Obligation
to Supreme Court in the Constitution and the lawyers
Justice
Mohammad Gholam Rabbani
Article
112 of the Constitution of Bangladesh reads as follows: "All authorities,
executive and judicial, in the Republic shall act in the aid of the
Supreme Court."
A.T.M.
Kamruzzaman Syed was then managing director of Sadharan Bima Corporation.
He was arrested on 14.11.88 and was detained in the Dhaka Central Jail
under the special Powers Act. Subsequently a Division Bench of the High
Court Division passed order of releasing him atonee. Jail authority
received the order on 20.2.89, but did not release him because a fresh
order of detention was served upon the detenee on the same date inside
the jail. Division Bench declared the second order of detention as illegal
and directed the detenee be released atonee. Jail authority received
the order on 16.4.89, but did not release him atonee and so another
fresh order of detention could be served on 17.4.89 when the detenee
was under the custody.
Thereafter
the rule of contempt of court was issued against the Deputy Inspector
General of Prisons, Dhaka Central Jail. Upon hearing a Division Bench
held that allowing the detaining authorities to serve a fresh order
of detention inside the jail had the effect of thwarting of the order
of the High Court Division. In view of article 112 no other authority
can delay, stay or set aside any order of the Supreme Court and unless
this dictum is followed strictly in letter and spirit it will be the
end of Rule of Law in this country. The contemner was convicted and
sentenced to pay a fine of Tk 500/-. (Ref: 41 DLR 508)
The
expression "shall act in the aid of Supreme Court" also means
that a court after disposing of a matter should allow sufficient time
to the aggrieved party to take necessary and requisite steps for seeking
relief in the Supreme Court. (Ref: 17 DLR 656)
It
has been the century old practice that the contemners are asked to appear
in person on the first date and are usually exempted from personal appearance
on subsequent dates. In a case of contempt of court the judges who issued
the rule are not the prosecutors, they are the judges to decide the
issue of contempt in question while the attorney general is the prosecutor
and the contemner is the respondent. Obviously in view of this legal
position we do not find any case law in the law reports or journals
where propriety of the direction to appear in person was the issue for
decision. Probable another cause for such absence of case law is that
no lawyer advised any contemner to file such a case or in other words,
there were in those days lawyers including lawyers politicians, but
no politician lawyers.
Justice
Mohammad Gholam Rabbani is a retired Judge, Appellate Division, Supreme
Court.