Dear all,
There has been some discussion about the circular issued by the Department
of Personnel and Training on how Information Commissions should conduct
hearings. The sum and substance of the circular is that benches constituted
by the Central Information Commission and other multi-member State
Information Commissions are illegal. All Commissions must hear every case as
a body according to DoPT.  This is impractical, untenable and goes against
the letter and spirit of the RTI Act. This position is argued below in
detail.
 
What does the May 22 2009 cirular say? :
The circular issued by the Director, DoPT claims that the opinion of the
Department of Legal Affairs was sought regards the legality of benches of
Information Commissions hearing appeals and complaints. (click for the
circular here:
http://persmin.gov.in/WriteData/CircularNotification/ScanDocument/RTI/1_1_20
09-IR_1.pdf) The Dept. of Legal Affairs has held that there must be a
specific provision in the Act for the constitution of benches. Further, the
powers granted to the Chief Information Commissioner, Central Information
Commission (CIC) under section 12(4) do not include the power to constitute
individual or multi-member benches. In view of this opinion received from
the Dept. of Legal Affairs, the Director has advised the Secretary of the
CIC to ensure that the CIC "as defined by section 2(k) of the RTI Act" take
decisions on complaints and appeals.
 
What is wrong with this circular?:
With due respect to the wisdom of the DoPT in issuing this ciruclar and the
even greater wisdom of their advisors- the Department of Legal Affairs, the
following difficulties must be pointed out:
 
1) Section 12(7) of the RTI Act states that the headquarters of the CIC
shall be at Delhi and the CIC may with the previous approval of the Central
Government establish offices at other places in India. What was the
intention of Parliament when it inserted this section? The most obvious
reason that is apparent to common sense is that Parliament believed the CIC
must be accessible to people all across the country and not be closeted in
Delhi alone. Given the fact that a maximum of ten Commissioners can be
appointed (in addition to the Chief Information Commissioner) this
decentralisation and spreading out of offices of the CIC is theoretically
possible. If Parliament wanted the CIC to hear all cases as one body, this
provision would become redundant. The general rules of interpretation
require that no provision of a law must be interpreted in a manner that
renders another provision in the same law lifeless or unworkable. The
principle of harmonious construction requires that the law be interpreted in
such a manner that all provisions are given effect to in a harmonious way.
If offices of the CIC are to be established across the coutnry then the
intention was not to make them dispose cases in collegium.
 
The circular of the DoPT does not take these important principles into
account. (It is important to note that the Government of India has rejected
the recommendation of the Second Administrative Reforms Commission to set up
offices of the CIC all over the country. The reason given is that it is an
expensive exercise that does not serve much purpose)
 
2) When seen in the light of the sheer workload of a majority of the
Information Commissions, the advice given appears laughable. The Central
Government and the State Governments have not given the Information
Commissions high quality staff nor have they given them adequate freedom to
hire quality personnel from the private sector. In countries like the UK a
majority of the cases do not even go to the UK Information Commissioner.
They are disposed of by the investigative staff themselves acting under the
authority of the Information Commissioner. In India there is no investment
made at any level to develop such investigative staff for Information
Commissions. So there is no choice but to refer all cases to the
Commissioners themselves. If Commissioners are required to decide all cases
as a collegium we can expect pendency to go up to a decade or more- "File an
appeal/complaint today - expect a decision after 10 years when the 3rd round
of Information Commissioners take charge (each Commissioner has a tenure of
five years only)". DoPT's advice is not only laughable but ill thought out
and impractical. The advisors have not grounded themsleves in the reality of
the pendency levels in Information Commissions before drafting this advice.
Somebody forgot to send them on essential field work before this opinion was
drafted- a visit to the registry of Information Commissions would have
revealed pendency levels.
 
Does the Chief Information Commissioner not have the power to constitute
benches?:
Of course the RTI Act does not clearly state how appeals and complaints must
be heard. Let us face it, this is a law drafted in a hurry, so some of the
fine tuning is missing. This issue could have been addressed under the RTI
Appeals Rules. The Central Government has made Rules prescribing the
procedure to be adopted for disposing appeals. There is no mention of the
necessity of collegial decision-making in those Rules. In expectation of the
workload, the Chief Information Commissioner allotted work to his 4
colleagues and later revised it when 4 more were appointed. If the Act is
silent and the Rules do not provide for collegial decision-making, what
crime has been committed by constituting benches to dispose of matters
speedily? The responsibility of running the CIC lies with the Chief
Information Commissioner. Given the fact that the Act and the Rules are
silent about how to handle the ever-increasing workload, the management
powers given to the Chief Information Commissioner are adequate for the
purpose of dividing work between Information Commissioners. The advice given
and the circular issued subsequently appear mischievous in their intent
given the impracticality of the idea.
 
Why object after four years?
When the Chief Information Commissioner allocated work to various
Information Commissioners as and when they were apointed, DoPT did not
object to such division of work. In fact it submitted itself to the
jurisdiction of single and multi-Commissioner benches during the last four
years. Now the reference of this matter to the Dept. of Legal Affairs and
the subsequent advice rendered appear to be afterthoughts when they found
themselves in a corner over the file-notings issue. This circular if
implemented will have a crippling effect on most Information Commissions.
Perhaps this is the intended effect given the fact that the CIC drove DoPT
to a corner on the issue of file notings earlier.
 
What happens in other courts?
We are all familiar with the single, double, division and constitution
benches of the Supreme Court and the High Courts. Article 145(2) of the
Constitution states that rules shall be made to provide for the number of
judges of the Supreme Court who shall sit for any purpose. Specific rules
will be made outlining the powers of a single judge or Division Court.
Nowhere in the Constitution does it say that the Chief Justice shall
constitute such benches. The Supreme Court Rules issued in 1966 empower the
Chief Justice of India to constitute such benches (click here for the SC
Rules: http://www.supremecourtofindia.nic.in/rulespdf.pdf). These Rules were
issued with the approval of the President. The situation is similar in the
High Courts. So it is difficult to pin point any grave error committed by
the Chief Information Commissioner by constituting benches to decide cases.
This is the most practical thing to do.
 
What can we do?
Perhaps DoPT should do its own homework and amend the RTI Appeals Rules to
empower the Chief Information Commissioner to constitute benches. Until such
time, the Chief Information Commissioners can use their powers under the RTI
Act to manage the CIC. So all of us in the RTI fraternity should write to
the MInister of Personnel to withdraw this circular issued to the CIC and
the Chief Secretaries of all the States and also recommend that the RTI
Appeals Rules be amended to clearly empower the Chief Information
Commissioners (Central and States) to constitute benches.
 Sincerely,
Venkatesh Nayak

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