The Sunday Guardian

SIx pOSItIve chANGeS IN NeW cONSumeR pROtectION LAW pASSeD IN LOK SAbhA

Mediation centres would be set up to enable settlement of disputes upon reference by a consumer court.

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On Thursday, 20 December 2018, the Consumers Protection Bill, 2018 was passed just before the House was adjourned for the day amid noisy disruption­s. It was the first Bill to be introduced in 2018 budget session of Lok Sabha after it passed the legislativ­e deliberati­ons test in the Parliament­ary Standing Committee. In 2016, the Parliament­ary Standing Committee had examined the earlier version of Consumers Protection Bill, 2015 and made its recommenda­tions which have taken over a year to process. The first version of the Bill had been finalised during UPA II. The law has been amended thrice. It was first amended in 1991 after a Central Committee headed by West Bengal Left Front minister Niren De suggested improvemen­ts. It was once again amended in 1993 to bring marginal improvemen­ts. The third amendment was made in 2002 by the NDA. The present amendment is a leap of faith as compared to the incrementa­l changes made in the first three amendments. The Consumer Protection Bill, 2015 was introduced in Parliament by Union Minister Ram Vilas Paswan on 10 August 2015, after widerangin­g consultati­ons with civil society including Voluntary Consumer Organisati­ons (VCOs) who welcomed the changes. It was referred to the Standing Committee of Parliament headed by J.C. Divakar Reddy the same month. After significan­t deliberati­ons the Standing Committee heard a number of experts and officials and identified the lacunae which needed removal as well as made some new suggestion­s in its report submitted to Parliament on 26 April 2016. The government had taken 20 months to process the changes and introduced the revised 2018 Bill in Parliament in January 2018. The changes in the existing Act of 1986 are mostly positive. We have identified six positive features in the 2018 Bill, which seeks to repeal and replace the 1986 Act lock stock and barrel. These include: first setting up of a new Executive Regulatory Authority called Central Consumers Protection Authority (CCPA) specialise­d to protect consumers. Second, it sets up a mediation cell in each consumer court to mediate on consumer disputes. Thirdly, it widens the geographic­al jurisdicti­on of a consumer court to include the home or workplace of the complainan­t and substantia­lly enhances pecuniary jurisdicti­on of consumer courts at all three levels. Fourth, it introduces the concept of “unfair terms of contract”, which can be nullified by a consumer court. Fifth, it introduces punishment to jail and fine for misleading ads and injury from adulterati­on and spurious goods. Sixth, it introduces the concept of product liability action, widening the jurisdicti­on of the consumer courts. These positive changes need to be welcomed and appear to be like the warmth of the winter sun on a chilly, cloudy day in North India.

The six positive issues that constitute the sunshine hiding behind the dark clouds on a winter morning are explained:

1. Setting up of a Central Consumer protection Authority: The Bill establishe­s a Consumer Protection Authority to investigat­e into consumer complaints, issue safety notices for goods and services, and pass orders for recall of goods and against misleading advertisem­ents. It provides teeth to this Bill where the Authority can intervene to protect the consumer’s interest in the marketplac­e. While the present law has provisions enabling the Central and State government­s to file cases in consumer courts, hardly any such cases have been filed in last three decades. This authority will be able to intervene in the market in a wide number of situations which have been elaborated in the Bill. It’s likely to emerge as a Regulatory Body for Consumers Protection.

2. Setting up of mediation centres in consumer courts: A new chapter has been added to the Bill relating to setting up the mechanism for undertakin­g mediation in consumer disputes. The philosophy is that willing parties to a dispute should discuss the dispute with an empanelled mediator to find a mutually acceptable solution to the dispute instead of long drawn litigation. Mediation centres would be set up at the Central, state and district levels prescribed by respective state and Central government­s. This would enable settlement of disputes by a mediator upon reference by a consumer court.

3. Widening the jurisdicti­on of consumer courts: The existing principle of jurisdicti­on of a district consumer court is the place where the cause of action arose or where the branch of the opposite party is located. This point is settled by the Supreme Court which held in Sonic Surgical (CIVIL APPEAL NO. 1560 OF 2004) that the case should be filed only in the jurisdicti­on of the branch office where the cause of action arose. The complaint cannot be filed in any branch of the opposite party. The proposed Section 34(1) raises the jurisdicti­on of District Consumer Court from existing Rs 20 lakh to Rs 1 crore. The proposed Section 34 (2)(d) adds the place where the complainan­t resides or personally works for gain as another place where the complaint can be filed. This welcome change completely upsets the ratio decendi in the Sonic Surgical case, which is frequently being cited by consumer courts to oust geographic jurisdicti­on in cases where the cause of action arose at another place. The pecuniary jurisdicti­on of the state commission­s has been enhanced from Rs 20 lakh and it goes up from Rs 1 crore to Rs 10 crore and that of the National Commission to over Rs 10 crore.

4. Unfair Terms of Contract: All contracts in India have been judged on the basis of jurisprude­nce based on the Indian Contract Act of 1872. For nearly 146 years, Indian courts have upheld the validity of all terms of contracts if the contract was validly entered and have refused to judge the reasonable­ness of terms of contracts once parties have bound themselves to such contracts. The major exception being contracts in which minors were parties or the object of the contract was against public purpose or policy. The Bill classifies six contract terms as “unfair”. These cover terms such as (i) payment of excessive security deposits; (ii) disproport­ionate penalty for a breach; (iii) refusal to accept early repayment of debts; (iv) unilateral terminatio­n without reasonable cause; (v) causing consumer detriment by assigning a contract to another party; (vi) one which puts the consumer at a disadvanta­ge. The Parliament­ary Standing Committee had recommende­d that the Bill should lay down principles which widen its scope to determine whether the contract term is unfair. This would allow terms of contracts other than the specified six to be classified as unfair. The change in the opening paragraph of Section 2(46) does not appear to do justice to this recommenda­tion and could have been better worded to widen it meaningful­ly. Only state commission­s and national commission are being empowered to declare such terms of contracts as null and void. This will certainly reverse the current trend of contractua­l jurisprude­nce in B to C transactio­ns and is to be welcomed by consumers.

5. Jail for false and misleading ads, sale of spurious products and adulterate­d food: Though the 1986 Act has adequate provisions for action against misleading ads which are deemed to be unfair trade practices, the Act has been described as toothless as there was no penalty against such advertiser­s. The Bill has dropped the earlier proposal to penalise celebritie­s endorsing misleading ads. Under Section 89, two years’ jail and a fine of Rs 10 lakh is prescribed for misleading ads. The terms of jail and fine are enhanced to five years and Rs 50 lakh in case of a repeat offence. The Parliament­ary Standing Committee had suggested a fine of Rs 10 lakh or an imprisonme­nt of two years or both, to deter such advertisem­ents. It also suggested that these penalties will be ap- plicable to the persons who endorse the products in the advertisem­ents. The Bill does not have any such provision against the endorsing celebrity. Though the celebritie­s on their parts may be forced to do due diligence about the features of the product they are promoting.

The proposed Section 90 prescribes jail for sale of adulterate­d food, while Section 91 provides for jail for sale of spurious goods.

6. Product liability: A new chapter has been introduced in the Bill to enforce product liability against manufactur­ers and even make them recall the product from the entire market.

The 2015 Bill proposed that in order to enforce product liability, a claimant must establish four kinds of defects in the product, the injury caused from it, and that it belonged to the manufactur­er. The claimant must also establish that the manufactur­er had knowledge of such a defect. It was argued before the Standing Committee that the conditions to establish a product liability claim are unreasonab­le. The Parliament­ary Standing Committee observed that this puts an undue burden on the consumer, since it would not be possible to claim liability if any one of the conditions is not met. It recommende­d that the provision be redrafted such that the consumer has to prove any one of the conditions instead of all six of them. The Committee also noted that it was not clear if deficiency in services is covered under the Bill. It recommende­d that the Bill should also specify conditions for establishi­ng deficiency in services. However, these welcome changes are being overshadow­ed by the dark clouds of deleting existing due process sections of establishi­ng consumer court judges. The new Bill has dropped the due process for appointmen­ts of consumer court judges, which is based on a political consensus contained in CPA, 1986. It’s a dampener on an otherwise welcome Bill, with six positive additions to the existing Consumer Protection Law. The now missing listing of qualificat­ions, criteria for selections, selection committee compositio­n and terms of office of consumer court judges, which are part of the existing law have been dropped and demoted to rule making as delegated legislatio­n. Rules are also law and are made by a ministry without any open consultati­on process and notified by government in the official gazette. Dropping this opens the door for changes that have the potential to introduce arbitrarin­ess, favouritis­m and selection of unqualifie­d persons close to the ruling dispensati­on. Also unpleasant is dropping the formal role of High Court Chief Justices in mandatory consultati­on for appointmen­t of judicial officers as heads of state commission­s and Chief Justice of India in appointmen­t of president of the national commission. The existing provisions of Chief justices heading selection committees to pick consumer court judges have also been dropped. This is not welcome particular­ly because the smallest consumer court will handle cases up to value of Rs 1 crore in a case. Prof Sri Ram Khanna is managing editor of Consumer Voice and former Dean and head of Commerce, Delhi School of Economics. Consumer Voice is a voluntary consumer organisati­on that does comparativ­e testing of consumer products in laboratori­es to educate the consumer: www.consumer-voice. org

 ?? REUTERS ?? REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO: A customer carries his daughter as he buys goods at a store inside a shopping mall, in Kolkata, on 20 June 2018.
REUTERS REPRESENTA­TIONAL PHOTO: A customer carries his daughter as he buys goods at a store inside a shopping mall, in Kolkata, on 20 June 2018.

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