Law to Weed out Touts is Inadequate and Needs to be Done More
Law to Weed out Touts is Inadequate and Needs to be Done More
The presence of touts is ubiquitous in any court,
be it district, High Court or even the Supreme Court. Why only courts- this is
a common sight of any government office dealing with the public. So much so,
even in the hospitals, touts rule the roost. Police stations remain hovered by
the touts all the time. Even an FIR cannot be lodged without the help of the
touts. As far as the courts are concerned, touts are found on all their gates
itself. Many advocates depend on them because it is they who bring cases to
them and in return get good commissions. Many touts have their own independent
offices, and they operate by giving a façade of computer operators or typists.
That is why, the Advocate Amendment Bill 2023 passed by Parliament the other
day is a welcome law.
Verily speaking, the judicial system
is swamped with touts. The definition of tout that has been given in the new
Advocates (Amendment) Bill of 2023 is ‘a person, who procures, in consideration
of any remuneration moving from any legal practitioner, the employment in any
legal business.’ It further says that ‘who for such procurement frequents the
precincts of Civil or Criminal Courts or revenue-offices, or railway stations,
landing stages, lodging places or other places of public resort.’ The need for bringing in changes in India’s
judicial administration was felt immediately after independence. The Law
Commission was tasked with preparing a report on reforms. In its 249th Report
titled ‘Obsolete Laws: Warranting Immediate Repeal’, the Commission recommended
repealing the 1879 Act. Additionally, the All-India Bar Committee made its
recommendations on the subject in 1953. Taking these into account, the 1961 Act
was passed.
However, this Amendment is inadequate unless
the judges and advocates come forward to root this out, it will be highly
impossible to get rid of this disease. The new
provision, Section 45A, states that the Bill enables every HC and district
judge to frame and publish lists of touts. However, no person’s name will be
included in any such list until they have had an opportunity to show cause
against such inclusion. Further, any authority empowered to make lists of
alleged or suspected touts can send them to any subordinate court, which, after
holding an inquiry into the conduct of such persons, will allow them an
opportunity to show cause. After this, the lower court will report back to the
authority ordering the inquiry. If proven to be a tout, the person’s name will
be included in the list of touts that will be published by the authority and
hung in every court. The court or judge may exclude any person whose name is
included in any such list from the court’s vicinity. Additionally, this
provision punishes anyone acting as a tout ‘while his name is included in any
such list’ with imprisonment up to three months, a fine that may extend to five
hundred rupees or both.
Touts are, in fact, all-pervasive. They
are present at the houses and offices of ministers/ politicians, who not only
make money but also allow the touts to make money due to their influence and
proximity to powerful politicians. The names of the touts can be published by
the courts but what about touts who are Ll. B degree holders and work in the
garb of advocates? These people work as middle persons for the judges and the
advocates, which is monetarily and mutually beneficial to both. It may sound strange, but it is a fact that touts are operating even at
the famous temples, and they swoop on pilgrims at the bus stations, inside the
trains and railway stations or near the temples.
Apart from the
effective laws, what is needed is general awareness among the people. The
administration has to have determination and necessary firmness in dealing with
the pests of touts. But then the administration itself will have to cure itself
from the infection of touts. If the senior advocates and judges do not show any
leniency towards touts, more than half the problem will be automatically
solved.
The decision of the government to repeal
all obsolete and superfluous laws, which have lost their utility, which is
often used by insensitive officers is also a welcome step. In the process, more
than one thousand laws have already been abrogated but hundreds more
need to be consigned.
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