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ADI PHEROZSHAH GANDHI Vs. H.M. SEERVAI, ADVOCATE GENERAL OF MAHARASHTRA, BOMBAY – 21/08/1970

SUPREME COURT
In a civil proceeding the decision of a criminal court is not res judicata. To give an example, if a person is involved in a traffic offence in which some one is injured he may in the criminal court receive a light sentence but if he is sued in a civil court for heavy damages he can plead and prove that he was not negligent or that accident was due to the contributory negligence of the defendant. The decision of the criminal court would not preclude him from raising this issue before the civil court.

(1971) AIR(SC) 385 : (1971) 2 SCA 74 : (1970) 2 SCC 484 : (1971) 2 SCJ 71 : (1971) 1 SCR 863

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FULL BENCH

( Before : M. Hidayatullah, C.J; J. M. Shelat, J; G. K. Mitter, J; C. A. Vaidyialingam, J; A. N. Ray, J )

ADI PHEROZSHAH GANDHI — Appellant

Vs.

H.M. SEERVAI, ADVOCATE GENERAL OF MAHARASHTRA, BOMBAY — Respondent

Civil Appeal No. 2259 of 1969

Decided on : 21-08-1970

Advocates Act, 1961 – Section 35, Section 37, Section 38
Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC) – Section 11, Section 112, Section 91, Section 92
Penal Code, 1860 (IPC) – Section 193, Section 228
Advocates Act, 1961 – Sections 37 and 35

Cases Referred

Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others, AIR 1955 SC 223 : AIR 1954 SC 223 : (1955) 1 SCR 1055
Counsel for Appearing Parties

C.K. Daphtary, A.S.R. Chari, J.B. Dadachanji, O.C. Mathur, Ravinder Narain and S. Swarup, for the Appellant; V.S. Desai and B.D. Sharma for respondent No. 1 and M.C. Bhandare and S.B. Wad, for the Respondent

JUDGMENTJudgment The statement given by the Judge on the grounds of a decree or order - CPC 2(9). It contains a concise statement of the case, points for determination, the decision thereon, and the reasons for such decision - Order 20 Rule 4(2).  Section 354 of CrPC requires that every judgment shall contain points for determination, the decision thereon and the reasons for the decision. Indian Supreme Court Decisions > Law declared by Supreme Court to be binding on all courts (Art 141 Indian Constitution) Civil and judicial authorities to act in aid of the Supreme Court (Art 144) Supreme Court Network On Judiciary – Portal > Denning: “Judges do not speak, as do actors, to please. They do not speak, as do advocates, to persuade. They do not speak, as do historians, to recount the past. They speak to give Judgment. And in their judgments, you will find passages, which are worthy to rank with the greatest literature….” Law Points on Judgment Writing > The judge must write to provide an easy-to-understand analysis of the issues of law and fact which arise for decision. Judgments are primarily meant for those whose cases are decided by judges (State Bank of India and Another Vs Ajay Kumar Sood SC 2022)

M. Hidayatullah, C.J.—I agree with the judgment delivered by my brother Mitter but in view of the importance of the question and the difference between my brethren I have chosen to express myself separately.

2. We heard this appeal on a preliminary point raised by the appellant that the appeal of the Advocate-General of Maharashtra filed before the Bar Council of India was incompetent as the Advocate-General did not fall within the expression a ‘person aggrieved’ to whom alone is given the right of appeal u/s 37 of the Advocates Act of 1961, against the orders of the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of the State.

3. The facts necessary to bring out the controversy may be briefly stated. The appellant is an advocate from Maharashtra. The Bar Council of the State of Maharashtra had called upon him suo motu to show causeShow Cause A process directed to a person to appear in court and present reasons why a certain order, judgment, or decree should not be made final. why he should not be held guilty of misconduct. It appears that the appellant was convicted before a Summary Court in London on a charge of pilfering some articles from departmental stores and sentenced to a fine. The record of the proceedings in London was not before the Bar Council of the State and action was taken on the basis of a brief report of the incident in a newspaper. The appellant explained before the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of the State that he was the victim of a misunderstanding but as he had no means of defending himself effectively, he was found guilty and received a light sentence of fine. He explained how he had fallen into this unfortunate predicament and did not know how to extricate himself. The order of the Summary Court was not a speaking order and the proceedings were summary. The disciplinary committee were satisfied that there was no reason to hold him guilty of professional or other misconduct. They, therefore, ordered that the proceedings be filed.

4. The Advocate-General of the State, who was sent a notice of the proceedings, as is required by the second sub-section of Section 35, and had appeared before the committee, purporting to act u/s 37 of the Act filed an appeal before the Bar Council of India. It was heard by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India. The advocate objected that the Advocate-General had no locus standi to file the appeal. The objection was overruled and the appeal was accepted. The advocate was held guilty of misconduct and suspended for a year from practice. The advocate now appeals u/s 38 of the Act to this Court. His appeal raises questions of merit but he contends at the there hold that the Advocate-General was not competent to file the appeal u/s 37 of the Act.

5. The point in controversy before the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India and now before us, is a short one. It is : whether the Advocate-General can be said to be a ‘person aggrieved’ by the order of the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of the State Having heard this point in detail we took timeTime Where any expression of it occurs in any Rules, or any judgment, order or direction, and whenever the doing or not doing of anything at a certain time of the day or night or during a certain part of the day or night has an effect in law, that time is, unless it is otherwise specifically stated, held to be standard time as used in a particular country or state. (In Physics, time and Space never exist actually-“quantum entanglement”) to consider. I am of the opinionOpinion A judge's written explanation of a decision of the court. In an appeal, multiple opinions may be written. The court’s ruling comes from a majority of judges and forms the majority opinion. A dissenting opinion disagrees with the majority because of the reasoning and/or the principles of law on which the decision is based. A concurring opinion agrees with the end result of the court but offers further comment possibly because they disagree with how the court reached its conclusion. that it must be held in favour of the advocate and the order of the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India, now under appeal before us, must be set aside on this short ground without going into the meritsMerits Strict legal rights of the parties; a decision “on the merits” is one that reaches the right(s) of a party as distinguished from a disposition of the case on a ground not reaching the rights raised in the action; for example, in a criminal case double jeopardy does not apply if charges are nolle prossed before trial commences, and in a civil action res judicata does not apply if a previous action was dismissed on a preliminary motion raising a technicality such as improper service of process. of the case.

6. Section 37 of the Advocates Act 1961 reads: “37. Appeal to the Bar Council of India.

(1). Any person aggrieved by an order of the disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council made u/s 35 may, within sixty days of the date of the communication of the order to him, prefer an appeal to the Bar Council of India.

(2) Every such appeal shall be heard by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India which may pass such order thereon as it deems fit.

7. The expression a ‘person aggrieved’ is not new, nor has it occurred for the first time in the Advocates Act. In fact it occurs in several Indian Acts and in British Statutes for more than a hundred years. In the latter a right of appeal to a ‘person aggrieved’ is conferred in diverse contexts. It occurs in the Ale House Act, the Bankruptcy Acts, Copyright Act, Highway Act, Licensing Acts, Milk and Dairies (Amendment) Act, Rating and Valuation Act, Summary JurisdictionJurisdiction Authority by which courts receive and decide cases. Limited Jurisdiction: the authority over only particular types of cases, or cases under a prescribed amount in controversy, or seeking only certain types of relief, the District Court is a court of limited jurisdiction. Original Jurisdiction: Jurisdiction of the first court to hear a case. Act, Union Committee Act, Local Acts, in certiorari proceedings and the Defence of Realm Regulations to mention only a few. The list of Indian Acts is equally long.

8. As a result of the frequent use of this rather vague phrase, which practice, as Lord Parker pointed out in Baling CorporationCorporation A legally established entity that can enter into contracts, own assets and incur debt, as well as sue and be sued—all separately from its owner(s). The term covers both for-profit and nonprofit corporations and includes nonstock corporations, incorporated membership organizations, incorporated cooperatives, incorporated trade associations, professional corporations and, under certain circumstances, limited liability companies. v. Jones L.R. [1959] 1 Q.B.D. 384, has not been avoided, in spite of the confusion it causes, selections from the observations of judges expounding the phrase in the context of these varied statutes were cited before us for our acceptance. The observations often conflict since they were made in different contexts and involved the special standing of the party claiming the right of appeal. Yet these definitions are not entirely without value for they disclose a certain unanimity on the essential features of this phrase, even in the diversity of the contexts. The font and origin of the discussion is the well-known definition of the phrase by James L.J. in In Re Side-hotham Ex. J. Sidebotham (1880) 14 Ch. D. 458 C.A. It was observed that the words ‘person aggrieved’ in Section 71 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1869 meant:

not really a person who is disappointed of a benefit which he might have received, if some order had been made. A ‘person aggrieved’ must be a man who had suffered a legal grievous, a man against whom a decision has been pronounced which had wrongfully deprived him of something or wrongfully refused him something or wrongfully affected his title to something.

The important words in this definition are ‘a benefit which he might have received’ and ‘a legal grievance’ against the decision which ‘wrongfully deprives him of something’ or affects ‘his title to something’.

9. The definition was held in later cases to be not exhaustive and several other features of the phrase were pointed out. Thus under the Bankruptcy Acts, where the Board of Trade summoned to support the validity of the appointment of a trustee, went before the judge, and failed, it was considered a ‘person aggrieved’ on the principle that a person who is brought before the Court to submit to its decision, but not a person who is heard in a dispute between others must be treated as a ‘person aggrieved’ (see In Re Lamb Ex., p. Board of Traded [1894] 2 Q. B. D. 805 per Lord Esher). Here again the words to notice are ‘brought before the court to submit to its decision’, that is to say, a person who is in the nature of a party as contra-distinguished from a person who is next described as ‘a person who is heard in a dispute between others.’ To distinguish between these two positions I may refer to a few more decisions. In Re Kitson, Ex. p. Sugden (Thomas) and Sons Ltd. [1911] 2 K. B. 109, it was further explained that.

the mere fact that an order is wrongly made does not of itself give a grievance to a person not otherwise aggrieved. (per Phiilimore J.)

It was added that a person deprived of the fruits of litigation which he had instituted in the hope for them, is a ‘person aggrieved’. Similarly, a creditor who did not wish an ‘adjudication order to be made was held not to be a ‘person aggrieved’–See In Re Brown Ex. p. Debtor v. Official Receiver [1943] Ch. D. D. 177. The utmost that this series of cases goes is to be found in the observations of James L.J. in Ellis Ex. p. Ellis [1876] 2 Ch. D. 797 that even a person not bound by the order of adjudication must be treated as a ‘person aggrieved’ if the order embarrasses him. In a later case (In Re Woods Ex. P. Ditton [1879] 40 L. T. 297 C.A. 79 Cotton L.J. held that even so the person must be aggrieved by the very order and not by any of the consequences that ensue. This was clarified in R. v. London County Keepers of the PeacePeace εἰρήνη and Justices [1890] 20 Q. B. D. 357, by Lord Coleridge C.J. while dealing with the Highway Act, denying the right of appeal in these words :

Is a person who cannot succeed in getting a conviction against another a ‘person aggrieved’ ? He may be annoyed at finding that what he thought was a breach of the law is not a breach of law; but is he aggrieved because some one is held not to have done wrong? It is difficult to see that the section meant anything of the kind. The section does not give an appeal to anybody but a person who is by the direct act of the Magistrate ‘aggrieved’–that is who has had something done or determined against him by the Magistrate.

These observations again show that the person must himself suffer a grievance, or must be aggrieved by the very order because it affects him.

10. Two cases which may usefully be seen in the same context may next be mentioned. In Jennings v. Kelly [174] A. C. 206 in relation to the Government of Ireland Act 1920, Lord Wright did say that if a person was treated in certiorari proceedings as a competent party and notice was served on him as being a proper party he would be a ‘person aggrieved.’ The point to bear in mind is that the person must be treated as a party. However the force of the observation was considerably weakened because the party there was ordered to pay costsCosts Subject to any written law, costs are at the discretion of the Court, and the Court has the power to determine all issues relating to the costs of or incidental to all proceedings, including by whom and to what extent the costs are to be paid, at any stage of the proceedings or after the conclusion of the proceedings. Generally “Costs” includes charges, disbursements, expenses, fees, and remuneration. Costs in any matter are payable from the date of the order of the Court unless the parties otherwise agree. The costs of a third-party funding contract are not recoverable as part of the costs of, or costs. and the right of appeal was held to be available on. that limited ground. Further qualification is to be found in In Re Riviere (1884) 26 Ch. D. 48 where Lord Sel-borne observed :

… It must be a legal grievance; it must not be a stet pro ratione voluntas; the applicant must not come merely saying do not like this thing to be done’, it must be shown that it tends to his injury, or to his damage, in the legal sense of the word.

The locus standi of the person aggrieved must be found from his position in the first proceeding and his grievance must arise from that standing taken with the effect of the order on him.

11. These cases are of course far removed from the one before me and as Branwell L.J. observed in Robinycn v. Currey [1881] 7 Q. B. D. 465. the expression is nowhere defined and, thereby, must be construed by reference to the context of the enactment in which it appears and all the circumstances. He pointed out that ‘the words are ordinarily English words, which are to have the ordinary meaning put upon them.’

12. From these cases it is apparent that any person who feels disappointed with the result of the case is not a ‘person aggrieved.’ He must be disappointed of a benefit which he would have received if the order had gone the other way. The order must cause him a legal grievance by wrongfully depriving him of something. It is no doubt a legal grievance and not a grievance about material matters but his legal grievance must be a tendency to injure him. That the order is wrong or that it acquits some one who he thinks ought to be convicted does not by itself give rise to a legal grievance. These principles are gathered from the cases cited and do not, as I shall show later, do violence to the context in which the phrase occurs in the Advocates Act. Although I am aware that in Seven Oaks Urban District Council v. Twynham [1929] 2 K. B. 440 Lord Hewart C.J. uttered words of caution, again emphasised by Lord Parker C.J. in Baling Corporation v. Jones L. R. [1959] 1 Q. B. D. 384, in applying too readily the definitions given in relation to other statutes but I do not think I am going beyond what Lord Hewart C.J. said and what Lord Parker C.J. did in the case. Lord Parker observed :

… As Lord Hewart C.J. pointed out in Seven Oaks Urban District Council v. Twynam : ‘But as has been said again and again there is often little utility in seeking to interpret particular expressions in one statute by reference to decisions given upon similar expressions in different statutes which have been enacted alio in-tuitu. The problem with which we are concerned is not, what is the meaning of the expression ‘aggrieved’ in any one of a dozen other statutes, but what is its meaning in this part of this statute?’ Accordingly, T only look at the cases to which we have been referred to see if there are general principles which can be extracted which will guide the court in approaching the question as to what the words ‘person aggrieved’ mean in any particular statute.

If I may say respectfully I fully endorse this approach. I am now in a position to examine the Advocates’ Act but before T do so I must refer to a case near in point to this case, than any considered before.

13. The case is reported in Attorney General of Gambia v. Pierrie Saar N’jie [1961] A. C. 617. A legal practitioner was held guilty of professional misconduct but was acquitted on appeal and an appeal was taken to the Judicial Committee against the decision of the West African Court of Appeal. This involved consideration of whether the Attorney General could be said to be a ‘person aggrieved’. The facts need to be stated a little fully as both sides rely upon the observations of Lord Denning and they need to be explained carefully.

14. A barrister (a member of the English Bar) and also a Solicitor (the two professions appear to be united in the Gambia) practicing in the Supreme Court of the Gambia was charged with professional misconduct and an order was made, September 22, 1958, by the Deputy Judge (Abbot J.) striking off his name from the roll of that Court, and directing that the matter be reported to the Masters of the Bench of his Inn. On June 5, 1959 the West African Court of Appeal (Bairamian, Ag.P, Hurley Ag. J.A. and Ames Ag. J.A.) set aside the order on the ground that the Deputy Judge had no jurisdiction. The Attorney General of the Gambia thereupon sought leave to appeal to Her Majesty in Council but this was refused. Then a petition was made for special leave. Special leave was granted subject to the preliminary objection by the respondent that no appeal lay at the instance of the Attorney General. The preliminary objection was rejected.

15. Section 31 of the West African (Appeal to Privy Council) Order in Council 1949 under which special leave was asked reads :

Nothing in this order contained shall be deemed to interfere with the right of His Majesty upon the humble petition of any person aggrieved by any judgment of the court, to admit his appeal therefrom upon such conditions as His Majesty in Council shall think fit to impose.

In the Gambia disciplinary jurisdiction over barristers and solicitors is embodied in Rules of the Supreme Court 1928. Under those rules the ‘Supreme Court’ Judge (and there is only one) admits and enrolls barristers and solicitors of the Court, and Schedule I. Order 9, Rule. 7 says that:–

The Judge shall have power, for reasonable cause, to suspend any barrister or solicitor from practising within the jurisdiction of the court for any specified period, or order his name to be struck off the roll of court.

Then there is the West African Court of Appeal and it hears appeals from the ‘Supreme Court’ in civil and criminal matters. In an earlier case in which a certain Mr. Macauley was struck off the roll of the Supreme Court of Sierra Leone and Mr. Macauley sought to appeal to the Full Court of West AfricaAfrica Eastern Africa Burundi Comoros Djibouti Eritrea Ethiopia Kenya Madagascar Malawi Mauritius Mayotte Mozambique Réunion Rwanda Seychelles Somalia South Sudan Tanzania Uganda Zambia Zimbabwe Middle Africa Angola Cameroon Central African Republic Chad Congo Democratic Republic of the Congo Equatorial Guinea Gabon São Tomé e Príncipe Northern Africa Algeria Egypt Libya Morocco Sudan Tunisia Western Sahara Southern Africa Botswana Eswatini Lesotho Namibia South Africa Western Africa Benin Burkina Faso Cape Verde Islands Côte d’Ivoire Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea-Bissau Liberia Mali Mauritania Niger Nigeria Saint Helena Senegal Sierra Leone Togo it was ruled by the Full Court that the decision of the Chief Justice was not a decision of the ‘Supreme Court’ and was, therefore, not appeal able and that the only remedy was to obtain special leave to appeal to the Privy Council (see W.E.A. Macauley v. Judges of the Supreme Court of Siena Leone and Anr. L. R. [1928] A. C. 344. The legislature then added Section 14 which provided :

An appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal from any order of the judge suspending a barrister or solicitor of the Supreme Court from practice or striking his name off the roll, and for the purposes., of any such appeal any such order shall be deemed to be an order of the Supreme Court.

The words of the section show that the legislature did not regard a decision in disciplinary matters as a judgment of a court but only deemed it to be so.

16. The Full Court on the appeal of N’Jie from the order of the Deputy Judge held that a Deputy Judge could not deal with any matter which was not a proceeding in the court in the exercise of judicial power. The Judicial Committee held that this was exercise of judicial power. Them the preliminary objection was considered. The objection was that the Attorney General had no locus standi not being a ‘person aggrieved’. This was overruled by the Judicial Committee.

17. Lord Denning referred to the definition of James L.J. in In Re Sidebotham Ex. p. Sidebotham [1880] 40 Oh. D. 458, and said that if the definition were to be regarded as exhaustive and were held applicable, an ‘aggrieved person’ would be only a person who was a party to a Us, a controversy inter parties and had a decision given against him. The Attorney General would not come within this restricted definition as there was no suit between two parties when disciplinary proceedings were started ex mero motu by the court or at the instance of the Attorney General or some one against a legal practitioner. But the definition of James L.J. was not exhaustive and the words ‘person aggrieved’ were of wide import and should mot be subjected to a restricted interpretation. They included not a busy body but certainly one who had a genuine grievance because an order had been made which prejudicially affected his interests. Posing the question did the Attorney General have a sufficient interest’, the Judicial Committee answered he had. The Attorney General in a Colony represented the Crown as the guardians of public interest and it was his duty to bring before the Judge a case, of misconduct to warrant action. Then Lord Denning proceeded to distinguish two kinds of cases to determine if the Attorney General would be a ‘person aggrieved.’ The first was a case where the judge acquitted the practitioner. In such a case no appeal was open to the Attorney General under the Supreme Court Ordinance, and Lord Denning added “He has done his duty and is not aggrieved”. In other words, he did not come within the words of the 31st section of the Order in Council. The Attorney General could not, therefore, ask for special leave as a ‘person aggrieved’. But the case was different if the judge found the practitioner guilty and a Court of Appeal reversed the decision on a ground which went to the root of the jurisdiction of the judge or was otherwise a point in which the public interest was involved. In that case the Attorney General was a ‘person aggrieved’.

18. The observations of Lord Denning clearly meant that the Attorney General could not pose as a ‘person aggrieved’ to seek to bring a simple case of acquittal for reversal by the Judicial Committee under the 31st section of the Order in Council for he could not be regarded as a ‘person aggrieved’. The remark was made perhaps to repel an argument that every case of acquittal would make the Attorney General an ‘aggrieved person’. Lord Denning said that this was not the true position. The Attorney General could only move the judge and there his duty ended. The law gave him no express right of appeal and he could not claimA Claim A claim is “factually unsustainable” where it could be said with confidence before trial that the factual basis for the claim is entirely without substance, which can be the case if it were clear beyond question that the facts pleaded are contradicted by all the documents or other material on which it is based. to be a ‘person aggrieved’. He could only invoke the 31st section if he could make out his grievance and it was found to be as a person representing the Crown and the guardian of public interest seeking to get reversed a decision which struck at the root of the jurisdiction of the disciplinary judge, by denying that the Deputy Judge was exercising judicial power u/s 7 of the Supreme Court Ordinance. The Crown was aggrieved by this decision and the Attorney General representing the Crown was an ‘aggrieved person’.

19. The scheme of the law under which the disciplinary action was taken and the appeal to the Privy Council was brought gave the true connotation of the expression ‘person aggrieved’. In those cases in which no question of public interest was involved the Attorney General even if he had moved the judge and got an adverse decision could not be regarded as aggrieved but in a. case in which, apart from the merits of the case against the practitioner, some grave question of public importance was involved, the Attorney General representing the Crown could be regarded as a ‘person aggrieved’.

20. It was presumably after reading this case and understanding it as I have done, that the Advocate-General set about making out a question of public importance. He did not seem only to get the decision overturned on facts. This is what he said :

The appellant has filed this appeal as the Advocate General of Maharashtra. Under the Advocates Act, 1961, (as under the Indian Bar Councils Act, 1926), the Advocate General represents the public interest in every disciplinary inquiry. u/s 35 of the Advocates Act, 1961, the Advocate General is entitled to notice in respect of every disciplinary inquiry, is entitled to have an opportunity of being heard before the disciplinary committee passes any order. This appeal raises very important questions of principle as regards the effect of a conviction of an Indian Advocate of an offence recognised by all civilised countries as an offence involving moralMorality Mental frame. It can be high morality or low morality, savage morality or civilised morality or Christian morality, or Nazi morality. Decent Behaviour is acceptable norms of the nations. Christian morality starts with the belief that all men are sinners and that repentance is the cause of divine mercy. Putting Crucified Christ in between is the destruction of Christian morality and logic. Now morality shifted to the personal choice of Jesus. What Jesus did is 'good'. The same would be the case of Ram, Krishna, Muhammad, Buddha, Lenin, etc. Pure Human Consciousness degraded to pure followership. There exists no proof the animals are devoid of morality. turpitude. The question raised also related to the requirements of natural justice in a criminal court, and the effect of the judgments of the Supreme Court on the subject. It raises the further question whether an Indian Advocate convicted of an offence involving moral turpitude by a Court outside India is immune from disciplinary action because of minor differences of procedure in such countries where such trial has been held in complete accord with principles of natural justice. The profession of an advocate is an honourable profession and the disciplinary provisions of the Advocates Act are designed to secure that persons guilty of offences involving moral turpitude are subject to appropriate disciplinary action.

21. It is obvious that the Advocate-General has attempted to use the observations of Lord Denning in the Gambia case and wishes to plead that he enjoys a special position in the Bar and under the Advocates Act and therefore is entitled to appeal as a ‘person aggrieved’. This was the line adopted by Mr. M. C. Setalvad. counsel for the Bar Council of India. On the other hand, Mr. V. S. Desai appearing for the Advocate General argued that the Advocate-General having notice of disciplinary proceedings, in any event, must be treated as a ‘person aggrieved’ within Sections. 35 and 38 of the Advocates Act. I shall consider the narrow question presented by Mr. Setalvad latter, I shall first take up for consideration the larger question and the more general application of the expression ‘person aggrieved’.

22. In support of his contention Mr. V. S. Desai cited three cases from this Court, one from the Judicial Committee and one from the Bombay High Court. They all relate to disciplinary proceedings and I may begin by considering them.

23. The case of the Privy Council reported in Advocate General of Bombay and Ors. v. Phiroz Rustamji Bharucha 37 Bom. L. R. 722 was next cited. It was an application for special leave by the Advocate General of Bombay in a proceeding relating to professional misconduct of an advocate. The standing of the Advocate General was questioned. The report in the Bombay LawLaw Positive command of sovereign or divine. One can be ruled either by a Statute, a Statue, or a Statement. Legislation is the rule-making process by a political or religious organisation. Physics governs natural law. Logical thinking is a sign of a healthy brain function. Dharma is eternal for Sanatanis. Reporter Series reproduces more fully the arguments than the official report and we were referred to the arguments. The point was not debated and there does not appear to be a pronouncement on this point either during the course of argument or in the judgment since special leave was refused on another ground. Mr. Desai says that if the Judicial Committee had found substance in ‘his objection they would have ruled out the Advocate General on this ground alone. There is no reason to think that the objection was considered at all. I cannot derive any assistance from ‘his ruling because the prerogative of the Crown to grant special leave as of grace in any case was always there irrespective of the standing of the Advocate General. The Privy Council often granted special leave and even heard appeals on certificates wrongly granted. (See Sevak Jeranchod Bhogilal v. Dakore Temple Committee A. I R. 1935 P. C. 155 and the cases collected in Halsbury Laws of EnglandEngland In England, the Parliament was originally an advisory body summoned to consult with the monarch, and the courts exercised delegated royal powers, as “lions beneath the throne”. (3rd Edn.) Vol. 9 p. 380 paragraph 886 note (h). This prerogative the Judicial Committee has exercised on behalf of the Crown particularly in cases of general interest see ibid D. 379 Section 885 note (s). The provisions of the former Section 112 of the CPC show the extent of the prerogative. therefore, because the Privy Council refused special leave on one ground rather than another cannot import a rejection of the objection as to the standing of the Advocate General.

24. Next we have an unreported decision of a Division Bench of this Court reported in B. M. Madani v. Commissioner of Workmen’s Compensation. Bombay C. A. 877 of 1968 decided on October 10, 1968. In that case the appeal was taken by the Commissioner for enhancement of penalties against the delinquent advocate and the penalty was in fact increased. This Court held that he was entitled to do so as a ‘person aggrieved’. The particular misconduct was committed in relation to a claimant before the Commissioner. The Advocate had picketed the travelling allowance grafted by the Commissioner to the widow of a deceased workman. There may be some doubt whether the Commissioner was a ‘person accreted by the penalty imposed in the first instance but I do not pursue this matter. The case can be justified on the dictum in some cases that a party which moves the court or a person brought before the court to be bound by its order may be a ‘person aggrieved.’ See for example the case of the Official Receiver in Re Payne Ex p. Castle Mail Packets Co. [1886] 18 Q. B. D. 154, and In Re Lamb. Ex. p. Board of Trade already considered by me. Madani’s, case does not help to resolve the dispute centering round the Advocate-General.

25. The next case is reported in Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others. That case arose under the Bar Councils Act, 1926 when the Judges exercised disciplinary power, In the case before the Supreme Court the Judges of the Madras High Court were shown as respondents. This Court observed at page 1064 as follows:

Before parting with this appeal we desire to say that it appears to us that it was wholly wrong and inappropriate for the appellant to have made the Honourable Judges of the Madras High Court respondents to this appeal. It appears that in some cases involving contempt of CourtContempt of Court Failure to obey a court order.  A disregard of, or disobedience to, the rules or orders of a judicial body or an interruption of its proceedings by disorderly behavior or insolent language. Civil Contempt:  Noncompliance with a court order or rule that affects another person; punishment is administered to compel compliance. the Honourable Judges have been made parties. It is not necessary for us to express any opinion on this occasion as to the propriety of that procedure in contempt cases but we are clearly of the opinion that in an appeal arising out of a proceeding under the Bar Councils Act the appropriate parties should be the advocate concerned, the complainant, if any, the Bar Council or the secretary thereof and the Advocate General of the State concerned to whom notice have to be issued under section: 12(3) of the Indian Bar Councils Act.

This does not advance the case of the Advocate General of Maharashtra any further.

26. The last case of this Court is Municipal Corporation of the City of Bombay v. Chandulal Shamaldas Patel and Ors. C. A. No. 1716 of 1967 decided on August 1, 1970. In land acquisition eases started for the benefit of the Municipal Corporation certain notifications issued under the Land Acquisition Act were set aside by the High Court, and the Municipal Corporation sought to appeal. It was held not to be a ‘person aggrieved’. This case, even if I were to accept it as correctly decided, does not assist us in relation to our Act passed with a different intent and purpose and using the words in another context.

27. The last case is from Bombay but it did not discuss the point and cannot be held to have laid down a precedent. It is useless to refer to it.

28. I now proceed to examine the larger question whether by reason of the provisions of the Advocates Act the Advocate General of the State enjoys such position that he must necessarily be treated as a ‘person aggrieved’ entitling him to file an appeal. For this purpose we have to examine critically the provisions of the Act to discover if the claim can be entertained.

29. The Advocates Act was passed to amend and consolidate the law relating to legal practitioners and to provide for the Constitution of Bar Coupons and an All India Bar. It replaced the earlier Acts governing the legal profession particularly the Indian Bar Councils Act 1926. Prior to the passing of the Advocates Act, the enrolment and discipline of legal practitioners was in the hands of the courts and in the case of the advocates the High Court entertained and determined cases of misconduct against them. Now this jurisdiction is completely transferred to the Bar Councils of the States and the Bar Council of India. In the Bar Councils of the States (except Delhi) the Advocate-General of the State is an ex officio member. In Delhi the Additional Solicitor-General takes the place of the Advocate-General. Other members are elected. In the Bar Council of India, the Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General are ex officio members and the other members are elected one each by the State Bar Councils. In the Union Territory of Delhi the Additional Solicitor-General is ex officio member. The functions of the Advocate-General are not different from those of the other members in so far as the affairs of the Bar Council are concerned. The only matters where the Advocate-General, the Attorney-General and the Solicitor-General and the Additional Solicitor-General are mentioned are these. The Act gives a right of pre-audience over other advocates to the Attorney-General, the Solicitor-General, the Additional Solicitor-General and the Advocate-General. The right of pre-audience gives them a standing for hearing of’ cases but does not confer on them any other rights. The magniloquent phrases such as Leader of the Bar, Keeper of the Conscience of the Bar have no meaning neither now, nor before under the Bar Councils Act of 1926. They are just honorific titles given by courtesy but are not grounded on law. Indeed the Keepers of the Conscience of the Bar are the Bar Councils and the Leader of the Bar may be someone who may even have refused to accept Advocate-Generalship.

30. The functions of the Bar Councils of the States and the Bar Council of India throw some light on the remaining functions of the Advocate-General and may first be seen. Section 6 of the Act lays down the functions of the State Bar Council and s. 7 those of the Bar Council of India. Apart from certain administrative functions which these councils, which are bodies corporate, perform, their functions in relation to the Bar are somewhat different. Both have their own rolls and they prepare and maintain the rolls. The State Bar Council entertains and determines cases of misconduct of advocates on its roil and safeguards the nights, privileges and interests of advocates on its roll. The bar Council of India lays down the standards of professional conduct and etiquette of advocates, the procedure to be followed by its disciplinary committee and the disciplinary committee of each of the State Bar Councils. The Bar Council of India also safeguards the rights and privileges and interests of advocates and exercises general supervision and control over State Bar Councils. It also deals with and disposes of any matter arising under the Advocates Act which may be referred to it by a State Bar Council. There are other functions which relate to the education etc. of those who wish to join the legal profession. The Bar Council of India maintains a common roll of advocates. The Bar Councils also decide in relation to their rolls all questions of seniority. The State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India constitute one or more disciplinary committees and under Chapter V questions of the conduct of advocates on their respective rolls are referred to them. The disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India exercises superior powers inasmuch as it hears appeals from the orders of the disciplinary committees of the State Bar Council’s and may even of its own motion withdraw for inquiry before itself for disposal, any proceedings for disciplinary action against an advocate pending before the disciplinary committee of any State Bar Council.

31. The disciplinary proceedings commence both before the State Bar Council and the Bar Council of India on a complaint or otherwise made respectively to the State Bar Council or the Bar Council of India. The Bar Councils in either case refer them for disposal to their respective disciplinary committees. The disciplinary committee in each case can reject the complaint summarily, but if it proceeds to hear the matter further it causes a notice thereof to foe sent to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate-General of the State or the Attorney-General of India, as the case may be. The disciplinary committee after giving the advocate concerned and the Advocate-General or the Attorney-General, as the case may be, an opportunity to be heard, makes an order either dismissing the complaint or where the proceedings are found to be not fit for consideration and are started at the instance of the Bar Council, ordering that they may be filed. The committee may, if the advocate is found guilty, reprimand him or suspend him from practice for such period as it deems fit, or may remove him altogether from the roll of advocates. The Advocate-General or the Attorney-General, as the case may be, need not appear personally but may appear through an advocate.

32. From the decision of the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council an appeal lies to the Bar Council of India which is heard by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India which may pass such orders thereon as it deems fit. From the decision of the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India an appeal lies to tins Court. The appeals can be taken by a ‘person aggrieved’ by the order of the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council or the Bar Council of India, as the case may be. It is in this context that we have to determine whether the Advocate-General can be regarded as a ‘person aggrieved”.

33. In view of the common roll maintained by the Bar Council of India it appears to me that if anybody represents the Bar it would be the Bar Council of India and in the case of the States, the Bar Council of the State. The Advocate-General has no right to speak on behalf of the body of the advocates as if he represented them and their interests. Neither is this privilege expressly conferred on him, nor can it be implied from any of the provisions of the Act. The question, therefore, arises: in what capacity does the Advocate-General appear before a disciplinary committee ? It is obvious that he is not a prosecutor on behalf of the Bar Council because if he was one, his presence would be more necessary at the stage at which the disciplinary committee considers in limine to decide whether the matter should be proceeded with at all. The next question is : why is he summoned at all? In my opinion, the Advocate-General is not noticed and brought before the court because he is a prosecutor or is to be bound by the order of the disciplinary committee. He represents no interest there and is heard merely because he is the chief counsel of the State and therefore his assistance at the hearing is useful. The fact that he need not appear by himself and may appear through an advocate renders his position a little weaker in the matter of his grievance. If he is to be treated as a ‘person aggrieved’ he must argue the case himself. The fact that he appears through a counsel shows that the intention is merely to have the opinion of a person who is nether siding with the complainant nor with the advocate and who will thus have unbiased and impartial approach to the case. The Advocate-General is generally a lawyer of some standing having made a mark in the profession and his contribution to the deliberations of the disciplinary committee is welcome because thus the disciplinary committee is helped to reach a proper conclusion.

34. If he is not a person summoned to be bound by the order but a person who is heard in a dispute between others merely to be of assistance in reaching the right conclusion he can hardly have a grievance. The Advocate-General must after he has done his duty leave the matter to the complainant and the advocate or the Bar Council to take the matter further if they choose. In no event the Advocate-General is in the nature of a party having independent rights which he can claim are injured by the decision. The decision does not deny him anything nor does It ask him to do anything. It is thus that Lord Denning says that in these disciplinary proceedings the Attorney-General is not a party as in a lis and after the decision, his duty ends. Lord Denning points this out clearly by saying that the Attorney-General in that case could not have been aggrieved by the order of the Deputy Judge if he had acquitted the delinquent advocate in that case The Attorney-General’s interest was found by Lord Denning in relation to the Crown and the Colony and that too for the special reason that appeal court had denied that the Deputy Judge possessed jurisdiction to hear the case. In our country the Advocate-General does not represent the Executive or the Legislature or the Judiciary in disciplinary proceedings before the disciplinary committee. His function is advisory and more akin to an amicus curiae. He is not to take sides except in so far his arguments lend weight to the case of the one side or that of the other. Beyond that he is not interested in the dispute either in his personal capacity or in his capacity as an Advocate-General. He does not represent the Government in these proceedings. If the Government was interested the notice would have gone to it. In other statutes, where the Central Government is vitally interested, as for example, in the Chartered Accountants’ Act, the notice does not go to the Advocate-General but to Government and the government appears through the Advocate-General. The Advocate-General under the Act finishes his duty when the hearing is over and he cannot be considered to be a party interested or a ‘person aggrieved’. I do not find anything in the Act which indicates that the Advocate-General is to be treated as a person aggrieved’ by a decision whether in favour of the advocate or against him. Indeed it would have been the easiest thing to give a right of appeal to the Advocate-General eo nomine without including him in the compendious phrase a ‘person aggrieved’. If he is not noticed, the order would be held to deny him something which the law entitled him to. That is quite different. The larger proposition contended for by Mr. Desai is therefore not acceptable to me.

35. This brings me to the narrow ground on which Mr. Setalvad very properly rested the case of the Bar Council of India. That narrow ground is that in this case there were several points of genera public interest which needed to be solved and therefore, if the decision of the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council was wrong, the Advocate-General in the public interest could take the matter further. I do not think that I can subscribe to this approach either in this case. The Advocate-General presented his views that a conviction in England showed moral turpitude in the advocate. I do not think that this inference necessarily follows. The advocate explained that he was held guilty in a summary court and received a small fine because he was not in a position to prove his innocence before the Magistrate.

36. Now in disciplinary proceedings the advocate was not stopped from questioning the charge that he was guilty of corrupt practice. In a civil proceeding the decision of a criminal court is not res judicata. To give an example, if a person is involved in a traffic offence in which some one is injured he may in the criminal court receive a light sentence but if he is sued in a civil court for heavy damages he can plead and prove that he was not negligent or that accident was due to the contributory negligence of the defendant. The decision of the criminal court would not preclude him from raising this issue before the civil court.

37. The advocate here explained that he was held guilty before the Magistrate in the circumstances in which he was placed. The fact of his conviction, as well as his full statement bearing on his conduct were before the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council. They had to choose between the two, that is to say, the, result of a summary trial without going into merits and proof of the misconduct. Having examined the advocate and seen the record, the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council chose to accept the plea of the advocate and held that he was not guilty. They were also satisfied that the summary proceedings in the criminal trial in England offended against the principles of natural justice. They were entitled to this view on which much can be said on both sides. If the Advocate-General’s view of the case was not accepted by the disciplinary committee he could not have any grievance. He could not make this into his own cause or a cause on behalf of persons he did not represent. He had done his duty and the matter should have rested there. For this reason I am of the view in this case the Advocate-General was not a ‘person aggrieved’ within the meaning of Section 37 of the Advocates Act even on the narrow ground and the appeal filed by him before the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India was incompetent.

38. The conclusion which I have reached does not mean that I have gone into the merits of the advocate’s plea. Nor does it indicate that I, sitting as a judge, would have accepted the plea of the advocate, if I were to decide the case on facts. That is a matter quite beside the point. I refer to the plea because it was raised and was accepted by his peers on the disciplinary committee.

39. I would therefore, allow the appeal and set aside the order of the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India.

G.K. Mitter, J.

40. On the basis of a news item in the Times of India of August 27, 1966 the Bar Council of Maharashtra in exercise of its powers u/s 35 of the Advocates Act, 1961 issued a notice to the appellant to face an inquiry into his conduct by its disciplinary committee. The said committee exonerated the appellant of the charge leveled against him and held that he was not guilty of any misconduct, professional or otherwise. Relying on the provisions of s. 37 of the said Act the Advocate-General of Maharashtra who had appeared before the said, committee preferred an appeal to the Bar Council of India. The Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India disagreed with the finding of the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of Maharashtra observing that the conduct of the appellant which was investigated into before the State Bar Council was quite undeserving of an advocate and directed his suspension from practice for a period of one year. The appellant has come up in appeal to this Court and has urged a preliminary point that the appeal by the Advocate-General to the Bar Council of India was incompetent and the finding and order of the disciplinary committee of the said body ought to be set aside on that ground alone without our going into the facts of the case.

41. Notice of this hearing was given to the Advocates-General and the Bar Councils of all the States as also the Attorney-General of India and we have had the benefit of arguments advanced before us not only on behalf of the Advocate-General for the State of Maharashtra but also on behalf of the Bar Council of India, the Attorney-General of India and some of the Advocates-General of the States.

42. The determination of this question depends on the interpretation of s. 37 of the Advocates Act. 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the ‘Act’) :–

(1) Any person aggrieved by an order of the disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council made u/s 35 may. within sixty days of the date of the communication of the order to him. prefer an appeal to the Bar Council of India.

(2) Every such appeal shall be heard by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India which may pass such order thereon as it deems fit.

To put the matter in a nut-shell the question is, “Is the Advocate-General of a State who appears before the disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council in pursuance of a notice given to him u/s 35(2) of the Act ‘a person aggrieved’ within the meaning of the words used in Section 37 ?”

43. To decide this question we have to look into the Act to find out the role of the Advocate-General of a State in proceedings of this kind. The object of the Act is to amend and consolidate the law relating to legal practitioners and to provide for the Constitution of Bar Councils and an All-India Bar. All the States and the Union territories are to be under the jurisdiction of named State Bar Councils and there is also to be a Bar Council of India for the territories to which the Act is extended. Generally speaking a State Bar Council is to consist of a number of members including the Advocate-General of the State ex officio, while the Attorney-General of India ex officio is to be a member of the Bar Council of India. The other members of the Bar Councils are to be elected in terms of the Act. u/s 6 the functions of a State Bar Council are to be inter alia :–

(a) to admit persons as advocates on its roll;

(b) to prepare and maintain such roll;

(c) to entertain and determine cases of misconduct against advocates on its roll.

Section 7 lays down the functions of the Bar Council of India which are to be inter alia :

(a) to prepare and maintain a common roll of advocates:

(b) to lay down standards of professional conduct and etiquette for advocates; and

(c) to lay down the procedure to be followed by its disciplinary committee and the disciplinary committee of each State Bar Council.

Under Section 9 a Bar Council has to constitute one or more disciplinary committees each of which is to consist of three persons of whom two are to be persons elected by the Council from amongst its members and the third is to be a person co-opted by the Council from amongst advocates possessing the qualifications specified in the proviso to Sub-section (2) of Section 3 but is not a member of the council. Section 15 empowers Bar Councils to make rules to carry out the purposes of the Act. Chanter III of the Act containing Sections 16 – 28 provides for admission and enrolment of advocates, the determination of their seniority etc. The right of an advocate to practice is dealt with in Chapter IV. Chapter V which contains Sections 35 – 44 deals with conduct of advocates. The relevant provisions thereof are set out as under —

35(1) Where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise a State Bar Council has reason to believe that any advocate on its roll has been guilty of professional or other misconduct, it shall refer the case for disposal to its disciplinary committee.

(2) The disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council, if it does not summarily reject the complaint, shall fix a date for the hearing of the case and shall cause a notice thereof to be given to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate-General of the State.

(3) The disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council after giving the advocate concerned and the Advocate-General an opportunity of being heard, may make any of the following orders, namely :–

(a) dismiss the complaint or, where the proceedings were initiated at the instance of the State Bar Council, direct that the proceedings be filed;

(b) reprimand the advocate;

(c) suspend the advocate from practice for such period as it may deem fit;

(d) remove the name of the advocate from the State roll of advocates.

(4) …

(5) Where any notice is issued to the Advocate-General under Sub-section (2) the Advocate-General may appear before the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council either in person or through any advocate appearing on his behalf.

37. Supra.

38. Any person aggrieved by an order made by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India u/s 36 or Section 37 may, within sixty days of the date on which the order is communicated to him, prefer an appeal to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court may pass such order thereon as it deems fit.

Section 42 gives the disciplinary committee of a Bar Council the same powers as are vested in a civil court under the CPC in respect of various matters including the summoning and enforcing the attendance of any person and examining him on oath, requiring discovery and production of documents etc. and under Sub-section (2) all proceedings before a disciplinary committee of a Bar Council are to be deemed judicial proceedings within the meaning of Sections 193 and 228 of the Indian Penal Code. Section 43 empowers the disciplinary committee of a Bar Council to make such order as to costs of any proceedings before it as it may deem fit. Section 44 gives the disciplinary committee power to review any order passed by it of its own motion or otherwise.

44. The above provisions of the Act make it clear that subject to a right of appeal to this Court u/s 38 the inquiry into charges of misconduct against an advocate are to be in the exclusive jurisdiction of the Bar Councils. Any complaint against the conduct of an advocate has to be preferred before a State Bar Council and when the council has reason to believe on the strength of such complaint that an advocate on its roll has been guilty of professional or other misconduct, it has to refer the case for disposal to its disciplinary committee. The council can take such a step of its own motion. Section 35(1) shows that it is not obligatory on the State Bar Council to refer each and every complaint to the disciplinary committee. It has to be satisfied that there is a prima facie case for investigationInvestigation Purpose of all investigation is to reveal the unvarnished truth. The constitutional courts are duty bound to ensure that the truth is revealed.. It can throw out a complaint if the same appears to be frivolous. Sub-section (2) of Section 35 shows that it is not incumbent on the disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council to proceed further with the matter if it takes the view that the complaint is without substance. It is not obliged to call upon the advocate concerned to explain his conduct or to inform the Advocate-General that it has rejected the complaint summarily. It is only when the disciplinary committee is satisfied that the complaint ought not. to be rejected out of hand that it has to fix a date for the hearing of the case and give notice thereof to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate-General of the State. It is mandatory on the disciplinary committee to give such a notice to both. Sub-sections. (3) and (5) of Section 35 go to show that it is not incumbent on the Advocate-General to appear at the hearing and that it is within his discretion to appear either by himself or through another advocate of his choice and place his viewpoint before the disciplinary committee. He is not a party to the proceedings but he has a right to appear and to make submissions both on questions of fact and questions of law.

45. Section 37 does not in terms lay down who can prefer an appeal from the order of the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council. There can be no doubt that the advocate against whom an order is made would be a person aggrieved. The Slate Bar Council cannot be such a person as the order is made by itself acting through its disciplinary committee. A member of the public may make a complaint to the State Bar Council against an advocate on the ground of loss or damage or any serious Prejudice caused to him by the advocate, be it negligence or fraud e.g. collusion with the opponent or misappropriation of any moneys belonging to him and there does not seem to be any justifying cause for holding that he is not a person aggrieved by an order which dismisses his complaint.

46. The question arises as to whether the Advocate-General is a person aggrieved because the disciplinary committee does not take the same view of the matter as himself, be it for or against the advocate. To place the Advocate-General in the category of “person aggrieved” one must be able to say that the disciplinary committee committed an error which it was his duty to attempt to set right because of some function attributable to him as the Advocate-General or some obligation cast upon him by the Act or the general law of the land to safeguard and maintain standards of conduct of advocates laid down by the Bar Council of India.

47. Generally speaking, a person can be said to be aggrieved by an order which is to his detriment, pecuniary or otherwise or causes him some prejudice in some form or other. A person who is not a party to a litigation has no right to appeal merely because the judgment or order contains some adverse remarks against him. But it has been held in a number of cases that a person who is not a party to suit may prefer an appeal with the leave of the appellate court and such leave would not be refused where the judgment would be binding on him under Explanation 6 to Section 11 of the CPC. We find ourselves unable to take the view that because a person has been given notice of some proceedings wherein he is given a right to appear and make his submissions, he should without more have a right of appeal from an order rejecting his contentions or submissions. An appeal is a creature of statute and if a statute expressly gives a person a right to appeal, the matter rests there.

48. Innumerable statutes both in England and in India give the right of appeal to “a person aggrieved” by an order made and the provisions of such statutes have to be construed in each case to find out whether the person preferring an appeal falls within that expression. As was observed in Robinson v. Currey 7Q. BD.465 the words “person aggrieved” are ‘ordinary English words which are to have the ordinary meaning nut upon them’. According to Halsbury’s Laws of England (Third Edition, Vol. 25) page 293 foot-note “h”:

The expression is nowhere defined ‘and must be construed by reference to the context of the enactment in ‘which it appears and all the circumstances :

Attempts have however from time to time been made to define the expression in various cases. In Ex parte Sidebotham In re Sidebotham 14 Ch. D. 458 at 465 it was observed by James, L.J.

But the words ‘person aggrieved’ do not really mean a man who is disappointed of a benefit which he might have received if some other order had been made. A ‘person aggrieved’ must be a man who has suffered a legal grievance, a man against whom a decision has been pronounced which has wrongfully deprived him of something, or wrongfully refused him something, or wrongfully affected his title to something.

49. The above definition of James, L.J. was described by Esher, M.R. in Ex Parte Official Receiver In Re Reed, Bowen and Co. 19 Q. B. D. 174 at 178 as not “an exhaustive definition”. His Lordship added :

It is an affirmative definition of a person who may appeal, and at all events it includes a person who has asked for a decision for which he had a right to ask. and has been wrongfully refused.

50. The Queen v. The Keepers of the Peace and Justices of the County of London 25 Q. B. D. 357 was a case of an appeal by an informant against the judgment of a justice of the peace upon the hearing of an information or complaint by the vestry of the parish against a person for unlawfully and wilfully obstructing the free passage of a certain highway. The relevant section provided :

If any person shall think himself aggrieved by… any order, conviction, judgment, or determination made, or by any matter or thing done by any justice or other person in pursuance of this Act. . . . such person may appeal to quarter sessions.

In holding that an informant had no right of appeal Lord Coleridge C.J. said:

Is a person who cannot succeed in getting a conviction against another a ‘person aggrieved ?’ He may be annoyed at finding that what he thought was a breach of law is not a breach of law; but is he ‘aggrieved’ because some one is held not to have done wrong ? It is difficult to see that the section meant anything of that kind.

In Rex v. London Quarter Sessions Ex parte Westminster Corporation 512 K. B. 508 a borough council whose cancellation of the registration of a street trader had been reversed by a magistrate on appeal by the trader concerned u/s 25 of the London County Council (General Powers) Act, 1947 was held not to be a person aggrieved by an order of a court of summary jurisdiction within the meaning of Section 64 of the Act, The argument advanced on behalf of the corporation was that it had a public administrative duty to perform in the regulation of the streets and having been interfered with in the execution of that duty by the decision of the magistrate, they were persons aggrieved by his order. One of the grounds for refusal of the application by Lord Goddard, C.J. was that the order made did not directly affect the borough council in such a way as to make them “a person aggrieved” within the meaning of the section. According to the learned Chief Justice what the statute did was “to substitute the opinion of the magistrate for the opinion of a borough council”. It was said that the court of summary jurisdiction had to take into account the same matters as the borough council had to take into account, and if the court thinks that the cancellation of the licence is not justified, it can restore the licence to the street trader. If the court of summary jurisdiction refuses to grant a licence, then the street trader is a person aggrieved, because his livelihood is affected, or an order is made directly affecting him.

51. The case of Sevenoaks Urban District Council v. Twynam [1929] 2 K. B. 440 was relied upon by counsel appearing for the Advocate-General of Maharashtra to support his argument that even a person who had no proprietary or pecuniary interest in the subject matter of the litigation might be a person aggrieved so as to give him a right to appeal. The statute in this case was however worded very differently from the statutes which came up for consideration in the cases noted earlier. Section 68(1) of the Public Health Act, 1925 laid down that:

Where for the purpose of relieving or preventing congestion of traffic it appears to the local authority to be necessary to provide within their district suitable parking places for vehicles.

then that authority may, subject to certain conditions, provide those parking places and might acquire land suitable for use as a parking place. The proviso to the section however laid down, that no such order shall authorise the use of any part of a street so as unreasonably to prevent access to any premises adjoining the street, or the use of the street by any person entitled to the use thereof, or so as to be a nuisance, or be made in respect of any part of a street without the consent of the authority or person responsible for the maintenance of the street. Sub-section (2) of the section provided that where a local authority proposes to acquire land for the purpose of using it as a parking place they are to give notice of the proposal specifying the land and notify the date within which any objection is to be sent to them and the notice is to state that a right of appeal was conferred by the section. Sub-section(3) provided that before carrying into effect any proposal of which notice was required to be given the local authority shall consider any objection which was sent to them in writing. There was no limit there as to the kind of person making the objection or the kind of objection which might be raised. The respondent, a rate payer, duly gave notice under Sub-section(3) on various grounds but he did not allege the infringement of any personal legal right and he objected in his capacity as a ratepayer and as a member of the public on grounds common to them all. The urban council considered the objection and informed him of their decision to proceed with the scheme. The respondent appealed to petty sessions which allowed his objection. The appellant appealed to quarter sessions and took the preliminary objection that the respondent was not a person aggrieved because he had alleged no infringement of any legal right personal to him.

52. Referring to the dicta of James L.J., Esher M.R. and Lopes L.J. in the above cases Lord HeVart C.J. observed :

I think this respondent did ask for a decision for which he had a right to ask. He did give notice of an objection of which he was entitled to give notice, . . . but the person making the objection is not to have an appeal unless he satisfies two conditions : (1) that he is the author of the objection, and (2) that he is aggrieved by the refusal in the sense that he has a special and individual right infringed. It seems to me that upon the fair construction of this Sub-section, which is by no means a common kind of statutory provision, what is meant is that a person may make an objection and is entitled to a decision upon it, and if the decision is adverse to him, he may, if he thinks fit and subject to the usual consequences, appeal from it to a petty seasonal court, and so appealing, may, in consequence of other statutory provisions, appeal, if need be. to the court of quarter sessions.

According to Avory J. :

There is no limit there [in Sub-section (3)] of the kind of person or the kind of objection which may be made, it proceeds that after so considering the objection, they are to give notice of their decision to the person by whom the objection was made, and any person who is aggrieved by such decision may appeal. I cannot help thinking that on the plain words of that statute it was intended to give a right of appeal to any person who has made an objection to the proposal and has received notice that that objection has been overruled.

53. In Ealing Corporation v. Jones [1959] 1 Q. B. 384 Lord Parker C.J. remarked that it was easier to say what will not constitute a person aggrieved than it was to say what “person aggrieved” included. He observed that a person was not aggrieved when being a public body it had been frustrated in the performance of one of its public duties. He amplified this by saying that:

If costs have been awarded in a case against a local authority, it is clear on the authorities that the local authority would be an aggrieved person. Equal y, if the result of the decision has been to put some legal burden on the public body concerned, that has been held to make it a person aggrieved.

According to Donovan J. in the same case–

The word ‘aggrieved’ connotes some legal grievances, for example, a deprivation of something, an adverse effect on the title to something, and so on, and I cannot see that this is so here. The local planning authority has simply been told that it cannot enforce the discontinuance of the present use of this land by the appellant by means of an enforcement notice u/s 23.

54. If one is to be guided merely by the provisions of the Advocates Act it is difficult to see how the Advocate-General can be a person aggrieved because the State Bar Council takes the view, whatever be its reasoning, that an advocate on its roll his not been guilty of any misconduct. The entertaining of complaints, the inquiry info them and the punishment to be meted out to the advocate are all concerns of the Bar Council. The Advocate-General no doubt is entitled to a hearing if the complaint is not rejected summarily. The statute expects him to take a fair and impartial attitude. He has to render all assistance to the Bar Council so that a proper decision may be arrived at. His ro’e is not that of a prosecutor: nor is he a defence counsel on behalf of the advocate. He is not interested in petting the advocate punished any more than he is interested in seeing that the character of a fellow member of the Bar is cleared even if his conduct be unworthy of an advocate. The Act does not make it obligatory on him to take part in the proceedings where he thinks that the facts of the case are so plain that his assistance is not called for. It is only when he feels that a case requires a careful investigation, and proper elucidation of the facts or the exposition of the law on the subject that he is called upon to render all assistance in the proceedings. When he chooses to do so he does his duty by appearing at the heading and putting before the disciplinary committee the facts in their proper perspective and advancing the proper inference to be drawn therefrom. Once he does so there is an end of the matter so far as he is concerned. He cannot have any grievance because the decision of the Bar Council is against his submission or not to his liking.

54. The question then arises as to whether any duty is cast on the Advocate-General by reason of his position to question the decision of the Bar Council if he feels it in the general interest of the members of the Bar or a wider public to do so. Article 165(2) of the Constitution epitomizes the functions and duties of the Advocate-General in the following words:–

It shall, be the duty of the Advocate-General to give advice to the Government of the State upon such legal matters and to perform such other duties of a legal character, as may from time to time be referred or assigned to him by the Governor and to discharge the functions conferred upon him by or under the Constitution or any other law for the time being in force.

A notable instance of his statutory duties is furnished by Order XXVII-A of the CPC. By the provisions of Section 91 of the CPC no suit for a declaration and injunction in the case of a public nuisance can be instituted except by him or with his consent. Similar powers are given and duties cast on him by Section 92 C.P.C. in the case of trusts created for public purposes. Section 526-A of the CrPC gives an Advocate-General power to apply to the court for the committal or transfer of a case to the High Court where any person subject to the Naval Discipline Act or to the ArmyArmy The Army of the Islamic Republic of Iran shall be an Islamic army, which is an ideological and peoples army and which shall recruit competent individuals faithful to the objectives of the Islamic Revolution and ready to make sacrifices for attaining the same. (Art-144) Act or to the Air Force Act is accused of any of the offences specified therein. It is not open to the Advocate-General to intervene in any suit or legal proceeding apart from the provisions of the CPC because he thinks public interest is involved in the matter.

55. Treating the matter historically, it may be said that in many respects the position of an Advocate-General before 1950 was, very similar to that of the Attorney-General in England. Sections 100 and 111 of a statute of 1813, 53 George III, C. 155, enabled the Advocates-General to exhibit to the respective Supreme Courts of Judicature at any of the Presidencies or to the Recorder’s Court at Bombay any information or information’s for breaches of Revenue laws etc. as might be taken by the Attorney-General in the court of Exchequer in England or in the nature of action or actions at law or of a bill or bills in equity as occasion might require against any person or persons residing within such jurisdiction as His Majesty’s Attorney-General for the time being was by law authorised to exhibit. The wording of Section 111 shows that it? object was to dispel doubts which had arisen about the competency of the Advocate-General or, Principal Law Officer of the East India Company to take such action. Section 114 of the Government of India Act, 1915 empowered the Advocate-General for any Presidency to take on behalf of His Majesty such proceedings as might be taken by His Majesty’s Attorney-General in England. Section 65(2) of the Government of India Act, 1935 laid down that it was the duty of the Advocate-General to give advice to the Provincial Government upon such legal matters and to perform such other duties of a legal character as may from time to time be referred or assigned to him by the Governor.

56. The position of the Attorney-General in England is stated by Hood Phillips on Constitutional and Administrative Law (Fourth Edition) at p. 316 to be as follows :

The Law Officers consist of the Attorney-General and Solicitor-General for England, and the Lord Advocate and Solicitor-General for Scotland. They are regarded as the heads of the Bar in their respective countries, and as such are referees on points of professional etiquette.

The learned author goes on to note at p. 317 :

The Attorney-General represents the Crown in civil proceedings in which it is specially concerned. His consent is necessary for the prosecution of certain offences, e.g. under the Official Secrets Acts. In criminal proceedings he or the Solicitor-General, or their deputies, prosecute in important cases. It is the practice for the Attorney-General to lead in treason and important Constitutional cases. He may also file ex officio criminal informations, though this procedure is now rarely used. He may stop the trial of an indictment by entering a nolle prosequi. He may also take over certain proceedings on the relation of private individuals (relator actions) e.g. public nuisance etc. … The Attorney-General’s procedural privileges include the right to demand a trial at Bar (i.e. now, before a Divisional Court), and the right to choose the venue for any civil or criminal proceedings in which the Crown is concerned.

Anson in his treatise on Law and Custom of the Constitution Volume II, Part I (4th Edition, 1935) describes the Attorney-General, the Solicitor-General and the Lord Advocate and the Solicitor-General for Scotland as the chiefs of the legal profession in their respective countries and states that in England and Northern Ireland they represent the Bar when the Bar takes collective action. So far as England is concerned neither the Attorney-General nor the Solicitor-General appears to have had for a very long time any function to discharge or any duty to perform when the conduct of a barrister or a solicitor was called in question. The power of inquiry was delegated by the Judges to the Inns of Court so far as barristers were concerned and as regards solicitors the matter has for some time been delegated to the Law Society.

57. It may not also be out of place to note the history of the legislation in India with regard to enquiries against members of the legal profession prior to the Act of 1961. Under clause 10 of the Letters Patent of the High Court of Calcutta of the year 1865 the High Court was to have power to make rules for the qualification and admission of proper persons to be advocates, vakils and attorneys at law and was to be empowered to remove or suspend them from practice on reasonable cause. The Letters Patents of other High Court contained provisions. The Legal Practitioners Act 1879 appears to have been the earliest Indian, statute on the subject. u/s 13 of this Act the High Court was empowered after such enquiry as it though fit, to suspend or dismiss any pleader or muktyar who was guilty of fraudulent or grossly improper conduct in the discharge of his professional duty. The Bar Councils came into existence for the first time under the Bar Councils Act, 1926. But even under this Act the power to reprimand, suspend or remove from practice any advocate of the High Court charged with professional or other misconduct was left with the High Court u/s 10(1). Section 10(2) laid down the procedure to be adopted by the High Court when a complaint was made to it by any Court or by the Bar Council or by any other person that an advocate had been guilty of misconduct. The High Court could summarily reject the complaint or refer the case for enquiry to the Bar Council or after consultation with the Bar Council refer it to the Court of a District Judge and it also might of its own motion refer any case where it had reason to believe that any advocate had been so guilty. Under s. 11 it was the duty of a committee of the Bar Council to inquire into a complaint made u/s 10. u/s 12(2) of the Art the finding of a Tribunal on an inquiry referred to the Bar Council was to be forwarded to the High Court through the Bar Council and the finding of a District Court on such inquiry was to be forwarded to the High Court direct with a copy to the Bar Council. Section 12(3) of the Act contained a provision somewhat similar to Section 35(3) of the Act of 1961. The hearing was however to take place before the High Court, which had to give notice of the date fixed for the purpose to the advocate concerned, to the Bar Council and to the Advocate-General and to afford them an opportunity of being heard before orders were passed in the case. Under the Act of 1926 the Advocate-General appeared on the scene only after the Bar Council had recorded its finding. The significant departure in the Act of 1961 from the analogous provision of the Act of 1926 is that the Advocate-General is given notice of hearing of the case. By itself this cannot affect any change in his position as regards an inquiry into the conduct of an advocate. It would be reasonable to hold that while passing the statutes of 1926 and 1961 the Legislature thought that the Advocate-General should be heard inasmuch as he occupied the position of a general referee on points of professional etiquette very much like the Attorney-General in England.

58. However that may be, once he does the duty enjoined upon him by the statute of making such submissions as he thinks proper at the hearing his functions qua the inquiry come to an end. As a referee he has no further interest in the matter. If the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council makes an order against the advocate which the Advocate-General considers harsh and unreasonable in the circumstances of the case, he is not called upon to file an appeal to protect the interests of the advocate. Neither is he interested in prosecuting the matter further if he takes the view that the punishment meted is not commensurate with the misconduct of the advocate.

59. Elaborate reference was made at the Bar to the decision of the Privy Council in Attorney-General of the Gambia v. Pierre Sarr N’Jie [1961] A.C. 617. In that case the conduct of the respondent, a member of the English Bar admitted to practice as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of the Gambia was found to be dishonorable and as such an order striking his name off the roll of the court was made by the deputy Judge with a direction that it should be reported to the Masters of the Bench of the Inn to which he belonged. The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Gambia had criticised the conduct of the barrister severely in the course of a trial held before him and had sent a copy of his judgment to the Attorney-General of the Gambia. The Attorney-General served a notice of motion on the barrister for an enquiry to be made by the Chief Justice but as the Chief Justice was the only Judge of that Court he recommended that some one other than himself should be appointed as a deputy Judge to hold the inquiry. The Deputy Judge ordered his name to be struck off the roll. His order was however set aside by the West African Court of Appeal not on merits but on the ground that a Deputy Judge had only jurisdiction to represent the Chief Justice in the exercise of his judicial powers and according to the Court of Appeal the power to strike the name of a legal practitioner off the roll was not a judicial power. The Attorney-General of the Gambia appealed to Her Majesty in Council. The question of the maintain ability of the appeal was also canvassed before the Board. With regard to inquiries into the conduct of barristers and solicitors in the Crown colonies Lord Denning, who delivered the judgment of the Privy Council, said —

by the common lawCommon law The legal system that originated in England and is now in use in the United States. It is based on court decisions rather than statutes passed by the legislature. of England the Judges have the right to determine who shall be admitted to practice as barristers and solicitors, and as incidental thereto the judges have the right to suspend or prohibit from practice. In England this power has for a very long time. been delegated, so far as barristers are concerned, to the Inns of Court; and, for a much shorter time, so far as solicitors are concerned, to the Law Society. In the colonies the Judges have retained the power in their own hands, . . .

His Lordship went on to remark at p. 631 :

When the judges exercise this power to suspend or expel, they do not decide a suit between the parties. There is no prosecutor as in a criminal case, nor any plaintiff as in a civil suit. The judges usually act on their own initiative, ex mero motu, on information which has come to their notice, or to the notice of one or other of them in the course of their duties.

Further,

When a legal practitioner is suspended or struck off by the judges of a colony, he has always been at liberty to petition Her Majesty in Council to restore him.

Rejecting the argument that the Attorney-General had no locus standi to petition for special leave to appeal as he was not a person aggrieved, the Board referred to Section 31 of the Order in Council, 1949 which gave very wide powers to His Majesty in Council to entertain the petition of any person aggrieved by any judgment of the court and to “admit his appeal upon such conditions as His Majesty in Council would think fit to impose. On the facts of the case the Board held that the Attorney-General had a sufficient interest in the matter because the order made by the West African Court of Appeal prejudicially affected his interests. The reasoning of the Board was as follows :–

The Attorney-General in a colony represents the Crown as the guardian of the public interest. It is his duty to bring before the Judge any misconduct of a barrister or solicitor which is of sufficient gravity to warrant disciplinary action. True it is that if the judge acquits the petitioner of misconduct, no appeal is open to the Attorney-General. He has done his duty and is not aggrieved. But if the Judge finds the practitioner guilty of professional misconduct and a Court of Appeal reverses the decision on a ground which goes to the jurisdiction of the judge,, or is otherwise a point in which the public interest is concerned, the Attorney-General is a ‘person aggrieved’ by the decision and can properly petition Her Majesty for special leave to appeal.

It is clear that Lord Banning considered the denial of jurisdiction of the deputy Judge to be a matter of public interest and therefore held the Attorney-General, as the Crown’s representative, to be a person sufficiently interested as to be a person aggrieved. That surely is not the position here, nor is an Advocate-General the representative of the Government. Neither the Constitution nor the Advocates Act 1961 holds him as the representative of the Government or as a person representing the public interest. Whatever may be the position of the Attorney-General in a colony as a representative of the Crown, he is not the guardian of the public interest in India in any matter except as provided for in the statutes. He like any other person may draw the attention of the Bar Council to any misconduct of an advocate which according to him merits disciplinary action. The Act of 1961 provides for notice to be given to him of all such proceedings and gives him a right to appear at the hearing but once the hearing is over and a finding recorded he has done his duty and cannot be said to be aggrieved within the meaning of the expression used in Section 37. It is only because the Attorney-General for the Gambia had an interest in seeing that the Court of Appeal did not reverse the decision of the Deputy Judge on a ground which went to the jurisdiction of the Judge or was otherwise a point in which the public interest was concerned that the Board held that he was a person aggrieved.

60. Our attention was drawn to a decision of the Judicial Committee in Advocate-General Bombay v. Phiroz Barucha 37 B.L.R. 722 where the Privy Council entertained an appeal by the Advocate-General of Bombay against an advocate who had been found by the High Court of Bombay to have been guilty of misconduct but against whom no disciplinary action had been taken by the Judges. Although there was a good deal of discussion at the Bar about the maintainability of the appeal which was sought for by special leave, the Board remarked that the circumstances were not such as to justify it in advising His Majesty to grant such special leave principally on the ground that the question was one of the exercise of statutory discretion by the Judges as to whether the circumstances of the case as established before the High Court called for any disciplinary action and the Board felt that the action of the High Court in exercising their discretion in the way they had done was not such as His Majesty would be advised further to consider.

61. This decision does not help the Advocate-General of Maharashtra because it did not decide the point as to the maintainability of the appeal. It is well known that the Judicial Committee was never chary in granting special leave to appeal when it felt that the justice of the case demanded a further hearing.

62. Mr. Daphtary appearing for the appellant very fairly drew our attention to an observation of this Court in Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others, which was a case of an appeal by special leave from an order of the High Court at Madras u/s 12 of the Indian Bar Councils Act debarring the advocate for a period of five years on charges of misconduct which were held by the High Court as proved. In the ultimate paragraph of the judgment this Court recorded its strong disapproval of the frame of the appeal in that the Judges of the High Court had been made respondents to it. They however went on to observe that :

in an appeal arising out of a proceeding under the Bar Councils Act the appropriate parties should be the-advocate concerned, the complainant, if any, the Bar Council or the secretary thereof and the Advocate-General of the State concerned to whom notices have to be issued u/s 12(3) of the Indian Bar Councils Act.

With great respect, we find ourselves unable to concur in the above so far as the Advocate-General is concerned. It does not appear that any argument was advanced about the proper parties to the appeal before this Court and the point as to whether the Advocate-General was a person aggrieved was neither raised nor argued. The only party to appear before this Court was “the Judges of the High Court.”

63. It appears that the Advocate-General of Maharashtra felt in this case that the disciplinary committee of the Maharashtra Bar Council had gone wrong and that there was a question of principle involved as regards the effect of a conviction of an Indian advocate of an offence recognised by all civilised countries as an offence involving moral turpitude and that the question also related to the requirements of natural justice in a criminal court. Every day courts of law are called upon to decide questions of law inter-parties which may be of general importance to the public. The Advocate-General cannot prefer an appeal merely because the question is one of considerable importance to the public inasmuch as he is not a party to it and he has no locus standi to do so even in a case where the statute only gives him an opportunity of appearing at a hearing and making his submissions.

64. A decision by the disciplinary committee cannot necessarily be said to raise a point of public interest merely because the Advocate-General feels that it is erroneous or that he himself would have arrived at a different conclusion. That at best is his personal opinion as regards the conduct of an advocate who has to deal with the public and the non-acceptance thereof does not make him a person aggrieved. An Advocate-General in India is not the guardian angel of the Bar, nor is he the champion of public interest in any matter save as specified in a statute.

65. In conclusion we hold that the appeal by the Advocate-General of Maharashtra to the Bar Council of India was incompetent and this appeal should be allowed and the finding of the Bar Council of India set aside.

C.A. Vaidialingam, J.

66. With respect, I am not able to agree with the views expressed by My Lord, and Mr. justice Mitter that the appeal filed by the Advocate-General of Maharashtra before the Bar Council of India was incompetent.

67. The preliminary point that has been argued before us in this appeal relates to the maintainability of the appeal by the Advocate-General of Maharashtra before the Bar Council of India u/s 37(1) of the Advocates Act 1961–Act 25 of 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) against the order of the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of Maharashtra (hereinafter referred as the Committee) dated October 19, 1968 holding the appellant not guilty of any professional misconduct. It is not necessary to refer to the allegations of professional misconduct made against the appellant as this appeal has yet to be heard on merits.

68. Against the order of the Committee, acquitting the appellant, the Advocate-General of Maharashtra Sri H. N. Seervai, filed u/s 37(1) D.C. Appeal No. 18 of 1968 before the Bar Council of India. The said appeal was heard by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India (hereinafter referred to as the Appellate Committee) as required by Section 37(2) of the Act. A preliminary objection was raised on behalf of the appellant that the Advocate-General was not competent to prefer the appeal as he was not the complainant nor were the proceedings for taking disciplinary action initiated at his instance and he is not “any person aggrieved” u/s 37(1). The State Bar Council, which initiated the proceedings was apparently satisfied with the decision of its Committee and did not take any further action. In short, according to the appellant, the Advocate-General was not “any person aggrieved”, u/s 37(1) of the Act. The appeal was also contested by the appellant on merits. The Appellate Committee by its order dated October 26, 1969 overruled the preliminary objection and held that the Advocate-General was competent to maintain the appeal u/s 37(1). By the same order the Appellate Committee disagreed with the findings of the Committee and found the appellant guilty of professional misconduct and ordered his suspension from practice for a period of one year. The appellant was also directed to pay the costs of the proceedings. It is this order of the Appellate Committee that is the subject of the appeal before us.

69. As stated earlier, we have heard arguments only on the question of the maintainability of the appeal at the instance of the Advocate-General of Maharashtra before the Bar Council of India. As the question raised was a fairly important one, notice had been issued to the Attorney-General of India, the Bar Council of India, the Advocates-General and the Bar-Councils of the States. Advocates-General of most of the States were represented by counsel. The Attorney-General of India, the Bar Council of India as well as the Bar Council of Maharashtra were also represented by counsel before us.

70. The question posed for our consideration is whether the Advocate-General of a State comes within the expression “any person aggrieved” in Section 37(1) of the Act.

71. Mr. Daphtary, learned Counsel for the appellant, drew our attention to the various provisions of the Act and pointed out that matters concerning the legal profession have now been entrusted to the State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India and the powers to take disciplinary action have also been vested in them. Whatever may have been the position once occupied by the Advocate-General vis-a-vis the legal profession, that has now been changed by the Act. His appearance in disciplinary matters is only to assist the Committee and he has no further interest in those proceedings. Whether an Advocate is acquitted or convicted is no concern of the Advocate-General, because he is not interested in the actual decision of the Committee. Hence the Advocate-General cannot be considered to be “any person aggrieved by any order of the Committee so as to be eligible to file an appeal u/s 37 of the Act. In this connection Mr. Daphtary referred us to several English decisions where the expression ‘person aggrieved’ has been considered and interpreted with references to the statutes in which those expressions occur. Relying on the principles laid down in those decisions, to which reference will be made later, Mr. Daphtary pointed out that the expression ‘person aggrieved’ should not be interpreted as covering every person who is disappointed or dissatisfied with a decision rendered by a Committee. On the other hand, the counsel urged, that in order to be considered as a ‘person aggrieved’ that person must be one who has suffered a legal grievance, a man against whom a decision has been pronounced and which has wrongfully deprived him of something or wrongfully refused him something, or wrongfully affected his title to something. An appeal must be by the party who has endeavoured to maintain the contrary of that which has taken place. The counsel further pointed out that the Advocate-General is a public officer and cannot be considered to be a party to the proceedings before the Committee. The Advocate-General may be even annoyed with the decision of the Committee acquitting an Advocate, but that will not make him a ‘person aggrieved’.

72. Considerable reliance was placed by Mr. Daphtary on the observations of Lord Denning in Attorney-General of the Gambia v. Pierre Sarr N’Jie [1961] AC 617 to the effect that the Attorney-General in a colony represents the Crown as the guardian of the public interest and that it is his duty to bring before the Judge any misconduct of a barrister or solicitor which is of sufficient gravity to warrant disciplinary action and that if the Judge acquits the practitioner of misconduct, no appeal is open to the Attorney-General, who has done his duty and is not aggrieved. But if, on the other hand, a Court of Appeal reverses the decision holding a practitioner guilty of professional misconduct, on a ground which goes to the jurisdiction of the Judge or is otherwise a point in which the public interest is concerned, the Attorney-General is a ‘person aggrieved’ by the decision and can properly petition Her Majesty for special leave to appeal. Drawing support from these observations Mr. Daphtary urged that in this case, the Committee had acquitted the appellant and the Advocate-General having appeared through counsel before the Committee has done his duty, and as such he cannot be considered to be aggrieved. No question of jurisdiction of the Committee or any point in which the public interest is concerned arose for decision in the appeal filed by the Advocate-General, so as to make the appeal competent even within the limited rule laid down by Lord Denning.

73. Mr. V.S. Desai, learned Counsel appearing for the Advocate-General of Maharashtra and Mr. M. C. Setalvad, learned Counsel appearing for the Bar Council of India have supported the decision of the Appellate Committee holding in favour of the competency of the appeal filed by the Advocate-General as “any person aggrieved” u/s 37 of the Act. The counsel appearing for the Attorney-General, the Bar Council of Maharashtra and the Advocates-General represented before us have supported this view.

74. Mr. V.S. Desai pointed out that the Act is a self-contained Code, and that the various decisions where the expression ‘person aggrieved’ has been interpreted must be appreciated in the particular context in which those expressions occur in the statutes which were before the Courts. The reasoning in those decisions may furnish a guide but cannot be applied ipso facto when interpreting Section 37 of the Act. The expression “any person aggrieved” in Section 37 of the Act will have to be understood and interpreted in the context in which it appears, having due regard to the scheme of the Act. The counsel also referred us to certain decisions bearing on this matter, to which we shall refer in due course.

75. Mr. M.C. Setalvad, learned Counsel, appearing for the Bar Council of India urged in particular that the Advocate-General is a responsible person and is the highest Law Officer of the State. The legal profession is very closely associated with the administration of justice by the Courts. The Bar, in that context has to come into contact with the public to assist them in legal matters. This responsible position occupied by the legal profession has to be properly safeguarded and that could be done only by insisting that its members are persons of high character and integrity and who observe rules of professional etiquette. The Act has made it obligatory to give notice in the disciplinary proceedings to the Advocate-General and give him an opportunity of being heard. The purpose for which the highest Law Officer of the State, the Advocate-General, is brought in not only in the Act, but also in the Indian Bar Councils Act of 1926 (Act 38 of 1926) (hereinafter referred to as the Bar Councils Act) is to subserve the public interest, namely, of seeing that the integrity and honesty of the legal profession are maintained and that proper decisions are given in disciplinary proceedings. There may be cases of inadequate punishment or even harsh punishment being awarded by the Committee. The Advocate-General in proper cases can bring up such matters before the Bar Council of India. Mr. Setalvad further pointed out that there is no restriction placed in Section 37 denying the right of the Advocate-General to file an appeal against the orders of the Committee. Having due regard to the scheme of the Act and particularly of Sections. 35 and 37, the Advocate-General comes within “any person aggrieved” and hence he was competent to file the appeal.

76. I have given careful consideration to the various aspects placed before us by all the learned Counsel and I am of the view that the decision of the Appellate Committee holding that the appeal filed by the Advocate-General of Maharashtra was competent is correct. I am further of the view that the expression “any person aggrieved” in Section 37 will have to be interpreted in the context in. which it appears, having due regard to the provisions of the Act and its scheme. Considered in this manner, it has to be held that the Advocate-General comes within “any person aggrieved” in Section 37. The decisions relied on by Mr. Daphtary have, no doubt, interpreted the expression “person aggrieved’ occurring in the particular statutes which came up for consideration in those decisions, but in my opinion it will not be safe to adopt in toto the interpretation so placed, no doubt on the identical expression occurring in different statutes when construing the said expression in the Act before us. As pointed out by Lord Parker C.J. in Ealing Corporation v. Jones [1959] 1 Q.B.D. 384 cases which have interpreted similar expressions, can be looked into “to see if there are general principles which can be extracted which will guide the court in approaching the question as to what the words ‘person aggrieved’ mean in any particular statute.” I will make a brief reference to the decisions cited for the appellant later. But before doing so, it is desirable to refer to some of the provisions of the Act itself, so that the scheme of the Act will become evident, and that will throw considerable light on the interpretation of Section 37.

77. Before I refer to the Act. I think it desirable to advert to some of the provisions of the Bar Councils Act. Even at the outset I may point out that the scheme of the Bar Councils Act was different. In the Bar Councils Act. the disciplinary jurisdiction over Advocates was vested in the High Court [vide Section 10(1)]. u/s 10(2) the High Court, if the complaint is not summarily rejected by it, had to refer the case for inquiry either to the Bar Council or after consultation with the Bar Council, to the Court of a District Judge. When a case is referred for inquiry to the Bar Council u/s 11, the case was to be inquired into by the Committee of the Bar Council, referred to as the Tribunal, and that Tribunal consisted of the particular number of person mentioned in Section 11(2) appointed for the purpose, by the Chief Justice. The High Court had power to make rules u/s 12(1) prescribing the procedure to be followed in the conduct of inquiries. The finding of the inquiry by the Tribunal had to be forwarded to the High Court. On receipt of the finding, the High Court had to fix a date for hearing of the case. u/s 12(3) it was obligatory to give notice, amongst other persons, to the Advocate-General of the day fixed for hearing; and it was also further obligatory to give the Advocate-General an opportunity of being heard before orders were passed. u/s 12(4) the High Court could pass final orders or refer the case back for further inquiry. Under Sub-section (5) the High Court had also power when passing final orders to give directions regarding payment of costs. I am only referring to the material provisions of the Bar Councils Act to show that the High Court was then the disciplinary authority and the function of the Committee of the Bar Council was only to submit a finding after conducting an inquiry as directed by the High Court. It is however to be noted that the Advocate-General then was not associated in the inquiry proceedings before the Tribunal of the Bar Council; but he was entitled to be given notice of the date fixed for hearing and also to be heard in the proceedings before the High Court after receipt of the finding submitted by the Committee of the Bar Council. Those provisions clearly establish the important position occupied by the Advocate-General and recognised by the Bar Councils Act.

78. The scheme is slightly different when we come to the Act. The State Bar Councils and the Bar Council of India have been made autonomous units and various functions regarding the legal profession have been entrusted to them. Taking disciplinary action against the delinquent members of the Bar and conducting inquiries are all part of their functions. Barring a provision of a right to appeal to the Supreme Court u/s 38 of the Act, the Courts are completely out of picture so far as the legal profession is concerned. The Act was one to amend and consolidate the law relating to legal practitioners and to provide for the Constitution of the Bar Councils of the States and the Bar Council of India. Section 3 makes provisions for the State Bar Councils. Under Sub-section (2) the Advocate-General of the State is an ex-officio member. Similarly the Additional Solicitor General of India is an ex-officio member of the State Bar Council of Delhi. Section 6(1) enumerates the functions of the State Bar Councils. One of the functions under Clause (c) relates to entertaining and determining cases of misconduct against advocates on the roll of the State Bar Council. Section 7 similarly enumerates the functions of the Bar Council of India. Under Clause (c), the Bar Council of India has got the power to lay down the procedure to be followed by its Disciplinary Committee and the Disciplinary Committees of each State Bar Councils. Section 9 deals with the Bar Council constituting one or more Disciplinary Committees in the manner indicated therein. Section 23 gives a right of pre-audience to the Attorney-General of India, the Solicitor Gerteral of India, the Additional-Solicitor General of India and the Advocate-Generals of the States, as mentioned in Sub-sections 1 to 4 respectively.

79. Chapter V deals with the “conduct of Advocates” and contains the group of Sections 35 – 44. Section 35 deals with the punishment of Advocates for misconduct and is as follows :

Section 35 : Punishment of advocates for misconduct :

(1) Where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise a State Bar Council has reason to believe that any advocate on its roll has been guilty of professional or other misconduct, it shall refer the case for disposal to its disciplinary committee.

(2) The disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council, if it does not summarily reject the complaint, shall fix a date for the hearing of the case and shall cause a notice thereof to be given to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate-General of the State.

(3) The disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council after giving the advocate concerned and the Advocate-General an opportunity of being heard, may make any of the following orders, namely :–

(a) dismiss the complaint or, where the proceedings were initiated at the instance of the State Bar Council, direct that the proceedings be riled;

(b) reprimand the advocate;

(c) suspend the advocate from practice for such period as it may deem fit;

(d) remove the name of the advocate from the State roll of advocates.

(4) Where an advocate is suspended from practice under Clause (c) of Sub-section (3), he shall, during the period of suspension, be debarred from practising in any court or before any authority or person in India.

(5) Where any notice is issued to the Advocate-General under Sub-section (2), the Advocate-General may appear before the disciplinary committee of the State Bar Council either in person or through any advocate appearing on his behalf.

80. Similarly Section 36(1) deals with the disciplinary powers of the Bar Council of India. Sub-section (2) confers powers on the Appellate Committee of its own motion to withdraw for inquiry for itself any disciplinary action against an advocate pending before the Committee and dispose of the same. Sub-section (3) provides for the Appellate Committee when disposing of a case u/s 36 observing, so far as may be, the procedure laid down in Section 35. It further provides that references to the Advocate-General in Section 35 are to be construed as references to the Attorney-General of India.

81. Sections 37 and 38 which provide for an appeal to the Bar Council of India and to the Supreme Court respectively run as follows :

Section 37 : Appeal to the Bar Council of India.

(1) Any person aggrieved by an order of the disciplinary committee of a State Bar Council (under section 35) may, within sixty days of the date of the communication of the order to him, prefer an appeal to the Bar Council of India.

(2) Every such appeal shall be heard by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India which may pass such order thereon as it deems fit.

Section 38. Appeal to the Supreme Court :

Any person aggrieved by an order made by the disciplinary committee of the Bar Council of India u/s 36 or Section 37 may, within sixty days of the date on which the order is communicated to him, prefer an appeal to the Supreme Court and the Supreme Court may pass such order thereon as it deems fit.

82. Section 42(1) deals with powers of the disciplinary committee of a Bar Council with regard to the various matters provided for in Clauses. (a) to (f). Section 43 provides for making of orders as to costs by the disciplinary committee of a Bar Council. Section 44 gives powers of review to the disciplinary committee of a Bar Council. Section 48A, in Chapter VI, deals with the revisional powers of the Bar Council of India.

83. It will be seen from Sections. 3(2)(a), 23(4) and 35 that the Advocate-General of the State is given by the Act a very important and responsible position. Some discussion took place before us whether the Advocate-General can be considered to be the person who is charged with the duty of safeguarding the professional integrity of the members of the Bar, when powers and duties in that regard have been conferred under the Act on the State Bar Councils. I do not think it necessary to go into that aspect as I think an’ inquiry in that regard is not relevant for the present purpose of construing Section 37. Nor can the analogy of the Attorney-General in a colony representing the Crown, being the guardian of public interest, as stated by Lord Denning in Attorney-General of the Gambia v. Pierree Sarr N’Jie [1961] 1 A. C. 617 be brought in for interpreting Section 37 of the Act, as we are only concerned to find out the right given to the Advocate-General by the Act. So far as that is concerned, I am satisfied that the Act has given due recognition to his status by virtue of his being the highest Law Officer in the State, as the Advocate-General and who may be trusted to place a disinterested and dispassionate view before the Committee to enable it to come to a proper decision having due regard to the Advocate concerned, as well as the entire legal profession to which he belongs. Apart from his being u/s 3(2)(a) an ex-officio member of the State Bar Council, s. 23(4) gives him a right of pre-audience over all other advocates.

84. Coming to Section 35, read with Section 37, which has been extracted earlier, the main features that emerge therefrom are as follows :

(1) The State Bar Council can suo moto or on receipt of a complaint, when it has reason to believe that an advocate has been guilty of professional or other misconduct refer the case to its committee.

(2) If the Committee does not summarily reject the complaint, it is bound to fix a date for hearing of the case, and it is also further bound to give notice of the date of hearing, apart from the advocate concerned, to the Advocate-General of the State.

(3) The Committee is bound in the inquiry to give an opportunity of being heard both to the advocate concerned and the Advocate-General. After such an inquiry the Committee can pass one or other of the orders enumerated in Section (a) to (d) of Section 35.

(4) The Advocate-General may appear before the Committee in person or through an advocate appearing on his behalf.

(5) The orders of the Committee have to be communicated to the Advocate-General and the advocate concerned.

(6) Against the orders passed u/s 35, any person aggrieved is entitled to file an appeal u/s 37, to the Bar Council of India.

85. While under the Bar Councils Act, the Advocate-General was associated with the disciplinary proceedings only when the matter was being decided by the High Court, after receipt of the findings submitted by the Tribunal of the Bar Council, it is significant to note that under the Act, the Advocate-General is associated with the disciplinary proceedings right from the stage of inquiry by the Committee. Under Sub-section (2) of Section 35 the Committee is bound to give notice of the date of hearing not only to the Advocate concerned but also to the Advocate-General of the State. It will be noted that disciplinary proceedings may have been occasioned because of a complaint made by a third party or may have been initiated suo moto by the State Bar Council. In whatever manner the proceedings may have been initiated, the Advocate-General is entitled to be given notice of the date of hearing. It cannot be a formal and empty notice, to the Advocate-General, because Sub-section (3) clearly indicates that the Advocate-General should be given an opportunity of being heard. It is significant to note that Sub-section (3) of Section 35 which deals with the giving of an opportunity of being heard both to the advocate concerned and the Advocate-General does not make any distinction in the opportunity so afforded to both of them. The same opportunity that the Advocate concerned has under Sub-section (3) is also afforded to the Advocate-General. It is not necessary to go to the extent of holding that there is a “Us” before the Committee and that the Advocate-General is a “party” in the sense that expression is ordinarily understood in law. The advocate concerned will be interested in disputing the allegations made or charges leveled against him and he will be entitled to lead evidenceEvidence All the means by which a matter of fact, the truth of which is submitted for investigation, is established or disproved. Bharatiya Sakshya (Second) Adhiniyam 2023 in support of his plea. If there is a complainant, he will of course lead evidence to support his case. The Advocate-General, on the other hand, is also entitled to place before the Committee all aspects of the matter including facts that may be in favour of the advocate whose conduct is under inquiry. This is because of the important position occupied by him. It may be that the Advocate-General may not be able to appear personally and participate in all the disciplinary proceedings and that is why provision has been made in Section 35(5) enabling the Advocate-General to appear either in person or through any advocate appearing on his behalf. Just as the Advocate concerned will have an opportunity of examining his witnesses and cross-examining the witnesses produced against him, the Advocate-General or the counsel appearing on his behalf will also have a right of cross-examining the witnesses produced in the case so as to elicit information about the charge of professional misconduct (sic) against the advocate concerned. The Advocate-General need not be vindictive and take sides as a party to a litigation and see that the advocate is found guilty. On the other hand, by virtue of the special and dispassionate role occupied by him, he will be able during the inquiry to place such materials or evidence which will enable the Committee to come to a proper and correct finding, in the interest of both the legal practitioner and legal profession to which he belongs.

86. It is in this context of the close association of the Advocate-General with the disciplinary proceedings that the expression ‘person aggrieved’ in Section 37 has to be interpreted. There can be no controversy that an appeal will lie against the various orders that the Committee may pass as enumerated in Clauses. (a) to (d) of Section 35(3). The question is at whose instance the appeal will lie. If the complaint is dismissed, the complainant will be a ‘person aggrieved’ who can file an appeal u/s 37. In fact it has been held by this Court in B.M. Madani v. Commissioner of Workmen’s Compensation, Bombay (Civil Appeal No. 877 of 1968 decided on 8-10-1968) that when proceedings are initiated on a complaint by a party and the Committee after rending the advocate guilty of the charges, passed an order reprimanding with a warning, an appeal filed by such a complainant before the Appellate Committee only on the question of sentence imposed, was competent as the complainant was a ‘person aggrieved’. Similarly, an order adverse to the advocate, concerned, can be the subject of appeal at his instance.

87. There is no controversy that the order passed by the Committee was communicated to the Advocate-General. As already pointed out a series of steps is contemplated u/s 35; reference to the Committee, of a case of professional misconduct; notice of the date of hearing to be given to the Advocate-General; Advocate-General being given an opportunity of being heard at the hearing; the Advocate-General being entitled to appear before the Committee either in person or through an Advocate; his being entitled to be communicated with a copy of the order passed by the Committee. It is in that context and for these purposes that I have considered the meaning of the expression “any person aggrieved” in Section 37(1). The fact that the Advocate-General does not allege an infringement of any legal rights of his own is of no consequence. The particular proceeding in which the Advocate-General is given a right to participate relates to an inquiry into the allegations of misconduct against an advocate. Upon a fair construction of Section 37 read with Section 35 of the Act, the Advocate-General, in my opinion is “any person aggrieved” and as such was entitled to file the appeal u/s 37(1) against the order passed by the Committee. The same reasoning will apply to the Attorney-General of India u/s 38.

88. It may be that in a particular case the Advocate-General may feel that the findings arrived at in favour of the advocate by the Committee is not justified by the evidence and that decision will have to be reconsidered by the Appellate Committee; or it may even be that in a particular case the sentence imposed by the Committee may not be commensurate with the guilt of the advocate; or it may also be that the sentence imposed on an advocate by the Committee is very harsh or the finding of guilt is not correct. Under such and similar circumstances in the interests of the Advocate and the legal profession, the Advocate-General will be competent to bring up the matter before the Appellate Committee so that justice may be done.

89. In this context the observations of Lord Hewart C J. in Sevenoaks Urban District Council v. Twynam [1929] 2 IC. B. 440 are apposite. The question before the Court in that decision was whether an objector to a proposal made by a local authority to acquire land in order to provide parking place for vehicles and whose objections were overruled was a ‘person aggrieved’ u/s 68(3) of the Public Health Act 1925 and as such entitled to appeal. It was found that the objector alleged no ground of objections personally to himself. Nevertheless it was held that such an objector was a ‘person aggrieved’ and entitled to appeal. Lord Hewart C.J. at page 443 states :

The question, therefore, is: Is it true to say that in these circumstances and within the meaning of this part of this statute this respondent was a ‘person… aggrieved’? Now undoubtedly those words, ‘a person aggrieved’, have very often been considered, and, if one looked at the mere terms apart from their context and apart from the particular circumstances, it would have been quite easy to marshal decisions of contradictory import. But as has been said again and again there is often little utility in seeking to interpret particular expressions in one statute by reference to decisions given upon similar expressions in different statutes which have been enacted alio intuitu. The problem with which we are concerned is not, what is the meaning of the expression ‘aggrieved’ in any one of a dozen other statutes, but what is its meaning in this part of this statute ? It is a little important to see what this part of this statute is dealing with.

90. The above extract has been quoted with approval by Lord Parker C.J. in Baling Corporation v. Jones [1959] 1. Q. B. 384.

91. I have already indicated earlier that the problem before us whether the Advocate-General is a ‘person aggrieved’ u/s 37 of the Act will have to be tackled with reference to the scheme and provisions of the Act and that is exactly what I have done and arrived at the conclusion that he is a person aggrieved.

92. Mr. Daphtary argued that when the Committee consisting of members of the legal profession, has decided in favour of the Advocate, the Advocate-General can have no grievance. This, in my view, is really begging the question. Why did the Legislature then bring in the Advocate-General at all and why has it associated him in disciplinary proceedings from the very beginning of the inquiry? That and other circumstances, already pointed out by me, bring him u/s 37 as “any person aggrieved.”

93. Mr. Daphtary then urged that if the Advocate-General was expected to safeguard the interest of the Advocate and the legal profession by seeing that proper decisions are given by the Committee, that purpose is not served when powers have been given to the Committee u/s 35(2) to summarily reject a complaint and the Advocate-General will have no remedy against such rejection. The short answer to this contention is that a right of appeal must be specifically conferred by statute. Section 37(1) gives a right of appeal against an order passed u/s 35. The orders which could be passed after hearing the case are enumerated in Section (a) to (d) of Section 35(3). It is not necessary for me to express any opinion whether an order summarily rejecting a complaint can also be the subject of an appeal u/s 37(1) as that section is in very wide terms. In any event, Mr. Daphtary’s contention will only amount to this viz., that the Advocate-General is not associated at the stage of summary rejection of a complaint. That circumstance does not militate against the view already expressed by me. Probably the Legislature may have felt that if there is any wrongful summary rejection of a complaint it could be set right by the Bar Council of India under” Section 48A. But once the Committee decides to hear the cases and passes an order u/s 35, the Advocate-General gets a right of appeal u/s 37(1).

94. Mr. V.S. Desai referred us to the decision of the Judicial Committee in Advocate General of Bombay and Ors. v. Pitamberdas Gokuldas Mehta and Ors. 62 Indian Appeals 235 wherein, according to him, an appeal by the Advocate-General of Bombay against the decision of the High Court of Bombay Pleaders Act was entertained by the Judicial Committee. He has also referred us to the discussion between the Court and counsel in the said decision reported in Advocate-General of Bombay v. Phiroz Rustomji Bharucha 37 BLR 722 which, according to him, will show that though an objection about the locus standi of the Advocate-General to file an appeal under such circumstances was raised, but was not accepted by the Judicial Committee. I have gone through both the reports and there is no indication that the question of maintainability of an appeal by the Advocate-General was decided one way or the other by the Judicial Committee.

95. Mr. Daphtary has referred us to the decisions in Re. Side-botham 14 Chancery Division 458, in re. Reed, Bowen and Co., 19 Q. B. 174, The Queen v. The Keepers of the Peace and Justices of the County of London 25 Q. B. D. 357, Rex. v. London Quarter Sessions [1951] 2 K. B. D. 508 and Ealing Corporation v. Jones [1959] 1 Q. D. 384, wherein the expression ‘person aggrieved’ occurring in different statutes came up for interpretation. The principles that emerge from those decisions appear to be that a ‘person aggrieved’ must be a person who has suffered a legal grievance or who has claimed a title to something and his claim has been negatived or who has maintained to the contrary in the proceedings or litigation. It has been further held in some of those decisions that the said expression does not take in any person who may be affected by the order or who may feel disappointed or even annoyed at the decision. In the view that I take that the expression ‘person aggrieved’ in Section 37 of the Act has to be interpreted in the light of the provisions of and scheme of the Act as well as the context in which those expressions appear. I do not think it necessary to consider in great detail those decisions which have been rendered on different statutes.

96. The decision in The Municipal Corporation of the City of Ahmedabad v. Chandulal Shamaldas Patel and Ors. (Civil Appeal No. 1716 of 1967 decided on 1-8-1970) referred to by Mr. Daphtary, in my opinion, does not assist the appellant. In that decision it was held that when certain notifications issued under the Land Acquisition Act were set aside by the High Court, the Municipal Corporation, on whose behalf the acquisition was being made by the Government, cannot be considered to be a ‘person aggrieved’ entitled to challenge the order of the High Court. An additional reason has also been given against the competency of the appeal that even an order for costs has not been passed against the Municipal Corporation. That decision was rendered on the scheme of the Land Acquisition Act, and so does not help the appellant.

97. It was urged on behalf of the appellant that if the Advocate-General was really intended to be given a right of appeal u/s 37(1), the Legislature should have used the expression ‘any person including the Advocate-General aggrieved by an order. …’ I am of the view that it was unnecessary to make any such provision because the expression as it stands clearly takes within its fold the Advocate-General also.

98. This leaves me with the decision in Attorney-General of the Gambia v. Pierre Sarr N. ‘Jie [1961] A.C. 617 which has been very strongly relied on by Mr. Daphtary. One Mr. X a member of the English Bar was admitted to practice as a barrister and solicitor of the Supreme Court of Gambia. The Deputy Judge made an order striking his name off the roll of that Court. This decision was reversed by the West African Court of Appeal on the ground that the Deputy Judge had no jurisdiction in the matter. The Attorney-General of Gambia sought leave to appeal to Her Majesty in Council; but the West African Court of Appeal declined to grant him leave on the ground that notice had not been given in due time to Mr. X. The Attorney-General then made a petition to Her Majesty for special leave to appeal from the judgment of the West African Court of Appeal, setting aside the order of the Deputy Judge-as well as refusing to grant leave to appeal. The Attorney-General’s petition was granted; but liberty was reserved to Mr. X to raise the preliminary point that no appeal lay at the instance of the Attorney-General. During the course of arguments the Judicial Committee rejected the preliminary objection.

99. It is to be noticed that against the decision of the Deputy Judge striking his name off the roll, Mr. X filed an appeal to the West African Court of Appeal u/s 14 which was as follows :

An appeal shall lie to the Court of Appeal from any order of the Judge suspending a barrister or solicitor of the Supreme Court from practice or striking his name off the Roll and for the purposes of any such appeal any such order shall be deemed to be an order of the Supreme Court.

100. I am particularly referring to this decision because certain observations of Lord Denning on which reliance has been placed by Mr. Daphtary will have to be understood with reference to this provision of law. Exercising jurisdiction under this section, the West African Court of Appeal set aside the order of the Deputy Judge. In the first instance the Attorney-General sought leave to appeal to Her Majesty in Council from the West African Court of Appeal u/s 5 of the West African (Appeal to the Privy Council) Order in Council, 1949, which is as follows :

Applications to the court for leave to appeal shall be made by motion or petition within 21 days from the date of the judgment to be appealed from, and the applicant shall give the opposite party notice of his intended application.

101. The West African Court of Appeal declined to grant leave to appeal to the Attorney-General on the ground that notice had not given within the time mentioned in the above order to Mr. X. The Attorney-General made an application to the Judicial Committee for special leave to appeal from the two orders mentioned above of the West African Court of Appeal. That petition was filed u/s 31 of the West African (Appeal to Privy Council) Order in Council, 1949, which runs as follows :

Nothing in this order contained shall be deemed to interfere with the right of His Majesty upon the humble petition of any person aggrieved by any judgment of the Court to admit his appeal therefrom upon such conditions as His Majesty in Council shall think fit to impose.

102. The question that arose before their Lordships was whether the Attorney-General was a ‘person aggrieved’ under the above order.

103. In discussing this question Lord Denning at page 634 observes :

… The words ‘person aggrieved’ are of wide import and should rot be subjected to a restrictive interpretation. They do not include, of course, a mere busy body who is interfering in things which do not concern him : but they do include a person who has a genuine grievance because an order has been made which prejudicially affects his interests. Has the Attorney-General a sufficient interest for this purpose ? Their Lordships think that he has. The Attorney-General in a colony represents the Crown as the guardian of the public interest. It is his duty to bring before the judge any misconduct of a barrister or solicitor which is of sufficient gravity to warrant disciplinary action. True it is that if the judge acquits the practitioner of misconduct, no appeal is open to the Attorney-General. He has done his duty and is not aggrieved. But if the judge finds the practitioner guilty of professional misconduct, and a Court of Appeal reverses the decision on a ground which goes to the jurisdiction of the judge, or is otherwise a point in which the public, interest is concerned, the Attorney-General is a ‘person aggrieved’ by the decision and can properly petition Her Majesty for special leave to appeal. It was for these reasons that their Lordships rejected the preliminary objection and held that the Attorney-General was a ‘person aggrieved’ by the decision of the West African Court of Appeal.

104. The observations made in the above extract, in my opinion, have to be related to the particular provision of the order in Council which the Judicial Committee was considering. In the case before the Judicial Committee, the Attorney-General had initiated the disciplinary proceedings against the Barrister. u/s 14, there was only a very limited right of appeal and that too in favour of the barrister or solicitor in respect of the orders mentioned therein. The Attorney-General, though he may have been the complainant u/s 14 had no right of appeal if the barrister was acquitted. That is why Lord Denning states that it is true that if the Judge acquits the practitioner of misconduct no appeal is open to the Attorney-General. This view, with respect, is correct because Section 14 does not give a right of appeal to the Attorney-General. Lord Denning, no doubt, has further stated that the Judicial Committee has rejected the preliminary objection in view of the fact that it was of the opinion that in the case before it a question of jurisdiction or a point of public interest is involved and therefore, the Attorney-General is a ‘person aggrieved’.

105. I have already indicated that there are no restrictions or limitations imposed in Section 37 of the Act giving a right of appeal only to the advocate who may have been found guilty. On the other hand, the words “any person aggrieved” in Section 37 are very wide, and as observed by Lord Denning in the opening part of the above extract these words should not be subjected to a restrictive interpretation. In the view that I take that the Advocate-General has an unqualified right of appeal u/s 37(1) I do not think it necessary either to refer to Article 165 of the Constitution nor do I think it necessary to consider the further question whether the appeal riled by the Advocate-General before the Bar Council of India relates to any question of jurisdiction or a point of public interest.

106. To conclude, the appeal filed by the Advocate-General of Maharashtra before the Appellate Committee was competent and this point has to be held against the appellant. The result will be that the appeal before us will have to be heard on merits.

A.N. Ray, J.

107. I agree with Vaidialingam, J. I desire to express my separate opinion in view of the importance of the question raised in this appeal.

108. This is an appeal from the order dated 26 October, 1969 of the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India suspending the appellant from practice for a period of one year.

109. An appeal to the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India was preferred by Shri H. M. Seervai, Advocate General of Maharashtra against the order dated 17 October, 1968 of the Bar Council of Maharashtra holding that the appellant was not guilty of professional misconduct or otherwise.

110. Before the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India a preliminary objection was taken by Adi Pheroz Shah Gandhi as to the maintainability of the appeal preferred by the Advocate General of Maharashtra.

111. The appellant pressed the same preliminary objection in this Court, namely, that the Advocate General of the State of Maharashtra could not prefer an appeal against an order of the Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar Council.

112. The relevant provision for appeal to the Bar Council of India is to be found in Section 37 of the Advocates Act, 1961 (hereinafter referred to as the Act). There are two Sub-sections of Section 37. The first sub-section enacts that any person aggrieved by an order of the Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar Council made u/s 35 may, within sixty days of the date of the communication of the order to him, prefer an appeal to the Bar Council of India. Sub-section (2) of Section 37 states that every such appeal shall be heard by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India.

113. The present appeal is u/s 38 of the Act which confers right of appeal to the Supreme Court by any person aggrieved by an order made by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India.

114. The entire controversy in this appeal centers on the meaning of the words ‘any person aggrieved by an order of the Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar Council’ occurring in Sub-section (i) of Section 37 of the Act. The same words also occur in Section 38 of the Act.

115. Mr. Daphtary on behalf of the appellant contended first that the Advocate General did not represent public interest and could not therefore be said to be a person aggrieved by an order of the Disciplinary Committee. Secondly, that the provisions in Section 35 of the Act that the Advocate General was entitled to a notice from the Disciplinary Committee of the date of hearing and the provision that the Advocate General was entitled to be heard by the Disciplinary Committee could not have the effect of making the Advocate General a party, and, thirdly, the Advocate General was an impartial person and his duty would end by making submissions, if any, before the Disciplinary Committee and he would not be a person aggrieved either by an order of dismissal of a complaint against the Advocate or by any order passed against the Advocate.

116. Notices were given to the Attorney General and the Advocates General of different States in view of the importance of the question involved in this appeal. Mr. V. S. Desai on behalf of the Advocate General of Maharashtra, Mr. Setalvad on behalf of the Bar Council of India, Dr. Seyied Muhammad on behalf of the Attorney General, Mr. Datar counsel for the Maharashtra State Bar Council of India, Dr. Seyied Muhammad on behalf of the of other States all contended that the Advocate General would have the right under the Act to prefer an appeal as a person aggrieved by an order of the Disciplinary Committee of a State Bar Council.

117. Various decisions were cited at the Bar to illustrate the meaning of the words ‘person aggrieved’. One group of decisions is based on the locus classicus in Re. Ex-pane Sidebotham 14 Ch. D. 458. The other line of decisions is to be found in Ex-pane Official Receiver, In Re. Reed. Bowen and Co. 19 Q.B.D. 174 and Sevenoaks Urban District Council v. Twynam [1929] 2 K.B. 404. James, J. in the case of Ex-pane Side-botham said that “a ‘person aggrived’ must be a man who has suffered a legal grievance, a man against whom a decision has been pronounced which has wrongfully deprived him of something, or wrongfully refused him something, or wrongfully affected his Title to something.” Lord Esher, M. R. on the other hand in Ex-pane Official Receiver In Re. Reed, Bowen & Co. 19 Q.B.D. 174 said that the meaning given by James, L.J. to the words ‘person aggrieved’ would not be an exhaustive definition and the words would include a person who has asked for a decision for which he had a right to ask. and has been wrongfully refused. In the Sevenoaks [1929] 2 K.B. 404 case Lord Hewart, C.J. said “that when a person might make an objection and was entitled to a decision upon it he would, if the decision was adverse to him be able to appeal”.

118. These decisions indicate that the words ‘person aggrieved’ would have different shades of meaning in accordance with the tenor of the relevant statute. The observations of James, LJ. in the case of Ex-pane Sidebotham turn on the meaning of the words ‘person aggrieved’ occurring in the English Bankruptcy Act, 1914 which, inter alia, provided that the orders of the Court in bankruptcy matters except in cases specially excluded were subject to appeal at the instance of any person aggrieved even if he had not appeared in the court below. It is in the context of the English Bankruptcy Act that creditors, trustees, administrators of a debtor or bankrupt would have a legal grievance against whom a decision has been pronounced which has wrongfully deprived him of something, or wrongfully refused him something, or wrongfully affected his title to something.

119. Lord Hewart, C.J., in Sevenoaks case [1929] 2 K.B. 404 said “the problem is not what is the meaning of the expression person aggrieved’ in one or dozen statutes but what is its meaning in this part of the Statute”. In that case the relevant provision of the Public Health Act conferred a power on a local authority to provide within that district suitable parking place for vehicles. The statute further in that case contemplated a notice of the proposal to acquire land for using it as a parking place and objections, if any, to such proposal. When objections were made, the local authority would have to consider them. In the Sevenoaks [1929] 2 K.B. 404 case the Urban Council considered the objection of a ratepayer and thereafter proceeded with the scheme of the parking place. Lord Hewart, C.J. in giving meaning to the words ‘person aggrieved’ in that case said that first a person was an author of an objection, and, secondly, he was aggrieved by the refusal of his objection. It was held that a special individual right was infringed. In the Sevenoaks case there was neither a pecuniary nor a proprietary grievance. The action of the local authority in providing a parking place invited objections. It is the refusal of that objection which constituted a grievance and it was a grievance sustainable in law.

120. Mr. Daphtary relied on the observations of James, L.J. in Re. Sidebotham 14 Ch. D. 458 that ‘a disappointed person would not be a person aggrieved’ and also on the observations of Lord Coleridge in Queen v. Keepers of the Peace and Justices of the County of London 25 Q.B.D. 357 that one would not be an aggrieved person because someone was held not to have done wrong. In other words, it was said that the Advocate General would make submissions or advance contentions and the non-acceptance by the Disciplinary Committee of such submissions would not constitute either a legal grievance or rejection of a remedy asked for.

121. Mr. Daphtary also leaned heavily on the decision of the Judicial Committee in Attorney General of Gambia v. Pierre Sarr N’ Jie [1961] A. C. 617 in support of two propositions. First, that the Judicial Committee found in the Gambian case that in the colonies the Attorney General represented the Crown and was therefore the guardian of the public interest. Mr. Daphtary submitted that the Advocate General did not represent public interest in our country and therefore could not be said to be a guardian of public interest. Secondly, the Judicial Committee in the Gambian case said that in relation to disciplinary proceedings if a legal practitioner was acquitted of misconduct no appeal was open to the Attorney General because he had done his duty and was not aggrieved. Extracting that proposition from the Gambian case Mr. Daphtary submitted that similarly the Advocate General could not have any grievance where an Advocate was acquitted.

122. The purpose and the provisions of the Advocates Act, 1961 will determine whether the Advocate General is a person aggrieved within the meaning of the relevant sections in the Act. It may not be out of place to refer to the Bar Councils Act, 1926 which dealt with disciplinary conduct of practitioners. Prior to the Advocates Act the High Court under the Bar Councils Act, 1926 had power to suspend any advocate from practice whom it found guilty of professional or other misconduct. Under the said 1926 Act upon receipt of a complaint made to it by any court or by Bar Council or by any other person that any Advocate had been guilty of misconduct, the High Court if it did not summarily reject the complaint referred the case for enquiry to the Bar Council or after consultation with the Bar Council to the Court of a District Judge and the High Court might of its own motion refer any case in which it had reason to believe that any such Advocate had been so guilty. If any case was referred under the Bar Councils Act, 1926 for enquiry, the case was to be enquired into by the Committee of the Bar Council which was called the Tribunal. The Tribunal consisted of not less than three and not more than five members of the Bar Council appointed for that purpose by the Chief Justice or Chief Judge of the High Court, and one of the members so appointed was the President of the Tribunal. The finding of a Tribunal was forwarded to the High Court through the Bar Council and the finding of a District Court was to be forwarded direct to the High Court with a copy to the Bar Council. On receipt of the finding the High Court was to fix a date for the hearing of the case and notice of the date so fixed was to be given to the Advocate concerned and to the Bar Council and to the Advocate General. The High Court was also required under the statute to afford the Advocate concerned and the Bar Council and the Advocate General an opportunity of being heard before orders were passed in that case.

123. Mr. Desai relied on the provisions of the Bar Councils Act, 1926 to show that under the said Act notice was to be given to the Advocate General and that the Advocate General was entitled to be heard and he relied on a decision of the Judicial Committee in Advocate General of Bombay v. Phiroz Bharucha 62 1. A. 235 : 37 Bom. L. R. 722 and the decision of this Court in Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others, in support of two propositions, namely, that the Advocate General could prefer art appeal and in an appeal preferred by the Advocate concerned, the Advocate General would be a respondent to such an appeal. In Bharucha’s case 62 I.A. 2350 certain Advocates were members of Associations declared unlawful by Government and they were convicted of offences punishable under Section. 17(i) of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1908. The High Court did not take any steps against the Advocates on the ground that it did not consider that membership of an unlawful Association would render the Advocates unfit for the exercise of the profession. The Advocate General of Bombay made applications for special leave before the Judicial Committee to appeal against the decision of the High Court. The Judicial Committee did not grant any special leave and agreed with the view of the High Court. No question was raised in the applications before the Judicial Committee as to the maintainability of the applications for special leave. It should be noticed that under the Bar Councils Act there was no provision for any appeal. Mr. Desai rightly relied on the decision of the Judicial Committee not for an actual decision that the Advocate General had a right of appeal but for the purpose of showing that the Advocate General had not only locus standi to make an application for leave but also could be said to have been aggrieved by an order in relation to professional misconduct of an Advocate. The Judicial Committee would not have entered into the merits of the case if the Advocate General had no right to apply for leave to appeal.

124. The decision of this Court in Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others, was to the effect that in an appeal preferred to the Supreme Court by an Advocate against whom an order of suspension was passed by the High Court u/s 12 of the Bar Councils Act, the proper respondents would be the complainant, if any, the Bar Council and the Advocate General of the State concerned and not the High Court. The appeal to this Court in Bhataraju Nageshwara Rao Vs. The Hon’ble Judges of The Madras High Court and Others, was by special leave. This Court held that the Advocate General, the Bar Council and the complainant would be parties to the appeal on the ground that notices under the Bar Councils Act had been issued to those persons. The decisions of this Court and the Judicial Committee both indicate that the Advocate General under the Bar Councils Act had locus standi in making an application for leave to appeal and being a respondent to an appeal preferred by the Advocate.

125. The position held by the High Court under the Bar Councils Act, 1926 is now occupied by the Bar Council under the Advocates Act. There are State Bar Councils and there is also a Bar Council of India. Every Bar Council is a body corporate. The functions of the State Bar Council are inter alia to admit persons as advocates on its roll; to prepare and maintain such roll; to entertain and determine cases of misconduct against advocates on its roll; to safeguard the rights, privileges and interest of advocates on its roll. The functions of the Bar Council of India are to lay down standards of professional conduct and etiquette for advocates, to lay down the procedure to be followed by the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar Council of India and the Disciplinary Committees of the State Bar Councils, to safeguard the rights, privileges and interests of advocates. A Bar Council is empowered under the Act to constitute one or more Disciplinary Committees.

126. Sections 35 – 44 deal with conduct of Advocates and powers of the Disciplinary Committees of the State Bar Councils as also of the Bar Council of India. u/s 35 of the Act where on receipt of a complaint or otherwise a State Bar Council has reason to believe that any advocate on its roll has been guilty of professional or other misconduct, it shall refer the case for disposal to its Disciplinary Committee. The Disciplinary Committee of a State Bar Council, if it does not summarily reject the complaint, shall fix a date for the hearing of the case and shall cause a notice thereof to be given to the advocate concerned and to the Advocate General of the State. The Disciplinary Committee of a State Bar Council after giving the advocate concerned and the Advocate General an opportunity of being heard, may dismiss the complaint or reprimand the advocate, suspend the advocate from practice for such period as it may deem fit, or remove the name of the advocate from the State roll of advocates. Where any notice is issued to the Advocate General, the Advocate General may appear before the Disciplinary Committee of the State Bar Council either in person or through any advocate appearing on his behalf. These provisions establish first that the Advocate General is entitled to a notice of the date of hearing, secondly, that no order can be made by the Disciplinary Committee without giving an opportunity to the Advocate General of being heard, and, thirdly, that the Advocate General may appear in person or through any advocate. It cannot be said that the Advocate General is appearing as a friend of the Court. The right of the Advocate General to appear is based on statute. The word ‘may’ is used to indicate the choice of the Advocate General to appear in person or through any advocate. He may choose not to appear at all. But when the Advocate General does appear, he does so by virtue of the statutory rights and powers conferred on him. It is, therefore, necessary to know as to why notice under the Act is given to the Advocate General and why he is to be heard before an order is made by the Disciplinary Committee.

127. The Judicial Committee in the Gambian case found that the name of N’Jie was struck off the roll of barristers and solicitors of the Supreme Court of Gambia by an order of Abbott, J., Deputy Judge of the Supreme Court in the Colony of Gambia. The Deputy Judge had jurisdiction to represent the Chief Justice in the exercise of his judicial powers. The power to strike the name of the legal practitioner off the roll was held by the Judicial Committee not to be a judicial power but an administrative one of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Gambia. therefore, the order of Abbott, J. was without jurisdiction. The West African Court of Appeal under those circumstances set aside the order of Abbott, J. The Attorney General of Gambia thereupon preferred an appeal to the Judicial Committee. An appeal to the Privy Council lay u/s 31 of the West African (Appeal to Privy Council) Order in Council, 1949. Broadly stated, the provision was to the effect that any person aggrieved by any judgment of the Court could prefer an appeal to His Majesty. The Judicial Committee construed the words ‘person aggrieved’ occurring in Section 31 of the West African Order in Council. 1949 not to be subjected to a restrictive interpretation but to include a person who has a genuine grievance because an order has been made which prejudicially affected his interest. The Attorney General of Gambia was found to have sufficient interest for the purpose and the interest was held to be a public one which the Attorney General represented. The Judicial Committee also said that if the Judge found the practitioner guilty of misconduct and the West African Court of Appeal of Gambia reversed the decision which went to the jurisdiction of the Judge, or was otherwise a point in which public interest was concerned, the Attorney General would be a person aggrieved by the decision. The Judicial Committee construed the words ‘person aggrieved’ to include the Attorney General of Gambia as representing the public interest.

128. The most significant feature in Sections 35 and 36 of the Act is that the Disciplinary Committee does not either give any notice to or hear the complainant. On the contrary notice is given u/s 36 to the Attorney General and u/s 35 to the Advocate General. The Disciplinary Committee without giving the Attorney General in one case and the Advocate General in another case an opportunity of being heard cannot pass any order against the Advocate concerned., The Attorney General under Article 76 of the Constitution and the Advocate General under Article 165 of the Constitution have to discharge the functions conferred on them by or under the Constitution or any other law for the time being in force. The Advocates Act concerns the Advocate and it is in the fitness of things that the Attorney General and the Advocate General of a State are heard as persons representing the profession which assists the litigant public and the courts in the administration of justice. The Attorney General and the Advocates General of States are persons of high standing and with long experience in the profession and it is indisputable that they will ever adopt any partisan attitude in proceedings before the Disciplinary Committee. The Advocates Act gives special pre-eminence to the Attorney General and the Advocate General in disciplinary proceedings because it is not an attempt of the Disciplinary Committee to redress the grievance of an individual complainant but to find out whether there is any breach of professional standard and conduct. The high tradition, dignity and purity of the Bar is to be maintained. The Attorney General and the Advocate General are heard because they are heads of their respective Bar and the proceedings affect discipline and dignity of the Bar and touch the professional conduct of an Advocate.

129. They are not parties to a ‘lis’. They have no personal or pecuniary or proprietary interest in the matter. It is manifest that their locus standi and interest is based on professional code of conduct and for the purpose of upholding the purity of the Bar and preservation of correct standards and norms in the profession. The Attorney General and the Advocates General will uphold the professional discipline, dignity and decorum and that is why no order is made by the Disciplinary Committee without giving them an opportunity of being heard.

130. The issue before the Disciplinary Committee is whether there has been professional misconduct and the question has to be looked at purely from the point of view of profession. The profession touches the public on the one hand and the courts on the other. On no other basis could the presence of the Advocate General be explained.

131. In a recent decision of this Court in B. M. Madnani v. Commissioner of Workmen’s Compensation, Bombay C.A. No. 877 of 1968 decided on October 10, 1968 the Commissioner of Workmen’s Compensation preferred an appeal for enhancement of penalties against the Advocate concerned. This Court held that the Commissioner was entitled to maintain the appeal as a person aggrieved. Mr. Daphtary at one stage contended that a complainant would not be a person aggrieved within the meaning of the relevant section of the Advocates Act to prefer an appeal. The decision of this Court repels that submission.

132. It may not be put of place to notice that the Act uses the words ‘person aggrieved’ and not the words ‘party aggrieved’. First in disciplinary proceedings there is no party. It is a matter touching the professional conduct of the Advocate. The enquiry is by the Disciplinary Committee. The Advocate is heard. The Attorney General in one case and the Advocates General in other cases are heard. They are heard not because they are parties but because they represent the interest of the profession. They represent the standards to be maintained in the profession. Suppose. the Disciplinary Committee held proceedings without giving notice-to the Advocate General or made an order without giving the Advocate General an opportunity of being heard. In either case the Advocate General would be a person aggrieved. Would the participation by the Advocate General in the proceedings before the Disciplinary Committee alter the position ? Neither on logic nor on principle could it be said that the Attorney General and the Advocates General who have the right to be heard could not be persons aggrieved by the decision. If they have the right to be heard they may have grievance as to the result of the hearing.

133. The Attorney General and the Advocates General receive notice and are entitled to be heard by virtue of the provisions in the statute. They are performing statutory duties. They are not contemplated in the statute as ordinary counsel. It was not the intention of the statute that they would be merely neutral observers before the Disciplinary Committee and they would have no-duty to perform. They would have to express their views one way or the other. It is true that they would be completely free from personal favour or disfavour in these matters touching the professional conduct. Their presence before the Disciplinary Committee is explicable only on the ground of adhering to the correct professional code. It would therefore be open to the-Attorney General and the Advocate General to take the view that in a matter of sufficient gravity a completely inadequate punishment would not be in public interest of the profession. Similarly, if the punishment is severe in a case which did not merit such action, the Attorney General and the Advocate General would be; persons aggrieved to have it corrected.

134. To accede to the contention of Mr. Daphtary that the words ‘person aggrieved’ refer only to Advocates would be misreading-the provisions. The words ‘person aggrieved’ will be referable to the Advocate concerned, the complainant and the Attorney General or the Advocate General as the case may be. The Attorney General and the Advocate General will be persons aggrieved because they are interested in maintaining the professional rectitude. The Attorney General and the Advocate General have the right of pre-audience. Such right determines that they are leaders of the profession in their respective fields. They will ask for maintaining the proper standards of professional ethics. It is from that point of view that the Attorney General and the Advocate General will be aggrieved persons when they will find” that the interest of the Bar, the public interest have not been properly safeguarded by decisions of the Disciplinary Committee of the Bar: Council.

135. For these reasons, I am of opinion that the Advocate General of the State of Maharashtra is competent to appeal as a person aggrieved u/s 37 of the Advocates Act, 1961.

ORDER

136. In accordance with the opinion of the majority, the appeal is allowed and the order of the Bar Council of India is set aside. There shall be no order as to costs.