D S Nakara v. Union of India (1983)
The 1983 Supreme Court ruling that arbitrary classification of citizens violates Article 14 of the Constitution. The Government cannot give one group of pensioners a benefit and deny it to similarly-situated others without a “rational and objective” basis. This principle is widely used in RTI matters when the Government applies §8 exemptions to one citizen but not another in identical circumstances.
D S Nakara v. Union of India
The issue
The Government had a pension liberalisation scheme that benefited only those who retired after a cut-off date. D S Nakara, who retired before that date, challenged the cut-off as arbitrary under Article 14.
The holding
A 5-judge Constitution Bench held:
- Article 14 forbids arbitrary classification — the Government must show a rational basis for differential treatment.
- The pension cut-off was arbitrary — there was no rational nexus between the date of retirement and entitlement to a higher rate.
- The classification was struck down and the benefit extended to all eligible pensioners.
- The doctrine of “reasonable classification” requires (a) intelligible differentia and (b) rational nexus to the object sought.
Why this matters for RTI
Apply Nakara to RTI in two scenarios:
- When a public authority answers one applicant's RTI fully but stonewalls another with identical query — the differential treatment is challengeable under Article 14.
- When a department applies §8(1)(j) selectively — denying an asset disclosure to citizen A but disclosing to citizen B under the same facts. The selective application is arbitrary.
Citation
D S Nakara v. Union of India, (1983) 1 SCC 305, AIR 1983 SC 130. Decided 17 December 1982 by a 5-judge Constitution Bench (CJI Y V Chandrachud, D A Desai, V D Tulzapurkar, O Chinnappa Reddy, B Eradi JJ).
Use this case in your RTI appeal
If the same PIO's office disclosed similar information to another applicant but denied it to you, cite D S Nakara to argue the classification is arbitrary. Demand the prior disclosures via RTI to establish the comparator.
Sources
- Supreme Court of India, D S Nakara v. Union of India, (1983) 1 SCC 305.
- Constitution of India, Article 14.
- Right to Information Act, 2005, §8 + §10. Full text.
Related on RTI Wiki
Last reviewed: 4 May 2026.