Dear Hon’ble Justice Kurian Joseph,
Unlike many former
judges of the supreme court, even the distinguished ones, you shot into
limelight soon after you retired. Not for reasons that did you proud.
You laid down your office a
week ago, on the 29th November, and four days later NDTV aired your interview.
Sorry, you didn’t shine in the interview – mainly because you spat on the
institution you served by maligning the man
who headed it as Chief Justice of India. He, Justice Dipak Misra, had also retired before you.
The whole of India knows that, when you were in the supreme court, you and three companion judges held a press conference against Justice Dipak Misra in Delhi last January. Some may have presumed that a
bit of decorum of a judge in office prevented you then from revealing more about him though you possibly
had details to disclose. But even after retiring, all you could
say against the former chief justice are pompous nothings. May I please explain?
Let me recite some key words you spoke to the television channel, to say what you saw wrong in Justice
Dipak Misra and why four sitting judges of the supreme court, including you, gathered
against him and met pressmen: “The existence of judiciary
should be independent. If it is not independent and if it is dependent, the
independence of the judiciary which is the hall mark of Indian judiciary is
gone. It is shaken……So we found that there has been external influences on the Chief
Justice of India, and he has not been making independent decisions …. We discussed.
We brought it to the notice of the Chief Justice of India that things are not
going in the right direction. ‘You should correct your ways.’ We met him.
We brought to his notice in writing.
Then finally, without finding any result, as I used to say, the barking
dog had to bite… We brought it to the notice of the whole nation.”
Before you were interviewed for television, on the same day Press Trust of India quoted you: "The then CJI was remote-controlled by an external source. There was some influence of some external source that was impacting the administration of justice." When asked to specify the basis of your assertion, you told PTI it was the perception among you and three other judges who figured in the January press conference - and some unnamed other judges as well. That's all. You told other journalists also about your 'perception' as the basis of your claim. Today's edition of The Hindu reports that when questioned on proof to substantiate your 'external influence' theory you said, "It was a perception. There was a perception in the minds of not only the four of us but among several other judges and the media."
I am still searching for maturity and credibility in your statements. For instance, you didn't reveal how you found that, apart from the four of you, several other judges too had an identical perception of an external influence driving Justice Dipak Misra. Did those other judges tell you or was it your perception that they had the same perception like yours? And the probing talkative media too seem totally unaware they have the perception you attribute to them, since they have never expressed it themselves - that's why many of them described your latest revelations as 'a bombshell' or 'explosive'. Can you guess what an image of yourself you create in the minds of others, Hon'ble Justice Joseph? Common people coming to court will hope that you were not deciding cases as a judge on the basis of similar perceptions.
I am still searching for maturity and credibility in your statements. For instance, you didn't reveal how you found that, apart from the four of you, several other judges too had an identical perception of an external influence driving Justice Dipak Misra. Did those other judges tell you or was it your perception that they had the same perception like yours? And the probing talkative media too seem totally unaware they have the perception you attribute to them, since they have never expressed it themselves - that's why many of them described your latest revelations as 'a bombshell' or 'explosive'. Can you guess what an image of yourself you create in the minds of others, Hon'ble Justice Joseph? Common people coming to court will hope that you were not deciding cases as a judge on the basis of similar perceptions.
Do you realise what a damning
criticism you uttered against India's head of the judiciary, with whom you
served? You know that independence is an
essential quality of a judge in whom people can trust. If you fault Justice Dipak
Misra for lacking in that trait, you portray him as a most unfit judge, even at
district level. If you still believe you spoke with responsibility when decrying
him, let me recall more of what you spoke and ask you a few things, so you become clearer to those watching you.
The television interviewer queried
you on your view that Justice Misra was “remote-controlled” and asked,
“Who was holding the remote control? Was
it the influence of the government or was it political influence?” Having been a supreme court judge, you gave
this stunning reply to back up your charge: “I … we have no idea as to who was
the person behind. But we were quite sure
that the Chief Justice of India was not taking decisions independently… I am
not able to pinpoint as to who was influencing him. But we were much sure he was under some
influence.” Well, when you spoke these
words you managed not to laugh. What more can anyone say, Hon’ble Justice Joseph?
Did your January press
conference curtail the ‘external influence’ emanating from an unknown source and
affecting Justice Misra? You seemed to believe so when you told PTI recently that
the presser “had an impact and things started changing for good during the
remaining part of Justice Misra’s tenure as CJI.” So, you say that Justice Misra was
reforming himself and freeing himself from that ‘external influence’ as a result of your press meet in January. But this cause-and-effect story is hard to
believe.
If you cannot pinpoint that ‘external
influence’ now, surely you didn't do it while sitting face to face with Justice Misra in his chamber in the supreme court. By simple logic,
three other judges who were with you at the January press meet could not
also identify that 'external influence' up till now, since the four of you
would have shared any such knowledge among you if even one of you gauged it. Then
how did Justice Misra banish that 'external influence' - when you
did not know what it was or where it came from and so the chief justice did not
have to fear you exposing him? Or, are you saying that after you and three
other judges met pressmen last January Justice Misra turned a new leaf on
his own and got himself out of that 'external influence?' If indeed he did so, what kind of a real influence was that ghostly force when its
victim could shake it off instantly? You were a judge, that too of the
supreme court of India. Do you sound convincing to yourself, leave alone
others?
I was also puzzled by some thoughts you expressed to the same interviewer at different stages of a sitting and to different interviewers, and I just couldn’t put two and two together. You told NDTV early on that you didn’t know if the government was the ‘external influence’. Towards the end of your dialogue, when the interviewer asked you, “Will future chief justices be not remote-controlled?” you quickly replied, “Governments will always try to somehow influence the chief justice because they are not happy at all …..” Did you, per chance, let the cat out of the bag? And then, in The Hindu interview of today, you praised both the present Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, who was with you at the January press conference, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the good rapport between them.
If anyone understood or misunderstood you as hinting that the former Chief Justice of India was under the influence of the present government, but that the same government maintains smooth honourable relations with the present Chief Justice of India, the listener or viewer could be left utterly confused. When I see these conflicting pictures coming from you, am I at fault sir?
I was also puzzled by some thoughts you expressed to the same interviewer at different stages of a sitting and to different interviewers, and I just couldn’t put two and two together. You told NDTV early on that you didn’t know if the government was the ‘external influence’. Towards the end of your dialogue, when the interviewer asked you, “Will future chief justices be not remote-controlled?” you quickly replied, “Governments will always try to somehow influence the chief justice because they are not happy at all …..” Did you, per chance, let the cat out of the bag? And then, in The Hindu interview of today, you praised both the present Chief Justice of India Ranjan Gogoi, who was with you at the January press conference, and Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the good rapport between them.
If anyone understood or misunderstood you as hinting that the former Chief Justice of India was under the influence of the present government, but that the same government maintains smooth honourable relations with the present Chief Justice of India, the listener or viewer could be left utterly confused. When I see these conflicting pictures coming from you, am I at fault sir?
When
you speak to the public, the public too will speak to you as I do. Also,
you fairly told the television interviewer, “People have a right to raise
questions”. So, you won’t surely mistake
the questions I have posed here. Your answers could help everyone understand you
better.
Finally, let me ask you. The Contempt of Courts Act, 1971, defines ‘criminal
contempt’ to include any act which (i) scandalises or lowers the authority of
any court, or tends to do so; or (ii) interferes with or obstructs the
administration of justice in any other manner, or tends to do so. Assume you were functioning as the Chief Justice
of India, and that I met you and accused you of being remote-controlled by some
external influence which I felt affected the administration of justice. Assume further I admitted that I could not pinpoint or prove who was influencing you and I still demanded that you correct your ways. Then would you not have
hauled me up for criminal contempt, and would I not be close to being convicted? And if I laid the same charge against you publicly after you retired
as such Chief Justice, what would you or anyone sensible think of me? Will you please enlighten me, Hon’ble Justice Joseph?
Warm
regards.
R. Veera Raghavan
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Copyright © R. Veera Raghavan 2018