BTL 744 - COPRA 2019
The
Banking Tutor’s Lessons
BTL 744 15-01-2025
COPRA 2019
The Consumer Protection Act
(COPRA) of 2019 is a law that aims to protect consumers and establish a
mechanism for settling consumer disputes.
The new Consumer Protection
Act was passed by Parliament in 2019. It came into force in July 2020 and
replaced the Consumer Protection Act, 1986.
Need for the new
act:
The Digital Age has ushered
in a new era of commerce and digital branding, as well as a new set of customer
expectations. Digitisation has provided easy access, a large variety of
choices, convenient payment mechanisms, improved services and shopping as per
convenience. However, there are also associated challenges related to consumer
protection.
To help address the new set
of challenges faced by consumers in the digital age, the Indian Parliament
passed the landmark Consumer Protection Bill, 2019 which aims to provide timely
and effective administration and settlement of consumer disputes. This Act
provides safety to consumers regarding defective products, dissatisfactory
services, and unfair trade practices.
The basic aim of the Consumer
Protection Act, 2019 is to save the rights of the consumers by establishing
authorities for timely and effective administration and settlement of
consumers’ disputes.
Rights of the
consumers:
Consumers have the right to
information on various aspects of goods and services. This could be information
about the quantity, quality, purity, potency, price, and standard of goods or
services.
To be protected from
hazardous goods and services. Right to protection against goods and services
that can be dangerous to life and property.
To be protected from unfair
or restrictive trade practices.
Consumers have the right to
access a variety of goods and services at competitive prices.
Consumers should have the
right to redressal.
New definition of
consumer:
As per the Act, a person is
called a consumer who avails the services and buys any good for self-use. Worth
to mention that if a person buys any good or avails any service for resale or
commercial purposes, he/she is not considered a consumer. This definition
covers all types of transactions i.e. offline and online through teleshopping,
direct selling or multi-level marketing.
Central Consumer
Protection Authority (CCPA)
The Act proposes the
establishment of the Central Consumer Protection Authority (CCPA) as a
regulatory authority.
The CCPA will protect,
promote and enforce the rights of consumers and regulate cases related to
unfair trade practices, misleading advertisements, and violation of consumer
rights.
CCPA would be
given wide-ranging powers.
The CCPA will have the right
to take suo-moto actions, recall products, order reimbursement of the price of
goods/services, cancel licenses, impose penalties and file class-action suits.
The CCPA will have an
investigation wing to conduct independent inquiry or investigation into
consumer law violations.
Consumer Disputes
Redressal Commission (CDRC)
The Act has the provision of
the establishment of Consumer Disputes Redressal Commissions (CDRCs) at the
national, state and district levels to entertain consumer complaints. The CDRCs will entertain complaints related
to -
Overcharging or deceptive charging
Unfair or restrictive trade practices
Sale of hazardous goods and services which may
be hazardous to life.
Sale of defective goods or services
As per the Consumer Disputes Redressal
Commission Rules, there will be no fee for filing cases up to Rs. 5 lakh.
E-Filing of
Complaints:
The new Act provides
flexibility to the consumer to file complaints with the jurisdictional consumer
forum located at the place of residence or work of the consumer. This is unlike
the earlier condition where the consumer had to file a complaint at the place
of purchase or where the seller has its registered office address.
The new Act also contains
enabling provisions for consumers to file complaints electronically and for
hearing and/or examining parties through video-conferencing.
Consumers need not hire a
lawyer to represent their cases.
Product Liability
& Penal Consequences:
The Act has introduced the
concept of product liability. A manufacturer or product service provider or
product seller will now be responsible for compensating for injury or damage
caused by defective products or deficiency in services. This provision brings
within its scope, the product manufacturer, product service provider and
product seller, for any claim for compensation.
The term ‘product seller’ would also include e-commerce platforms.
Penalties for
Misleading Advertisement:
The CCPA may impose a penalty
on a manufacturer or an endorser, for a false or misleading advertisement. The
CCPA may also sentence them to imprisonment.
Provision for
Alternate Dispute Resolution:
The new Act provides for
mediation as an Alternate Dispute Resolution mechanism. For mediation, there
will be a strict timeline fixed in the rules.
As per the recently notified
rules, a complaint will be referred by a Consumer Commission for mediation,
wherever scope for early settlement exists and parties agree to it. The mediation
will be held in the Mediation Cells to be established under the aegis of the
Consumer Commissions. There will be no appeal against settlement through
mediation.
Unfair Trade
Practices:
The new Act has armed the
authorities to take action against unfair trade practices too.
The Act introduces a broad
definition of Unfair Trade Practices, which also includes the sharing of
personal information given by the consumer in confidence unless such disclosure
is made in accordance with the provisions of any other law.
The Central
Consumer Protection Council:
The Consumer Protection Act
empowers the Central Government to establish a Central Consumer Protection
Council. It will act as an advisory body on consumer issues. The Central
Consumer Protection Council would be headed by the Union Minister of Consumer Affairs,
Food and Public Distribution with the Minister of State as Vice Chairperson and
34 other members from different fields.
The Council, which has a
three-year tenure, will have a Minister-in-charge of consumer affairs from two
States from each region – North, South, East, West, and NER. There is also a
provision for having working groups from amongst the members for specific
tasks.
Applicability:
This Act is applicable to all
the products and services, until or unless any product or service is especially
debarred out of the scope of this Act by the Central Government.
Empowering Consumers:
The Act empowers consumers
and help them in protecting their rights through its various rules and
provisions. The Act helps in safeguarding consumer interests and rights.
The Act will also push
consumer-driven businesses to take extra precautions against unfair trade
practices and unethical business practices.
Inclusion of the
e-commerce sector:
The earlier Act did not
specifically include e-commerce transactions, and this lacuna has been
addressed by the new Act. E-commerce has been witnessing tremendous growth in
recent times.
The Act also enables
regulations to be notified on e-commerce and direct selling with a focus on the
protection of interests of consumers. This would involve rules for the
prevention of unfair trade practices by e-commerce platforms.
As per the Act, every
e-commerce entity is required to provide information relating to return,
refund, exchange, warranty and guarantee, delivery and shipment, modes of
payment, grievance redressal mechanism, payment methods, the security of
payment methods, charge-back options, etc. including country of origin which
are necessary for enabling the consumer to make an informed decision at the
pre-purchase stage on its platform.
The e-commerce platforms will
have to acknowledge the receipt of any consumer complaint within forty-eight
hours and redress the complaint within one month from the date of receipt under
this Act. This will bring e-commerce companies under the ambit of a structured
consumer redressal mechanism.
E-commerce entities that do
not comply will face penal action.
Time-bound
redressal:
A large number of pending
consumer complaints in consumer courts have been common across the country. The
Act by simplifying the resolution process can help solve consumer grievances
speedily.
A main feature of the Act is
that under this, the cases are decided in a limited time period.
Responsible
endorsement:
The Act fixes liability on
endorsers considering that there have been numerous instances in the recent
past where consumers have fallen prey to unfair trade practices under the
influence of celebrities acting as brand ambassadors.
This will make all
stakeholders – brands, agencies, celebrities, influencers and e-commerce
players – a lot more responsible. The new Act would force the endorser to take
the onus and exercise due diligence to verify the veracity of the claims made
in the advertisement to refute liability claims.
Upholding consumer
interests:
For the first time, there
will be an exclusive law dealing with Product Liability.
Product liability provisions
will deter manufacturers and service providers from delivering defective
products or deficient services.
The Act empowers the National
Consumers Dispute Redressal Committee as well as the State Commission to
declare null and void any terms of a contract while purchasing a product. This
will go a long way in protecting consumers.
Alternate dispute
redressal mechanism:
The provision of Mediation
will make the process of dispute adjudication simpler and quicker. This will
provide a better mechanism to dispose of consumer complaints in a speedy manner
and will help in the disposal of a large number of pending cases in consumer
courts across the nation.
Simplified process
for grievance redressal:
The Act would ease the
overall process of consumer grievance redressal and dispute resolution process.
This will help reduce inconvenience and harassment for the consumers.
The enhanced pecuniary
jurisdiction and provisions providing statutory recognition to mediation
processes, enabling filing of complaints from any jurisdiction and for hearing
parties through video-conferencing will increase accessibility to judicial forums
and afford crucial protection in times when international e-commerce giants are
expanding their base.
Consumer Protection
Act 2019 Concerns:
State regulation: As
part of the Consumer Protection Act, 2019, the Ministry of Consumer Affairs
compile a code of conduct for advertisers and agencies, a move designed to curb
unfair practices and misleading claims. The said code will detail penalties for
advertisers and their agencies and publishers if misleading advertising and
false claims are found. There have been concerns that this approach would mark
a move from self-regulation to a more federated oversight.
Implementational
challenges: The existing vacancies at the district
commission level would undermine the effective implementation of the new Act.
Lack of
differentiated approach: As per the Rules for the
e-commerce businesses, companies are not allowed to “manipulate the price” of
goods and services offered on their platforms to gain unreasonable profit or
discriminate between consumers of the same class or make any arbitrary classification
of consumers affecting their rights under the Act.
Sekhar Pariti
+91 9440641014
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home