top of page

Shreya Singhal and Ors. v. Union of India

  • Writer: Ritik Agrawal
    Ritik Agrawal
  • 3 hours ago
  • 7 min read

Particulars

Details

Case Name & Citation

Shreya Singhal and Ors. v. Union of India

Full Citation

AIR 2015 SC 1523; Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 167 of 2012

Date of Judgment

24 March 2015

Bench

Justice R. F. Nariman and Justice J. Chelameshwar

BACKGROUND: 

In Sun-June, July and August of this year, those who had posted what is now alleged to be offensive comments online were arrested. The representative Shreya Singhal herself assailed the constitutionality of section 66A, on the grounds that terms such as "annoyance" and "inconvenience" were vague and undefined so as to permit arbitrary arrests, and possibly misused against a legitimate free speech.

2.  Facts:

As established by the amendment of 2008, Section 66A under the IT Act of 2000 states that

(a)  any communication that is said to be "grossly offensive" or "menacing," or

(b)  the sending of what are repeated false messages causing annoyance, inconvenience, danger, obstruction, insult, injury, and criminal intimidation, hatred, or ill will; or

(c)   any email that is intended to annoy, inconvenience, or mislead the recipient concerning its origin.

All these offenses are punishable by imprisonment of up to a period of three years and a fine.

Misuse Leads to Cause for Legal Challenge: 

  1. Few arrests outraged the mass. In 2012, two women from Maharashtra were arrested under Section 66A for posting derogatory comments on Facebook about a shutdown in Mumbai. 

  2. Other incidents include that of a student sharing caricatures (Ambikesh Mahapatra), that of an activist (Aseem Trivedi), and many others arrested for making political or satirical comments. 

  3. These incidents pointed out the ambiguity in the law by which it could be misused. The vagueness of the wording like "annoyance" and "ill will" had no definition left for their misuse. 

Petitioner: 

In total, several petitions were filed in the Supreme Court challenging the constitutional validity of Section 66A. The initial petition was made by Shreya Singhal, a law student at the time. Other public interest litigations against the constitutionality of Section 66A included those filed by NGOs like PUCL and from the website MouthShut.com.

ARGUMENTS BY THE PETITIONER IN OPPOSITION OF SECTION 66A: 

Vagueness and Ambiguity: The terms "grossly offensive," "menacing," "annoyance," "inconvenience," and "ill will" were undefined. This vagueness had created confusion about what was crime and how it was left open for arbitrary enforcement. 

Chilling Effect on Free Speech: The law had a chilling effect with persons self-censoring online from the fear of arrest even if their speech was constitutionally protected. 

Violating Article 19(1)(a): The provision unreasonably restricted the freedom of speech, as it did not fall within the particular grounds for restriction in Article 19(2) such as sovereignty, security, or public order that allow the state to restrict in such manner. 

Asymmetrical Burden: The entitled term was too much-maximum incarceration of three years was harsh in comparison with the alleged crime most often concerned with the expression of opinion or very little else. 

ARGUMENTS BY UNION OF INDIA IN DEFENSE OF SECTION 66A: 

The restriction was reasonable on freedom of speech by the state.

The Act was an attempt to avoid misuse of the internet because of cybercrime, including the motion of sharing false and lewd information.

The government said the potential risk of misuse did not in any way justify striking down this legislation, and the judiciary could step in if abuse were found. 

3. Legal Issues Brought Up: 

The challenge had various constitutional issues, such as: 

1.  Freedom of Speech and Expression (Art. 19(1)(a)): 

Is Section 66A an infringement of the citizen’s rights to free speech? Does it fall under the "reasonable restrictions" allowed by Article 19(2) of the Constitution of India? 

2.  Overbreadth and Vagueness: 

Do the definitions overly or vagueness chill free speech?

3.  Non-Arbitrariness and Equality Violation:

Does the penalization of speech communicated over online platforms discriminate vis-a-vis other kinds of media? 

4.  Intermediary liability: 

Will the intermediary be considered liable without consent of a court? 

5.  Blocking Powers of the Government (Section 69A):

Is the governmental authority for blocking constitutionally valid? 

Legal Reasoning & Judicial Analysis: 

Free Speech & Neither Article 19(1)(a) nor Article 19(2)-Justice Nariman observed, "In general provisions, free speech cannot be contained." So, Section 66A failed to satisfy the bar of "reasonable restrictions" established under Article 19(2), which was applicable to expressions leading to public disorder or defamation, not annoyances and inconveniences. 

He made relevant differentiations among discussion, advocacy, and incitement, explaining that only incitement that carries an immediate threat can restrict free speech. Such a consideration was altogether absent from Section 66A. 

Vagueness & Chilling Effect: 

The judges found that Section 66A was obviously unconstitutional in that it was indefinable and therefore manifestly arbirtary. 

Vagueness: Expressions like "grossly offensive," "menacing," annoyance, and "inconvenience" have no precise legal denotation. What one person finds offensive may be innocuous to another; this vagueness does not lay down definite guidelines for law enforcement, leading to gross abuses of the law under which the police detain any citizen with little or no evidence. Further, the Court noted that such distressing uneasiness ensues-chilling effect-with Section 66A. Indeed, overwhelming fear of three years in prison for posting "offensive" comments as judged so by someone in authority would keep anyone at a gallant march away from exercising his rights in free speech. So deep would be this chilling effect that they would take with it those dissents, rather, flourishing among vibrant democracies.

The Court emphasized that badly drafted provisions like Section 66A would result in the citizens opting for self-censorship. The fear of three years behind bars for just mentioning something "offensive" would make anyone dance very gingerly, without recognizing his right to freedom of speech, as construed by some person in authority. This "chilling effect" stifles dissentation and is, instead, in vibrant democracy as opposed to a thriving one. 

Article 14 - Equality & Differentiation: 

The petitioners argued that speech on the internet should be controlled no more than any other kind of medium. The Court found a valid legislative purpose in that, as pointed out, the internet is omnipresent, inexpensive, and fast, thus enabling the creation of disorder through messages really easily, thus, relating it to Article 14. 

Non-Severability & Doctrine of Severability (Article 13): 

It was argued that some parts of the provision were unconstitutional, but then the Court would have to "read down" the provision to save it. The Court, however, held that the entire section is "unconstitutional altogether". Vague and arbitrary terms formed the crux of the offence, and it was not possible for the Court to excise these terms without rewriting the law, which lies in the legislature's domain, not the judiciary's. 

So, the Court pronounced that Section 66A was void abinitio, meaning it has not existed under law in its eyes. With immediate effect, quash all prosecutions underway instituted under this section. 

Section 79 - In regard to intermediary liability: 

The Court did clarify Section 79, holding that intermediaries would be liable only upon a court or government order; knowledge would not itself give rise to liability for any offending content. 

Section 69A - On Blocking of Content: The Court upheld the constitutional validity of Section 69A and the rules framed for it, stating that the government had given prima facie justification for its implementation since these were well drafted and procedurally protected, much unlike the provisions of Section 66A. 

5. Judgment:  

Hoist non for Section 66A: 

Section 66A is thus declared unconstitutional as it violated Articles 14, 19(1)(a) and 21.

*  This neither falls under Article 19(2) nor has any safety covers.

*  Therefore, the entire section has been void ab initio, as it never existed at law. 

Read down for S. 79: 

Intermediary platforms must act on direction of the Court or the Government, not on arbitrary complaints. 

Upheld Section 69A: 

The Court allowed the Government to block such content, in consonance with just procedures, thus holding such procedures constitutional. 

6. The After-Math Effects: 

Landmark free speech for Internet 

This finding marks a monumental period for free expression in India. The ruling protects the civil rights against state interference in a flourishing online domain. 

Clear laws: Precedent established 

The Shreya Singhal judgment presents a watershed precedent for any law to be clear, especially those concerning limits on legislation that affects fundamental rights. It dictated that any legislation restricting speech must define its limits clearly and narrowly, and most certainly, not vaguely or broadly; it is upon this basis that citizens can ensure that they will not fall into arbitrariness when applying these laws. These laws must directly and substantially refer to a legitimate state interest, such as public order and must not treat speech as a crime simply for being irksome or inconvenient to someone. 

Interim Non-Compliance & Legal Zombies: 

Nonetheless, arrests continued under Section 66A, with a few new FIR cases entering an instrumental 2018 study after the judgment; PUCL in 2019 filed a suit to enforce compliance. 

On the other hand, the Supreme Court directed the Union government to address the Chief Secretaries of all states concerning the judgment and provide appropriate training for the police. 

The Court instituted additional directives: close pending cases, engage in public announcements, and enlighten the judiciary. By October 2022, it reiterated that there would be no prosecution under Section 66A and that it should be heralded accordingly.

IMPORTANCE OF JUDGEMENT: 

This case stated that free speech, including communication via the Internet, forms an essential standing value in the functioning of a democracy. This judgment protects from arbitrary censorship since it indicated that restrictions on freedom should be duly narrowed down, precisely in a manner that does not lead to any possible misuse by authorities. It has, thus, become the leading authority with respect to online free speech in India; a strong testament to the judiciary's role in upholding and protecting constitutional rights. 

CONCLUSION: 

This case has been a significant landmark in the entire journey of freedom over the web in India.

It did not simply strike down a quite draconian law but also glorified the idea that any restriction on speech must be clearly defined, proportionate, and justifiable; fostering the spirit of democracy in discourse in the digital age.

So, there are a few matters still pending under Section 66A, long after the pronouncement of the judgment. Nags: civil society to form an understanding that laws seldom make sense unless turned baldly effective with conscious awareness of their terms. Implementation will include government orders, advisories, and public education-the indicator of a distance travelled from the court's verdict to the reality of everyday life.

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


EMAIL

CONTACT

+91 8349512882 (Ritik)

+91 8770503968 (Vidhi)

  • Whatsapp
  • Linkedin
  • Instagram

Thanks for submitting!

© 2020-24 Jusscriptum

bottom of page