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SC pulls up lawyers for shouting

NEW DELHI:Some recent incidents of senior lawyers trying to outshout each other and allegedly attempting to browbeat judges during high-profile hearings today irked the Supreme Court, which said shouting will “not be tolerated at any cost”.

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New Delhi, December 7

Some recent incidents of senior lawyers trying to outshout each other and allegedly attempting to browbeat judges during high-profile hearings today irked the Supreme Court, which said shouting will “not be tolerated at any cost”.

A five-judge Constitution Bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra, which was hearing a legal question whether a Parsi woman loses her religious identity after marrying a man of different religion, was upset over the growing incidents of senior lawyers arguing on a high pitch in cases like the Babri Masjid title suit and the Delhi-Centre disputes.

“What happened yesterday (in Delhi-Centre case) was atrocious and what happened a day before (in Ayodhya case) was more atrocious,” the Bench, also comprising Justices AK Sikri, AM Khanwilkar, DY Chandrachud and Ashok Bhushan, said.

Day before yesterday, several senior lawyers, including Kapil Sibal, Rajeev Dhavan and Dushyant Dave, had made high-pitched arguments in the Ayodhya case seeking adjournment of the hearing till July 2019 and some of them had even threatened to walk out.

In the Delhi-Centre dispute hearing, Dhavan had yesterday made some submissions that were not appreciated by the Bench. 

“Come what may, shouting in the courtroom will not be tolerated at any cost,” the CJI observed today. “Lawyers are traditionally called ministers of justice. Unfortunately, some lawyers think they can raise their voice...argue with authority and conviction. Raising your voice just shows inadequacy and incompetence,” the CJI said, adding that some senior members of the Bar have been indulging in high-pitch arguments.

The court said, “When lawyers argue in a manner not in tune with the constitutional language, we will tolerate it but for how long? If the Bar does not regulate itself, we will be compelled to regulate”. — PTI

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