Court: High Court of Karnataka
Bench: Justice Suraj Govindaraj
Case No.: Writ Petition No. 11351 of 2020
Case Title: PSBB Learning Leadership Academy v. Mrs. Barnali Rout & Others
Date of Judgment: 1 June 2026
Introduction
In a judgment that may significantly influence the future of accessibility jurisprudence in India, the Karnataka High Court has issued a comprehensive Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) on Universal Accessibility covering government institutions, private establishments, educational institutions, transport infrastructure, public spaces, housing developments, and digital platforms.
The judgment arose from a dispute involving a teacher who acquired a severe locomotor disability while attempting to save a student from a potentially fatal incident. However, the Court transformed what began as an individual grievance into an opportunity to address the systemic barriers faced by persons with disabilities across Karnataka.
The resulting 465-page judgment stands out as one of the most comprehensive judicial interventions on accessibility ever delivered by an Indian court. Our sector colleague Dr. Jayna Kothari, Senior Advocate represented the Respondents in the case.
The Background
Mrs. Barnali Rout, a teacher employed by PSBB Learning Leadership Academy, Bengaluru, suffered a serious spinal injury in August 2013 while attempting to prevent a student from jumping from a school building. The incident left her with approximately 90% permanent locomotor disability.
The State Commissioner for Persons with Disabilities directed the school to pay compensation and provide relief. The school challenged the Commissioner's order before the Karnataka High Court, raising multiple legal questions, including:
- Whether the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 applies to private educational institutions.
- Whether private employers are obligated to provide reasonable accommodation.
- Whether the State Commissioner possesses authority to issue corrective directions.
- What obligations educational institutions owe to employees who acquire disabilities during service.
The Court answered each of these questions in favour of a robust and purposive interpretation of disability rights.
Accessibility Is a Fundamental Right
Perhaps the most significant contribution of the judgment is its unequivocal recognition that accessibility is not a welfare measure.
The Court held that accessibility flows directly from the guarantees of equality, dignity, freedom, and life under the Constitution. Drawing from Articles 14, 15, 19, 21, 38, 41, and 46, the Court declared that accessibility is a fundamental right and not an act of charity.
The judgment adopts the principles of:
- Universal Design;
- Inclusion by Design;
- Reasonable Accommodation;
- Barrier-Free Environment; and
- Substantive Equality.
Importantly, the Court also recognised the concept of intersectionality, acknowledging that disability often overlaps with gender, age, caste, poverty, geography, and other forms of disadvantage.
A Landmark SOP on Universal Accessibility
The most enduring feature of the judgment is the Court's issuance of a detailed Standard Operating Procedure on Universal Accessibility.
The SOP has been directed to operate throughout Karnataka as binding directions until the State Government frames comprehensive accessibility rules under Sections 40 and 45 of the RPwD Act, 2016.
Who Is Covered?
The SOP extends to an extraordinary range of establishments, including:
Government Institutions
- Secretariat buildings
- Government departments
- Courts and tribunals
- Police stations
- Panchayat offices
- Municipal offices
- Prisons and correctional facilities
Public Commercial Establishments
- Shopping malls
- Commercial complexes
- Multiplexes and cinemas
- Hotels and restaurants
- Banks and ATMs
- Fuel stations
Educational Institutions
- Schools
- Colleges
- Universities
- Coaching centres
- Libraries
- Examination centres
Healthcare Facilities
- Hospitals
- Clinics
- Rehabilitation centres
- Mental health institutions
Transport Infrastructure
- Railway stations
- Metro stations
- Bus terminals
- Airports
- Taxi stands
- Parking facilities
- Footpaths and pedestrian crossings
Religious and Cultural Institutions
- Temples
- Mosques
- Churches
- Gurudwaras
- Museums
- Heritage sites
- Sports complexes
Residential Developments
- Apartment complexes
- Housing societies
- Student hostels
- Senior living facilities
Digital Platforms
The SOP is particularly notable for its detailed treatment of digital accessibility. It applies to:
- Government websites;
- Mobile applications;
- E-governance portals;
- Court filing systems;
- Online grievance portals;
- Smart-city platforms; and
- Public-facing private digital services.
The Court has mandated compliance with recognised digital accessibility standards and emphasised WCAG 2.1 Level AA compliance, keyboard accessibility, screen-reader compatibility, captioning, and support for Indian Sign Language.
Accessibility Obligations for New and Existing Buildings
The Court has adopted a phased compliance model.
New Constructions
- Every new public or private building must be designed as accessible from inception.
- No building approval or completion certificate should be granted unless accessibility requirements are incorporated into the design.
Existing Buildings
The SOP requires accessibility retrofitting through defined timelines. High-footfall facilities have been prioritised for early compliance, such as:
- Airports,
- Railway stations,
- Metro stations,
- Bus terminals,
- Shopping malls, and
- Commercial complexes
The Court has also mandated accessibility audits, annual reviews, renewal audits, and surprise inspections. Significantly, the Court directed that occupancy certificates and trade licence renewals should be linked to accessibility compliance. This is potentially one of the strongest enforcement mechanisms seen in Indian accessibility jurisprudence.
Detailed Accessibility Standards
Unlike many previous judicial directions that merely refer to accessibility in general terms, the Karnataka High Court has prescribed specific measurable standards.
The SOP includes requirements relating to:
- Ramp gradients;
- Accessible toilets;
- Lift dimensions;
- Corridor widths;
- Service counters;
- Signage;
- Wayfinding systems;
- Emergency evacuation measures;
- Areas of Rescue Assistance;
- Accessible parking;
- Public seating; and
- Communication accessibility.
The judgment therefore moves beyond principles and enters the domain of practical implementation.
Special Directions for Educational Institutions
The Court devoted particular attention to schools and educational institutions. Every educational institution is required to:
- Establish Disability Anti-Discrimination Committees;
- Adopt Inclusive Education Policies;
- Ensure that admissions are not denied solely on the ground of disability;
- Install safety features in buildings;
- Maintain accessible facilities; and
- Develop emergency response protocols.
These directions have significance far beyond the facts of the present case and may serve as a model for educational institutions nationwide.
Private Sector Obligations Clarified
One of the most important legal findings concerns the applicability of the RPwD Act to private establishments.
The Court carefully distinguished the position under the 1995 disability law and held that the Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 expressly covers private establishments.
The judgment notes that the statutory definitions of "establishment" and "private establishment" leave little room for doubt.
Consequently, schools, companies, trusts, societies, hospitals, commercial entities, and other private organisations are bound by many obligations under the RPwD Act, including non-discrimination and reasonable accommodation.
This clarification is likely to have significant implications across India.
State Accessibility Authority
Recognising that rights without implementation mechanisms often remain ineffective, the Court directed the State Government to establish:
State Accessibility Authority
The Authority is expected to:
- Monitor compliance;
- Empanel accessibility auditors;
- Issue certifications;
- Maintain monitoring systems;
- Update standards; and
- Publish annual accessibility reports.
District Accessibility Committees
The Court also directed constitution of District Accessibility Committees across Karnataka to ensure local-level implementation and monitoring.
Relief to the Teacher
The Court upheld the compensation awarded to the teacher and directed the school to offer meaningful reinstatement through reasonable accommodation measures, including:
- Ground-floor wheelchair-accessible classrooms;
- Accessible washroom facilities;
- Transport allowance;
- Additional rest breaks;
- Online teaching options when required; and
- Necessary support arrangements.
The Court firmly rejected the argument that the teacher's conduct in attempting to save a student could diminish the school's obligations under disability rights law.
Why This Judgment Matters
This decision is remarkable for at least five reasons.
- First, it treats accessibility as a constitutional right rather than a welfare measure.
- Second, it recognises that disability rights obligations extend beyond government establishments to the private sector.
- Third, it bridges the longstanding implementation gap by prescribing concrete standards and timelines.
- Fourth, it places digital accessibility on an equal footing with physical accessibility.
- Fifth, it creates an institutional framework for monitoring compliance rather than leaving implementation to goodwill alone.
DRI's Perspective
For years, disability rights advocates have highlighted that India's challenge is no longer the absence of law but the absence of implementation.
The Rights of Persons with Disabilities Act, 2016 contains an extensive framework on accessibility. Yet progress across many sectors has remained uneven because accessibility standards have often lacked enforceable implementation mechanisms.
The Karnataka High Court's judgment seeks to address precisely this gap.
While many aspects of the SOP may require further scrutiny and some directions may ultimately be tested before appellate courts, the judgment unquestionably represents one of the boldest judicial attempts to operationalise accessibility rights in India.
Its influence is likely to extend far beyond Karnataka.
If implemented effectively, the judgment may become a model for other States and contribute significantly to transforming accessibility from a legal promise into a lived reality.
Accessibility is not charity. Accessibility is not welfare. Accessibility is a right. The Karnataka High Court has now said so in unmistakable terms.
No comments:
Post a Comment