Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Special Leave Petition (civil) 26269 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Dattaraj Nathuji Thaware
RESPONDENT:
State of Maharashtra & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 14/12/2004
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & S.H. KAPADIA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of CC No. 11374 of 2004)
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
This case is a sad reflection on members of the legal profession
and is almost a black spot on the noble profession. The petitioner who
belongs to this profession filed a petition styled as "Public Interest
Litigation" before the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court. By the
impugned judgment, the High Court dismissed it holding that there was
no public interest involved and in fact the petitioner had resorted to
black mailing respondent nos. 6 and 7 and was caught red handed
accepting "black mailing" money. The High Court also noticed that the
allegations of unauthorized constructions made in the petition were
also not true.
Cost of Rs.25,000/- (Rupees twenty five thousand only) which was
levied, was directed to be paid to the affected respondent nos. 6 and 7
before the High Court.
It is, in fact, a black day for the black robed professionals, if
the allegation, as found by the High Court to be true and which
presently appear to be the subject matter of further proceedings in a
criminal case, are true. This will leave the members of the legal
profession black faced for the black deed of the petitioner who may be
as the High Court found a black sheep in the profession. Though the
petition filed by the petitioner carried the attractive brand name of
"Public Interest Litigation", the least that can be said is that it
smacks of every thing what the Public Interest Litigation should not
be.
When there is material to show that a petition styled as a public
interest litigation is nothing but a camouflage to foster personal
disputes, said petition is to be thrown out. Before we grapple with
the issue involved in the present case, we feel it necessary to
consider the issue regarding 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 interest litigation" or the
latest trend "paise income litigation". The High Court has found that
the case at hand belongs to the last category. If not properly
regulated and abuse averted, it becomes also a tool in unscrupulous
hands to release vendetta and wreck vengeance, as well. There must be
real and genuine public interest involved in the litigation 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
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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.
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 The
Janta Dal v. H.S. Chowdhary (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 v.
R.M. Premchand, (1994 (6) SCC 620).
It is necessary to take note of the meaning of expression ’public
interest litigation’. In Stroud’s 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 case (supra) this Court considered the scope of
public interest litigation. In para 52 of the said judgment, after
considering what is public interest, has 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 paras 60, 61 and 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 96 of the said judgment, it has further been pointed out
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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 long arm of
sympathy to the poor, the ignorant, the oppressed and the needy whose
fundamental rights are infringed and violated and whose grievances 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 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 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
busybodies, meddlesome interlopers, wayfarers or officious interveners
having absolutely no 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 and
thus criminally waste the valuable time of the Courts and as a result
of which the queue standing outside the doors of the Courts never
moves, which piquant situation creates frustration in the minds of the
genuine litigants and resultantly they loose faith in the
administration of our judicial system.
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
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name of public interest litigation should not 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 considerations. The Court must
not allow its process to be abused for oblique considerations by masked
phantoms who monitor 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 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 busybodies 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 draught
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. They must inspire confidence in Courts and among the
public.
As noted supra, a time has come to weed out the petitions, which
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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 where even 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 are entertaining such petitions
and wasting valuable judicial time which, as noted above, 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. 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 copies, the real
brain or force behind such cases would get exposed to find out the
truth and motive behind the petition. Whenever such frivolous pleas,
as noted, are taken to explain possession, the Court should do well
not only to dismiss the petitions but also to impose exemplary costs.
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 (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. He has also left the following note of caution:
(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.
These aspects have been highlighted in Ashok Kumar Pandey v.
State of West Bengal (2004 (3) SCC 349) and Dr. B. Singh v. Union of
India & Ors. (2004 (3) SCC 363).
It is disturbing feature which needs immediate remedial measure
by the Bar Councils and the Bar Association to see that the process of
law is not abused and polluted by its member. It is high time that the
Bar Councils and the Bar Associations ensure that no member of the Bar
becomes party as petitioner or in aiding and/or abetting files
frivolous petitions carrying the attractive brand name of "Public
Interest Litigation". That will be keeping in line with the high
traditions of the Bar. No one should be permitted to bring disgrace to
the noble profession. We would have imposed exemplary cost in this
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regard but taking note of the fact that the High Court had already
imposed costs of Rs.25,000/-, we do not propose to impose any further
cost.
Let copy of this judgment be sent to Bar Council of India and the
Supreme Court Bar Association by the Registry for necessary action.
The petition deserves to be dismissed, which we direct.