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regular-article-logo Saturday, 23 November 2024

Justice Sanjib Banerjee skips farewell tea, pens a gracious thank you letter

My regret is that I could not completely demolish the feudal culture in which you serve, writes outgoing Madras High Court chief justice who has been transferred to Meghalaya

Paran Balakrishnan New Delhi Published 17.11.21, 05:58 PM
Justice Sanjib Banerjee

Justice Sanjib Banerjee File picture

Sanjib Banerjee, the outgoing chief justice of the Madras High Court, has stepped down from his post after penning a gracious letter to the lawyers, judges and the court officers who had worked with him during his brief 11-month tenure.

Banerjee has been ordered transferred by the Supreme Court to the much smaller Meghalaya court in a move that has stirred widespread protests from lawyers at the Madras High Court.

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Banerjee heaped praise upon the Madras High Court’s lawyers, saying, “You are amongst the best in the country,” and thanked them for putting up with “a talkative and sometimes grumpy old judge with more patience, respect and understanding than I may have deserved.”

Banerjee had made strenuous efforts to shake up the court’s registry and introduce more transparency and accountability in its functioning.” He acknowledged that it was a work in process, saying: “I am sorry for the long hours you have had to keep for me. My regret is that I could not completely demolish the feudal culture in which you serve.”

Banerjee’s transfer after just 11 months as the Madras High Court chief justice to Meghalaya has caused an uproar. One group of 237 lawyers wrote last week to the Chief Justice of India N. V. Ramana protesting at the transfer. A second group of 23 Madras High Court senior lawyers also wrote a strong letter to the Chief Justice of India.

The outgoing chief justice addressed his letter to, “My dear family at the Madras High Court.” The Madras High Court is the fourth-largest in the country with a sanctioned strength of 75 judges. The Meghalaya High Court, by contrast, is one of the country’s smallest with a strength of four judges. Banerjee’s transfer is widely seen in legal circles as a punishment posting for his secular judgements and efforts to crack down on corruption.

Banerjee’s letter was in lieu of the farewell tea party that is customary on such occasions.

Banerjee started his letter by apologising to his fellow judges. “To my colleagues at the Bench: I apologise. First, for being unable to last the distance and second, for not saying goodbye to you in person.” He threw in an additional apology, saying: “To the few of you who may have felt offended by any of my actions, please know that they were never personal: I perceived those actions as necessary for the institution.”

The outgoing chief justice ended his letter saying that he and his wife, Ranee, “remain forever indebted to everyone in this beautiful and glorious state we had the privilege of calling our own for the last eleven months and for the kindness and warmth with which we were greeted during the entire tenure.”

Banerjee signed off with the Tamil words: "Nandri. Vanakkam", meaning Thank you and Namaste

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