Datar reads out the excerpts from the Supreme Court's 2019 judgment where the 2017 Rules were strick down and the SC had directed for the new set of Rules to be framed that would be in line with the SC's guidelines laid down in its precedents.
Datar: One thing unique about India is our SC has permitted judicial powers to be exercised by the Tribunals.
My argument in relation to National taxation tribunal was that core judicial power cannot be taken away from the Courts system.
Justice Nariman struck down NTT.
Datar: my humble submission is today for better or worse, we have accepted the fact that judicial functions can be exercised by Tribunals. But my prayer is that Centre must then ensure that these Tribunals then are as independent as possible
Datar: Some guidelines must be laid down to ensure that there is independence of these Tribunals that have now the power to exercise judicial functions.
Datar: SC has repeatedly said that Tribunals should not become havens for retired Judges... The idea that SC has repeatedly said that take young members should be considered.
Datar in his parting submissions requests Court to open up the opportunity for advocates which will also enable lady members of the Bar to be appointed in Tribunals and will help in improving representation aspect.
Senior Counsel Aryama Sundaram begins his submissions.
His submissions will touch upon
- Opportunity for lawyers to be appointed in Tribunals
- Restrospective vs prospective applicability of the Tribunal Rules
Sundaram: For the past 35 years lawyers have been eligible... If you want to make a departure from that, there must be some good reason. What is most telling is that even the 2017 Rules which were struck down did not disentitle lawyers.
Sundaram: The exclusion of lawyers has no nexus or connection with what is the purpose of the Tribunals.
To eliminate lawyers in a blanket manner is totally discriminatory especially when these Tribunals exercise the functions of what civil courts would have
Sundaram: The DRAT, NCLAT etc have taken away the jurisdiction from the HC and vested them in the Tribunals.
Your Lordships would look at these being equal to the normal Court system.
Sundaram: Through these enactments, control over judicial bodies has been given to the executive and this would impinge on the doctrine of judicial independence.
Sundaram: Do not just see this from the lens of Article 14. This violates the basic structure of our Constitution.
Justice Bhat: You have an analogy here, but it is an extreme one.
Sundaram: Your Lordships would look at it through the lens and when testing a legislation then look at it through a magnifying glass with regard to the independence of judiciary.
Justice Rao: We have a number of judgements here including Rojer Mathew where this aspect ha ls been considered.
(Sundaram is now taking the Court through a status report filed by Centre on vacancies in CAT)
Sundaram: Therefore, I submit that If your Lordships are to uphold the Rules, they cannot have retrospective effect and cannot make candidates ineligible who were earlier qualified.
Sundaram reads excerpts from the Madras Bar Association judgement of 2014 on tbe issue of qualification of candidates and for lawyers to be eligible
Sundaram: When the Constitution itself does not make a distinction between a lawyer or a judge being appointed to the superior judiciary then an enactment cannot bring in such a distinction for a lower level of courts/bodies.
Sundaram summarises:
- SC should view the enactment with the lens that it would use for examining any legislation that makes judicial inroads
- Rules are on the face of them prospective.
- Exclusion of Lawyers is arbitrary.
(Sundaram concludes his arguments)
Senior Counsel Siddharth Luthra now making submissions on behalf of a a candidate who had applied for being appointed in the CESAT under 2017 Rules which came to be struck down in 2019.
Justice Rao: We were discussing this earlier... There was interim order that any appointments that were made after Rojer Mathew judgment were to be regulated by the parent Act.
Luthra: They are treating my appointment as fresh appointment and this is what I'm agitating against also.
Justice Rao: Your entitlement b to pe sion may not be related.
Luthra: In terms of pension they are treating me as a fresh appointee and that is the problem
Luthra stresses that the Rules cannot be applied retrospectively.
(Luthra cites SC's precedents to support his case that the Rules in place at the time of the issuance of advertisement for vacancy should be applicable)
Justice Rao: What is your response on the requirement of 25 years experience for appointment to ITAT?
Khanna: When you're replacing the jurisdiction of a Court and vesting it in a Tribunal, you cannot prescribe a qualification that is different from Constitutional provisions.
Khanna concludes.
Senior Counsel Mukul Rohatgi begins his submissions on behalf of three judicial members of CESTAT.
Rohatgi: Under the Rules of 1987, members of ITAT and CESTAT go up to 62 years.
Rohatgi: There is an error coming because for all other Tribunals there is five years tenure but for ITAT and CESTAT it is five years or 62 years of age. As far as we (his clients) are concerned, it has to be 62.
Rohatgi: If a lawyer or a District Judge joins the Tribunal at 50 and after five years he is told that your tenure is over, he will lose out on everything. This will lead to absurdity.
Rohatgi: Even the interim relief which directed for all apointments to go back to parent Acts also reiterates my case.
(Rohatgi now cites the example of appointment of Justice Manjula Chellur as the Chairman of the Appellate Tribunal for Electricity)
Rohatgi: I think they have something against the lawyers. What is the point of saying that a lawyer with 10 years experience can be appointed a Judge of the High Court but cannot be appointed to these Tribunals.
Ultimately this is how the Bar grows, but lawyers are excluded.
Rohatgi: Today Your Lordships have extended the tenure of Justice Manmohan Singh... He's one of the most renowned in the arena of IP.
He has disposed of so many cases.
But he was not sure if his tenure is getting over.
Rohtagi: Justice Cheema (NCLAT) the other day said that "I will give you a date if I have time"
This is how Tribunals are functioning.
Rohtagi: If Tribunalisation has to happen and jurisdiction is taken from Courts and vested in Tribunals then it should be done gracefully.
What's the point of Madras Bar Association judgements 1, 2 and 3 saying judicial member is a must and after five years they are told to go.
Rohatgi concludes.
Senior Advocate AS Chandhiok making a case of members of the NCLAT who are due to retire in the next thirty days.
Justice Rao indicates that the judgement on this case can be expected in two weeks so matter can be dealt with thereafter.
Senior Advocate CS Vaidyanathan made brief submissions on behalf of an applicant on the aspect of tenure of members being four years.
Senior Advocate Gautam Misra argues in a transfer petition.
Misra is referring to the SC judgment in the RK Jain case of 1994 which appreciates the "invaluable and vital role" of the Bar in being capable of discharging judicial services.
Misra: RK Jain judgment was considered and relied on in the Rojer Mathew judgment.
Point is that executive would be bound by RK Jain judgment.
Misra: If all these are considered, then there js no way Advocates can be excluded.
By bringing in the Rules through an executive action they have tried to take away the effect of legislative provisions which make lawyers eligible.
Misra concludes.
Senior Advocate S Guru Krishnakumar for intervenors argues that if the Court upholds the Rules, then okay but should the Rules be struck down then the matter considering IPAB should be considered separately.
Chitambaresh argues that the interim order which ordered for apointments to go back to parent Act was modified later to say that the appointments after 2017 Rules were struck down to be governed by the advertisment issued.
Senior Counsel C Nageswar Rao argues on behalf of applicants in relation to CESTAT.
His sole point is that the new Rules should be made applicable to his client also.
Supreme Court bench of CJI Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi to hear it's suo motu case on Odisha High Court bail order which had a condition for cleaning police stations
#SupremeCourt
Adv for the state: Learned Advocate General of Odisha is logged in
CJI: Okay Dr Acharya.
CJI: unfortunately the HC as well as some district courts while granting bail in odisha is imposing conditions which is obnoxious and bringing a bad name to the image of judiciary.
CJI; we do not expect the judiciary to act and behave in 2026. We spent 76 years for the liberty and this is how are repaying !
ASG Aishwarya Bhati: With profound pain we have to mention this curative. This curative is from AIIMS. Termination of pregnancy is not possible. It will be a live baby with severe deformities. Minor mother will have life long health issues and cannot reproduce. I am sorry I am not composed..
CJI Surya Kant: if the mother does not have permanent disability then it should be carried out. This is a case of child rape. Victim will have lifelong scar and trauma. This is foetus vs child fight.
ASG: this is not foetus vs child fight. This is in best interest of child. Minor mother will have life long health issues.
CJI: Even if she has complicated marital life later..is this pain more or that one.
ASG: this child can be given for adoption. It has been 30 weeks now..it is a viable life now.
CJI: the first judgment of this country on this was delivered by me. If supreme court had not stayed it..it would have been law now. Justice Augustine Masih was on bench with me then. Later SC reversed its own ruling. There are children for adoption. In this country we have lot of sympathies... There are deserted, abandoned children on the streets and even mafias on it. We have to look at them. This is an unwanted pregnancy of a 15 year old child.
CJI: This is a curative. Unwanted pregnancy cannot be thrusted on a person. Imagine she is a child. She should be studying now. But we want to make her a mother. Imagine the pain, the humiliation the child has suffered in this.
ASG: just four more weeks.. it will be better for the child mother.
CJI: my sister must have seen all this
Premature delivery and foeticide are the two things which has to be done now..it's injecting the foetal heart: ASG
#BREAKING Plea in Calcutta High Court challenges ECI decision to deploy only employees of Central government and PSUs as counting supervisors.
Senior Advocate Kalyan Bandopadhyay mentioned the matter. To be heard at 2 PM.
Hearing is ongoing before Justice Krishna Rao
Senior Advocate Kalyan Bandopadhyay, representing Trinamool Congress, said the Chief Electoral Officer had no jurisdiction to pass such order.
"Why are you [ECI] insisting on central government employees who are not involved in the process... is it for particular one party. Why did you [ECI] not disclose," Bandopadhyay said.
Supreme Court nine-judge bench to resume hearing submissions around key issues regarding religious freedom (Articles 25/26), judicial review of faith-based customs, and the 2018 Sabarimala verdict
#Sabarimala #SupremeCourt
Adv Nizam Pasha begins submissions
Adv Pasha: The reason we were constrained to file this intervention application is because a writ petition came to be filed before the Delhi High Court following the Sabarimala judgment. The petitioner, a law student who had come to Delhi for an internship, visited the Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah and was stopped from entering the sanctum sanctorum, the small enclosure where the grave is housed. She claimed that this was a violation of her rights as declared in Sabarimala.
The relief sought before the High Court was a declaration that the practice of prohibiting women from entering the sanctum sanctorum of the Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah is illegal and unconstitutional.
This raises the issue which has been troubling the Court, namely whether a complete third party, a non believer, can enter a place of worship and demand that matters of faith must yield to their individual claims. This is a stark example of such a situation.
Suo Motu: Brutal Assault on a member of the legal frraternity and need for judicial intervention
Adv: A lady lawyer was attacked. She was brutally stabbed in the office of her husband. She went somehow made PCR calls and the. Hospitals refused to take her in.
CJI Surya Kant: As soon as I got your letter yesterday I registered the suo motu
ASG Aishwarya Bhati: The accused was arrested. The FIR is under section 109(1) BNSS. AIIMS has been treating her. She has been discharged and now in private hospital
CJI: why did hospital denied emergency treatment?
CJI: A letter was received by the office of the CJI. The letter sought urgent intervention in the case of brutal assault of a woman advocate . The photos depicted brutal assault by a sharp edged weapon on the lady lawyer which led to injury in all vital organs of the body. She was stated to be under treatment at AIIMS trauma centre. ASG is present on behalf of NCT Delhi. The investigating officer is also present.
CJI: Husband of the victim is the prime accused and assaulted. There are complaints against in laws who are absconding. It is noted that victim has three minor daughters aged 12,4 and 1 years. The girl child was abandoned by the father. Now they are under care of maternal grandparents.
Delhi High Court directs counsels representing Delhi University, Delhi Police, Delhi University Students Union (DUSU) President Aryaan Maan and other contesting candidates who allegedly violated court orders, Lyngdoh Committee recommendations and guidelines framed for conducting DUSU Elections, to be present before court on next date of hearing.
The matter was listed before Chief Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya and Justice Tejas Karia.
Court - Where is the university counsel? Where are the students?
Counsel appearing on behalf of Central Government Standing Counsel (CGSC) representing Union of India and Delhi Police stated that his senior is not available.