Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Amid CJI row, judge says lawyers on TV ‘killing’ SC

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Justice Arun Mishra, who suffered collateral damage in two recent controvers­ies concerning the Supreme Court, on Wednesday lashed out at advocates who, he said, were targeting apex court judges within the court as well as on TV debates, thereby “killing the institutio­n”.

Justice Mishra’s comments, his first reference to the recent controvers­ies around the top court, came when he was hearing a petition by the Medical Council of India against a Kerala government ordinance that allowed two medical colleges to admit students despite a Supreme Court order to the contrary.

In January, Justice Mishra found himself to be collateral damage when four senior judges held a press conference in January to speak out against the alleged arbitrary allocation of cases by Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra. They claimed that sensitive matters were being allocated to junior judges.

When asked whether the marking of a petition seeking an independen­t enquiry into special judge BH Loya’s death to a bench headed by Mishra prompted them to come out in the open, one of the four answered in the affirmativ­e.

Although Justice Misra had heard the petition on the first date, it was later withdrawn from his bench and transferre­d to a three-judge bench led by the CJI that eventually ruled out foul play in judge Loya’s death and passed scathing remarks against the petitioner’s lawyers for misusing the public interest litigation (PIL) platform.

Soon after the January press conference, Justice Mishra broke down at an informal tea meeting of SC judges, saying he had been humiliated by senior colleagues, whose actions questioned his integrity.

Later, at a talk at the Harvard Club of India, Justice J Chelameswa­r, one of the four judges who held the press conference, clarified that the judge Loya case was not the trigger for the public airing of grievances.

Justice Mishra has often joked in the court about being called a “junior judge”.

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