Justice Sheikh A. Saeed / Justice Ijazul Ahsan
So Nawaz Sharif was perfectly entitled to claim that the Capital FZE monies did not constitute his income as he had not received it as yet. If it wasn’t his income, it couldn’t later form part of his assets either. Meaning, therefore, he was under no obligation to declare it.
Let me give another example. Like most lawyers — I have a number of dead-beat clients who, collectively, owe me a fairly hefty sum of legal fees. Some will eventually pay, others will not. Since I follow the cash-basis accounting system, I only declare fees that have actually been paid to me as my income. I do not declare fees payable to me as my income nor do I add them to my wealth statement nor do I pay taxes thereon just because I’ve already sent out the fee invoice and it has become a “receivable”.
If the Supreme Court applied the above standard to all, every single lawyer presently in Parliament would be disqualified if his unpaid legal fees were not mentioned as an asset in his nomination papers!
Even otherwise, the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasised that not every mis-declaration on a nomination form is ground for disqualification. The mis-declaration must pertain to a “material particular” which has been defined as a fact that — if disclosed — would have exposed you to disqualification (like holding of dual nationality).
Only last year, the Court declared in Murad Bux’s case — “[w]e are of the considered view that non-disclosure of a fact which otherwise, if disclosed, could not debar the Petitioner from contesting the election, cannot be made ground to preclude the Petitioner from contesting the election”.
As the bench itself pointed out during the Panama Papers case hearings, the Constitution does not bar the prime minister from holding another office of profit. If so, his omission to mention his salary from Capital FZE could hardly be termed a ‘material particular’.
In the previous round of the Panama Papers case, Justice Asif Saeed Khosa — in his minority judgement — quoted Bassanio in The Merchant of Venice: “And I beseech you, Wrest once the law to your authority: To do a great right, do a little wrong”. At the time, Justice Azmat Saeed responded with“[w]e cannot resort to exceptionalism by making a departure from the settled law and inventing a new set of rules merely because Respondent No.1 holds the Office of the Prime Minister. The last time in our legal history, when such a course of action was followed, it had tragic consequences.”
Unfortunately, the former view seems to have prevailed in the Supreme Court for now. When this happened the last time round, the “tragic consequences” were visited not only upon that prime minister but on the nation as a whole and the long-term credibility of the Supreme Court itself. If there was ever a judgement that begs review, this is it.
The writer is a barrister.
Published in Dawn, July 29th, 2017