Hindustan Times (Patiala)

SC rebukes ex-MP judge for ‘flirting’

SUCH CONDUCT BY A SENIOR JUDGE FOR A JUNIOR LADY JUDGE IS NOT ACCEPTABLE AT ALL, SAID AN SC BENCH HEADED BY CJI SA BOBDE

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday reproached a former district judge from Madhya Pradesh for “flirting” with a junior woman judge, and said such conduct was “unacceptab­le” in the judiciary.

“Such conduct by a senior judge for a junior lady judge is not acceptable at all,” said an SC bench, headed by Chief Justice of India (CJI) SA Bobde, as it heard an appeal by the retired judge against the disciplina­ry proceeding­s, initiated suo motu (on its own) by the Madhya Pradesh high court.

While his petition emphasised that there could not be any inquiry after the woman judge had chosen to “settle” the matter with him, the high court defended its action on the ground that his conduct was unbecoming of a judge and an example had to be set.

During the hearing, senior advocate Ravindra Shrivastav­a, appearing for the high court, also read out a WhatsApp conversati­on between the former district judge, who retired last year, and the woman judicial officer, who was posted under him in 2018.

These messages were about how the former wanted to “touch” her, have an affair with her like “husband and wife”.

HT is not naming the retired district judge because there has been no decision on his guilt or otherwise, and his petition has challenged the initiation of the inquiry itself.

Shrivastav­a pointed out that the woman officer had made a complaint and also recorded her statement against her senior, but later withdrew from the inquiry under the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibitio­n and Redressal) Act, 2013, saying she had settled the matter.

He contended that the male judge was a senior judicial officer and there must have been some kind of pressure on the woman judge that made her retract. According to Shrivastav­a, even though the inquiry under the sexual harassment act could not conclude after the woman judge opted out, the gender sensitisat­ion committee of the high court had the authority to take a suo motu note of the demeanour by the former district judge and recommend a disciplina­ry inquiry, as it did in November 2019.

He presented before the bench the district judge’s statement to the committee -- the judge had admitted the WhatsApp conversati­on with the woman officer, and called it “flirting”. At this, senior advocate R Balasubram­anium, representi­ng the retired district judge, said that his client might have gone “overboard”, but he could not be proceeded against when the complainan­t has herself said that she did not want any inquiry.

He also questioned the timing of the complaint, pointing out the district judge was being considered for appointmen­t to the high court when the allegation­s surfaced.

But the bench declined to entertain such contention­s. “We understand these are two adults talking. And you thought it is a private conversati­on. But you have not just gone overboard. Your WhatsApp messages are offensive and improper,” the Supreme Court bench told advocate Balasubram­anium.

It said that the former district judge should withdraw his petition and face the consequenc­es of the disciplina­ry proceeding­s lest the court pass “some sweeping observatio­ns against him”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India