Pakistan Peoples Party Senator and lawyer Aitzaz Ahsan walking outside the Supreme Court | White Star
Not that it was always like this: in the 1950s and 1960s, the superior judiciary’s opinions were clearer, relatively concise and, most importantly, noisily arrived at — bucking today’s trend of junior justices following their seniors in silence.
With debate and disagreement, there came an extra intellectual dimension to the country’s jurisprudence. American judge Benjamin N Cardozo once compared the dissenter to “the gladiator making a last stand against the lions”. It is the passionate dissent, after all, that may become hard law tomorrow. Bereft of that, the superior judiciary’s decisions too often read like an echo chamber.
Then there is the language barrier, though errors in grammar and spelling are forgivable in a country long tormented by the British — that is, when such errors do not scale the absurd. In Muhammad Riaz Sheikh versus The State (2005 YLR 1782), a case involving alleged copyright infringement by a bubblegum manufacturer, Justice Khawaja Muhammad Sharif wrote (in one of his more coherent judgements):
“To satisfy conscience [sic] of this Court and to reach at [sic] a just decision of the case, I have personally examined the packets of bubbles [sic] i.e. one belongs to the complainant party and the other to the petitioners. After careful perusal of both the packets, I have reached to the conclusion [sic] that there is so similarity [sic] that anyone can easily be deceived while purchasing the said item because there is no major change in the size of the packet, colour, pieces therein and apparent looking of the packets [sic]. The only difference in the packet of the petitioners is…against the word of ‘Ding Dong’ the word ‘Ding Dung’ is written.”
For the unholy sin of passing Ding Dung off as Ding Dong, Khawaja Sharif revoked the petitioner’s bail. But the former justice’s opinion-writing skills are only a minor part of the problem. Appointed by Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif in 1998, Khawaja Sharif represents an ad hoc and politically-compromised brand of justice reminiscent of the past. That a justice (and later chief justice) of the Lahore High Court is appointed for the very reasons that merit suppressing his elevation through the bench is distressing.
Also read: What is the most controversial ruling by the superior judiciary?
Then again, it is also a testament to how far the judiciary has come from the 1990s, when the bench would be ‘packed’ with party men by Benazir Bhutto (a la Franklin Roosevelt). After yet another attempt by her widower, Zardari, to pack the bench in 2009, the process of appointments was overhauled by the 18th and 19th Amendments, and brought under the aegis of a judicial commission set up by Article 175-A of the Constitution.
Leaving judges like Khawaja Sharif where they should be: a relic from the 1990s, a time the judiciary was too often under siege. It was, after all, in 1998 when Nawaz Sharif’s tussle with the judges over appointments in the superior judiciary led to goons ransacking the Supreme Court. By the time the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz’s (PMLN’s) finest stopped breaking things, Jinnah’s portrait lay in pieces on the floor. The symbolism was lost on no one.
At the Supreme Court, a court correspondent whispers, “Thand pai gayi ai” (everything has been put on ice). It has just not been the same since he left.
“He” can only be Iftikhar Chaudhry, the personification of the legal system that Pakistan’s 20th chief justice both inherited and left behind. The Supreme Court has always seemed an aloof place, always sulking in its marble coldness in the middle of the Constitution Avenue. Now deprived of Chaudhry’s shadow, the apex court is more glacial than ever.
Taking oath as the chief justice of Pakistan 10 years ago, a sombre, moustachioed Chaudhry said, “Let there be candid admission that the man in the street is dismayed and disillusioned with the judiciary’s role. Proper justice has become elusive in our society.”
That inaugural speech announced to the world all the hallmarks of the Supreme Court under Chaudhry: the clipped tones, the heightened self-awareness and, above all else, the low populism.
But, notwithstanding his own diagnosis, Chaudhry was part of the problem back then: he had already taken oath under General (retd) Pervez Musharraf’s Provisional Constitutional Order (PCO) in 2000, rubber-stamped a coup in the judicial challenge to Musharraf’s overthrow of Nawaz Sharif’s government in what is known as the Zafar Ali Shah case, approved a military dictator’s amendments to the Constitution in the Watan Party case, and then allowed a president in uniform to carry on as army chief in the Pakistan Lawyers’ Forum case. In those early days, Chaudhry seemed less like Dorab than Dogar.
While Chaudhry beheaded many a public body for corruption, there were only minimal changes that filtered down to the rest of the organisation.
Which begged the question: why not? For the longest time, the story of the superior judiciary has been a sorry one. It was Pakistan’s second chief justice, Muhammad Munir, who breathed life into British jurist Henry Bracton’s maxim, “That which is not lawful is made lawful by necessity.” And it was Munir who approved the dissolution of Parliament in 1954 – at the behest of a non-elected governor general.
Munir set the tone for our unhappy history: the judges kowtowed to the king, and the king carried on, oblivious to the needs of democracy.
Until that spring day in 2007 when Chaudhry stood up to Musharraf, this trend held — one in which lawyers were all too complicit. When 18-year-old Asma Jahangir petitioned the court against General Yahya Khan’s martial law in 1971, it was Sharifuddin Pirzada who, as amicus curie, or friend of the court, argued for the supremacy of the Constitution. In 1977, Pirzada – as Attorney General – argued the exact opposite when Nusrat Bhutto filed a petition against the imposition of martial law by General Ziaul Haq. He would win both cases. And when Zia sacked the government of his hand-picked Prime Minister Muhammed Khan Junejo and dissolved Parliament in 1988, he was reminded of the law which mandates elections must be held in 90 days after the dissolution of the legislature. The general wasn’t worried. “Pirzada ke paas kuch masala hai” (Pirzada has a recipe to fix that), he is reported to have said, smilingly.
But even unhappy histories have their heroes. Among the Munirs taking us deeper into the darkness, there have always been beacons of light: there was Sindh High Court Chief Justice George Constantine in the 1950s. He fended off the governor general’s henchmen from hurting Maulvi Tamizuddin, the then speaker of the constituent assembly. In his famous Irish accent, he went on to declare the assembly as sovereign. And when Munir overturned Constantine’s decision in the historic Maulvi Tamizuddin case, it was A R Cornelius who dissented. “The Catholic chief justice of a Muslim state” – according to his biographer – Cornelius is now considered one of Pakistan’s greatest-ever adjudicators.
Then there was Dorab Patel in the 1980s. He refused to accept Zia’s PCO, an improvised oath of loyalty to the military dictator. Patel essentially walked away from becoming the chief justice for seven long years. “How can I take such an oath?” he is reported to have asked.
Also read: Rough Justice—March 2015 cover story on the judiciary in Pakistan
And there was also Nasir Aslam Zahid in the 1990s, a compassionate man who only listened to his heart, providing relief to all and sundry, whatever the consequences. Benazir Bhutto banished him to the Federal Shariat Court. He was also as unimpressed by Musharraf’s PCO, preferring to go home instead.
These men, however, have been the exception to the rule.
But from March 9, 2007 onwards, a brave new world emerged. For the first time, the Chief Justice of Pakistan had been suspended. For the first time, a movement calling for the rule of law was to be successful in bringing him back to the top of the bench. Nothing, it seemed, could stand in the way of the Lawyers’ Movement: not emergency rule, not Musharraf, and certainly not Zardari. Riding to glory in one of the largest popular movements the country has seen, Chaudhry was restored in 2009, and things were never quite the same again.
In many ways though, the story of Chaudhry is a Greek tragedy. If Italian jurist Piero Calamandrei once called the courts “hospitals of human corruption,” Chaudhry saw his jurisprudence as the cure. The term suo motu, a piece of Latin legalese (wherein judges take cognizance of a case of their own accord) entered the national conversation, as the Supreme Court under Chaudhry weighed in on matters of economics, infrastructure, and moral purpose.
A deference that seemed unimaginable only minutes earlier. The line in the sand was drawn, and the Chaudhry era came to a close.
But, besides adding to an already overflowing docket, Chaudhry’s suo motu actions seldom developed the law. Asher Qazi, in an enlightening essay in The Politics and Jurisprudence of the Chaudhry Court – edited by Moeen H Cheema and Ijaz Shafi Gilani – draws his conclusions from the data at hand: of Chaudhry’s 123 suo motu actions (as opposed to his predecessor Justice Nazim H Siddiqui’s two suo motus), detailed written judgements were delivered in just 37 – or 30 per cent. Only eight of these judgements “were considered to have contributed in any manner to the development of law”.
The theme remained the same: humbling the king. In a survey of most of Chaudhry’s suo motu actions, Qazi found 34 per cent to do with executive abuse of power, 38 per cent to do with executive inefficiency, and 11 per cent to do with corruption (with 17 per cent dealing with other variables, such as the allegation that pig meat was being used in poultry feed).
“Joo-ris-proo-dance?” repeats a youngish Supreme Court official, when asked about Chaudhry’s judicial philosophy. “He made it up as he went along.” The official proceeds to tap a newspaper for effect. “Surkhi, surkhi, surkhi” (headline, headline, headline), he says, before dancing off into the sun.
That may be unkind. For while Chaudhry was busy interfering in kite-flying and petrol prices, he did hang on to a core tenet: safeguarding the democratic process. His verdict in the Sindh High Court Bar Association’s petition is one such bombshell: a judgement thought to have slammed the door on future military rulers. It held that all legal theories, including the necessity doctrine, had to be tested at the touchstone of the Constitution, and that all institutions had to act within the limits set by it (words even his court may have heeded better).
In most ways, however, Chaudhry’s modus operandi was self-defeating. Much was made about forcing the government of the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) to reopen its chairman’s corruption cases. But while Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gillani was sent home, President Zardari still made it to the finish line. Having trampled the separation of powers, Chaudhry walked away with a weaker democracy.
Much was also made about taking on the army’s shadow world in Balochistan, but the missing persons case remains undecided; even Chaudhry knew where to draw the line.
Also read: Live discussion with Asma Jahangir
Hurting his case further was a sea of contempt notices, as Chaudhry began hauling in anything and everything that dared criticise Their Fair Lordships. In one of his newspaper columns, Lahore-based lawyer Saroop Ijaz cited the British case of McLeod versus St Aubyn from a century ago in which the court had observed, “Committals for contempt of court by scandalising the court itself have become obsolete in this country…But it must be considered that in small colonies, consisting principally of coloured populations…contempt of court for attacks on the court may be absolutely necessary to preserve in such a community the dignity of and respect for the court.” The court’s prescription under Chaudhry for its own coloured population was sadly the same.
As with all top-down directives, there were also structural problems with such an approach. While Chaudhry beheaded many a public body for corruption, there were only minimal changes that filtered down to the rest of the organisation. Countless hours of court time were consumed chasing and sacking the bosses of government institutions, only to see them replaced by the government with flunkies even less qualified.
As the court’s caseload soared, poor petitioners waited for Chaudhry who would be busy deciding the next day’s headlines instead. As high-profile cases concerning the most rarefied constitutional questions (or the most coveted appointments) took centre-stage, the ordinary litigant was pushed aside.
In December 2013, Chaudhry laid down his robe on his own terms, no small achievement for a chief justice twice deposed. Yet it was a sobering exit: for a man who had returned to the Supreme Court with petals strewn in his path, he left in relative silence.
With him went much of the court’s audaciousness.
As early as the farewell reference for Chaudhry, the then Chief Justice-designate Tassaduq Hussain Jillani said in his address that the Supreme Court “may be called upon to fill in the gaps between the law and social dynamics, but while doing so, the Court has to defer to an equally important constitutional value of trichotomy of powers…”