The direction was given after the Maharashtra government said it was "withdrawing unconditionally" the charges made against Justice Oka, with the court terming the state's move as "frivolous".
Advocate General Ashutosh Kumbhakoni submitted a two- page communication in the HC, saying the state's allegation, that Justice Oka harboured a serious bias against the state machinery in the noise pollution matter, "was not raised as an allegation against the judge personally, but was limited only to the subject matter involved".
"The state only requested the Chief Justice (of the HC) to consolidate all noise pollution matters, and to place them before a bench of which Justice Oka is not a member," Kumbhakoni said.
A bench of Justices Oka and Riyaz Chagla, after perusing the letter, however, said an apology must be tendered by way of an affidavit by the government.
"A mere statement by the AG (advocate general) doesn't translate into the state's apology," the bench said.
"It must submit an affidavit explaining its application before the chief justice. The state should show remorse. Also, such an affidavit must be signed by a senior state official, and it must identify the person who gave the AG's office the direction to seek the transfer," the bench said.
Kumbhakoni said the state government would file an affidavit to the effect tomorrow.
The court also said it was not bothered by the fact that allegations had been made against a particular judge.
"Your allegations mean that the Maharashtra government doesn't want the high court to exist. It means that the state does not trust the high court and it says so in as many words," it said.
The bench also said the state, in getting the noise pollution cases transferred to another bench, had "misled" the chief justice.
"The consequence of the state's action is now irreparable. It has damaged the judiciary reputation," Justice Oka said.
"The state must get a clear signal hereafter that in future it can't play with the institution. The state must understand the consequences of its frivolous actions," the bench said.
Chief Justice Manjulla Chellur, on the same day, passed an administrative order allowing the plea and placed the matters before another bench.
Several lawyer associations later condemned the state's accusations against Justice Oka and urged the chief justice to take appropriate action.
Yesterday, Chief Justice Chellur passed an order constituting a three-judge bench (full bench) led by Justice Oka to hear the matters.
The bench, headed by Justice Oka, and the government were at loggerheads on whether an order passed by the High Court in 2016 would continue to operate despite an amendment to the Noise Pollution Rules issued this year.
According to the amendment, only the government can declare an area as silence zone.
The HC order had said areas not less than 100 meters from hospitals, educational institutions and courts constitute as silence zones and hence, no specific declaration to that effect was necessary.
Kumbhakoni had said that by virtue of this amendment, the August 2016 order of the high court cannot be operated.
The Justice Oka-led bench, however, had expressed its prima facie opinion that its order would continue to operate until the government filed an application seeking to review the 2016 order and the plea was heard and decided.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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