SOMEONE MUST BE TRUSTED. LET IT BE
JUDGES
By:
MAHMOOD ABDUL GHANI
Advocate Supreme Court of
Lord Denning M.L. the Twentieth Century
British Judge and Jurist in his famous book "The Family Story" has
remarked: "Every Judge on his appointment discards all politics and all
prejudice. You need have no fear. The Judges of England have always in the past
- and will - be vigilant in guarding our freedoms. Someone must be trusted. Let
it be the Judges." The principle duty of a Judge, especially of the
Judges, like Caesar's wife are above
suspicion. No doubt Judges are but men. Yet Judges presently apparently are too
inclined to fold their hands and blame the legislature. It is high time they
set to work and give the words, even of the Constitution, a rational workable
meaning, even if this involves a departure from the letter of them. In so doing
they are more likely to find the truth. Today Judges are faced with hard cases,
and we all know where hard cases can take a Judge. Today a Judge hears the
arguments and puts a brave face on the matter, press conferences apart, and
since he has to decide, he has to do justice and give satisfaction to the
community not an individual.
It is proclaimed that let legislators decide
the issue, but Judges are perhaps more apt then
legislators to take a long view. Judges are just like any other human being.
The reason that Judges are appointed is that even an ordinary citizen cannot
trust our legislatures what to talk of lawyers. A judge is a student who marks
his own examination paper. He should have learned to know evil not from his own
soul, but from observation of evil in others. William Shakespeare in Henry VII
has proclaimed:
"'Heaven is above all; yet there sets a
Judge. That no King can corrupt."
Today we have upright Judges. Shakespeare
calls them "brave Judge''. Injustice is relatively easy to bear. What
stings is justice. Let justice be done though the world perish is an age old
saying of more than five hundred years. Proclaiming respect for judges and
superior judiciary apparently is a hollow, deceitful proclamation. Love of
justice is, in most cases these days, nothing more than the fear of suffering from
justice from acts done. French Revolutionary Leader Pierre Vergriand
has declared:
'When justice has spoken, humanity must have
its turn."
Do we have right to exist without justice.
Deceased Pope John Paul II had remarked: "Only socially just country has
the right to exist". Today Pakistan International Airlines, Pakistan Steel
Mills, Pakistan Railways, Pakistan Electric Power Company, to name few
collectively are suffering loss of Rs. 360 billion a
year due to nepotism, corruption, mismanagement. This means this poor country
is suffering a loss of Rs. 100 Crore a day every day
of the year. Government make the nation to bleed by
pouring in billions of rupees to support such loss making organizations. No
remedial measures are adopted to stem these losses. Financial Loss on bonafide commercial considerations are
acceptable. Losses due to corruption, loot and plunder
and mismanagement is unacceptable. Should our superior judiciary be indifferent
and turn their face the other side and allow this poor hapless country to bleed
further. The Judges are part of our society. They are as
loyal if not more than any other poor countrymen. They have taken an
oath to defend, protect the law and the Constitution. Surely they cannot remain
indifferent to the way this country is crawling. Destruction of the country
under the cover of democracy is not acceptable. Not one institution saves
Superior Judiciary is working. In Sindh High Court,
as against the strength of forty Judges, presently there are only fifteen
Judges. They work from
Even after deletion of concurrent list from the Constitution after
Eighteenth Amendment, Legislature at the Centre continue
to promulgate Labour Legislation. Extension by four
months by National Assembly to Industrial Relations Ordinance, 2011 is a recent
example. Judges are perhaps more apt then legislatures to
take a long view. Judges are just like any other human beings. They
nonetheless be trusted. Thomas Jefferson has aptly
remarked: "Judges should always be man of learning and experience in the laws , of exemplary morals, great patience, calmness and.attention, their minds should not be distracted with
jarring interests, they should not be dependant upon
any man or body of men". Lord Macaulay has remarked: "The reason that
judges are appointed is, that even a good man cannot be trusted to decide a
cause in which he is himself concerned". Lord Mansfield in a case titled R Vs Wilkes (1770) 4 Burr. 2527 at 2562
talking about self and other Judges has said: "I will not do that which
may conscience tell me is wrong, upon this occasion, to gain the huzzas of
thousand, or the daily praise of all the papers that come from the press. 1
will not avoid doing what I think is right, though it should draw on me the
whole artillery of libels, all that falsehood and malice can invent, or the
credibility of a deluded populace can swallow....Once for all, let it be
understood, that no endeavors of this kind will influence any man who at
present sits here."
Judges of superior judiciary are philologist of the highest order. Sir
William Scott has rightly observed in a case that to vindicate the policy of
the law is no necessary part of the office of a Judge. How lawful-it is to some
when the right judge judges rightly. Today well considered
and balanced judgments reminds one of William Shakespeare remarks:
"O wise and upright judge. How much more elder art thou than thy
looks."
There is a Latin proverb: "The best law leaves the least discretion
to the judge." If our legislators passed law not on the basis of
directions but conscience then Ch. Aitzaz Ahsan would have been questioned as to the reason he gave
the statement in the press on
Judges are subject to the same ambitions, passions, prejudice and fear.
If you prick them, they bleed. However, high the present general standard of
judicial competence, there will always be human weaknesses which may possibly
affect their judgments. This may be endearing, but should not encourage certain
maverick Lawyers to shout foul. Because Judges are, after all men, not
machines, one must expect judicial frailities. But be
assured these are unintentional. We should not judge them too harshly.
Precautions can be taken to limit the damage, if caused, through their
imperfections to the interest of justice. By careful scrutiny one can hope to
detect, deter and defeat potential injustices, but certainly not through
verbose theatrical showman slip. To curb this growing tendency amongst certain
elements, it is essential that judicial language by our
Half a century experience in the Legal Profession has led me to conclude
that a Judge rarely performs his functions adequately unless the case before
him is adequately presented. The position of a Judge is that of an oyster
anchored in one place, unable to take the initiative, unable to go out after
things, restricted to working on and digesting that which the fortuitous eddies
and currents of litigation may bring his way. My experience as a student of law
has led me to conclude that judges are in many respects, like parent. You have
to give them a good enough reason to do what you want. Judges do not have an
easy job. They repeatedly do what the rest of us seek to avoid: make decisions.
They carry out this function in public. The Judge has the burden of resolving
day after day and week after week, a long succession of issues, each one of
which occupies the Doctor - professor - critics for months and even years of
specialized study. Judges do make mistakes. To err is human. However, no
motives are to be attributed to them. It be always remembered that Judges have burden some responsibilities to discharge. He has power
over the lives and livelihood of all those litigants who enter his Court. The
pity is that there is not more Judge made law in our country. Labour Jurisprudence in this country woefully is suffering
today when a Judge is dealing with people at their most unattractive or their
most unreasonable or when they are most completed revealed as cheats, liars,
corrupt and dishonest, he cannot easily comply with his judicial oath to do
right to all people. The vocation of a judge is akin to a
priesthood. They are eager to protect the mysteries of their craft. They
do not respond to public criticism aimed at misleading and misguiding this
nation. Judges are mere mortals but they are asked to perform a function that
is truly divine. Because Judges are men, not machines, we expect judicial
frailties and not judge them too harshly. Let they be
trusted.