Punjab & Haryana High Court, Chandigarh
Citation(1981) 1 SCC 635
CourtSupreme Court of India
Date14 January 1981
Year1981
BenchP.N. Bhagwati, A.P. Sen JJ.
Acts/ArticlesArticle 21, Article 39A
CategoryConstitutional Law, Criminal Law

Key Principle Established

Right to free legal aid is a constitutional obligation. Magistrates must inform accused of this right at first production. State cannot plead financial inability.

Brief Facts

This case arose from the infamous Bhagalpur blindings — police had blinded several undertrials by pouring acid into their eyes. The case raised questions about custodial violence and the right to legal representation.

Ratio Decidendi

Justice Bhagwati held that free legal aid at State expense is a constitutional right under Article 21:

  • The State is constitutionally obligated to provide free legal services to the poor and disadvantaged
  • This obligation arises from the moment a person is first produced before the Magistrate
  • Magistrates and Sessions Judges have a duty to inform the accused of their right to free legal aid
  • The State cannot plead financial inability to refuse legal aid

Impact & Significance

This judgment, together with Hoskot (1978), laid the constitutional foundation for the legal aid movement in India. It directly led to the establishment of legal services authorities and eventually the Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987. The direction to Magistrates to inform accused of their legal aid rights is now mandatory practice.

Tags & Related Topics

Constitutional Law Criminal Law Article 21 Article 39A
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Disclaimer

This judgment summary is for educational and research purposes. While care has been taken to accurately represent the ratio and findings, for authoritative reference always consult the original judgment text from official sources (SCC Online, AIR, Manupatra, or court websites).

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