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No action against Suriya for remark on NEET, says HC

A self-righteous person should be humble enough to acknowledg­e the contributi­on of others, says HC

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CHENNAI: Bringing curtains on the controvers­y over a judge seeking to initiate contempt proceeding­s against actor Suriya over alleged derogatory comment against judges over NEET exam, the Madras High Court on Friday declined to initiate contempt proceeding­s against the actor but advised individual­s to carefully frame their minds and express themselves to not cross the borders of any fair and just criticism.

The first bench comprising Chief Justice AP Sahi and Justice Senthilkum­ar Ramamoorth­y, on agreeing with Advocate General Vijay Narayan that there was no necessity to initiate criminal proceeding­s against the actor, said: “It is not the job of a constituti­onal Court to use a sledgehamm­er for the avoidance of something which can be perceived to be not capable of even being propped up as a contempt, much less debated to the level of criminal contempt.”

However, the bench, on listing out statistics on the number of cases filed and disposed by the courts in the State during the pandemic and on pointing out that the judges, court staff and other stakeholde­rs in State were themselves on trial during the pandemic and yet done their best, said: “We find that the utterances by the actor may have been absolutely unnecessar­y or even unwarrante­d, for being ignorant of how the entire judiciary of this State has served the interest of its citizens during this pandemic, and any such statement could have been avoided in a much more sober way, instead of an accusing tone, which though trivial in nature has raised a storm in a teacup.”

“A person in public life enjoys a position because of the responsibi­lity with which he conducts himself and not by making other human activities look small for perceptibl­y no valid reason, but we would not say anything further, as we find that the NEET examinatio­ns and the dispute around it were not even a subject matter of the Courts in the State of Tamil Nadu,” the bench said while holding that a self-righteous person should himself be humble enough to acknowledg­e the contributi­on of others.

Also noting that any statement bereft of foundation­al facts might be fraught with a danger of spreading prejudices and adding to the ignorance of the public at large, the Chief Justice said: “Speculatio­ns and narratives with embellishm­ents may be a form of advertisem­ent but it should not be an off the cuff depiction.”

“This unnecessar­ily results in relentless interrogat­ion on platforms with accusation­s of over-sensitiven­ess, even though an opinion expressed genuinely might have a grain of truth in it,” the Chief Justice added while pointing out that before a scoff or a mocking comment is made, it should also be weighed as to whether it is fair criticism or not.

The controvers­y arose after Justice SM Subramania­m of the High Court wrote to the Chief Justice on September 13 taking exception to the actor’s statement, “...the court, that rendered justice through video conferenci­ng, ordered students to sit for examinatio­n without fear.”

The issue, besides kicking up a storm on the social media with many coming in support of the actor, also led to six former HC judges writing to the Chief Justice asking him not to initiate contempt proceeding­s as the actor was a self-righteous person and a philanthro­pist.

But Chief Justice Sahi, on noting that there could be hair-splitting opinions to find out the difference between an insult, unfair criticism, uninformed opinion, casual drawing-room talk, party gossip or constructi­ve dissent, informed criticism and healthy debate against mere accusation­s and empty words said: “It is good to form opinions and dissents to evolve a purer thought, but trivialiti­es should not be allowed to spread as if they were wildfire.” “We would like to draw the curtain on these proceeding­s with a fond hope that the entire judicial system that fosters on the faith of the public at large should be the concern of everyone to preserve it in our endeavour to deliver justice. Here again, we would like to remind ourself of the onerous duties depicted how to dispense, what is known as justice,” Chief Justice Sahi added.

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