Karnataka High Court Bars Spouses from Accessing IT Returns via RTI; Quashes CIC Order
In a landmark judgment protecting the privacy of taxpayers, the Karnataka High Court has ruled that Income Tax Returns (ITRs) constitute "personal information" and cannot be disclosed to a spouse under the Right to Information (RTI) Act. The court quashed a previous order by the Central Information Commission (CIC) that had directed the tax department to share a husband’s financial details with his wife.
Justice Suraj Govindaraj, presiding over the bench, clarified that matrimonial disputes or maintenance litigations do not automatically translate into "public interest." The ruling establishes a significant precedent on the boundary between transparency laws and the right to financial privacy within domestic legal battles.
- 2012–2017: Assessment years for which the wife sought the husband's IT returns.
- Initial Application: The wife filed an RTI request for ITR copies, tax payment details, and bank account info.
- CPIO Rejection: The Income Tax Officer rejected the plea citing Section 8(1)(j) (Personal Information) and Section 8(1)(e) (Fiduciary Relationship).
- April 12, 2019: The CIC allowed the second appeal, directing disclosure.
- Latest Update: Karnataka High Court quashed the CIC order upon a writ petition by the IT Department.
The High Court scrutinized the relationship between the RTI Act and tax confidentiality. It concluded that a taxpayer's returns are held by the department in a fiduciary capacity. Disclosure of such private financial data to a spouse, without a demonstrated larger public interest, would be an unwarranted invasion of privacy.
The Court emphasized that matrimonial disputes are essentially private matters. While one spouse may need the other's income details to claim maintenance, the RTI Act is not the appropriate tool for this "discovery" of documents. Instead, judicial safeguards within the family court system should be utilized.
Justice Govindaraj noted that Family Courts possess ample powers to summon financial documents during maintenance proceedings. These judicial processes offer procedural protections that a simple RTI application lacks, ensuring that sensitive data is used only for the specific legal purpose intended by the court.
The court also applied the legal maxim generalia specialibus non derogant (general laws do not override special laws). It held that Section 138 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, which specifically governs the disclosure of tax information, maintains its sanctity over the general provisions of the RTI Act.
Following this verdict, the Income Tax Department is no longer obligated to entertain RTI requests from spouses seeking ITRs for domestic litigation. The ruling provides a clear roadmap for Information Officers to reject such applications unless a distinct and substantial public interest is evidenced.
The Bench further clarified that the relationship between the tax department and the assessee is one of "legal trust" or fiduciary nature. This means the government is a custodian of private data, and releasing it unnecessarily would breach the legal framework of the Income Tax Act.
What is officially confirmed: The High Court has officially quashed the CIC's order dated April 12, 2019. It is now legally confirmed in Karnataka that IT returns are exempt from spouse-led RTI queries under Section 8(1)(j). What is not yet proven: Whether the respondent (the wife) will challenge this ruling in a larger bench or the Supreme Court remains to be seen.
