Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
V.P. KUMARAVELU
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE BAR COUNCIL OF INDIA,NEW DELHI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/02/1997
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, SUJATA V. MANOHAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 4TH DAY OF FEBRUARY, 1997
Present:
Hon’ble Mr. Justice S.C. Agrawal
Hon’ble Mrs. Justice Sujata V. Manohar
A.T.M. Sampath and V. Balaji, Advs. for the appellant
A. Mariarputham and Ms. Aruna Mathur and V.
Krishnamurthy, Advs. for the Respondent Nos. 2-3
J U D G M E N T
The following Judgment of the Court was delivered:
Mrs. Sujata V. Manohar, J.
These appeals arise from a common order dated 15.5.1986
passed by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of
India in D.C.I.T. Case Nos.48 and 49 of 1985. These two
cases pertain to the appellant and were transferred to the
appellant and were transferred to the Disciplinary Committee
of the Bar Council of India under the provisions of Section
36B(1) of the Advocates Act, 1961 as the Disciplinary
Committee of the Bar Council of Tamil Nadu could not dispose
of these cases within the prescribed period of one year.
On or about 21st of October, 1978, the appellant was
appointed as City Government Pleader in all the Civil Courts
constituted in Madras other than the High Court of Madras.
The work was spread over several courts in Madras and the
appellant as the city Government Pleader was required to
conduct all the civil matters pending in the civil courts of
Madras except the High Court, on behalf of the Government
and also to give his opinion on these matters from time to
time when required. The appellant was allowed the assistance
of juniors who were not appointed by the Government. The
respondent was provided with staff.
The first complaint which was filed by the Commission
and Secretary, Government of Tamil Nadu against the
appellant before the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar
Council of Tamil Nadu bearing D.C. Case No. 48/1985 was in
respect of Suit No.400 of 1978 on the file of the City Civil
Court at Madras. The Government Pleader was instructed to
appear on behalf of the State Government in that case. The
Memo of Appearance had been filed by the earlier Government
Pleader. The records of the case had been sent to the Office
of the Government Pleader and he had also been asked to
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prepare a written statement. However, when the appellant was
appointed as Government Pleader, a fresh Memo of Appearance
on his behalf had not been filed in the said suit nor were
the papers put up before him. As a result, on 28.6.1979, the
suit was decreed ex parte against the State. An application
was thereafter moved by the appellant to set aside the ex
parte order. The court set aside the ex parte order on
condition that the Government should pay Rs.20/- as costs.
However, the cost was not deposited. As a result the
application to set aside the ex parte order was dismissed on
27-9-1979. Consequently the suit was decreed ex parte with
costs.
This suit had been filed by the Travancore Textiles
Pvt. Ltd. against the State of Tamil Nadu relating to a
lease of land admeasuring 1240 sq.ft. forming part of a
channel. The plaintiff had prayed for a declaration that the
annual rent of Rs.3609.66 as also the Municipal taxes levied
were illegal. The plaintiff had also made a prayer for
refund of Rs.25,575.40 with interest at the rate 12% p.a.
and for a further declaration that he need not pay any rent
after 30.6.1974. The complainant alleged that as a result of
the gross negligence on the part of the appellant the
Government of Tamil Nadu had suffered substantial loss.
The appellant contended that since the office staff had
not put up the papers of this case before him, it was
through inadvertence that the suit was decreed ex parte. The
Bar Council of India has, however, noted that at the time
when an application for setting aside the ex parte order was
filed the appellant must have known about the pendency of
the case, and the serious consequences that would follow if
the order for payment of costs were not complied with. The
Bar Council has held that for this lapse the appellant
cannot raise the plea that the staff was negligent. Now,
although the application for setting aside the ex parte
order is filed by the appellant, it is not clear from the
record whether the appellant had personally appeared in
court for setting aside the ex parte order or was personally
aware of or was appraised of the order of costs which had
been while setting aside the ex parte order.
In fact, the Bar Council of India has noted mitigating
circumstance which go to show that blame cannot be attached
solely to the appellant. It has noted that from the
correspondence which is brought on record, it is clear that
at no point of time the papers pertaining to the case were
placed before the appellant except for moving an application
for setting aside the ex parte order. It is also not known
whether the application was actually moved by the appellant
himself or through a junior. It is not clear whether the
order which was passed on this application for payment of
costs was brought to the notice of the appellant either. The
Bar Council has also noted that after the summons in the
case was served on the State of Tamil Nadu through the
Secretary to the Government of Tamil Nadu in June 1978, a
letter was sent on 27th of June, 1978 by the then Government
Pleader. Thereafter the Collector of Madras vide his letter
dated 20th of September, 1978, sent details and office
remarks on the plaintiff’s claim. At this time the appellant
was not Government Pleader. These papers were received by
his predecessor who made an endorsement on the letter of the
Collector of Madras to the effect that remarks/statements be
prepared. It is also not clear to whom this matter was
assigned. According to the distribution of work, copy of
which has been placed on record by the appellant, it was the
duty of G. Jagannathan, the then Assistant to submit the
records of the case of the City Government Pleader for
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preparation of the written statement. In the letter
addressed by the Collector of Madras he had directed the
Executive Deputy Tehsildar, Egmore to meet the Government
advocate with the concerned file and to render necessary
assistance in preparing the draft written statement. But it
appears that no one attended the office of the Government
Pleader with the concerned file for preparing the written
statement.
After the appellant took charge as the Government
Pleader, he had also notified that representatives of the
departments of the Government should remain present
personally with files on various dates of hearing so that
suitable instruction can be made available to the Government
Pleader for conducting the case. But this instruction also
does not seem to have been followed. It is in these
circumstances that the case of the State went unrepresented.
The Bar Council has said that the office staff of the
appellant was also responsible for misleading the appellant
and keeping him in the dark. The Government also did not
care to depute a responsible officer to attend the office of
the Government Pleader.
After noting these circumstance the Bar Council of
India has imposed a "lighter" punishment of severe reprimand
after noting that the appellant is a fairly senior advocate
in the State of Tamil Nadu and has a good reputation and a
good standing at the Bar.
The next complaint No.17 of 1984 is in respect of a
suit filed by an employee of the Directorate of Education of
the State of Tamil Nadu challenging his date of birth.
Summons was forwarded to the appellant along with a letter
date 24.9.1979 informing him that the date of hearing in the
case was 10.10.1979. There is an endoresment made by the
office of the Government Pleader on that letter. Thereafter
another letter of 25.9.1979 was received by the office of
the Government Pleader from the Directorate of Education,
Madras on which an endorsement was made, "remarks/written
statement to be prepared". These remarks are in the same
handwriting in which the endoresment on the previous letter
is made. However, no memorandum for appearance was filed in
that suit on behalf of the State of Tamil Nadu. On
26.10.1979 an ex parte decree came to be passed in that
suit.
The appellant has contended that the office had not put
up these papers before him. Therefore, there had been a
lapse in attending to this case. Here also the Bar Council
of India has accepted that there was no deliberate lapse on
the part of the appellant. His only lapse was not to have
kept the office in order. The Bar Council has held, "It may
be that due to rush of work office might have kept him in
dark and the papers might not have been put up......". The
finding against the appellant, therefore, is that he was not
able to control his office on account of rush of work and
also because the staff which was allotted to him had been
negligent in the performance of its duties and had not put
up the papers in the concerned cases before him to enable
him to take appropriate action. The appellant has been held
guilty of "constructive negligence", and the Bar Council of
India has reprimanded him.
Looking to all the circumstances the appellant was
negligent as he had failed to attend to the two cases. His
client had to suffer ex parte decrees. There is, however, no
finding of any mala fides on the part of the appellant or
any deliberate inaction on his part in not attending to the
two cases. Will his negligence or "constructive negligence"
as the respondent-Bar Council puts it, amount to
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professional misconduct? Whether negligence will amount to
professional misconduct or not will depend upon the facts of
each case. Gross negligence in the discharge of duties
partakes of shades of delinquency and would undoubtedly
amount to professional misconduct. Similarly, conduct which
amounts to dereliction of duty by an advocate towards his
client or towards his case would amount to professional
misconduct. But negligence without moral turpitude or
delinquency may not amount to professional misconduct.
In the case of In re a vakil (1926 ILR 49 Mad. 523),
Coutts Trotter, C.J., said, "negligence by itself is not
professional misconduct; into that offence there must enter
the element of moral delinquency. Of that there is no
suggestion here, and we are, therefore, able to say that
there is no case to investigate, and that no reflection
adverse to his professional honour rests upon Mr.M." In the
case of P.D. Khandekar v. Bar Council of Maharashtra & Ors.
(AIR 1984 SC 110 at 113), this Court said, "There is a world
of difference between the giving of improper legal advice
and the giving of wrong legal advice. Mere negligence
unaccompanied by any moral delinquency on the part of a
legal practitioner in the exercise of his profession does
not amount to professional misconduct...........For and
advocate to act towards his client otherwise than with
utmost good faith is unprofessional. When an advocate is
entrusted with a brief he is expected to follow norms of
professional ethics and try to protect interests of his
client in relation to whom he occupies a position of trust.
Counsel’s paramount duty is to the client. When a person
consults a lawyer for his advice he relies upon his
requisite experience, skill and knowledge as a lawyer and
the lawyer is expected to give proper and dispassionate
legal advice to the client for the protection of his
interests".
In the present case, there is failure on the part of
the appellant to discharge his duties towards his client.
This failure, however, is not deliberate. It is on account
of heavy pressure of work coupled with lack of diligence on
the part of his staff as well as on the part of his client
in not sending a responsible person with papers to the
office of the Government pleader. However, while the
appellant cannot be held responsible for his client’s
failure to attend the office, the appellant cannot shift the
blame entirely on his staff. As the head of the office it
was his responsibility to make sure that the work is
properly attended to and the staff performs its functions
properly and diligently. The appellant has, therefore,
rightly been held guilty of negligence. However, in the
absence of any moral turpitude or delinquency on his part,
we cannot sustain the finding of the Bar council of India
that his conduct in the facts and circumstances of this case
amounts to professional misconduct. In fact the various
mitigating circumstances have been noted by the Bar council
of India itself. The negligence on the part of the appellant
in these circumstances cannot be construed as professional
misconduct.
The appeals are, therefore, allowed. There will,
however, be no order as to costs.