Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BAR COUNClL OF MAHARASHTRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
M. V. DABHOLKAR ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT13/08/1975
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
BENCH:
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
MATHEW, KUTTYIL KURIEN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
GUPTA, A.C.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION:
1975 AIR 2092 1976 SCR (1) 306
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1976 SC 578 (27)
RF 1976 SC2602 (20)
E 1980 SC 856 (14)
RF 1981 SC 116 (17)
R 1981 SC 344 (48)
RF 1981 SC 477 (3,5)
R 1982 SC 149 (606,963)
RF 1985 SC 28 (30)
ACT:
Advocates Act, 1961-Sections 37 and 38 Scope of-"Pelson
aggrieved" if a State Bar Council could be a "person
aggrieved".
HEADNOTE:
The State Bar Councils created by the Advocates Act,
1961 have been entrusted with the functions inter alia of
entertaining and determining cases of misconduct against
advocates on their rolls and to safeguard their rights,
privileges and interests. The Bar Council of India which is
a national body created by the Act is entrusted with the
work of laying down standards of professional conduct and
etiquette and overseeing the functioning of the State Bar
Councils. Under s. 35 of the Act, if a State Bar Council,
either on receipt of a complaint or otherwise has reason to
believe that any advocate on its roll has been guilty of
professional or other misconduct, it shall refer the case to
its Disciplinary Committee which, after due inquiry may
impose certain penalties. An appeal from the decision of the
State Bar Council lies to the Bar Council of India. Any
"person aggrieved" by an order of the Disciplinary Committee
of the Bar Council of India may, under s. 38, appeal to the
Supreme Court. In exercise of the Powers conferred by the
Act the Bar Council of India framed rules relating to
professional conduct and etiquette, r. 36 of which says that
advocates shall not solicit work or advertise themselves.
The State Bar Council, in the present case, issued
notices to the respondents suo motu alleging that they stood
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at the entrance of the court house at the Presidency
Magistrate’s Court, Fort Bombay and solicited work etc., and
that the said act amounted to professional and/or other
misconduct. ’the Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar
Council found the respondents guilty of conduct which
absolutely lowered the reputation of the Bar in the eyes of
the public and suspended them from practising as advocates.
The respondents’ appeal to the Bar Council of India having
been allowed, the State Bar Council has come up in appeal to
this Court under s. 38. Before the Bar Council of India the
State Bar Council had not appeared. F
On the question whether the State Bar Council is a
"person aggrieved,"
Allowing the appeals, Held:
^
[By the full Court],
The State Bar Council is an "aggrieved person" to
maintain an appeal under the Act.
per Ray, C.J., Khanna, Mathew, Gupta and Murtaza Fazal Ali,
JJ):
(1) The Bar Council is a "person aggrieved" because (i)
the words "person aggrieved" in the Act are of wide import
in the context of the purpose and provisions of the statute
and should not be subjected to a restricted interpretation
of possession or denial of legal rights or burdens or
financial interests. In disciplinary proceedings before the
Disciplinary Committee there is no lis and there are no
parties. The word ’person’ will embrace the Bar Council
which represents the Bar of the State; (ii) the Bar Council
represents the collective conscience of the standards of
professional conduct and etiquette. The Bar Council acts as
the protector of the purity and dignity of the profession;
(iii) the function of the Bar Council in entertaining
complaints against advocates indicates that the Bar Council
is interested in the proceedings for the vindication of
discipline. dignity and decorum of the profession; (iv) when
the Bar Council ini-
307
tiates proceedings by referring eases of misconduct to the
Disciplinary Committee, the Bar Council, in the performance
of its function under the Act, is interested in the task of
seeing that the advocates maintain proper standards and
etiquette of the profession and (v) the Bar Council is
vitally concerned with the decision, in the context of its
functions. The Bar Council will have a grievance if the
decision prejudices the maintenance of standards of
professional conduct and ethics. [315G: 316D-G]
(2) (a) The Bar Council acts as the sentinel of
professional code of conduct and is vitally interested in
the rights and privileges of the advocates as well as the
purity and dignity of the profession. [316A-B]
(b) The grievance of the Bar Council is to be looked at
purely from the point of view of standards of professional
conduct and etiquette. If any decision of the Disciplinary
Committee of the Bar Council of India is according to the
State Bar Council such as will lower the standards and
imperil the high traditions and values in the profession the
State Bar Council is an "aggrieved person" to safeguard the
interests of the public, the interests of the profession and
the interests of the Bar. [316B-C]
(3) The most significant feature in the matter of
initiation of proceedings before the Disciplinary Committee
is that no litigant and no member of the public can
straightaway commence disciplinary proceedings against an
advocate It is the Bar Council of a State which initiates
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the disciplinary proceedings. There is no lis in proceedings
before the Disciplinary Committee The Bar Council, in
placing a matteu. before the Disciplinary Committee, does
not act as a prosecutor in a criminal case. A complainant
who prefers a complaint against an advocate is not like a
plaintiff in a civil suit. The Bar Council may act on its
own initiative on information which has come to its notice
in the course of its duties. There is no party to the
disciplinary proceedings because the Bar Council, the
Attorney General, the Advocate General act in protecting the
interests of advocates and the interests of’ the public. In
so acting there is no conflict between the advocate and any
other person because it is professional conduct,
professional etiquette, professional ethics, professional
morality, which are to be upheld. transgression of which
results in reprimanding the advocate or suspending him from
practice or removing his name from the roll. [314B-F]
Adi Pherozshah Gandhi v. H. M. Seervai, Advocate
General of Maharashtra. Bombay [1971] I S.C.R. 863, referred
to
Beg J. (concurring):
(1) There is no objection to a participation of a State
Bar Council in its executive capacity in a disciplinary
proceeding against an advocate on its roll either at the
initial or at the appellate stages. Before it can become a
"person aggrieved" by an order against which it could
appeal, there must have been a lis or a dispute to be
decided which gives rise to the order complained of. To such
a "lis" the State Bar Council, in its executive capacity,
must be deemed to be a party. There seems to be no legal
obstacles in the way of its separate representation even
before its own Disciplinary Committee. Its right to appeal
as a "person aggrieved" is squarely covered by the
provisions of ss. 37 and 38 of the Act. In the present case
the respondents themselves treated the Bar Council as a
party interested in the lis when they impleaded the State
Bar Council as a respondent in their appeals to the Bar
Council of India. Its statutory right to appeal under s. 38
is not affected by the mere fact that it did not put in
appearance before the Bar Council of India. [319D-G]
(2) The State Bar Council operates through its
committees. Each committee has distinct and separable
functions. Each could be said to have a "persona" and an
identity of its own, which is distinguishable from that of
the Bar Council as a whole [317G]
3 (a) If the Bar Council has a separable interest as a
guardian of the rights and privileges of the members of the
Bar, specifically mentioned by s. 6(1)(d) of the Act. there
is no reason why a right to represent this interest before
its
308
own Disciplinary Committee as well as before the Bar Council
of India, on an A appeal under s. 37 of the Act, or., on
further appeal to this Court under s. 38 of the Act should
be denied to it. [318C-D]
4(a) When the State Bar Council can have locus standi
and rights of a "person aggrieved" affected by the results
of such proceedings there is no reason why it should not be
in the position of a party lo a lis or dispute’ between
itself and the allegedly delinquent advocate. [318D-E]
(b) The term ’lis’ is not confined to litigation by
means of a suit in a court of law. [318E]
Butler v. Mountgarret 7 H.L. Ca. 641 and B. Johnson &
Co. (Builders) v. Minister of Health [1947] 2 All. E.R. 395
399, referred to.
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5. The State Bar Council in its executive capacity acts
as the prosecutor through its Executive Committee. There is
no incongruity in its Disciplinary Committee representing
its judicial wing, functioning as an impartial judge whose
decisions are binding upon the State Bar Council. It is a
"person aggrieved" within the meaning of that expression
used in ss. 37 and 38 of the Act. [318G-H]
Krishna Iyer, J. (concurring):
(1) The Bar is not a private guild, like that of
’barbers, butchers and candlestick-makers’ but, a public
institution committed to public justice and pro bono publico
service. The grant of a monopoly licence to practice law is
based on three assumptions; (i) there is a socially useful
function for the lawyer to perform; (ii ) the lawyer is a
professional person who will perform that function; and
(iii) his performance as a professional person is regulated
by himself and more formally, by the profession as a whole.
The central function that the legal profession must perform
is nothing less than the administration of justice. [322G-H]
(2) In a developing country the pattern of public
oriented litigation better fulfils the rule of law if it is
to rule close to the rule of life. The Bar Council clearly
comes within this category of organisations when a lawyer is
involved.
(3) A case of professional misconduct is not a lis in
the British sense nor a case and controversy in the American
meaning. It is a public investigation about misconduct by
one belonging to a public profession where every member of
the Bar with a reputation to lose has a stake and everyone
concerned with the justice administration is interested.
’the Bar has a share in being the sentinel on the qui vive
when the legal dykes of right and justice are breached by
authoritarianism or citizen wrongdoing. [323F-Gl
(4) The possible apprehension that widening legal
standing with a public connotation may unloose a flood of
litigation which may overwhelm the judges is misplaced
because public resort to court to suppress public mischief
is a tribute to the justice system. In this case to grant an
exclusionary windfall on the respondents is to cripple the
Bar Council in its search for justice and insistence on
standards. [326B] G
A. P. Gandhi v. H. M. Seeravai, [1971] 1 S.C.R. refered
to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1461
to 1468 of 1 974.
From the Judgment and order dated the 14th April, 1974
of the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India,
New Delhi. in C. Appeals Nos. 15 to 19, 21, 22 and 25 of
1973 respectively. H
V. S. Desai, Vimal Dave and Kailash Mehta, for the
appellant (in all the appeals).
309
M. V. Dabolkar, for the respondent (In C. A. No.
1461/74).
Z. F. Bootwala and Urmila Sirur, for the respondent (In
C. A. Nos. 1462-64/74) . V. N. Ganpule and V. H. Dixit, for
the respondent (In C. A. No. 1465/74).
K. G. Mandalia, for the respondent (In C. A. No.
1466/74).
E. Udayarathallam and A. K. Doshi, for the respondent
(In C.A. No. 1467/ 74).
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D. K. Raisinghani, for the respondent (In C.A. No.
1468/74).
K. K. Sinha and S. K. Sinha, for the Bihar State Bar
Council.
D. V. Patil and K. Hingorani, for the Bar Council of
India.
The Judgment of A. N. RAY, C.J., H. R. KHANNA, K. K.
MATHEW, A. C. GUPTA AND S. M. FAZAL ALl, was delivered by A.
N. RAY, C.J., M. BEG and V. R. KRISHNA IYER, JJ. gave
separate opinions.
RAY, C.J.-These appeals were placed before this Bench
for consideration of the question whether the Bar Council of
a State is "a person aggrieved" to maintain an appeal under
section 38 of the Advocates Act, 1961 hereinafter called the
Act.
The Bar Council of Maharashtra on 8 August, 1964
considered a complaint received from the High Court against
the respondents and resolved that the complaint received
from the High Court against the respondents be referred to
the disciplinary committee. Another resolution was passed by
the Bar Council of Maharashtra on the same day whereby
Messrs Hotchand Advani, R. W. Adik and S. C. Chagla were
elected as members of the disciplinary committee to enquire
into the complaints.
The aforesaid disciplinary committee met on 19 March,
1965 and heard the advocates for the Bar Council of the
State of Maharashtra. After considering the papers placed
before the committee, it directed the Registrar to issue
notices under section 35(2) of the Act to the "parties
concerned including the Advocate-General". The committee
also expressed the opinion that "there is a prima facie case
of professional misconduct".
The Bar Council of Maharashtra on 18 May, 1965 issued
notices under section 35 of the Act to the respondents. The
notice was described as a suo motu inquiry against the
respondents. The notice proceeded with the recital that it
came to the notice of the Bar Council of Maharashtra that
the respondents stood at the entrance of the Court House at
the Presidency Magistrate’s Court, Esplanade, Fort Bombay
and solicited work and generally behaved at that place in an
undignified manner and the said acts amounted to
professional and/or other misconduct and the Bar Council
constituted disciplinary committee and the inquiry was
entrusted to the committee consisting of Messrs H. G.
Advani, R. W. Adik and S. C. Chagla.
310
The said disciplinary committee heard evidence upto 31
August, 1968. On 14 June, 1969, the Bar Council of
Maharashtra passed a resolution requesting the aforesaid
disciplinary committee to proceed with the inquiry which was
pending before them prior to 31 March, 1969.
The disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of
Maharashtra on 27 June, 1973 found the respondents guilty of
conduct which seriously lowered the reputation of the Bar in
the eyes of the public. The disciplinary committee directed
that the respondents would stand suspended from practising
as advocates for a period of three years. The suspension
orders were to be operative from 1 August 1973.
The respondents preferred appeals before the Bar
Council of India. In these appeals, the respondents
impleaded the Bar Council of Maharashtra as respondents. The
disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India on 14
April, 1974 allowed the appeals and set aside the orders of
the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of
Maharashtra. While setting aside the orders of the
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disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of Maharashtra,
the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India
stated as follows:-
"The Bar Council of Maharashtra has not appeared
even though they started the proceedings suo motu and
we do not pass any orders as to costs and we direct
each party will bear their costs. However, we have gone
through the evidence ourselves and also the same has
been placed in detail by the appellants. All that we
can say is that we expected the Bar Council of
Maharashtra to be represented in the ap- peal because
proceedings were started suo motu"
These statements of the disciplinary committee of the
Bar Council of India indicate that the Bar Council of
Maharashtra should have appeared before the disciplinary
committee of the Bar Council of India.
The scheme of the Advocates Act in short is as follows:
There are State Bar Councils. There is Bar Council of
India Every Bar Council is a body corporate.
The functions of a State Bar Council are inter alia to
entertain and determine cases of misconduct against
advocates on its roll and to safeguard the rights,
privileges and interests of advocates on its roll.
The functions of the Bar Council of India are inter
alia to lay down standards of professional conduct and
etiquette, to lay down the procedure to be followed by its
disciplinary committee and the disciplinary committee of
State Bar Councils, to safeguard the rights, privileges and
interests of advocates and to exercise general supervision
and control over State Bar Councils
Disciplinary committees are constituted by each Bar
Council. A Bar Council is required to constitute one or more
disciplinary committees each of which shall consist of three
persons of whom two shall
311
be persons elected by the Council from amongst its members
and the other shall be A person co-opted by the Council from
amongst advocates who possesss the qualifications specified
in the proviso to section 3(2) of the Act and are not
members of the Council, and the senior most advocate amongst
the members of a disciplinary committee shall be its
Chairman.
When the Executive Committees of a State Bar Council
and of the Bar- Council of India and an Enrolment Committee
of a State Bar Council and the legal education committee of
the Bar Council of India are to consist of members erected
by the Council from amongst its members, it is noticeable
that the disciplinary committees of Bar Council of State as
well as of Bar Council of India shall consist of three
persons of whom two shall be elected by the Council from
amongst its members and the other shall be a person co-opted
by the Council from advocates who are not otherwise members
of the Council.
Chapter V of the Act relates to the Conduct of
Advocates. Chap ter V contains sections 35 to 44. Section 35
states that where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise a
State Bar Council has reason to believe that any advocate on
its roll has been guilty of professional other misconduct,
it shall refer the case for disposal to its disciplinary
committee. The State Bar Council may, either of its own
motion or on application made to it by any person
interested, withdraw a proceeding pending before its
disciplinary committee and direct that inquiry to be made by
another disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council. The
disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council shall fix a
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date for the hearing of the case and shall cause a notice to
be given. to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate-
General of the State. The disciplinary committee of the
State Bar Council may make any of the following orders
namely, (a) dismiss the complaint, or where the proceedings
were initiated at the instance of the State Bar Council,
direct that the proceedings be filed, (b) reprimand the
advocate, (c) suspend the advocate for such period as it may
deem fit, (d) remove the name of the advocate from the state
roll of advocates.
Section 36 speaks of disciplinary powers of the Bar
Council of India and provides that where on receipt of a
complaint or otherwise the Bar Council of India has reason
to believe that any advocate whose name is not entered on
any State roll has been guilty of professional or other
misconduct, it shall refer the case for disposal to its
disciplinary committee. The disciplinary committee of the
Bar Council of India may either of its own motion or on a
report by any State Bar Council or on an application made to
it by any person interested, withdraw for inquiry before
itself any proceeding for disciplinary action against any
advocate pending before the disciplinary committee of any
State Bar Council and dispose of the same.
Section 37 speaks of appeal to the Bar Council of
India. This section states that any person aggrieved by an
order of the disciplinary
312
committee of a State Bar Council or the Advocate-General of
the state may, within sixty days of the date of
communication of the order, prefer an appeal to the Bar
Council of India.
Section 38 provides for appeal to the Supreme Court.
Section 38 states that any person aggrieved by an order made
by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India
under section 36 or section 37 or the Attorney-General of
India or the Advocate-General of the State, as the case may
be, may prefer an appeal to the Supreme Court.
Section 49 of the Act provides that the Bar Council of
India may make rules for discharging its functions under the
Act and in particular such rules may prescribe inter alia
the standards of professional conduct and etiquette to be
observed by advocates. The Bar Council of India in exercise
of the rule making power under section 49(c) of the Act on
10 and l l July, 1954, approved the rules of standards of
professional conduct and etiquette. The standards of
professional conduct and etiquette are described in five
sections. The first section deals with duty of advocates to
the Court. The second section speaks of duty of advocates to
the clients. The third section consists of rules regarding
duty of advocates to opponent. The fourth section prescribes
duties of advocates to colleagues. The fifth section lays
down restrictions on advocates on other employments.
The present appeals touch on Rule 36 of the Rules of
the Bar Council of India. Rule 36 is in fourth section under
the heading "duty to colleagues Rule 36 speaks that "an
advocate shall not solicit work or advertise either directly
or indirectly, whether by circular, advertisements, touts,
personal communications, interviews not warranted by
personal relations furnishing newspaper comments or
procuring his photograph to be published in connection with
cases in which he has been engaged or concerned.
The question for consideration is the meaning of the
words any person aggrieved by an order made by the
disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India"
occurring in section 38 of the Act. It is noticeable that in
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section 37, the Advocate-General of the State and in section
38, the Attorney-General or the Advocate-General of the
State, as the case may be, have been given specific rights
of appeal. These rights were introduced into the Act by
amendments made in the year 1974 by Amending Act 60 of 1973.
In Adi Pherozshah Gandhi v. H. M. Seervai, Advocate-
General of Maharashtra, Bombay(1), the question which fell
for consideration was whether the appeal filed by the
Advocate-General of Maharashtra before the Bar Council of
India was competent. The majority view was that the
Advocate-General of the State was not competent to file an
appeal to the Bar Council of India. In the Maharashtra case
(supra), the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council
was satisfied that that there was no reason to hold Adi
Pherozshah Gandhi guilty of professional misconduct or other
misconduct. The Advocate-General
(1) [1971] 1 S. C. R. 863.
313
of Maharashtra filed an appeal before the Bar Council of
India. The appellant objected to the locus standi of
Advocate-General before the Bar Council of India. That
objection was overruled and the appeal filed by the
Advocate-General was accepted by the disciplinary committee
of the Bar Council of India. The disciplinary committee of
the Bar Council of India held the advocate, Adi Pherozshah
Gandhi guilty of misconduct and suspended him from practice
for one year. The advocate preferred an appeal under section
38 of the Act to this Court. In view or majority decision,
the appeal filed by Adi Pherozshah Gandhi was accepted by
this Court on the ground that the Advocate-General of
Maharashtra was incompetent to file an appeal. It is in this
background that amendments have been introduced into
sections 37 and 38 of the Act conferring right of appeal on
the Advocate-General of State and the Attorney-General of
India under sections 37 and 38 respectively.
The respondents contended on the ruling of this Court
in Adi Pherozshah Gandhi s case (supra) that the Bar Council
of the State is not a person aggrieved to maintain an appeal
against a decision of its disciplinary committee for these
reasons. First, the Bar Council of a State is not an
aggrieved person because Bar Council has not suffered ally
legal grievance, and the decision of the Bar Council of
India has not deprived the Bar Council of a State of
anything. Second, the allegation that order of the
disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India is
wrongfully made does not by itself give any grievance to the
Bar Council of a State. The person must be aggrieved by the
order and not by the consequences which ensue. Third, it is
not the duty of the State Bar Council to attempt to set
right any alleged error of the disciplinary committee of the
Bar Council of India. The reason is that no such duty has
been imposed or cast by law on the Bar Council of a State.
Fourth, a person can be said to be aggrieved by an order
which is to his detriment, pecuniary or otherwise or causes
him some prejudice in some form or other. Fifth, the Bar
Council of a State is subordinate to Bar Council of India
and is, therefore, not competent to appeal against any
orders of the superior body. Finally, an appeal could have
been filed by the Advocate-General or the Attorney-General
of India who have the right to appeal but they have chosen
not to do so.
The scheme and the provisions of the Act indicates that
the constitution of State Bar Councils and Bar Council of
India is for one of the principal purposes to see that the
standards of professional conduct and etiquette laid down by
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the Bar Council of India are observed and preserved. The Bar
Councils therefore entertain cases of misconduct against
advocates. The Bar Councils are to safeguard the rights,
privilege and interests of advocates. The Bar Council is a
body corporate. The disciplinary committees are constituted
by the Bar Council. The Bar Council is not the same body as
its disciplinary committee. One of the principal functions
of the Bar Council in regard to standards of professional
conduct and etiquette of advocates is to receive complaints
against advocates and if the Bar Council has reason to
believe that any advocate has been guilty of professional or
other misconduct it shall refer the case for disposal to its
disciplinary committee. The Bar Coun-
314
cil of a State may also of its own motion if it has reason
to believe that any advocate has been guilty of professional
or other misconduct it shall refer the case for disposal to
its disciplinary committee. It is apparent that a State Bar
Council not only receives a complaint but is required to
apply its mind to find out whether there is any reason to
believe that any advocate has ben guilty of professional or
other misconduct. The Bar Council of a State acts on that
reasoned belief. The Bar Council has a very important part
to play first, in the reception complaints, second, in
forming reasonable belief of guilt of professional or other
misconduct and finally in making reference of the case to
its disciplinary committee. The initiation of the
proceedings before the disciplinary committee is by the Bar
Council of a State. A most Significant feature is that no
litigant and no member of the public can straightaway
commence disciplinary proceedings against an advocate. lt is
the Bar Council of a State which initiates the disciplinary
proceedings.
In finding out the meaning of the words "person
aggrieved by an order made by the disciplinary committee of
the Bar Council of India", two features are to be kept in
the fore-front. First, there is no lis in proceedings before
the disciplinary committee. When the disciplinary committee
exercises the power to reprimand the advocate, or suspend
the advocate from practice or remove the name of the
advocate, the committee does not decide a suit between the
parties. The Bar Council in placing a matter before the
disciplinary committee does not act as prosecutor in a
criminal case. A complainant who prefers a complaint against
an advocate is not like a plaintiff in a civil suit. The
complaint is examined by the Bar Council in order to find
out whether there is any reason to believe that any advocate
has been guilty of misconduct. ’The Bar Council may act on
its own initiative on information which has come to its
notice in the course of its duties. Second, there is no
party to the disciplinary proceedings. It is because the Bar
Council, the Attorney-General, the Advocate-General, as the
case may be, all act in protecting the interests of
advocates, the interests of the public. In so acting there
is no conflict between the advocate and another person. The
reason is that it is professional conduct, professional
etiquette, professional ethics, professional morality, which
are to be upheld, transgression of which results in
reprimanding the advocate of suspending him from practice or
removing his name from the roll.
With regard to the conduct of the advocates, the State
Bar Council plays an important part, vis-a-vis the
disciplinary committee constituted by the State Bar Council.
First, under section 35(1A) of the Act the State Bar Council
may either of its own motion or on an application made to it
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by any person interested, withdraw a proceeding pending
before its disciplinary committee and direct the inquiry to
be made by ant other disciplinary committee of the State Bar
Council. This indicates the watch that the State Bar Council
has to keep. Its task does not cease on placing a matter
before the disciplinary committee. This provision shows on
one hand the abiding interest of the State Bar Council in
the matter and on the other the duty of guarding the
professional ethics with which it is entrusted. Second,
under section 36(2) of the Act, a ’State Bar Council may
make a report to the Bar Council of India to
315
withdraw before the disciplinary committee of the Bar
Council of India any proceeding for disciplinary action
against any advocate pending before the disciplinary
committee of a State Bar Council. These provisions indicate
that after the State Bar Council has placed the matter
before its disciplinary committee, the Bar Council continues
its check on the proceedings. These courses of action are
procedural. These steps do not give the State Bar Council
any power to deal with the decisions of the disciplinary
committee. The reason why the State Bar Council is empowered
under the Act to withdraw proceedings from one disciplinary
committee and give it to another or to have the disciplinary
proceedings withdrawn from the State for determination by
the disciplinary committee of the Bal- Council of India is
that the State Bar Council is all the time interested in the
task of preserving the profession against impurities in the
standards of conduct. The Bar Council is the collective
representative of the lawyers, the public, in regard lo the
observance of professional ethics by persons belonging to
the noble profession.
The words ‘person aggrieved" are found in several
statutes. The meaning of the words "person aggrieved" will
have to be ascertained with reference to the purpose and the
provisions of the statute. Some times, it is said that the
words "person aggrieved" correspond to the requirement of
locus standi which arises in relation to judicial remedies.
Where a right of appeal to Courts against an
administrative or judicial decision is created by statute,
the right is invariably confined to a person aggrieved or a
person who claims to be aggrieved. The meaning of the words
"a person aggrieved" may vary according to the con text of
the statute. One of the meanings is that a person will be
held to be aggrieved by a decision if that decision is
materially adverse to him. Normally, one is required to
establish that one has been ’denied or deprieved of
something to which one is legally entitled in order to make
one "a person aggrieved". Again a person is aggrieved if a
legal burden is imposed on him. The meaning of the words a
"person aggrieved" is sometimes given a restricted meaning
in certain statutes which provide remedies for the
protection of private legal rights. The restricted meaning
requires denial or deprivation of legal rights. A more
liberal approach is required in the background of statutes
which do not deal with property rights but deal with
professional conduct and morality. The role of the Bar
Council under the Advocates Act is comparable to the role of
a guardian in professional ethics. The words "persons
aggrieved" in sections 37 and 38 of the Act are of wide
import add should not be subjected to a restricted
interpretation of possession or denial of legal rights or
burdens or financial interests. The test is whether the
words "person aggrieved" include "a person who has a genuine
grievance because an order has been made which prejudicially
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affects his interests". It has therefore, to be found out
whether the Bar Council has a grievance in respect of an
order or decision affecting the professional conduct and
etiquette.
The pre-eminent question is: what are the interests of
the Bal. Council? The interests of the Bar Council are the
maintenance of standards of professional conduct and
etiquette. The Bar Council has
316
no personal or pecuniary interest. the Bar Council has the
statutory A duty and interest to see that the rules laid
down by the Bar Council of India in relation to professional
conduct and etiquette are upheld and not violated. The Bar
Council acts as the sentinel of professional code of conduct
and is vitally interested in the rights and privileges of
the advocates as well as the purity and dignity of the
profession.
The interest of the Bar Council is to uphold standards
of professional conduct and etiquette in the profession,
which is founded upon integrity and mutual trust. The Bar
Council acts as the custodian of the high traditions of the
noble profession. The grievance of the Bar Council is to be
looked at purely from the point of view of standards of
professional conduct and etiquette. If any decision of the
disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India is
according to the State Bar Council such as will lower the
standards and imperil the high traditions and values in the
profession, the State Bar Council is an aggrieved person to
safeguard the interests of the public, the interests of the
profession and the interests of the Bar
The Bar Council is "a person aggrieved" for these
reasons First, the words "person aggrieved" in the Act are
of wide import in the context of the purpose and provisions
of the statute. In disciplinary proceedings before the
disciplinary committee there is no lis and there are no
parties. therefore, the word "person" will embrace the Bar
Council which represents the Bar of the State. Second, the
Bar Council is "a person aggrieved" because it represents
the collective conscience of the standards of professional
conduct and etiquette. The Bar Council acts as the protector
of the purity and dignity of the profession. Third, the
function of the Bar Council in entertaining complaints
against advocates is whn the Bar Council has reasonable
belief that there is a prima facie case of misconduct that a
disciplinary committee is entrusted with such inquiry. Once
an inquiry starts, the Bar Council has no control over its
decision. The Bar Council may entrust it to another
disciplinary committee or the Bar Council may make a report
to the Bar Council of India. This indicates that the Bar
Council is all the time interested in the proceedings for
the vindication of discipline, dignity and decorum of the
profession. Fourth, a decision of a disciplinary committee
can only be corrected by appeals as provided under the Act.
When the Bar Council initiates proceedings by referring
cases of misconduct to disciplinary committee, the Bar
Council in the performance of its functions under the Act is
interested in the task of seeing that the advocates maintain
the proper standards an(l etiquette of the profession.
Fifth, the Bar Council is vitally concerned with the
decision in the context of the functions of the Bar Council.
The Bar Council will have a grievance if the decision
prejudices the maintenance of standards of professional
conduct and ethics.
For these reasons we hold that the Bar Council is an
aggrieved person to maintain an appeal under the Act.
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The appeals will now be heard on merits by a Division
Bench.
317
BEG, J.-I not only concur with the conclusion reached
by My Lord the Chief Justice and the reasons given to
support it. but I think that we can and should hold that
there was actually a "lis" between tho Bar Council and the
allegedly delinquent Advocates who were hauled up before its
Disciplinary Committee, on complaints sent by the Executive
Committee of the State Bar Council, for what were said to be
acts of professional misconduct,
The learned Chief Justice has very clearly and
succinctly set out the reasons why a State Bar Council is a
"person aggrieved" entitled to appeal against orders in
disciplinary proceedings against members of the Bar of the
State. It represents the Bar of the State. It is the "keeper
of the conscience" and the guardian of the interests of
members of the Bar. It acts "as the protector of the purity
and dignity of the (‘ profession." Its function in relation
to disciplinary proceedings, is to entertain complaints
against Advocates, and, when there is a prima facie case of
misconduct, to initiate proceedings by sending the complaint
to its Disciplinary Committee. It has an interest in seeing
that correct decisions are given upon matters involving
allegations of misconduct against members of the Bar of the
State. My learned brother Krishna Iyer has indicated the
wide range and the social significance and dimensions of
this interest.
A State Bar Council is composed primarily of members
elected from amongst Advocates of a State. Its statutory
functions are given in Section 6 of the Advocates Act, 1961
(hereinafter referred to as ’the Act’). Amongst these, we
are especially concerned here with clauses (c) and (d) of
Section 6(t) of the Act, which read as follows:
(c) to entertain and determine cases of
misconduct against advocates on its roll;
(d) to safeguard the rights, privileges and
interests; of advocate on its roll;"
Under Section 9 of the Act, the State Bar Council
constitutes its Disciplinary Committee consisting of "three
persons of whom two shall be persons elected by the. Council
from amongst its members and the other shall be a person
elected by the Council from amongst Advocates who possess
the qualifications specified....". Under Section 10 it
elects an Executive Committee of five members and an
Enrolment Committee of three members. Thus, the State Bar
Council operates through its Committees. Each Committee has
distinct and separable functions. Each could, therefore, be
said to have a "persona" and an identity of its own which is
distinguishable from that of the Bar Council as a whole.
Each Committee, no doubt, acts for the Bar Council, but its
members are likely to be different although this is not
necessarily so. In any case, when the State Bar Council has
sent a case to its Disciplinary Committee, under Section 35
of the Act, that Committee proceeds as an independent and
impartial authority which tries a complaint and either
dismisses lt or directs proceedings to be filed, or, upon
finding an advocate guilty, punishes him by either
reprimanding him, suspending him from practice for a
specified period, or orders removal of his name
7-L 839 Sup CI/75
318
from its roll of advocates. Indeed, Section 42(1) of the Act
gives the Disciplinary Committee the powers of a Civil Court
under the Civil Procedure Code; and, Section 42(2) enacts
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that its proceedings shall be "deemed" to be judicial
proceedings for the purposes mentioned there.
At the trial of a complaint, opportunities to be heard
must be given to the Advocate General and to the Advocate
who is tried by it. This has to be done because there are
disputes and conflicting interests and points of view on
which the Disciplinary Committee has to give its decisions.
Tho Advocate General can appear either personally or through
an Advocate representing him. He presumably represents
public interest as well as the interests of the legal
profession of which he is the formal head in the State. It
is true that there is no provision in Section 35 of the Act
for impleading the State Bar Council which, on its executive
side, initiates the proceedings by sending the case to its
Disciplinary Committee. But, if the Bar Council has a
separable interest, as a guardian of the rights and
privileges of the members of the Bar specifically mentioned
by Section 6(1)(d) of the Act, there is no reason why I
right to represent this interest before its on Disciplinary
Committee well as before the Bar Council of India, on an
appeal under Section 37 of the Act, or, on the further
appeal to this Court under Section 38 of the Act, should be
denied to it. Neither Section 37 nor Section 38 of the Act
mention the State Bar Council as a separate entity.
Nevertheless if, as we are holding, it can have the locus
standi and rights of "person aggrieved", affected by the
results of such proceedings, I see no reason why we should
not say that in tho position of a party to a "lis" or a
dispute between itself and the allegedly delinquent Advocate
towards the decision of which the proceedings are directed.
The term "lis" is not confined to litigation by means
of a suit in a Court of law. In Butler v. Mountgarret it was
held that a "suit is not necessary to constitute lis". It
was pointed out there that "a family ..controversy capable
of being litigated is a lis mota’. In B. Johnson & Co.
(Builders) v. Minister of Health(2), Lord Greene, M.R. said:
‘"Lis implies the conception of an issue joined between two
parties, The decision of a lis.. is the decision of that
issue".
If the State Bar Council, acting through its through it
Executive Committee, has found a prima facie case to be send
and tried by its Disciplinary Committee, it performs the
functions of a prosecuting agency. lt does so i the
discharge of its duty to safeguard ’‘the rights, privileges
and interests’ of advocates as a whole on its roll which are
affected by the misconduct of an advocate. There arc,
therefore, triable issues between it and the; (, individual
Advocate accused of misconduct. lt seems to mc that we could
and should, therefore, hold that the State Bar Council, in
its executive capacity, act as the prosecutor through its
Executive Committee There is no incongruity in its
Disciplinary Committee, representing is judicial want"
functioning as an impartial Judge whose decisions ar..
binding upon the State Bar Council. If are were holding that
Bar Council, dissatisfied with a decision of its
Disciplinary Committee, can appeal against it, we her to, I
think, as its logical corollary, also hold that it is
(1) 7 H. L. Ca. 641. (2) [1947] 2 All.E. R. 39; At 399.
319
a party to a "lis". Our‘ opinion that it is a ’person
aggrieved", within the meaning of that expression as used in
Sections 37 and 38 of the Act, necessarily implies that.
The point of view stated above rests upon the
distinction between the two different capacities of the
State Bar Council; an executive capacity, in which it acts
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as the prosecutor through its Executive Committee, and a
quasi-judicial function, which it performs through s
Disciplinary Committee. If we can make this distinction, as
I think we can, there is no merger between the prosecutor
and the Judge here. If one may illustrate from another
sphere, when the State itself gets through it executive
agencies to prosecute and then though its judicial wing to
decide a case there is no breach of a rule of natural
justice. The prosecutor and the Judge could not be said to
have the some personality or approach just because both of
them represents different aspects or functions of the same
State.
For the reasons given above, I do not see any objection
to a participation of State Bar Council in its executive
capacity, in a disciplinary proceeding against an Advocate
on its roll, either at the initial or the appellate stages.
Before it can become a person aggrieved" by an order against
which it could appeal, there must have been a "lis" or a
dispute to be decided which gives rise to the order
complained of. To such a "lis" the State Bar Council, in its
executive capacity must be deemed to be a party. Apparently,
its interests are presumed to be sufficiently represented by
the Advocate General. Hence, it was not considered necessary
to provide for its separate representation by a notice to
be given by its Disciplinary Committee; is provided for in
the case of the Advocate General But, their seems to me to
be no legal obstacle in the way of its separate
representation, if. it so desires, even before its own
Disciplinary Committee. It certainly has notice of every
complaint whenever it send it to its Disciplinary Committee.
Its right to appeal in any event, as a "person aggrieved",
seems squarely covered by the provisions of Sections 37 and
38 of the Act. It may be mentioned here that the respondents
themselves treated the Bar Council as a party interested in
a "list", so that it could become a "person" aggrieved" by
the setting aside of the orders against respondents, when
they impleaded the State Bar Council as a respondent in
their appeals to the Bar Council India. Its statutory right
to appeal to this Court under Section 38 is not affected by
the mere fact that it did not put in appearance before the
Bar Council of India.
KRISHNA IYER, J.- My concurrence the opinion which has been
handed down by the learned Chief Justice is ordinarily
dissuasive of a separated long note, save when a fresh
perspective is to be presented or new frontiers are to be
drawn by doing so. Partially, my supplementary has this
apology.
The tow-day long arguments in this case have been devoted to
a construction of two simple words in common use forming the
320
expression ’person aggrieved’. Precedential erudition and
traditional approaches not withstanding, the key to tho
meaning of the expression in question lies in plain English
plus the social fell of the Status and the public commitment
of the legal profession, the regulation on which has been
achieved by the Advocates Act, 1961 (for short, the Act)
wherein the above words occur. Legal scholarship, to be
fruitful, must focus on the life-style of the law without
getting lost in mere logomachy.
The short question is as to whether the State Bar
Council is a person aggrieved’ within the meaning of s. 38
so that it has locus standi to appeal to this Court against
a decision of the Disciplinary Tribunal of the Bar Council
of India which, it claims, is embarrassingly erroneous and,
if left unchallenged, may frustrate the high obligation of
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maintaining standards of probity and purity and canons of
correct professional conduct among the members of the Bar on
its rolls.
I skip the facts as they have been 5 out in the
judgment of the armed Chief Justice, except to state. that a
number of advocates, who are ranged as respondents, had been
found guilty by the Disciplinary Tribunal of the State Bar
Council of unseemly soliciting but,. On appeal. the
disciplinary body of the National Bar Council, exonerated
them on certain view of ’professional conduct’ which
disturbed the State Bar Council and even the All-India Bar
Council, with the result that the former came upto this
Court in appeal and. the latter activity supported this
stand.
The hackneyed phrase, ’person aggrieved is not merely
of frequent occurrence m statutes and in the writ
jurisdiction but has come up for judicial consideration in
Anglo American and India courts in a variety of situations
and legislative settings. Notwithstanding the slippery
semantics of such legalese, the Indian legislative draftsmen
have continued to use them, out of linguistic allegiance to
the British art, and Indian Judges have frequently sought
interpretative light from English authorities of ancient
vintage. These ’borrowed’ drafting and interpretative
exercises arc sometimes inept when time and country change
and the context and text of the statute vary. I stress this
aspect since much of the time of the Courts in India is
consumed by massive, and sometimes mechanical, reliance on
exotic constructions and default in evolving legislative
simplicity and avoiding interpretative complexity. At a time
when our Courts are on trial for delayed disposals and
mystifying processes, this desideratum becomes all the more
urgent. Otherwise, why should decoding a single expression-
’person aggrieved’ take two days of learned length ?
Even. in England, so well-known a Parliamentary
draftsman as Francis Bennion has recently pleaded in the
Manchester Guardian against incomprensible law forgetting
’that it is fundamentally important in a free society that
the law should be readily ascertainable and reasonably
clear, and that otherwise it is oppressive and deprives
321
the citizen of one of his basic rights’. It is also
needlessly expensive and wasteful. Reed Dickerson, the
famous American Draftsman. said: ’lt cost the Government and
the public many millions of dollars annually’. The Renton
Committee, in England, has reported on drafting reform but
it is unfortunate that India is unaware of this problem and
in a post-Independence statute like the Advocates Act
legislators should still get entangled in these drafting
mystiques and judges forced lo play a linguistic game when
the country has an illiterate laity as consumers of law and
the rule of law is basic to our constitutional order.
Back to the issue. Is the State Bar Council a ’person
aggrieved’? No narrow. pedantic, technical or centenarian
construction can be blindly applied. On the other hand, a
spacious construction, functionally informed by the social
conscience and the salutary purpose of the enactment must
illumine the judicial effort. So viewed, the ample. import
and breath of meaning of the words ’person aggrieved’ will .
embrace the State Bar Council,for reasons which 1 shall
presently set out.
Each statute has a personality and a message. Judicial
interpretation is not bloodless and sterile exercise in
spinning subtle webs sometimes cobwebs, out of words and
phrases otherwise simples. but to unfold the scheme of the
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Legislation insightfully, sense its social setting and read
the plain intendment. This living approach can do justice to
law, We arc here concerned with a legislative outfit for a
national Bar, organising and prescribing its statutory
autonomy, elective structure, public functions, internal
regulation and ultimate appeal to the Supreme Court where
canons of good conduct have been allegedly breached by
delinquent lawyers. This conspectus will show what a vibrant
and responsible role the Bar Council has to play at the
State and national levels and any interpretation which will
detract from this supervisory status of the Bar Council will
be incongruous with the founding creed of the institution.
The paramount concern of the Bar Councils is the lawyer, the
public and professional responsibility. Anything that hurts
the health of this system is a social trauma, a legal
grievance, a special injury, for them. After all, ’lawyer-
power’ lasts not through peak incomes of a few and security
of statutory monopoly, but by the high comport and ethics of
the many, screening and weeding deviants and delinquents.
Let us get a glimpse of the great expectations about
The legal profession in society. Long ago, De Toqueville
trenchantly remarked that the profession of law.
"is the only aristrocratic element which can be
amalgamated without violence with natural elements of
democracy.... I cannot believe that a Republic could
subsist if the influence of lawyers in public business
did not increase in proportion to the power of the
people.
" He rightly stressed that ’lawyers belong to the people by
birth an. interest, to the aristocracy by habit and taste’.
Thus the profession is
322
the connecting link between the community and the
Administration given an enlightened, goal-oriented group
outgrowing its elitist mores indeed today lawyers are
recruited also from the lower brackets. India has huge
number of law men who can be a force. What Prof. Brabanti
observed about the Pakistan Bar has some, only some though,
relevance to India, and I quote:
"The sheer size of the legal community, strongly
organised into bar associations and closely allied with
equally strong courts has not only been a major source
for the diffusion and regeneration of norms generally,
but by weight of numbers has enabled the courts to
remain strong and has prevented the rise of
administrative lawlessness. There is s curious anomaly
here. The legal community, while often antagonistic to
government and constraining executive action, is
nevertheless closely identified normatively and
culturally with the bureaucratic elite. This
identification curiously coupled with health antagonism
actually enhances the strength of the legal community.
It derives popular support from its ostensible
opposition to Government and at the same time elicits
bureaucratic support in the community at large. It has
a net work of relationships in rural areas and the
cities.. In short, the legal community is a force to
be, reckoned with. It has challenged the executive
during and after martial law, it has defined efforts to
restrict court jurisdiction, it has compelled
justiciability of fundamental rights, it has forced
abrogation of several restrictive enactments. Is this
law as an impendiment to political development ? Is
this misallocation of scarce resources in the system?
Is this unproductive use of non productive man-power ?
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On the contrary, it seems to us that this is the Very
genius of political development."
Michael Hager, after quoting Prof. Brabanti, comments (in
his article in the American Bar Association Journal, January
1972, Vol. 58, on .The Role of Lawyers in Developing
Countries’)
"The legal profession has a unique opportunity to
effect change from within the political elite, to exert
pressure from without and to win over the general
public to development policies. And as Mihaly and
Nelson observed with respect to legal education, ’law
graduates usually fan out not only into legal practice
but also into responsible positions in business,
government and politics’."
The Bar is not a private guild, like that of ’barbers
butchers and candlestick-makers’ but, by bold contrast, a
public institution committed to public justice and pro bono
publico service. The grant of monoply licence to practice
law is based on three assumptions There is a socially useful
function for The lawyer to perform. (2) The lawyer is a
professional person who will perform that function, and (3)
His performance as a professional person is regulated by
himself and more normally, by the profession as a whole. The
central function
323
That the legal profession must perform is nothing less than
the administration of justice (’The Practice of Law is, a
Public Utility’ ‘The Lawyer, The Public and Professional
Responsibility’ by F. Raymond Marks et al-Chicago American
Bar Foundation, 1972, p.288-289). A glance at The functions
of the Bar Council, and it will be apparent that a rainbow
of public utility duties, including legal aid to the pour,
is cast on these bodies in the national hope that the
members of this monopoly will serve society and keep to
canons of ethics befitting an honourable order. If
pathological cases of member misbehaviour occur, the
reputation and credibility of the Bar suffer a mayhem and
who, out the Bar Council, is more concerned with and
sensitive to this potential disrepute The few black sheep
bring about? The official heads of the Bar i.e., the
Attorney General and the Advocates-General too are
distressed if a lawyer ’stoops to conquer’ by resort to
soliciting, touting and other corrupt practices.
I may now refer to A. P. Gandhi v. H. M. Seervai (1)
where diver gent opinions were delivered but all concurred
in treating the Bar Council as an ’aggrieved person’. The
earlier decision in Bhataraju (2) strikes a note in
consonance with this view. No hesitancy inhibits me from
hazarding the opinion that the social canvas must be spread
wide when making out the profile of a statute like the
Advocates Act for the good reason that the Bar has a share
in being the sentinel on the qui vive when the legal dykes
of Right and justice are breached by authoritarianism or
citizen-wrong- doing. Nor do I conceal my halfhorror at any
professional tribunal glossing over ’snatching briefs’ and
’dragging clients’-provided they are proved-as less than
gross misconduct. If the salt lose their savour, wherewith
shall they be salted ? However, I hasten to make it plain,
to avoid prejudice to the parties. that I totally desist
from pronouncing on the merits of tho evidence in this case.
One more point. A case of professional misconduct is
not a lis in the British sense nor a case and controversy in
the American meaning. It is a public investigation about
misconduct by one belonging to public profession where every
member of the Bar with a reputation to lose has a stake and
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every one concerned with the justice administration is
interested. Traditionally used to the adversary system, we
search for individual persons aggrieved. But a new class of
litigation public interest litigation-where a section or
whole of the community is involved (such as consumers’
organisations or NAACP-National Association for Advancement
of Coloured People-in America), emerges. In a developing
country like ours, this pattern of public-oriented
litigation better fulfils the rule of law if it is to run
close to the rule of life. The Bar Council clearly comes
within this category of organisations When a lawyer is
involved.
I derive support for this philosophy of approach from
academic and judicial opinion in England and America. A
question arose whether a railroad company-BAR (Bangor and
Aroostook Railroad)-could bring an action against the
stockholders for having drained BAR
(1) [197] I S C. R. 863. (2) [1955] 1 S. C. R.
1055,1064.
324
improperly. Although an academic critic took the view that
the District Court was incorrect in its view that BAR was
the ’sole beneficiary’, he went on to state that the
public’s interest in the financial health of BAR provided a
separate interest in bringing the action. The learned author
wrote:
"It would seem to be incontestable that the public has
a very n real interest in rail roads. Railroads have
been found vital to a healthy national economy; any
such factor must. a priori, be deemed a potent
component of the public welfare. As such, it is evident
that a financially healthy railroad is of concern not
only to its stockholders, but to the public as well
Finding that the management of a railroad has
obligations running to the public as well as fiduciary
duties owing to the corporation’s stockholders, the
Court concluded that, of these two responsibilities,
tho public interest is paramount. "It must be
remembered," the Court cautioned, "that railways are
public corporations organized for public
purposes....They all primarily owe duties to the public
of a higher nature even than that of earning large
dividends for their shareholders."
(Review by James 1;. Simon of Bangor & Aroostook R. R
v. Bangor Punta operations, Inc (Bangor & Aroostook),
482 F.2d 865 (Ist Cir. 1973), cert. granted, 94 S.Ct.
863 (1974) Columbia Law Review Vol. 74 No. 3, April 197
p. 528 at pp. 531-532).
Similarly, the American Supreme Court relaxed from the
restrictive attitude towards ’standing’ in public action in
Baker v. Carr (369 U.S. 186 (1962), vide Maryland Law
Review, Vol. XXXIII 1973 p.506:
"In Baker, voters challenged the failure of the
Tennessee legislature to reapportion itself since 1901;
the plaintiffs lived l. in countries which had become
under-represented under the old law. The Supreme Court
held that these voters had the requisite standing to
challenge the inaction of the legislature The Court
expanded the notion cf direct injury to include mere
’debasement’ of a vote, rather than the total
deprivation which had previously been required."
American jurisprudence has recognised, for instance,
the expanding importance of consumer protection in the
economic system and permitted consumer organisations to
initiate or intervene in actions, although by the narrow
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rule of ’locus standi’, such a course could not have been
justified (see p. 807-New York University Law Review. Vol.
46. 1971). In fact, citizen organisations have recently been
Campaigning for using legal actions for protection of
community interest, broadening the scope of ’standing’ in
legal proceedings (see p.403-Boston University Law Review,
Vol. 51, 1971).
325
In the well-known case of Attorney,General of the
Gambia v. Pierr sarr N.’Jie(l), Lord Denning observed about
the Attorney-General’s standing thus:
"...The words ’person aggrieved’ are of wide
import and should not be subjected to a restrictive
interpretation. They do not include, of course, a mere
busy body who is interfering. in things which do not
concern him; but they do include a person who has a
genuine grievance because an order has been made which
prejudicially affects his interests. Has the Attorney-
General a sufficient interest for this purpose ? Their
Lordships think that he has. The Attorney General in a
colony represents the Crown as the guardian of the
public interest. It is his duty to bring before the
judge any mis conduct of a barrister or solicitor which
is of sufficient gravity to warrant disciplinary
action."
Ray, J (as he then was) crystallised this ratio in A.P.
Gandhi (supra) thus:
"The Judicial Committee construed the words ’person
aggrieved’ to include the Attorney General of Gambia as
representing the public interest."
(p.927)
"The profession touches the public on the one hand and
the courts on the other. On no other basis could the
presence of J., the Advocate General be explained."
(p.928)
Although not strictly confined to ’standing’ with
reference to suits jurists have thrown some light on this
subject. Professor S.A de Smith has observed:
"All developed legal systems have had to face the
problem of adjusting conflicts between two aspects of
the public interest-the desirability of encouraging
individual citizens to participate actively in the
enforcement of the law, and the undesirability of
encouraging the professional litigant and the
meddlesome interloper to invoke the jurisdiction of the
courts in matters that do not concern him."
(Quoted ill ’Standing Justifiability’ by V. S.
Deshpande- Journal of the Indian Law Institute-April-
June 1971- Vol. 13, No. 2, p. 174)
Professor H.W.R. Wade has observed:
"In other words, certiorari is not confined by a narrow
conception of locus standi. It contains an element of
the actio
(1) [1961] A, C. 617.
326
popularis.This is because it looks beyond the personal
rights A of tho applicant; it is designed to keep the
machinery of justice in proper working order by
presenting inferior tribunals and public authorities
from abusing their powers."
(Standing and Justiciability bid, p. 175)
The possible apprehension that widening legal standing With
a public connotation may unloose a flood of litigation which
may overwhelm the judges is misplaced because public resort
to court to suppress public mischief is a tribute to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 20
justice system. In this very case, to grant an exclusionary
windfall on the respondents is to cripple the Bar Council in
its search for justice and insistence on standards.
I have been long on a short point, but brevity, where
there is some thing to speak, is not the soul of wit but a
sign of something different.
P.B.R.
327