By K. Ramakumar, Advocate, High Court of Kerala
Goodbye to A Good Judge
(K. Ramakumar, Senior Advocate, High Court of Kerala)
The High Court of Kerala will undoubtedly suffer a real loss in the retirement of Sri Justice Thomas P. Joseph, one of our most upright and capable Judges.
Legal practitioners including halting and hesitant green horns loved to enter his Court for they were never humbled, humiliated or harrowed. They could argue their cases with ease and confidence. Quality counted in his court needing no cadging. He held high the tradition of Bar friendliness and reaped in return--respect unreserved.
His talents however were cabined only to Criminal and Civil branches of law, which of-course he handled with commendable ability with his firm grip and familiarity with most of the reported Rulings.
This humble contributor while representing the High Court Bar had respectfully requested the then Hon’ble Chief Justice to consider adopting the pattern prevalent in the Apex Court and in some other High Courts to allocate to all Judges admissions on Mondays and Fridays, with the remaining three days for final disposal. A few days later the Chief Justice responded that he is willing but his colleagues are not. I had occasion to interact with Sri Thomas P. Joseph as a young practitioner in Kottayam and therefore, it was not a surprise to me to later know that he had been chosen to the higher judiciary.
He was the ever vigilant Registrar Vigilance practically perambulating like a Police Officer. His report on the Marad massacre was incisive as well as revealing. Like many such reports, it gathers dust due to political compulsions. When Sri Justice Thomas P. Joseph demits his high office he can proudly feel assured that he had done his job well.
Members of the Bar wish him good health and happiness and most of all the greatest gift of God - contentment.
By K.G. Balasubramanian, Advocate, High Court of Kerala
Some more Thoughts on Claims and Counterclaims
(By K.G. Balasubramanian, Advocate, High Court of Kerala)
I had left Thankamma* to the care of Themis. The judicious reprieve to her in the form of an application under Order VIII R. 6C was most welcome though I had felt that the situation required further investigation and more convincing answers.
I noticed sometime thereafter that maintainability of counter claim in suits for decree for partition had been negatived in Doraiswamy v. Sivasankaran (2014 (3) KLT SN 20 (C.No. 21). The learned Single Judge has declared that “......defendants are incompetent to set up any counter-claim for inclusion of some more properties not included in the plaint for division in the suit instituted by another sharer. .......... no counter-claim by defendants in a suit for partition for inclusion of other items which are stated to have been omitted for division is possible, decree can be only in respect of items described in the plaint schedule”.
In Jose v. Antony (2001 (2) KLT SN 31 (C.No. 34), a decree for partition of property including a school scheduled to the written statement was upheld (presumably because maintainability of the counterclaim was not canvassed).
In 1982 KLT 376 (Sukumaran v. Madhavan) dealing with a suit for a decree for injunction and counterclaim therein for declaration of title to the property and recovery of possession – it was held that “The object appears to be to reduce pendency of cases so that causes of action and cross claims similar in nature could be clubbed together and disposed of by a common judgment ...............” and that “it can be seen that courts have not restricted the scope of R 6-A only to money suits.................. In the result, the submission that R.6-A can apply only to suits for recovery of money has to fail”. Though the learned Single Judge noticed the contention based on Order XX Rule 19, it is not seen decided.
In Raveendran v. Mruthyunjayan (1986 KLT 1305) it was held that “It cannot be said that a counter claim can be confined only to money claims or to causes of action of the same nature as the original action. There is no justification for the conclusion that the counter claim relates to or must be connected with the original cause of action or matter. O.8 R.6A envisages that it is open to a defendant to prefer a counter claim against the claim of the plaintiff. The words “any right or claim in respect of cause of action accruing to the defendant against the plaintiff definitely indicate that the cause of action from which a counter claim arises need not necessarily arise from or have any relationship or connection with the cause of action pleaded by the plaintiff.” The learned Single Judge had not noticed Order XX Rule 19.
While Pathrose Samuel v. Parameswaran (1987 (2) KLT 44) accepts that “The words “in addition to his right of pleading a set off under R.6'’ appearing in R.6A need only be understood as enabling a defendant in a money suit also to plead not only set off under R.6 but also make a counter claim for what is due to him after set off. A different interpretation will only defeat the purpose and object of the provision to avoid multiplicity of litigations by clubbing causes of actions and counter claims similar or identical in nature and disposing them of by common judgments”, it proceeds to opine that “Whether the counter claim can be in respect of any claim that could be made the subject matter of a separate suit in relation to any cause of action accruing to the defendant against the plaintiff independent of and unconnected with the plaint claim or cause of action as held in Raveendran v. Mruthyunjayan (1986 KLT 1305) is not a matter that comes up for consideration in this case. ..................... That means the Code contemplated claims which could not and need not be entertained as counter claims but left to be decided in independent suits as the court considering the counter claim deems fit. What those categories of counter claims are need not be gone into here. So far as this case is concerned the counter claim relates to the same property over which the plaintiff claims relief and the claim is counter to the title claimed by the plaintiff.
Sambhaji & Ors. v. Gangabai & Ors. (2008 (15) SCALE 522 = (2008) 17 SCC 117) reiterated: “The processual law so dominates in certain systems as to overpower substantive rights and substantial justice. The humanist rule that procedure should be the handmaid, not the mistress, of legal justice compels consideration of vesting a residuary power in Judges to act ex debito justitiae where the tragic sequel otherwise would be wholly inequitable. Justice is the goal of jurisprudence, processual, as much as substantive. No person has a vested right in any course of procedure. He has only the right of prosecution or defence in the manner for the time being by or for the Court in which the case is pending, and if, by an Act of Parliament the mode of procedure is altered, he has no other right than to proceed according to the altered mode. A procedural law should not ordinarily be construed as mandatory, the procedural law is always subservient to and is in aid to justice. Any interpretation which eludes or frustrates the recipient of justice is not to be followed”.
The above statement of law also prompted me to say earlier that despite comprehensive amendments to the Code vide Act 46/1999, the limitations manifested in Order VIII Rule 6F and Order XX Rule 19 were not removed, only because the Legislature thought it fit not to pave the way for inconvenient situations in non-monetary litigation. But, it is expeditious and judicious to accept that counterclaims homogeneous with the plaint claim may be ordinarily entertained, a situation proved to be healthy and welcome by two decades of legal escapades.
But, there is conflict between the dicta laid down by three learned single Judges; of course, it will be easy to say that the conflict does not survive in the light of Gurbachan Singh v. Bhag Singh & Ors. (1996) 1 SCC 770 = AIR 1996 SC 1087) and Jag Mohan Chawla v. Dera Radha Swami Satsang (1996) 4 SCC 699) though I feel those decisions and Doraiswamy v. Sivasankaran require to be reconsidered on account of casus omissus.
* (See 2014 (2) KLT Journal Page 9)
By B. Premnath, Advocate, High Court of Kerala
A Reporter's Diary
(By B.Premnath, Advocate, High Court of Kerala, Ernakulam)
“But in these sharp quillets of the law, good faith, I am no wiser than a Daw”1 - My feelings exactly, as I ruminate over judgements after judgements, day after day. A novice, only in to the 5th year of law reporting, I always feel elated to do the art. My day begins by reading judgements and end with it. I wish I had the trained eye of an eagle to spot the dictum flawlessly and craft the head notes. I always remind myself that law reporting is not news paper reporting, where sensationalism has a coveted place.
When I eagerly set out to comprehend the works of the “Living Oracles of the Law”2 , I read through the lines, word by word. I revel in digging deep in to the judgements. I don’t have the liberty to coin words, add embellishments to the head notes than point out the exact law that brews out of the judgement. I am reminded ever not to rush through the judgement. I know I cannot miss the Lex Loci that lies hidden. My eyes stay pinned on to the facts spanning to the precedents if any relied on, and then to the ratio decidendi, to discover the law within. I am aware of the value of the precedents. “Stare decisis is at least the every day working rule of our law”, says Benjamin N.Cardozo. Precedents have a “directive force for future cases of the same or similar nature,” (Redlich, “The case method in American Law School,” Bulletin No.8, Carnegie Foundation, Page No.37).
I ever try to emulate the probably unparalleled work culture of Late Sri.Siby Mathew, my mentor at the Kerala law Times. I have his advice ringing in my ears -"Prem, mind the reader” - readers comprising judges, lawyers, lawmakers and students. What do I need to deliver through the head notes? It should definitely be the dictum which the reader ought to understand at a glance. Long winding sentences would be a nightmare. I cannot be like a knight on a sleeveless errand, through the judgements. I am conscious that unless I chew and digest the judgements, I will be failing in my attempt to report the law. I know that in my long run as a lawyer, it will put me in good stead.
But how judgements are made? and how a decision gets its shape to become the Lex Loci ? Benjamin N.Cardozo says that the decision making process is one of “search, comparison and little more. Some judges seldom get beyond that process in any case. Their notion of their duty is to match the colours of the case at hand against the colours of many sample cases spread out upon their desk. The sample nearest in shade supplies the applicable rule. But, of course, no system of living law can be evolved by such a process, and no judge of a high court, worthy of his office, views the function of his place so narrowly. If that were all there was to our calling, there would be little of intellectual interest about it. The man who had the best card of index of the cases would also be the wisest judge. It is when the colours do not match, when the references in the index fail, when there is no decisive precedent, that the serious business of the judge begins. He must then fashion law for the litigants before him. In fashioning it for them, he will be fashioning it for others”.
1. Henry VI, William Shakespeare
2. Blackstone
By V.K. Babu Prakash, Judge, M.A.C.T., Thalassery
Culprit's Lost Idenity
(By V.K. Babu Prakash, Judge, M.A.C.T., Thalassery)
There was heat and dust outside the Court building where he stood. His lawyer was talking with someone on his mobile. His escort policemen were watching dully the lawyers and clients who were lazily emptying from the court premises. The lawyers have dark, dead and alien eyes. They looked at the people and things like tired men looking at flies. Everything around the court and its atmosphere felt him dull and insipid. The building was cheaply built, the painting on the wall was faded, the furniture were rickety, old and worn out and things like that. The Judge showed no enthusiasm and lawyers and clients watched the court proceedings as if a funeral ritual was taking place.
The lawyer hurriedly reached near him and told without emotion that the evidence taking process in his case is over. Next week, the Judge would question him about the substance of the evidence. He has to prepare answers. The lawyer will give him answers which he has to tell the Judge when he is questioned. The answers must impress the Judge who must be confused with the evidence. When the lawyer was sermoning about the matter eagerly, he felt bored and looked beyond the lawyer. Faraway in the court precinct a thin cow was grazing the ground to find out some green grass buds. The cow also felt bored and slowly walked away. He noded his head to the lawyer and slowly walked towards the escort policemen. The policeman who was Senior among them removed the hand cuff from his pocket and locked his hands in it. He accompanied the policemen to the next bus stop to catch the bus to the Sub Jail where he was remanded.
The bus was crowded. As he was handcuffed an old man stood up from his seat and offered it to him. He began to watch the side scenes when the bus moved ahead. It always enlivened his mind to watch the side scenes from the moving bus. His mind was rolling back to his past life. He was a happily married man. His wife was beautiful and devout to him. He was working in a bank and their life was going on without peril. One day he received a communication that he has to attend a training programme at Delhi for three days. As he cannot take his wife with him, he decided to go alone leaving his wife at home. His wife also readily agreed and assured him that she will be alright at home. He booked the train ticket and went off. But in the mid way, all the trains were cancelled due to a communal riot which happened in the faraway city, thereby he had to cancel the journey. He came back home without informing his wife that the journey is cancelled. When he reached home he found his beloved wife in bed with her lover. He was shocked. After a moment of indecision, he picked up a chopper and killed them both. He handed himself to the police with the murder weapon. Police found their task easy and collected evidence at his instance. As there was nobody to take him on bail, he was in custody throughout. The court started trial and a lawyer was appointed for him by the court. The lawyer who did not have much work, tried his level best to make out a defence. But, he did not show much interest in the trial and its outcome on his fate. Next week, he would be questioned by the Judge, lawyer told him. He was suddenly woken up from his day dream by the police man as they have reached in front of the Sub Jail.
When the clock struck at 11, the Judge appeared on the dais through the corner door of his chamber. His case was called and he was brought into the dock. The Judge with a dull face in a feeble voice asked him something about the incident. He looked at the Judge who turned his eyes to avoid his gaze. He also turned his eyes which caught upon a lizard which was slowly passing behind the Judge on the wall. The lizard in a slow pace looked at the Judge and then hurriedly moved off to the other side of the wall. He in a firm but polite voice told the Judge that the woman he found in his bed on the fateful day with her lover was not his wife, but someone he had never before laid eyes on. The woman with whom he had shared his life all these years, the woman he knew and trusted would never have done this treachery to him. He explained, it therefore followed that his wife was not the woman in the bed but someone else and he was not himself who killed her. He further said that the couple he had killed were two thieves who had broken into his house and made shameless use of his bed. His wife was not there as she had gone off to somewhere without informing him her destination. He has taken the responsibility for the crime committed by the other person who had taken over his body when the crime passion overwhelmed him. If he is let off by the court, however long it would be, he was going off in search of his wife he had not seen since his departure from the house. If he finds her, she would, he hoped, help him find his own lost self. He in an unflinching tone told the Judge with folded hands that he be left off to find his lost wife and his lost self. When he stopped without pause, his lawyer was looking at him with plate like eyes. The lawyer patted his own head in despair.
The Judge noded his head and buried his head down on the paper he was scribbling. After some time, he looked at the empty space and muttered in an illegible voice that his case is over and he is let off with permission to seek and find his lost wife and his lost self. The Judge without saying anything further, went off to his chamber through the same corner door. Policemen took him back to the Jail after some paper works at the court. The formality at the Jail took some time. He was released in the early dawn of the next day. When he came out by the Jail door, chilling morning air gusted against his frail body. There was nobody to receive him. He stood alone by the side of the road. Sun has not risen in the horizon. He did not know where to go. He looked at the far corner of the street where he heard the dirty howl of a stray dog. Snow began to fall when he took off slowly towards the eastern side where the first ray of sunrise started to glow from far away........
By V.K. Babu Prakash, Judge, M.A.C.T., Thalassery
Looking Through The State of The Nation
(By V.K. Babu Prakash, Judge, M.A.C.T., Thalassery)
“Just as it is impossible not to taste honey or the poison that one may find at the tip of one’s tongue, so it is impossible for one dealing with Government funds not to taste a little bit of the King’s revenue. Just as it is impossible to know whether fish moving in water are drinking it, so it is impossible to find out when Government servants employed in Government work are taking money for themselves............”.
— Kautilya in Arthashastra —
(Quoted by Fali S. Nariman in his book
‘The State of the Nation’)
On my leisurely fidgetting through the pages of the new arrivals at the book counter of Current Books, Thalassery, two books quickly knocked down my attention. One was ‘The State of the Nation’, the second new book by Fali. S. Nariman and the other was the new best selling book by Dan Brown titled ‘Inferno’. The budget in my pocket restrained my instinct to choose one between the two, whereas both books ogled at me like two beautiful women. At last, I bought both the books and walked away feeling contented. Began the reading with Fali’s book, although mind was rolling on to ‘Inferno’ to catch down with it. But alas, the first rung of the reading held me so dear with Fali as the attractive cover of the book with the title folder showing Fali’s bright, smiling and handsome face enveloped in the background of his red Sweater made me to read Fali’s new exposition with much relish. No doubt, the book ‘The State of the Nation’ is lucid, witty and absorbing. It is published by Hay House India which also published the best selling autobiography of Fali ‘Before Memory Fades’. The book is a definitive analytical and candid account of the present state of the Nation, in the context of India’s Constitution.
Fali. S. Nariman resolutely conveys the idea in the book that there is vital link between India’s document of Governance and the events shaped substantially by elected and appointed constitutional functionaries, that have unfolded over the past six plus decades. Dr. B. R. Ambedkar, the chief architect of Indian Constitution observed in 1949 in the constituent assembly as follows:- “However good a Constitution may be, it is sure to turn out bad, because, those who are called upon to work it happen to be a bad lot. However bad a constitution may be, it may turn out to be good, if those who are called upon to work it happen to be a good lot. The working of constitution does not depend wholly upon the nature of the constitution”. The book is divided into six chapters with an appendix conculding with the constitution making and unmaking process in Pakistan and Bangladesh.
The first chapter writes about how India and its many scattered princely states have become a one Nation after independence. Every chapter of the book is prefaced by the wise cartoon of R.K. Lakshman which gives a witty but thoughtful pointer to the content that follows it. Fali deals with Indian diversity which begins with its geography in the first chapter. The second chapter touches emotionally about the state of the Nation and Indian constitution. Fali eloquently argues in the chapter that after all for whose benefit was the constitution enacted? What is the point of making all these bother about fundamental rights? The Constitution is not for the exclusive benefit of Governments and States, it is not only for lawyers, politicians and officials and those highly placed. It also exists for the common man, for the poor and the humble for those who have business at stake, for the butcher, the baker and the candle stick maker. It lays down for this land a rule of law as understood in the free democracies of the world.
On Indian federalism in chapter three Fali deals with the topic with the poignant observation of Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the first and only President who was elected twice to the post (1956-62). Dr. Rajendra Prasad exalted that he does not attach any importance to the label which may be be attached to it as federal or unitary Constitution or by any other name. It makes no difference so long as the constitution serves the people. In chapter four Fali makes a scathing search to see whether we have forgotten the common man in our governance of the country for the past six decades. Fali expounds that if we search for the main reason why we have floundered over the past sixty plus years and why we have not been able to successfully work the constitution, despite the genuine efforts of politcians, lawyers and a string of commissions and committees, it is only because, we have not had the will to implement the Directive Principles of the state policy, the principles declared fundemental to the governance of the country. Making of laws is not enough, but applying and enforcing laws, which is also the primary duty of the state requires a certain idealism, a certain awareness of constitutional norm, which over the years those in governance have totally ignored. Chapter five and six deal with the corruption in the public life and corruption in the higher judiciary. Fali sensitively appeals that we have to fight the menace of corruption with whatever weapon we can call in aid, with laws that have sufficient teeth and claws, with education, with persuasion, with instilling in the dishonest and fraudulent the fear of God, public opinion and the might of law. But, will the fight succeed, Fali asks in doubt. Yet, Fali hopefully concludes that the nature of bribes is antithetical to the nature of human power in its full development. Just as slavery was once a way of life and how it become obsolete and incomprehensible, so the practice of bribery in the form of exchange of payment for official actions will become obsolete. In combating corruption in the higher judiciary Fali moves on the subject with two eloquent quotes by Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer and Edmund Burke. Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer in his peculiar style says that a court which is final and unreviewable needs more careful scrutiny than any other. Unreviewable power is the most likely to self indulge itself and the least likely to engage in dispassionate self analysis. In a country like ours, public institution or the people who operate it cannot be above public debate. Edmund Burke in his ‘Reflections on the Revolution in France’ held that all persons possessing a portion of power ought to be strongly and awfully impressed with an idea that they act in trust and that they are to account for their conduct in that trust. The chapter on corruption ends with the witty but quint essential lines of Willam Shakespeare.
“In short, whoever you may be to this conclusion you ‘ll agree.
When every one is somebody then no one’s anybody”
To conclude, the book ‘The State of the Nation’, by Fali S. Nariman is comprehensive, absorbing, hard hitting as well as thought provoking. But, above all, it is eminently readable with a delicious touch of taste. It is an anthology of the state of affairs that engulf the body and soul of Indian nation. The word ‘anthology’ comes from Greek, meaning a flower gathering, in other words a bouquet of flowers. Flowers bring with their fragrance and colour a reminder of the fields of a season. Fali S. Nariman gives the sense of such a season in the book. It is a vast field of his sensitivity which he painfully wanted to share with others. It most often enlivens us with enjoyable reading and by the bye, at times, disturbs also when one introspectively thinks about the reality of the State of our nation which the author had vividly portrayed.