THE
LIFE AND TIMES OF JUSTICE V R KRISHNA IYER
[Published
in Livelaw | November 8, 2016]
Justice
V R Krishna Iyer (1915-2014) had it all that takes to be the cream of the crop
among his contemporaries in terms of judgeship, statesmanship, leadership and
much more that shaped him up as a dynamic legal practitioner, prominent
legislator, minister for key portfolios in Kerala, member of Indian Law
Commission, Judge of High Court and later of Supreme Court. He who began his
legal practice as an advocate in 1937 at Taluk level subordinate court in
Telliserry, Kerala beseeched, defended and argued in the trial and appellate
courts and engaged in debates in the matter of legislation processes at Madras
Presidency and Kerala Legislative Assembly. Having acquired training in the art
of drafting recommendations and reports while serving as a member of Law
Commission (1971-1973), he also had the privilege to witness the pre and post
constitutional courts, adjudicatory process and legal developments. He stands
distinguished among his contemporaries for his versatile knowledge coupled with
considerable experience in litigating, legislating and adjudicating multi
phases and procedures of law. With this worldly exposure, he decided cases and
rendered justice to the deserving.
There
were times when this multi-faceted genius had been bowled over by adversaries
as in the early days of his public life, he was imprisoned for one month for a
political cause and his speech rendered during his post-retirement life held
him in contempt followed by a proceeding in the High Court. On a striking note,
the court did not punish him for the latter but conferred encomium and the
speech was declared an extensively well informative academic exercise within
the contours of permissible criticism.
He
adorned the Bench of High Court, Kerala and also served as the Judge of Supreme
Court for three years and seven and a half years respectively. He administered
an equal number of years as a legislator (MLA) and as minister. Yet, people
calls him with the haloed prefix ‘Justice’ and his hard earned fame made it an
integral part of his real name. In his tenure of less than eight years in the
Supreme Court, Justice Krishna Iyer pronounced more than 700 judgments of which
a greater number were progressive and had set a new trend in the judicial
governance. Interestingly, he had never delivered dissenting verdicts and had
not struck down any of the major provisions of law as null and void. Even in
the promulgation of Muthamma case, a legal literature on misogyny, he raised a
question Him can – Her Cannot How? And thus removed the gender inequality and
declared Rule 18(4) of the Indian Foreign Service as void and unconstitutional.
The
pro-poor prolific pronouncements he penned while in the Bench have opened the
doors of apex court to commonalty and the grave hurdle of financial disability
to pay the court fee has been removed. Prior to the amendment in the Motor
Vehicles Act (MVA), the legal heirs and dependents of road accident victims had
to pay the court fee to claim compensation, like a litigant seeking recovery of
amount due under a negotiable instrument. If not affordable they have to sue as
paupers under the Code of Civil Procedure. When the High courts have denied the
road accident victims to sue as indigent litigant on the ground that the
relevant provision would not be applicable for tribunals, he rejected those
arguments and held that ‘the poor shall not be priced out of the justice market
by insistence of court fee by refusing to apply the provisions of exemption’.
He suggested that a high level government body monitor the process of
automobile manufacturing and creation of Highway Ombudsman with plenary powers
of from nuts and bolts to blood and bones of accident relives and punitive
counts as preventive and curative reliefs to the road traffic victims.
Unequivocally
and equitably, he exercised his onerous responsibility of adjudication of cases
and interpretation of laws. Though there has been a flimsy criticism that his
judgments had partial influence of his political and non-legal ideologies, a
conjoint reading would prove that the perceptions incorporated were convincing
enough and had enlightening aspects deriving a logical conclusion. In the
Maneka Gandhi case which dealt with Right to Travel under Article 21 of
constitution, Iyer journeyed further and highlighted the importance of
travelling abroad. He propounded a philosophy that travel is not a casual
facility but a core liberty.
When
a warrant for civil arrest and detention was issued against Jolly George
Varghese, an impecunious debtor who had already suffered two money decrees
against him knocked the doors of apex court, Justice Iyer spoke on behalf of
the Bench and laid foundation for poverty jurisprudence. He invoked the
International Covenant (ICCPR) in the Indian legal parlance and upheld that no
one should be imprisoned merely on the ground of inability to fulfil a
contractual obligation. His innovative interpretations of Section 51 and Order
21 Rule 37 of Code of Civil Procedure paved way for postulating the theory of
‘economic justice’, a mandatory mantra in the preamble of the constitution.
Justice Iyer drafted the judgments using unusual words in an uncustomary style
for which he had been grimly criticised but he never acceded to any and
progressed his way. He received bouquets rather than brickbats from the Bench
and Bar in India and abroad, appreciating the precise narration of facts and
laws, quoting relevant literature from non-legal text books. In 1974, he penned
a separate but concurring judgment in Shamesher Singh case which dealt with the
powers and duties of President, governors and the cabinet system. Even after
four decades of myriad changes and upheavals in politics and governance, this
remains as a report sketching clearest exposition of the cabinet government in
Indian polity. For the beautifully crafted verdict in Shamsher Singh case, Iyer
received appreciation from an unexpected corner. It was from his wife, who
heard the dictation.
Justice
Iyer’s judicial pronouncements caused an indelible impact in the prison
administration as well. Perhaps, for the first time in the annals of history,
he along with two other Judges of Supreme Court visited Tihar Jail, the largest
prison complex in India, also in South Asia. Abolition of the practice of
hand-cuffing and foot-cuffing the prisoners and solitary confinement are two
tremendous achievements that humanized the Indian prison jurisprudence by dint
of their decisive efforts. The segregation of under trail and convicted prisoners
and directions for expeditious disposal of cases of the pre-trial prisoners are
the greatest reforms introduced by his landmark decisions.
In
both the cases of Ediga Annamma and Rajendra Prasad, Iyer delivered that death
penalty be dissolved and substituted the same with life sentence. The
pronouncement weaved a heated debate in the legal fraternity and the then Chief
Justice sought an informal explanation from him. These verdicts have re-written
the sentencing policy, an underdeveloped branch of criminal jurisprudence in
India.
No
red carpet was rolled out and instead a tempest awaited him when he was
elevated as the Judge of Supreme Court on 17th July, 1973. The leaders of
political parties opposed the move. Another unanticipated step was when a section
of the Bar routed a complaint to the President stating apprehensions concerning
Justice Iyer’s post in the Supreme Court. Justice Iyer’s unbiased adjudication
of cases, unaffected by the political ideologies he followed as a public
representative, humane approach, creative interpretation of laws, propounding
of theories for the welfare of people and to safe guard their rights have
falsified the apprehensions as futile and baseless. As assessed by Prof.
Upendra Baxi, the landmark decisions rendered in Justice Iyer’s tenure have
metamorphosed the Supreme Court of India to Supreme Court for Indians. The
Supreme Court Bar Association (SCBA) judged the valuable contributions of Iyer
and handed down a unanimous declaratory verdict on the day of his retirement on
superannuation. It reflects the love, respect and admiration they had saved for
a distinguished judge of the nation. The judgment on a judgment-maker by the
lawyers reads that on Thursday, 15th November, 1980, when the weather was crisp
and bright in Delhi but the Court Hall No.3 where Justice Iyer sat was loaded
with humid air, viewed by moisturizing eyes of great lawyers and leaders of the
Bar, because a great intellectual was sitting in the court for the last time.
The erstwhile foes who opposed his elevation with institutional inclination had
become his friends and admirers and celebrated him as an asset of the supreme
constitutional institution.
His
judicial decisions raised curtains, changed the old scene and set a new trend
in the justice dispensation. Above all, even after four decades none of them
overruled. Still, they serve as primary tools for legal profession, help the
lawyers and judges to breathe a fresh air in the legal arena and provide
reliefs to the litigant public. This is the power, magic and effect of the
value added verdicts of Justice V.R. Krishna Iyer.
The
superannuation fixed by the constitution precluded him from pronouncing de jure
orders but promoted the contribution of voluminous extra –judicial writings
running more than ninety books. These legal texts are recognized as de facto
precedents and luminous guiding stars for judicial governance by scholars
around the world.
However,
He did not accept any post-retirement assignments from the governments and
lived as a committed activist for good cause. The candidature for the high
office of President of India gave him the estimable opportunity to meet and
interact with leaders of various political parties. It was yet another rare
electoral battling experience he lived through after retirement.
Justice
Iyer breathed his last on 4th December 2014. Perhaps, he was the first retired
Judge of the Supreme Court of India who received a ceremonial cremation with
State honours. To sum up, his life was an anthology of noble vision, committed
to the cause of justice to common man, cultured with rich and versatile
experiences, a career that still beams in colours noted for his valuable
contributions to the nation and humanity. It is indeed unique and laudable in
all ages.
*****
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