The Bombay High Court on Thursday junked a plea that sought medical examination of ailing Goa Chief Minister Manohar Parrikar and releasing the diagnosis in public domain, saying that it was 'outrageous overstepping' on the individual's privacy.
Mere ill-health does not make a constitutional functionary "incapable" of holding his post, the high court observed.
Parrikar, who is suffering from a pancreatic ailment, is more or less confined to his house since October.
The petition was termed as a "a half-hearted attempt to make serious inroads in the territory of privacy of an individual" by the division bench of Justice Prithviraj K Chavan and R M Borde.
Petitioner Trajano D'Mello had sought details of Parrikar's health and demanded that a panel of doctors examine him and submit a report which should be made public.
"The constitutional functionary, merely on account of his ill-health, is not incapable to occupy the constitutional position which he occupies on account of his proven majority before the House of Legislature, and any individual who has rival political interest has to adopt a democratic method to unsettle the political power," the Goa bench of the High Court said.
The court also said the petition sought "strictly private and confidential information which deals with the privacy of the chief minister" without making him a party to the proceedings. "This was not acceptable," it said.
A plea under the garb of public interest litigation (PIL) will have to be categorised, as stated by the Supreme Court, as a "publicity interest litigation" or "private interest litigation" or "political interest litigation", the judges said.
Parrikar, 62, underwent treatment in the United States for nearly three months earlier this year. He is functioning from home since October 14 when he was discharged from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences in New Delhi where he underwent another round of treatment.