Upgrad
LCI Learning

Share on Facebook

Share on Twitter

Share on LinkedIn

Share on Email

Share More

anjali tamrkar   02 November 2023

Public interest litigation

  • Public interest Litigation (PIL) means litigation filed in a court of law, for the protection of “Public Interest”, such as Pollution, Terrorism, Road safety, Constructional hazards etc. Any matter where the interest of public at large is affected can be redressed by filing a Public Interest Litigation in a court of law.
  • Public interest litigation is not defined in any statute or in any act. It has been interpreted by judges to consider the intent of public at large.
  • Public interest litigation is the power given to the public by courts through judicial activism. However, the person filing the petition must prove to the satisfaction of the court that the petition is being filed for a public interest and not just as a frivolous litigation by a busy body.
  • The court can itself take cognizance of the matter and proceed suo motu or cases can commence on the petition of any public spirited individual.
  • Some of the matters which are entertained under PIL are:
    • Bonded Labour matters
    • Neglected Children
    • Non-payment of minimum wages to workers and exploitation of casual workers
    • Atrocities on women
    • The first reported case of PIL was Hussainara Khatoon vs. State of Bihar (1979) that focused on the inhuman conditions of prisons and under trial prisoners that led to the release of more than 40,000 under trial prisoners.
      • Right to speedy justice emerged as a basic fundamental right which had been denied to these prisoners. The same set pattern was adopted in subsequent cases.
    • A new era of the PIL movement was heralded by Justice P.N. Bhagawati in the case of S.P. Gupta vs. Union of India.
      • In this case it was held that “any member of the public or social action group acting bonafide” can invoke the Writ Jurisdiction of the High Courts (under article 226) or the Supreme Court (under Article 32) seeking redressal against violation of legal or constitutional rights of persons who due to social or economic or any other disability cannot approach the Court.
      • By this judgment PIL became a potent weapon for the enforcement of “public duties” where executive action or misdeed resulted in public injury. And as a result any citizen of India or any consumer groups or social action groups can now approach the apex court of the country seeking legal remedies in all cases where the interests of general public or a section of the public are at stake.
      • Justice Bhagwati did a lot to ensure that the concept of PILs was clearly enunciated. He did not insist on the observance of procedural technicalities and even treated ordinary letters from public-minded individuals as writ petitions.


Learning

 2 Replies

T. Kalaiselvan, Advocate (Advocate)     02 November 2023

Thanks for the information. 

But is it a legal query?

Dr. J C Vashista (Advocate )     03 November 2023

Good information but query is missing on the subject.


Leave a reply

Your are not logged in . Please login to post replies

Click here to Login / Register