Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (crl.) 365 of 1999
PETITIONER:
R.RATHINAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE BY DSP, DISTRICT CRIME BRANCH
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 08/02/2000
BENCH:
K.T. Thomas & D.P. Mohapatra
JUDGMENT:
Thomas J.
L...I...T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
Seventy five advocates, practising in various courts
situated in Tamil Nadu, presented two petitions addressed to
the Chief Justice of Madras High Court for cancellation of
the bail granted to certain persons. It was further prayed
therein that the Chief Justice might place the matter before
a Division Bench of the High Court for its consideration.
On 4.5.1998, the Chief Justice of Madras High Court directed
the petitions to be placed before a Division Bench. Finally
the matters came before the Division Bench consisting of
T.Jayarama Chouta and V.Bakthavatsalu, JJ. Learned Judges
held that those petitions, presented before the Chief
Justice, are not maintainable and hence no proceedings could
be initiated thereron. Accordingly, the Division Bench
"closed the suo motu proceedings" by an order passed on
24.9.1998. The first among those advocates has moved the
petition for special leave in this Court against the said
order. Leave is granted.
The back ground for presenting the said petitions is a
carnage which took place on 30.6.1997 at a village in
Madurai District. In the gory episode six persons belonging
to a Scheduled Caste community were done to death. One of
the slaughtered persons was described as President of the
local Panchayat Committee. The police arrested 34 persons
in connection with the said massacre. Though initially they
were not released on bail, subsequently by orders passed by
Madras High Court in the months of March and April 1998,
many of them were released on bail and that number reached
30. A brother of one of the deceased, in association with
some other persons, submitted a representation to the Chief
Minister of Tamil Nadu on 16.4.1998, pressing him to adopt
steps for moving the High Court to cancel the bail granted
to those accused for reasons which have been elaborated in
the representation. But the Government did not favourably
respond to it. It was in such a situation that appellant
and his colleagues at the Bar filed the petitions before the
Chief Justice of the High Court.
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Learned Judges of the Division Bench formulated the
following question:
"When there is a statutory remedy to the aggrieved party
by filing applications/petitions for cancellation of the
bail granted by the learned Judges of this court, whether a
representation made by some Advocates who have nothing to do
with the said case could be entertained by the High Court
and dispose of it on merits as a suo motu proceedings."
While answering the said question the Division Bench
pointed out that neither the State nor any aggrieved persons
on the side of the victims of the crimes moved the High
Court for cancellation of the bail granted to various
accused earlier. At the same time learned Judges expressed
that the competency of the Chief Justice to place those
petitions before the Division Bench is undisputed and hence
unquestionable. However, the Division Bench doubted the
sustainability of petitions filed by some advocates in
respect of a matter when remedy in a proper forum was
otherwise available. While refusing to act on the said
petitions the Division Bench gave its reasoning in the
following lines:
"The petitioners by filing these memorandum before the
Honourable Chief Justice seeking to initiate suo motu
proceedings by posting it before a Division Bench cannot
bye-pass the statutory provisions. If such representations
are entertained, then there will be no end and the High
Court will be flooded with such petitions and the genuine
prayers and the relief therein will be delayed and further,
the judicial system itself will fall."
We agree with the learned Judges that neither those 75
advocates nor any other person can challenge the correctness
of the order passed by the Single Judge of the Madras High
Court by moving the same High Court subsequently. If they
had any grievance against the orders passed by the single
judge, the only remedy open was to move this Court seeking
special leave under Article 136 of the Constitution. They
have not done so.
Be that as it may, the next question is whether the same
High Court can cancel the bail for other reasons. The
answer is explicit in Section 439(2) of the Code of Criminal
Procedure. It reads thus:
"A High Court or Court of Session may direct that any
person who has been released on bail under this Chapter be
arrested and commit him to custody."
The frame of the sub-section indicates that it is a
power conferred on the said courts. Exercise of that power
is not banned on the premise that bail was earlier granted
by the High Court on judicial consideration. In fact the
power can be exercised only in respect of a person who was
released on bail by an order already passed. There is
nothing to indicate that the said power can be exercised
only if the State or investigating agency or even a public
prosecutor moves for it by a petition.
It is not disputed before us that the power so vested in
the High Court can be invoked either by the State or by any
aggrieved party. Nor is it disputed that the said power can
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be exercised suo motu by the High Court. If so, any members
of the public, whether he belongs to any particular
profession or otherwise, who has a concern in the matter can
move the High Court to remind it of the need to invoke the
said power suo motu. There is no barrier either in Section
439 of the Code or in any other law which inhibits a person
from moving the High Court to have such powers exercised suo
motu. If the High Court considers that there is no need to
cancel the bail for the reasons stated in such petition,
after making such considerations it is open for the High
Court to dismiss the petition. If that is the position, it
is also open to the High Court to cancel the bail if the
High Court feels that the reasons stated in the petition are
sufficient enough for doing so. It is, therefore, improper
to refuse to look into the matter on the premise that such a
petition is not maintainable in law.
Every matter to be decided by a High Court is normally
decided by a two Judge Bench of the High Court. For
achieving expediency in disposal of cases, statutes have
provided that certain categories of cases can be heard and
disposed of by single judges of the High Court. But it must
be pointed out that all matters which can be heard and
decided by a single judge, can as well be heard and decided
by a Division Bench but not vice-versa, subject to statutory
restrictions passed by the legislature. It is the
prerogative of the Chief Justice of a High Court to allot
cases to different judges of the High Court for disposal,
subject to such statutory provisions.
In State of Rajasthan vs. Prakash Chand [1998(1) SCC 1]
a three Judge Bench of this Court has held that the Chief
Justice of the High Court has a prerogative to distribute
business of the High Court, both judicial and
administrative. "The Chief Justice is the master of the
roster. He alone has the right and the power to decide how
the Benches of the High Court are to be constituted: which
Judge is to sit alone and which cases he can and is required
to hear and also as which Judges shall constitute a Division
Bench and what work those Benches shall do."
Though the aforesaid position has not been deviated from
by the Division Bench of the Madras High Court it is
necessary to remind all concerned of the legal principles
involving the prerogative of a Chief Justice. The Division
Bench has gone wrong in holding that the petition submitted
by the concerned advocates was not maintainable at all.
Refusing to exercise the suo motu powers contemplated in
Section 439(2) cannot be on such a fallacious premise. The
Division Bench ought to have considered the petitions on
merits.
We therefore, allow this appeal and set aside the order
under challenge. A Division Bench of the Madras High Court
will now hear the petitions afresh and dispose them of in
accordance with law and in the light of the observations
made above. It is open to the Chief Justice of the Madras
High Court to allot this matter before a Bench of that High
Court.