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Anil Agrawal (Retired)     07 November 2009

These are our judges

 Respect or hang our head in shame?

HC fines itself for wrong judgment

To Pay Up Rs 15K For Dismissing Lower Court Judge

TIMES NEWS NETWORK 



Ahmedabad: In a curious case of judicial self-introspection, the Gujarat high court has imposed a penalty on itself for misjudging a case. 

    A division bench headed by Chief Justice K S Radhakrishnan on Friday imposed a cost of Rs 15,000 on the high court for neglecting judicial tradition in a case that led to the dismissal of a lower court judge. “Judges are at times poor judges of judges, especially in judicial administration,’’ the divi
sion bench observed while hearing S J Pathak, who was first suspended in 1999 and dismissed seven years later for granting bail to an accused in a serious case without considering settled principles of law. 

    Pathak faced two departmental inquiries. The report was then placed before a disciplinary committee of Justice B J Shethna and Justice D K Trivedi (both now retired), who “tentatively’’ held that charges were proved against the judge. It was not supported by any reasoning. 

    Since the conclusions were “tentative’’, the report was place before another disciplinary committee of Justice N G Nandi and Justice M S Shah. This committee in 2003 exonerated Pathak of all charges. In wake of conflicting conclusions, the report 
was placed before the HC for perusal 

of all judges. In a chamber meeting, all judges did not accept the conclu
sion arrived at by Justice Nandi and Justice Shah and decided to entrust the case with Justice Shethna again. In 2006, Justice Shethna held that all charges against Pathak were proved and recommended his dismissal. Pathak filed a petition and the bench of Justice Radhakrishnan and Justice A S Dave pulled up the HC for referring the case to Justice Shethna for re-consideration, particularly when Pathak had expressed apprehension that he was biased. 

    The Chief Justice ordered return of Pathak to service immediately and made observations against the HC’s decision of sending the case back to Justice Shethna, who had “prejudged’’ the case, which led to a decision that was “vitiated by bias and liable to be set aside’’.
 



Learning

 3 Replies

Anish goyal (Advocate)     07 November 2009

Finally justice is done. And all is well if end is well.

(Guest)

 I don't know what the facts are. But I know that if your conscience is clear, nothing bad will happen to you

Anil Agrawal (Retired)     07 November 2009

 Ten years down the line ending in well and this is called justice is done! Great.


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