KARACHI, Dec 23: A federal law ministry notification issued on Dec 15 evidently moved Justice Agha Rafiq Ahmed Khan to the top of the seniority list of Sindh High Court judges, including the chief justice.

A law ministry notification issued earlier on Dec 12 ‘reappointed’ Justice Agha Rafiq instead of ‘appointing’ him a permanent judge of the high court like Justice Bin Yamin. Both the district and sessions judges were inducted as additional SHC judges on Dec 14, 2007, along with Justices Syed Pir Ali Shah and Arshad Noor Khan. While Justices Agha Rafiq and Bin Yamin were ‘reappointed’ and ‘appointed’, respectively, the latter-mentioned two were given six months’ extension each as additional judges by another notification of the same date. The Dec 12 notification, issued in the name of the president, treated Justice Agha Rafiq as a confirmed rather than an additional judge.

The notification of Dec 15 says that “on his reappointment under Article 193 of the Constitution (meant for appointment of permanent high court judges), the competent authority (the president) has been pleased to allow seniority of Mr Justice Agha Rafiq Ahmed Khan as a judge of the High Court of Sindh along with pensionary benefits on the basis of his original appointment as a judge of the High Court of Sindh in accordance with the Constitution and law.”

(The term ‘reappointment’ has been coined recently for judges relieved on Nov 3, 2007, but re-inducted after fresh oaths on various dates).

The notification does not specify the date of ‘the original appointment’ of the judge. He was first appointed an additional judge in 1995 but the appointment was challenged along with the elevation of a number of lawyers and judicial officers as having been made without meaningful consultation with the ‘judicial consultees’, the permanent chief justices of the high courts and the Supreme Court.

Justice Agha Rafiq then ranked below a number of his colleagues in the judicial service. He was laid off in pursuance of the Supreme Court verdict in the so-called Judges Case in 1996 and subsequently reverted as a district judge along with a number of other high court judges who ceased to hold office as a result of the judgment. A few days before the Supreme Court announced its decision, the then acting chief justices of the Lahore and Sindh high courts administered the additional judges oaths as permanent judges but they were nullified by the SC judgment.

The Dec 15 notification assigns Justice Agha Rafiq seniority with effect from the date of his original appointment without saying what the date of such appointment is. The subordinate judicial service tribunal consisting of two high court judges recently accepted his appeal for seniority against two judicial officers, including Justice M. Sadiq Leghari, who was elevated in 2002 and retired in 2006 on attaining the age of 62.

The tribunal decision implied that he was eligible for elevation in 2002 prior to Justice Leghari if the principle of seniority was strictly followed. But it did not and could not declare his competence for elevation, much less determine the date of his first appointment.

The obvious inference is that the Dec 15 notification refers to Justice Agha Rafiq’s appointment as an additional judge in 1995 or to his oath as a permanent judge administered by (the late) Justice Abdul Hafeez Memon, a Supreme Court judge appointed acting SHC chief justice by the second Benazir Bhutto government early in 1996.

If that be the case, Justice Agha Rafiq is senior to SHC Chief Justice Anwar Zaheer Jamali, who became a high court judge in 1998. Supreme Court Chief Justice Abdul Hameed Dogar was among the judicial officers elevated as high court judges in 1995 but his appointment was upheld by the Supreme Court. Advocate Rasheed A. Razvi was also a member of the batch of 1995 additional judges relieved after the SC judgment.

The Dec 15 notification allows Justice Rafiq seniority along with ‘pensionary benefits’, which he is already entitled to by virtue of appointment or reappointment on Dec 12 under a recent Supreme Court judgment. It does not, however, allow him other benefits, including remunerations, with retrospective effect.

The Sindh High Court reissued a seniority list of its judges soon after the induction of new permanent judges on Dec 15 and it placed Justice Rafiq at serial number 14. The latest notification seems to supersede the list.

Opinion

Editorial

System failure
Updated 12 Nov, 2024

System failure

Relevant institutions often treat right to internet connectivity with the same disdain as they do civil and political rights.
Narrowing the gap
12 Nov, 2024

Narrowing the gap

PERHAPS a pat on the back is in order for the ECP. Together with Nadra, it has made visible efforts to reduce...
Back on their feet
12 Nov, 2024

Back on their feet

A STIRRING comeback in the series has ended Pakistan’s 22-year wait for victory against world champions Australia....
Time to deliver
Updated 11 Nov, 2024

Time to deliver

Pakistan must display a serious commitment to climate change adaptation and mitigation at home.
Smaller government
11 Nov, 2024

Smaller government

THE IMF bailout programme has put the government under pressure to curtail its spending, especially current...
Unsafe inheritance
11 Nov, 2024

Unsafe inheritance

DESPITE regulations, the troubling practice of robbing women of their rightful inheritance — the culprits are ...