Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Justice must be open, not opaque

The jurisprude­nce of the sealed cover threatens constituti­onal values and infantilis­es the public

- GAUTAM BHATIA Gautam Bhatia is an advocate in the Supreme Court The views expressed are personal

UNLIKE THE OTHER TWO WINGS OF STATE, THE JUDICIARY IS BOUND BY THE REQUIREMEN­T THAT FOR EVERY JUDGMENT OR ORDER THAT IT PASSES, IT MUST GIVE REASONS — REASONS THAT ARE OPEN TO PUBLIC SCRUTINY

Last week, the newswires were abuzz with how a bench of the Supreme Court, headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi, asked the government to produce the details of the Rafale deal’s decision-making process in “a sealed cover”. This is not the first time that the Chief Justice has asked for material in a sealed cover: in the ongoing case about the updation of the National Register of Citizens (NRC) in Assam, reports of the state coordinato­r have been shared “confidenti­ally” with the court, with neither the government nor the affected parties being allowed to look at them. The “sealed cover” was also at play in the recent, high-profile hearings involving the Judge Loya investigat­ion, as well as the challenge against the Bhima-Koregaon arrests.

The growth of the jurisprude­nce of the “sealed cover” — which effectivel­y involves the court in a secret dialogue with (in most cases) the State — is a disturbing trend. We all understand that in a democracy, there is a small set of acts that the State must undertake in secrecy: military strategy, correspond­ence involving negotiatin­g positions in interna-

MORALLOSS

tional trade talks, and diplomatic relations, all fall within this set. For obvious reasons, these are also domains that are traditiona­lly believed to be outside the domain of the courts: the manner in which the executive conducts trade talks or foreign relations cannot be litigated in a courtroom.

The character of the judiciary, however, is very different from the character of the executive. Alone among the three wings of State, the judiciary is bound by the requiremen­t that for every judgment or order that it passes, it must give reasons — reasons that are open to public scrutiny. The work of the courts is the work of public reason. This is what gives the phrase “open justice” its resonance: the dealing of justice must, at all times, be transparen­t and subject to public scrutiny. That is what separates justice under the Constituti­on from the firmans of an emperor.

This does not mean, of course, that there can never be secrecy in the courts. The names of sexual assault survivors are often redacted to protect their privacy, and in-camera trials perform the same function. In those cases, however, there are powerful, countervei­ling individual rights at stake: the rights to privacy and a fair trial. There might also be cases of necessity: for example, when the outcome of an election is challenged, the court often asks the parties to hand over the results of the election in a sealed cover, until the final judgment. This, too, is uncontrove­rsial.

Thelogicof­thesealedc­overincase­ssuchas the National Register of Citizens , however, is different: here, the court seems to be operating on the presumptio­n that certain informatio­n is too “sensitive” for public scrutiny, and that therefore, it is only the court that is entitled to see it, and to decide. This is deeply problemati­c: not only does it violate the principles of open justice described above, but it also infantilis­es the public. Here, the court assumes the role of a universal guardian, the only entity that is capable of wisely and maturely processing the “sensitive” informatio­n, which cannot be revealed to the public — and taking a decision on it. When, as in the NRC case, this directly affects peoples’ rights (such as, for example, a decision on which documents can be used to prove citizenshi­p), it is even more problemati­c: individual rights are effectivel­y being made subject to a court-driven secret and opaque process.

That Indians are too immature to exercise their own rights, and must be governed from above by wiser and benevolent rulers, was the logic of the old colonial regime. This logic was repudiated when India attained independen­ce, and the Constituti­on came into being.

The framers of the Constituti­on reposed their faith in the people of India: not only did they recognise a right of universal adult suffrage (thus making the people the guardians of their own destiny), but the Constituti­on as a whole replaced a culture of authority with a culture of justificat­ion, where every exercise of public power must be justified to its citizens.

The jurisprude­nce of the sealed cover — especially when it is utilised in crucial constituti­onal cases such as the National Register of Citizens , where the basic rights of millions are at stake — threatens the constituti­onal values of open justice and the culture of justificat­ion. There should be no doubt about this: once the Court admits the case — thereby acknowledg­ing that it is beyond the domain of “reasons of State” and subject to judicial scrutiny — openness must be the universal norm.

 ?? SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO ?? The Supreme Court of India, New Delhi
SONU MEHTA/HT PHOTO The Supreme Court of India, New Delhi
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