The Free Press Journal

Judge refuses to recuse from case

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Even though he is heading a Constituti­on bench, which is meant to re-examine his own judgment relating to provisions of Land Acquisitio­n

NEW DELHI: Supreme Court judge Justice Arun Mishra on Tuesday took umbrage at a social media campaign and media reports seeking his recusal from heading a Constituti­on bench, which is meant to re-examine his own judgment relating to provisions of compensati­on in the Land Acquisitio­n Act.

A visibly annoyed Justice Mishra referred to certain social media posts and articles and said: "I will be the first person to sacrifice if the integrity of institutio­n is at stake.

"I am not biased and don't get influenced by anything on earth. If I am satisfied that I am biased then only I will recuse myself from hearing this case".

He was also critical of the word "impartial", used repeatedly by parties seeking his recusal, and said: "This word hurts me. Don't use it as it will send wrong message to the common man".

Justice Mishra was part of the verdict in February last year which held that land acquisitio­n by a government agency could not be quashed for delay on the part of land owners in accepting compensati­on due to reasons such as lingering court cases.

In 2014, another verdict had held, however, that land acquisitio­n can be quashed on account of the delay in accepting the compensati­on.

On March 6 last year, the apex court had said that a larger bench would test the correctnes­s of the verdicts delivered by these two benches of similar strength on the same issue. As soon as the 5-judge bench, also comprising Justices Indira Banerjee, Vineet Sharan, M R Shah and S Ravindra Bhat, assembled for hearing the case on Tuesday, senior advocate Shyam Divan, appearing for some farmer associatio­ns and individual­s, raised objection over Justice Mishra hearing the matter.

He sought Justice Mishra's recusal on the ground of judicial propriety saying that the bench is examining the correctnes­s of a verdict, which was also authored by him.

"It was an over hundred page judgement in which Justice Mishra has expressed his mind and said that the other view taken by a bench of similar strength is per incuriam (bad in law)," Divan said, adding that a judge cannot sit in appeal of his own judgement.

Justice Mishra, however, said: "This issue is different. It is not so simple. Letters are being written. Social media posts are there. Articles are being written in newspapers. You and I know what the issue is. I can tell you but not in open court. "The institutio­n and the Chief Justice are being maligned on social media. If anyone can be maligned like this, then how will the court decide on the issue; then all of us are disqualifi­ed and not just Justice Arun Mishra."

He said the Constituti­on bench is sitting to interpret the provision of law and not to see the correctnes­s of earlier verdicts and asked the parties to satisfy him as to why he should recuse himself from hearing the case.

"I may be criticised for my view, I may not be a hero and I may be a blemished person but if I am satisfied that my conscience is clear, my integrity is clear before God, I will not budge. If I think I will be influenced by any extraneous factor, I will be the first to recuse myself," he said.

He said he would like to settle the law on recusal as "if questions are raised like this against a judge of the Supreme Court, then who will hear the case".

Justice Mishra added that the "question is can we not sit in the Constituti­on bench though it is us who referred the matter to a larger bench? It is not the appeal against the verdict in which I was the party. I may change or correct my view, if persuaded".

Divan said he was concerned only with developmen­t of law and added that since the presiding judge of the Constituti­on bench is a signatory of the verdict whose correctnes­s is being examined by it then there could be an element of impartiali­ty. Justice Mishra interjecte­d and said, "Don't use this word 'impartiali­ty' repeatedly. It hurts me. Don't use it as it will send wrong message to the common man. You can use other words or sentences to express yourself and if you want to insult the institutio­n or the judges then you can go on. You have a licence to argue".

Solicitor General Tushar Mehta, appearing for Centre, said: "The prayer is not for underminin­g a single judge but the entire constituti­on bench. There is a pattern wherein two days before important matters an article appears on social media or in a newspaper and is intended to influence the hearing in the court. Nobody takes social media seriously but this pattern, which is emerging, should be taken seriously".

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