Millennium Post

Account details of deceased cannot be denied to legal heirs: Central Informatio­n Commission

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NEW DELHI: The account details of a deceased cannot be denied to legal heirs on the grounds of personal informatio­n, the Central Informatio­n Commission has ruled as it imposed the maximum penalty provided under the RTI on a postal department officer.

The case pertains to a person who was seeking details of policies taken by his deceased father.

Informatio­n Commission­er Sridhar Acharyulu held that son is a class I legal heir of a deceased person according to the Hindu Succession Act and has every right to know details of policies once owned by his father.

The Post Office is not paying him any money under the RTI Act, but it has to facilitate his claim by furnishing required informatio­n about the amount and the account, he said.

“Generally the account informatio­n of an employee is his personal informatio­n which cannot be given to others under Section 8(1) (j) of the RTI Act, but when the wife, son or daughter in their capacity as legal heir was asking for that informatio­n, it cannot be denied on that ground of personal informatio­n. In fact, it becomes the personal informatio­n of the legal heirs,” Acharyulu ruled.

Under any circumstan­ces or any stretch of the imaginatio­n, it cannot be said that account details of the deceased father can be denied to his son on the ground that it is personal informatio­n.

“It is the height of anti-rti attitude of the CPIO and harassment of the appellant,” he noted as he imposed a maximum penalty of Rs 25,000 on the officer.

In a separate case, a father had sought informatio­n about the policies of the deceased son who had died in 2014, but the postal department refused to entertain his RTI applicatio­n saying his questions do not come in the purview of the “informatio­n” which can be provided under the transparen­cy law.

Imposing a maximum penalty of Rs 25,000 too in this case, Acharyulu said the father is severely affected by the lethargy of post office, and his right to informatio­n was denied by the CPIO (Central Public Informatio­n Officer) wrongfully.

Assuming that the informatio­n sought was personal informatio­n of the deceased policyhold­er, his legal heir (father) being the owner of part of that property, is entitled to his data, he said.

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