Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 18
PETITIONER:
SHEELA BARSE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/08/1988
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
DUTT, M.M. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1988 (3) 15
ACT:
Constitution of lndia, Art 32-Public Interest
Litigation- With - drawal of Petition by petitioner-in-
person not allowed-No litigant can be permitted to impose
any condition for his participation in the proceedings--
Petitioner may be allowed to withdraw himself from the
proceedings-Information relating to the case gathered by the
petitioner during pendency of the proceedings-Petitioner not
entitled to use such information after with
drawal/deletion of his name from the case.
%
Contempt of Courts Act, 1971-Sec. 2(c)-Delay in final
disposal of public interest litigation-Criticism of-High
lighting public accountability of courts-Whether contempt of
court.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner had filed a Writ Petition (Criminal) No.
1951 of 1985 in the Supreme Court praying that the
respondents-States be directed: (a) to release all children
detained in the jails in the respondent-States ; (b) to
furnish ’complete information respecting all children
detained in the States and the circumstances and the legal
facts of such detention and the number of available
juvenile courts and children homes; (c) to appoint
district judges of the districts to visit jails, sub-jails
and lock-ups to identify and release children in such
illegal detention; (d) to requisition immediately necessary
buildings and provide infrastructure and make immediate
interim arrangements for ‘places of housing’ of children
sought directions to the respective States, Legal. Aid
Boards, District Legal Aid Committees through the
appointment of ‘ duty_counsel’ to ensure protection of the
right of the children etc.
The said petition was treated as a public interest
litigation and in regard to most of the areas covered by the
aforesaid prayers, orders were made from time to time by
this Court. However, being dissatisfied with the progress of
the case, the petitioner preferred a Misc. Petition for
leave to withdraw the main public interest litigation on the
PG NO 643
PG NO 644
grounds: (1) that the Supreme Court has become
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 18
"dysfunctional" in relation to, and in the context of the
gravity of the violations of the rights of children and the
urgency of the requisite remedial steps and that though the
proceedings were listed for final disposal in the month of
November, 1986 however, owing to unjustified adjournments
obtained by the respondents and owing further, to the
functional deficiencies of the procedure of this court the
proceedings have not yet been finally disposed of; (2) that
the Court has not been able to exact prompt compliance with
its own orders and directions, issued from time to time,
from the respondents; (3) that the applicant is disabled
from conducting proceedings with "dignity" as certain
happenings in Court had the effect of casting and tended to
cast a slur on her integrity and dignity: and (4) that the
proceedings were brought as a "voluntary action" and that
applicant is entitled to sustain her right to be the
"petitioner-in-person" in a public interest litigation and
that the proceedings cannot be proceeded with after
delinking her from the proceedings.
Dismissing the criminal miscellaneous petition,
HELD: (1) The permission to withdraw the main petition
is refused and it is directed that the applicant be deleted
from the array of parties in this proceeding. The
proceedings shall now be proceeded with a direction to the
Supreme Court Legal Aid Committee to prosecute the petition
together with the aid and assistance of such persons or
agencies as the Court may permit or direct from time to
time. [667B-C]
1(ii) The order dated 5.8.1986 and I3.8.1986 forbidding
the applicant from using the information collected by her
during her visits to jails and other custodial institutions
cannot he modified during the pendency of the proceedings as
the information was gathered for purposes of the case and
pursuant to the directions of this Court. [667D]
2(i) The "rights" of those who bring the action on
behalf of the others must necessarily be subordinate to the
"interests" of those for whose benefit the action is
brought. [652C]
2(ii) In a public interest litigation, unlike
traditional disputeresolution-mechanism, there is no
determination or adjudication of individual rights. While in
the ordinary conventional adjudications the party-structure
is merely bi-polar and the controversy pertains to the
determination of the legal-consequences of past events and
the remedy is essentially linked to and limited by the logic
of the array of the parties, in a public interest action the
PG NO 645
proceedings cut across and transcend these traditional forms
and inhibitions. The compulsions for the judicial
innovation of the technique of a public interest action is
the constitutional promise of a social and economic
transformation to usher-in an egalitarian social-order and
a welfare-State; Effective solutions to the problems
peculiar to this transformation are not available in the
traditional-judicial-system. The proceedings in a public
interest litigation are, therefore, intended to vindicate
and effectuate the public interest by prevention ot
violation of the rights, constitutional or statutory, of
sizeable segments of the society, which owing to poverty,
ignorance, social and economic disadvantages cannot
themselves assert-and quite often not even aware of-those
rights. The technique of public interest litigation serves
to provide an effective remedy to enforce these group-rights
and interests. In order that these public causes are
brought before the courts, the procedural techniques
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 18
judicially innovated specially for the public interest
action recognises the concomitant need to lower the locus-
standi-threshoIds so as to enable public-minded citizens or
social-action-groups to act as conduits between these
classes of persons of inherence and the forum for the
assertion and enforcement of their rights. The dispute is
not comparable to one between private-parties with the
result there is no recognition of the status of a Dominus-
Litis for any individual or group of individuals to
determine the course of destination of the proceedings,
except to the extent recognised and permitted by the court.
[651E-H; 652A-C]
2(iii) What corresponds to the stage of final disposal
in an ordinary litigation is only a stage in the
proceedings. There is no formal, declared termination of
the proceedings. The lowering of locus-standi-threshold does
not involve the recognition or creation of any vested-rights
on the part of those who initiate the proceeding, analogus
to Dominus-Litis.[652H;653A]
3. Unduly harsh and coercive measures against the states
and the authorities might themselves become counter-
productive. In the matter of affirmative-action the willing
cooperation of the authorities must, as far as possible, be
explored. If the proceedings are allowed to be diverted at
every stage into punitive-proceedings for non-compliance,the
main concern and purposes of the proceedings might tend to
be over-shadowed by its incidental ramifications. The
coercive action would, of course, have to be initiated if
persuasion fails. [660C-D]
In the instant case, the Court’s orders dated 15.4.86,
12.7.86. 5.9.96, 13.8.86 and 21.11.86, show that certain
PG NO 646
important and far-reaching actions were initiated and
appropriate directions were issued to the States and
authorities concerned. The first ground, therefore, does not
justify the withdrawal of this public interest Litigation.
If the Court acknowledges any such status of a Dominus-Litis
to a person who brings a public interest litigation, it will
render the proceedings in public interest litigations
vulnerable to and susceptible of a new dimension which
might, in conceivable cases, be used by persons for
personal-ends resulting in prejudice to the public-weal.
[653F-G;662H; 663A-B]
4(i) The concept of public accountability of the
judicial system is, indeed, a matter of vital public-
concern for debate and evaluation at a different plane. But,
for that reason courts of law, in their actual day-to-day
judicial work, cannot allow the incantations and professions
of these principles to enable parties to judicial-
adjudications to constitute themselves the overseers of the
judicial performance and accountability in the individual-
case in which they are immediately concerned and permit
themselves comments and criticism of the judicial-work in
the particular case. [661F,G-H;662A]
4(ii) While comments and criticisms of judicial-
functioning, on matters of principle, are healthy aids for
interspersion and improvement, the criticism of the
functioning of the Court in the course of and in relation to
a particular proceeding by the parties to it borders on a
conduct intended or tending to impair the dignity, authority
and the functional-disposition of the court. It is,
therefore thought important to maintain respect and dignity
ot the courts and its officers whose task is to uphold and
enforce the law because without such respect, public faith
in the administration of justice would be undermined and the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 18
law itself would fall into disrespect. [662B-C]
4(iii) This is not to deny the broader right to
criticise the systemic inadequacies in the larger public
interest. It is the privileged right of the Indian citizen
to believe what he considers to be true and to speak-out his
mind, though not, perhaps, always with the best of testes;
and speak perhaps, ’with greater courage then care for
exactitude. Judiciary is not exempt from such criticism.
Judicial institutions are. and should be made, of stronger
stuff’ intended to endure and thrive even in such hardy
climate. [662F-G]
In the instant case, there is no justification to the
resort to this freedom and privilege to criticise the
proceedings during their pendency by persons who are parties
and participants therein. [662G-H]
PG NO 647
5(i) Even the humblest citizen of the land,
irrespective of his station in life, is entitled to present
his case with dignity and is entitled to be heard with
courtesy and sympathy, Courts are meant for, and are
sustained by, the people and no litigant can be allowed to
be looked upon as a supplicant or an importuner. [663C-D]
5(ii) The parties who seek justice at the hands of the
court are neither its subordinates or subsidiaries. But the
notion of an equal participation, in its practical
applications, presents difficulties and cannot be stretched
to the point where the court could share the responsibility,
and the powers that go with it, of regulating the
proceedings of the court with any of the parties before it.
In the existing system. the parties who seek recourse to
courts have to submit themselves to the jurisdiction and
discipline of the court. Their conduct, in relation to the
proceedings. is liable to be regulated by the court. This is
not a matter of expression or assertion of any superiority
but is merely a necessity and a functional-imperative-
[666B-C]
In the instant case, keeping in view the facts and
circumstances or the case, the second ground of withdrawal
is wholly insubstantial and proceeds on what appear to be
certain subjective susceptibilities of the applicant which,
to the extent they are irreconcilable with the discipline
of the court, cannot be countenanced. [666D]
6(i) The contention, that applicant is entitled to
sustain her right to be the "petitioner-in-person"-in a
public interest litigation and that the proceedings cannot
be proceeded with after de-linking her from the proceedings
cannot be accepted. Any recognition of any such vested right
in the persons who initiate such proceedings is to introduce
a new and potentially harmful element in the judicial
administration of this form of public law remedy. That
apart, what is implicit in the assertion of the applicant is
the appropriation to herself of the right and wisdom to
determine the course the proceedings are to or should take
and its pattern. This cannot be recognised. [666E-G]
6(ii) No litigant can be permitted to stipulate
conditions with the court for the continuance of his or her
participation. [667A]
7. The initiation of a public interest litigation or
proceedings for issue of a writ of Habeas Corpus on the
basis of letters reflects and symbolises the Court’s anxiety
to relax the rigour of formal pleadings. However, in
proceedings which are already initiated and are pending it
world be inappropriate for a party to the proceedings to
address letters directly to the Judges. What is sought to be
PG NO 648
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 18
brought to the notice of the Court should,as far as
possible, be filed in the Registry for being placed before
the appropriate bench or submitted in the open court. There
might be extra-ordinary circumstances when a party is
compelled to resort to the expedience of a letter or a
telegram. Even in such a case, it would be appropriate to
address them to the Registry to be placed before the
appropriate bench. The difficulties arising out of such
direct-communications are too obvious to require any
elaborate discussion, [664E-G]
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Criminal Misc. Petition No. 3128
of 1988.
IN
Writ Petition (Criminal) No. 1451. of 1985.
(Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.)
Petitioner-in-person.
P.A. Chaudhary, S.B. Bhasme, V.C. Mahajan, Tapash Ray,
Swaraj Kausal, Probir Choudhary, K. Ram Kumar, K. Ram Mohan,
K.R. Nambiar, A.S. Bhasme, C.V.S. Rao, Girish Chandra,
Kailash Vasdev, J.R. Dass, D.K. Sinha, A.V. Rangam, T.V.
Ratna, A. Subba Rao, Ranjan Mukherji, D.N. Mukherjee, R.S.
Sodhi, T. Sharma, M. Veerappa, A.S. Nambiar, P.K. Manohar,
Mrs. H. Wahi, Dalveer Bhandari, Mahabir Singh, P.R.
Ramasesh, A.K. Sanghi Ms. Kamini Jaiswal, D.K. Sinha, J.R.
Das, Ms. A. Subhashini, R.B. Misra, S.K. Bhattarcharya, Mrs.
Urmila Kapoor, and Ms. S. Janani for the Respondents .
The Order of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALIAH,J. This Miscellaneous Petition for leave
to withdraw the main public interest litigation is filed
under circumstances which can only be characterised as
somewhat unfortunate. The main petition is brought to
highlight the gross violations of the constitutional and
statutory rights of a large number of children in the
country who are suffering custodial restraints in various
parts of the country and for the protection and enforcement
of their rights.
It might clear some possible misconceptions if it is
clarified what this order is not about. The applicant is
not, by the force of this order, denied the right or the
PG NO 649
opportunity of instituting any public interest litigation
nor is the right of a public-minded citizen to bring an
action for the enforcement of fundamental rights of a
disabled segment of the citizenry disputed. The question
agitated relates, on the contrary, to the aspect whether a
public-minded person who brings such an action is entitled,
as of right, to withdraw the proceedings from the court.
Applicant asserts that this Court cannot refuse leave for
withdrawal. The proceedings, it is contended, are the result
of a ’’voluntary action of a citizen" and that, as a
corollary, the proceedings cannot be continued except with
applicant’s participation. The applicant relies on what she
calls "a citizen’s right to be a petitioner-in-person in a
public interest litigation". As stemming from this
premise, applicant contends that not only that leave for
withdrawal cannot be refused but also that the main petition
cannot be continued by any other citizen or organisation.
2. No elaborate arguments are, indeed, necessary to
decide a question such as this; but out of deference to the
applicant’s submission that the propositions she propounds
in this behalf be considered by the court, we proceed to do
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 18
so.
3. Applicant, on certain perceptions and assessment of
her own, both as to the effectiveness and utility of the
continuance of the proceedings as well as the manner of
their conduct in and by this court, which according to her,
has not been conducive either to their efficacy or to her
participation there in with "dignity’’ seeks leave to
withdraw the main petition itself. Figuratively, this is a
‘walk-out’ of the court. The prayer, if granted, would
frustrate the important issues the main petition has served
to high-light in the matter of the status and enforcement
of the laws enacted for the protection and welfare of the
children in the country. The proceedings espouse the cause
of a large number of suffering children who, on account of
the traditional inertia against reform, the bureaucratic and
official apathy, insensitivity to and lack of human
consideration for the lot of the suffering children and the
lack of proper perceptions of the values and idealogy of the
legislation concerning children even on the part of law
enforcing agencies, are being denied the protection of
their constitutional and statutory rights.
4. It is not necessary to go into all the averments in
the present application. The board reasons on which the
applicant has persuaded herself to make this somewhat
extraordinary request are recognisable in three areas:
PG NO 650
The first is that this court has become "dysfunctional"
in relation to, and in the context of, the gravity of the
violations of the rights of children and the urgency of the
requisite remedial steps and that though the proceedings
were listed for final disposal in the month of November,
1986, however, owing to unjustified adjournments obtained by
the respondents and owing further, to the functional
deficiencies of the procedure of this court the proceedings
have not yet been finally disposed of. It is a˜so averred
that the court has not been able to exact prompt
complainance with its own orders and directions, issued from
time to time, from-the respondents.
The second area is that the applicant is disabled from
conductive proceedings with "dignity" as certain happenings
in court had the effect of casting and tended to cast a slur
on her integrity and dignity.
The third-this pertains to the claim that no body else
can go on with this litigation-is that the proceedings were
initiated as a result of the voluntary action on the part of
a citizen and that that citizen is entitled to withdraw
them. The applicant claims that she as representing "other
conscientious citizens, social workers and activists is duty
bound to sustain the citizen?s right to be petitioners-in-
person" and that, therefore, the petition cannot be
continued against the wishes and without the participation
of the applicant.
5. The applicant’s stand on these points are put across,
according to the learned counsel for respondents, in over
assertive tone of great severity but of questionable
propriety. But we should not allow to be influenced by this.
The applicants references to the manner of conduct of the
proceedings are certainly unflattering to the Court. But the
concern of this Court for and its achievements in the field
of public interest litigation are open to the public-
assessment; and the assessments even of those immersed in an
individual experience and where objectivity might,
episodically, be clouded should also serve some purpose-of
introspection. Though the language employed in relation to
the Court is not conspicuous for its moderation, we may yet
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 18
examine objectively the justifiability, if any, for such
strong expressions of remonstrance.
6. In regard to the first area, applicant’s grievance
had better be set out from her own application :
"The petitioner submits that with such an over-whelming
confirmation and reconfirmation of the fact of imprisonment
PG NO 651
of children by the State, the GOI hundreds of DJs as also
the reaffirmation of Hussainara Khatoon in one of the orders
in this petition by this Court, were sound grounds for
delivering final judgment in this case in November, 1986."
"The then Chief justice of India who was presiding Judge
of the Bench ... .. fixed9.l2.l986 as the date for
delivering final judgment, and 2.12.1986 for confirming that
date."
"The petitioner states that she obeyed the Court’s order
and arranged the Court’s hundreds of files. But the CJ
absented himself from the Court for 3 days to attend an
International Judges’ meet he had initiated and convened."
"The petitioner states that on 13.12.1986, an hour and
half after opening of the Court, the then Cj informed the
petitioner that he would not be in Court that afternoon
hence there can be no final hearing as scheduled. The
petitioner understands that the CJ had to inaugurate some
chambers and the date had been fixed in advance. "
The grievance is that the final disposal of the main
petition was not expeditiously done. In a public interest
litigation, unlike traditional dispute-resolution-
mechanism. there is no determination or adjudication of
individual rights. While in the ordinary conventional
adjudications the party-structure is merely bi-polar and the
controversy pertains to the determination of the legal-
consequences of past events and the remedy is essentially
linked to and limited by the logic of the array of the
parties, in a public interest action the proceedings cut
across and transcend these traditional forms and
inhibitions. The compulsions for the judicial innovation of
the technique of a public interest action is the
constitutional promise of a social and economic
transformation to usher-in an egalitarian social-order and a
welfare-State. Effective solutions to the problems peculiar
to this transformation are not available in the traditional-
judicial-system. The proceedings in a public interest
litigation are, therefore, intended to vindicate and
effectuate the public interest by prevention of violation of
the rights, constitutional or statutory, of sizeable
segments of the society, which owing to poverty, ignorance,
social and economic disadvantages cannot themselves assert-
and quite often not even aware of-those rights. The
technique of public interest litigation serves to provide an
effective remedy to enforce these group-rights and
PG NO 652
interests. In order that these public-causes are brought
before the Courts, the procedural techniques judicially
innovated specially for the of public interest action
recognises the concomitant need to lower the Locus-standi-
thresholds so as to enable public-minded citizens or social-
action-groups to act as conduits between these classes of
persons of inherence and the forum for the assertion and
enforcement of their rights. The dispute is not comparable
to one between private-parties with the result there is no
recognition of the status of a Dominus-Litis for any
individual or group of individuals to determine the course:
or destination of the proceedings, except to the extent
recognised and permitted by the Court. The "rights" of’
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 18
those who bring the action on behalf of the others must
necessarily by subordinate to the interests,, of those for
whose benefit the action is brought. The grievance in a
public interest action, generally speaking, is about the
content and conduct of governmental-action in relation to
the constitutional or statutory rights of segments of
society and in certain circumstances the conduct of
governmental-policies. Necessarily, both the party structure
and the matters in controversy are sprawling and amorphous,
to be defined and adjusted or re-adjusted as the case may be
ad-hoc, according as the exigencies of the emerging
situations. The proceedings do not partake of pre-determined
private law litigation models but are exogeneously
determined by variations of the theme.
Again, the relief to be granted looks to the future and
is generally, corrective rather than compensatory which,
sometimes, it also is. The pattern of relief need not
necessarily be derived logically from the rights asserted
or found. More importantly, the court is not merely a
passive, disinterested umpire or onlooker, but has a more
dynamic and positive role with the responsibility for the
organisation of the proceedings, moulding of the relief
and-this is important--also supervising the implementation
thereof. The Court is entitled to, and often does seek the
assistance of expert-panels, Commissioners, Advisory-
committees, Amici etc. This wide range of the
responsibilities necessarily implies correspondingly higher
measure of control over the parties, the subject-matter and
the procedure. Indeed as the relief is positive and implies
affirmative-action the decision are not "one-shot"
determinations but have on-going implications. Remedy is
both imposed, negotiated or quasi-negotiated.
Therefore, what corresponds to the stage of final
disposal in an ordinary litigation is only a stage in the
proceedings. There is no formal, declared termination of
the proceedings. The lowering of locus-standi-threshold does
PG NO 653
not involve the recognition or creation of any vested-rights
on the part of those who initiate the proceedings, analogus
to Dominus-Litis.
7. The theme, implicit in the applicants hyper-
articulated grievance, is that this Court has not
shown adequate concern for justice in this case. Is this
justified? The record of the proceedings show that even by
November, 1986, directions of far-reaching effect had been
issued and very significant exercises had been initiated.
The grievance, in the ultimate analysis, is really in the
area of non-compliance by the several States and its
authorities with the orders and directions issued by the
Court from time to time in the proceedings.
In order to appreciate the position, perhaps, it would
be relevant to refer to the prayers made in the main
petition and the orders passed from time to time even prior
to a month of November, 1986. The prayer in the main
petition was that this Court should pass order directing
the Respondent-States: (a) to release all children detained
in the jails in the respondent States; (b) to furnish
complete information respecting all children detained in the
States and the circumstances and the legal facts of such
detention and the number of available juvenile courts and
children homes ; (c) to appoint district judges of the
district to visit jails, sub-jails and lock-ups to identify
and release children in such illegal detention ; (d) to
requisition immediately necessary buildings and provide
infrastructure and make immediate interim arrangements for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 18
"places of housing" of children facing trial before juvenile
courts. The petition also seeks directions to the respective
states, Legal Aid Boards, District legal Aid Committees
through the appointment of ’duty-counsel’ to ensure
protection of the rights of the children etc.
8. In regard to most of the areas covered by these
prayers, orders were made from time to time by this Court.
The Court’s orders dated 15.4. 1986, 12.7.1986, 13.8.1986,
21.11.1986, show that certain important and far-reaching
actions were initiated and appropriate directions were
issued to the States and authorities concerned. The
following are some of the excerpts of the orders made by
this Court:
"This Writ Petition discloses a disturbing state of
affairs with regard to children below the age of 15 years
in jail. It is an elementary requirement of any civilised
society and it has been so provided in various statutes
concerning children that children should not be confined in
PG NO 654
jail because incarceration in jail has a dehumanising effect
and it is harmful to the growth and development of children
" . . . . . . We would, therefore, direct the District
Judges in the country to nominate the Chief Judicial
Magistrate or any other judicial magistrate to visit the
District Jail and sub Jail in his District for the purpose
of ascertaining how many children below the age of 16 years
are confined in jail, what are the offences in respect of
which they are charged, how many of them have been in
detention- Whether in the same jail or previously in any
other jail before being brought to the jail in question,
whether they have been produced before the children’s court
and if so, when and how many times and whether any legal
assistance is provided to them.
Each district 3judge will give utmost priority to this
direction ......"
" . . . . We would also direct the State Legal Aid &
Advise Board in each State or any other Legal Aid
Organisation existing in the State concerned, to send two
lawyers to each jail within the State once in a week for the
purpose of providing legal assistance to children below the
age of 16 years who are confined in jails. If there are any
other persons confined in jails who are there merely because
they are suffering from some handicap (physical or
otherwise) they should be released immediately and placed in
appropriate home or place where they can receive suitable
medical assistance or other educational training. ’’
[Vide order dated 15.4. 1986]
"Meanwhile, there are a few matters which need our
urgent directions. It seems that there are a number of
children who are mentally or physically handicapped and
there are also children who are abandoned or destitute and
who have no one of take care of them. They are lodged in
various jails in different states . . . . ."
" . . . . The State Governments must take care of this
mentally or physically handicapped children and remove them
PG NO 655
to a Home where they can be properly looked after and so far
as the mentally handicapped children are concerned, they can
be given proper medical treatment and physically handicapped
children may be given not only medical treatment but also
vocational training to enable them to earn their livelihood.
Those children who are abandoned or lost and are presently
kept in jails must also be removed by the State Governments
to appropriate places where they can be looked after and
rehabilitated . . . ."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 18
" . . . . We would also ask the Director General, All
India Radio and the Director General, Dordarshan to give
publicity requesting non-governmental social service
organisations to offer their services for the purpose of
accepting these children with a view to taking care of them
and providing for their rehabilitation in accordance with a
hand-out to be sent by the Registrar of this Court."
"There are two girls in the Julpaiguri District Jail who
have been kept in that jail in "safe custody" One of them
is Parbati Dass, aged 8, who has been detained in jail since
12. 11. 84 and the other is Sabita Sah, aged 10, who has
been detained in jail since 20.8.85 . . . ."
.
". . . . We would accordingly direct that Parbati Dass
and Sabita Shah should be transferred immediately to the
Home in Raiketpara as recommended by the District Judge,
jalpaiguri. "
[Vide order dated 12.7. 1986]
"This Court directed the District Judges in the country
to nominate the Chief Judicial Magistrate or any other
Judicial Magistrate to visit the District Jail and Sub-Jail
in their districts for the purpose of ascertaining how many
children below the age of 16 years are confined in jail,
what are the offences in respect of which they are
charged, how many of them have been in detention-whether in
the same jail or previously in any other jail-before being
brought to the jail in question, whether they have been
produced before the children’s court and, if so, when and
how many times and whether any legal assistance is provided
to them. The Court also directed that each District Judge
PG NO 656
will give utmost priority to this direction and the
Superintendent of each jail in the district will provide
full assistance to the District judge or the Chief Judicial
Magistrate or the judicial magistrate, in this behalf who
will be entitled to inspect the registers of the jail
visited by him as also any other document/documents which he
may want to inspect and will also interview the children if
he finds it necessary to do so for the purpose of gathering
the correct information in case of any doubt. The District
Judge, Chief Judicial Magistrate or the Judicial Magistrate,
as the case may be, will submit report to this court within
10 weeks from today . . . ."
..................
..................
"Six further weeks have passed beyond the time indicated
in the order dated April 15, 1986, and even till this day
analysis shows that several District Judges have not
complied with the direction. This Court had intended that
the reports of the District Judges would be sent to the
Registry of this Court though the Registrars of the
respective High Courts. This obviously meant that the
Registrars of the High Courts were to ensure compliance. We
are both concerned and surprised that a direction given by
the apex Court has not been properly carried out by the
District Judges who are an effective instrumentality in the
hierarchy of the judicial system. Failure to submit the
reports within the time set by the Court has required
adjournment of the hearing of the writ petition on more than
one occasion. We are equally surprised that the High Courts
have remained aloof and indifferent and have never
endeavored to ensure submission of the reports by the
District Judges within the time indicated in the order of
this Court. We direct that every defaulting District Judge
who has not yet submitted his report shall unfailingly
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 18
comply with the direction and furnish the report by August
31, 1986, through his High Court and the Registrar of every
High Court shall ensure that compliance with the present
direction is made. "
PG NO 657
" . . . . We are of the view that the petitioner should
have access to information and should be permitted to visit
jails, children’s homes, remand homes, observation homes,
borstal schools and all institutions connected with housing
of delinquent or destitute children. We would like to point
out that this is not an adversary litigation and the
petitioner need not be looked upon as an adversary. She has
in fact volunteered to do what the State should have done.
We expect that each State would extend to her every
assistance she needs during visit as aforesaid. We direct
that the Union Government respondent no. 1- shall deposit a
sum of rupees ten thousand for the time being within two
weeks in the Registry of this Court which the petitioner can
withdraw to meet her expenses.
We would like to make it clear that the information
which the petitioner collects by visiting the children’s
institutions in different States as indicated above is
intended to be placed before this Court and utilised in this
case and not intended for publication otherwise. "
[Vide order dated 5th August, 1986]
"If a child is a national asset, it is the duty of the
State to look after the child with a view to ensuring full
development of its personality. That is why all statutes
dealing with children provide that a child shall not be kept
in jail. Even apart from this statutory prescription, it is
elementary that a jail is hardly a place where a child
should be kept. There can be no doubt that incarceration in
jail would have the effect of drawing the development of
the child exposing him to beneful influences, coarsening
his conscience and alienating him from the society. It is a
matter of regret that despite statutory provisions and
frequent exhortations by social scientists, there are still
a large number of children in different jails in the country
as is now evident from the reports of the survey made by the
District Judges pursuant to our order dated 15th April,
1986l. Even where children are accused of offences, they
must not be kept in Jails. It is no answer or the part of
the State to say that it has lot got enough number of remand
homes or observation homes or other places where children
can be kept and that is why they are lodged in jails. It is
also no answer on the part of the State to urge that the
PG NO 658
ward in the jail where the children are kept is separate
from the ward in which the other prisoners are detained. It
is the atmosphere of the jail which has a highly injurious
effect on the mind of the child, estranging him from the
society and breeding in him aversion bordering on hatred
against a system which keeps him in jail. We would therefore
like once again to impress upon the State Governments that
they must set up necessary remand homes and observation
homes where children accused of an offence can be lodged
pending investigation and trial. On no account should the
children be kept in jail and if a State Government has not
got sufficient accommodation in its remand homes or
observation homes, the children should be released on bail
instead of being subjected to incarceration in jail. "
....................
....................
" . . . . It is absolutely essential, and this is
something which we wish to impress upon the State
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 18
Governments with all the earnestness at our command, that
they must set up Juvenile Courts, one in each districts and
there must be a special cadre of Magistrates who must be
suitably trained for dealing with cases against children.
They may also do other criminal work, if the work of the
Juvenile Court is not sufficient to engage them fully, but
they must have proper and adequate training for dealing with
cases against juveniles, because these cases require a
different type of procedure and qualitatively a different
kind of approach. "
"We would also direct that where a complaint is filed or
first information report is lodged against a child below the
age of 16 years for an offence punishable with imprisonment
of not more than 7 years, the investigation shall be
completed within a period of three months from the date of
filing of the complaint or lodging of the First Information
Report and if the investigation is not completed within this
time, the case against the child must be treated as closed .
If within three months, the chargesheet is filed against
the child in case of an offence punishable with imprisonment
of not more than 7 years, the case must be tried and
disposed of within a further period of 6 months at the
PG NO 659
outside and this period should be inclusive of the time
taken up in committal proceedings, if any . . . . ."
".... We would direct every State Government to give
effect to this principle or norm laid down by us in so far
as any future cases are concerned, but so far as concerns
pending cases relating to offences punishable with
imprisonment of not more than 7 years, we would direct every
State Government to complete the investigation within a
period of 3 months from today if the investigation has not
already ,resulted in filing of chargesheet and if a charge-
sheet has been filed, the trial shall be completed within a
period of 6 months from today and if it is not, the
prosecution shall be quashed."
[Vide order dated 13th August, 1986]
"In regard to Sub-Jails, no reports have been received
in respect of such jails of 14 districts of Maharashtra.
Though this matter was listed on 14. 11.1986 for final
disposal, an adjournment became imperative in view of the
failure of compliance with the directions in the manner
indicated above and the matter is adjourned till 2. 12.
1986. We direct the Registrars of the High Courts of the
States in which the districts indicated above are located to
ensure compliance with the previous directions by 30.11.
1986. We hope and trust that special care will be taken to
ensure compliance and this Court will not be forced to take
any stringent action. "
[Vide order dated 21st Nov., 1986]
9. It is true that with the active and willing co-
operation of the respective States, the progress made in the
proceedings would have been far more substantial. It is also
true that several of the States and the authorities have
not, prima facie, realised the seriousness and the magnitude
of the problem. Some states pleaded financial constraints in
implementing the directions.
The detention and mal-treatment of children in violation
of the law is far too serious a matter to be looked at with
any complacence, and unfortunately, a stage has now been
reached where this Court cannot be content with the
PG NO 660
expectation of compliance with its orders in these
proceedings but would have to go further and exact it. The
States have to be more honest about their obligations to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 18
delinquent children. Children misbehave because, perhaps,
the society and the elders have, -may be-behaved worse.
Society is becoming increasingly in hospitable to its weak.
By ignoring the non-custodial alternatives prescribed by law
and exposing the delinquent-child to the trauma of
custodial-cruelty, the state and the society run the serious
risk of losing the child to the criminal clan. This is no
more a matter of concession to the child; but its
constitutional and statutory right.
Even so, unduly harsh and coercive measures against the
states and the authorities might themselves become counter-
productive. In the matter of affirmative-action the willing
cooperation of the authorities must, as far as possible, be
explored. If the proceedings are allowed to be diverted at
every stage into punitive-proceedings for non compliance,
the main concern and purpose of the proceedings might tend
to be over-shadowed by its incidental ramifications. The
coercive action would, of course, have to be initiated if
persuasion fails. We are dealing with a large number of
states and authorities. There are 32 respondents, 429
districts in which reports of the District Judges have been
called for and nearly 400 of them have submitted their
reports. There are innumerable jails, sub-jails, remand-
homes, custodial-institutions etc. This court issued notice
to the Home-Secretaries of the States to file their reply by
15-7- 1988 Finally.
The applicant has complained that "the non-participation
of counset has assumed focal importance to the case" and has
also aired a grievance about the "Court’s overwhelming use
of discretionary powers to accommodate every one except the
petitioner". The point to note is that learned counsel for
the respondent-States and the applicant arc not in the same
position. The former were accountable to the Court to report
compliance by their respective client-States with the
directions issued by the Court. Learned counsel appeared to
have sought extensions of time. Their request might or
might-not have been made with perfect justifications. Grant
of their request does not to amount discriminatory treatment
meted out to the applicant who was not in any such position
representing any party who was required to report compliance
with the Court’s directions. The two are not comparable
positions. Indeed. in January 1988, the case appears to have
been adjourned for about six weeks on grounds of ill-health
of the applicant herself. While we understand the concern of
the applicant in regard to the delays occasioned, we are
unable to appreciate
PG NO 661
the unconcealed, cynical scorn the applicant has permitted
to exhibit towards the process of this Court. Instead of
sustaining and strengthening the process of this Court in
what is clearly a sensitive and difficult task of some
importance and magnitude, the applicant has chosen to give
herself the role of a self-appointed invigilator and has
made a generous use of that position by her barbed quips and
trenchant comments against the court. By this, we think, she
has done no service either to herself or to the cause she
sought to serve. Scornful impatience can also wreck a
mission.
The attitudes of the applicant is perhaps conditioned
and influenced by her own perceptions of what she considers
to be the real and larger-issues- apart from the immediate
problems of the case-involved in the proceedings. Applicant
says:
". . . . . .. . . Therefore, it is important to
establish principles of accountability of the GOI, the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 18
States and the Judiciary." " In the last analysis both the
dignity of the Court, the honour of the institution of
judiciary and the effectiveness of judicial process are at
stake. "
We are afraid, the references to judicial-
accountability, having regard to the specific-context in
which they are made in the context,really mean no more than
that the proceedings are to be conducted in conformity with
the standards of promptitude and dispatch of which the
applicant chooses to constitute herself the judge, to sit in
judgment over the alleged short-comings in that behalf. The
concept of public accountability of the judicial system is,
indeed, a matter of vital public-concern for debate and
evaluation at a different plane. All social and political
institutions are under massive challenges are pressures of
reassessment of their relevance and utility. Judicial
institutions are no exception. The justification for all
public institutions are related to and limited by their
social relevance, professional competence and ability to
promote the common-weal. There is no denying that a debate
is necessary and, perhaps, is overdue.
But for that reason courts of law, in their actual day-
to-day judicial work, cannot allow the incantations and
professions of these principles to enable parties to
judicial-adjudications to constitute themselves the
overseers of the judicial performance and accountabil-ity in
the individual-case in which they are immediately concerned
and permit themselves comments and criticism of the
PG NO 662
judicial work in the particular case. The application and
its annexures are replete with statements intended to
demostrate the inefficacy of the proceedings before this
Court, disclosing a cynical distrust of its utility and
effec-tiveness. Indeed, while comments and criticisms of
judicial-functioning, on matters of principle, are healthy
aids for introspection and improvement, the criticism of the
functioning of the Court in the course of and in relation to
a particular proceeding by the parties to it borders on a
conduct intended or tending to impair the dignity,authority
and the functional-disposition of the court.
10. The attitude "we call respect for law" says a
learned author"is a complex one". It "may consist for
example, in the belief that the law is democratic and fair
and that it contributes to social progress or that it
protects individual rights. They may include pride that the
law of one’s country is by and Iarge enlightened and
progressive, satisfac-tion that one lives under the
protection of an adequate legal system,respect or even
admiration for institutions or persons involved in creating
or administering the law and for symbols of the law . ...
251]. It is,therefore, thought important to maintain respect
and dignity of the Courts and its officers whose task is to
uphold and enforce the law because without such respect
public faith in the administration of justice would be
undermined and the law itself would fall into dis-respect.
What excites general dissatisfaction with the judicial
determi-nations of the Court also indisposes the minds of
litigants to obey them shaking men’s allegiance to law."Laws
are not made by Legislatures alone,but by the law abiding as
well; the Statute ceases to embody a law (except in a formal
sense) in the degree that it is widely dis-regarded. "
11. This is not to deny the broader right to criticise
the systemic inadequacies in the larger public interest.It
is the privileged right of the Indian citizen to believe
what he considers to be true and to speak-out his mind,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 18
though not, perhaps, always with the best of tastes; and
speak perhaps, with greater courage than care for
exactitude. Judiciary is not exempt from such criticism.
Judicial institution are,and should be made, of stronger
stuff intended to endure and thrive even in such hardy
climate. But we find no justification to the resort to this
freedom and privilege to criticise the proceedings during
their pendency by persons who are parties and participants
therein.
12. The first ground, therefore, does not justify the
withdrawal of this public interest litigation. If we
PG NO 663
acknowledge any such status of a Dominus-Litis to a person
who brings a public interest litigation, we will render the
proceedings in public interest litigations vulnerable to and
susceptible of a new dimension which might, in conceivable
cases,be used by person for personal-ends resulting in
prejudice to the public-weal.
13 The second ground for withdrawal is no better. The
ground is that the applicant, in view of what transpired in
the two immediately preceding dates of hearing of the case,
is unable to prosecute the proceedings with dignity" and
that, therefore, the applicant is entitled to withdraw the
proceedings. There is, and can be, no dis-agreement with the
principles that even the humblest citizen of the land,
irrespective of his station in life, is entitled to present
his case with dignity and is entitled to be heard with
courtesy and sympathy.Courts are meant for and are sustained
by, the people and no litigant can be allowed to be looked
upon as a supplicant or an importuner.It is, unfortunate
that the applicant claims that there was any shortcom-ing in
this behalf in her case. We regret that there should at all
have been any occasion for this. Let us see whether there is
any real justifi-cation for this.
At one of the hearings of the case, the Court had
occasion to point out to the applicant who was not present
in Court at the com-mencement of the hearing and who sought
to interrupt the submissions of Shri Bhasme, learned
Senior Counsel, who was on his legs, that she having been
absent at the commencement of the proceedings could not
interrupt the proceedings. It is the practice of courts that
when parties-in-person or even learned counsel who were not
initially present but seek to participate in the
proceedings, a formal submission is made to the court in
that behalf. This is nothing more than a matter of courtesy
and decorum. As the applicant straight away sought to
interrupt the learned counsel who was on his legs, she was
told of the impropriety. Her re-action to this as set out in
the application is this:
"The petitioner states that she arrived in Court just 40
seconds after her case was called."
The petitioner states that Mr. Bhasme Counsel for
Maharashtra, had just started his argument that as the
counsel for Maharashtra, he found himself with papers of
Himachal Pradesh. He said that in the absence of correct
documents not being available to him, and the Home
Secretary, they be allowed an adjournment of 12 weeks.
PG NO 664
"The petitioner states and submits that she had a right
to reply to Mr. Bhasme’s outlandish argument. The petitioner
states and submits that she come to the Court as a
responsible citizen at her personal cost. She is not a paid
professional...."
The question was not of the right of the applicant to
make such submissions as she considers appropriate but one
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 18
of the manner of its exercise. But the applicant does not
seem to appreciate this. Indeed she did exercise her right
and made a strong criticism of Sri Bhasme’s submissions.
14. The court also had occasion to point out to the
applicant the impropriety of addressing communications to
Judges by postal letters in regard to the pending cases
or on matters bearing on them. The re-action of the
applicant which has been set out in strong assertions is,
again, that she is entitled to address such communications
and in para 7(b) of her written submissions relies on the
position, inter alia, that letters to the Courts have been
the basis of many public interest litiga-tions; that
applicant was not a private litigant and got no benefit from
the letters she wrote, that Judges were themselves inviting
the citizens to write to the Court etc. What this argument
over-looks is that the initiation of a public interest
litigation or proceedings for issue of a writ of Habeas
Corpus on the basis of letters reflects and symbolises the
Court’s anxiety to relax the rigour of formal pleadings.
However, In proceedings which are already initiated and are
pending it would be inappropriate for a party to the
proceedings to address latters directly to the Judges. What
is sought to be brought to, the notice of the Court should,
as far as possible be filed in the Registry for being placed
before the appropriate bench or submitted in the open court.
There might be extra-ordinary circumstances when a party is
compelled to resort to the expedience of a letter or a
telegram Even in such a case, it would be appropriate to,
address them to the Registry to be placed before the
appropriate bench. The difficulties arising out of such
direct-communications are too obvious to require any
elaborate dis-cussion. The opposite parties would not have
had the benefit of the information contained in the
communication. Sometimes, even the other judges on the Bench
would not know. The authenticity and even the delivery of
the communication may be disputed. It is only proper that
Judges who have to decide the case should not be drawn into
such controversies. That apart the office would not be able
PG NO 665
to check the papers and process them for appropriate
judicial notice. Judicial tradition considers, for good
reason, such practice undesirable. Applicant,however, has,
and is entitled to, her own views in the matter. We regret
our inability to accept them.
Another instance referred to by the applicant as
impairing her ’dignity’ arose in the context of the court
pointing out to the applicant the impropriety of her
resorting to the press to air her grievances against the
proceedings in court and of making what the Court con-
sidered, a factually inaccurate statement.
Indeed on the subsequent date of hearing, the Court had
pointed out to the applicant of her misunderstanding of what
she stated to the press and that the "warning" which the
applicant thought was administered to her and made a public
complaint about, was not directed towards her but was
attributed by her erroneously to herself. This clarification
should have been sufficient. But the clarification of the
Court, apparently, did not re-assure her. Referring to it
she says :
"On 27.O8.88, the Court explained that the warning " we
will put you on the dock if you utter another word, was
addressed to the counsel for Maharashtra while I was warned
that I was in contempt of Court for writing a letter to the
Court. Well, as I perceived it them both the threats were
held out to me because I was on my legs at that time.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 18
Frankly, we are unable to unravel the purpose of this
pre-disposition to and determination on her part to
misunderstand. We shall leave it at that.
15. Applicant has her own notions of the relationship
between the Court and the parties. She asserts:
" . . . . . While the litigants have entitlements the
Court has decision making powers. However, the Court’s
special powers do not make it more equal, nor do they make
the Court the fountain-head of justice. The citizen-
petitioner coming to court on behalf of fellow citizens
whose rights art: violated by the State is certainly an
equal participant and not a subsidiary of the institution. "
" . . . . . Institutions are made by the conduct and the
quality of work and output of the persons who man it. My
PG NO 666
application No. 3128/88 records the conduct of person who
man it. This record is not a slur on the institution of the
judiciary but a citique, of a dysfunctional institution."
It is true that the parties who seek justice at the
hands of the Court are neither its subordinates or
subsidiaries. But the notion of an equal participation, in
its practical applications, presents difficulties and can-
not be stretched to the point where the court could share
the responsi-bility, and the powers that go with it Of
regulating the proceedings of the court with any of the
parties before it. In the existing system, the parties who
seek recourse to courts have to submit themselves to the
jurisdiction and discipline of the Court. Their conduct, in
relation to the proceedings, is liable to be regulated by
the Court. This is not a matter of expression or assertion
of any superiority but is merely a necessity and a
functional-imperative.
The second ground on which withdrawal is sought is,
therefore, wholly insubstantial and proceeds on what appear
to be certain subjec-tive susceptibilities of the applicant
which, to the extent they are irreconcilable with the
discipline of the Court cannot be countenanced.
16. The third ground is that the proceedings are brought
as a "voluntary action" and that applicant is entitled to
sustain her right to be the petitioner-in-person" in a
public interest litigation and that the proceedings cannot
be proceeded with after de-linking her from the proceedings.
This again proceeds on certain fallacies as to the rights of
a person who brings a public interest litigation. Any
reconnection of any such vested right in the persons who
initiate such proceedings is to introduce a new and
potentially harmful element in the judicial administration
of this form of public law remedy. That apart,what is
implicit in the assertion of the applicant is the
appropriation to herself of the right and wisdom to
determine the course the proceedings are to or should take
and its pattern. This cannot be recognised. In the pre-sent
proceedings the Court has already gone through and has
initiated an elaborate exercise as indicated in the orders
excerpted earlier. The petition cannot be permitted to be
abandoned at this stage. Only a private litigant can abandon
his claims.
Though the main prayer is one for the withdrawal of the
petition, in the written submissions, however, the applicant
seems to strike a different note and seeks to participate in
the proceeding subject to certain conditions. No litigant
PG NO 667
can be permitted to stipulate conditions with the Court
for the continuance of his or her participation.
There is, thus, no substance in any of the grounds.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 18
17. Now at the end of the day, the order that commends
itself as appropriate having regard to all in the
circumstances of the case, is to refuse permission for the
withdrawal of the petition, and to direct that the applicant
be deleted from that: array of parties in this proceeding.
The proceedings shall now be proceeded with a direction to
the Supreme Court Legal Aid Committee to prosecute the
petition together with the aid and assistance of such
persons or agencies as the Court may permit or direct from
time to time.
18. The other prayer in the application is for
modification of the order dated 5.8.1986 and 13.8.1486
forbidding the applicant from using the information
collected by her during her visits to jails and other
custodial institutions pursuant to the Court’s order in
1’)86. This permission cannot be granted during the pendency
of the proceedings as the information was gathered for
purposes of the case and pursuant to the directions of this
Court.
19. In the result, the Criminal Miscellaneous Petition
is dismissed; but the name of the Supreme Court Legal Aid
Committee shall be substituted in place of that of the
applicant. There will be no order as to costs.
M. L. A. Petition dismissed.