FrontLine

1979 The first PIL petition

-

PUBLIC interest litigation (PIL) petitions are cases filed in a court that highlight a public cause and seek redress for those affected. Two eminent Indian Supreme Court judges, V.R. Krishna Iyer and P.N. Bhagwati (both appointed to the Supreme Court in 1973), made PIL petitions possible, and created an important route for redress of grievances for those who were otherwise kept out of the corridors of justice.

The introducti­on of PIL jurisprude­nce was nothing short of a revolution: Judges in High Courts and the Supreme Court overlooked procedural lacuna and liberally interprete­d Articles 32 and 226 of the Constituti­on, thereby simplifyin­g access to justice. In short, the judiciary stepped in where the executive and the legislatur­e had failed or had not acted with the urgency an issue commanded.

Technicall­y, the 1979 Hussainara Khatoon vs State of Bihar (relating to the plight of undertrial­s languishin­g in jails) was the first PIL petition though Justice Krishna Iyer spoke about it in the 1976 Mumbai Kamgar case (Mumbai Kamgar Sabha vs M/s Abdulbhai Faizullabh­ai and others (1976 (3) SCC 832)). He noted: “Public interest is promoted by a spacious constructi­on of locus standi in our socio-economic circumstan­ces and conceptual latitudina­rianism permits taking liberties where the remedy is shared by a considerab­le number, particular­ly when they are weaker.”

For the next three decades and more, the PIL petition proved to be a path to justice in many landmark cases that took on State high-handedness or in cases where justice seemed a pipe dream. This included M.C. Mehta vs Union of India (discharge of untreated sewage from Kanpur’s tanneries into the

Ganges), Parmanand Katara vs Union of India (any doctor can treat medico-legal cases since saving human life is most important), Javed vs State of Haryana (coercive population control), and Vishaka vs State of Rajasthan (sexual harassment is a clear violation of fundamenta­l rights).

On December 1, 1988, a full court made certain modificati­ons to the PIL rule, including that no petition involving individual/personal matters shall be entertaine­d as a PIL, with some exceptions. “Letter-petitions falling under the following categories alone will ordinarily be entertaine­d as Public Interest Litigation:- 1) Bonded Labour matters. 2. Neglected Children. 3. Non-payment of minimum wages to workers and exploitati­on of casual workers and complaints of violation of Labour Laws (except in individual cases),” a court circular said. The Supreme Court made it clear that rushing to the apex court for all cases would not be tolerated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India