Home TA Online Judiciary betrays justice – injustice wins the day!

Judiciary betrays justice – injustice wins the day!

Follow us on our Malay and English WhatsApp, Telegram, Instagram, Tiktok and Youtube channels.

Instead of enhancing public confidence in the judiciary, the stand taken by the Federal Court over the extended terms of top judges has undermined confidence, writes P Ramakrishnan.

For the first time after many decades, a seven-member Federal Court bench sat, raising the hopes of those who have been thoroughly disappointed and disillusioned with the judiciary in the past.

But the many members on the bench did not make any difference to the expectations of the nation.

They sat not because a litigant sought their intervention to right a wrong that had been suffered. That was not the case. This was an issue that affected the judiciary itself. The wrong that was involved in this instance was something that was self-inflicted by the judiciary.

Here was an opportunity for the judiciary to purge itself of all negativity with which it was viewed and restore its lost sheen and regain its respectability.

The extended term of tenure of the former Chief Justice Md Raus Sharif and former Court of Appeal president Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin after their compulsory retirement age of 65 years and 6 months was seen as a deliberate act to manipulate the judiciary to serve the purpose and bidding of the executive.

This perception was especially grave since there were many other qualified judges available to succeed them and who were grossly denied their upward mobility by this sinister move to retain them – especially when there was no constitutional provision to legitimise their extended term of tenure.

The core issue was to consider whether their contentious appointments were constitutional – that was all!

So the enlarged Federal Court bench sat on 24 September 2018 to consider the four constitutional questions posed by the Malaysian Bar and the Advocates Association of Sarawak pertaining to the extended tenures of the former chief justice and the former Court of Appeal beyond their compulsory retirement:

  • Whether under Article 121(1A) of the Federal Constitution, an additional judge can be appointed on the advice of the chief justice, which is advised to take effect after the latter’s retirement;
  • Whether under Article 121(1A), read together with Article 122B(1), Article 122B(2) and Article 125(1) of the Federal Constitution, an additional judge can be appointed as the chief justice or Court of Appeal president;
  • Whether the appointment of judges by the Yang di-Pertuan Agong under Articles 122(1A) and 122B(1) of the Federal Constitution is justiciable; and
  • Whether the appointment of additional judges, and thereafter of the chief justice or Court of Appeal president announced whilst they were serving judges, but to take effect after retirement, violates Article 121(1), Article 122 (1A) and Article 125(1) of the Federal Constitution.
READ MORE:  Malaysia's challenge: Overcoming obstacles along the long road to reform

The intervention of these two professional bodies reflected and represented the serious concerns and views of many that these appointments were made in violation of the Constitution.

When two bodies representing the lawyers in West Malaysia and East Malaysia raised the questions pertaining to the legality of their extended appointments beyond the permissible provision, it becomes a compelling enough issue that deserves a ruling. But the seven-member Federal Court bench to our consternation refused to answer the four questions laid before the bench.

The bench refused to rule over the controversial appointments claiming that the matter had become academic. According to their reasoning, the matter had become academic because “the constitutionality of the judges holding their respective offices is no longer in existence. Their replacements have been made.”

The court’s logic was baffling! True, the judges holding their illegal positions had resigned on 7 June 2018, but with their resignations does the issue of their illegal appointment evaporate into thin air?

The court disappointingly did not address the real issue. The issue was the legality or otherwise of their extended tenure beyond their compulsory retirement age. Was it constitutional? That was all! Who cares whether they subsequently resigned or not. Their resignations did not – and cannot – negate their unconstitutional appointments.

Federal Court judge Zainum Ali, who wrote the unanimous judgment, asked in her judgment, “What then is the dispute that needs to be resolved?” Zainun added there is no remedy that the court can give to effect the Bar’s application.

Nobody was seeking a remedy from the court. All that was needed of the court was to rule whether their appointments were constitutional and therefore legal. Why was this crucial point ignored totally?

READ MORE:  Yusoff Rawther ought to be discharged as prosecution admits probe not yet completed - NGO

“Since there is no live issue, the court should not rule in the matter. Therefore the court does not act in vacuo nor in vain,” the judgment read.

But in reality the legality or otherwise of the extended tenure beyond their mandatory retirement age was an issue that was begging for a ruling. Such a ruling would have prevented a similar occurrence in the future. It would have prevented the manipulation of the judiciary to the detriment of justice itself.

By taking the position that the matter has now become academic, does it mean that justice involving their appointments has also become an academic matter and therefore need not be addressed? It seems ridiculous!

As someone not schooled in the arcane of the law, I find it difficult to comprehend the court’s position in refusing to answer the questions posed. We go to the court for a ruling or for a resolution of a problem. Can the court refuse to give a ruling? If so, what is the purpose for its existence?

I think Malaysians are greatly perplexed and shocked by the stand taken by the Federal Court. Instead of enhancing the confidence of the public by “educating” Malaysians concerned by such extended terms, the stand taken by the Federal Court has undermined our confidence in the judges.

This quotation immediately comes to my mind:

Every time we turn our heads the other way when we see the law flouted, when we tolerate what we know to be wrong, when we close our eyes and ears to the corrupt because we are too busy or too frightened, when we fail to speak up or speak out, we strike a blow against freedom and decency and justice. – Robert Kennedy

READ MORE:  Why has Parliament not removed unconstitutional section of Land Acquisition Act?

Was the court mindful of the repercussions that may arise involving the cases adjudicated by the former Chief Justice Md Raus Sharif and the former Court of Appeal president Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin during their extended tenure – if a ruling was given?

Was that the reason why they refused to come up with a ruling? Would that suggest that the sacrosanct principles of justice were sacrificed on the altar of expediency?

The views expressed in Aliran's media statements and the NGO statements we have endorsed reflect Aliran's official stand. Views and opinions expressed in other pieces published here do not necessarily reflect Aliran's official position.

AGENDA RAKYAT - Lima perkara utama
  1. Tegakkan maruah serta kualiti kehidupan rakyat
  2. Galakkan pembangunan saksama, lestari serta tangani krisis alam sekitar
  3. Raikan kerencaman dan keterangkuman
  4. Selamatkan demokrasi dan angkatkan keluhuran undang-undang
  5. Lawan rasuah dan kronisme
Support our work by making a donation. Tap to download the QR code below and scan this QR code from Gallery by using TnG e-wallet or most banking apps:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
3 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dr. SNaidu
Dr. SNaidu
7 Oct 2018 1.29pm

I am quite taken aback by judge Zainum, as based on the above. I believe today, the culture of materialism and a sense of one’s community first at all costs probably, has caught on so hard- hopefully not ‘fossilizised’, it might take a whole, new generation of ‘educated’ MALAYSIANS to see things ‘as they are seen by God’. What else then? We are, as the Federal Constitution and the Rukun Negara purport, a one, multiethnic nation. Education needs to focus intensely today, at all levels, towards instilling a common set of Malaysian, nationhood values. Please, let’s get on.

Khoo Soo Hay
Khoo Soo Hay
7 Oct 2018 11.04am

Members of the judiciary, in their individual conviction of what is right or wrong, and purportedly on that issue were they selected to sit on the bench, should not be seen to
be protecting their species, whether already retired, or going to retire, unless they fear that
their pensions may be forfeited, which in this country cannot be done, without justice been seen to be so. It is not so much the pension of the judges, more important, in the pages of their biography, in their afterlife, that their acts had been seen to be above board, the very reflection of the oath that they took to preserve the life and justice of the country and its people. They should be the guardians of truth and liberty of our beloved country.

lavs
lavs
6 Oct 2018 11.17pm

wat would happen if judge were invited to decide cases like this where the subject matter of the dispute is non existence???hv any one heard judicial precedent???

3
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x