Constitutional Law – Public Safety – Stray Dog Menace – Scope of Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 – Institutional Premises – Interpretation of “street dogs”, “same place” and “locality” – Article 21 – Exercise of powers under Article 142 – Harmonious construction of PCA Act and ABC Rules.
The Supreme Court considered multiple interlocutory applications seeking modification, recall, clarification and stay of earlier directions dated 07.11.2025 issued in suo motu proceedings concerning stray dog menace in institutional areas such as schools, hospitals, sports complexes, bus stands and railway stations. The principal challenge was to directions prohibiting re-release of stray dogs into institutional premises after sterilisation and vaccination. Applicants contended that the directions violated Rule 11(19) of the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 mandating release of dogs at same place/locality from where captured. The Court examined the scope of the ABC Rules, 2023, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960 and powers under Article 142 of the Constitution.
Held:
A. “Street dogs” or “community dogs” under Rule 7(2) do not include stray dogs inhabiting sensitive institutional premises.
Rule 7(2) of the ABC Rules, 2023 is merely classificatory and does not confer any indefeasible right upon stray dogs to continue occupying every space including hospitals, schools, colleges, airports and sports complexes. Paras 41-43.
B. Rule 11(19) requiring release at “same place or locality” must be read harmoniously with Section 2(i) of PCA Act.
The expression “same place or locality” in Rule 11(19) is confined to public streets and analogous open-access spaces contemplated under Section 2(i) of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, and cannot extend to restricted-access institutional premises. Paras 44-45.
C. Institutional premises are entitled to be maintained free from stray animals in larger public interest.
Hospitals, educational institutions, transport hubs and sports complexes are sensitive public utility spaces requiring controlled, secure and hygienic environments. Presence of stray dogs therein creates serious risks to safety, health and institutional functioning. Paras 43, 46-47.
D. Directions prohibiting re-release of stray dogs into institutional premises are consistent with statutory framework.
The Court held that exclusion of institutional premises from the re-release mechanism under Rule 11(19) is in consonance with purposive and harmonious interpretation of the ABC Rules, 2023 and PCA Act, 1960. Paras 48-49.
E. Article 142 empowers Supreme Court to issue directions for complete justice.
The Court reiterated that powers under Article 142 are plenary and cannot be curtailed merely by ordinary statutory provisions, though such powers must remain consistent with constitutional principles and public policy. Paras 50-51.
F. Article 21 includes right to safety and secure public spaces.
The Court emphasized that unchecked stray dog presence and dog-bite incidents directly affect right to life, safety, mobility and public health guaranteed under Article 21. Paras 1, 13, 24, 31-32.
ANALYSIS OF LAW
1. Harmonious Interpretation of ABC Rules, 2023 and PCA Act, 1960
The core issue before the Court was whether Rule 11(19) of the ABC Rules mandated compulsory re-release of stray dogs into institutional areas.
The Court rejected a literal and expansive interpretation.
The Court held that:
- Rule 7(2) is merely classificatory.
- It does not create vested rights in favour of stray dogs.
- “Same place or locality” cannot be interpreted independent of parent statute.
The Court harmonised:
- Rule 7(2),
- Rule 11(19),
- Section 2(i) of PCA Act.
The definition of “street” under Section 2(i) became the interpretative anchor.
Thus:
- “locality” means public-access areas,
- not restricted institutional premises.
Legal significance:
The Court preferred:
- purposive interpretation,
- constitutional compatibility,
- public safety oriented construction.
Paras 40-45.
2. Institutional Premises and Public Safety Doctrine
The Court recognised:
- hospitals,
- schools,
- colleges,
- railway stations,
- bus depots,
- airports,
- sports complexes
as “sensitive institutional environments”.
The Court held these spaces must remain:
- hygienic,
- obstruction free,
- secure,
- risk free.
The Court observed that:
- children,
- patients,
- elderly persons,
- vulnerable persons
are disproportionately exposed to danger from stray dogs.
Important principle:
Animal welfare cannot override institutional safety obligations under Article 21.
Paras 43, 46-47.
3. Scope of Article 21
The judgment significantly expands public safety jurisprudence under Article 21.
The Court treated:
- dog-bite incidents,
- stray dog intrusions,
- unsafe institutional premises
as constitutional violations affecting:
- life,
- safety,
- dignity,
- mobility,
- access to public spaces.
The Court recognised positive obligations of State authorities to:
- secure institutional areas,
- prevent preventable injury,
- ensure safe civic infrastructure.
Constitutional principle evolved:
Public safety from preventable animal hazards forms part of Article 21.
Paras 1-4, 23-26, 31-32.
4. Article 142 and Complete Justice
The applicants argued:
- Article 142 cannot override statutory provisions.
The Court discussed:
- Union Carbide Corporation v. Union of India,
- Prem Chand Garg v. Excise Commissioner.
The Court reiterated:
- Article 142 is a constitutional power,
- distinct from ordinary statutory powers,
- aimed at doing complete justice.
However, the Court avoided direct statutory conflict by holding:
- its directions were actually consistent with the statutory scheme when properly interpreted.
Thus:
- the Court harmonised Article 142 with the ABC Rules rather than overriding them.
Paras 50-51.
5. Administrative Accountability
The Court imposed:
- mandatory obligations upon municipal bodies,
- district authorities,
- institutional heads,
- transport authorities.
The judgment emphasizes:
- continuous inspection,
- fencing,
- nodal officers,
- removal and relocation,
- anti-rabies preparedness,
- SOP formulation,
- inter-departmental coordination.
Jurisprudential significance:
The judgment converts stray animal management from:
- discretionary governance
to - enforceable constitutional obligation.
Paras 24-30.
ANALYSIS OF FACTS
1. Background of Suo Motu Proceedings
The proceedings originated from:
- escalating dog-bite incidents,
- media reports,
- stray dog intrusions in public institutions.
The Court took judicial notice of:
- repeated attacks on school children,
- patients in hospitals,
- passengers at transport hubs,
- athletes in sports complexes.
Paras 1-2, 12-13.
2. Earlier Directions Dated 07.11.2025
The earlier order mandated:
- removal of stray dogs from institutional premises,
- sterilisation and vaccination,
- relocation to shelters,
- prohibition on re-release to same premises.
Para 25(E).
3. Challenge by Animal Welfare Organisations
Applicants argued:
- directions violated ABC Rules,
- re-release was statutorily mandatory,
- relocation would create “vacuum effect”,
- infrastructure for shelters was insufficient,
- large-scale relocation was economically unviable.
Paras 10-28.
4. Counter-position Supporting Directions
Supporting applicants argued:
- ABC framework failed to control stray population,
- India witnessed exponential growth of stray dogs,
- dog-bite incidents and rabies deaths were alarming,
- unrestricted stray presence violated Article 21 rights of citizens.
Paras 29-37.
RATIO DECIDENDI
The expression “same place or locality” under Rule 11(19) of the Animal Birth Control Rules, 2023 does not include sensitive institutional or restricted-access premises such as hospitals, schools, colleges, sports complexes, bus depots and railway stations, and therefore stray dogs captured from such premises need not be re-released into those areas.
Rule 7(2) of the ABC Rules, 2023 is merely a classificatory provision and does not confer an indefeasible or perpetual right upon stray dogs to inhabit every location where they are found.
The State and its instrumentalities bear a constitutional obligation under Article 21 to secure public and institutional spaces from preventable hazards arising from stray animal menace.
The Supreme Court, in exercise of powers under Article 142, may issue comprehensive directions to balance public safety and animal welfare, provided such directions remain consistent with constitutional principles and purposive interpretation of statutory framework.
Final Conclusion
The Court upheld and reaffirmed the earlier directions dated 07.11.2025 requiring:
- removal of stray dogs from institutional premises,
- non-release into same institutional locations,
- relocation in accordance with humane statutory procedures.
The Court held that the directions are:
- constitutionally valid,
- statutorily harmonious,
- necessary for protection of public safety under Article 21.
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