- Introduction
This case deals with a unique situation where two advocates, including an Advocate-on-Record (AoR), were accused of professional misconduct in filing a Special Leave Petition (SLP) before the Supreme Court. It raised questions about legal ethics, the role of apology in judicial decisions, and how the judiciary balances punishment with compassion. Ultimately, the Court chose forgiveness over strict action.
- Facts of the Case
- The petitioner (convicted under the SC/ST Act and IPC) was represented by AoR P Soma Sundaram.
- After losing in the Madras High Court, the petitioner approached the Supreme Court for relief and sought an exemption from surrendering.
- That appeal was dismissed, and the accused was directed to surrender within two weeks.
- Despite this, a second SLP was filed by the same AoR, again seeking exemption.
- This second petition showed suspicious discrepancies:
- Petitioner’s signatures did not match.
- Affidavits had no proper explanation for disobeying the earlier court order.
- Applications were signed only by the lawyers, not by the accused.
- The Legal Issue
Whether the conduct of the advocates — particularly AoR P Soma Sundaram and another lawyer — amounted to professional misconduct, and if so, whether it warranted disciplinary action such as suspension or fines.
- Split Verdict (April 17, 2024)
- Justice Bela M. Trivedi:
- Found the lawyers’ actions irresponsible.
- Punishment:
- Suspended Sundaram from the AoR register for 1 month.
- Imposed a ₹1 lakh cost on advocate Muthukrishnan.
- Justice Satish Chandra Sharma:
- Acknowledged the wrongdoing but focused on the fact that both lawyers had apologized sincerely.
- Called the earlier punishment “too harsh”.
- Emphasized that mistakes, especially when apologized for, should not destroy a lawyer’s career.
- Final Verdict by 3-Judge Bench (July 2025)
Headed by CJI BR Gavai, the Bench agreed with Justice Sharma and chose not to punish the advocates.
Key Reasoning:
- The apologies were genuine and heartfelt.
- The majesty of law lies not in punishment but in forgiveness.
- The Court stressed that a minor lapse should not ruin a lawyer’s professional future.
- Referred to the relationship between Bar and Bench as two wheels of the golden chariot — both should support justice, not fight each other.
- Legal Principles & Takeaways
- Legal Ethics: Lawyers must be extremely cautious while filing documents. Even clerical mistakes can be taken seriously.
- Apology as a Legal Remedy: This case shows that the Supreme Court is open to accepting apologies if they are genuine, especially in cases without malicious intent.
- Judicial Leniency: Forgiveness can be applied in appropriate circumstances — especially for first-time or unintentional mistakes.
- Balance Between Discipline and Empathy: The Court highlighted a humane approach in legal profession regulation.
- Critical Analysis
- The final decision promotes a restorative approach over a punitive one.
- However, some may argue that this might set a soft precedent if taken advantage of in future.
- It also shows the importance of judicial discretion — while one judge may prefer accountability, another may choose mercy.
- For law students and practitioners, this case is a reminder to maintain high ethical standards, yet also provides hope that one honest mistake won’t end a career.
- Conclusion
The judgment in N. Easwaranathan v. State teaches a vital lesson: while the legal profession demands integrity and precision, it also values sincerity and remorse. The Supreme Court’s choice to forgive, rather than punish, demonstrates that justice can be both firm and fair.
- References
- N. Easwaranathan v. State, Supreme Court Judgment, July 2025.
- Bar & Bench legal news summary.
- Indian Bar Council Rules on Professional Conduct and Etiquette.