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Sukhdev v. SP Karnal — Mandatory Penalty for Wilful Delay

The CIC held in 2016 that the maximum penalty of ₹25,000 under §20(1) of the RTI Act is mandatory — not discretionary — where the PIO's delay was wilful and the “sufficient cause” defence fails. A vague claim of administrative pressure is not “sufficient cause.”

This is the strongest ruling for forcing accountability on persistently non-compliant PIOs.

Facts

Sukhdev filed an RTI application with the Superintendent of Police, Karnal (Haryana) — a Central Government–funded body. The PIO gave no reply for 47 days. In the second appeal, the PIO's defence was that the office was “understaffed and overworked.” The CIC had to decide whether this amounted to “sufficient cause” under §20(1).

What the CIC held

The CIC rejected the “insufficient staffing” defence and imposed the maximum penalty of ₹25,000. It held: (1) §20(1) penalty is not discretionary — the CIC “shall” impose penalty once the conditions are met; (2) the only escape for the PIO is proving “sufficient cause” — an independent, specific reason for each day of delay; (3) general workload, understaffing, or systemic administrative pressure do not constitute “sufficient cause”; (4) the penalty runs from Day 31 (deemed-refusal date) up to the date of disclosure or a maximum of 100 days × ₹250 = ₹25,000.

Operative paragraph

“The word 'shall' in Section 20(1) is mandatory and not directory. The Central Information Commissioner is obliged to impose penalty where the CPIO has failed to furnish information within the prescribed time limit without sufficient cause. The burden of proving sufficient cause lies squarely on the CPIO. A general plea of administrative inconvenience or shortage of staff does not discharge this burden. In the present case, the CPIO has offered no specific, credible reason for a 47-day silence. Maximum penalty of ₹25,000 is accordingly imposed.”

— CIC order in Sukhdev v. Superintendent of Police, Karnal, 2016

How this helps your appeal

FAQ

Can a PIO appeal against a penalty order?

A PIO can challenge a CIC penalty order by filing a writ petition in the High Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. Courts generally uphold well-reasoned CIC penalty orders. The CIC order is not automatically suspended by filing a writ.

Is the penalty paid to me or to the government?

Under §20(1), the penalty is a disciplinary measure — it is deducted from the PIO's salary and deposited with the government, not paid directly to the applicant. §19(8)(b) separately allows the CIC to recommend compensation to the applicant for loss/detriment suffered; that is a separate award.

What if the PIO changes between my RTI and the penalty order?

The penalty attaches to the PIO who was responsible during the period of delay — the individual officer, not the designation. If the PIO was transferred, the CIC names the individual and routes the penalty through their current department.

Can I get compensation in addition to penalty?

Yes. Under §19(8)(b), the CIC can award compensation to an RTI applicant who suffered loss because of the PIO's failure. This is separate from the §20 penalty. Compensation orders are rarer but are available — claim it in your second-appeal memorandum.

Verified source: CIC order in Sukhdev v. SP Karnal (2016) · RTI Act §20(1)