The Asian Age

Karnan, on run, moves SC for relief

- AGE CORRESPOND­ENT with agency inputs

Amid continuing confusion and drama over his whereabout­s, Calcutta high court judge Justice C.S. Karnan moved the Supreme Court through his lawyer on Thursday to seek a recall of the top court’s May 9 order that ordered him jailed for six months on contempt charges.

The SC agreed to hear the plea, but did not give a date for hearing, the latest in an extraordin­ary tussle in India’s higher judiciary playing out over the past four months.

When his lawyer Mathews Nedumapara made a mention before a bench that Justice Karnan has filed an applicatio­n to recall the order, Chief Justice J.S. Khehar asked about the judge’s whereabout­s.

There is no bar on Justice Karnan’s arrest and imprisonme­nt as per the sentence pronounced by the 7judge bench until the same bench decides in favour of his ‘recall’ petition

The counsel said he was in Chennai. But the police has been unable to trace him there.

Justice Karnan travelled to Chennai from Kolkata hours before the SC order, stayed in a guesthouse, but has not been seen after that.

Earlier in the day, Justice Karnan’s legal adviser W. Peter Ramesh Kumar said he might have crossed the border to Bangladesh or Nepal with plans to approach the President for relief.

Lawyer Mathews Nedumapara said Justice Karnan signed an affidavit before a notary on Wednesday, and produced the vakkalatna­ma’s copy before the bench.

The controvers­y started in January when Justice Karnan wrote to PM Narendra Modi levelling corruption charges

against certain judges. The top court relieved him of judicial and administra­tive works and later asked him to undergo a mental examinatio­n, but he refused to comply.

In his petition Justice Karnan said on Thursday that the entire proceeding from February 8, when a contempt notice was issued by the CJI, culminatin­g in his conviction and sentence, was without jurisdicti­on. The HC judge said that from a mere reading of the provisions of the Contempt of Courts Act, it is manifest that what could constitute a criminal contempt is any “publicatio­n” which scandalise­s, or tends to scandalise, or lowers or tends to lower the authority of, any court. He said there was a distinctio­n between the words “court” and “judge”. A Judge is not a court, though without a judge there could be no court. In addressing the letter in question to the Prime Minister and bringing to his notice certain alleged corrupt practices by some judges, the petitioner did not commit any contempt, the plea said.

Justice Karnan said the allegation­s are against the judges and not against any court, neither the Madras HC nor the SC. If the said allegation­s are untrue, they would at the most amount to defamation, he said.

Under the laws of the land, the judges named in the said letter have every right to proceed against the petitioner under the civil and criminal laws, he said. However, none of them chose to do so for reasons better known to them, he said.

 ??  ?? Justice C.S. Karnan
Justice C.S. Karnan

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India