THE
SELECTIVE BATTLES OF THE BAR COUNCIL OF INDIA.
The disciplinary actions initiated by BCI of late have given
the impression that it is selective and partisan in the battles it wants to
wage.
The Bar Council of India, which ceased to be truly representative
long ago because to the failure to hold due elections in time, recently surprised
many with a resolution. The resolution, stated to have been taken on March 18,
but announced to the world on March 31 in a press conference held by the
Chairman of the ad-hoc Council Senior Advocate Manan Kumar Mishra, , states that legislators who
participate in removal process of a judge of a High Court or Supreme Court
should not be allowed to practice before that Court/Judge. The exact wordings
of the operative portion of the resolution is “the majority view of the Bar
Council of India is that once process of removal of a Judge of a High Court or
Supreme Court, the advocates who are MPs should not be allowed to appear before
that Court/Judge”. As is evident,
there is something semantically incorrect and incomplete about resolution,
which indicates that the BCI must have made some glaring omissions while taking
the resolution. Perhaps, the omissions are indicative of the cavalier manner in
which BCI takes important decisions.
The resolution is to be analyzed in the backdrop of
the move of some MPs to pilot an impeachment motion against the present CJI
Justice Dipak Misra. On March 27, news regarding the impeachment motion
floated by Indian National Congress appeared. Senior lawyers Kapil Sibal, A.M
Singhvi, Salman Kurshid, Vivek Tankha and K.T.S Tulsi are also MPs of Congress
party in the parliament. The resolution will affect
the practice of these lawyers if they choose to support the proposed
impeachment motion. Therefore, this resolution in effect operates as a
deterrent on these lawyers to associate with the impeachment proceedings. It is
curious why the resolution, which is stated to have been taken on March 18, was
announced on March 31, only after the news of impeachment motion came.
Flaws in the resolution.
The BCI states that the resolution is taken while
considering the plea of Ashwini Upadhyaya that legislators should be barred
from practicing law. He has filed a petition in the SC contending that permitting
lawyers to become legislators will lead to conflict of interest. The BCI formed
a sub-committee to examine the issue.
The sub-committee expressed the opinion that legislators cannot be
barred from practicing law, with a lone dissent. The sub-committee also
recommended that BCI may consider framing of rules barring advocates who are
also MPs from appearing before Judge/Court against whom motion for removal
under the Judges(Inquiry) Act has been admitted either by the Speaker of the
Lok Sabha or Chairman of Rajya Sabha.
The BCI resolution states that ‘the Council accepts
the report submitted by the committee except the part relating to removal
proceedings of judges before parliament’(emphasis supplied). Now, this
is a very confusing statement. This conveys that the BCI is adopting the
position that legislators should not be barred from practicing law. However,
what is meant by the qualification in the acceptance made in the statement ‘except
the part relating to removal proceedings of judges before parliament’? If
the BCI is not accepting the sub-committee recommendation regarding the part
relating to removal proceedings of judges, why has it chosen to resolve in this
manner?
The resolution fails in intelligibly conveying the
reason for its intention to restrain lawyers who are MPs from appearing before
judges who are facing impeachment proceedings in parliament. So long as the BCI is agreeable to the major
premise of lawyers being legislators, it is not possible to locate any rational
basis for its objection regarding lawyer-legislators appearing before judges
who are facing impeachment proceedings. Either it should resolve to bar
legislators from being lawyers’ altogether, or should state that such barring
of law practice is not possible. When the BCI permits lawyers from being
legislators, it cannot selectively state that lawyers should not appear in
courts in which judges are facing impeachment proceedings. So long as a lawyer
remains in the rolls of the Council, she is entitled to practice in all courts
all over the country by virtue of Section 30 of Advocates Act 1961. The BCI cannot impose fetters on the
statutory right to appear so long as the lawyer remains on rolls. That would
amount to interference with the professional autonomy of a lawyer. The
statutory right of an advocate under Section 30 cannot be undermined through
such a strangely and confusingly worded resolution, which does not speak of the
reasons.
How can BCI curb parliamentary privileges?
Participating in a parliamentary process is the
duty of a representative occupying seat in the house. Impeachment is a parliamentary process,
carried out in accordance with Constitutional provisions. A legislator has to
be given full freedom to take an uninfluenced decision in the process. A legislator
should not be presented with an ‘either-or’ situation while participating in
the impeachment process. The resolution tends to deter legislators from freely
exercising their parliamentary privileges, due to threat of curbs on their
professional freedom as lawyers.
Now, if the BCI has issue with practising lawyers
occupying office of legislators, let that be dealt in its entirety. When BCI
skirts that issue, it cannot control the manner in which legislators, who also
happen to be lawyers, exercise their parliamentary privileges. This is
a clear instance of BCI overstepping its jurisdictional domain, by taking a
resolution in a manner which has the effect of curbing the parliamentary
privileges of legislators, who also happen to be lawyers.
Resolution in excess of powers under Advocates Act.
The BCI is a creature of the Advocates Act 1961.
Therefore, it has to act within the confines of the statute which created
it. The Act does not give any powers to
the BCI to place fetters on the right to practise of advocates who are not
found liable to be removed from rolls. So long as a person continues to be an
advocate, it is absolutely within her powers and discretion to decide upon the
courts and tribunals in which she can appear.
If the BCI feels that a lawyer-legislator appearing
before a judge facing impeachment proceedings can create conflict of interest,
it is not for the BCI to decide upon the propriety of the issue. It is for the
concerned judge to make a decision of recusal. As per long standing conventions
of legal practise, it is the judge who decides whether to recuse from hearing a
case in the event of possible doubt of bias. Recusal is an absolute judicial
prerogative. That is a matter which is left to the individual conscience of the
judge.
The BCI cannot act on a surmise that there will be
conflict of interest if lawyer-legislators make appearance before judge facing
impeachment motion. There is no tradition of a lawyers’ body deciding as to
which all lawyers should desist from appearing in a case.
Strokes of confusion
Throughout the resolution, the wording used is
‘Court/judge’. Is the BCI intending to state that a lawyer-legislator should
not appear in a Court wholly, when a judge of that Court is facing impeachment
motion? That would mean that lawyers like Kapil Sibal, A.M Singhvi, Vivek
Tankha, K T S Tulsi etc should stop their practise in Supreme Court completely,
if the impeachment motion against CJI Misra gets admitted in the
Parliament. The confusing use of strokes
in the wordings ‘Court/judge’ has created a sweeping ban on the right to
practise of lawyers. If only the BCI had shown more application of mind while
drafting the resolution! Is that too much to expect from an apex body of
lawyers?
Selective battles of BCI.
The disciplinary actions initiated by BCI of late
have given the impression that it is selective and partisan in the battles it
wants to wage. During October 2017, the BCI had issued a show cause notice to Dushyant Dave, Senior Advocate, for his open criticism
that the SC collegium had succumbed to executive pressure while arriving at the
decision to transfer Justice Jayant Patel, Judge of High Court of Karnataka. The show-cause notice and the
following press release by the BCI were bizarrely worded, as the present
resolution, belying a knee-jerk response
in a manner not behoving well for a body claiming to be representing advocates.
It is important to remember that the BCI does not have any power to initiate
disciplinary proceedings.The authority to initiate disciplinary proceeding is
the Disciplinary Committee of the concerned State Bar Council and not the
BCI.
Again, during January 2018, the BCI issued another notice to Dushyant
Dave, for his comments in the
court during the hearing of case relating to death of Judge Loya. During the
hearing, Dave had raised issues of conflict of interest and impropriety by
senior lawyers Harish Salve and Pallav Sisodia. Dave had contended that
these lawyers should not be permitted to appear in the Judge Loya case as they
had represented adversarial interests in previous and related proceedings.
Justice Chandrachud, a member of the bench hearing the matter, remarked that it
was a matter of conscience of the particular lawyer to decide upon the issue of
impropriety.
The BCI however resolved to initiate proceedings against Dave on the
ground that his comments amounted to misconduct. However, the proceedings
against Dave were later stayed by the
High Court of Delhi. It is rather surprising that the BCI did not find it
necessary to examine the issue of impropriety raised by Dave. Instead, it chose
to attempt to shoot the messenger, so as to bury uncomfortable questions.
The selective approach of the BCI is evident in the present resolution
as well. Why should lawyers be proceeded
against for raising issues against the bench? It is for the Parliament to
decide whether there is any merit in the impeachment motion. It is not easy for
an impeachment motion to pass the muster, as the level of scrutiny is very
high. Before such a decision is taken, why should the BCI come up with such a
resolution, which can act as a pressure on the lawyers to withdraw from the
impeachment motion?
Care-taker Council exceeding mandate.
Yet another important fact to be borne in mind is that the present
Council is akin to a ‘caretaker government’. The term of the present Council
had expired long ago, and it is continuing in office only on default to hold
timely elections. Now that the elections to the State Bar Councils have been
conducted as per directives of the Supreme Court, the role of the present
Council is that of a mere ‘care-taker’. So, in the interests of propriety, it
ought to refrain from taking crucial policy decisions, since it is not at
present a representative body in the true sense of the word.
But, the present Council seems to be oblivious of all such norms of
propriety, and is waging selective battles by exceeding its mandate and powers.
Such instances make one wonder whether the BCI is acting to undermine its
objective to safeguard the rights, privileges and interests of advocates.
Published in Live Law on 01.04.2017
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