The Bombay High Court has said transfer of
proceedings from a judicial officer cannot be done on mere allegation by one
party, and dismissed a petition of the Lilavati Hospital's trust founder
alleging bias against the Charity Commissioner.
A single bench of Justice Sharmila Deshmukh last
month refused to transfer the proceedings pertaining to a dispute between the
trustees from the Charity Commissioner to any other judicial officer, noting
there was no reasonable apprehension of bias or prejudice.
The HC said passing of an adverse order cannot be
the foundation for seeking transfer of proceedings.
"It is necessary to ensure for securing the
ends of justice that a mere allegation is differentiated from an apprehension
and what is required is a reasonable apprehension. An absence of congenial
atmosphere cannot be a ground for transfer," it said.
The court dismissed the petition filed by the
Lilavati Kirtilal Mehta Medical Trust founder Charu Mehta and permanent
trustees Rajesh Mehta and Prashant Mehta, seeking transfer of all proceedings
pertaining to the trust from the Charity Commissioner to any other judicial
officer while alleging bias.
The petitioners are embroiled in a dispute with the
other trustees over control of the trust and the Lilavati Hospital.
"In my view the apprehension of the petitioners
lacks foundation," the judge said.
The adverse orders passed by the Charity
Commissioner against the petitioners cannot be said to be the result of a
"pre-judged mind and cannot form the basis for reasonable apprehension
that justice will not be done by the Charity Commissioner while adjudicating
the proceedings," the HC said.
The court noted that transfer of proceedings from a
court or a quasi-judicial officer is usually viewed as a suspicion being cast
on the conduct of proceedings by the judicial officer and hence transfer cannot
be based on mere allegation.
Earlier this year, the Charity Commissioner
provisionally accepted certain change reports of the trust and initiated suo
motu (on its own) inquiry against the trustees including the petitioners and
pending inquiry suspended the trustees except Charu Mehta.
Mehta and the two other trustees filed a petition in
the HC, challenging the Charity Commissioner's order.
The HC in September stayed the order, noting the
Charity Commissioner had acted contrary to the provisions of law.
The petitioners claimed the Charity Commissioner
initiated suo motu inquiry even when there was no such prayer from the other
side.
The plea alleged the Charity Commissioner had held a
private meeting with lawyers of the other side, which casts a serious doubt
about impartiality.
The respondent trustees claimed the petitioners
habitually file transfer applications when faced with adverse orders and those
applications have been rejected in the past.
The HC observed that even if the orders passed are
not in accordance with law, at the most it can be said to be a perverse order
capable of being corrected by the higher forum.
"However, the passing of such an order itself
cannot be said to be the result of a predetermined and prejudiced mind,"
the court said.
The allegations levelled by the petitioners, if
viewed, in isolation would not indicate any basis for apprehension of bias and
even if viewed cumulatively it would at the most amount to passing of adverse
orders, the HC said.
"The judicial orders passed by the authorities legitimately, though
may or may not be corrected by the higher forums, cannot lead to an inference
of pre-judged and/or pre-determined and/or biased mind against the
litigant," it said.