Hindustan Times (Noida)

‘Vibrant, visionary’: SC judge Shah heaps praise on Modi

FORMER CJI RM LODHA SAYS SUCH COMMENTS BY A SC JUDGE AT A PUBLIC EVENT SHOULD BE AVOIDED

- Utkarsh Anand letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Supreme Court judge MR Shah on Saturday described Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the “most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leader” at a virtual public function to commemorat­e the 60th anniversar­y of the Gujarat high court.

“I am glad and feel proud and privileged to participat­e in this important function of release of commemorat­ive stamp of Gujarat HC on completion of 60 years and that too by our most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leader, Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendrabh­ai Modi,” said justice Shah.

NEW DELHI: Supreme Court judge MR Shah on Saturday described Prime Minister Narendra Modi as the “most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leader” at a virtual public function to commemorat­e the 60th anniversar­y of the Gujarat high court.

“I am glad and feel proud and privileged to participat­e in this important function of release of commemorat­ive stamp of Gujarat HC on completion of 60 years and that too by our most popular, loved, vibrant and visionary leader, Hon’ble Prime Minister Shri Narendrabh­ai Modi,” said justice Shah at the beginning of the function, which had the PM as its chief guest.

As the sitting SC judge was about to conclude his address, justice Shah, who hails from Gujarat, once again referred to Modi as the “most loved Prime Minister”. The virtual event also had Gujarat high court chief justice Vikram Nath, Union minister of law and justice Ravi Shankar Prasad, Gujarat chief minister Vijay Rupani and solicitor general Tushar Mehta in attendance.

The remarks by justice Shah left some former judges of the Supreme Court divided on whether it was proper for a sitting judge of a constituti­onal court to express himself in such a manner at a public function.

Former Chief Justice of India RM Lodha said such comments by a Supreme Court judge at a public event should be avoided.

“These things are absolutely avoidable. As a famous quote goes, restraint is the better part of valour,” he said. Justice Lodha added that he belonged to a different school of thought and practised restraint in his personal as well as judicial life, which was also bound by a code of conduct.

Another former SC judge, justice Gopala Gowda said that he was “astonished” to see a sitting apex court judge showering praise on the PM when the government was the biggest litigant in the SC and had the highest stakes in policy matters. “Releasing of a commemorat­ive stamp by the PM is a most welcome thing. But for a sitting Supreme Court judge, who is a constituti­onal functionar­y, to compliment the PM with such adjectives is unwarrante­d and uncalled for. The tremendous confidence of people in the judiciary will be eroded if Supreme Court judges start praising executives in this fashion.”

However, justice BP Singh, another retired judge of the top court, did not find justice Shah’s remarks inappropri­ate. “He has not commented on any case in the Supreme Court. These could be his (justice Shah’s) personal views and he may genuinely feel like that for the Prime Minister. Why should it create any doubt? I don’t think it should become an issue,” said justice Singh.

Last year, Supreme Court judge justice Arun Mishra (now retired) courted controvers­y by saying that “PM Modi was a versatile genius who thinks globally and acts locally”. The SC Bar Associatio­n had passed a resolution criticisin­g justice Mishra’s comments as “reflecting poorly on judicial independen­ce”.

A Code of Conduct for the SC and high court judges called ‘Re-instatemen­t of Values in Judicial Life’, was resolved in the chief justices’ conference of 1999. The 15-point code primarily recommends that a serving judge maintain an air of “aloofness” in their official and personal life.

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