Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 122 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Dr. B. Singh
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/03/2004
BENCH:
DORAISWAMY RAJU & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(D. No.305/2004)
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
This petition filed purportedly under Article 32 of the
Constitution of India, 1950 (in short the ’Constitution’)
shows to what extent the process of law can be abused. It
carries the attractive brand name of "public interest
litigation", but the least that can be said is that it
smacks of everything what a public interest litigation
should not be.
The petition is purported to have been filed
questioning the propriety of respondent No.3 being
considered for appointment as a Judge. Subsequently, an
application was filed for permission to withdraw the
petition with liberty to file a fresh petition as in the
meantime respondent No.3 has been appointed as a Judge.
Before we go into the desirability of even entertaining
such a petition, background in which the petition has been
filed needs to be noticed.
According to the petitioner, as reflected in the
petition, basis of the petition is a copy of the
representation purported to have been received from one Ram
Sarup which was addressed to the President of India with
copies to the Chief Justice of India, Ministry of Law and
Justice, Chief Justice of Punjab and Haryana High Court,
Governor of Haryana and Bar Council of India wherein
allegations were made against respondent No.3. Only on the
basis of what is stated therein of which apparently the
petitioner himself cannot legitimately claim to have any
personal knowledge the petitioner filed a writ petition
before the Punjab and Haryana High Court which was
dismissed. The petitioner makes a grievance that aforesaid
Ram Sarup had received acknowledgement of the representation
addressed to the President of India wherein it was also
noted that the same had been forwarded to the Secretary to
the Government of India, Ministry of Law, Justice and
Company Affairs (Department of Legal Affairs) for
appropriate action. But no action was taken to look into the
allegations. It is not clear from the writ petition as to
whether the petitioner had sent any representation to the
President and other constitutional functionaries as the
enclosures to the writ petition show that aforesaid Ram
Sarup had sent representations to the President with copies
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to the other functionaries. The copy of the representation
dated 18.10.2003 shows that it was sent by Ram Sarup. The
second representation is dated 13.12.2003 in which reference
has been made to a representation purported to be dated
28.11.2003. In the representation dated 13.12.2003 reference
is made to the acknowledgement dated 12.11.2003. This
creates an impression that the acknowledgment dated
12.11.2003, of the President’s Secretariat relates to the
representations sent by Ram Sarup. But the copy of purported
acknowledgement filed as Annexure P-2 shows as if it was
sent by the petitioner. No copy of any representation dated
28.10.2003 as indicated in Annexure P-2 has been filed along
with the petition. The petitioner nowhere has stated that
he has any personal knowledge of the allegations made
against respondent No.3. He does not even aver that he made
any effort to find out whether the allegations have any
basis. He only refers to the representation of Ram Sarup and
some paper cuttings of news items. He has not indicated as
to whether he was aware of the authenticity or otherwise of
the news items. It is too much to attribute authenticity or
credibility to any information or fact merely because, it
found publication in a newspaper or journal or Magazine or
any other form of communication, as though it is gospel
truth. It needs no reiteration that newspaper reports per
se do not constitute legally acceptable evidence. Strangely,
in the affidavit accompanying the writ petition he has
stated as follows:
"That I have read over the
contents of accompanying writ petition
page No. 1 to 13 para, Para No. 1 to
18, synopsis and list of dates, page A
to C and I say that the same are true
and correct on knowledge and based on
the record of the case".
The affidavit shows that the contents were true and correct
to his knowledge and based on records. Strangely, it has
not been indicated as to what is the source of his
knowledge and are based on what records. Even the copy of
the order passed by the Punjab and Haryana High Court where
he filed writ application on allegedly identical issues, as
indicated in the petition, has not been annexed. The casual
and cavalier fashion it appears to have been handled and of
late attempted to be made ipse dixit, in a laconic and
lackadaisical manner compels to draw the only inference
that the petitioner is a busy body bent upon self publicity
sans any sense of responsibility unmindful of the adverse
impact, at times it may go to create at the expense of
decency and dignity of constitutional offices and
functionaries and there is no element or even trace of
public interest involved in the petition.
When there is material to show that a petition styled
as a public interest litigation is nothing but a camouflage
to foster personal disputes or vendatta to bring to terms a
person, not of ones liking, or gain publicity or a facade
for blackmail, said petition has to be thrown out. Before
we grapple with the issues involved in the present case, we
feel it necessary to consider the issue regarding the
"public interest" aspect. Public Interest Litigation
which has now come to occupy an important field in the
administration of law should not be "publicity interest
litigation" or "private interest litigation" or "politics
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interest litigation" or the latest trend "paise income
litigation". If not properly and strictly regulated at
least in certain vital areas or spheres and abuse averted it
becomes also a tool in unscrupulous hands to release
vendetta and wreck vengeance, as well to malign not only an
incumbent to be in office but demoralise and deter
reasonable or sensible and prudent people even agreeing to
accept highly sensitive and responsible offices for fear of
being brought into disrepute with baseless allegations.
There must be real and genuine public interest involved in
the litigation and concrete or credible basis for
maintaining a cause before court and not merely an adventure
of knight errant borne out of wishful thinking. It cannot
also be invoked by a person or a body of persons to further
his or their personal causes or satisfy his or their
personal grudge and enmity. Courts of justice should not be
allowed to be polluted by unscrupulous litigants by
resorting to the extraordinary jurisdiction. The credibility
of such claims or litigations should be adjudged on the
creditworthiness of the materials, averred and not even on
the credentials claimed of the person moving the courts in
such cases. A person acting bona fide and having sufficient
interest in the proceeding of public interest litigation
will alone have a locus standi and can approach the Court to
wipe out violation of fundamental rights and genuine
infraction of statutory provisions, but not for personal
gain or private profit or political motive or any oblique
consideration. These aspects were highlighted by this Court
in Janata Dal v. H.S. Chowdhary and Ors. (1992 (4) SCC 305)
and Kazi Lhendup Dorji vs. Central Bureau of Investigation,
(1994 Supp (2) SCC 116). A writ petitioner who comes to the
Court for relief in public interest must come not only with
clean hands like any other writ petitioner but also with a
clean heart, clean mind and clean objective. See Ramjas
Foundation vs. Union of India, (AIR 1993 SC 852) and K.R.
Srinivas vs. R.M. Premchand, (1994 (6) SCC 620).
It is necessary to take note of the meaning of
expression ’public interest litigation’. In Strouds
Judicial Dictionary, Volume 4 (IV Edition), ’Public
Interest’ is defined thus:
"Public Interest (1) a matter of public or
general interest does not mean that which is
interesting as gratifying curiosity or a
love of information or amusement but that in
which a class of the community have a
pecuniary interest, or some interest by
which their legal rights or liabilities are
affected."
In Black’s Law Dictionary (Sixth Edition), "public
interest" is defined as follows :
"Public Interest something in which the
public, or some interest by which their
legal rights or liabilities are affected.
It does not mean anything the particular
localities, which may be affected by the
matters in question. Interest shared by
national government...."
In Janata Dal’s case (supra) this Court considered the
scope of public interest litigation. In para 53 of the said
judgment, after considering what is public interest, has
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laid down as follows :
"The expression ’litigation’ means a legal
action including all proceedings therein
initiated in a Court of law for the
enforcement of right or seeking a remedy.
Therefore, lexically the expression "PIL"
means the legal action initiated in a Court
of law for the enforcement of public
interest or general interest in which the
public or a class of the community have
pecuniary interest or some interest by which
their legal rights or liabilities are
affected."
In para 62 of the said judgment, it was pointed out as
follows:
"Be that as it may, it is needless to
emphasis that the requirement of locus
standi of a party to a litigation is
mandatory, because the legal capacity of
the party to any litigation whether in
private or public action in relation to
any specific remedy sought for has to be
primarily ascertained at the threshold."
In para 98 of the said judgment, it has further been
pointed out as follows:
"While this Court has laid down a chain of
notable decisions with all emphasis at their
command about the importance and
significance of this newly developed
doctrine of PIL, it has also hastened to
sound a red alert and a note of severe
warning that Courts should not allow its
process to be abused by a mere busy body or
a meddlesome interloper or wayfarer or
officious intervener without any interest or
concern except for personal gain or private
profit or other oblique consideration."
In subsequent paras of the said judgment, it was
observed as follows:
"It is thus clear that only a person acting
bona fide and having sufficient interest in
the proceeding of PIL will alone have as
locus standi and can approach the Court to
wipe out the tears of the poor and needy,
suffering from violation of their
fundamental rights, but not a person for
personal gain or private profit or political
motive or any oblique consideration.
Similarly a vexatious petition under the
colour of PIL, brought before the Court for
vindicating any personal grievance, deserves
rejection at the threshold".
It is depressing to note that on account of such
trumpery proceedings initiated before the Courts,
innumerable days are wasted, which time otherwise could have
been spent for the disposal of cases of the genuine
litigants. Though we spare no efforts in fostering and
developing the laudable concept of PIL and extending our
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long arm of sympathy to the poor, the ignorant, the
oppressed and the needy whose fundamental rights are
infringed and violated and whose grievance go unnoticed, un-
represented and unheard; yet we cannot avoid but express our
opinion that while genuine litigants with legitimate
grievances relating to civil matters involving properties
worth hundreds of millions of rupees and substantial rights
and criminal cases in which persons sentenced to death
facing gallows under untold agony and persons sentenced to
life imprisonment and kept in incarceration for long years,
persons suffering from undue delay in service matters -
government or private, persons awaiting the disposal of tax
cases wherein huge amounts of public revenue or unauthorized
collection of tax amounts are locked up, detenu expecting
their release from the detention orders etc. etc. are all
standing in a long serpentine queue for years with the fond
hope of getting into the Courts and having their grievances
redressed, the busy bodies, meddlesome interlopers,
wayfarers or officious interveners having absolutely no real
public interest except for personal gain or private profit
either of themselves or as a proxy of others or for any
other extraneous motivation or for glare of publicity break
the queue muffing their faces by wearing the mask of public
interest litigation and get into the Courts by filing
vexatious and frivolous petitions of luxury litigants who
have nothing to loose but trying to gain for nothing and
thus criminally waste the valuable time of the Courts and as
a result of which the queue standing outside the doors of
the court never moves, which piquant situation creates
frustration in the minds of the genuine litigants.
Public interest litigation is a weapon which has to be
used with great care and circumspection and the judiciary
has to be extremely careful to see that behind the beautiful
veil of public interest an ugly private malice, vested
interest and/or publicity seeking is not lurking. It is to
be used as an effective weapon in the armory of law for
delivering social justice to the citizens. The attractive
brand name of public interest litigation should not be
allowed to be used for suspicious products of mischief. It
should be aimed at redressal of genuine public wrong or
public injury and not publicity oriented or founded on
personal vendetta. As indicated above, Court must be
careful to see that a body of persons or member of public,
who approaches the court is acting bona fide and not for
personal gain or private motive or political motivation or
other oblique consideration. The Court must not allow its
process to be abused for oblique considerations by masked
phantoms who moniter at times from behind. Some persons with
vested interest indulge in the pastime of meddling with
judicial process either by force of habit or from improper
motives and try to bargain for a good deal as well to enrich
themselves. Often they are actuated by a desire to win
notoriety or cheap popularity. The petitions of such busy
bodies deserve to be thrown out by rejection at the
threshold, and in appropriate cases with exemplary costs.
The Council for Public Interest Law set up by the Ford
Foundation in USA defined the "public interest litigation"
in its report of Public Interest Law, USA, 1976 as follows:
"Public Interest Law is the name that has
recently been given to efforts provide legal
representation to previously unrepresented
groups and interests. Such efforts have
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been undertaken in the recognition that
ordinary market place for legal services
fails to provide such services to
significant segments of the population and
to significant interests. Such groups and
interests include the proper
environmentalists, consumers, racial and
ethnic minorities and others."
The Court has to be satisfied about (a) the
credentials of the applicant; (b) the prima facie
correctness or nature of information given by him; (c) the
information being not vague and indefinite. The information
should show gravity and seriousness involved. Court has to
strike balance between two conflicting interests; (i) nobody
should be allowed to indulge in wild and reckless
allegations besmirching the character of others; and (ii)
avoidance of public mischief and to avoid mischievous
petitions seeking to assail, for oblique motives,
justifiable executive actions. In such case, however, the
Court cannot afford to be liberal. It has to be extremely
careful to see that under the guise of redressing a public
grievance, it does not encroach upon the sphere reserved by
the Constitution to the Executive and the Legislature. The
Court has to act ruthlessly while dealing with imposters and
busy bodies or meddlesome interlopers impersonating as
public-spirited holy men. They masquerade as crusaders of
justice. They pretend to act in the name of Pro Bono
Publico, though they have no interest of the public or even
of their own to protect.
Courts must do justice by promotion of good faith, and
prevent law from crafty invasions. Courts must maintain the
social balance by interfering where necessary for the sake
of justice and refuse to interfere where it is against the
social interest and public good. (See State of Maharashtra
vs. Prabhu, (1994 (2) SCC 481), and Andhra Pradesh State
Financial Corporation vs. M/s GAR Re-Rolling Mills and Anr.,
(AIR 1994 SC 2151). No litigant has a right to unlimited
drought on the Court time and public money in order to get
his affairs settled in the manner as he wishes. Easy access
to justice should not be misused as a licence to file
misconceived and frivolous petitions. (See Dr. B.K. Subbarao
vs. Mr. K. Parasaran, (1996) 7 JT 265). Today people rush to
Courts to file cases in profusion under this attractive name
of public interest. Self styled saviours who have no face or
ground in the midst of public at large, of late, try to use
such litigations to keep themselves busy and their names in
circulation, despite having really become defunct in actual
public life and try to smear and smirch the solemnity of
court proceedings. They must really inspire confidence in
Courts and among the public, failing which such litigation
should be axed with heavy hand and dire consequences.
As noted supra, a time has come to weed out the
petitions, which though titled as public interest
litigations are in essence something else. It is shocking to
note that Courts are flooded with large number of so called
public interest litigations, whereas only a minuscule
percentage can legitimately be called as public interest
litigations. Though the parameters of public interest
litigation have been indicated by this Court in large number
of cases, yet unmindful of the real intentions and
objectives, Courts at times are entertaining such petitions
and wasting valuable judicial time which, as noted above,
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could be otherwise utilized for disposal of genuine cases.
Though in Dr. Duryodhan Sahu and Ors. v. Jitendra Kumar
Mishra and Ors. (AIR 1999 SC 114), this Court held that in
service matters PILs should not be entertained, the inflow
of so-called PILs involving service matters continues
unabated in the Courts and strangely are entertained. The
least the High Courts could do is to throw them out on the
basis of the said decision. This tendency is being slowly
permitted to percolate for setting in motion criminal law
jurisdiction, often unjustifiably just for gaining publicity
and giving adverse publicity to their opponents. The other
interesting aspect is that in the PILs, official documents
are being annexed without even indicating as to how the
petitioner came to possess them. In one case, it was
noticed that an interesting answer was given as to its
possession. It was stated that a packet was lying on the
road and when out of curiosity the petitioner opened it, he
found copies of the official documents. Apart from the
sinister manner, if any, of getting such copters, the real
brain or force behind such cases would get exposed to find
out whether it was a bona fide venture. Whenever such
frivolous pleas are taken to explain possession, the Court
should do well not only to dismiss the petitions but also to
impose exemplary costs, as it prima facie gives impression
about oblique motives involved, and in most cases show proxy
litigation. Where the petitioner has not even a remote link
with the issues involved, it becomes imperative for the
Court to lift the veil and uncover the real purpose of the
petition and the real person behind it. It would be
desirable for the Courts to filter out the frivolous
petitions and dismiss them with costs as afore-stated so
that the message goes in the right direction that petitions
filed with oblique motive do not have the approval of the
Courts.
In S.P. Gupta v. Union of India and Anr. (1981 Supp
SCC 87) it was emphatically pointed out that the relaxation
of the rule of locus standi in the field of PIL does not
give any right to a busybody or meddlesome interloper to
approach the Court under the guise of a public interest
litigant. The following note of caution was given: (SCC
p.219, para 24)
"But we must be careful to see that the
member of the public, who approaches the
court in cases of this kind, is acting bona
fide and not for personal gain or private
profit or political motivation or other
oblique consideration. The court must not
allow its process to be abused by
politicians and others to delay legitimate
administrative action or to gain a political
objective."
In State of H.P. vs. A Parent of a Student of Medical
College, Simla and Ors. (1985 (3) SCC 169), it has been said
that public interest litigation is a weapon which has to be
used with great care and circumspection.
Khalid, J. in his separate supplementing judgment in
Sachidanand Pandey vs. State of W.B., (1987 (2) SCC 295,
331) said:
"Today public spirited litigants rush to
courts to file cases in profusion under this
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attractive name. They must inspire
confidence in courts and among the public.
They must be above suspicion. (SCC p. 331,
para 46)
*
Public interest litigation has now come
to stay. But one is led to think that it
poses a threat to courts and public alike.
Such cases are now filed without any rhyme
or reason. It is, therefore, necessary to
lay down clear guidelines and to outline the
correct parameters for entertainment of such
petitions. If courts do not restrict the
free flow of such cases in the name of
public interest litigations, the traditional
litigation will suffer and the courts of
law, instead of dispensing justice, will
have to take upon themselves administrative
and executive functions. (SCC p.334, para
59)
*
I will be second to none in extending
help when such help is required. But this
does not mean that the doors of this Court
are always open for anyone to walk in. It
is necessary to have some self-imposed
restraint on public interest litigants."
(SCC p.335, para 61)
These aspects have been highlighted in Ashok Kumar
Pandey v. The State of West Bengal (2003 (8) Supreme 299)
Procedure for appointment of a Judge is provided in
Article 217 of the Constitution. The process is an
elaborate one and involves the views of the collegium of
the Court. Where a particular person is to be appointed as
a Judge, the modalities and procedures to be adopted have
been elaborately dealt with in Special Reference No.1 of
1998, Re: (1998 (7) SCC 739). The scope of judicial review
has been specifically delienated, limiting it to want of
consultation with the named constitutional functionaries or
lack or any condition of eligibility and not on any other
ground including that of bias which is in any case is
excluded by the element of plurality in the process of
decision-making. The view in Supreme Court Advocates-on-
Record Association and Ors. v. Union of India 1993 (4) SCC
441 (popularly known as Second Judges’ case) was
reiterated. It would be proper to take note of very
significant observations made in the Second Judges’ case
about the growing tendency of needless intrusion by
strangers and busybodies in the functioning of the
judiciary under the garb of public interest litigation, in
spite of the caution in S.P. Gupta’s case (supra). The note
of caution has yielded no fruitful result and on the
contrary these busybodies continue to make reckless
allegations and vitriolic statements against Judges and
persons whose names are under consideration for judgeship.
Therefore, it has become imperative to take stern actions
against these persons. It is not the ipse dixit of any
individual to say as to whether the recommended person is
fit for appointment, by making wide allegations which has
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become common these days and have resulted in delaying
appointment of Judges, though large number of vacancies
exist in different High Courts. All possible care and
caution is exercised before appointment of a Judge is made.
It is true that no system is infallible, but at the same
time the sinister design of people intended to thwart
prospects of a person likely to be appointed as a Judge has
to be nipped at the bud. The petitioner has not shown any
material to show that he is really interested in the
welfare of the judicial system or the institution of the
judiciary. As indicated above, he appears to be a busy
person seeking publicity and a person who has no genuine
concern for the institution, if such type of petitions are
permitted to be entertained it will cause immense damage to
the system itself. High sounding words used in the petition
about the desirability of a transparent judicial system
cannot in our view turn a mis-conceived petition filed with
oblique motives to be treated as a public interest
litigation. This petition deserves to be dismissed with
exemplary costs and we direct so. The petition though
deserves to be dismissed with costs of Rs.50,000/- hoping
that the petitioner would mend his ways and would not
hazard such vexatious litigations in future dismiss the
same with costs of Rs.10,000/- which the petitioner shall
deposit in the Registry of this Court within 6 weeks from
today. If deposit is made it shall be remitted to the
Supreme Court Legal Services Authority. In case the cost is
not deposited within the time stipulated, the Registry
shall forward this order to the Punjab and Haryana High
Court and the High Court shall have it recovered by
coercive means of recovery and remit the same to this
Court, which on receipt shall be paid to the Supreme Court
Legal Services Authority.