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Matrimonial Disputes | Can a Wife Use RTI to Access Husband’s Income Tax Returns? Karnataka High Court Says NO & Issues Guidelines

Matrimonial Disputes Can Wife Use RTI to Access Husband ITR

Matrimonial Disputes Can Wife Use RTI to Access Husband ITR

Can personal tax records be accessed through RTI during a maintenance dispute? The Karnataka High Court says no — privacy cannot be bypassed without proven larger public interest. The ruling clarifies that matrimonial battles cannot convert confidential financial data into public documents.

BENGALURU: In a notable ruling, Hon’ble Mr. Justice Suraj Govindaraj of the Karnataka High Court, Bengaluru, dealt with a real-life matrimonial disputes that moved beyond the family court and entered the domain of information law. The controversy began when a wife filed an RTI application seeking copies of his income tax returns, tax details and related financial information from the Income Tax Department.

The department rejected the request, treating the information as confidential third-party data held in a fiduciary capacity and invoking exemptions under Section 8(1)(e) and Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act. The first appellate authority upheld this decision. However, the Central Information Commission later allowed the wife’s appeal and directed disclosure, prompting the Income Tax Officer and CPIO to approach the High Court challenging that direction.

While examining the dispute, the Court referred to settled legal principles on privacy and RTI and reproduced the observation:

“Thus under Section 8 (1) (j) an information which has relevance to privacy and relates to personal information can be denied. If such an information relates to a third party then Section 2 (n) of the RTI Act defines third party to mean a person other than a citizen requesting information and includes a public authority.”

The Court also noted the broader constitutional perspective highlighted by the Supreme Court: “The right to information and the need for transparency in the case of elected officials is grounded in the democratic need to facilitate better decision-making by the public.”

Further reliance was placed on the clear position in Girish Ramchandra Deshpande, where it was held:

“The details disclosed by a person in his income tax returns are personal information which stand exempted from disclosure under clause (i) of Section 8(1) of the RTI Act, unless involves a larger public interest and the Central Public Information Officer or the State Public Information Officer or the Appellate Authority is satisfied that the larger public interest justifies the disclosure of such information.”

On the other side, the wife maintained that her RTI request was not for curiosity but necessity. She argued that courts had reduced her maintenance claim because she could not produce reliable proof of her husband’s income, and that official tax records were the only effective evidence available to establish his true financial capacity.

After analysing the statutory framework and binding precedents, the High Court held that income tax returns are personal information and are protected under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act. The Court found that the dispute between the spouses was essentially private in nature and did not involve any larger public interest that would justify overriding the exemption. It also noted that the Income-tax Act contains its own specific mechanism regarding disclosure of assessee information.

The Karnataka High Court allowed the writ petition and set aside the order of the Central Information Commission directing disclosure. The Court concluded that the wife could not access her husband’s income tax returns through the RTI route in the absence of a demonstrated larger public interest, thereby reaffirming the protection of personal financial information under the RTI Act.

Explanatory Table: Laws & Provisions Involved

Law / ProvisionPurposeHow Applied In This Case
Constitution of India – Articles 226 & 227Confer writ jurisdiction on High CourtsUsed by the Income Tax Officer to challenge the Central Information Commission’s disclosure order before the Karnataka High Court
Right to Information Act, 2005 – Section 8(1)(e)Exempts information held in fiduciary relationship from disclosureIncome Tax Department argued that tax returns are submitted in trust and therefore cannot be disclosed to third parties
Right to Information Act, 2005 – Section 8(1)(j)Protects personal information unless larger public interest existsCore provision relied upon to deny disclosure of husband’s income tax returns as personal financial data
Right to Information Act, 2005 – Section 11Prescribes procedure for disclosure of third-party informationHusband was treated as third party; notice issued before deciding disclosure
Right to Information Act, 2005 – Section 2(n)Defines “third party” under RTIApplied to classify husband as third party whose financial information was sought
Income-tax Act, 1961 – Section 138Regulates disclosure of assessee information by tax authoritiesCourt noted existence of special statutory framework governing confidentiality of income tax data
Protection of Women from Domestic Violence Act, 2005 – Section 12(1)Provides remedy including maintenance for aggrieved wifeWife sought income tax returns to establish husband’s income in maintenance proceedings
Supreme Court precedent – Girish Ramchandra DeshpandeDeclares income tax returns as personal informationRelied upon to reinforce privacy protection under RTI
Supreme Court precedent – Subhash Chandra AgarwalBalances right to information with right to privacyUsed to highlight constitutional privacy considerations in RTI matters

Case Details

Key Takeaways

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