How to cite RTI case law — ratio vs obiter, the 3-line citation
A correctly-cited case law in a PIO order or FAA decision turns it from a “review-able administrative action” into a “documented quasi-judicial determination.” Most reversal at the Information Commission is not because the rule was wrong, but because the citation was sloppy or the wrong case was cited. Master the 3-line citation: case name + year + court + ratio.
Statutory framework
Practitioner conventions; AIR + SCC + INSC + neutral citation styles; Indian Citation Format (Supreme Court Rules 2013).
Key principles
- Ratio = the legal principle the case decided. Binding.
- Obiter = commentary surrounding the decision. Persuasive only.
- Citation should always include: case name + year + court + ratio.
- For SC rulings, prefer SCC > AIR > neutral citation.
- For HC rulings, neutral citation (HC code + year + INHC + number) preferred since 2023.
- For CIC orders, file no + date + name(s) of parties.
- Always quote the specific SC/HC paragraph for the ratio.
Decision framework
- Identify the case — What was the SC/HC actually deciding?
- Find the ratio — Read the SC/HC opinion; the ratio is what answered the legal question.
- Distinguish from obiter — Anything not necessary to the decision = obiter, persuasive but not binding.
- Construct the citation — Case Name v Other Party (YYYY) Vol JOURNAL Page (Court). Ratio: [1-line]
- Quote the specific paragraph — For appeal use, quote the SC/HC para containing the ratio.
- Apply to your specific record — Cited case applies because facts are analogous in [specific way].
Template
STANDARD 3-LINE RTI CITATION FORMAT: [Case Name] v [Other Party] (YYYY) Vol JOURNAL Page (Court). Ratio: [One-line statement of what the case decided.] Application here: [How it applies to your specific record.] Examples: 1. SUPREME COURT — neutral citation: Aditya Bandopadhyay v CBSE, 2011 INSC 1234 (SC). Ratio: §8(1)(d) commercial confidence is narrow; pre-award tender details disclosable. Application here: PIO's reliance on §8(1)(d) for tender pricing data is reversed. 2. SUPREME COURT — SCC style: Girish Deshpande v CIC (2013) 1 SCC 212 (SC). Ratio: §8(1)(j) "personal information" excludes public-servant work record. Application here: Salary structure of [Designation] disclosable; only Aadhaar / personal address exempt. 3. SUPREME COURT — AIR style: Subhash Chandra Agarwal v CPIO, AIR 2019 SC 4815 (SC). Ratio: CJI office covered by RTI; public-interest override applies. Application here: Judicial appointment data subject to public-interest balancing. 4. HIGH COURT — neutral citation: Bhagat Singh v CIC, 2007 Del INHC 567 (Delhi HC). Ratio: PIO order must be speaking; conclusory orders set aside. Application here: PIO's 1-line "exempt under §8" violates speaking-order standard. 5. CIC ORDER — file no + date: In Re: Lokesh Batra v Department of Posts, CIC/SA/A/2010/000123, 15 Jul 2010. Ratio: §7(9) disproportionate-diversion must be quantified, not assumed. Application here: PIO cannot cite §7(9) without arithmetic showing actual diversion.
Illustrations
Multi-citation in one matter
For complex disputes, layered citation: SC ruling for principle + HC for application + CIC for procedural.
Distinguishing facts (when ruling does NOT apply)
Cite the ruling, then explain why your specific facts differ. Most often: subject is different.
Updating older rulings
Has DPDP 2023 §44(3) modified pre-2023 §8(1)(j) rulings? Cite the amendment + analyze.
Multiple PIOs cited same case
Build a “case-law leadership” pattern at PA level — institutional consistency.
Disagreeing with a CIC ruling
Cite the SC/HC ruling that supports departure; CIC orders are persuasive only.
Case law anchors
- Bhagat Singh v CIC (Delhi HC 2007) — Set the standard for citation of speaking-order requirement.
- Aditya Bandopadhyay v CBSE (SC 2011) — Most-cited RTI ruling; applied across hundreds of decisions.
- Girish Deshpande v CIC (SC 2013) — Standard reference for §8(1)(j) interpretation.
- Subhash Chandra Agarwal series (SC 2019) — Standard reference for institutional disclosure questions.
Common mistakes
- Citing “SC ruling on RTI” without case name — invalid.
- Confusing case names — “Aditya Bandopadhyay” appears in multiple cases.
- Citing obiter as ratio — gets reversed.
- Old citations not updated — DPDP 2023 modified some §8(1)(j) interpretations.
- Citing CIC order as if it binds SC/HC — wrong hierarchy.
- Generic “SC has held” without specific case — invalid.
Pro tips
- Maintain a personal case-law library — top 10 SC + top 5 HC for your subject area.
- For each cited case, note the specific paragraph containing the ratio.
- Distinguish facts when ruling does NOT apply — write 1-2 lines explaining.
- Cite layered: SC for principle + HC for application + CIC for procedure.
- Update annually — fresh SC rulings may modify older holdings.
- Train new PIOs on top 10 — accelerates decision quality.
FAQs
What's the difference between ratio and obiter?
Ratio = the legal principle decided + necessary to the conclusion. Obiter = commentary, examples, hypothetical scenarios.
How do I cite an unreported SC ruling?
Case name + date + INSC neutral citation (since 2023). Or AIR/SCC if reported.
Can I cite a CIC ruling against an SC ruling?
No — SC binds; CIC persuasive. Departure from CIC requires reasoning citing SC/HC.
How fresh should case law citations be?
Update annually for major rulings; key cases (Aditya Bandopadhyay, Girish Deshpande) stay relevant 10+ years.
What if I can't find a directly applicable case?
Cite the closest analogous case + explain why it applies. CIC + IC respect well-reasoned argument.
Related reading
Sources
Supreme Court Rules 2013 (Citation); ICRPC handbook on case law; AIR/SCC/INSC + High Court neutral citation conventions.
Last reviewed: 25 April 2026.
