{"id":947,"date":"2012-03-19T17:49:20","date_gmt":"2012-03-19T17:49:20","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.itatonline.org\/articles_new\/?p=947"},"modified":"2012-03-19T17:51:21","modified_gmt":"2012-03-19T17:51:21","slug":"the-qualities-of-a-good-judge","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/the-qualities-of-a-good-judge\/","title":{"rendered":"The Qualities Of A Good Judge"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"articleblogheader\">\n<div class=\"articlepicture2\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.itatonline.org\/images\/r_v_easwar.jpg\" alt=\"Hon'ble Justice Shri. R. V. Easwar\" width=\"86\" height=\"100\" \/><\/div>\n<p>The Qualities Of A Good Judge<\/p>\n<p>    Hon&#8217;ble Shri. R. V. Easwar, Judge, Delhi High Court<\/p>\n<p> With 20 years of experience in judicial office, Justice Easwar explains why some Judges are able to inspire confidence in the minds of the litigants. A Judge is like God and must develop sterling qualities to be able to occupy the high office. These qualities must be cultivated by everyone who aspires to the position of a Judge says Justice Easwar\n<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"chandrika\">\n<p>Br. Veerabhadrappa, the Officiating President of  the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, Br. Manmohan, Vice-President of the Mumbai  Zone, my esteemed erstwhile colleagues, and the newly appointed Members of the Tribunal:<\/p>\n<p>A very good afternoon to all of you. It is a  privilege accorded to me very kindly by Bro. Veerabhadrappa to address the  newly appointed members of the Tribunal. The Tribunal is close to my heart for  several reasons. I spent close to 20 years here and I tell you, those were some  of the very best years of my life. Besides giving me a sense of satisfaction so  far as the work aspect is concerned, it also gave me an exposure which  otherwise I may not have had. I worked in several places of the country and  both I and my family could imbibe the various cultural hues and enjoy the  pleasure of meeting myriad kinds of our countrymen. The Tribunal was so kind to  me. I had the benefit of sitting with several members coming from different  social, cultural and career backgrounds. I learnt from every one of them. Every  one of them, without exception, was considerate and kind to me and my family.  The Tribunal has always been one family and I indulged in the brotherhood  prevalent here. I therefore consider it my duty to be able to contribute  whatever you think I can, to the institution I served.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p><!--more--> <\/p>\n<div class=\"chandrika\">\n<div align=\"center\">\n<div class=\"\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"articlequote\">\n<p>    In India, the tradition is to consider judges as God. The perception, from time immemorial, is that judges are God-incarnate and it is God Himself who dispenses justice through human agency. Therefore, in the appointment of judges since ages it has been the tradition to look for persons with sterling qualities<\/p><\/div>\n<p>I take the liberty of welcoming you all to the  Tribunal as I still consider myself to be part of this great judicial body. In  its 70-odd years of existence, it has seen several ups and downs, but its core  values have remained constant. It is to this august judicial body that so many  apply, but so few are chosen. You will all be glad to know that you have been  chosen from among some 450 odd aspirants. The government has reposed that kind  of trust and confidence upon you, and you will, I am sure, in the years to  come, turn out worthy of it. Today, the institution looks to you, and many  others to come in the future, to further strengthen its pillars and foundation  and particularly at this juncture when there is all-round erosion of the moral  fibre.<\/p>\n<p>I took the liberty, without consulting Brother  Veerabhadrappa, of reversing the title of my speech from &ldquo;Principles of natural  justice and qualities of a judge&rdquo; to &ldquo;Qualities of a judge and the Principles  of natural justice&rdquo;, the reason being that the qualities of a judge is a  subject that is somewhat general in nature and therefore should take  precedence. I hope Bro. Veerabhadrappa will not mind!<\/p>\n<p>May I begin with a clarification? The title &ldquo;judge&rdquo;  traditionally is used to refer to a judge of the Supreme Court or the High  Courts or the presiding officers of the subordinate judiciary &mdash; the civil and  criminal courts. Some presiding officers of the special courts set up under the  various statutes are also referred to as &ldquo;judges&rdquo;. But those whose offices have  been created under a special law, particularly fiscal law, have different  designations such as &ldquo;adjudicating authority&rdquo;, &ldquo;member&rdquo; etc. Particularly, in  the legislation setting up the Tribunals, there are &ldquo;members&rdquo; who get promoted as  Vice-Presidents or Vice-Chairmen or President or Chairman. A question may  therefore arise as to whether it will be appropriate for me to title the speech  as &ldquo;qualities of a judge&rdquo; while addressing members of a Tribunal.<\/p>\n<p>I have always held the view that the title does not  matter and it is the substance of the functions that should matter. Therefore,  you need not feel a sense of discomfort or irrelevance or even a kind of  inferiority complex when you are referred to as a &lsquo;member&rsquo; and not as a  &lsquo;judge&rsquo;. I say so on high authority. No less a person than Lord Denning thinks  so. He thinks that the title does hardly matter, but what matters is the nature  of the functions. If the incumbent performs judicial functions AND (it is an  important &lsquo;and&rsquo;) he is independent of any influence or interference by the  executive, he is entitled to be called a &lsquo;judge&rsquo;. The critical test, according  to him, which the incumbent must pass is to enjoy the confidence of the people  by acting independently of the executive. Now, the Tribunal passes this test  admirably. It discharges judicial functions and for this proposition there is  ample authority. It is independent of the executive, except that the ministry  of law exercises only administrative control over it for budgetary allotments.  Otherwise there is no interference in its functions which are regulated by  itself and whenever some attempts were made to interfere, they were thwarted by  the Supreme Court. Your independence is safe and secure; you need not fear  while taking decisions which are just and right according to your judicial  conscience. It is also comforting to note that in the Bangalore Principles of  Judicial Conduct, 2002 adopted by the judiciary, echoes the view of Lord  Denning by defining a &ldquo;judge&rdquo; as &ldquo;any person exercising judicial power, however  designated&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>In India, the tradition is to consider judges as God. The  perception, from time immemorial, is that judges are God-incarnate and it is  God Himself who dispenses justice through human agency. Therefore, in the  appointment of judges since ages it has been the tradition to look for persons  with sterling qualities. Justice Rama Jois says, quoting Dharmakosa, that the  King shall appoint as members of the court of justice, honourable men of tried  integrity who are able to bear the burden of the administration of justice and  who are well-versed in the sacred laws, rules of procedure and are noble and  impartial towards friends and foes. Katyayana adds that the king should appoint  as judge one who is not cruel, who is sweet-tempered, kind, clever and  energetic but not greedy. According to the learned judge, all our  Dharmashastras and smruthis with one voice lay down that dispensation of  justice is the highest &lsquo;Dharma&rsquo; of judges. He says that if a judge fails to  dispense justice and upholds injustice, he is sure to suffer for his act.<\/p>\n<p>This, I think, sums up the basic qualities of a  judge. I do not think that there is any greater quality that is required of a  judge than his judicial instinct and sense of integrity and honesty. George  Orwell wrote this about the English judge, as he is seen traditionally, having  regard to the uncompromising British system of appointing judges: &ldquo;The hanging  judge &mdash; that evil old man in scarlet robe and horsehair wig, whom nothing short  of dynamite will ever teach what century he is living in, but who will at any  rate interpret the law according to the books and will in no circumstances take  a money bribe &mdash; is one of the symbolic features of England&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<div align=\"center\">\n<div class=\"\"><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"articlequoteleft\">\n<p> It is in my view totally unfair that a honest member should be put in such a situation as to feel a sense of vicarious guilt for what a handful may have done. That affects his judicial work, disturbs his mental peace. We all owe it to ensure that no such situation arises. We have no right to put the institution in jeopardy, nor to place our fraternity in an awkward situation as described above, It is our responsibility by our impeccable conduct to ensure that the judicial body which we serve is not dragged into any kind of scandal<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<p>The Bangalore Principles of Judicial Conduct states  that &ldquo;integrity is essential to the proper discharge of the judicial office&rdquo;.  It is not necessary to dwell upon this further, as integrity and honesty are a  &ldquo;given&rdquo;, they constitute the foundation of the judicial edifice. Justice K.  Ramaswamy observed that a judicial scandal is the worst form of all scandals,  because it shakes the public confidence in the judiciary and the judges and  erodes the rule of law. Nothing worse can happen than this! If we look back and  around, we will find that every problem in the judiciary has its roots in the  lack of integrity. We need to save ourselves, by developing a strong  will-power, from avarice, greed and pelf which are lurking round the corner to  devour us. Any act of indiscretion not only mars the reputation of that individual  member, but the public proceeds to tar the entire institution with the same  brush and that would be very unfortunate. It demoralises the right-thinking  members who constitute the majority. The black-sheep is always in a minority,  but the damage they can cause affects the reputation of the entire institution  and it would be very difficult to salvage the situation for a long time. This  should be realised. The further difficulty in such situations is this. A  right-thinking judge or a member cannot reply to general remarks about the  integrity of the institution as a whole. This creates a deeper sense of  insecurity in him; he feels suffocated. It is in my view totally unfair that a  honest member should be put in such a situation as to feel a sense of vicarious  guilt for what a handful may have done. That affects his judicial work,  disturbs his mental peace. We all owe it to ensure that no such situation  arises. We have no right to put the institution in jeopardy, nor to place our  fraternity in an awkward situation as described above, It is our responsibility  by our impeccable conduct to ensure that the judicial body which we serve is  not dragged into any kind of scandal. I quote th former Chief Justice of India,  Justice Lahoti:<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;From the standpoint of justice, the size of the  bribe or the scope of corruption cannot be the scale for measuring a judge&rsquo;s  dishonour. A single dishonest judge not only dishonours himself and disgraces  his office but also leopard jeopardises the integrity of the entire judicial system&rdquo;.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>We all know the words of Lord Acton that &ldquo;power  corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely&rdquo;. Lack of integrity is  essentially an instance of abuse of power. Henry Cecil, an English judge of  repute in his Hamlyn lectures says that every sane person abuses his power from  time to time, &ldquo;but a judge has many more opportunities of doing this than most  other people&rdquo;. Abuse of power, in the case of members or judges, may take many  forms. It may be a simple remark made in the course of the proceedings which  may have a permanent effect upon a person. It may be a refusal to let counsel  develop a point and if the counsel is a junior member of the Bar, it could even  affect his prospects. Making hurtful statements in the course of the  proceedings, pulling up parties by using language disproportionate to the  requirements of the situation and so on also amount to abuse of power. Abuse of  power may also arise in making irrelevant statements in the orders about  matters with which a member has no concern. The Tribunal is not a  constitutional authority; it is a creature of the Income Tax Act. It cannot  sermonise or read out homilies. An instance of an abuse of power is really an  instance of immaturity. These are pitfalls which must be carefully avoided. In  short, and in the words of Henry Cecil, &ldquo;a judge has to learn to control his  adrenal glands and if he is not able to control them, he should not be  appointed to the Bench&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>Apart from financial or pecuniary integrity about  which there can be no compromise, intellectual honesty or integrity is the  uppermost requirement of a judge. The decision-making process is basically a purely  intellectual exercise. A member of the Tribunal (or a judge) is expected to  display utmost transparency and honesty in taking every step of the process.  What does intellectual honesty mean? It means, according to me, that you should  have an open-mind, be receptive to arguments, be prepared and willing to learn,  and be courageous enough to accept that you can be wrong and should take pains to  deal with every argument advanced in the case. It also means that you shall not  conveniently omit to deal with arguments or citation of authorities which are  at variance with what you feel should be the right decision in the case. Every  argument, coming from a senior counsel or a junior member of the Bar, must be  given its due importance; every authority cited should be deferred to. But  dealing with arguments and authorities cited does not merely mean referring to  them without meeting or answering them. If you do so, that would be  intellectually dishonest. The danger in the adage that justice must not only be  done but should appear to be done is that a judge or a member may conceal  injustice by appearing to do justice. If you merely refer to the arguments without  effectively dealing with them, that would be a case of justice appearing to be  done, without actually being done. The same goes for binding precedents. A good  judge always reaches the conclusion to which the arguments and authorities take  him; he never decides the case in accordance with what he thinks is right, and  then look for reasons and authorities to support it.<\/p>\n<p>Precedent and reasoning go hand in hand. Lord  Devlin says that he would prefer to use a precedent as a mountaineer&rsquo;s rope  rather than a hangmen&rsquo;s rope. A precedent embalms a principle; it constitutes  the foundation of legal reasoning. A well-trained judge would prefer to follow  a precedent, for it provides him with the &ldquo;most conclusive logic&rdquo;, in the words  of Andrew Goodman, a barrister of repute. But the use of precedents requires  care. One could easily get lost in the maze of precedents. A precedent many  times inspires you to chart unknown territory. It may help you improvise and innovate.  But in all this, there has to be a sense of proportion and as member of the  Tribunal you should be able to keep the precedents to the minimum, since your  order must contain all the relevant factual findings and the mandate of the Act  for you is to find the facts. Judge Hammerton it was who said that &ldquo;Get the  facts first and the law will follow&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>That takes me to the passing of the orders. You  have been given the liberty of passing orders as you &ldquo;think fit&rdquo;, but think you  must. Section 254(1) itself contains the seeds of the end-product, namely, the  order in appeal and what it should consist of. When it says &ldquo;thinks fit&rdquo; it  clearly gives a mandate to you to bestow your thoughts on the dispute and  resolve it by giving reasons. Giving of reasons is the bedrock of the order. I  will deal with the reasoning part of your order when I come to the principles  of natural justice.<\/p>\n<p>A good judge listens well. Ernest Hemingway  complained that &ldquo;When people talk, listen completely (because) most people  never listen&rdquo;. Hearing a case is not merely sitting through the arguments  without any expression in your face except nod frequently to show that you are  following the arguments. It is much more than that. Hearing really means  attentive listening or effective listening. Great judges have been great  listeners. Seervai refers to Justice T.L. Venkatarama lyer of the Supreme Court  appreciatively as a good listener. That great judge adopted the attentive style  of hearing. Counsel would be invited to formulate their propositions and  address them one by one and the judge would pay attention closely. In case you  have doubts, please feel free to query the counsel. Uncleared doubts clog the  disposal of the appeals. Fifteen minutes more spent in the Bench will save you  five hours of toil and research in the chamber. Budh Sen, senior advocate, says  in his book that &ldquo;one common feature noticeable among the judges in the early  days of the Supreme Court was their humility, their patience in hearing counsel  in an unhurried manner and their willingness to give themselves sufficient time  for reflection and consultation which alone could find expression in those  monumental judgments that had stood the test of time&rdquo;. Effective or attentive  listening also implies that frequent interruptions to the counsel&rsquo;s arguments  should be avoided. You should wait for an opportune moment to put questions. Counsel  often come well-prepared and may have arranged their thoughts in a particular  way. Your questions should not break the chain of thoughts. Allow them to  develop a point and then test its validity by your questions. I must say that  your attitude towards the junior section of the Bar should be a little more  lenient or indulgent. Don&rsquo;t take out your impatience on them or snap at them! A  kind or encouraging word either in the course of his arguments or in the order  will motivate him to do better. A harsh word or a snub may snuff out the spirit  in him forever, and that would be the loss of the Bar and the Bench. Remember  this.<br \/>\n  &nbsp;<br \/>\n  <strong><u>QUALITIES OF A JUDGE <\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>India believes in independence and impartiality of  judges. The Constitution guarantees these twin indispensable requirements of an  efficient justice delivery system. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal has always  functioned independently and impartially. It is all the more important because  today the stakes involved in the matters reaching the Tribunal are very high,  and the issues are of far-reaching importance for the economy and growth of the  country. Whenever we talk of independence and impartiality, we probably have in  mind only executive interference. That is only part of the story. We have also  to be independent of pulls and pressures from every one, including the  taxpayers, lobbyists and pressure groups. At times, you may also face  professional associations making an orchestrated attempt to indirectly influence  your thinking and decisions, and though such occasions are practically  non-existent, they cannot be ruled out. Just as you will not bow down to the  influence of the executive, you will also not bow down to such pressures,  whatever be the consequences. The former Chief Justice of India, Justice  Lahoti, in his address on &ldquo;judicial ethics&rdquo; in the first M.C. Setalvad memorial  lecture, quotes Chief Justice Lamer on the twin aspects of judicial  independence and judicial impartiality:<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;The overall objective of guaranteeing judicial  independence is to ensure a reasonable perception of impartiality; judicial  independence is but a means to an end. If judges could be perceived as  impartial without judicial independence, the requirement of independence would  be unnecessary. However, judicial independence is critical to the public  perception of impartiality. <\/em><\/strong><strong><em>Independence<\/em><\/strong><strong><em> is the cornerstone, a necessary pre-requisite for  judicial impartiality&rdquo;.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The attributes of a judge were brought out lucidly  in the judgment of Justice K. Ramaswamy of the Supreme Court in C. Ravichandran  Iyer vs A.M. Bhattacharjee (1995) 5 5CC 457. He lists the following:<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>a) A judge should be endowed with sterling  character, impeccable integrity and upright behaviour;<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong><em>b) Judges should be men of fighting faith with a  tough fibre not susceptible to any pressure, economic, political or of any  sort;<\/em><\/strong> <\/p>\n<p><strong><em>c) Judges cannot be men of clay, amenable to all  human failings and all frailties and foibles of life.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>To the above list, Chief Justice Lahoti adds that a  judge has to be honest not only to himself and his office but to the society as  well, because &ldquo;the society&rsquo;s demand for honesty in a judge is exacting and  absolute&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>It is a misnomer to think that a member of the  Tribunal functions as a judge only in court and in the office of the Tribunal  and once the working hours are over, he is a free citizen of India and can do what pleases him. He certainly has all  the rights of a free citizen of the country, guaranteed under the Constitution.  But even in his private and social life, he is expected to conduct himself in a  manner commensurate with the dignity of his office and the position he holds.  So far as maintaining a strict vigil on his own conduct is concerned, there are  no off-hours. He occupies a judicial office which has been given to him in  trust. His conduct must show that he deserves it. He should be careful and  choosy about the company he keeps, the places he visits and the tastes he  displays. In this, he should be guided by his own right-thinking peers. It is  better that you always be on guard and err on the side of caution. It is  ultimately the impression others gain from his conduct that is important, not  what he thinks about himself. According to Henry Cecil, &ldquo;good manners among  judges are as important as a good legal brain&#8230;.&rdquo;.&nbsp; A summing up of the other qualities which a  judge should possess, applicable equally to members of the Tribunal, will be  like this:<\/p>\n<p>  a) Punctuality, both in maintaining office and  court timings and in delivering the orders;<\/p>\n<p>  b) Patience &mdash; a judge has to learn to control his  adrenal glands and his temper;<\/p>\n<\/p>\n<p>c) Desisting from making unfair remarks against  anybody;<\/p>\n<p>d) A judge should not pretend to know something  which he in fact does not know &mdash; Shakespeare called it being most assured about  matters of which a judge is most ignorant (&ldquo;As you like it&rdquo;)<\/p>\n<p>e) He should be courteous and patient and in full  command of all his faculties. He should come to court fresh and ready to take  the strain of the day&rsquo;s work bearing in mind that if he is not alert and sharp  throughout the day, the standard of justice will decline;<\/p>\n<p>f) A judge or member of the Tribunal has to take  great care that no one can even suggest that he has decided in favour of a  party because he knew him or his advocate or because of some information given  to him by one party in the absence of the other;<\/p>\n<p>g) A judge should never hear a case if he is aware  that he knows one of the parties even slightly;<\/p>\n<p>h) He should always disclose any pecuniary interest  which he has in the entity which is before him;<\/p>\n<p>i) The greatest harm that a judge can do is not merely  actual injustices, that is, wrong decisions, but in sending the litigants and  their counsel away with a feeling that they have not been properly heard.<\/p>\n<p>A judge is accountable. Judicial accountability is  one of the checks on abuse of power and tyranny. In his article titled &ldquo;Who  will judge the judges?&rdquo;, Justice Krishna Iyer, that worthy champion of the  downtrodden says that in the name of judicial independence, we cannot have judicial  absolutism and tyranny. Thus judicial accountability promotes regard for the  means to attain justice. Judicial independence is not something that should  exist for the personal benefit of the judges; it is designed to protect people  and democracy. When a law clerk asked judge Learned Hand, a federal judge of  great repute who did not make it to the US Supreme court, as to whom the judges  are accountable, he replied, pointing out to his library: &ldquo;Sonny, to those  books. It is to those books I am accountable and none else. Even those nine  bozos in Washington, who sometimes reverse me, cannot make me decide  as they wish&rdquo;. Accountability takes you along the path of judicial conscience  and a judge must have a judicial instinct. Chief Justice William Howard Taft of  the US remarked on judicial accountability thus:<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;Nothing tends more to render judges careful in  their decisions and anxiously solicitous to do exact justice, than the  consciousness that every act of theirs is to be subject to the intelligent  scrutiny of their fellowmen, and to their candid criticism.&rdquo;<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Sometimes judicial independence and true judicial  conscience have led to somewhat tragic situations, but that is not to say that  it is good reason to give them up, for that would be more tragic, in fact the  death-knell of the judicial system. We all know under what circumstances one of  our greatest judges, a champion of freedom and liberty, had to quit office. The  loss to our judiciary was greatest, but judicial independence emerged  victorious. In his case, it was not a mere lip service to judicial  independence; he was ready to, and in fact did, pay the price for being  fiercely independent.<\/p>\n<p>Lord Patrick Devlin of the Queen&rsquo;s Bench of the  High Court of England in his book &ldquo;The Judge&rdquo; writes that the social service  which the judge renders to the community is the removal of a sense of  injustice. According to him, &ldquo;To perform this service the essential quality  which he needs is impartiality and next after that the appearance of  impartiality. I put impartiality before the appearance of it simply because  without the reality the appearance would not endure&rdquo;. The sense of justice  which a judge imbibes in the minds of the public and the impartiality,  including the appearance of impartiality, are supreme judicial virtues,  according to the learned law Lord. It is his view that &ldquo;We ought never to  forget that judges&hellip;&hellip;. are the institutions which secure us from comparable  disorders within the nation and that their value to the community is to be  measured by the extent to which they do this and not by the extent to which  their judgments and verdicts are pleasing to the critical eye&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>We ought not in the ultimate analysis forget that  judges are human beings and are prove to err. The error by itself is not fatal,  for it can be corrected in appeal or review, depending upon the procedural law.  But if the error is the end-product of an unfair or biased hearing and an  improper procedure giving a go-by to the essential steps in the decision-making  process, that reflects poorly upon the judge. This is one principle that is  fundamental and permeates through judicial systems in all democratic countries.  The ultimate decision may be wrong, but the means of reaching the decision  should all be right, just and proper.<br \/>\n  I will now move on to the other branch of today&rsquo;s  topic, that is, the Principles of Natural Justice.<\/p>\n<p>Justice really means fairness in action. The  principles of natural justice are all about fairness or fair play. According to  Lord Evershed, Master of the Rolls in the leading case of Abbott v Sullivan  (1952) 1 KB 189, &ldquo;the principles of natural justice are easy to proclaim, but  their precise extent is far less easy to define&rdquo;. It is with this difficulty in  the background that we must attempt to approach, analyse and appreciate the  topic. <\/p>\n<p>At some point of time, it appears that natural  justice and natural law were words that were used interchangeably but in the  past several decades the words are used to denote certain rules that are to be  followed in judicial proceedings.<\/p>\n<p>Several definitions of what the rules or principles  of natural justice are have been attempted but all of them can be synthesised  into the following basic principles:<\/p>\n<p>a) No man shall be a judge in his own cause;<br \/>\n  b) Both sides should be heard, which is denoted by  the maxim &ldquo;audi alteram partem&rdquo;.<\/p>\n<p>In several early judgments these principles have  been expressed in different words but the substance was the same. In an early  decision in England in 1885 the Earl of Selborne, Lord Chancellor used  the expressions &ldquo;substantial requirements of justice&rdquo; and &ldquo;essence of justice&rdquo;.  He also stated that an opportunity of being heard shall be given to the party  likely to be affected by the decision of the adjudicating authority, that the  person charged must be informed of what he is being charged with, that he must  act impartially and honestly, that he should not act under the dictates of  another person and so on and so forth. All these however refer to the same idea  and are only refinements or extensions of the two basic rules mentioned above.  In 1949, Lord Tucker in Russell v Duke of Norfolk sorted out the issue with  consummate ease and provided a solution in the following words, which are by  and large accepted even today as a satisfactory answer to the question: <strong><em>&ldquo;The  requirements of natural justice must depend on the circumstances of the case,  the nature of the enquiry, the rules under which the tribunal is acting, the  subject matter that is being dealt with and so forth.&rdquo;<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In India, the meaning of &lsquo;natural justice&rsquo; came up for  consideration in the Supreme Court in the case of Swadeshi Cotton Mills v UOl  AIR 1981 SC 818 where Justice Sarkaria, speaking for himself and Justice D.A.  Desai observed thus:<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>&ldquo;The phrase is not capable of a static and precise  definition judges nurtured in the traditions of British jurisprudence often  invoked it in conjunction with a reference to &ldquo;equity and good conscience&rdquo;. <\/em><\/strong>Legal experts<strong><\/strong>of earlier generations  did not draw any distinction between &lsquo;natural justice&rsquo; and &lsquo;natural law&rsquo;.  Natural justice was considered as <strong><em>&ldquo;that part of natural law which relates  to the administration of justice&rdquo;.<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>What is the difference between &ldquo;natural justice&rdquo;  and &ldquo;legal justice&rdquo; or &ldquo;justice according to law&rdquo;? It has been recognised that  natural justice, when authoritatively formulated by law becomes legal justice.  These two are therefore not water-tight compartments.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<div class=\"journal3\">\n<p>Lecture delivered by Justice Easwar on 21st February 2012, during the Orientation &#038; Training Programme of newly appointed Members of Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. Reproduced with permission from the AIFTP Journal, March 2012 <\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>With 20 years of experience in judicial office, Justice Easwar explains why some Judges are able to inspire confidence in the minds of the litigants. A Judge is like God and must develop sterling qualities to be able to occupy the high office. These qualities must be cultivated by everyone who aspires to the position of a Judge says Justice Easwar<\/p>\n<div class=\"read-more\"><a href=\"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/the-qualities-of-a-good-judge\/\">Read more &#8250;<\/a><\/div>\n<p><!-- end of .read-more --><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_access":"","_jetpack_dont_email_post_to_subs":false,"_jetpack_newsletter_tier_id":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paywalled_content":false,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","jetpack_publicize_message":"","jetpack_publicize_feature_enabled":true,"jetpack_social_post_already_shared":false,"jetpack_social_options":{"image_generator_settings":{"template":"highway","default_image_id":0,"font":"","enabled":false},"version":2}},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-947","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-articles"],"jetpack_publicize_connections":[],"jetpack_featured_media_url":"","jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/947","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=947"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/947\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=947"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=947"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/itatonline.org\/articles_new\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=947"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}