NEW DELHI, Mar 2: A heated exchange of words was witnessed in the Supreme Court on Thursday between the Chief Justice of India (CJI) D.Y. Chandrachud and the chief of the Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) Vikas Singh over allotment of land for lawyers’ chambers.
At one stage, the CJI had even told Singh not to raise his voice and to leave his court. Several senior lawyers later apologised to the CJI for the strong behaviour by the SCBA chief.
The exchanges occurred when during the mentioning of cases, the SCBA president told a Bench of the CJI and Justices P.S. Narasimha and J.B. Pardiwala that he was struggling to get the matter listed for the last six months. “The Appu Ghar land came to the Supreme Court on a petition by the SCBA, and the Bar was given only one block with reluctance. The construction on the land was to begin during ex-CJI N.V. Ramana’s tenure. For the last six months, we have struggled to get the matter listed. Treat me like an ordinary litigant,” Mr. Singh said.
The CJI then remarked, “You can’t demand land like this. You tell us the day we are sitting idle for the whole day.” To this, Mr. Singh replied, “I am not saying that you are sitting idle for the whole day. I am only trying to get the matter listed. If it is not done, I will have to escalate and take it to your lordships’ residence. I don’t want the bar to be taken like this.”
This enraged Chandrachud and he burst out: Don’t threaten the chief justice. Is this a way to behave? Please sit down. It will not be listed like this. Please leave my court. I will not list like this. I will not be cowered down by you.” “Mr. Vikas Singh, please don’t raise your voice. As a president, you should be a mentor and leader to the bar. I am sorry; you are reducing the level of dialogue. You have filed an Article 32 petition, claiming that the land allotted to the Supreme Court should be handed over to the Bar for the construction of chambers. We will deal with the matter when it comes up. Please don’t try and twist our arm to give you the relief you want,” the CJI said.
“You are asking for land allotted to the SC to be given to the Bar. I have announced my decision. It will be taken on the 17th, and it will not be the first on board,” he added. The SCBA president said, “If my lords want to dismiss it, please do it. But don’t do that; it is not listed.” The CJI replied, “I have announced my verdict. It’s on March 17, and it will not be listed at serial number 1, Mr. Singh. The senior lawyer refused to slow down and said the bar has always supported the court. “I never want to be unreasonable, but I am forced to be so in this case,” he said.
Mr. Chandrachud then told Mr. Singh, “I am the Chief Justice. I have been here since March 29, 2000. I have been in this profession for 22 years. I have never allowed myself to be browbeaten by a member of the bar, a litigant, or anyone else. I will not do that in the final two years of my career.” Refusing to keep quiet, Mr. Singh said, “This is not the attitude. If the bar is cooperating with the court, it doesn’t mean it should be taken for a ride. That is something about which I feel very strongly. I want to make this very clear.” The CJI then said, “Please sort your agenda outside the courtroom,” and called the next matter.
As the mentioning of the cases ended, senior advocate Kapil Sibal, who was present in court for the Shiv Sena case, apologised to the Bench on behalf of the bar and said, “I’m sorry for what happened this morning. I apologise. There is a Lakshman Rekha that none of us should cross. I don’t think that the bar should transgress the limits of decorum.” The CJI said, “There is no reason to behave like this. We sit here the whole day and take up 70–80 matters in a day. For all these matters, I sit with my staff in the evening and give them dates.” Senior advocate Neeraj Kishan Kaul also expressed apology and said, “We all join and feel equally anguished by what happened.”
(Manas Dasgupta)