The CIC held in 2011 that the procedure under §11 of the RTI Act — issuing written notice to a named third party before disclosing information that concerns them — is mandatory, not discretionary. A disclosure order passed without following §11 is procedurally defective and can be set aside.
This ruling protects both the citizen applying for information (who needs a properly defended order) and the third party (who has a right to be heard).
An RTI applicant sought copies of a private company's project proposal and correspondence with a Ministry. The Ministry CPIO disclosed the documents without issuing a §11 notice to the private company. The company challenged the disclosure before the CIC, arguing that it had a right to be heard before its confidential commercial documents were shared.
The CIC held: (1) §11(1) requires the CPIO to issue a written notice to a third party within 5 days of receiving an RTI application that requests information “relating to or supplied by a third party and has been treated as confidential by that third party”; (2) the third party has 10 days to make a written submission on whether the information should be disclosed; (3) failure to follow this procedure vitiates the disclosure — the CPIO cannot pre-empt a third party's right to be heard; (4) where the §11 procedure is not followed, the aggrieved third party can apply to the CIC to recall the disclosure order.
“The procedure prescribed under Section 11 of the RTI Act is mandatory. It is not open to the CPIO to by-pass the third-party notice requirement on the ground that the information does not, in their view, merit confidential treatment. That question is precisely what the Section 11 procedure is designed to answer. An order directing disclosure passed without compliance with Section 11 is procedurally infirm and liable to be set aside on that ground alone. The CPIO must issue notice, receive the third party's objections, and pass a reasoned order after considering them.”
— CIC order in third-party §11 matter, 2011
Section 11(1) triggers when the CPIO proposes to disclose information “relating to or supplied by a third party and treated as confidential by that third party.” If the third party never marked it confidential, §11 may not technically apply — but best practice is to issue notice anyway for any information that names or concerns a private entity.
The CPIO proceeds to make a disclosure decision. Silence does not automatically mean “disclose” — the CPIO must still assess whether any §8 exemption applies. But non-response means the third party waives its right to make further objection at the CIC stage.
Yes. If the CPIO uses the §11 process as a delay tactic to avoid disclosure for well beyond 40 days, you can file a second appeal before the CIC for deemed refusal. The §11 process has a 40-day outer deadline from the date of the original RTI application.
Government employees' service records are usually information held by the employer (the public authority) — not “supplied by a third party.” §11 is typically relevant for private companies, contractors, and individuals who have submitted data to the government in a private capacity.
Verified source: CIC order on §11 third-party notice procedure (2011) · RTI Act §11(1)–(3)