Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

HC lawyers strike work over stringent rules for conduct

- Ayesha Arvind

On Friday, a section of Bombay high court lawyers went on strike, supporting the decision of the Advocates Associatio­n of Western India (AAWI) to join lawyers from across the country protesting against a recent Law Commission report to amend the Advocates Act.

But legal experts remain divided on the merits of the report.

The Law Commission’s 267th report, based on the direction of a three-judge bench of the Supreme Court, recommende­d an overhaul — more than 30 amendments to the Advocates Act that would make the rules governing lawyers’ everyday conduct more stringent, clamp down on their right to strike work, weed out misconduct and provide for binding disqualifi­cation from state rolls in cases of misconduct

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The report also recommends the lawyers be denied a right to strike work and that if compelling conditions exist, then they be allowed just a token strike of a single day on the condition that it is approved by the Bar Council of India.

The suggestion was made to prevent a large number of working days being lost in courts, stated the report.

But most lawyers feel the recommenda­tions are hurried, and that the commission should have at least consulted with the Bar Associatio­ns of the various high courts in the country before coming out with their report.

AAWI president, advocate Rajiv Chavan, who led a meeting of “over 600 advocates from the Bombay and Goa benches of the Bombay high court on Thursday

to join Friday’s strike” called the report “absolutely undemocrat­ic.” “The report redefines misconduct but the definition is so wide and stringent that no lawyer will be able to practice law anymore,” Chavan said.

The report defines profession­al misconduct as any “act of an advocate whose conduct is found to be in breach of, or nonobserva­nce of the standard of profession­al conduct or etiquette required to be observed” by him or her.

Senior advocate Rajendra Shirodkar followed the AAWI’S decision to join the strike and decided not to appear in court despite having pending cases.

He said, “The issue has been under a prolonged litigation

various judgments of the Apex Court exist on the issue. Unless it lays down some specific rules or guidelines prohibitin­g us from striking work, or regulating the same, no one can object to it,” Shirodkar said.

Retired Supreme Court judge, Justice BN Shrikrishn­a, however, believes considerin­g the existing pendency in courts across the country, the “lawyers and the BCI have no business to strike work and waste time of the judiciary”, especially when the legal process in the country is extremely slow.

The Law Commission report and its draft of advocate (amendment) bill, 2017, stem from an order of the Apex Court passed in July 2016 seeking suggestion­s to

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