RTI Act
VISA VIS Consumer Protection Act
This
issue has been discussed once again in the Revision Petition No. 2846 of 2013 in the matter of Public
Information Officer,Urban Improvement Trust
Ajmer, Rajasthan
through its Secretary Versus
Tarun Agarwal Before
Hon’ble Mr. Justice J. M. Malik, Presiding Member Hon’ble Dr. S. M.
Kantikar, Member.The order was pronounced _16th December, 2013
The key question swirls around the controversy, whether there lies a
Jurisdiction for the Consumer fora to entertain the case pertaining
to Right to Information Act, 2005 (in short ‘ RTI Act’).
National Commission held that a person seeking information under
RTI Act 2005 and in case does not get desired information, cannot seek remedy
under Consumer Protection Act because he is not a consumer as defined under Consumer
Protection Act in such circumstances.
There are number of orders pronounced on the issue by the National
Nommission.
Here we need to make a point very clear that seeking
information and providing information is a service under Consumer Protection
Act .In fact this was the basic concept for enforcement of consumers’ rights
when UNO at international platform issued directions to all the Nations and one
of the directions was right to information. Consumer Protection Act was
enacted in 1986, with an initial focus on goods as defined under Sale of Goods
Act. Thereafter through
amendment in 1993, number of
services were also brought under the purview of this act and one out of them
was to have information defined under section 2{o} of the consumer
protection act as: “……the purveying of news or other information but
does not include the services free of charge or under a contract of personal
service”
There is a very clear
provision for providing information as service as defined under section 2(o) of
the act as reproduced above.
Defining ‘information’
The word ‘Information’ has taken a very wide meaning and scope
after the Right to Information Act 2005 came into force. It has changed the
total scenario in the country and legal debates and discussions are never
ending on issue of its scope. The question now arises as to whether consumers
can invoke the provisions of Consumer Protection Act (CPA) for deficiency in
services against the erring authority when special law i.e. RTI Act is
available to the consumer for relief.
Beyond any reasonable doubt RTI Act is a specific law as against
the general law for consumers
But RTI Act has
gained so much of popularity that people have almost forgotten that it is
otherwise also their fundamental right not only to know what they ought to
know, but also what they need or want to know. If information word
is provided in the act as services, specifically in sec 2 [0] of CP Act, passed
by the same parliament ,it cannot be deleted unless removed by some amendment .
Now coming to the present case and number of other cases of the
similar nature, it has been observed that consumer comes to the consumer court
when fails to get information under RTI Act which is clearly not tenable.In the case decided by the national commission referred
above, Tarun Agarwal, the complainant sought RTI report
from the Public Information Officer, Urban Improvement Trust, Ajmer,
Rajsthan. Proper application was moved along with statutory fee
in the sum of Rs.10/-, through Postal Order.The complainant moved to the
District Consumer Forum when failed to obtain the desired information instead
of moving to the appallnt court under REI Act
. Consumer court granted compensation
in the sum of Rs.1, 000/- to the
complainant .But when matter came before the National commission,OP argued that the protection provided under Consumer Protection Act, 1986, to consumers is in addition to the
remedies available under any other statute. Though commission agreed that consumer
fora is an additional remedy available to the consumer for redressal of his
grievance but cannot be allowed to file an appeal against the order passed
under some different act and by different authority.It held complainant not
consumer under the circumstances.
Here it is to note that In this matter once relief has not been
granted under RTI for what so ever reasons , consumer fora cannot sit in appeal
over that order.We may refer to the provisions of RTI Act for making the issue
more clear -
Sec 23.of
RTI Act Bar of Jurisdiction of Courts :- No
court shall entertain any suit, application or other proceeding in respect of
any order made this Act, and no such order shall be called in question
otherwise than by way of an appeal under this Act”.
Further, Section 22.states that this act will have overriding
effect on the authorities
under this Act. notwithstanding anything inconsistent to the Official
Secrets Act, 1923 (19 of 1923), and any other law for the time being in force Therefore,
it may become necessary for the authorities to independently decide whether
disclosure of information which itself being an act done in public interest, overweighs
the public interest sought to be protected under those enactments.
This view stands
emboldened by the other orders in the matter of T.Pundalika Vs. Revenue Department (Service Division) Government of
Karnataka, RP No. 4061 of 2010, decided on 31.03.2011, by the Bench
Headed by Hon’ble Mr. Justice Ashok Bhan, President, wherein it was held “complainant cannot be considered as a
‘consumer’ as defined under the C.P.Act since there is a remedy available for
the complainant to approach the appellate authority u/s 19 of the RTI Act,
2005”.
Similar view was taken by
another judgment of this Commission, reported in Shonkh Technologies Ltd. Vs. Tasha
Mandlekar, IV (2009) CPJ 280 (NC). Para
No. 6 of the said judgment is relevant, which is reproduced below:-
“after respondent has lost its move to
secure copy of the agreement in question under the Right to Information Act,
before a Competent Authority also the Appellate Authority, this Commission
cannot exercise revisional jurisdiction sitting over the decisions rendered by these two
authorities as after availing one remedy prescribed under the statue taking
recourse to Consumer Grievance Redressal Agency hoping for further relief was
not permissible.”
Again, Section 19 of the RTI Act, 2005, provides procedure for appeal.
The above discussion clearly talks about a situation where
consumer has once contacted the authorities under RTI Act but when failed to
obtain suitable reply / relief, now contacts consumer forum by way of appeal.
Certainly such application which it fact is an appeal could be filed only
before the appellant court under the law which had been chosen in the
beginning.
Hence if information has been asked in normal course and not
following the procedure under RTI Act, then it is service.But filing appeal or
complaint when information under RTI Act is not received, consumer complaint is
not admissible under Consumer Protection Act.
DR PREM LATA
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