Make this your homepage
India News
Home > India News
Laws, legal system totally geared in favour of rich and powerful: Justice Deepak Gupta
TIWN
Laws, legal system totally geared in favour of rich and powerful: Justice Deepak Gupta
PHOTO : TIWN

NEW DELHI, May 7 (INDIAN EXPRESS): Supreme Court judge Justice Deepak Gupta on Wednesday rued that the country’s “laws and… legal system are totally geared in favour of the rich and powerful”, and said that “in the present day and age judges cannot live in ivory towers but must be aware of what is happening in the world around them”.

Speaking at a virtual farewell hosted by the Supreme Court Bar Association on his last working day, Justice Gupta said, “If somebody who is rich and powerful is behind bars, then time and again he will approach the higher courts during the pendency of the trial till some day he obtains an order that his trial should be expedited.” This, he said, happens at the cost of the poor litigant whose trial gets further delayed as he cannot approach the higher court.

“On the other hand, if a rich person is on bail or wants to delay a civil litigation, he can afford to approach the superior courts time and again to delay the trial or the proceedings till the other side gets virtually frustrated,” Justice Gupta said, adding that the Bench and Bar have a duty towards poor litigants “to ensure that their cases are not put on the backburner”.

“If real justice has to be done, then the scales of justice have to be weighted in favour of the underprivileged,” he said.  Justice Gupta exhorted that the Bar “should… be totally independent and members of the Bar while arguing matters in court should shed their political or other affiliations and argue the matter strictly in accordance with law”.  He said “the most important attributes of the judiciary and judges are independence, fearlessness and impeccable integrity” and that “in a country which professes to follow the rule of law and the principle of separation of powers, there is no alternative to a totally independent judiciary”. 

Rooting for harmony between the three wings of the state, the judge pointed out that courts have been given the power to even set aside laws made by Parliament and that “it is the duty of this court to ensure that no person is deprived of his life or liberty except in accordance with procedure prescribed by law”. 

“In times of a crisis such as the ones we are living in, the courts must protect the poor and the underprivileged, because it is they who are hit the hardest in trying times. When the court does its duty and acts in favour of the citizens, sometimes there will be friction, but a little friction in my view is a healthy sign that the courts are functioning properly”, he said.  Stating that judges must decide matters according to law and not their personal likes and prejudices, he said that “for any judge, when he sits in court, his only Gita, his only Bible, his only Quran, his only Guru Granth Sahib, his only Zend Avesta is the Constitution of India”.

Add your Comment
Comments (0)

Special Articles

Sanjay Majumder Sanjay Majumder
Anirban Mitra Anirban Mitra