Public Interest Litigation (PIL)

AIBE 2026 Exam Prep

Public Interest Litigation (PIL)

Constitutional Law · Writ Jurisdiction · Access to Justice

A complete, exam-oriented revision resource for All India Bar Examination 2026 — covering constitutional basis, landmark cases, MCQs, and quick revision notes.

📚 Topic-Wise Coverage

Click any topic below to expand detailed notes. The first topic is open by default.

Meaning of PIL

Public Interest Litigation (PIL) is a legal mechanism that allows any public-spirited person — not just the aggrieved party — to approach the courts for enforcement of constitutional or legal rights on behalf of those who are unable to approach the court themselves due to poverty, illiteracy, or social disability.

💡 Simple Example

A social activist reads a news report about hundreds of undertrial prisoners languishing in jail for years without trial. Even though the activist is personally unaffected, they can file a PIL before the Supreme Court to protect those prisoners' rights.

Object and Purpose

  • To provide access to justice for the poor, marginalized, and voiceless.
  • To enforce fundamental rights and constitutional guarantees when the State or its agencies fail to do so.
  • To protect public interest, public health, environment, and public safety.
  • To hold public authorities accountable for misuse of power or negligence.

How PIL Differs from Ordinary Litigation

AspectOrdinary LitigationPIL
Who filesAggrieved person onlyAny public-spirited person
Locus standiStrict — must show personal injuryRelaxed — public injury sufficient
PurposePrivate reliefPublic benefit / constitutional enforcement
ProcedureFormal pleadingsEven a letter or postcard may suffice
Court's roleNeutral adjudicatorActive, protective role
🎯 AIBE Exam Tip

PIL is NOT a separate statute or bare act. It is a constitutional doctrine evolved by the Supreme Court under Articles 32 and 226. Never treat it as a codified Act.

📊 Key Reference Tables

Table 1: Constitutional Basis Summary

ArticleNamePart of ConstitutionRelevance to PIL
Art. 32Right to Constitutional RemediesPart III – Fundamental RightsDirect jurisdiction of Supreme Court; PIL filed here for FRs
Art. 226Power of High Courts to issue writsPart VI – The StatesPIL before High Court; wider scope than Art. 32
Art. 14Right to EqualityPart III – Fundamental RightsPIL enforces equal treatment by State
Art. 21Right to Life and Personal LibertyPart III – Fundamental RightsMost PILs involve Art. 21 (environment, health, dignity, livelihood)
Art. 39AEqual Justice and Free Legal AidPart IV – Directive PrinciplesSupports PIL's access-to-justice philosophy
Art. 142Enforcement of SC decrees / Complete justicePart V – The UnionSC can pass any order for complete justice in PIL matters

Table 2: Key Distinction Table

AspectPILOrdinary Writ Petition
PetitionerAny public-spirited personAggrieved person only
Locus standiRelaxedStrict — personal injury needed
PurposePublic benefit, constitutional enforcementPrivate relief
ProcedureEven a letter may be treated as petitionFormal pleadings required
Article 32 scopeOnly Fundamental RightsOnly Fundamental Rights
Article 226 scopeFRs + other legal rightsFRs + other legal rights
Court's roleActive, protective, continuingRelatively passive adjudicator
CostsMay be imposed on misuseStandard court costs

Table 3: Maintainable vs Not Maintainable PIL

Maintainable PILNOT Maintainable as PIL
Undertrial prisoners seeking speedy trialEmployee challenging own transfer or promotion
Bonded labourers seeking releasePrivate property or land dispute
Environmental pollution harming public healthLandlord vs tenant dispute
Women seeking protection from custodial torturePersonal family dispute
Pavement dwellers threatened with evictionBusiness competitor trying to stop a rival
Illegal appointment to public office (Quo Warranto)Filing to harass or gain publicity

Table 4: Landmark PIL Cases — Quick Revision

CaseKey Principle / OutcomeArticles Involved
Hussainara Khatoon (1979)Speedy trial = Fundamental Right; undertrial prisoners' rightsArt. 21
S.P. Gupta (1981)PIL formally recognized; relaxed locus standiArt. 32, 226
Bandhua Mukti Morcha (1984)Release of bonded labourers; active judicial roleArt. 21, 23
Olga Tellis (1985)Right to livelihood = part of Art. 21Art. 21
M.C. Mehta (1987+)Environmental protection; continuing mandamus; polluter paysArt. 21, 32
Sheela Barse (1983)Protection of women prisoners; epistolary jurisdictionArt. 21, 32
D.K. Basu (1997)Mandatory guidelines against custodial torture / deathArt. 21, 22
Vishaka (1997)Sexual harassment at workplace guidelines; legislative vacuum filledArt. 14, 15, 21

🔀 PIL Concept Flowchart

How a PIL moves from a public concern to judicial relief.

Public Concern / Injury Identified
Is it a genuine PUBLIC cause?
(Not private dispute / personal grievance)
✗ NO
PIL NOT Maintainable
File ordinary civil/criminal case
✓ YES
Choose Forum
Supreme Court
Article 32
(National / FR issue)
High Court
Article 226
(State / local issue)
File PIL Petition
Formal petition / letter / news report
Court examines Maintainability
Dismissed
Frivolous / misuse → costs
Admitted → Hearing
Relief Granted
Writ / Directions / Continuing Mandamus

🧠 PIL Mind Map

PIL
📜 Constitution
Art.32 · Art.226
Art.14 · Art.21 · Art.39A
👤 Who Files
Public-spirited person
NGO · Lawyer · Suo Motu
📝 Writs
Habeas Corpus
Mandamus · Certiorari
Prohibition · Quo Warranto
⚖️ Principles
Bona Fide · No personal gain
Relaxed locus standi
Epistolary jurisdiction
🚫 Not Maintainable
Private disputes
Service matters
Political motives
📋 Common Causes
Environment · Prison
Women · Bonded labour
Public health
🏛️ Cases
S.P. Gupta · Vishaka
D.K. Basu · M.C. Mehta
Hussainara Khatoon
⚠️ Misuse
Frivolous PIL
Publicity seeking
Private interest

🗺️ AIBE 2026 PIL Study Roadmap

1

Understand the Constitution

Read Articles 32, 226, 14, 21, and 39A. Understand writ jurisdiction deeply.

2

Learn What PIL Is

Understand its meaning, purpose, who can file, and how it differs from ordinary litigation.

3

Study the 5 Writs

Memorize all 5 writs with their meaning, use case, and PIL relevance.

4

Memorize Landmark Cases

Learn 8 key cases: case name, year, one-line holding, and principle.

5

Practise MCQs

Attempt all three MCQ types — article-wise, argument-wise, statement-wise.

6

Do Quick Revision

Use the Quick Revision section below for last-minute revision before the exam.

Jump to MCQs:

📝 MCQ Set 1: Article-wise MCQs

Questions based on constitutional articles, writs, and direct PIL provisions.

  1. Easy Under which Article can a citizen directly approach the Supreme Court for enforcement of Fundamental Rights?

    • A. Article 226
    • B. Article 32
    • C. Article 142
    • D. Article 300
  2. Easy Which Article empowers High Courts to issue writs?

    • A. Article 32
    • B. Article 226
    • C. Article 21
    • D. Article 39A
  3. Easy Dr. B.R. Ambedkar called Article 32 the:

    • A. Spine of the Constitution
    • B. Heart and Soul of the Constitution
    • C. Cornerstone of Justice
    • D. Shield of the Republic
  4. Moderate Article 226 differs from Article 32 primarily because:

    • A. Article 226 is available only in criminal matters
    • B. Article 226 can be used for legal rights beyond Fundamental Rights
    • C. Article 226 is a Fundamental Right
    • D. Article 226 applies only to the Supreme Court
  5. Easy The writ of Habeas Corpus is primarily used to:

    • A. Challenge illegal appointment to public office
    • B. Secure release of a person from unlawful detention
    • C. Command a public authority to perform its duty
    • D. Quash an illegal order of a tribunal
  6. Moderate Which writ is most appropriate to compel a public authority to perform its legal duty in a PIL concerning bonded labour?

    • A. Habeas Corpus
    • B. Quo Warranto
    • C. Mandamus
    • D. Prohibition
  7. Moderate Which Directive Principle supports the philosophy of PIL by requiring the State to provide equal access to justice?

    • A. Article 44
    • B. Article 39A
    • C. Article 47
    • D. Article 45
  8. Moderate A PIL challenging the illegal appointment of an officer to a constitutional post will primarily involve which writ?

    • A. Mandamus
    • B. Certiorari
    • C. Quo Warranto
    • D. Prohibition
  9. Hard In a PIL under Article 32, which of the following CANNOT be enforced?

    • A. Right to life under Article 21
    • B. Right to equality under Article 14
    • C. A Directive Principle of State Policy under Article 48
    • D. Right against exploitation under Article 23
  10. Moderate Article 142 of the Constitution is relevant to PIL because it allows the Supreme Court to:

    • A. Punish contempt of court
    • B. Pass any order necessary for complete justice
    • C. Appoint ad-hoc judges
    • D. Override High Court orders
  11. Hard Which Article of the Constitution is considered the most important source of PIL activism relating to environment and right to clean air?

    • A. Article 48A read with Article 32 and Article 21
    • B. Article 51A read with Article 226
    • C. Article 39A alone
    • D. Article 14 alone
  12. Easy The writ of Certiorari is issued by a higher court to:

    • A. Direct performance of a statutory duty
    • B. Quash the order of an inferior court or tribunal
    • C. Inquire into the legality of detention
    • D. Restrain an inferior court from exceeding its jurisdiction before passing an order

📝 MCQ Set 2: Argument-wise / Scenario-based MCQs

Short legal scenarios — determine maintainability, correct forum, or principles involved.

  1. Easy Rajesh, a lawyer, files a petition before the Supreme Court on behalf of women victims of trafficking who cannot afford legal representation. This is:

    • A. Not maintainable — Rajesh has no personal interest
    • B. Maintainable as a valid PIL under Art. 32
    • C. Only maintainable if Rajesh is a victim himself
    • D. Only maintainable in a civil court
  2. Moderate A government employee files a PIL challenging his own suspension order, claiming it is in "public interest". The court should:

    • A. Admit it as a valid PIL
    • B. Refer it to the Labour Court
    • C. Dismiss it — service matters of an employee are not maintainable as PIL
    • D. Transfer it to the High Court
  3. Moderate An NGO files a PIL before a High Court about hazardous industrial waste being dumped in a river affecting thousands of villagers. Which is the correct legal position?

    • A. Only the villagers themselves can file the PIL
    • B. The NGO can file a valid PIL under Art. 226
    • C. This must go to the National Green Tribunal only
    • D. NGOs have no locus standi in PIL
  4. Hard A businessman files a PIL to stop the construction of a competitor's mall, claiming it will cause "public traffic problems". The court, after inquiry, finds the real motive is to obstruct business competition. The court will most likely:

    • A. Admit the PIL and investigate traffic issues
    • B. Dismiss the PIL with costs for misuse of PIL process
    • C. Transfer the matter to the civil court
    • D. Refer it to the Municipality
  5. Moderate A social activist writes a postcard to the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court about the condition of women prisoners in a state jail. The Supreme Court can:

    • A. Not accept this — only formal petitions are allowed
    • B. Treat this postcard as a writ petition under epistolary jurisdiction
    • C. Return the postcard with a form to fill
    • D. Refer this to the State Human Rights Commission only
  6. Easy A landlord files a PIL against his tenant claiming the tenant has "illegally occupied public property." The actual dispute is private tenancy. This PIL is:

    • A. Maintainable — property issues can be raised as PIL
    • B. Not maintainable — private tenancy disputes are not PIL matters
    • C. Maintainable before the Supreme Court only
    • D. Maintainable if supported by a local NGO
  7. Hard Which of the following PIL petitions is MOST likely to be admitted by the Supreme Court?

    • A. A PIL by a politician challenging the election manifesto of a rival party
    • B. A PIL by an NGO seeking directions to the State to release bonded child labourers in brick kilns
    • C. A PIL by a company seeking relief from environmental regulation affecting its profits
    • D. A PIL by a government employee seeking promotion
  8. Moderate A PIL is filed before a High Court seeking directions to the State government to improve drinking water supply in tribal areas. The petitioner is a concerned medical doctor. This PIL is:

    • A. Not maintainable — the doctor has no personal right to water supply
    • B. Maintainable — this is a genuine public health issue affecting a class of persons
    • C. Maintainable only before the Supreme Court
    • D. Not maintainable — water is a State subject
  9. Hard The Supreme Court, while deciding a PIL on prison conditions, appoints a committee to inspect jails and report back. This judicial action is an example of:

    • A. Violation of separation of powers
    • B. Continuing mandamus and active judicial role in PIL
    • C. Suo motu criminal contempt proceedings
    • D. Exercise of original civil jurisdiction
  10. Moderate In which scenario is PIL most appropriate?

    • A. Two brothers fighting over ancestral property
    • B. A group of bonded labourers unable to approach court due to poverty
    • C. A company seeking damages from its contractor
    • D. A student seeking re-evaluation of exam papers
  11. Easy An issue of national environmental importance (pollution from industries across multiple states) is best addressed by filing PIL under:

    • A. High Court under Article 226
    • B. District Court under CPC
    • C. Supreme Court under Article 32
    • D. NCDRC under Consumer Protection Act
  12. Moderate Continuing mandamus in PIL means:

    • A. The court passes a fresh mandamus in every subsequent case
    • B. The court monitors compliance with its directions over an extended period through periodic hearings
    • C. The court delegates compliance to the government without further review
    • D. The court issues mandamus only once and closes the matter

📝 MCQ Set 3: Statement-wise MCQs

One or more statements are given. Choose which is/are correct or incorrect.

  1. Easy Statement 1: PIL is a codified statute enacted by Parliament.
    Statement 2: PIL is a judicial doctrine evolved under Articles 32 and 226 of the Constitution.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  2. Easy Statement 1: Only the aggrieved person can file a PIL.
    Statement 2: In PIL, locus standi is relaxed, allowing any public-spirited person to file.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  3. Moderate Statement 1: Article 32 empowers the Supreme Court to issue writs only for enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
    Statement 2: Article 226 empowers High Courts to issue writs for enforcement of Fundamental Rights and any other purpose.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  4. Moderate Statement 1: In Hussainara Khatoon, the Supreme Court held that speedy trial is a Fundamental Right.
    Statement 2: In S.P. Gupta, the Supreme Court formally recognized PIL and relaxed locus standi.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  5. Moderate Statement 1: Epistolary jurisdiction allows courts to treat a letter as a writ petition.
    Statement 2: Epistolary jurisdiction is available only under Article 226 and not under Article 32.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  6. Hard Statement 1: Service matters of government employees are routinely entertained as PIL.
    Statement 2: PIL can be used to challenge corruption and misuse of public power.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  7. Moderate Statement 1: In Vishaka, the Supreme Court laid down guidelines for prevention of sexual harassment at workplace.
    Statement 2: Vishaka was decided under Article 32 and involved Articles 14, 15, and 21.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  8. Hard Statement 1: A frivolous PIL can be dismissed with costs.
    Statement 2: Courts can never impose costs in PIL proceedings since PIL is filed in public interest.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  9. Easy Statement 1: The writ of Mandamus compels a public authority to perform its legal duty.
    Statement 2: Mandamus can be issued against the President of India in the exercise of discretionary powers.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  10. Moderate Statement 1: The right to livelihood was held to be part of the right to life under Art. 21 in Olga Tellis v. BMC.
    Statement 2: Art. 21 only covers protection of physical life and not livelihood or dignity.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  11. Hard Statement 1: The Supreme Court can take up PIL suo motu on the basis of a news report.
    Statement 2: Only a formally registered organization can file a PIL before the Supreme Court.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect
  12. Moderate Statement 1: D.K. Basu v. State of West Bengal established guidelines to prevent custodial torture and deaths.
    Statement 2: D.K. Basu guidelines are now fully superseded by the Criminal Procedure Code with no further relevance.

    • A. Only Statement 1 is correct
    • B. Only Statement 2 is correct
    • C. Both are correct
    • D. Both are incorrect

❓ Short Answer Questions

  1. What is the meaning of "locus standi" and how is it treated differently in PIL?
  2. Define PIL. How is it different from a private writ petition?
  3. What is epistolary jurisdiction? Give one example.
  4. Name the five writs that courts can issue. Under which articles are they available?
  5. What does "continuing mandamus" mean in PIL?
  6. Why is Article 39A important for PIL?
  7. In which case was the right to livelihood held to be a part of Article 21?
  8. What is the significance of the S.P. Gupta case in the history of PIL in India?
  9. Name two types of PIL misuse and how courts respond to them.
  10. What is the difference between Article 32 and Article 226 in terms of scope?
  11. In which case did the Supreme Court lay down guidelines for prevention of custodial deaths?
  12. What is "suo motu" cognizance? How does it relate to PIL?
  13. Which PIL case is primarily associated with environmental protection and industrial pollution?
  14. Why are service matters of government employees generally not maintainable as PIL?
  15. What relief can a court grant in a PIL? Name at least three types.

📖 Descriptive / Long-Answer Questions

  1. Discuss the constitutional basis of Public Interest Litigation in India.

    Cover Articles 32, 226, 14, 21, 39A and the role of writ jurisdiction in PIL.

  2. Explain the concept of relaxed locus standi in PIL and its importance for access to justice.

    Compare with ordinary litigation; discuss S.P. Gupta; explain how it benefits the poor.

  3. Critically examine the misuse of PIL in India. How have courts responded to such misuse?

    Cover frivolous, political, and publicity interest PILs; discuss cost imposition; judicial caution.

  4. Write a note on epistolary jurisdiction. Explain with the help of landmark cases.

    Hussainara Khatoon, Sheela Barse; how letters became PIL petitions.

  5. Discuss the role of PIL in environmental protection in India with relevant landmark cases.

    M.C. Mehta series; Art. 21 and environment; continuing mandamus; polluter pays principle.

  6. Explain the five types of writs and their relevance in PIL proceedings.

    Each writ, its purpose, and PIL-specific application.

  7. Compare Article 32 and Article 226 with respect to PIL.

    Forum, scope, who can file, types of rights covered, practical usage.

  8. Discuss eight landmark PIL cases in India, identifying the principle established in each.

    All 8 cases covered in the topic section; focus on principle and Article involved.

🔑 Answer Key

⚡ PIL Quick Revision — AIBE 2026

📜 Core Constitutional Basis

  • Art. 32 → SC → FRs only
  • Art. 226 → HC → FRs + legal rights
  • Art. 21 → Most PIL cases relate to right to life
  • Art. 39A → Equal justice DPSP → supports PIL
  • Art. 14 → Equality enforcement via PIL

⚖️ Key PIL Principles

  • Relaxed locus standi — any public-spirited person
  • Epistolary jurisdiction — letter = petition
  • Bona fide public cause — genuine, no personal gain
  • Continuing mandamus — ongoing judicial monitoring
  • Suo motu — court acts on its own

📋 Cases — 1-Line

  • Hussainara Khatoon → speedy trial + epistolary
  • S.P. Gupta → PIL formally recognized
  • Bandhua Mukti Morcha → bonded labourers
  • M.C. Mehta → environment + continuing mandamus
  • Vishaka → workplace sexual harassment
  • Olga Tellis → livelihood = Art. 21
  • Sheela Barse → women prisoners
  • D.K. Basu → custodial death guidelines

🚫 PIL NOT Maintainable For

  • Service / employment matters
  • Private landlord-tenant disputes
  • Personal grievances
  • Political rivalry
  • Business competition disguised as PIL
  • Publicity-seeking petitions

📜 5 Writs Memory

  • H — Habeas Corpus → unlawful detention
  • M — Mandamus → perform legal duty
  • P — Prohibition → stop inferior court
  • C — Certiorari → quash illegal order
  • Q — Quo Warranto → illegal public office

🎯 AIBE Traps to Avoid

  • PIL is NOT a statute — it is a judicial doctrine
  • Art. 32 is itself a Fundamental Right
  • Art. 226 scope > Art. 32 scope
  • DPSPs cannot be directly enforced via Art. 32
  • Costs can be imposed on frivolous PILs
  • Epistolary jurisdiction = both Art. 32 and Art. 226
⚠️ Disclaimer: This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. All case information is based on well-known landmark judgments. Students are encouraged to refer to original judgments and authoritative legal texts for complete accuracy.
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