Introduction
For nearly a century, this one sentence let a government department head decide, almost unreviewably, what the country's courts were allowed to see. Then the Supreme Court dismantled that near-absolute power — and the same sentence, carried into the new Act word for word, is now at the centre of one of Indian litigation's most persistent controversies: the sealed envelope handed up to a judge that the other side never gets to open.
Section 129 of the Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 (BSA) opens a new run through the remaining six sections of Chapter IX ("Of Witnesses") — continuing backward from Section 130, examined in the previous article, toward Section 124, which will complete the chapter. This piece traces how this provision's meaning transformed through two landmark judgments decades apart, and why "sealed cover" litigation remains an unresolved flashpoint even under the modernised Act.
129. Evidence as to affairs of State.
No one shall be permitted to give any evidence derived from unpublished official records relating to any affairs of State, except with the permission of the officer at the head of the department concerned, who shall give or withhold such permission as he thinks fit.
Section 129 BSA and Section 123 IEA: Unchanged Text, Transformed Meaning
Section 129 carries over Section 123 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 without any change to its wording, confirmed across independent bare-act sources. What has changed dramatically is how courts read it — the phrase "as he thinks fit" once suggested the department head's decision was close to final; it no longer does.
| Aspect | Section 123, Indian Evidence Act, 1872 | Section 129, BSA, 2023 |
|---|---|---|
| Statutory text | Department head decides whether to permit evidence from unpublished State records | Identical wording, unchanged |
| 1961 interpretation | State of Punjab v. Sodhi Sukhdev Singh — department head's decision largely conclusive | Same starting doctrine, later overtaken |
| Current governing test | S.P. Gupta v. Union of India, AIR 1982 SC 149 — judicial public-interest balancing | Continues to bind courts applying Section 129 |
From Sodhi Sukhdev Singh to S.P. Gupta: The Doctrine Reversed
Early interpretation of Section 123, in State of Punjab v. Sodhi Sukhdev Singh, AIR 1961 SC 493, treated the head of department's decision to withhold a document as close to unreviewable — courts largely deferred to the executive's own judgment about what state affairs required protection. That changed decisively in S.P. Gupta v. Union of India, AIR 1982 SC 149 — the "Judges Transfer Case" — where the government invoked Section 123 to withhold correspondence about judicial appointments and transfers. The Supreme Court rejected the claim and, in doing so, laid down a framework that still governs this provision: the Court itself must weigh the public interest in disclosure — fair administration of justice, transparency, accountability — against the public interest the government claims disclosure would harm, and only withhold the document if the latter genuinely outweighs the former. The correspondence in that case, the Court held, bore directly on the integrity of judicial appointments and had to be disclosed. "As he thinks fit" survived as text, but its practical meaning shrank from near-final executive discretion to a claim the judiciary actively tests.
The Modern Flashpoint: Sealed Cover Jurisprudence
Section 129, together with Section 165's document-inspection power discussed in the previous article, is the statutory anchor for what Indian litigation calls sealed cover jurisprudence — the practice of a government party submitting material to a court in a sealed envelope that only the judges see, with the opposing party excluded entirely. Commentary tracking the practice under the BSA notes that the new Act did not reform this jurisprudence at all; Section 129 simply carries the old Section 123 language forward unchanged, leaving the sealed-cover practice to continue resting on judicial precedent rather than any statutory procedure.
That practice has drawn sustained criticism from the Supreme Court itself in recent years. The Court has described itself as "averse to sealed cover jurisprudence," insisting a government must make a "very clear" case that disclosure would seriously affect national security before resorting to it. In a 2023 hearing on the One Rank One Pension scheme, then-Chief Justice D.Y. Chandrachud refused to accept a sealed cover from the government outright, stating plainly: "We want to put an end to the sealed cover business." Critics point out the practice has expanded well beyond its original national-security purpose to cover status reports, police diaries, and investigative material from agencies — denying affected parties any real chance to test the evidence against them, in tension with the fair-hearing guarantee under Article 21 of the Constitution.
A Fairer Alternative: The Madhyamam Broadcasting Procedure
In Madhyamam Broadcasting Ltd. v. Union of India (2023), a bench of then-CJI D.Y. Chandrachud and Justice Hima Kohli went further than criticism — it laid down a structured public interest immunity procedure as a fairer alternative to sealed covers entirely. The case arose after the government revoked a Malayalam news channel's broadcast licence on undisclosed national-security grounds, submitting its reasons to the Kerala High Court in a sealed cover the channel never saw. The Supreme Court held that withholding reasons and evidence this way violated the right to a fair hearing and could not survive the proportionality standard under Articles 14 and 21 — and directed that going forward, courts should test national-security claims through a more transparent process, including redacted summaries and safeguards that let the affected party meaningfully participate, rather than blanket, unexplained secrecy.
Worked Example One: A Genuine State-Affairs Claim
A department head withholds internal assessments genuinely bearing on an active national-security operation, and the government requests in-camera review rather than a blanket sealed cover. Applying the Madhyamam Broadcasting approach, the Court can review the material itself, provide the affected party a redacted summary sufficient to meaningfully respond, and uphold the privilege on the specific, tested ground that disclosure would seriously compromise the operation — not merely because the department head asserts it.
Worked Example Two: An Over-Broad Claim Rejected
A different department resists producing internal notes in litigation over a contested administrative decision, invoking Section 129 to avoid disclosing material that would simply be embarrassing rather than genuinely sensitive. Applying the S.P. Gupta balancing test, the Court weighs the public interest in transparent, accountable administrative decision-making against the department's asserted interest in secrecy — and, finding no genuine state-affairs sensitivity, orders disclosure, just as the correspondence in the Judges Transfer Case itself was ordered disclosed.
Why This Matters in Practice
For litigants facing a government claim of state-affairs privilege, the practical path is to press for the S.P. Gupta balancing test to be applied in substance, not merely recited — asking the Court to independently weigh what the public interest in disclosure actually requires, and, where national security is genuinely invoked, to press for the Madhyamam-style safeguards (redacted summaries, meaningful participation) rather than accepting a blanket sealed cover. For government counsel, the safer course after Madhyamam Broadcasting is to build a specific, articulable national-security justification rather than relying on the older, more deferential understanding of Section 129 — the "very clear case" standard the Supreme Court has demanded is not satisfied by invoking the section's language alone.
Key Takeaways
- Section 129 BSA carries over Section 123 IEA unchanged — but the department head's discretion is no longer treated as close to final, unlike the early interpretation in Sodhi Sukhdev Singh (1961).
- S.P. Gupta v. Union of India, AIR 1982 SC 149, established that courts independently balance the public interest in disclosure against the public interest in secrecy before upholding a Section 129 claim.
- Sealed cover jurisprudence rests on Section 129 and Section 165 together, but the BSA did not reform or codify any procedure for it — the practice remains judge-made.
- Madhyamam Broadcasting Ltd. v. Union of India (2023) proposed a structured public interest immunity procedure — redacted summaries and meaningful participation — as a fairer alternative to blanket sealed covers.
- Section 129 (institutional state-affairs privilege) and Section 130 (individual official-confidence privilege) are tested by different frameworks, even though both sit in the same privilege cluster.
Conclusion
Section 129's text has not moved in over 150 years, but the power it grants has been reshaped twice by the judiciary — first checked by S.P. Gupta, then challenged again by Madhyamam Broadcasting's call for a fairer alternative to secrecy the courts themselves have said they are tired of. Whether Parliament eventually writes that fairer procedure into the statute, or leaves it to further judicial development, remains an open question as of this writing. The next article in this run turns from state secrecy to a far more personal form of protected communication — what passes between spouses during marriage, under Section 128.