Usually no. You cannot get another person disciplinary or service records under RTI, because they are treated as personal information that is exempt under Section 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act. The only way past this is a clear, larger public interest, such as proven corruption or misuse of public office.
Short answer: Someone else enquiry report, charge-sheet, file notings, ACR and salary details are personal information. A PIO can refuse them under Section 8(1)(j). Your OWN records are a different matter and are usually accessible to you.
If you are short on time, jump to the comparison table below. It shows what you can ask for about yourself versus what a PIO can refuse about someone else.
This is the single most important distinction in this topic. RTI does not treat the two requests the same way.
| Document | Your OWN record | Someone ELSE'S record |
|---|---|---|
| Charge-sheet against you | Generally yes | Generally no |
| Enquiry officer report | Generally yes | Generally no |
| File notings and internal deliberations | Often accessible, can be partly withheld | Generally no |
| Final disciplinary order | Generally yes | Generally no, unless public interest |
| Salary, ACR, evaluative comments | Generally yes | Generally no |
For your own case status, see how to get your own disciplinary action records and status. The rest of this page is about a THIRD PERSON record, where the answer is usually no.
The performance of an employee inside an organisation is primarily a matter between that employee and the employer. A stranger asking for it is asking for private information.
The Kerala High Court explained this clearly. It held that an employee disciplinary and service records are personal information under Section 8(1)(j), and that disclosing them to an outsider would cause an unwarranted invasion of privacy. File notings, internal deliberations and evaluative comments in disciplinary proceedings are protected, unless a larger public interest is shown.
So if you want a colleague enquiry report, a neighbour service book, or an officer ACR purely out of curiosity or rivalry, the PIO can lawfully say no.
Section 8(1)(j) exempts information that relates to personal information where the disclosure has no relationship to any public activity or interest, or which would cause an unwarranted invasion of the privacy of the individual.
There are only two situations where this personal information can still come out:
In plain words, the PIO weighs your reason for asking against the other person privacy. If your reason is private curiosity or a personal dispute, privacy wins. If your reason exposes a genuine public wrong, public interest can win.
Section 8(1)(j) is not an absolute wall. A PIO, or an appellate authority, can release a third party disciplinary record when there is a real public interest. Typical examples:
The public interest must be specific and demonstrable. A general claim that the public has a right to know is not enough. You must show why this particular record serves the public, not just you.
For how a PIO is supposed to apply this balancing test, read the PIO framework for deciding Section 8(1)(j).
If you have a genuine public interest reason, frame the request carefully. A vague or personal request is the easiest thing for a PIO to reject.
A PIO can lawfully refuse, citing Section 8(1)(j), when:
If the PIO refuses, the refusal must be reasoned. A bare “exempt under 8(1)(j)” without explaining the privacy harm is itself a weak order you can challenge.
If you believe your request genuinely served the public interest and was wrongly rejected, you can escalate.
For a deeper map of the whole RTI process, see The RTI Playbook.
Usually no. A coworker enquiry report and disciplinary file are personal information under Section 8(1)(j). Unless you can show a larger public interest, such as corruption, the PIO can refuse it. A workplace rivalry or personal grievance is not a public interest reason.
Generally no. Annual Confidential Reports, performance grades and salary details are among the most clearly personal records. They have little connection to public activity, so disclosure to an outsider is treated as an unwarranted invasion of privacy and can be refused under Section 8(1)(j).
No. The public interest must be specific and demonstrable, not a general claim that people have a right to know. You must explain why this particular record exposes a public wrong, like misuse of public office. A weak or personal reason will not override the other person privacy.
Yes, usually. Your own charge-sheet, enquiry report and final order are generally accessible to you, because you are the subject of that action. Some internal notings can still be withheld. See the page on getting your own disciplinary action records for the correct way to ask.
Sometimes. A final order in a matter involving corruption or misuse of public office can carry a public interest that outweighs privacy. The internal deliberations behind it are harder to get. The outcome of a genuine public wrong is more disclosable than the private process.