"Shut up. Why are you shouting? Is this a court or a fish market? Shut up I say. I will get you thrown out. There has to be some dignity of the court. This is the problem. People who do not conduct themselves in the courtroom want to become senior lawyers," the Chief Justice of India told the lawyers who were indulging in heated exchanges inside the court room.
"You keep quiet. There is a dignity of this court. Is this a court or a market place? You are not a party in this matter. Just look at (eminent lawyer) Soli Sorabjee. Just look at him and try to learn something. Do you think raising your voice and browbeating will help you," Justice Thakur said.
The CJI's bench, which also comprised Justices D Y Chandrachud and L Nageswara Rao, was hearing a PIL filed by senior advocate Indira Jaising seeking transparency and overhauling the "opaque system" of designating lawyers as senior advocates.
She alleged that the present system was discriminatory and "if we want this to continue with the present system, it has to be democratised."
However, her suggestions that a lawyer with 20-30 years of experience or those who filed PILs and had published articles in prominent periodicals should be automatically be designated as seniors, did not appeal to the bench.
The apex court also questioned the criteria suggested by
Jaising to give marks to candidates.
When Jaising spoke about the practice of lobbying, the court asked her whether she had lobbied for her gown. To this, she retorted, "No. I did not. Please don't compel me to disclose information which I am privy to."
Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi, senior advocate A M Singhvi, Supreme Court Bar Association President Dushyant Dave and senior counsel Soli Sorabjee also addressed the court on the issue.
While Singhvi maintained that a mechanism of marking could be followed internally by the judges, his stress was on consistency. Dushyant Dave said the Court should formulate some rules but it should not go for a very formal method.
The parties have now been given a week to file their written submissions and suggestions to make the process of designation more transparent.
Earlier, the Court had said it was open to suggestions from the bar to improve the system of designating lawyers as senior, but the final decision would remain with the judges.
In the PIL, Jaising had termed the present process as "opaque, arbitrary and fraught with nepotism."
She had claimed that the advocates taking up matters of human rights or public interest litigations were ignored and there was need to analyse data relating to the cases argued, judgements delivered in their matters and their contribution to jurisprudence and legal aid programmes.
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