Privacy on Trial: Phone Tapping and WhatsApp Messages as Digital Evidence
Privacy on Trial: Phone Tapping and WhatsApp
Messages as Digital Evidence
Sidhant
Malik
Advocate
7011490440
INTRODUCTION
The jurisprudence on
privacy in India is a study in contradictions. The Nine-judge bench in Justice
K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) elevated privacy to the status of
a fundamental right under Article 21, recognising it as the very essence of
dignity and liberty. Yet, in practice, this constitutional promise is
continually diluted by judicial balancing in favour of State interests.
Courts have sanctioned
phone tapping under the Telegraph Act, admitted WhatsApp chats and electronic
records as evidence, and permitted expansive surveillance through Aadhaar and
CCTV monitoring, provided it meets the tests of “legality, necessity and proportionality.”
Yet, real-world controversies, from the Pegasus spyware revelations to forced
disclosure of Aadhaar for basic services, underscore the fragile state of
informational autonomy in India. Thus, while privacy has been judicially
recognised as a right, its contours remain precariously subject to competing
claims of security, governance, and public order.
EVOLUTION OF
PRIVACY RIGHTS IN INDIA
The Indian Constitution did not originally mention
the right to privacy. Courts initially rejected privacy as a fundamental right,
but later cases gradually recognized its importance.
Kharak Singh v. State of UP (1963) AIR 1963 SC 1295
Facts: Police conducted surveillance on Kharak
Singh, including night visits at his house.
Issue: Was surveillance violating personal liberty under Article 21?
Judgment: Majority held that there was no fundamental right to privacy.
Minority opinion (Justice Subba Rao) dissented, arguing that privacy is part of
liberty.
Gobind v. State of MP (1975) (1975) 2 SCC 148
Facts: Police surveillance on a man suspected of
dacoity.
Judgment: Supreme Court hinted that privacy could be a fundamental right in
future cases.
Seeds of privacy rights were planted.
Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017) (2017) 10 SCC 1
Facts: Retired Judge K.S. Puttaswamy challenged the
Aadhaar scheme, where the Government collected citizens' fingerprints and iris
scans.
Issue: Does the Constitution guarantee a Right to Privacy?
Judgment: A nine-judge bench of the Supreme Court held that privacy is a
fundamental right under Article 21. It includes physical privacy (body
searches, surveillance) and informational privacy (data protection).
Analysis: Any law violating privacy must pass tests of legality, necessity, and
proportionality.
IMPORTANT PROVISIONS
Section 69 of the
Information Technology Act, 2000, gives authorities the power to intercept,
monitor, or decrypt digital information.
Under sub-clause (3) of Section 69, intermediaries, service providers, or
anyone in charge of a computer resource must assist the authorities. They must
provide access or decrypt the required data.
Non-compliance may lead to imprisonment for up to seven years and a fine.
While the law lists clear grounds for interception, experts raise concerns.
The major issue is the
lack of judicial oversight. This gap gives the executive wide powers with
minimal checks.
Authorities can issue orders under Section 69 on specific grounds:
v Sovereignty and
integrity of India
v Defence and
security of the state
v Friendly
relations with foreign states
v Public order
v Prevention of
incitement to commit cognizable offences
v Investigation of
any offence
Section 5(2) of the Indian Telegraph Act, 1885 allows government to tap phones in cases of public safety, national security, or preventing crime. Approval from the Home Ministry is mandatory.
DATA PROTECTION LAW (2023)
The Digital Personal
Data Protection Act, 2023 regulates how companies like WhatsApp, Facebook, and
Google handle personal data. It grants rights to users: Right to Consent, Right
to Correction, and Right to Erasure. For laypersons, this means India now has a
privacy law similar to GDPR in Europe.
PHONE TAPPING
AND SURVEILLANCE
People’s Union for Civil
Liberties (PUCL) v. Union of India
(1997) 1 SCC 301 : AIR 1997 SC 568
Facts: Challenge to
widespread government phone tapping.
Judgment: Supreme Court upheld the power but set safeguards only with Home
Secretary’s approval, limited duration, and judicial oversight.
WHY IT IS IN NEWS?
The Madras high court, recently
held that phone tapping, even to detect a crime, amounts to the violation of an
individual’s fundamental right to privacy, unless it is strictly justified
under a procedure established by law.
The court said that the
existing provisions of the Telegraph Act and Telegraph Rules do not permit
covert interception of phone calls or messages of an individual merely to
detect the commission of a crime. Such surveillance, is permissible only in
cases of public emergency or in the interest of public safety.
Justice N Anand
Venkatesh, accordingly, quashed an authorisation issued by the Union ministry
of home affairs (MHA) in 2011 for tapping the phone of a Chennai resident
involved in an alleged case of bribery and for making the results of such
interception available to the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
The judge emphasised
that corruption cases must be investigated lawfully, and constitutional
protections cannot be bypassed even in serious crimes.
Justice
Venkatesh said that a citizen’s “right to privacy is a fundamental right
protected under Article 21 of the Constitution, as well as part of the broader
freedoms guaranteed by Part III of the Constitution”.
Citing the Supreme
Court’s judgments in cases such as Gobind vs the State of Madhya Pradesh, PUCL
vs Union of India, and the landmark Puttaswamy judgement, the high court
emphasised that privacy is an inherent and essential part of personal liberty,
though it remains subject to reasonable restrictions under the Constitution and
There can be no doubt that telephone tapping would infringe Article 21 unless
such infringement has the sanction of a procedure established by law.
Justice Venkatesh also
cited the observations made by former Supreme Court judge justice SK Kaul’s
concurring remarks in the Puttaswamy judgment and said the same underscored the
need to recognize and adapt to evolving constitutional values, “replacing outdated
interpretations with a modern understanding of individual rights”.
The court quashed the
phone tapping order against the petitioner, P Kishore, after noting that though
the MHA had granted such permission saying it was for “preventing incitement to
the commission of an offence”, any law enforcement agency was not empowered to
“resort to covert surveillance by tapping the mobile phones to obtain
information regarding the commission of an alleged crime”.
The MHA, in its
affidavit filed before the court, had claimed that it had passed the phone
tapping order “in strict compliance” with section 5(2) of the Telegraph Act and
rule 419-A of the Telegraph Rules which grant the Centre or state governments
the power to intercept or detain messages during a public emergency or in the
interest of public safety.
Since the petitioner
was having a conversation about committing an offence, it was intercepted in
the interest of public safety preventing further incitement to the commission
of an offence, MHA had said.
Justice Venkatesh
however, noted that in previous judgments, the Supreme Court clarified that the
occurrence of public emergency or the interest of public safety could never be
a secretive condition or situation.
“Either of the
situations would be apparent to a reasonable person. Covert surveillance of the
type conducted in this case definitely cannot fall within the aforesaid two
situations contemplated under section 5(2) of the Act,” Justice Venkatesh said.
[P. Kishore Vs Secretary to Government 2025 SCC Online Mad 3053]
WHATSAPP
MESSAGES/CHATS AS EVIDENCE
In the contemporary
digital age, WhatsApp chats have emerged as a pivotal form of electronic
evidence in judicial proceedings. The Indian Evidence Act, 1872, read with the
Information Technology Act, 2000, accords recognition to electronic records,
thereby placing WhatsApp conversations within the ambit of admissible evidence.
However, the admissibility of such chats is not automatic; it is contingent
upon strict compliance with Section 65B of the Evidence Act [Now 63[4] of
BSA, 2023], which mandates a certificate to authenticate electronic
records.
The Supreme Court in Anvar
P.V. v. P.K. Basheer (2014) 10 SCC 473 laid down the principle that
secondary electronic evidence, such as printouts or screenshots of WhatsApp
messages, is inadmissible without a valid Section 65B certificate. This
position was further crystallized in Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash
Kushanrao Gorantyal (2020) 7 SCC 1, wherein the Court reiterated that
electronic records without proper certification cannot be relied upon as
evidence. Moreover, in Ambalal Sarabhai Enterprises Ltd. v. K.S. Infraspace
LLP (2020) 15 SCC 585, the Supreme Court observed that WhatsApp messages,
although admissible, carry limited evidentiary value unless corroborated by
other evidence.
Thus, in today’s
digital era, WhatsApp chats are judicially recognized as potential evidence,
but their probative value depends on compliance with statutory requirements of
authenticity and reliability, ensuring that the sanctity of digital justice is
preserved.
WHATSAPP
MESSAGES IN MATRIMONIAL DISPUTES
Re: [Vibhor Garg Versus
Neha, 2025,] An appeal filed before Hon’ble Supreme Court of India, against the
judgment passed by the Punjab and Haryana High Court, where the High Court had
ruled that recorded conversations between a husband and wife could not be the
basis for deciding a petition under Section 13 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955
the Division Bench of BV Nagarathna and Satish Chandra Sharma, JJ. held that
the founding rationale for Section 122 of the Evidence Act, 1872, [which
talks about confidential/privileged communications] as acknowledged by
the Law Commission and various High Courts, was to protect the sanctity of
marriage rather than focusing on the right to privacy of the individuals
involved.
Consequently, the Court
stated that the right to privacy is not a relevant consideration in situations
where the privilege under Section 122 is not granted, such as in proceedings
between spouses (an exception recognized in Section 122 itself).
The Court emphasised
that spousal communications were deemed privileged under Section 122 for the
purpose of protecting the sanctity of the marital relationship, and not for
safeguarding individual privacy rights.
The Issue before the Hon’ble Supreme Court was that Whether
the High Court was justified in setting aside the order of the Family Court and
thereby declining permission to the husband to corroborate his evidence in the
form of what has been recorded on his mobile phone and by means of a compact
disc (CD) and transcription of the same containing the communication made by
the wife to the husband to prove his case for seeking divorce?
The scope of Section
122 of the Indian Evidence Act, which provides a rule of privilege protecting
the disclosure of communications made between spouses during a valid marriage,
subject to limited exceptions. Unlike Section 120, which concerns the competency
of spouses to testify against each other, Section 122 focused on the
admissibility of privileged communications. The Court noted that Section 122
contains two distinct parts—one addressing compellability and the other
permissibility, separated by a semi-colon and meant to be read disjunctively.
The first part, on
compellability, imposed a blanket bar on compelling a spouse to disclose any
communication received from the other spouse during a valid marriage. This
protected the right to marital privacy unconditionally.
The second part, on
permissibility, imposed an even stricter standard. Even if a spouse voluntarily
wished to disclose such communication, the court could not admit it unless the
other spouse (who made the communication) or their legal representative gave
explicit consent.
In effect, consent had
to come from the communicator, not the recipient or the court. This prohibition
was subject to two exceptions: Proceedings between the spouses themselves.
Criminal proceedings involving a crime committed by one spouse against the other.
The Court clarified that this privilege: Applied only to legally wedded spouses
and not to live-in or other relationships. Attached at the time of
communication, not when evidence was later offered in court. Survived even
after the dissolution of marriage if the communication occurred during the
subsistence of the marriage. Barred only the spouse who received the
communication, not the one who made it. Did not bar third parties from
testifying about communications they overheard or also received.
Further, the Court
emphasised that the term “any communication” was broad, covering oral, written,
or non-verbal (e.g., sign language) communications and not limited to
confidential or private exchanges. However, the term “made to him/her”
indicated that it must be a message conveyed by one spouse to the other, not a
general dialogue or mutual conversation.
The Court clarified
that the bar under Section 122 applied specifically to the disclosure of a
“communication” by a spouse, and not to the communication itself. A spouse
could neither be compelled nor permitted to enter the witness box to disclose
such communications. However, the communication could still be brought before
the court through other lawful means, as long as those means were not barred by
Section 122 or other provisions of the Evidence Act.
For instance, if a
husband wrote a letter to his wife confessing to a murder, the wife would be
barred under Section 122 from disclosing the content of that letter in court.
However, if the letter was recovered by the police during investigation and
produced in evidence, then Section 122 would not apply, and the letter could be
admitted as evidence. Furthermore, the Court clarified that the bar did not
extend to acts witnessed or experienced by a spouse.
Whether a
secretly recorded conversation can be permitted to be given in evidence? The
Court noted that it had previously addressed the issue of collecting evidence
through illegal or morally questionable means, such as unauthorized recordings
or phone tapping, often without the knowledge or consent of the person being
recorded. Accused persons frequently argued that such evidence was inadmissible
due to the investigative authorities not following proper legal procedures.
However, the Court held that the mere fact that evidence was obtained
unlawfully did not automatically render it inadmissible. Instead, the
admissibility of such evidence depended on its relevance, reliability, and
accuracy.
The Court reiterated
that Section 122 of the Evidence Act comprises two parts: compellability and
permissibility. In the present case, the issue revolved around the second part,
i.e., the permissibility of disclosing privileged communication in court.
The Court held that
under normal circumstances, the husband would be barred from disclosing any
communication made to him by his wife during the subsistence of the marriage.
However, in this case, the bar was lifted by the express exception provided
under Section 122, since the communication was being disclosed in a proceeding
between the spouses, a divorce petition filed under Section 13 of the Hindu
Marriage Act, 1955. Therefore, the wife’s objection based on Section 122 was
held to be unacceptable.
The Court also
addressed Section 14 of the Family Courts Act, 1984, which allows Family Courts
to accept evidence beyond the strict rules of the Evidence Act. However, it
noted that this extraordinary power need not be invoked here, as the Evidence
Act itself permitted the admission of such communication under its exception
clause.
The Court highlighted
that the law of evidence is designed to aid judges in arriving at a just
decision by relying not only on direct evidence but also on circumstantial
evidence, presumptions, and adverse inferences. It stated that, in the digital
age, technology enables the accurate recording and preservation of past events,
and excluding such reliable material on the grounds of a privacy violation
would defeat the purpose of the Evidence Act.
The Court further noted that this was
precisely why Parliament amended the Evidence Act to include Section 65B, which
explicitly addresses the admissibility of electronic records. Thus,
electronically stored conversations, when authenticated in compliance with
Section 65B, are not only relevant but also admissible, and their exclusion
would undermine both legal reasoning and technological progress in the justice
system.
Whether such recorded
evidence should be disallowed solely on the ground that it is violative of the
privacy of one of the spouses?
The Court observed that
Section 122 of the Evidence Act had not been challenged in the present
proceedings. It reiterated that the protection of privileged communication
between spouses under Section 122 exists in the context of preserving marital
intimacy and trust. However, the Court emphasised that the exception under
Section 122, which allows such communication to be disclosed in proceedings
between the spouses themselves, must be interpreted in light of the right to a
fair trial, a core element of Article 21 of the Constitution of India.
CONCLUSION
The trajectory of
privacy jurisprudence in India reflects a constant tension between individual
liberty and State power. While the Supreme Court in Puttaswamy firmly
established privacy as a fundamental right under Article 21, subsequent
judicial interpretations and executive practices show that this right is far
from absolute. Phone tapping, surveillance, and the use of WhatsApp messages as
evidence highlight the delicate balance courts must maintain between protecting
constitutional freedoms and ensuring national security or public order.
Yet, the absence of robust
judicial oversight, coupled with the sweeping powers vested in the executive
under the Telegraph Act and the IT Act, raises legitimate concerns about misuse
and arbitrary intrusion. The recent pronouncements of the Madras High Court
reiterate that privacy cannot be casually sacrificed at the altar of
investigation, and any invasion must strictly comply with the tests of legality,
necessity, and proportionality.
I Privacy I I Blog I I Advocate I I WhatsApp I I Mobile I I Tapping I I Law8 I

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