Chennai:
Madras High Court
expressed its displeasure over an order of the special court hearing the wealth
case against Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa and said Bangalore court had not
shown ‘due respect’ to the observations of the High Court.
Expressing his
displeasure while referring to the March 14 order of the special court
dismissing a petition filed by a Chennai-based company Lex developers and
imposition of Rs 10,000 cost on it, Justice A Arumughaswamy said, “It gives an
impression that the special court has not shown due respect to the
observations, as is expected from a judicial forum which maintains judicial
discipline and decorum.”
The special
court had dismissed the interlocutory application filed by the company stating
no such observation was made by Madras High Court. “If the position is being
so, it is incorrect on the part of special court to say that no such observation
was made by the court,” the judge said.
The
disproportionate wealth case, which was registered against Jayalalithaa in
1996, was being heard at a special court in Chennai. It was, however,
transferred to a special court Bangalore by Supreme Court order on November 18,
2011, on a petition filed by DMK general secretary K Anbazhagan.
Among the
assets attached or seized by the prosecution were the properties of Lex which
had been attached by police. When Lex moved the high court for appropriate
orders, the court in 2011 directed it to approach the special court in
Bangalore. The court also made it clear that if such a petition was filed, the
special court would dispose of the matter “at first instance, before taking the
main case towards its finality.”
On March 14,
the special court dismissed Lex’s petition with Rs 10,000 cost. Aggrieved, the
company came back to the Madras High Court seeking certain clarifications to
its order.
Justice
Arumughaswamy said the company must work out its remedy before the High Court
of Karnataka. He, however, observed that, “The special court in Bangalore is,
of course, not bound by the observations made by me in the earlier order. But,
at the same time, the earlier order of this court certainly will have a
persuasive value before the special court since the petition was filed only in
pursuance of the observations made by the court. The special court cannot
simply ignore the observations made by this court,” he said.
“Judicial
discipline and decorum requires that a subordinate court, whether subordinate
to the particular or not, if there is any observation by such High Court should
be considered while decision making,”
the judge said.
He also said
the petitioner is entitled to file clarification application before the court
against the order passed by this court.
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