Recording phone calls without consent violates right to privacy: Chhattisgarh HC
text_fieldsBilaspur: The Chhattisgarh High Court has stated that recording a mobile phone conversation with a person without the latter’s knowledge amounts to violation of the right to privacy under Article 21 of the Constitution.
The court was hearing a petition moved by a 38-year-old woman challenging a family court’s order allowing her husband’s application in a maintenance case pending since 2019.
The woman had moved an application for a grant of maintenance from her 44-year-old husband at the family court in Mahasamund district. The man moved the family court seeking re-examination of his wife on the ground that certain conversation was recorded on the mobile phone and he wanted to cross-examine the petitioner and confront her with the conversation recorded on the phone.
The family court in an order dated October 21, 2021, allowed the man’s application, following which the woman approached the HC in 2022 challenging the family court’s order, her lawyer Vaibhav A Goverdhan said.
The man was trying to prove before the family court through the mobile conversation that his wife was committing adultery and hence he need not have to pay maintenance to her once they are divorced, he said.
During the hearing in the HC, the woman’s counsel submitted that the family court had committed an error of law by allowing the application as it infringed on the right of privacy of the petitioner, and without her knowledge, the conversation was recorded by her husband and the same cannot be used against her.
He quoted some judgments passed by the Supreme Court and the High Court of Madhya Pradesh.
On October 5, Chhattisgarh High Court Justice Rakesh Mohan Pandey set aside the verdict of the family court.
“It appears that the respondent (husband) has recorded the conversation of the petitioner (wife) without her knowledge behind her back which amounts to the violation of her right to privacy and also the right of the petitioner guaranteed under Article 21 of the Constitution of India,” the HC noted.
“Further, the right of privacy is an essential component of the right to life envisaged by Article 21, therefore, in the opinion of this court, the learned family court has committed an error of law in allowing the application under section 311 of the CrPC along with the certificate issued under section 65 of the Indian Evidence Act. Accordingly, the order passed by the learned family court is hereby set aside,” it added.
With inputs from PTI