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Right to Safe Roads under Article 21

Context & Background

  • Case: High Court on Its Own Motion v. State of Maharashtra (2025 SCC OnLine Bom 3869)
  • Issue: Recurring pothole-related deaths in Maharashtra despite repeated judicial directions.
  • Judgment: Bombay High Court held that the right to safe and well-maintained roads is a part of the Right to Life under Article 21.
  • Compensation: ₹6 lakh for deaths, ₹50,000–₹2.5 lakh for injuries; recovery from erring officials and contractors.

Constitutional & Legal Dimension

  • Article 21 Interpretation: Extends beyond mere animal existence to include dignity, safety, and humane living conditions (as per Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India, 1978).
  • Right to Civic Infrastructure: Similar expansion seen in Municipal Council, Ratlam v. Vardhichand (1980), where the SC held local bodies duty-bound to provide sanitation and prevent health hazards.
  • Strict Liability Principle: Even if private contractors err, ultimate accountability rests with the State (Doctrine of vicarious liability).
  • Continuing Mandamus: Court’s year-on-year monitoring aligns with M.C. Mehta v. Union of India (Oleum Gas Leak case, 1987) — judicial innovation for continuous enforcement.

Administrative & Governance Dimension

  • Multi-tier Responsibility: Road governance involves State PWD, Municipal bodies (MCGM, NMC, PMC), and private contractors — often leading to diffused accountability.
  • Judicial Finding: Despite being one of Asia’s richest municipal corporations, MCGM failed to maintain safe roads, violating Article 21.
  • Precedent: Puducherry v. PWD Contractors Association (Madras HC, 2022) similarly held officers personally liable for poor-quality roads.
  • Mechanisms Mandated:
    • 48-hour pothole repair window.
    • Grievance redressal via apps, helplines, and social media.
    • Disciplinary action and blacklisting of negligent contractors.

Social & Human Rights Dimension

  • Impact Distribution:
    • 80% of pothole victims are two-wheeler riders and pedestrians from lower- and middle-income groups.
    • Road safety is thus a social justice and equity issue under Articles 14 and 21.
  • Case Study: Akhilesh Tiwari v. State of Maharashtra (2021) — compensation awarded for pothole death, invoking Article 21 and the public law remedy principle.
  • Public Health Angle: Unsafe roads contribute to 1.68 lakh road deaths (MoRTH, 2023), affecting national productivity and healthcare costs.

Policy and Legislative Interface

  • Motor Vehicles (Amendment) Act, 2019: Provides for enhanced penalties and liability of contractors (Section 198A).
  • National Road Safety Policy (2010): Recognizes road safety as a public health imperative — now reinforced constitutionally by this ruling.
  • Smart Cities & AMRUT Missions: Must integrate “complete streets” and universal accessibility under urban liveability indicators.
  • Judicial Linkage: The Court’s order aligns with Supreme Court’s Road Safety Committee (2014) directions in SaveLIFE Foundation v. Union of India (2014).

Engineering & Environmental Dimension

  • Recurring Monsoon Damage: Reveals lack of climate-resilient road design — absence of drainage planning and use of substandard materials.
  • Global Example: Singapore’s Public Utilities Board integrates stormwater management with road design; India can replicate similar models.
  • Judicial Directive: Mandated roads to last minimum 5–10 years — enforcing lifecycle accountability.
  • Technological Solutions: Cold-mix asphalt, permeable pavements, and AI-based road inspection tools (as used in Hyderabad and Gurugram Smart Cities).

Fiscal and Institutional Challenges

  • Budget Prioritization: Focus on new projects over maintenance — “visibility politics.”
  • Corruption & Collusion: Tender manipulation, lack of third-party quality checks.
  • Data Deficiency: Absence of centralized accident and pothole mapping systems.
  • Implementation Lag: Judicial orders often remain on paper without administrative backing.

Recommendations / Way Forward

Reform AreaActionable StepsSupporting Example
AccountabilityEstablish Urban Road Safety Authorities with legal backingSimilar to SC’s Road Safety Committee (2014)
Design & MaintenanceMandate annual third-party auditsDelhi PWD partnered with IIT Delhi for audit in 2023
Legal EnforcementEnact National Road Maintenance & Safety Act integrating Art. 21 obligationsOn lines of Public Liability Insurance Act, 1991
Funding MechanismCreate a dedicated “Road Maintenance Fund” separate from capex budgetsKerala’s Maintenance Grant Model
Citizen EmpowermentUse GIS mapping and public complaint dashboardsHyderabad’s GHMC Pothole Tracking App
Climate-Resilient InfrastructureAdopt weather-proof materials and sustainable drainageJapan’s Porous Pavement Systems

Broader Significance

  • Rights-based Governance Shift: Infrastructure becomes a constitutional entitlement, not an administrative favour.
  • Judicial Federalism: State High Courts emerging as guardians of civic rights (similar to Delhi HC’s rulings on air quality and waste management).
  • Institutional Learning: Reinforces constitutional morality in public administration — “duty of care” as a constitutional value.
  • Link to SDGs: Advances SDG 3 (Health), SDG 11 (Sustainable Cities), and SDG 16 (Justice & Strong Institutions).

Conclusion

The Bombay High Court judgment transforms pothole deaths from administrative negligence to a constitutional violation. It bridges the gap between citizen safety and State responsibility, signalling that the Right to Life includes the Right to Safe Mobility.
For sustainable impact, the ruling must catalyze legislative reforms, urban engineering innovation, and citizen-driven accountability, ensuring that Article 21 protection truly extends to the streets where Indians live and travel.

Vaibhav Mishra

Written by

Vaibhav Mishra

Faculty — Polity & Governance · Anantam IAS

Vaibhav Mishra teaches Polity and Governance at Anantam IAS. He breaks the Indian Constitution down article-by-article, connects polity static matter to contemporary governance debates, and trains students to write Mains answers that cite the right articles, schedules and case law.

Specialises in · Indian polity, constitution and governance Experience · 10+ years Subject hub · /indian-polity/

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