament to consider inserting section 114‑B in the Evidence Act (as suggested by the Law Commission) to presume police responsibility for injuries in custody, and emphasized the need for police training, transparency, and scientific methods of investigation instead of “third‑degree methods.”​

 

Obiter dicta

  • The Court acknowledged the genuine challenge posed by terrorism and serious crime, but stressed that “state terrorism is no answer to combat terrorism” and that even hardened offenders cannot be subjected to torture; interrogation must remain “right, just and fair” and within legal bounds.​
  • It highlighted that protection against torture applies not only to police but also to other enforcement agencies like DRI, Enforcement Directorate, BSF, CRPF, CBI, etc., and that the D. K. Basu requirements equally bind them.​
  • The judgment articulates an important obiter that public law compensation for violations of fundamental rights is based on strict liability, with a right of the State to recover from the individual wrongdoer, and that traditional private‑law notions and sovereign immunity cannot limit the Court’s constitutional role as protector of fundamental rights.​

Wednesday, 10 December 2025

Divine Retreat Centre v. State of Kerala and Others Appeal (Criminal) No. 472 of 2008

 Case name: Divine Retreat Centre v. State of Kerala and Others

Citation: Appeal (Criminal) No. 472 of 2008, arising out of SLP (Crl.) No. 2234 of 2007; reported as (2008) 3 SCC 542

Date of judgment: 11 March 2008

Bench / Judges: S. H. Kapadia and B. Sudershan Reddy, JJ. (judgment by B. Sudershan Reddy, J.)

 

Facts

A remand prisoner, Mini Varghese, alleged that while staying at Divine Retreat Centre, she was sexually exploited by a priest (Father Mathew Thadathil), became pregnant, and was later falsely implicated in a theft case. On her petition, the Magistrate ordered an investigation and Crime No. 381 of 2005 under section 376(g) IPC was registered at Koratty Police Station. Separately, an anonymous petition with media clippings and CDs alleging sexual offences, suspicious deaths, foreign exchange violations and involvement of senior IAS/IPS officers at the Centre reached a High Court Judge. Treating it suo motu under section 482 CrPC, the Kerala High Court removed the Investigating Officer, constituted a Special Investigation Team headed by an IG, and ordered wide-ranging inquiries into alleged crimes and corruption.

 

 

Judgment / Holding

The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, set aside the High Court’s order constituting the Special Investigation Team and the wider directions based on the anonymous petition. It held that under section 482 CrPC the High Court cannot change the Investigating Officer or create its own investigating agency mid‑investigation, especially on vague, anonymous allegations, and that investigation of cognizable offences is the statutory domain of the police subject to limited judicial control. The Court directed that materials collected by the SIT be handed to the original Investigating Officer, who must file an appropriate report under section 173 CrPC for the Magistrate’s judicial consideration.

Key observations

  • The judgment reiterates that section 482 CrPC does not confer any new or unlimited power; it merely preserves inherent jurisdiction to: (i) give effect to orders under the Code, (ii) prevent abuse of process, and (iii) secure the ends of justice. Exercise must be sparing, cautious, and cannot be used to supervise or take over a police investigation.
  • The Court emphasises the clear separation between police powers of investigation under Chapter XII CrPC and judicial functions; neither accused nor complainant can choose the investigating agency, and High Courts cannot direct investigations on anonymous petitions or convert themselves into “police stations.”
  • On public interest litigation, the Court stresses that only bona fide litigants with disclosed identity and sufficient interest should be entertained; anonymous or unverified letters cannot be used to initiate PIL-styled criminal investigations, and High Courts must guard against “masked phantoms” misusing PIL for oblique motives.

 

Obiter dicta

  • Important obiter clarifies that while in exceptional cases the High Court may, under Article 226, interfere with an investigation for proven mala fides or abuse, even then it cannot dictate how the investigation is conducted, only insist on compliance with the Code.
  • The Court lays down institutional guidance: Chief Justice is master of the roster; individual judges should not unilaterally act on letters personally addressed to them, and all such communications must be placed before the Chief Justice to decide if and how they should be treated.
The judgment underlines that courts must protect their own institutional integrity and reputation by resisting attempts by unscrupulous litigants to drag them into inquisitorial roles beyond the constitutional design

Birendra Kumar Pandey and Another v. Union of India and Another Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 28 of 2012

 Case name: Birendra Kumar Pandey and Another v. Union of India and Another

Citation: Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 28 of 2012, Supreme Court of India

Date of final order: 8 June 2023

Bench / Judges: Vikram Nath, J. and Sanjay Kumar, J. (vacation bench at final disposal); interim proceedings earlier before Altamas Kabir, J. and J. Chelameswar, J.

Facts

The petitioners were issued summons under section 108 of the Customs Act, 1962, for interrogation by customs authorities in connection with an investigation. They feared coercive methods and possible extortion of confessions during questioning, and therefore filed a writ petition under Article 32 seeking a direction that their interrogation and recording of statements under section 108 be conducted in the presence of their advocate, at a visible but beyond‑audibility distance. On 16 April 2012, the Supreme Court, by an interim order, granted this protective arrangement during interrogation. The petition later came up for final disposal in 2023.

Judgment / Holding

The Court noted that the interim order of 16 April 2012 had already granted the precise relief sought in the writ petition, namely, presence of the petitioners’ advocate during interrogation within sight but beyond hearing range and without participation in questioning. Since nothing more survived for adjudication, the writ petition was disposed of in terms of the signed order, without granting any wider declaration of right beyond the specific protection already afforded.

Observations and Obiter dicta

  • While considering the interim relief, the Court distinguished Poolpandi v. Superintendent, Central Excise, where presence of counsel “during” interrogation as an active participant was refused, from a limited safeguard permitting counsel to sit at a visible but non‑audible distance to prevent coercion.
  • Relying on Jugal Kishore Samra and D.K. Basu directions, the Court treated such limited presence of counsel as a reasonable protective measure in appropriate cases, clarifying that the lawyer has no role in the interrogation itself and cannot consult the person during questioning.

Babu Singh and Others v. The State of Uttar Pradesh​ 1978 AIR 527

Case name: Babu Singh and Others v. The State of Uttar Pradesh​

Citation: 1978 AIR 527; 1978 SCR (2) 777; 1978 SCC (1) 579​

Date of judgment: 31 January 1978​

Bench / Judges: V. R. Krishna Iyer, J. (speaking for the Court) with D. A. Desai, J. on the Bench​

Facts 

The petitioners were charged with murder under section 302 IPC and were acquitted by the Sessions Judge on 4 November 1972. The State appealed; after about five years, on 20 May 1977, the High Court reversed the acquittal, convicted all petitioners and sentenced them to life imprisonment. The petitioners filed a statutory appeal to the Supreme Court and sought bail pending appeal. An earlier bail application had been rejected on 7 September 1977, but they moved a second application pointing to long delay, prior acquittal, their conduct while on bail, family circumstances, and time already spent in custody.​

Judgment and holding

The Court held that rejection of an earlier bail application does not bar a subsequent application if there are new materials or developments, and bail can be reconsidered at a later stage. Emphasising that personal liberty under Article 21 is a fundamental value and that bail refusal cannot be used punitively, the Court granted bail subject to strict conditions, including a bond, surety, exclusion from the concerned village, and weekly reporting to the local police station.​

Observations / Obiter dicta

  • The Court elaborated a constitutional, rights‑oriented “jurisprudence of bail,” stressing that deprivation of liberty is justified only on reasonable grounds tied to community safety and securing the accused’s presence, not as anticipatory punishment.​
  • It identified key bail factors: nature of charge and evidence, severity of possible sentence, likelihood of absconding, risk of tampering with evidence or threatening witnesses, antecedents, period already spent in custody, delay in hearing appeals, and the harsh conditions of prisons.​
  • The Court endorsed the view that where appeals cannot be disposed of reasonably quickly, persons sentenced to life imprisonment and granted special leave should ordinarily be released on bail unless there are cogent reasons to refuse.

Tuesday, 25 November 2025

3 types of bail


The three types of bail listed—regular, anticipatory, and interim—differ primarily by the timing of the application relative to the actual arrest and their duration. [1]


1. Regular Bail
  • Stage of Application: After a person has been arrested and is in police or judicial custody.
  • Purpose: To secure the release of an accused person from custody while the investigation or trial is ongoing, ensuring their attendance in court during the trial.
  • Legal Provision: Provisions are primarily under Sections 437 and 439 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (CrPC), 1973.
  • Duration: Generally continues until the end of the trial unless cancelled by the court. [1, 2, 3]
2. Anticipatory Bail
  • Stage of Application: Before a person is arrested, when they have a reasonable apprehension of being arrested for a non-bailable offence.
  • Purpose: To provide a protective shield against potential arbitrary arrest, allowing the individual to remain at liberty even if arrested.
  • Legal Provision: Granted under Section 438 of the CrPC, 1973.
  • Duration: Typically remains in force until the conclusion of the trial unless conditions are breached or it is cancelled by the court. [1, 3, 4, 5, 6]
3. Interim Bail
  • Stage of Application: Granted for a temporary, short period while a primary application for regular or anticipatory bail is pending before the court.
  • Purpose: To provide immediate, temporary relief and prevent the accused from being detained while the court takes time to review documents and make a final decision on the main bail application.
  • Legal Provision: Granted based on judicial discretion, as there is no specific section dedicated solely to it in the CrPC.
  • Duration: It is strictly time-bound, usually lasting only until the next date of hearing or a few weeks at most, at which point the person may face re-arrest if the main bail is not granted. [1, 4, 7, 8, 9]


REFRENCES-


 

Saturday, 15 November 2025

India’s Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 in the Vision of Viksit Bharat 2047: Finding the Balance Between Privacy and Development


India wants to become a developed nation by 2047. That requires massive digital growth AI, fintech, e-governance, data-driven public services, and innovation ecosystems. But growth built on personal data also comes with an obvious risk: privacy can be easily compromised if the law doesn’t keep pace with technology.

That’s exactly the gap the Digital Personal Data Protection Act (DPDP Act), 2023 tries to fill. It is India’s first dedicated privacy law, passed after years of fragmented rules and increasing public concern about the misuse of personal data. The Act claims to protect individuals while also enabling a strong digital economy. Whether it succeeds in balancing both sides is the real question.

This blog breaks down how the DPDP Act evolved, what it contains, and how it fits into the larger Viksit Bharat 2047 ambition.

 

Why India Needed a New Privacy Law

The digital expansion of the last decade smartphones everywhere, Aadhaar-linked services, online payments, massive e-governance platforms turned personal data into a kind of fuel for both businesses and governments. But the IT Act, 2000 and its 2011 SPDI Rules were outdated and toothless.

They covered only:

  • a narrow category of “sensitive personal data,”
  • only private entities (not government),
  • and had weak enforcement.

Most companies did the bare minimum with a checkbox privacy policy, and individuals had almost no real control over their data.

The turning point was Justice K.S. Puttaswamy (2017), where the Supreme Court declared privacy a fundamental right under Article 21. Justice Chandrachud’s observation "privacy allows each human being a protected core of solitude"forced Parliament to wake up. A proper legal framework became unavoidable.

A committee headed by Justice B.N. Srikrishna drafted the first bill in 2018. The 2019 Bill went through scrutiny, then was withdrawn. Finally, in 2023, Parliament unanimously passed the Digital Personal Data Protection Act.

 

What the DPDP Act Tries to Achieve

The Act openly acknowledges the two-sided reality of modern data governance:

  1. Individuals must have control over their personal data, and
  2. Data must flow for legitimate, lawful purposes governance, business, AI development, research, public welfare, and security.

This dual intention fits into the government’s broader Viksit Bharat 2047 vision, which sees data infrastructure and digital innovation as central pillars of a developed India.

In short, the Act is not anti-growth. It tries to be a growth-friendly privacy law.

 

Key Features of the DPDP Act, 2023

The law is built around seven principles:
lawfulness, transparency, purpose limitation, data minimization, accuracy, storage limitation, security safeguards, and accountability.

Here are the important parts broken down:

1. Wide Scope

The Act applies to all digital personal data.
It even covers foreign entities if they handle data of people in India.

This is a giant leap from the SPDI Rules, which applied only to some private entities and only to certain sensitive categories.

2. Consent is Now Meaningful, Not a Formality

Data Fiduciaries (companies or government bodies that handle data) must seek:

  • clear, informed, specific consent
  • in accessible language
  • without bundling it with unrelated conditions

This shuts down the old practice of hiding consent inside endless privacy policies.

The Act still allows certain non-consent grounds under Section 7—such as legal requirements, court orders, or when data is voluntarily submitted.

3. Stronger Rights for Individuals

People now have:

  • the right to access how their data is used,
  • the right to correct or erase data,
  • the right to grievance redress,
  • and the right to nominate someone to manage their data after death.

These rights simply did not exist earlier.

4. A Dedicated Enforcement Body

The Data Protection Board of India handles complaints, supervises compliance, and imposes penalties.

Fines can go up to:

  • ₹250 crore for major breaches,
  • ₹200 crore for violations involving children.

This is far stronger than the IT Act’s negligible penalties.

 

The Big Question: Does the Act Really Balance Privacy and Development?

The Act tries to strike a middle path. But the balancing isn’t perfectly symmetrical.

Where It Protects Privacy

  • Requires consent for most processing
  • Gives individuals rights they never had
  • Holds companies accountable through penalties
  • Applies even to foreign tech giants

These are welcome changes for a country where people commonly surrender data without understanding the consequences.

Where Development and Government Powers Dominate

The Act includes broad exemptions this is where the balance tilts.

1. Section 7 (Processing Without Consent)

Data can be processed without consent:

  • if required by any law,
  • by courts,
  • when individuals voluntarily give data (e.g., government forms),
  • or for state-provided services.

This means the government has wide room to use data for governance and welfare.

2. Section 17(2) (Government Exemptions)

This is the real power clause.

The Central Government can exempt any of its agencies from:

  • purpose limitation,
  • storage limitation,
  • consent requirements,
  • and even some transparency obligations

for reasons of national security, sovereignty, public order, or similar concerns.

In practice, the government can collect and use data without the same restrictions imposed on private entities. Critics argue this leaves too much discretion with the state.

Cross-Border Data

The DPDP Act permits cross-border data transfers except to blacklisted countries.
This supports global business operations.

However, other sectoral laws like RBI’s Payment Data Rules require strict localisation. The combination suggests India wants digital sovereignty plus digital growth—a tricky combination, but not impossible.

 

DPDP Act vs. the Old IT Act: What’s Really Changed?

You can think of this as a complete overhaul.

IT Act + SPDI Rules

DPDP Act, 2023

Covered only “sensitive data”

Covers all personal data

Applied mainly to private companies

Applies to government, private and foreign entities

Implied/blanket consent common

Explicit, informed consent required

Weak individual rights

Strong rights: access, correction, erasure, nomination

No specialist regulator

Dedicated Data Protection Board

Max penalty: ₹25,000

Penalties up to ₹250 crore

Compensation available under §43A

No compensation mechanism for individuals

One notable drawback:
DPDP removes the right to compensation that individuals previously had under Section 43A of the IT Act. That’s a gap the new law should have ideally filled, not eliminated.

 

How Courts Have Shaped India’s Privacy Landscape

The DPDP Act rests on decades of evolving jurisprudence:

  • Kharak Singh (1964): Privacy hinted but not clearly recognised.
  • R. Rajagopal (1994): Privacy linked to Article 21 more firmly.
  • Binoy Viswam (2017): Aadhaar-PAN linkage upheld with privacy safeguards.
  • Puttaswamy (2017): Privacy declared a fundamental right, triggering the need for a full data protection law.

Without Puttaswamy, the DPDP Act would not exist.

 

Conclusion

The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 is a long-overdue milestone. It modernises India’s privacy framework, gives citizens control over their data, and pushes companies toward responsible data practices. At the same time, it clearly prioritises India’s development and digital ambitions under the Viksit Bharat 2047 vision.

Is the balance perfect?
No.
Government exemptions are broad, compensation rights are missing, and certain definitions remain vague.

But it is still a foundational law one that gives India a starting point to build a privacy-aware, innovation-friendly digital economy.

As India moves toward 2047, the real test will be in its implementation, not its text. The gap between principle and practice will determine whether the DPDP Act becomes a genuine protector of digital rights or just another policy document with good intentions.

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