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The Supreme Court today turned to itself once again by filing an appeal against a January 12 Delhi High Court verdict that had clarified that the Right to Information (RTI) Act covered the office of the Chief Justice of India.

Citing as many as 39 reasons for its contention that the RTI law did not cover the office of the CJI, the appeal filed by the apex court’s secretary-general said that the high court had failed to deal with its submission that only information that was in ‘public domain’ could be sought under the 2005 law.

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The Central Information Commission (CIC) had directed the Supreme Court on January 6, 2009 to provide information to an RTI applicant who wanted to know whether judges of the higher judiciary were disclosing their assets to the CJI or the respective HC CJs. The SC challenged the CIC order in the Delhi HC, but lost both the appeals and the review plea. Earlier, the SC had filed a petition before itself challenging another CIC order for disclosure of details relating to bypassing of seniority while elevating Judges to the apex court. On February 8 this year, a Bench comprising Justices B Sudershan Reddy and SS Nijjar issued notice to all the HCs seeking their response to the SC plea that matters pertaining to appointment of judges could not be disclosed. In the present appeal, the apex court contended that the 1997 SC Resolution and the 1999 Judicial Conference Resolution on judicial values had only talked about “voluntary declaration” of assets by Judges and as such these were not in public domain. According to the appeal, the HC “has failed to appreciate the context in which the submission about the non-binding nature of the resolution needs to be noted.”

While interpreting the right to information under the act with reference to the judiciary, the HC ought to have appreciated the right under Section 2(j) in a manner “which is in furtherance of the basic structure of the Constitution, namely independence of judiciary.”

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Comments
15 years ago Daniel Thorat

Actually, this is not about "transparency" for the sake of transparency. It is about high level corruption in the highest judiciary of this country and the possibility of arresting some of it through RTI. The legal profession has degenerated into sheer money making pasture. It is common knowledge that some lawyers are charging on hourly basis at a few lakh rupees per hour ! It is also common knowledge that the Judges are always influenced by such lawyers. But, it is not for the sheer excellence of lawyers` knowledge or competence. It is because those lawyers are conduits for the judges. Starting from categorization, to listing, to preferred benches -- all are being manipulated through bribes in the SC. Therefore, the whole country must rise up and openly ask the CJI to fall in line, in the interests of corruptin free justice and for arresting ill gotten wealth.


15 years ago Daniel Thorat

The CJI is the main person preventing other judges supporting transparency. If the CJI admits that the purpose of the RTI is good and beneficial, he must stop advancing silly, childlike arguments. Already, the CJI did show himself in poor light, eg: the non-action on Justice B.N.Krishna`s report on Madras lawyers, income details on website etc. The awe inspiring reputation and stature of the Supreme Court of India has been damaged for all time. No previous CJI has dared do this in the past. The whole country knows that SC judges are only human beings, quite fallible, and they are, therefore, liable to indulge into corruption from a highly privileged position. It is for this reason that the CJI and SC judges must come forward boldly to fall in line with the rest of India.


15 years ago Reshma K

The SC is not like a ordinary villager who fears police harassment. It is the apex court and has enormous powers to deal with any situation including the lame excuse it has put forwards of being harassed by disgruntled litigants. Such statement by the SC is dissapointing and a mere excuse to avoid itself from transparency in its functioning. We should fight it tooth and nail.


15 years ago dr krishan k arora

Why is Supreme Court/CJI afraid of transparency? By appealing to itself to get restraint order by itself, it is sending absolutely wrong signals for public at large. High Court order should be respected and adopted.




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