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Thursday, May 24, 2012

comments against a judge by high court = The present appeal frescoes a picture and exposits a canvas how, despite numerous pronouncements of this Court, while dealing with the defensibility of an order passed by a Judge of subordinate court when it is under assail before the superior Court in appeal or revision, the imperative necessity of use of temperate and sober language warranting total restraint regard being had to the fact that a judicial officer is undefended and further, more importantly, such unwarranted observations, instead of enhancing the respect for the judiciary, creates a concavity in the hierarchical system and brings the judiciary downhill, has been totally ostracised. Further, the trend seems to be persistent like an incurable cancerous cell which explodes out at the slightest imbalance.


                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 651 OF 2009



Amar Pal Singh                                     .....……..Appellant

                                   Versus

State of U. P. & Anr.                              ………Respondents







                               J U D G M E N T


DIPAK MISRA, J.


      The present appeal frescoes a  picture  and  exposits  a  canvas  how,
despite numerous pronouncements  of  this  Court,  while  dealing  with  the
defensibility of an order passed by a Judge of subordinate  court   when  it
is under assail before  the  superior  Court  in  appeal  or  revision,  the
imperative necessity of use  of  temperate  and  sober  language  warranting
total restraint  regard being had to the fact that  a  judicial  officer  is
undefended and further, more  importantly,  such  unwarranted  observations,
instead of enhancing the respect for the judiciary, creates a  concavity  in
the hierarchical system and brings the judiciary downhill, has been  totally
ostracised.  Further, the trend seems to be  persistent  like  an  incurable
cancerous cell which explodes out at the slightest imbalance.

2.    The appellant, a judicial officer, being  aggrieved  by  the  comments
and observations passed by  the  learned  Single  Judge  of  High  Court  of
Judicature at Allahabad in Criminal Revision No. 1541  of  2007  vide  order
dated 31.05.2007, has preferred the present appeal.   The  brief  resume  of
facts are that one Sunil Solanki had filed an application under Section  156
(3) of the Code of Criminal Procedure (for  short  ‘the  Code’)  before  the
Chief  Judicial  Magistrate,  Bulandshahar  with  the  allegation  that   on
11.02.2007 at 09.30 p.m. when he was standing outside the door of his  house
along with some others, a marriage procession passed through the front  door
of his house and  at  that  juncture,  one  Mauzzim  Ali  accosted  him  and
eventually fired at him from his country made pistol which  caused  injuries
on the abdomen area of Shafeeque, one of  his  friends.   However,  as  good
fortune would have it, said Shafeeque escaped unhurt.  Because of  the  said
occurrence, Sunil Solanki endeavoured hard to get the FIR registered at  the
concerned police station  but  the  entire  effort  became  an  exercise  in
futility as a consequence of which he was compelled to knock  at  the  doors
of the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate  by  filing  an  application  under
Section 156 (3) of the Code for issue  of  a  direction  to  the  police  to
register an  FIR  and  investigate  the  matter.   While  dealing  with  the
application, the learned Chief Judicial Magistrate,  the  appellant  herein,
ascribed certain reasons and dismissed the same.

3.    Being dissatisfied, said Sunil Solanki  preferred  a  revision  before
the High Court and the learned Single Judge, taking note of the  allegations
made in the application, found that it was a  fit  case  where  the  learned
Magistrate should have directed the registration of  FIR  and  investigation
into the alleged offences.  While recording such a conclusion,  the  learned
Judge has made  certain observations which are reproduced below:-

           “This conduct of chief Judicial  Magistrate  is  deplorable  and
           wholly malafide and illegal”

Thereafter the learned Judge treated the order  to  be  wholly  hypothetical
and commented it was :-
            “vexatiously illegal”
After so  stating  the  learned  Single  Judge  further  stated  that  Chief
Judicial Magistrate has committed a blatant error of  law.   Thereafter  the
passage runs thus:-
            “.......and has done unpardonable injustice to the injured  and
           the informant.   His  lack  of  sensitivity  and  utter  callous
           attitude has left the accused of murderous assault to  go  Scot-
           free to this day.”

After making  the  aforesaid  observations,  he  set  aside  the  order  and
remitted  the  matter  to  the  Chief  Judicial  Magistrate  to  decide  the
application afresh in accordance with law as has been spelt out by the  High
Court of Allahabad in the case of Masuman v. State of U.P.  and  Another[1].
Thereafter, he directed as follows-
           “Let a copy of this order be sent to the  Administrative  Judge,
           Bulandshahar to take appropriate action  against  the  concerned
           C.J.M.  as he deem fit.”

4.    The prayer in the Special Leave Petition is to  delete  the  aforesaid
comments, observations and the ultimate direction.

5.    We have heard Mr.  Ratnakar  Dash,  learned  senior  counsel  for  the
appellant and the learned counsel for the State.

6.    It is submitted by the learned senior counsel appearing on  behalf  of
the  appellant  that  the  aforesaid  observations  and  the   consequential
direction were totally unwarranted and indubitably  affect  the  self-esteem
and career of a member of the subordinate judiciary  and  therefore  deserve
to be expunged.

7.    The learned counsel for the State has fairly stated  that  a  judicial
officer enjoys a status  in  the  eyes  of  the  public  at  large  and  his
reputation  stabilises the inherent faith of a litigant in  the  system  and
establishes authenticity and hence, the remarks made by the  learned  Single
Judge should not be allowed to stand.

8.    At the very outset, we make it clear that  we  are  neither  concerned
with  the  justifiability  of  the  order  passed  by  the  Chief   Judicial
Magistrate nor are we required to dwell upon the legal pregnability  of  the
order passed  by  the  learned  Single  Judge  as  far  as  it  pertains  to
dislodging of the order of the learned Magistrate.  We are only  obliged  to
address to the issue whether the aforesaid remarks and the  directions  have
been made in consonance with the principles that have been laid down by  the
various pronouncements of this Court and is in accord with judicial  decorum
and propriety.

9.    In Ishwari Prasad Mishra v. Mohammad Isa[2],  the  High  Court,  while
dealing with the judgment of the trial court in an  appeal  before  it,  had
passed severe strictures against the trial court at several places  and,  in
substance, had suggested that the decision of the trial court was  not  only
perverse but was also based on extraneous considerations. Dealing  with  the
said kind of  delineation  and  the  comments,  Gajendragadkar,  J  (as  His
Lordship then was) authoring the judgment held that the High Court  was  not
justified in passing the strictures against  the  trial  Judge.   The  Bench
observed that judicial experience shows that in adjudicating upon the  rival
claims brought before the courts, it is not always easy to decide where  the
truth lies. Evidence is adduced by the  respective  parties  in  support  of
their conflicting contentions and circumstances are similarly  pressed  into
service. In such a case, it is, no doubt, the duty of the Judge to  consider
the evidence objectively and dispassionately, examine it  in  the  light  of
probabilities and decide which way the truth lies. The impression formed  by
the Judge about the character of the evidence will ultimately determine  the
conclusion which he reaches. But it would be unsafe  to  overlook  the  fact
that all judicial minds may not react in the same way to the  said  evidence
and it is not unusual that evidence which  appears  to  be  respectable  and
trustworthy to one Judge may not appear to be  respectable  and  trustworthy
to another Judge. That explains why in some cases courts of  appeal  reverse
conclusions of facts recorded by the trial  Court  on  its  appreciation  of
oral evidence. The knowledge that another view is possible on  the  evidence
adduced in a case acts as  a  sobering  factor  and  leads  to  the  use  of
temperate language in recording judicial conclusions.  Judicial approach  in
such cases would always be based on the consciousness that one  may  make  a
mistake;  that  is  why  the  use  of  unduly  strong  words  in  expressing
conclusions, or the adoption of unduly strong  intemperate,  or  extravagant
criticism against the contrary view, which are often founded on a  sense  of
infallibility should always be avoided.  It is worth  noting  that  emphasis
was laid on sobriety, judicial poise and balance.


10.   In Alok Kumar Roy v. Dr. S. N. Sarma  and  Anr.,[3]  the  Constitution
Bench was dealing the issue whether a Judge of High Court can pass order  in
that capacity while he was working as Head of the Commission of enquiry  and
whether he can entertain writ petition and pass interim  order  while  being
at a  place which was not seat of High Court.  The learned Chief Justice  of
High Court while dealing with the matter commented on the Judge that he  had
passed  the  order  in  “unholy  haste  and  hurry”.   That  apart   certain
observations were made.  While not appreciating  the  said  remarks  in  the
judgment against a colleague, their Lordships opined that such  observations
even about the Judges of subordinate courts with the  clearest  evidence  of
impropriety are uncalled for in a judgment.  The Constitution Bench  further
proceeded to state that it is necessary to emphasise that  judicial  decorum
has to be maintained at all times and even where criticism is  justified  it
must be in language of utmost restraint, keeping always  in  view  that  the
person  making  the  comment  is  also  fallible.   Even   when   there   is
jurisdiction  for  criticism,  the  language   should   be   dignified   and
restrained.
11.   In Ishwar Chand Jain v High Court of Punjab and Haryana and Anr.[4]  ,
it  has  been  observed  that  while  exercising  control  over  subordinate
judiciary under Article 235 of the Constitution, the High Court is  under  a
Constitutional  obligation  to  guide  and  protect   subordinate   judicial
officers.

12.   In K. P. Tiwari v. State of Madhya Pradesh[5], the  High  Court  while
reversing the order passed by the  lower  Court  had  made  certain  remarks
about the interestedness and the motive of the lower Court  in  passing  the
impugned order.  In that  context  this  Court  observed  that  one  of  the
functions of the higher Court is either to modify  or  ser  aside  erroneous
orders passed by the lower Court.  It  has  been  further  observed  that  a
judge tries to discharge his duties to the  best  of  his  capacity.   While
doing so, sometimes, he is likely to err.  “It is well  said  that  a  judge
who has not committed an error is yet to  be  born”,  and  that  applies  to
judges at all levels  from  the  lowest  to  the  highest.   Sometimes,  the
difference in views of the higher and the lower courts is  purely  a  result
of a difference in approach and perception.  On such  occasions,  the  lower
courts are not necessarily wrong and the higher  courts  always  right.   It
has also to be remembered that  the  lower  judicial  officers  mostly  work
under  a  charged  atmosphere  and  are  constantly  under  a  psychological
pressure with all the contestants and their lawyers  almost  breathing  down
their necks – more correctly upto their nostrils.   They  do  not  have  the
benefit of a detached atmosphere of the higher courts to  think  coolly  and
decide patiently. Every error,  however  gross  it  may  look,  should  not,
therefore,  be  attributed  to  improper  motive.  It  is  possible  that  a
particular judicial officer may be consistently passing  orders  creating  a
suspicion  of  judicial  conduct  which  is  not  wholly  or   even   partly
attributable to innocent functioning. Even in such cases, the proper  course
for the higher court to adopt  is  to  make  note  of  his  conduct  in  the
confidential record of his work and to  use  it  on  proper  occasions.  The
judges in the higher courts have also a duty to ensure  judicial  discipline
and respect for the judiciary  from  all  concerned.  The  respect  for  the
judiciary is not enhanced when judges at  the  lower  level  are  criticised
intemperately and castigated publicly. No greater damage can be done to  the
administration of justice and  to  the  confidence  of  the  people  in  the
judiciary than when the judges of the higher courts  publicly  express  lack
of faith in the subordinate judges for one reason or the other. It  must  be
remembered that the officers  against  whom  such  strictures  are  publicly
passed, stand condemned for ever in the eyes of their  subordinates  and  of
the members of the public. No better device can  be  found  to  destroy  the
judiciary from within. The judges must, therefore, exercise  self-restraint.
There are ways and ways of expressing  disapproval  of  the  orders  of  the
subordinate courts but attributing motives to them is certainly not  one  of
them as that is the surest way to take the judiciary downhill.

13.   In Kasi Nath Roy v. State of Bihar[6]  it has been ruled that  in  our
hierarchical judicial system the appellate and revisional Courts  have  been
set up with the pre-supposition that the lower Courts  in  some  measure  of
cases can go wrong in decision making,  both on facts as also on  law.   The
superior Courts have  been  established  to  correct  errors  but  the  said
correction has to be done in a befitting manner maintaining the  dignity  of
the Court and independence of the judiciary.  It is the  obligation  of  the
higher Courts to  convey  the  message  in  the  judgment  to  the  officers
concerned  through  a  process  of   reasoning,   essentially,   persuasive,
reasonable,  mellow but clear and result orienting but rarely a rebuke.

14.   In Braj Kishore Thakur   v. Union of India[7] this  Court  disapproved
the practice of  passing  strictures  for  orders  against  the  subordinate
officers.   In that context the two-Judge Bench observed thus:-

           “No greater damage  can  be  caused  to  the  administration  of
           justice and to the confidence of people in judicial institutions
           when judges of higher courts publicly express lack of  faith  in
           the subordinate judges.  It has been said, time and again,  that
           respect for judiciary is  not  in  hands  by  using  intemperate
           language and by casting aspersions against lower judiciary.”


15.   In A. M. Mathur  v.  Pramod  Kumar  Gupta[8]  though  in  a  different
context immense emphasis was laid on judicial restraint and  discipline,  it
is appropriate to reproduce a passage from the said decision:-
                 “Judicial restraint and discipline are as necessary to the
           orderly  administration  of  justice  as   they   are   to   the
           effectiveness of the army.  The duty of restraint, this humility
           of function should be a constant  theme  of  our  judges.   This
           quality in decision making is as much necessary  for  judges  to
           command respect as to protect the independence of the judiciary.
            Judicial restraint  in  this  regard  might  better  be  called
           judicial respect; that is, respect by the judiciary.  Respect to
           those who come before the Court  as  well  to  other  coordinate
           before the Court as well to other  coordinate  branches  of  the
           State, the Executive and  Legislature.   There  must  be  mutual
           respect.  When these qualities fail or when litigants and public
           believe that the judge has failed in these qualities, it will be
           neither good for the judge nor for the judicial process.”


16.   In Re; K, a Judicial officer,[9]  a two-Judge Bench of this Court  was
dealing about the adverse remarks contained in  the  judgment  of  the  High
Court disposing of a Criminal Misc. Petition under Section 482 of  the  Code
and the expunction sought by a  Metropolitan  Magistrate  was  aggrieved  of
such  remark.   After  discussing  that  aggrieved  judicial  officer  could
approach this Court for expunging the remarks the Bench  opined  under  what
circumstances  the  exercise  of  power  of  making  remarks  can  withstand
scrutiny.  The Bench  reiterated  the  view  expressed  in  State  of  Uttar
Pradesh v. Mohammad  Naim[10],  wherein  it  was  clearly  stated  that  the
overall test is that the  criticism  or  observation  must  be  judicial  in
nature  and  should  not  formally  depart  from  sobriety,  moderation  and
reserve.  Thereafter their Lordships referred to the conception of  judicial
restraint, the controlling power, the expectations of subordinate  judiciary
form the High Court, the statutory jurisdiction exercised by the High  Court
and eventually opined that the High Courts have to remember that  criticisms
and observations touching a subordinate  judicial  officer  incorporated  in
judicial   pronouncements   have   their   won   mischievous    infirmities.
Thereafter the Court proceeded to enumerate the infirmities.  They  read  as
follows:-
           “Firstly, the judicial officer is  condemned  unheard  which  is
           violative  of  principles  of  natural  justice.   A  member  of
           subordinate judiciary himself dispensing justice should  not  be
           denied this minimal natural justice  so  as  to  shield  against
           being condemned unheard.  Secondly,  the  harm  caused  by  such
           criticism or observation may be incapable of being undone.  Such
           criticism of the  judicial  officer  contained  in  a  judgment,
           reportable or not, is a  pronouncement  in  open  and  therefore
           becomes public.  The same Judge  who  found  himself  persuaded,
           sitting on judicial side, to make  observations  guided  by  the
           facts of a single case against a subordinate Judge  may  sitting
           on administrative  side  and  apprised  of  overall  meritorious
           performance of the subordinate Judge, may  irretrievably  regret
           his having made those observations on judicial side the  harming
           effect whereof even he himself cannot remove  on  administrative
           side.  Thirdly, human nature being what it is, such criticism of
           a judicial officer contained in the judgment of a  higher  Court
           gives the litigating party a sense of victory not only over  his
           opponent but also over  the  Judge  who  had  decided  the  case
           against him.  This is subversive of judicial  authority  of  the
           deciding Judge.  Fourthly, seeking expunging of the observations
           by judicial officer by filing an appeal or petition of  his  own
           reduces him to the status of  a  litigant  arrayed  as  a  party
           before the High Court or Supreme Court - a  situation  not  very
           happy from the point of view of the functioning of the  judicial
           system.”


 Thereafter the Bench laid down how the matter should be handled and  should
 be dealt with on  the  administrative  side  and  ultimately  expunged  the
 remarks.

17.   In Samya Sett v. Shambu Sarkar and Anr.,[11]  the  court  was  dealing
with the case where a judicial officer  was  constrained  to  approach  this
court for expunging the remarks made by Single Judge of the  High  Court  of
Calcutta  against  him.   Their  Lordships  referred  to  the  decisions  in
Mohammad Naim (supra), Alok Kumar Roy (supra), State of  M.  P.  v.  Nandlal
Jaiswal and Ors.[12] and certain  other  authorities  and  opined  that  the
stricture was totally inappropriate.  In that context the court referred  to
certain passages about the view expressed in other countries.  We  think  it
apt to reproduce them.
           “It is universally accepted and we are  conscious  of  the  fact
           that judges are also human beings.  They have  their  own  likes
           and dislikes; their preferences and prejudices.  Dealing with an
           allegation of bias against a Judge, in Linahan, Re, (1943) 138 F
           IInd 650, Frank J. stated;


                 “If, however, ‘bias’ and ‘partiality’ be  defined  to  mean
                 that total absence of preconceptions in  the  mind  of  the
                 judge, then no one has ever had a fair trial,  and  no  one
                 ever will.  The human mind, even at infancy,  is  no  blank
                 piece of paper.  We are born with predispositions  and  the
                 processes  of  education,  formal   and   informal   create
                 attitudes which precede reasoning in  particular  instances
                 and which, therefore, by definition are prejudices.”


      Justice John Clarke has once stated;


           “I have never known any judges, no  difference  how  austere  of
           manner, who discharged their judicial duties in an atmosphere of
           pure, unadulterated reason.   Alas!  we   are  ‘all  the  common
           growth of the Mother Earth’ – even those of us who wear the long
           robe.”


18.   In State of Bihar v. Nilmani Sahu and Anr.[13] a sitting judge of  the
Patna High Court had approached  this  Court  for  expunction  of  the  some
observations made by this Court in disposing of  a  special  leave  petition
arising out of a land acquisition proceeding.  A Bench  of  this  Court  had
used the expression “We find that  the  view  taken  by  the  learned  Singh
Judge, Justice P. K. Dev, with due respect,  if  we  can  say  so,  is  most
atrocious”.  The learned Single Judge had treated this to be  stigmatic  and
approached this Court and raised a contention that it was not necessary  for
the decision.  A two-Judge Bench of this Court  after  hearing  the  learned
counsel for the parties and considering the judgment of  this  Court  opined
the expression used in the judgment was  wholly  inappropriate  inasmuch  as
when this Court uses an expression against the judgment of  the  High  Court
it must be in keeping with dignity of the person concerned.  Eventually  the
said observations were deleted.

19.   From the aforesaid enunciation of law it is quite clear that for  more
than four decades this Court has been  laying  emphasis  on  the  sacrosanct
duty of a Judge of a superior Court how to employ the language  in  judgment
so that a message to  the  officer  concerned  is  conveyed.   It  has  been
clearly spelt out that  there  has  to  be  a  process  of  reasoning  while
unsettling the judgment and such reasoning are to be reasonably stated  with
clarity and result orientation.   A  distinction  has  been  lucidly  stated
between a message and a rebuke.  A Judge is  required  to  maintain  decorum
and sanctity which are inherent in judicial discipline  and  restraint.    A
judge functioning at any  level has  dignity  in  the  eyes  of  public  and
credibility of the entire system is dependent on use of  dignified  language
and sustained restraint,         moderation and sobriety.   It is not to  be
forgotten  that  independence  of  judiciary   has   an   insegregable   and
inseparable  link  with  its  credibility.   Unwarranted  comments  on   the
judicial officer creates a dent in the  said  credibility  and  consequently
leads to some kind of erosion and affects the conception  of  rule  of  law.
The sanctity of decision making process should not be confused with  sitting
on a pulpit  and  delivering  sermons  which  defy  decorum  because  it  is
obligatory  on  the  part  of  the  superior  Courts  to  take  recourse  to
correctional measures.   A reformative method can be taken  recourse  to  on
the administrative side.  It is condign to state it should be  paramount  in
the mind of a Judge of superior Court that a Judicial officer  projects  the
face of the judicial system and the independence of judiciary at the  ground
reality level and derogatory remarks against a judicial officer would  cause
immense harm to him individually (as the expunction of the remarks later  on
may  not  completely  resuscitate  his  reputation)  but  also  affects  the
credibility of  the  institution  and  corrodes  the  sacrosanctity  of  its
zealously cherished philosophy.    A  judge  of  a  superior  Court  however
strongly he may feel about the unmerited and fallacious order passed  by  an
officer, but is  required  to  maintain  sobriety,  calmness,  dispassionate
reasoning and poised restraint. The concept of loco parentis has to  take  a
foremost place in the mind to keep at bay any uncalled for  any  unwarranted
remarks.
20.   Every judge has to remind himself about the aforesaid  principles  and
religiously adhere to them.   In this regard it would not be  out  of  place
to sit in the time machine  and  dwell  upon  the  sagacious  saying  of  an
eminent author who has said that there is a distinction between  a  man  who
has command over ‘Shastras’ and  the  other  who  knows  it  and  puts  into
practice. He who practises them can alone be called  a   ‘vidvan’.    Though
it was told in a different context yet  the  said  principle  can  be  taken
recourse to, for one may know  or  be  aware  of  that  use  of  intemperate
language should be avoided in judgments but  while  penning  the   same  the
control over the  language  is  forgotten  and  acquired  knowledge  is  not
applied to the arena of practice.  Or to put it  differently  the  knowledge
stands still  and  not  verbalised  into  action.   Therefore,  a  committed
comprehensive endeavour has to be made to put the  concept  to  practice  so
that it is concretised and fructified and the  litigations  of  the  present
nature are avoided.
21.    Coming  to  the  case  at  hand  in  our   considered   opinion   the
observations,  the  comment  and  the   eventual   direction   were   wholly
unwarranted and uncalled for.  The learned  Chief  Judicial  Magistrate  had
felt that the due  to  delay  and  other  ancillary  factors  there  was  no
justification to exercise the power under Section 156 (3) of the Code.   The
learned Single Judge, as is manifest, had  a  different  perception  of  the
whole  scenario.   Perceptions  of  fact  and  application  of  law  may  be
erroneous but that never warrants such kind of observations and  directions.
 Regard being had to the aforesaid we  unhesitatingly  expunge  the  remarks
and the direction which have been  reproduced  in  paragraph  three  of  our
judgment.   If  the  said  remarks  have  been  entered  into   the   annual
confidential roll of the judicial officer the  same  shall  stand  expunged.
That apart a copy of the order be sent by the Registrar  of  this  Court  to
the Registrar General of the High Court of Allahabad to  be  placed  on  the
personal file of the concerned judicial officer.

22.   The appeal is allowed accordingly.

                              ............................................J.
                                                          [DR. B.S. Chauhan]






                              ............................................J.
                                                               [Dipak Misra]

New Delhi;
May 17, 2012.


































      -----------------------
[1]    2007 ALJ (1) 221
[2]    AIR 1963 SC 1728
[3]    AIR 1968 SC 453
[4]    AIR 1988SC 1395
[5]    AIR 1994 Sc 1031
[6]    AIR 1991 SC 3240
[7]    1997 SCR 420
[8]    AIR 1990 SC 1737
[9]    AIR 2001 SC 1972
[10]   AIR 1964 SC 703
[11]   AIR 2005 SC 3309
[12]    1987 1 SCR 1
[13]   (1999) 9 SCC 211