Delhi HC Stays Order for Human Review of RBI Ombudsman Complaint Rejections

The Delhi High Court Division Bench has stayed a single judge's order that required a second level of human supervision for complaints rejected by the RBI Ombudsman. The single judge had issued the direction to prevent the mechanical dismissal of consumer grievances and strengthen the ombudsman mechanism. The RBI, represented by Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appealed the order, arguing that modifying the statutory scheme falls outside judicial authority. The Division Bench found substantial legal questions and has scheduled the next hearing for March 17.

Key Points: Delhi HC Stays Order on RBI Ombudsman Human Review

  • Delhi HC stays single judge's order
  • Mandated human review of RBI Ombudsman rejections
  • RBI challenged judicial intervention in statutory scheme
  • Case listed for next hearing on March 17
3 min read

Delhi HC Division Bench stays single judge's order mandating human review of RBI Ombudsman rejections

Delhi High Court stays order mandating second-level human review for RBI Ombudsman rejections. Case to be heard in March.

"any alteration, modification, or restructuring of the scheme can only be carried out by authorities empowered under the parent statutes - Tushar Mehta"

New Delhi, January 8

The Delhi High Court Division Bench, headed by the Chief Justice, on Thursday stayed a direction issued by a single judge which required that complaints finally rejected by the Reserve Bank of India Ombudsman must undergo a second level of human supervision by legally trained personnel, including retired judicial officers or advocates with at least ten years' experience.

The interim stay was granted during the hearing of an appeal filed by the RBI challenging the directions issued by the single judge. The matter has now been listed for further hearing on March 17.

The appeal arises from a detailed judgment delivered by a single judge in November 2025, in which the Court issued a series of directions aimed at strengthening the RBI Ombudsman mechanism and making it more consumer-friendly.

The single judge expressed strong dissatisfaction with the manner in which consumer complaints were disposed of, observing that many grievances were being rejected by automated or mechanical processes.

The Court had stated that such an approach defeats the very purpose of the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme, 2021, and leads to avoidable litigation before constitutional courts and consumer forums.

Among the various directions issued, the most contested was a direction which mandated second-level human scrutiny of rejected complaints. The single judge had reasoned that introducing legally trained oversight would prevent dismissal of complaints on hyper-technical grounds and ensure that genuine grievances are not shut out due to minor procedural lapses.

The Court had also directed RBI to require banks to publish clear grievance redressal flowcharts on their websites and to strengthen the Ombudsman's infrastructure, and to call upon senior RBI officials to ensure effective implementation.

Appearing for RBI, Solicitor General of India Tushar Mehta submitted that the Integrated Ombudsman Scheme is a statutory scheme framed under Section 35A of the Banking Regulation Act and Section 18 of the Payment and Settlement Systems Act. He contended that any alteration, modification, or restructuring of the scheme can only be carried out by authorities empowered under the parent statutes, and not by judicial directions, however well-intentioned.

After hearing the submissions, the Division Bench observed that the challenge raised substantial questions regarding the scope of judicial intervention in statutory regulatory frameworks. Granting interim protection to RBI, the Bench ordered that the operation of Direction 47(5) of the impugned single judge order shall remain stayed until the next date of hearing. The case is now scheduled to be taken up again on March 17, when the Court will examine the merits of RBI's appeal in greater detail.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
As someone who had a complaint rejected by the Ombudsman for a "technical" reason, I fully support the single judge's order. Banks and RBI systems are too quick to reject common people's complaints. A human review by legal experts is exactly what we need! 😤
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Rohit P
The core issue is the "automated or mechanical" rejection process. If the Ombudsman scheme is meant for justice, it cannot run like a call centre closing tickets. The stay is temporary, but I hope the Division Bench sees the merit in fixing this broken system.
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Sarah B
Interesting legal tussle. It pits consumer protection against regulatory autonomy. The direction to publish clear flowcharts on bank websites is a simple but excellent idea that should be implemented regardless. Transparency helps everyone.
K
Karthik V
The RBI's appeal feels like they are resisting accountability. If their Ombudsman mechanism was working fairly, there would be no need for a court to step in. This stay order is a setback for the common man fighting against powerful banks.
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Michael C
The argument about who has the authority to modify the scheme is technically correct, but sometimes the system needs a judicial nudge to reform. The court identified a genuine flaw. Hopefully, the RBI will now internally implement a similar review process voluntarily.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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