Evolution of Right to privacy as Fundamental right
This Article shows how Indian Judiciary from past years has been dealing with the issue of Right to privacy and now declaring it as a fundamental right in recent judgment has become law of land.Author Name: asthasaxena1
This Article shows how Indian Judiciary from past years has been dealing with the issue of Right to privacy and now declaring it as a fundamental right in recent judgment has become law of land.
Evolution of Right to Privacy as Fundamental Right
Introduction
 Right to privacy refers to protection of one’s personal information from being  public or used by other without permission. Privacy is defined as “absence or  avoidance of publicity or display; the state or condition from being withdrawn  from the society of others, or from public interest; seclusion” in New Oxford  English Dictionary. Black’s Law Dictionary also refer privacy as “the right to  be let alone; the right of a person to be free from unwarranted publicity; and  the right to live without unwarranted interference by the public in matters with  which the public is not necessarily concerned”. If we see the traces of privacy  law in India, it has been a very debatable topic that whether it should be  treated as a fundamental right or a civil right but now by the recent judgment  of Supreme Court, Right to privacy is a Fundamental Right has become a settled  law of land.
Right To Privacy And Constitution of India
On August 24th, 2017, Supreme Court has given its verdict on Right to privacy  inJustice K S Puttaswamy V Union of India, declaring it as a fundamental right  of a citizen. This judgment has finally put an end to the long historical legal  battle from the past 40-50 years.
 
 In this Article, I am going to discuss how Indian judiciary has evolved with the  concept of Right to privacy with time.
 
 Since the 1960s, the Indian judiciary and the Supreme Court in particular, have  dealt with the issue of privacy, both as a fundamental right under the  constitution and as a common law right. The common thread through all these  judgment by the supreme court of India has been to recognize a right to privacy  either as a fundamental under the constitution or as a common law right, but to  refrain from giving a specific definition before the recent landmark judgement.  Instead court has decided to have it evolve on case to case basis. As Justice  Mathew put it, “The right to privacy will, therefore, necessarily, have to go  through a process of case by case development”.
1. Right to privacy in the context of surveillance by the state
The first case to lay down the basics of right to privacy in India, was the case  of Kharak Singh v. State of Uttar Pradesh, where a seven judge bench of the  Supreme Court was required to check the constitutionality of certain police  regulations which allowed police to do domiciliary visit and surveillance of  persons with criminal record. In the present case the petitioner challenges the  constitutionality of such provisions on the ground of that they violated his  fundamental right to privacy under clause ‘personal liberty ‘of article 21 of  the constitution of India. In this particular case majority of the judges  decline to interpret article 21 to include within its ambit the right the  privacy, part of the majority expressed “The right of privacy is not a  guaranteed right under our Constitution, and therefore the attempt to ascertain  the movements of an individual is merely a manner in which privacy is invaded  and is not an infringement of a fundamental right guaranteed in Part III.” But  however they did recognize it as a common law right to enjoy the liberty of  their houses and approves an old age saying “man’s home was his castle” The  majority therefore understood the term ‘personal liberty’ in Article 21 in the  context of age old principles from common law while holding domiciliary visits  to be unconstitutional. Two of the judges of the seven judge bench, however, saw  the right to privacy as a part of Article 21, marking an early recognition of  privacy as a fundamental right. Justice Subba Rao held “It is true our  Constitution does not expressly declare a right to privacy as a fundamental  right, but the said right is an essential ingredient of personal liberty.”
 
 The question of privacy as a fundamental right presented itself once again to  the Supreme Court a few years later in the case of Govind v. State of Madhya  Pradesh. The petitioner in this case had challenged, as unconstitutional,  certain police regulations on the grounds that the regulations violated his  fundamental right to privacy. Although the issues were similar to the Kharak  Singh case, the 3 judges hearing this particular case were more inclined to  grant the right to privacy the status of a fundamental right. Justice Mathew  stated: “Rights and freedoms of citizens are set forth in the Constitution in  order to guarantee that the individual, his personality and those things stamped  with his personality shall be free from official interference except where a  reasonable basis for intrusion exists. ‘Liberty against government’ a phrase  coined by Professor Corwin expresses this idea forcefully. In this sense, many  of the fundamental rights of citizens can be described as contributing to the  right to privacy.” This statement was however qualified with the disclaimer that  this right was not an absolute right and that the same could be curtailed by the  State provided it could establish a “compelling public interest” in this regard.
2. Right to Privacy against Right to Free Speech
Subsequent to the Govind judgment, the Supreme Court was required to balance the right of privacy against the right to free speech in the case of R. Rajagopal v. State of Tamil Nadu. In this case, the petitioner was a Tamil newsmagazine which had sought directions from the Court to restrain the respondent State of Tamil Nadu and its officers to not interfere in the publication of the autobiography of a death row convict–‘Auto Shankar’ which contained details about the nexus between criminals and police officers. The Supreme Court framed the questions in these terms: “Whether a citizen of this country can prevent another person from writing his life story or biography? Does such unauthorized writing infringe the citizen's right to privacy? Whether the freedom of press guaranteed by Article 19(1) (a) entitles the press to publish such unauthorized account of a citizen's life and activities and if so to what extent and in what circumstances?” While answering the above questions, a bench of two judges of the Supreme Court, for the first time, directly linked the right to privacy to Article 21 of the Constitution but at the same time excluded matters of public record from being protected under this ‘Right to Privacy’. The Supreme Court held: “(1) the right to privacy is implicit in the right to life and liberty guaranteed to the citizens of this country by Article 21. It is a "right to be let alone". A citizen has a right to safeguard the privacy of his own, his family, marriage, procreation, motherhood, child-bearing and education among other matters. None can publish anything concerning the above matters without his consent whether truthful or otherwise and whether laudatory or critical. If he does so, he would be violating the right to privacy of the person concerned and would be liable in an action for damages. Position may, however, be different, if a person voluntarily thrusts himself into controversy or voluntarily invites or raises a controversy. (2)The rule aforesaid is subject to the exception, that any publication concerning the aforesaid aspects becomes unobjectionable if such publication is based upon public records including court records. This is for the reason that once a matter becomes a matter of public record, the right to privacy no longer subsists and it becomes a legitimate subject for comment by press and media among others.”
3. The ‘Right to Privacy’ of HIV (‘ ’ve) Patients
In the case of Mr. ‘X’ v. Hospital ‘Z’, the Supreme Court was required to discuss the scope of a blood donor’s right to privacy of his medical records. The respondent hospital in this case had disclosed, without the permission of the blood donor, the fact that the blood donor was diagnosed as being a HIV patient. Due to this disclosure by the hospital, the lady who was to have been married to the blood donor had broken off her engagement and the donor was subject to social ostracism. Discussing the issue of privacy of medical records, the Supreme Court ruled that while medical records are considered to be private, doctors and hospitals could make exceptions in certain cases where the non-disclosure of medical information could endanger the lives of other citizens, in this case the wife.
4. Prior Judicial Sanction for Tapping of Telephones
In the case of PUCL v. Union of India, the petitioner organization had challenged the actions of the state in intercepting telephone calls. Recognizing procedural lapses that had occurred, the court set out procedural safeguards which would have to be followed, even as it did not strike down the provision relating to interception in the Telegraph Act 1885. In arriving at its decision, the court observed: “Telephone-tapping is a serious invasion of an individual's privacy. It is no doubt correct that every government, howsoever democratic, exercises some degree of sub rosa operation as a part of its intelligence outfit, but at the same time citizen's right to privacy has to be protected from being abused by the authorities of the day.” The court held: “Telephone tapping would, thus, infract Article 21 of the Constitution of India unless it is permitted under the procedure established by law.” The Supreme Court placed restrictions on the class of bureaucrats who could authorize such surveillance and also ordered the creation of a ‘review committee’ which would review all surveillance measures authorized under the Act.
5. The ‘search and seizure’ Powers of Revenue Authorities
 In 2005, the Supreme Court passed one of its most important privacy related  judgments in the case of District Registrar v. Canara Bank. In this case the  Supreme Court was required to determine the constitutionality of a provision of  the A.P. Stamps Act which allowed the Collector or ‘any person’ authorized by  the Collector to enter any premises to conduct an inspection of any records,  registers, books, documents in the custody of any public officer, if such  inspection would result in discovery of fraud or omission of any duty payable to  the Government. The main issue, in the case, related to the privacy of a  customer’s records stored by a financial institution such as a bank. The  impugned provision was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme Court on the  grounds that it failed the tests of reasonableness enshrined in Articles 14, 19  and 21 of the Constitution. The Court held that any legislation intruding on the  personal liberty of a citizen (in this case the privacy of a citizen’s financial  records) must, in order to be constitutional, satisfy the triple test laid down  by the Supreme Court in the case of Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India. This  triple test requires any law intruding on the concept of ‘personal liberty’  under Art. 21, to meet certain standards:“(i) it must prescribe a procedure;  (ii) the procedure must withstand the test of one or more of the fundamental  rights conferred under Article 19 which may be applicable in a given situation;  and (iii) it must also be liable to be tested with reference to Article 14.” The  impugned provision was held to have failed this test. More importantly, the  Court ruled that the concept of privacy related to the citizen and not the  place. The implication of such a statement was that it did not matter that the  financial records were stored in a citizen’s home or in a bank. As long as the  financial records in question belonged to a citizen, those records would be  protected under the citizen’s right to privacy.
6. Privacy in the context of Sexual Identities
In the case of Naz Foundation v. Union of India, the Delhi High Court ‘read down’ Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 to decriminalize a class of sexual relations between consenting adults. One of the critical arguments accepted by the Court in this case was that the right to privacy of a citizen’s sexual relations, protected as it was under Article 21, could be intruded into by the State only if the State was able to establish a compelling interest for such interference. Since the State was unable to prove a compelling state interest to interfere in the sexual relations of its citizens, the provision was read down to decriminalize all consensual sexual relations.
Conclusion
 Following the trend of these judgements, the concept of right to privacy has  evolved and emerged, as a fundamental right. Our judiciary has tried in these  various judgements interpret the meaning and the scope of right to privacy.  Right to privacy is an essential component of right to life and personal liberty  under Article 21. Right of privacy may, apart from contract, also arise out of a  particular specific relationship, which may be commercial, matrimonial or even  political. No doubt puttaswamy judgmentwill have a deep impact upon our legal  and constitutional landscape for years to come. It will impact the interplay  between privacy and transparency and between privacy and free speech; it will  impact State surveillance, data collection, and data protection for sure.
End-Notes
 # Govind V State of Madhya Pradesh, AIR 1975 SC 1378
 # AIR 1964 SCR(1)332.
 # AIR 1975 SC 1378 2 AIR 1964 SCR(1) 332
 # 1994 SCC(6)632
 # AIR 1999 SC 495.
 # 1997 1 SCC 30
 # 2005 1 SCC 496
 # 1978 SCR(2) 621.
 # WP NO 7555 OF 2011.
ISBN No: 978-81-928510-1-3
Author Bio: Student of B.com LLb, Institue of law, nirma university.
Email: 15bbl038@nirmauni.ac.in
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