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[Cites 16, Cited by 0]

Central Information Commission

Sudesh Sachdeva vs Land And Development Office on 9 July, 2020

                                     के ीय सूचना आयोग
                            Central Information Commission
                                  बाबा गंगनाथ माग, मुिनरका
                             Baba Gangnath Marg, Munirka
                               नई द ली, New Delhi - 110067

ि तीय अपील सं या / Second Appeal No.:- CIC/LADOF/A/2018/169975-BJ

Mr. Sudesh Sachdeva
(E mail: [email protected])
                                                                       ....अपीलकता/Appellant

                                          VERSUS
                                           बनाम
CPIO,
Dy. Land & Development Office (V),
Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs,
Land and Development Office,
Moulana Azad Road, Nirman Bhawan,
New Delhi - 110011
                                                                    ... ितवादीगण /Respondent

Date of Hearing      :              08.07.2020
Date of Decision     :              09.07.2020

Date of RTI application                                                  16.06.2018
CPIO's response                                                          19.07.2018
Date of the First Appeal                                                 10.08.2018
First Appellate Authority's response                                     18.10.2018
Date of diarised receipt of Appeal by the Commission                     29.11.2018

                                         ORDER

FACTS The Appellant vide his RTI application sought information regarding the plots allotted to M/s Pannalal Girdharlal by separate perpetual lease earlier known as plot no. 39& 40 of block no. 134, Queensway Road and now known as 82 and 84 Janpath, Connaught Place, New Delhi was sanctioned and built up together without any partition with common staircase and common passage on plot no. 82 and 84 Janpath, New Delhi and the completion certificate was issued by the NDMC.

The CPIO vide letter dated 19.07.2018, denied disclosure of information under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act, 2005 stating that information/details relating to the property are personal information of the recorded lessees/owners and disclosure of which will not serve any larger public interest. Dissatisfied by the response, the Appellant approached the FAA. The FAA, vide its order dated 18.10.2018, upheld the CPIO's response.

Page 1 of 5

HEARING:

Facts emerging during the hearing:
The following were present:
Appellant: Mr. Rakesh Sachdeva Appellant's representative; Respondent: Mr. Mahesh Chandra, SO and Mr. V. Ramakrishna, Supdt.;
The Appellant's representative reiterated the contents of the RTI application and stated that the information sought was incorrectly denied to him u/s 8 (1) (j) of the RTI Act, 2005 despite the fact that he was the tenant of the said premises. Explaining that the information was required to contest his personal dispute with the owner of the property pending before the ADJ, Patiala House Courts, New Delhi, the Appellant submitted that a reply by the Respondent with the comment Yes/ No would suffice. In its reply, the Respondent stated that the information sought being related to a Third Party was denied from disclosure u/s 8 (1) (j) of the RTI Act, 2005. Furthermore, the Appellant who was the tenant and not the owner of the premises could not justify the larger public interest in seeking the information. On being queried if he had contested the issue before the Court of ADJ, Patiala House Courts, New Delhi where the matter was sub- judice, the Appellant replied in the negative.
The Commission was in receipt of a written submission from the Respondent dated 02.07.2020 wherein while re-iterating the response of the CPIO/ FAA it was stated that the reply was sought by the tenant of the property and not by the recorded lessee hence the information fell under Section 8 (1) (j) of the RTI Act, 2005.
The Commission referred to the definition of information u/s 2(f) of the RTI Act, 2005 which is reproduced below:
"information" means any material in any form, including records, documents, memos, e- mails, opinions, advices, press releases, circulars, orders, logbooks, contracts, report, papers, samples, models, data material held in any electronic form and information relating to any private body which can be accessed by a public authority under any other law for the time being in force."
Furthermore, a reference can also be made to the relevant extract of Section 2 (j) of the RTI Act, 2005 which reads as under:
"(j) right to information" means the right to information accessible under this Act which is held by or under the control of any public authority and includes ........"

In this context a reference was made to the Hon'ble Supreme Court decision in 2011 (8) SCC 497 (CBSE and Anr. Vs. Aditya Bandopadhyay and Ors), wherein it was held as under:

35..... "It is also not required to provide 'advice' or 'opinion' to an applicant, nor required to obtain and furnish any 'opinion' or 'advice' to an applicant. The reference to 'opinion' or 'advice' in the definition of 'information' in section 2(f) of the Act, only refers to such material available in the records of the public authority. Many public authorities have, as a public relation exercise, provide advice, guidance and opinion to Page 2 of 5 the citizens. But that is purely voluntary and should not be confused with any obligation under the RTI Act."

Furthermore, the Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in Khanapuram Gandaiah Vs. Administrative Officer and Ors. Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.34868 OF 2009 (Decided on January 4, 2010) had held as under:

6. "....Under the RTI Act "information" is defined under Section 2(f) which provides:
"information" means any material in any form, including records, documents, memos, e- mails, opinions, advices, press releases, circulars, orders, logbooks, contracts, report, papers, samples, models, data material held in any electronic form and information relating to any private body which can be accessed by a public authority under any other law for the time being in force."

This definition shows that an applicant under Section 6 of the RTI Act can get any information which is already in existence and accessible to the public authority under law. Of course, under the RTI Act an applicant is entitled to get copy of the opinions, advices, circulars, orders, etc., but he cannot ask for any information as to why such opinions, advices, circulars, orders, etc. have been passed."

7. "....the Public Information Officer is not supposed to have any material which is not before him; or any information he could have obtained under law. Under Section 6 of the RTI Act, an applicant is entitled to get only such information which can be accessed by the "public authority" under any other law for the time being in force. The answers sought by the petitioner in the application could not have been with the public authority nor could he have had access to this information and Respondent No. 4 was not obliged to give any reasons as to why he had taken such a decision in the matter which was before him."

The Commission also observed that the framework of the RTI Act, 2005 restricts the jurisdiction of the Commission to provide a ruling on the issues pertaining to access/ right to information and to venture into the merits of a case or redressal of grievance. The Commission in a plethora of decisions including Shri Vikram Singh v. Delhi Police, North East District, CIC/SS/A/2011/001615 dated 17.02.2012 Sh. Triveni Prasad Bahuguna vs. LIC of India, Lucknow CIC/DS/A/2012/000906 dated 06.09.2012, Mr. H. K. Bansal vs. CPIO & GM (OP), MTNL CIC/LS/A/2011/000982/BS/1786 dated 29.01.2013 had held that RTI Act was not the proper law for redressal of grievances/disputes.

The Hon'ble Supreme Court of India in the matter of Union of India v. Namit Sharma in REVIEW PETITION [C] No.2309 OF 2012 IN Writ Petition [C] No.210 OF 2012 with State of Rajasthan and Anr. vs. Namit Sharma Review Petition [C] No.2675 OF 2012 In Writ Petition [C] No.210 OF 2012 had held as under:

"While deciding whether a citizen should or should not get a particular information "which is held by or under the control of any public authority", the Information Commission does not decide a dispute between two or more parties concerning their legal rights other than their right to get information in possession of a public authority. This function obviously is not a judicial function, but an administrative function conferred by the Act on the Information Commissions."
Page 3 of 5

Furthermore, the High Court of Delhi in the matter of Hansi Rawat and Anr. vs. Punjab National Bank and Ors. LPA No.785/2012 dated 11.01.2013 held as under:

"6. The proceedings under the RTI Act do not entail detailed adjudication of the said aspects. The dispute relating to dismissal of the appellant No.2 LPA No.785/2012 from the employment of the respondent Bank is admittedly pending consideration before the appropriate forum. The purport of the RTI Act is to enable the appellants to effectively pursue the said dispute. The question, as to what inference if any is to be drawn from the response of the PIO of the respondent Bank to the RTI application of the appellants, is to be drawn in the said proceedings and as aforesaid the proceedings under the RTI Act cannot be converted into proceedings for adjudication of disputes as to the correctness of the information furnished."

Moreover, in a recent decision in Govt. of NCT vs. Rajendra Prasad WP (C) 10676/2016 dated 30.11.2017, the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi had held as under:

6. The CIC has been constituted under Section 12 of the Act and the powers of CIC are delineated under the Act. The CIC being a statutory body has to act strictly within the confines of the Act and is neither required to nor has the jurisdiction to examine any other controversy or disputes.
7. In the present case, it is apparent that CIC had decided issues which were plainly outside the scope of the jurisdiction of CIC under the Act. The limited scope of examination by the CIC was: (i) whether the information sought for by the respondent was provided to him; (ii) if the same was denied, whether such denial was justified; (iii) whether any punitive action was required to be taken against the concerned PIO; and (iv) whether any directions under Section 19(8) were warranted. In addition, the CIC also exercises powers under Section 18 of the Act and also performs certain other functions as expressly provided under various provisions of the Act including Section 25 of the Act. It is plainly not within the jurisdiction of the CIC to examine the dispute as to whether respondent no.2 was entitled to and was allotted a plot of land under the 20-Point Programme.

A similar view delineating the scope of the Commission's jurisdiction was also taken by the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi in Sher Singh Rawat vs. Chief Information Commissioner and Ors., W.P. (C) 5220/2017 and CM No. 22184/2017 dated 29.08.2017 and in the matter of Shobha Vijender vs. Chief Information Commissioner W.P. (C) No. 8289/2016 and CM 34297/2016 dated 29.11.2017.

The Commission also referred to the decision of the Hon'ble High Court of Delhi in the case of Union Public Service Commission v. Dr. Mahesh Mangalat (Date of Decision: 17th March, 2015) (W.P.(C) No. 7431/2011) wherein it was held that:-

"18. Prior to the enactment of the RTI Act, access to any information pertaining to public authorities was correlated to the locus standi of the requestor. In other words, it was necessary for the information-seeker to show why he/she wanted the information before a decision could be made to give or not to give the information sought by him. With the Page 4 of 5 enactment of the RTI Act this requirement has been changed drastically. The present Act abolishes the concept of locus standi as under section 6(2) of the RTI Act no reasons need to be given for seeking information. However, this restriction on disclosure of reasons cannot be misconstrued to mean that any information pertaining to a public authority or its employees is public information.
19. It is a settled law that for seeking personal information regarding any employee of the public authority the applicant must disclose a "sustainable public interest‟. Even Section 8(1) (j) of the RTI Act was enacted to ensure that all information furnished to public authorities including personal information is not given free access to. As per this Section unless the CPIO or the State PIO or the appellate authority, as the case may be, is satisfied that the larger public interest justifies, the disclosure of any such information that invades the privacy of an individual is not permissible. The Appellant was not able to contest the submissions of the Respondent or establish the larger public interest in disclosure which outweighs the harm to the protected interests.
DECISION:
Keeping in view the facts of the case and the submissions made by both the parties, no further intervention of the Commission is required in the matter. For redressal of his grievance, the Appellant is advised to approach an appropriate forum.
The Appeal stands disposed accordingly.
(The Order will be posted on the website of the Commission).


                                                                 Bimal Julka (िबमल जु का)
                                          Chief Information Commissioner (मु य सूचना आयु )
Authenticated true copy
(अ भ मा णत स या पत         त)




K.L. Das (के .एल.दास)
Dy. Registrar (उप-पंजीयक)
011-26186535/ [email protected]
 दनांक / Date: 09.07.2020




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