Tuesday, 30 January 2018

Four Supreme Court Judges Ask the Nation to Judge Them


Four senior-most judges of the Supreme Court came out together publicly and signalled a message: ‘Just like with justice, a tamasha must not only be done but must also seen to be done'. And the tamasha they enacted was seen very well.

Justices J Chelameswar, Ranjan Gogoi, Madan Lokur and Kurien Joseph are those four honourable men, who held a press meet in New Delhi on the 12th January, away from the Supreme Court.  Amidst newsmen and cameramen, they complained that “administration of the Supreme Court is not in order” and that Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra did nothing to remedy it, though the foursome had reminded him many times on the issue. They released an undated joint letter they wrote to the CJI in late 2017, giving more thrust to their present protest.

In their joint letter, the four judges faulted the CJI for allocating sensitive and important cases in the Supreme Court to benches of some particular junior judges for adjudication.  At the same time, they admitted that the chief justice had the power and discretion to constitute benches, i.e., decide the number of judges to sit in a court room, who those judges will be and the cases they will hear.

The four judges contend that sensitive and important cases – meaning the ones which hold the attention of politicians, the mainstream media and the general public - should be adjudicated by senior judges, not junior ones, and so the chief justice must accordingly form benches with the right mix of judges for those cases and for other cases.  This is their demand, and subject of their complaint.

Remember, the four honourable men were not discharging judicial functions when they openly faulted and accused the chief justice. So they should be ready to hear the reactions of the public. They said they had spoken to the chief justice but could not convince him, and hence they brought up the issue in public and “placed it before the nation” – that is, they want the public to hear and judge the four judges, so the four of them could abide by people’s views, though disagreeing with the CJI.  They indicated they were out to help preserve the institution of the Supreme Court and ensure ‘survival of democracy’.  

Did the foursome elaborate how and when they wished to gauge people’s views, who and how many among the people will count for that purpose and so on? No, not a word on that.  If all they meant by “placing it before the nation” was calling the attention of the many political parties who oppose the chief ruling party at the centre, that worked and all opposition leaders quickly expressed support to the four honourable men.  D. Raja, an opposition leader and National Secretary of the Communist Party of India, was welcomed by Justice Chelameswar into his residence on the day of the press conference after it ended.  The judge should have surely convinced at least one eager member of the public that his attack on the CJI was justified.  Is this not more proof of the judges’ tamasha?

Right now, 24 judges serve in the Supreme Court, not including the chief justice.  Aside from the four protesting judges, none of the 20 other judges have so far publicly expressed a similar opinion against the chief justice. That shows 20 judges do not approve of the action of four other judges in meeting the press and faulting the CJI. Do the four honourable men believe that a majority of 20:4 have a value within the Supreme Court or before the public or in a democratic sense?  Can a similar minority of judges (4 versus 20) in India’s 24 High Courts call pressmen to air complaints against their chief justices, relating to court administration?  

The four judges must be aware that the public – who comprise ‘the nation’ – will not study law and its niceties to decide the matter brought before them. If people want to decide, they will go by their sense of fairness and good outcome.  They approved Narendra Modi of the BJP as prime minister, overlooking expectations of other elders or stalwarts in that party. The Congress party has elected the 47-year old Rahul Gandhi, not anyone elder or more experienced, as its President. In a business corporation, key decisions may be taken by younger persons. In cricket, if a new youngster bats or bowls well, spectators applaud him and want to see more of him on the field.  If so, why would the common man want the four senior judges, and not any junior judge, to decide all sensitive and important cases in the Supreme Court?  Will the four honourable men want to think like a common man when they look to him to decide their query?

If the four judges wish to say junior judges wrongly decided several sensitive and important cases, they should specify those cases and convince the public about what the right decisions on them should be. It cuts no ice, especially with the general public, if the four judges merely argue that sensitive and important cases should not go to junior judges, no matter they are rightly decided.  And they must go further - opening a discussion on the correctness of judgements the four judges rendered as senior judges.  All these naturally follow when the four wise men opened a Pandora’s box – and so more colourful tamasha is assured, isn’t it?

The four judges alone know what really prompted them to come out in the open against the Chief Justice of India. But they will not be remembered in the cause of ‘survival of democracy’. They have just been unruly - especially as judges who should observe restraint and moderation in language and conduct.  Do they like to be expressive, combative and demonstrative? Well, then please resign and go public – that will be in order.

Someone is asking, “Can four lieutenant generals of the Indian army hold a press conference against the ways of the Chief of the Army Staff?” Before you reply, consider a more important question: “If four army men really do it, won’t we see messages of support pouring in from opposition leaders and many intellectuals?”.  You know the answer in today’s India.

The four judges also know that a court does not just hear one party on his case and decide, without calling his opponent to have his say. 'Hear the other side' is a rule judges follow. Even in the public sphere, in a television debate between two rival candidates in an election both candidates get equal time and opportunity to give their views and counter opponent’s claims. Do the four honourable men wish that the Chief Justice of India should come before the people and defend himself on the charge laid against him, so the public may hear both sides and decide?  Do the four wise men realise that if such a spectacle occurs - for which they set the stage - they will have brought our judiciary to greater national and international ridicule and shame?

After bringing their issue before the public, the four judges have gone back to work. A day after their press meet, two judges spoke their mind. Kurien Joseph said, “There is no need for outside intervention to solve the matter because it is a matter that occurred within an institution. Necessary steps would be taken by the institution itself to sort it out”, while Ranjan Gogoi stated, “There is no crisis”. If the four judges still believe it was right coming before the public, they owe a duty to tell the public if their issue had been solved to their satisfaction, by internal discussions with the CJI, and if so how.  They cannot keep the public guessing and wondering. That is not the way of respecting democracy. Or, if by now they feel it was a mistake holding a press meet on their issue and ‘placing it before the nation’, they should tell their fellow-Indians, "Sorry, we erred in coming to the public" – that would be graceful, and accepted in a democracy. There is still a chance for the four honourable men to come clean and be straight before the public, one way or the other.  If they don’t do one of these two things, they are fooling the nation by pretending to ask for its opinion, while actually employing a pressure tactic against the CJI. Such tamashas don’t help democracy.

Like every CJI before him, Chief Justice Dipak Misra too will be assessed on his contribution in court administration, more fully after he retires.  He may be rated as outstanding, good, ordinary or below average. That is a different issue.  But he deserves credit for the maturity he has displayed till now in not joining issue with the four judges in a public show, like in a road rage, and not presenting a sorrier picture of the judiciary.

It might look the CJI has buckled under a masterstroke played by the four honourable men, because he is not saying anything openly in response to a tirade. On this issue, he will also be watched on what he does. if the CJI plays the role of women in many Indian households who don't talk back instantly, and also don't mind being snubbed by irresponsible menfolk, but yet quietly work for the unity, dignity and onward journey of the family, he will take a special honour in the hearts of lovers of democracy.  

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Copyright © R. Veera Raghavan 2018




12 comments:

  1. Yes, the nation wants to know the latest status from the 4 SC judges after 18 days now .They can not continue as usual that nothing happened . If they dont inform the nation, the media and the public should ask them about the status . they just cannot hold press conference one day and the keep quiet and continue in their job , earning their money. Why can not we start a campaign in social media asking them to inform the nation ?

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  2. I as a lay man do not understand the significance of PM's Secretary meeting the CJI in his house as 'former neighbor'! CJI seems to have got /solicited the advice of a politician of 'a party with a difference'! May God save my India that is Bharath and the Judiciary.

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  3. PM's secretary did not ( we are told ' could not) meet the CJI. Shri NVS's comment is political, akin to the party spokesperson's responses on Times Now and Republic. His comment should reflect on what Shri RVR has written. I find Shri RVR's piece quite balanced and non parochial

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  4. It's wrong on the judges to face public.they are president appointees and should treat the office with escalation to president than taking to public who have not clue on the framework of the legal system

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  5. The points raised here are valid and rational. In every walk of life, we get a representative cross-section of the society in which we live. Judiciary cannot be an exception, though, like places of worship, we expect some cleanliness in the premises and some discipline from those who manage the affairs there. I still don't know what and who guided the 4 judges to behave in the manner they did. Individual aberrations in behavior has to be tolerated, but not the kind of unionism in the sanctum sanctorum.
    In the long term, a more professional approach to appointment of judges in High Courts and Apex Court and longer tenure for Chief Justices may have to be thought of.

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  6. Excellent analysis Mr. Veeraraghavan

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  7. Well said, Sir. The four worthies cast aspersion on the junior judges. This is sheer contempt of court.

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  8. A case of much ado about nothing! All it achieved is damage to the SC. Real interest should be uniting to clear huge backlog of cases and delivering speedy justice, instead sadly we see a fight between the highest judicial officers of the land. Sad.

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  9. What did the 4 supreme court judges seek to achieve?
    Even after two weeks i am at a loss to understand what they sought?
    It it was to politicise justice Loya's death then it has clearly misfired thanks to the exposure which has taken place in Media. These Judges are.
    seen in very poor light
    Will not High court judges and even lower court judges resort to such measures in furture . Justice Karnan must be thrilled on this.. We await his reaction .

    The corruption in Judiciary is a welll known secret. That it is happening in the highest Judiciary of the country is shocking.

    There is very little for us to be proud of Judiciary whether it be tackling Corruption at High Places . example it took us 21 years to punish Jayalalitha a Chief Minister who was drawing a salary of Rs.1 a month and hence Rs.60 in sixty months while she ammassed wealth of over Rs.66 crs. It has taken more than 20 years to punish Lalu prasad Yadav and that too only at the CBI court. As a citizen of this country i hang my head in shame when i heard today that the salary of HC/SC judges are being increased by 200%
    SATHYAMEVA JAYATHE
    At one stroke these Judges have lowered the dignity of the Supreme court to an almost irreversible level. Should they not be called to resign to salvage whatever little credibility the SC is left with.

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  10. Major socio-psychological disorder is attention seeking sensationalism

    In the present day atmosphere of overcrowded and over enthusiastic free distribution of opinions by anyone with access to some media be it the totally biased multiple MSMs [Main Stream Media houses both in print and visual] or the billions of SM [Social Media] avenues, attention seeking sensationalism is a very hard to resist temptation.

    However, the other side of this issue is that everything and everyone gets evaluated and judged through multiple frames of references with various motives and in various aspects.

    Invariably in most cases reason gets bypassed in the din of opinions, counter opinions, evaluations, judgmental sweeping provocative statements, ideological identity based narrow cherry picking of issues, words, statements, actions and reactions etc which get selectively magnified for mass consumption and spiced with an attractive aroma of sensationalism which is predominantly superficial .

    These are done intentionally for mass consumption by masking many complete and comprehensive in depth view of reality and ramifications.

    The most overpowering spices in this are well nuanced and clichéd coining of slogans and statements which keep on recycling and repeating ad nausea and provocative visuals both of which have the potential to prioritize in such a way that they can to turn a very calm issue into a catastrophic crisis or at least preoccupy the mind space of every individual.

    This is a major socio-psychological disorder that the very perpetrators must stop, which is very unlikely, as it provides the fodder for their hidden agenda or remote controlled manipulators.

    However, some seriously concerned people can and must educate the victims to this disorder suitably or divert by prioritizing sanity and humane values over these sensational superficialities.

    It becomes really sad when this disorder permeates into even institutions and individuals who are looked upon to maintain order.

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  11. I feel that they are being criticized only because they withheld much more than what they had revealed. Had they come out with everything which compelled them to take such a step it would have been disastrous. I am mentioning this on the basis of my personal observation of the way these four judges function in their courts and their judgments.
    A temple is a temple only if people have faith in it, otherwise it is a structure similar to that of a brothel. Ask a common man what he thinks about our temples of justice

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