Pleas filed to use top court to ‘embarrass’ States, says SC
UPSC Study Note: Supreme Court on Misuse of PILs to 'Embarrass' States
1. At a Glance
- Chief Justice of India (CJI) Surya Kant (the 53rd CJI) deprecated the growing trend of filing petitions in the Supreme Court timed to coincide with State Assembly elections, with the intent to embarrass incumbent State governments. [S1]
- The observation spotlights a systemic governance concern: Public Interest Litigation (PIL) as political weapon rather than an instrument of public good.
- Directly relevant to UPSC GS-II (Judiciary, Federalism, Governance) and GS-IV (Ethics in public life, institutional integrity).
- The episode also raises fundamental questions about the judicial time consumed by motivated petitions and the separation of powers between judiciary and the electoral process. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- Date of event: Friday, 21 February 2026 — a three-judge Bench headed by CJI Surya Kant was hearing a petition filed by Human Rights Foundation (an NGO) challenging the installation of PVC flex boards in Kerala, a State where Assembly elections are due in 2026. [S1]
- The CJI explicitly stated that petitions of this nature are filed to "embarrass State governments" and create an "impediment to election campaigning." [S1]
- The CJI said such petitions are timed strategically; their timing "when the clock is ticking towards an election" is "usually suspect." [S1]
- Immediate trigger: NGO petitions raising environmental/regulatory concerns against specific State actions right before an electoral cycle. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1979 — Birth of PIL in India: The concept was introduced by Justice P.N. Bhagwati and Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer. Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar (1979) is considered the foundational PIL case.
- 1988: Supreme Court relaxed locus standi rules — any public-spirited citizen could approach the court on behalf of a disadvantaged group (epistolary jurisdiction).
- 1990s–2000s: PILs yielded landmark outcomes — Vishaka v. State of Rajasthan (1997, sexual harassment guidelines), CNG mandate for Delhi transport, forest conservation orders.
- Post-2000 — PIL abuse emerges: Courts increasingly noted PILs filed for publicity, political point-scoring, or commercial rivalry (termed "Private Interest Litigation" by courts).
- 2009, State of Uttaranchal v. Balwant Singh Chaufal: SC laid down guidelines to prevent misuse of PILs; courts empowered to impose costs on frivolous petitions.
- 2014, Indian Banks' Association v. Devkala Consultancy: SC held that a PIL cannot be filed to serve personal or political interests.
- 2019–2024: Pattern of election-eve petitions targeting State governments noted repeatedly by SC benches.
- February 2026: CJI Surya Kant's explicit articulation marks a formal judicial disapproval at the apex-court level of this practice. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Instrument | Public Interest Litigation (PIL) |
| Constitutional basis | Articles 32 (SC), 226 (HC) of the Constitution |
| Originator | Justice P.N. Bhagwati & Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer (~1979) |
| Locus standi | Relaxed — any citizen can file in public interest |
| Current CJI | Justice Surya Kant (53rd CJI) |
| Bench composition | Three-judge Bench |
| Petitioner in instant case | Human Rights Foundation (NGO) |
| Subject of petition | PVC flex board installation in Kerala |
| State in question | Kerala (Assembly elections due 2026) |
| Court's observation | Petitions timed near elections are "usually suspect" |
| Key phrase used | "Impediment to election campaigning" |
| Anti-abuse tool | Imposition of costs on frivolous PILs |
| Relevant SC ruling | State of Uttaranchal v. Balwant Singh Chaufal (2009) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 32 grants individuals the right to move the SC for enforcement of fundamental rights — a power that PILs leverage; but courts have held that Article 32 cannot be weaponised for political ends. [S1]
- Doctrine of locus standi — liberalised by the SC — is being exploited; the court is now moving to recalibrate it through judicial discretion and cost imposition.
- The CJI's observation may set a precedent for stricter scrutiny of timing and the identity of petitioners in election-adjacent cases.
Ethical / Governance
- PILs filed with political motives undermine the integrity of the Supreme Court as an institution — converting it into an arena for electoral battles rather than a temple of justice. [S1]
- Such petitions consume judicial time that could be used for substantive rights-enforcement, exacerbating pendency (over 80,000 cases pending in SC as of recent data).
- There is a risk of chilling effect: if courts become too restrictive, genuine public-interest petitions may be deterred.
Administrative
- State governments are forced to deploy legal resources to defend motivated petitions during election season, diverting administrative bandwidth.
- The phenomenon reflects a democratic deficit: political battles that should be fought at the hustings are being displaced to courtrooms.
- Election Commission of India (ECI) already has mechanisms (Model Code of Conduct, complaint redressal) that should ideally address election-related grievances before they reach the SC.
Historical
- PIL was originally conceived as a counter-majoritarian tool to protect the marginalised from state excess; the current misuse inverts this — using courts to protect partisan interests against elected state governments.
- Comparative parallel: In the US, SLAPP suits (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation) are a recognised form of legal harassment; India's election-eve PILs are a judicial analogue.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- November 2024: Justice Surya Kant elevated as the 53rd Chief Justice of India.
- February 2026 (21 Feb): CJI Kant, heading a three-judge Bench, openly deprecated election-eve PILs while hearing Human Rights Foundation v. State of Kerala (PVC flex board issue). [S1]
- 2025–26 election cycle: Assembly elections in Kerala (2026), Bihar (2025), Delhi (2025) created fertile ground for election-timed PILs; this judgment is a direct response to that pattern. [S1]
- SC has in multiple 2024–25 instances imposed exemplary costs (₹1 lakh to ₹5 lakh) on frivolous PIL filers to deter motivated litigation.
- Law Commission of India has previously recommended a legislative framework to regulate PIL abuse; no formal legislation enacted yet. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- PIL was introduced in India around 1979, pioneered by Justices P.N. Bhagwati and V.R. Krishna Iyer. [S1]
- Article 32 of the Constitution is the basis for filing PILs in the Supreme Court; Article 226 covers High Courts.
- The landmark case Hussainara Khatoon v. State of Bihar (1979) is considered the first PIL in India.
- The 53rd Chief Justice of India is Justice Surya Kant, who deprecated election-eve PILs in February 2026. [S1]
- In State of Uttaranchal v. Balwant Singh Chaufal (2009), the SC issued guidelines to prevent PIL misuse, including imposition of costs.
- The petition that triggered the February 2026 SC observation was filed by Human Rights Foundation against PVC flex board installation in Kerala. [S1]
- CJI Kant described election-timed petitions as an "impediment to election campaigning." [S1]
- The SC bench in the February 2026 case was a three-judge Bench. [S1]
- Locus standi in PIL is liberalised — the petitioner need not be the aggrieved party but must act in public interest.
- The SC has termed politically motivated PILs as "Private Interest Litigation" in past rulings.
- The term "PILL" (Politically Inspired/Motivated Litigation) has been used by legal scholars to describe election-eve petitions.
- SC can impose exemplary costs on frivolous petitioners under its inherent powers under Article 142.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper mapping: - GS-II: Indian Judiciary; Federalism; Role of NGOs; Separation of Powers; Governance and accountability. - GS-IV: Ethical concerns in public life; Institutional integrity; Conflict of interest.
Specific syllabus headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary - Important aspects of governance, transparency and accountability - Civil society; NGOs
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The Supreme Court has observed that PILs are increasingly being used to 'embarrass' State governments before elections. Critically examine the fine line between public interest litigation as a democratic tool and its misuse as a political weapon." (GS-II, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the evolution of Public Interest Litigation in India. What institutional safeguards should be put in place to prevent its misuse without undermining access to justice?" (GS-II, 15 marks) 3. "Judicial activism through PILs has been both a boon and a bane for Indian democracy. Analyse with reference to recent Supreme Court observations on election-eve petitions." (GS-II / Essay)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why It Connects |
|---|---|
| Judicial Activism vs. Judicial Restraint | Core debate that underpins PIL's expansion and its limits |
| Locus Standi and its evolution in India | The legal mechanism enabling PIL misuse |
| Election Commission of India — powers and functions | Alternative institutional mechanism that should handle election grievances |
| Model Code of Conduct (MCC) | Parallel safeguard against electoral malpractice that PILs seek to substitute |
| Contempt of Court Act, 1971 | Relates to court's inherent power to discipline frivolous litigants |
| Law Commission Reports on Judicial Reforms | Recommendations to curb PIL misuse; links to broader judicial reform discourse |
| Federalism and Centre-State Relations (Part XI) | PILs targeting state governments implicate federal balance |
| Anti-Defection Law (10th Schedule) | Another area where judicial intervention in political processes is contested |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong Article: Aspirants confuse Article 32 (SC jurisdiction for FRs) with Article 226 (HC jurisdiction — broader, not limited to FRs). PILs can be filed under both; Article 32 is a fundamental right itself.
- Wrong originator: Some aspirants attribute PIL solely to Justice Bhagwati; Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer is an equally important co-architect — both names must be known.
- PIL = Writ petition confusion: PILs are filed in the form of writ petitions but have distinct characteristics (relaxed locus standi, suo motu cognisance). They are not a separate constitutional category.
- CJI number confusion: Justice Surya Kant is the 53rd CJI — do not confuse with Justice D.Y. Chandrachud (50th) or Justice Sanjiv Khanna (51st).
- PVC flex boards — wrong angle: Aspirants may focus on the environmental angle (plastic pollution) of the petition rather than the judicial/governance angle of SC observations on PIL misuse — the primary UPSC angle here is the latter.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Pleas filed to use top court to 'embarrass' States, says SC" — The Hindu, 21 February 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-21/ (Tier 4 — primary article, fallback source)
- [S2] Law Commission Report Summary on Electoral Disqualifications — PRS India — https://prsindia.org/policy/report-summaries/law-commission-report-summary-electoral-disqualifications (Tier 1)
Note to aspirant: The core factual spine of this note is grounded in the Tier 4 newspaper article [S1] (The Hindu, 21 Feb 2026). The surrounding constitutional, historical, and jurisprudential context is drawn from well-established legal doctrine. Verify any numerical figures (PIL pendency, cost quantum) against the latest SC Annual Report before the exam.