Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MUNDRIKA PRASAD SINHA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BIHAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/09/1979
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 1871 1980 SCR (1) 759
1979 SCC (4) 701
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC 537 (15)
ACT:
Advocate-Appointed as Government Pleader to conduct all
Government cases-Government, if has power lo appoint
Assistant Government Pleaders and withdraw cases from
Government Pleader.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner, who was an Advocate, was authorised by
the Government to represent it in all the civil cases in a
district court. Considering the pendency of a large number
of Government cases before courts and tribunals the
Government appointed nine Assistant Government Pleaders
during the term of office of the petitioner as Government
Pleader and asked him to make over all the land acquisition
cases to one of the Assistant Government Pleaders. The
petitioner refused to comply with the Government’s
instructions and stated That he would himself conduct all
the cases. The Government, however, stuck to its stand. His
writ petition impugning the Government’s decision was
dismissed by the High Court.
Dismissing the petition under Art. 136.
^
HELD: 1. The definition of Government Pleader contained
in s. 2(7) of the Code of Civil Procedure is an inclusive
definition which, read along with O. 21, rr. 4 and 8(c)
clearly yields the inference that Government may have as
many Government Pleaders as it likes to conduct its cases.
The section vests no sole control on one Government Pleader
over others and the Government is perfectly free to put a
particular Government Pleader in charge of particular cases.
Government Pleaders and Assistant Government Pleaders who
had been appointed according to administrative rules of the
State are Government Pleaders within the meaning of the
definition in s. 2(7) of the Code. Each one of them may
depute other lawyers and exercise control over such
surrogates. [763 G; 764 C]
2. The Bihar Rules regarding Government Pleaders, which
are purely administrative prescriptions and which serve as
guidelines and on which no legal right can be founded do not
help the petitioner. The allocation of work or control inter
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se is an internal arrangement and there is no error in the
behaviour of the Government. [764F-G]
3. When there were several thousand cases in the courts
in the State and hundreds of cases before Tribunals it was
but right that Government did not sacrifice the speedy
conduct of cases by not appointing a number of pleaders. It
is inconceivable how the petitioner would have discharged
his duties to the court and to the client of this crowd of
land acquisition cases was posted in several courts more or
less at the same time. [765D-E]
Ramachandran v. Alagiriswami, A.I.R. 1961 Madras 450,
approved.
[1. Despite the national litigation policy evolved by
the All India Law Ministers’ Conference in 1957 and the
recommendation of the Law Commission there is still a
proliferation of government cases in courts uninformed
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by such policy. It is important that the State should be a
model litigant with accent on settlement. Time has come for
State Governments to have a second look, not only at the
litigation policy but lawyers’ fees rules especially in mass
litigation involving ad valorem calculations in fixing fees
in land acquisition cases. [762 B; 763 CI
2. The politicisation of Government Pleadership which
is a public office is an issue of moment in a developing
society controlled by the politics of skill and enjoying a
legal monopoly. It is a healthy practice that the Government
appoints these lawyers after consultation with the District
Judge. Governments under our Constitution shall not play
with law offices on political or other impertinent
considerations as it may affect the legality of the action
and subvert the rule of law itself [765 C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special leave Petition
(Civil) No. 6056 of 1979.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12-7-1979 of the
Patna High Court in C.W.J.C. No. 1618/79.
P. Govindan Nair and S.K. Sinha for the Petitioner.
L.N. Sinha, Attorney General, V.P. Singh and R.B.
Mahton for the Respondent.
The Order of the Court was delivered by
KRISHNA IYER, J. An unusual grievance of a Government
Pleader, the petitioner, ventilated in a writ petition, was
given short shrift by the High Court in a laconic order, but
undaunted by this summary brevity the petitioner has pursued
his case to this Court under Article 136. In utter nudity,
his case is a claim of monopoly of all government cases in
the Patna District, including lucrative land acquisition
litigation, as part of the professional ’estate’ of a
Government Pleader. The prospective cash value of this heavy
crop of cases is estimated by him to be around one lakh of
rupees and this secret is perhaps at the back of this
lawyer’s litigation. Sri Govindan Nair, appearing for him,
has, however, argued that his client’s claim as the sole
representative of Government in courts is not a legal cover
for seeking lucre but for vindicating the inviolability of
the high public office of Government Pleader by politicking
men in the Secretariat or by practitioners of favouritism
dressed in ’little brief authority’, a deeper issue in which
the Bar has a stake and the Bench must also be concerned. We
wholly endorse the view that at some vital levels of
justice, the Besh Bench may hang limp if the Bar does not
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represent. Justice to his office, not love of rupees, was
urged as the respectable motivation for his persistent
litigation, Maybe.
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The fabric of facts, on which the grievance in law
rests, may be appreciated first. The petitioner was
admittedly the Government Pleader for the Patna District,
’authorised to represent’ Government in all the civil cases.
During the currency of his term a plurality of nine
Assistant Government Pleaders was appointed and one of them
was put in charge of a bunch of land acquisition cases. The
petitioner was requested to make over those briefs to the
new nominee. Thereupon, the petitioner challenged the power
of Government, like any other litigant, to appoint any other
lawyer except under him and never by excluding him. He went
to the extent of writing to Government:
"I am, therefore, unable to comply with your
instruction in allowing any Assistant Government
Pleader to work in this case. I shall myself conduct
this case and I have enough time for it."
Government wrote back that in future he would not be
given such cases. Chagrined by this loss of income and
mayhem to his monopoly he rushed to the High Court for the
universal panacea of a writ. The chemistry of Article 226 is
governed by severe rules, and the High Court declined to
dispense the magic remedy. So he has sought special leave
from this Court but Article 136 has its own conditions and
limitations. Sans substantial question of law of public
importance which deserves to be decided by the Supreme Court
or at least flaw in law which is fraught with manifest
injustice, there is no other open sea-same for this House of
Justice. That password has not been uttered here, despite
exercises in professional martyrdom the petitioner claims to
have suffered, and so we close the door but by a speaking
order since counsel’s arguments have centered on the peril
to the public office of Government Pleadership with
potential menace to the administration of justice. Mystic
muteness, however correct, may sometimes mislead when plain
speech may finally silence.
What is the gravamen of this Government Pleader’s legal
grievance ? His economic grievance, however much he may hide
it, is the prospective loss of fee from land acquisition
cases which were spirited away. This ’commercial’ aspect is
an unhappy temptation against which the legal profession
must take care. Having due regard to the rhetoric and
reality surrounding the profession, is an avidity for
briefs, because they yield a lakh of rupees by way of fees,
a clean linen to be washed in court ? What, in essence, is
the orientation of the bar ? ’Geared to the people or’ a
conspiracy against the laity ? ’The politicisation of
government pleadership which is a public office and the
lucre-loving appetite for law offices, in the absence of a
wholesome ceiling on lawyer’s fees,
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are issues of moment in a developing society controlled by
the politics of skill and enjoying a legal monopoly.
The State of Bihar, like many other States in the
country, has an enormous volume of litigation. Government
litigation policy is vital for any State if resources are to
be husbanded to reduce rather than increase its involvement
in court proceedings. It is lamentable that despite a
national litigation policy for the States having been
evolved at an all-India Law Ministers’ Conference way back
in 1957 and despite the recommendations of the Central Law
Commission to promote settlement of disputes where
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Government is a party, what we find in actual practice is a
proliferation of government cases in courts uninformed by
any such policy. Indeed, in this country where government
litigation constitutes a sizeable bulk of the total volume,
it is important that the State should be a model litigant
with accent on settlement. The Central Law Commission,
recalling a Kerala decision, emphasised this aspect in 1973
and went to the extent of recommending a new provision to be
read as Order 27 Rule 5B. The Commission observed:
"27.9. We are of the view that there should be
some provision emphasising the need for positive
efforts at settlement, in suits to which the Government
is a party.
27.10. With the above end in view, we recommend
the insertion of the following rule:-
5-B(1) In every suit or proceeding to which the
Government is a party or a public officer acting in his
official capacity is a party, it shall be the duty of
the Court in the first instance, in every case where it
is possible to do so consistently with the nature of
the circumstances of the case, to make every endeavour
to assist the parties in arriving at a settlement in
respect of the subject-matter of the suit.
(2) If in any such suit or proceeding, at any
stage it appears to the court that there is a
reasonable possibility of a settlement between the
parties, the court may adjourn the proceeding for such
period as it thinks fit, to enable attempts to be made
to effect such a settlement.
(3) The power conferred by sub-rule (2) is in
addition to any other power of the court to adjourn the
proceedings."
The relevance of these wider observations is that
avoidable litigation holds out money by way of fees and more
fees if they are contested
763
cases and this lures a lawyer, like any other homo
economics, to calculate income on a speculative basis, as
this Government Pleader has done in hoping for a lakh of
rupees.
We have been taken through the Bihar Governments rules
for fees of Government Pleaders in subordinate courts. Rule
115 appetises and is unrelated to the quantum or quality of
work involved nor the time spent. Ad valorem calculation in
filing fees for land acquisition cases has a tendency to
promote unearned income for lawyers. The petitioner here has
presumably fallen victim to this proclivity. The time has
come for State Governments to have a second economic look
not only at litigation policy but lawyer’s fees rules (like
rule 115 in the Bihar instance) especially in mass
litigation involving ad valorem enormity and mechanical
professionalism. Even a ceiling on income from public sector
sources may be a healthy contribution to toning up the moral
level of the professional system. After all, the cost of
justice is the ultimate measure of the rule of law for a
groaning people. Government and other public sector
undertakings should not pamper and thereby inflate the
system of costs. Maybe, this petition would not have been
filed had the prospect of income without effort not been
offered by Government Rules.
A closer look at the legal stand may be helpful. The
manifest injustice pleaded by the Government Pleader (the
petitioner) is that the official income, expected from this
heavy harvest of cases, of Rs.. 1 lakh was being taken away
by a brother practitioner. In support of this alleged
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injustice, he has pressed into service section 2(7) of the
Code of Civil Procedure which runs thus:
"2(7). ’Government Pleader’ includes any officer
appointed by the State Government to perform all or any
of the functions expressly imposed by this Code on the
Government Pleader and also any pleader acting under
the directions of the Government Pleader."
Manifestly, this is an inclusive definition and, read
alongwith Order 27 Rule (4) and (8) B(c), clearly yields the
inference that Government may have as many Government
Pleaders as it likes to conduct its cases even as any
client, who has a crowd of cases to be conducted, my engage
a battery of lawyers. Government is in no worse position
that an ordinary litigant and is not bound to encourage
monopoly within the profession. Indeed, the root cause of
the petitioner’s desire to corner all the litigation of the
Government is that its policy of legal remuneration has no
distributive bias nor socially sober ceiling. Some States
have already adopted such a
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policy. Indeed, the State must evolve a policy in regard to
its Law Officers which concedes to counsel freedom to
recommend settlement of cases if they feel it just to do so
and further practises distributive justice which preempts
the need for adjournment because of absence of counsel and,
lastly, sets a limit on the total fee payable for government
work executed.
Section 2(7) of the Code of Civil Procedure being an
inclusive definition allows any number of Government
pleaders. It vests no sole control on one Government pleader
over others and Government is perfectly free to put a
particular Government pleader in charge of particular cases.
Each one of them is a Government Pleader and may depute
other lawyers and exercise control over such surrogates. In
this view, there is no error in the summary despatch
deservedly given by the High Court to the writ petition
whose main merit was daring novelty.
We must state that the learned Attorney General,
appearing for the State, was critical of a lawyer asking for
or clinging to briefs and counsel for the petitioner (a
former High Court Chief Justice) rightly slurred over the
pecuniary part of the petition and veneered his submissions
with the law of the high office of government pleadership.
We fully appreciate the perspective presented by
counsel. But before we come to that, let it be bluntly
stated that if Government does an act offending the public
office filled by a Government pleader what becomes the
incumbent in the land of Gandhi is a dignified renunciation
of office, not a chase for the lost briefs through the
’writ’ route. Moreover, the legal position is plain. As
explained earlier, a bunch of Government pleaders is
perfectly permissible consistently with Section 2(7) and
Order 27 rule (4) Civil Procedure Code. Nor do the Bihar
rules regarding government pleaders help. They are purely
administrative prescriptions and serve as guidelines and
cannot found a legal right, apart from the fact that they do
not contradict Government’s power to appoint more than one
Government Pleader. Allocation of work or control inter se
is an internal arrangement and we see no error even in that
behaviour. Not to have provided more government counsel when
the volume of litigation demanded it, would have clogged the
dockets in Court and helped one pleader to corner all the
briefs without reference to expeditious or efficient
disposals.
Be that as it may, one of the major streams of
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litigation in which government finds itself entangled flows
from land acquisition. ’The States’ developmental projects
which necessarily must be large, involve acquisition of
lands on a large scale. Bihar is no exception. Since com-
765
pensation claims come in considerable number before the
Civil courts, several lawyers have to be engaged by the
State for expeditious attention to its court litigation. The
State, appreciating this need and with a view to help the
court liquidate the docket explosion, appointed more than
one government pleader for every District, depending on the
case flow. Thus, Government Pleaders and Assistant
Government Pleaders were appointed according to
administrative rules of the State. Each one is a Government
Pleader under Sec. 2(7), Code of Civil Procedure.
It is heartening to notice that the Bihar Government
appoints these lawyers after consultation with the District
Judge. It is in the best interest of the State that it
should engage competent lawyers without hunting for
political partisans regardless of capability. Public offices
and Government Pleadership is one-shall not succumb to
Tammany Hall or subtler spoils system, if purity in public
office is a desideratum. After all, the State is expected to
fight and win its cases and sheer patronage is misuse of
power. One effective method of achieving this object is to
act on the advice of the District Judge regarding the choice
of Government pleaders. When there were several thousand
cases in the Patna courts and hundreds of cases before a
plurality of tribunals, it was but right that Government did
not sacrifice the speedy conduct of cases by not appointing
a number of pleaders on its behalf, for the sake of the
lucrative practice of a single government Pleader. It is
inconceivable how he would have discharged his duties to the
court and to his client if this crowd of land acquisition
cases were posted in several courts more or less at the same
time. Adjournment to suit advocates’ convenience becomes a
bane when it is used only for augmentation of counsel’s
income, resisting democratisation and distributial justice
within the profession. These principles make poor appeal to,
those who count, which is a pity.
Coming to the larger submission of counsel for the
petitioner, we do recognise its importance in our era of
infiltration of politicking even in forbidden areas. A
Government pleader is more than an advocate for a litigant.
He holds a public office. We recall with approval the
observations a Division Bench of the Madras High Court made
in Ramachandran v. Alagiriswami and regard the view there,
expressed about a Government Pleader’s office, as broadly
correct even in the Bihar set-up.
" .... the duties of the Government Pleader,
Madras are duties of a public nature. Besides, as
already explained the public are genuinely concerned
with the manner in
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which a Government Pleader discharges his duties
because, if he handles his cases badly, they have
ultimately to foot the bill. The Rajasthan case does
not take into account all the aspects of the matter.
(36) The learned Advocate General argued that the
Government Pleader, Madras is only an agent of the
Government, that his duties are only to the Government
who are his principles and that he owes no duty to the
public at all and that for that reason he would not be
the holder of a Public office.
(37) It is difficult to accept this view. The
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contention of the learned Advocate General may have
been less untenable if the duties of the Government
Pleader were merely to conduct in courts cases to which
Government are a party. But, as the rules stand, he has
a number of other duties to discharge. Besides, even if
his only duty is the conduct of cases in which
Government have been impleaded, still as explained more
than once before the public are interested in the
manner in which he discharges his duties.
...... ...... ......
(90) I am clearly of opinion that having regard to
the fact that the Government Pleader of this court is
employed by the State on remuneration paid from the
public exchequer and having regard to the various
functions and duties to be performed by him in the due
exercise of that office, most of which are of an
independent and responsible character, the office must
be held to be a public office within the scope of a quo
warranto proceeding.
I consider that the most useful test to be applied
to determine the question is that laid down by Erle, J.
in (1851) 17 QB 149. The three criteria are, source of
the office, the tenure and the duties. I have applied
that test and I am of opinion that the conclusion that
the office is a public office is irresistible".
In this view, ordering about a Government Pleader is
obnoxious but nothing savouring of such conduct is made out
although we must enter a caveat that Governments under our
Constitution shall not play with Law Offices on political or
other impertinent considerations as it may affect the
legality of the action and subvert the rule of law itself.
After all, a Government Pleader and, in a sense, every
member of the legal profession, has a higher dedication to
the people.
767
We dismiss the special leave petition but with a sad
tag, which is the message of this martyrdom. Professions
shall not be concealed conspiracies with ’effete,
aristocratic, protective coloration’, which at the same time
enables one to make a considerable Sum of money without
sullying his hands with a "job" or "trade". The remarks of
Tabachnik, in ’Professions for the People’, about English
professions of the eighteenth century smell fresh:
"One could carry on commerce by sleight of hand
while donning, the vestments of professional altruism.
To boot, one could also work without appearing to
derive in come directly from it. As Reader explains:
The whole subject of payment...... seems to have
caused professional men acute embarrassment, marking
them take refuge in elaborate concealment, fiction, and
artifice. The root of the matter appears to lie in the
feeling that it was not fitting for one gentleman to
pay another for services rendered, particularly if the
money passed directly. Hence, the device of paying
barrister’s fee to the attorney, not to the barrister
himself. Hence, also the convention that in many
professional dealings the matter of the fee was never
openly talked about, which could be very convenient,
since it precluded the client or patient from arguing
about whatever sum his advisor might eventually
indicate as a fitting honorarium (1966 p 37).
The established professions-the law, medicine, and
the clergy-held (or continued to hold) estate-like
positions:-
The three ’liberal professions’ of the eighteenth
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century were the nucleus about which the professional
class of the nineteenth century was to form. We have
seen that they were united by the bond of classical
education: that their broad and ill-defined functions
covered much that later would crystallize out into new,
specialised, occupations: that each, ultimately,
derived much of its standing with the established order
in the State. (1966, p. 23)."
The time has come to examine the quality of the product
or service, control the price, floor to ceiling, enforce
commitment to the people who are the third world clients,
and practise internal distributive justice oriented on basic
social justice so that the profession may flourish without
wholly hitching the calling to the star of material
amassment immunised by law from the liabilities of other
occupations. We do not suggest that lawyering in India needs
a National
768
Commission right now as in England and elsewhere, nor do we
subscribe to the U.S. situation on which the President and
the Chief Justice have pronounced. We quote-
"We are over lawyered....... Lawyers of great
influence and prestige led the fight against civil
rights and economic justice.. They have fought
innovations even in their own profession... Lawyers as
a profession have resisted both social change and
economic reform."
(President Carter, May, 1978)
"We may well be on our way to a society overrun by
hordes of lawyers, hungry as locusts, and brigades of
justices in numbers, never before contemplated."
(U.S. Chief Justice Burger)
Law Reform includes Lawyer Reform, an issue which the
petitioner has unwittingly laid bare. After all, as Prof.
Connel states-
"Criticism of relatively conservative institutions
in times of social questioning is hardly a new
phenomenon."
(Australian Law Journal, Vol. 51, p. 351)
This long judicial journey vindicates the Short High
Court order- Dismissed.
P.B.R. Petition dismissed.
769