By B. Premnath, Advocate, High Court of Kerala
Powers of Attorney -- A Concept Alien to the Proceedings
under Chapter IX of the Code of Criminal Procedure ?
(By B.Premnath, Advocate, High Court of Kerala, Ernakulam)
The focus in this write-up is mainly on the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code of Criminal Procedure before the Family Courts where there are cases in which parties; especially the respondents are appearing through their power of attorney holders. The preamble of the Family Courts Act, 1984 indicates that, the family courts are established “to promote conciliation in, and secure speedy settlement of disputes relating to marriage and family affairs.” Chapter IX was incorporated in the Code of Criminal Procedure for a speedy, effective and cheaper remedy for the applicants therein. Is not the presence of power of attorney holders defeating the very purpose of the enactment of the Family Courts Act and Chapter IX? Whether parties to proceedings under Chapter IX can represent themselves through their power of attorney holders ? Family Courts, while dealing with the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code of Criminal Procedure, exercise the jurisdiction of the Magistrates, which is that of a criminal Court as per Section 6 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, in accordance with the provisions of that Code, as held in Satyabhama v. Ramachandran (1997(2) KLT 503 (F.B.)). But that will be subject to the provisions of the Family Courts Act and the Rules, as per Section 10(2) of the Family Courts Act. Let us begin with the concept of Powers of Attorney and then answer the questions posed above, taking stock of the nature of proceedings under Chapter IX on the way.
2. A person who authorizes another to act in his place is said to grant the other a ‘power of attorney.’ Qui per alium facit per seipsum facere videtur. Section 2 of The Power of Attorney Act, 1882 is a copycat of Section 46 of the English Act, “The Conveyancing and Law of Property Act, 1881”, though the word “assurance’” occurring in the 1882 Act was omitted by Section 3 of the Act 55 of 1982. Section 2 merely declares the effect of the power granted to an ‘attorney.’ It does not empower the power holder to represent the Principal before the Court. As held by the Apex Court in Ravulu Subba Rao v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Madras (AIR 1956 SC 604), “It does not confer on a person a right to act through agents. It presupposes that the agent has the authority to act on behalf of the principal, and protects acts done by him in exercise of that authority but in his own name.”
3. Order 3 Rule 1 of the Code of Civil Procedure permits parties to the proceedings to which that Code apply, to act by themselves, through their recognized agents or through a pleader except otherwise expressly provided by any law. Such appearance can be made by the party in person if the Court so directs. Rule 2 of Order 3 describes “recognized agents” as persons holding powers of attorney and agents of the persons carrying on trade or business. Rule 22 of the Civil Rules of Practice, Kerala deals with the procedure when a party appears by an agent other than a pleader. Rule 22(2) mandates that the said agent can appear only after the Judge grants him permission to do so.
4. By the decision of the Apex Court in Janki Vashdeo v. Indusind Bank (2005 (2)KLT 265 (SC)), it is now settled that the “acts” employed in the provisions of Order 3 Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure is confined only to the “acts” done by the power holder in exercise of the power granted by the instrument and it would not include deposing in place and instead of the Principal and that the power of attorney holder can only depose about the “acts” rendered by him in pursuance of that authority, and that he cannot depose for the principal for the acts done by him. Our High Court followed suit, in Rekharani v. Prabhu (2007(3) KLT 917).
5. With the advent of the Advocate’s Act, 1961 it has become the exclusive domain of the “Advocate” to practice the law, subject to Sections 29, 30, 32, 33 and 34 of that Act. It may be noted that “Pleader,” defined under Section 2(15) of the Code of Civil Procedure doesn’t cover a power of attorney holder. Therefore, in a civil case, though a power of attorney holder can appear on behalf of the parties and engage a pleader for them, he cannot act as a “pleader” for the party and doesn’t have a right of audience in the Court. In M.Krishnammal v. T.Balasubramania Pillai (AIR 1937 Mad.937(F.B.)) it was held: “There is no warrant whatever for putting a power of attorney given to a recognized agent to conduct proceedings in Court in the same category as a Vakalat given to a legal practitioner, though the latter may be described as a power of attorney.” This decision was later quoted with approval by the Apex Court in T.C.Mathai v. The District and Sessions Judge, Trivandrum (1999 (2) KLT 156 (SC)). The above view gets support from Jaymal Thakore v. Gujarat State Charity Commissioner (AIR 2001 Guj.279 (D.B.)) also.
6. Appearance of complainants through a power of attorney holder is not contemplated by the Code of Criminal Procedure (hereinafter referred to as the “Code,” for brevity) with regard to the offences regulated by the Code as criminal law can be set in motion by any body. Few instances where only an aggrieved person can file a complaint are when the offences alleged are under Sections 494, 498-A and 499 of the Indian Penal Code as mandated under Sections 198, 198-A and 199 of the Code, with the exceptions provided therein. But there also representation by a power of attorney holder is not contemplated. Section 195 of the Code categorizes offences in which the Court has to be the complainant.
7. A Power of Attorney holder can represent a complainant in a proceeding involving the offence under Section 138 of the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1988. It is because of the law of agency under Section 27 which is embedded in Chapter III of that Act, which is equally applicable to both Civil and Criminal Proceedings, as held in Pandalai v. Jacob C.Alexander (2000(2) KLT 59). Ashalatha v. State of Kerala (2007(3) KLT 984) held that as the law does not insist that the payee or holder-in-due-course should personally file the complaint, his duly authorized power-of-attorney can file the complaint on his behalf.
8. Whether an accused can be allowed to represent himself through a power of attorney holder? Provisions of the Code compel the accused to appear in person unless exempted by the Court. In no case the accused can appear through his power of attorney holder, as held in T.C.Mathai v. The District and Sessions Judge, Trivandrum (1999 (2) KLT 156 (SC)). When exempted under Section 205, the accused has to represent himself through a pleader; obviously a pleader as defined under Section 2(q) of the Code, with the permission of the Court. The benefit of representation through a pleader is extended to the exempted accused during the evidence taken in the course of the trial, by virtue of Section 273 of the Code. Section 303 of the Code recognizes the right of the accused to be defended by a pleader of his choice, which finds its alma mater in Article 22 of the Constitution of India, which is a fundamental right.
9. Chapter IX was incorporated in the Code with the intent of preventing vagrancy. Chapter IX is a complete Code in itself, evolving a one of its kind procedure of its own. It is now settled by Moideenkutty v. State of Kerala (2008 (3) KLT 8) that the sentence under Section 125(3) is not stricto senso a punishment. The ‘complaint’ filed to initiate the proceedings under Section 125 is not a ‘complaint’ as defined under Section 2(d) of the Code, as it is not an allegation of commission of an 'offence.' S.190(1)(a), (b) and (c) apply only when Court is taking 'cognizance' of an 'offence'. Therefore, only the aggrieved party can invoke the right u/S.125 of the Code. She/He cannot engage another person/power of attorney holder even otherwise, as the Code does not provide so.
10. Naushad v. Naseema Beevi (1994 (1) KLT 184) held that there is no legal bar in permitting a duly constituted power of attorney holder of a party to the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code to engage a pleader for conducting cases. This was on the premise that the proceedings under Chapter IX are “civil proceedings,” and the power of attorney can represent a party in the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code. In SAL Narayan Row & Another v. J.Ishwar Lal Bhagwan Das & Anr. (AIR 1965 SC 1818), the Apex Court distinguished “Criminal proceedings” from “Civil proceedings.” It was stated: “A criminal proceeding on the other hand is ordinarily one in which if carried to its conclusion it may result in the imposition of sentences such as death, imprisonment, fine or forfeiture of property. It also includes proceedings in which in the larger interests of the State, orders to prevent apprehended breach of the peace, orders to bind down persons who are a danger to the maintenance of peace and order, or orders aimed at preventing vagrancy are contemplated to be passed…” Satyabhama v. Ramachandran (1997(2) KLT 503 (F.B.) relying on that Judgement and without following Balan Nair v. Valsamma (1986 KLT 1378 (F.B.)), held that the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code are “criminal proceedings.” Peter v. Sara (2006(4) KLT 219 (F.B.)) followed suit.
11. Code insists the respondent to appear in person in the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code. Section 126(2) mandates that all evidence in the proceedings have to be taken in the presence of the respondent and if his personal presence was dispensed with, in the presence of his pleader. Proviso to Section 126(2) calls for passing an ex parte order against a respondent who “willfully neglects” to attend the Court. Apart from making appearance through his “pleader,” he cannot avoid his personal presence before the Court. Situation may arise in a case where a respondent is unable to appear in person because of his avocation. There the answer would be: Compulsion for the complainant to approach the Court under Section 125 arose only because of the willful neglect of the respondent to provide maintenance. Then the respondent cannot be heard to say that he is unable to appear because of his job or some other reason. The respondent cannot be allowed to take advantage of his own negligence.
12. Now, when the proceedings under Chapter IX are transplanted to the Family Courts, it assumes a different colour. By the application of Section 8 of the Family Courts Act the jurisdiction of the Magistrate under Chapter IX of the Code is taken away in an area where a Family Court is established. As per Section 10 of the Family Courts Act, a statutory stricture is imposed on the parties against appearing through their agents. Section 10 states that in all the proceedings before it except those under Chapter IX of the Code, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure apply. O.III Rr.1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure which regulates representation by power of attorney holders are applicable only to "Civil Proceedings". Hence by the exclusion of Chapter IX by Section 10 and as the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code are "criminal proceedings", parties before the Family Court in proceedings under Chapter IX cannot represent themselves through their power of attorney holders. For these reasons the decision reported in 1994 (1) KLT 184 (Naushad v. Naseema Beevi ) is not good law.
13. Section 10(2) of the Family Courts Act makes the provisions under the Code applicable to the Family Court in the proceedings under Chapter IX of the Code before it, subject to the other provisions of the said Act and the Rules. The power of the Family Court in endeavouring for a settlement of the disputes as prescribed under Section 9 is not circumscribed by the Code or the sub-sections (1) and (2) of Section 10 of the Family Courts Act, as stated in Section 10(3). Rule 25 of the Family Courts (Kerala) Rules, 1989 grants the power to the Family Court to take action against the failure of a party to attend the counseling under Section 9 of the Family Courts Act.
14. The very purpose of Conciliation contemplated under the Family Courts Act is to bring the hostile members of a family together, to see each other eye to eye, speak out in a congenial atmosphere and unite their lives riven asunder. Power of Attorney holders can never be the substitutes for them. Further, all the proceedings in the Family Court are purely personal in nature. Power of attorney holders will not be able to know actually what transpired between the family members, the tenor of their feelings and the case evolved from it. The court will not have the advantage of seeing the parties in person and their demeanors, which will only help the Court to reach a settlement. Situations may arise where a respondent in a given case engages a power of attorney holder, may not appear at all before the Court even during the proceedings for conciliation in the first instance, till the end of the case. This will delay in resolving the dispute and will certainly defeat the very purpose for which the Family Courts were established.
15. Before parting with the topic, let me deal with an incidental question. Whether an agent can be a "pleader" for a party in a criminal proceeding? Definition of “pleader” under Section 2(q) of the Code encompasses a power of attorney holder as held by the Apex Court in Jimmy Jahangir Madan v. Bolly Cariyappa Hindley (2004 (3) KLT 850 (SC)), and any other person, appointed with the permission of the Court. Section 302 of the Code permits “any person,” which includes a “pleader,” as defined under Section 2(q), to conduct the prosecution with the permission of the Court except the Officers mentioned therein. Rule 30 of the Criminal Rules of Practice stipulates that “No person who is not a qualified legal practitioner shall be permitted to act as a pleader in any proceeding except to prevent a possible miscarriage of justice.” It is further stated that it will not operate as a general licence for all cases. Sub-rule 2 further requires such person who was permitted so, to file a power of attorney from his client containing such authorization. In T.C.Mathai v. The District and Sessions Judge, Trivandrum (1999 (2) KLT 156 (SC)), the Apex Court held that an agent cannot become a “pleader” for the party in criminal proceedings unless the party himself (emphasis supplied) secures permission from the court to appoint him to act in such proceedings. Hence even if there is a power of attorney, that will not clothe a private person with the authority to conduct the prosecution.
16. The Apex Court sounded a note of caution on appointing a private person as a “pleader,” in Harisankar Rastogi v. Giridhari Sharma &Anr. (AIR 1978 SC 1019), through that great Judge V.R.Krishna Iyer who, in his inimitable style spoke thus: “If the man who seeks to represent has poor antecedents or irresponsible behaviour or dubious character, the court may receive counter productive service from him. Justice may fail if a knave were to represent a party. Judges may suffer if quarrelsome, ill informed, or blackguardly or blockheadly private representatives filing arguments at the Court. Likewise the party himself may suffer if his private representative deceives him to destroy his case mendacious or meaningless submissions and with no responsibility or respect for the Court. Other situations, setting and disqualifications may be conceived of where grant of permission for a private person to represent another may be obstructive, even destructive of justice.”
By John S. Ralph, Advocate, Kochi
Proved, Not Proved, Disproved And the Dilemma
of the Forgotten Prudent Man
(By John S. Ralph, Advocate, High Court of Kerala)
Two grand authorities on the subject of proof in Evidence Act have rendered two sets of thoughts ; one in Jose v. State of Kerala ( 2010 (2) KLT 163) by his Lordship Justice R.Basant and the other in reply to that by his Lordship Justice U.L Bhat published in 2010 (3) KLT Journal 1. The clash of the titans gave immense academic pleasure for its readers. This is to explain a different approach on the subject. And not to contradict or differ with those jurists.
For a quick reading let me reproduce Section 3 of the Evidence Act.
Proved : A fact is said to be proved when, after considering the matters before it, the court either believes it to exist or considers its existence so probable that a prudent man ought under the circumstances of the particular case, to act upon the supposition that it exists.
(The other 2 limbs ‘not proved’ and ‘disproved’ are omitted since not required for the present discussion).
Thus Section 3 has two limbs. (1) The court believes it to exist (2) probability of the acts of a prudent man under a particular circumstance.
The crux of the judgment in Jose v. State of Kerala was that the second limb of the section is meant for the jury and the first limb is for the trained judicial mind. Hence the two limbs are mutually exclusive. The reply article tries to establish the contrary and argues that both the limbs are to mutually exist.
My humble endeavor is to advance a different theory for the inclusion of the second limb of Section 3 since both the aforesaid theories explained by the echelons of law will at times conflict each other and hence they both could not fit in all the circumstances. Let us consider some of them.
Belief of the trained judicial mind conflicts with the evidence: There may arise situations in which the belief of the trained judicial mind conflicts with the proved facts. Take for example a case of defamation on a popular public figure as the victim. The prosecution/ plaintiff as the case may be has to prove that the person defamed has got certain fame/reputation. But the Judge knows from his personal experience (since the defamed man is a popular figure) that the person defamed is a dishonest man. Evidence is adduced through witnesses. What they speak about the fame is what they think about that particular man. The cross examination was unsuccessful. Now there is a set of evidence tendered through witnesses, unbroken in cross examination. But the Judge does not BELIEVE it to be true since he knew that the defamed man is dishonest and has no fame or reputation. Here the belief of the Judge is in direct conflict with the evidence before him. Now the judge cannot render his judgment against the set of evidence before him, by saying that he did not believe them to be true. Then the question arises “can the Judge consider the matter as proved even though he does not believe it to be proved?” If he does so he will be rendering a judgment against his conscience. Then comes the essentially consequential query. Can a Judge render a judgment against his conscience ? The answer will be a difficult one. There may be thousand of like situations wherein the judicial mind conflicts with the evidence adduced. Hence the argument that both the limbs are mutually exclusive is doubtful.
Are the limbs mutually co-existing ? If both the limbs are co-existing, the need for the second limb vanishes. Why because (1) the trained judicial mind can certainly gather what the untrained lay prudent man of the jury thinks on that certain set of facts. (2) If the trained judicial mind can not accept a thing as proved, it should not, need not and cannot go down to a lower level of intellect as of the lay prudent man jury for ascertaining what a lesser intellect thinks fit (3) if both the limbs are co-existing, the Judge goes to the second limb since he does not believe himself that the fact is proved. But later on he cannot accept a different belief from the jury since it will be in direct conflict with his own belief.
These apart the law at the time of jury trial was that, when there is a conflict between the jury and the Judge regarding a question of fact, the decision of the jury should prevail. (See Ramanugrah Sing v. Emperor 1946 PC 151).
And it is also not correct to assume that the jury was consisting of lay prudent men, at least in 1872 when the Evidence Act came into force. There may be cases of imprudent jury men like that of Nanavati’s case (AIR 1961 SC 112) which resulted in abolishment of jury system in India. But at the inception of the jury system, persons of high positions in the society were forming the jury. The Evidence Act came in 1872 and it was codifying the practice and precedents of centuries of legal wisdom. The earliest jury men were appointed by the crown to assess the tax of the land possessed by the citizens. And those were persons of highest integrity and reputation in the society. And nowhere in the British legal history we get information for the proposition that the jury consisted of lay prudent men. Bear in mind that we are in 1872, the year in which Section 3 came into the statute book.
Now let us view the second limb of Section 3 in a totally novel way, tearing it from the first limb. Both the masterminded authors mentioned above have not considered the question “who is a prudent man ? " Prudent man is not a lay man or a jury man or a reasonable man.
Who is a prudent man ? The Prudent man rule came in the year 1830 in a Massachusetts court decision in Harvard College v. Armory 9 Pick (26 Mass) 446, 461 (1830). The rule directs trustees “to observe how men of prudence, discretion and intelligence manage their own affairs, not in regard to speculation, but in regard to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable income, as well as the probable safety of the capital to be invested”. And the said rule, obviously came into existence after decades of legal battles on the subject in many suits. This has been made a specific law in many countries including America under The Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 1974.
An Example on how the rule applies : The plaintiff entrusted money with the defendant who is an investment expert. He invested the same in land in Kochi at a time when X party was in power and the land value was increasing. Due to certain political turmoil, the Government was forced to resign and in the ensued election, the Y party came into power. Due to their policies, the land value decreased. The plaintiff sues the defendant for the loss he sustained in the investment. The defendant takes up the plea of PRUDENT MAN RULE and content that he had done only what the prudent men had done in that particular circumstances.
Here, the loss suffered by the plaintiff was due to the attitude of the millions of voters/electorate that changed the Government. Ultimately what affected the investment was the mental attitude of each and every voter, a fact which could not have been foreseen before the election result comes. Hence the plaintiff cannot prove or ascertain that the loss of the Government and the consequences were certain and that the defendant should not have invested in land. The defendant also could not prove that the change of the Government was unlikely since the society was improving which is indicated by the increase in the land value and it was thus he invested in land.
Hence there will not be any positive cogent evidence on matters before the court for it to enter into a belief which of the plea of the parties is correct.
In such situations, the court should go to the second limb and ascertain what the Prudent Men had done in that given period. (Whether the investment was speculative or not, or whether the investment was advised by the financial experts and magazines etc.) Thus resolves the rival contentions. It is for that purpose the second limb exists.
Deconstructing the Section (Deconstruction is a method in western philosophy that rigorously pursues the meaning of a text to the point of exposing the contradictions and internal oppositions upon which it is apparently founded and showing that those foundations are irreducibly complex, unstable, or impossible. It was founded by the French philosopher Jacques Derrida (1930-2004) and effectively used by critics like Roland Barthes (1915-80).
The present argument can also be explained by deconstructing the second limb into parts as follows :
.....existence so (1) PROBABLE (court is considering only the probability and not a certainty) that a
(2) PRUDENT MAN (the prudent man in the prudent man rule) ought
(3) UNDER THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE PARTICULAR CASE, (the word “case” according to Oxford means ‘an instance of a particular situation, the situation affecting or relating to a particular person or thing etc’)
(4) TO ACT UPON (here the court is considering the ACT of the PRUDENT MAN and not his belief)
(5) THE SUPPOSITION THAT IT EXISTS. (that certain situation was existing)
Now let us add these five segments and we get the following conclusion that is to be arrived by the court after considering matters before it.
That the prudent man was, under those circumstances, acting upon the supposition that those situations were existing.
This proposition gets support from the set of words TO ACT UPON. Let us again deconstruct these set of words.
Who is acting ? and To act upon what?
The prudent man in the prudent man rule was ACTING and he was acting under a certain situation. And his ACT was so probable.
Had this been not the intention of the second limb, it would have been constructed as follows : “OR CONSIDERS ITS EXISTENCE SO PROBABLE THAT A PRUDENT MAN WILL BELIEVE IT TO EXISTS ". So it is not the belief of the lay prudent man jury but the PROBABILITY OF THE ACT OF A PRUDENT MAN UNDER A CERTAIN SITUATION is being considered/evaluated by the court to arrive at a conclusion whether the claim of the party that what he had done was only a thing that the prudent men had done at that given situation.
The theory that the second limb applies to the standard of proof in civil cases is also doubtful. Especially when after considering the matters before it, the court has to arrive at his own BELIEF as stated in the first limb. And nowhere it is stated with what strictness the criminal cases are to be proved. “Reasonable doubt” and “Preponderance of probability” are the brain children of Trained Judicial Wisdom.
The hypothesis that the standard of proof in criminal and civil law are different and in the former, the facts are to be proved beyond reasonable doubt and in the later it need only to be proved through preponderance of probability has a historical reason. In criminal law, the defendant/accused is under the protection of a golden presumption that he is innocent until the guilt is proved. This is evolved from the basic concept of righteousness of the individual in a given society that assumes that every citizen is good. So in a criminal case, the prosecution has to rebut that presumption by strict proof. In civil cases such a presumption is absent and the court can consider which argument is more probable.
So in my humble opinion, the second limb of S.3 of the Evidence Act is incorporated for a different purpose based on the Prudent Man Rule, 1836.
By P. Chandrasekhar, Advocate, Ernakulam
By K.G. Balasubramanian, Advocate, High Court of Kerala
By T.P. Kelu Nambiar, Sr. Advocate, High Court, Ernakulam
Notice and Interim Stay for Two Days
(T.P.Kelu Nambiar, Sr.Advocate, High Court of Kerala)
Legal profession’s fears, myths and facts are interesting interludes. I have a lot of experience; and I have written and spoken about them many-a-time. It was while I was thinking of stopping my writing curve, I remembered that I had forgotten to write about an important aspect. I should write it here and now. It is a subject known to every lawyer; and no brain pacemaker is required to understand it. For better understanding, let me put it in the form of court-proceedings.
The Court Officer called: “Item No.203: W.P. (C) No......” Counsel for the petitioner stood up, not daring to think beyond the Judge. The Judge bestowed upon the lawyer a nod of sovereign to serf. Counsel argued for admission for a few minutes, more in hope than expectancy. The Judge, a mere two-year old, after listening with only half-an-ear, forgetting that advocacy is no Gypsy song, observed: “I shall issue notice”. Counsel hurried to submit: “I have prayed for stay”, as if he was facing a stress interview. The Judge, with ill-concealed anger, said: “I am not inclined”. Counsel started pressing for an order of stay, like a crying babe though. Then the Judge, with dignified authority, dictated: “Notice by Special Messenger. Interim stay for two days. Post on....” Counsel disappeared, spreading a smile. The Court Officer called the next case for admission. In that case, there was practically a repetition of the earlier scene and the Judge finally ordered notice and interim stay for one week.
In the third case, interim stay was for a period of two weeks. The pattern continued.
But in no case the period of interim stay exceeded one month.
If one imagines continuance of this exercise for the subsequent days also, it may not be a surprise to see that every day the cause list would contain hundreds of matters for extension of stay. Imagine the time consumed for this process.
Let me rewind to the good old days, rich in history, where, if the Judge was minded to order stay, interim stay was granted until further orders; practical as Pius. When notice goes to the respondent, if the respondent is aggrieved or inconvenienced by the order of stay, he would bring up the matter for further orders. If this system is adopted, a lot of judicial time can be saved. When interim stay as such is ordered, the opposite party may or may not bring up the matter for further orders. In that event, the cause list would never be crowded.
A better procedure is to stipulate that when interim stay is ordered, the opposite party, if aggrieved, should bring up the matter for further hearing along with a counter-affidavit opposing the stay. This could be a crowd control measure.
Judicial time is said to be precious. It need not be wasted for mere extension of stay.
Looking at one of the docket sheets in my office, I find that there were more than fifteen postings in regard to the stay matter alone. Every time the stay was being extended, for one reason or other, for a short period. At no point of time was the stay extended until further orders, or was vacated.
If I may venture a view, the court can take into confidence experienced Advocates in matters concerning settlement of cause lists. According to the practice prevailing now, in matters of posting, decisions are taken by the Honourable Judges and the Registry, without any reference to the Advocates Association, possibly thinking that the area is ‘apartheid’ for lawyers. The views of the Advocates are entitled to great weight, because they have experience in observing the proceedings and presiding Judges in all the courts. Bar realities count much. Innovate to win. There should never be a trust gap between the Bench and the Bar.
Judges should remember that there is no award for good judgment, for there should never be a bad judgment.
Law, is the name of the game played in court, where there are no preferred bidders. I am fuelled by memories of the past. I am dW1 to the history of this High Court. Oliver Twist sought food security. I seek justice security. After all, justice delivery system is not nuclear commerce. At the same time, it is not a fun game.