The Delhi High Court ruled in 2014 that a Public Information Officer cannot deny an RTI application by labelling the requested information as “irrelevant” or “unnecessary”. Section 3 of the Right to Information Act, 2005 gives every citizen an unconditional right to information held by a public authority — the citizen does not have to justify why the information is needed.
Adesh Kumar v. Union of India and Others
The petitioner had filed an RTI under §6 of the Right to Information Act, 2005. The PIO refused, observing that the information sought was “not relevant” and “not germane” to any public interest. The CIC had upheld the refusal. The applicant approached the Delhi High Court.
The threshold question: can a PIO refuse an RTI on the ground that the information sought is not relevant or not necessary?
The Delhi High Court (single judge bench) emphatically said NO. The key passage:
“The question whether the information sought by the petitioner is relevant or necessary is not relevant or germane in the context of the Act; a citizen has a right to information by virtue of Section 3 of the Act and the same is not conditional on the information being relevant.” — paragraph 18.
In other words, §3 of the RTI Act creates an unconditional right. The PIO's only legitimate grounds for refusal are the enumerated exemptions in §8 and §9 of the RTI Act — and “irrelevance” is not on that list.
This is one of the most-cited Delhi HC rulings in routine RTI matters because:
A PIO can ONLY refuse RTI on these grounds:
Anything outside this list — including “irrelevance” — is an unlawful refusal.
The ruling remains good law and is routinely cited at FAAs and Information Commissions. The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 (in force 14 November 2025) does not affect this case — the §44(3) amendment touched only §8(1)(j); §3 (the right itself) is intact.
If your RTI is rejected with language like “*the information sought is irrelevant*” or “*you have not stated why you need this*”, file a §19(1) First Appeal within 30 days, citing:
Use our First Appeal Builder — it has this citation pre-loaded.
Adesh Kumar v. Union of India and Others, W.P. (C) 3543/2014, decided 16 December 2014 by the Delhi High Court (single bench). The full judgment PDF is in the case-law media folder.
Last reviewed on: 4 May 2026 — RTI Wiki editorial team.