Jayalalithaa death probe: Counter statement against Apollo Hospitals not warranted, says High Court

‘CoI can only offer its opinion on the nature of treatment’

April 04, 2019 10:52 pm | Updated 10:52 pm IST - CHENNAI

The Madras High Court on Thursday criticised Justice A. Arumughaswamy Commission of Inquiry (CoI) for its counsel filing a counter statement against Apollo Hospitals before the panel. The CoI is probing circumstances that led to hospitalisation and consequent death of former Chief Minister Jayalalithaa on December 5, 2016.

The Bench said, “The averments made by, or on behalf of the commission in the counter statement are in fact disturbing. The contents of the counter statement are per se unwarranted and not intended in inquiry proceedings conducted by the second respondent (CoI) in exercise of powers conferred on it under the Commissions of Inquiry Act of 1952.”

The counter statement had been filed when the hospital insisted on constitution of a medical board if the CoI wanted to assess the correctness and adequacy of the treatment provided to Jayalalithaa between September 22 and December 5, 2016. The hospital said a team of highly qualified and experienced specialists in the country, apart from top doctors from the U.S. as well as the UK, had attended on her.

The Division Bench made it clear that the CoI should have avoided the procedure of filing a counter statement against the party before it. When the court was told that the counter statement was actually filed by the commission’s counsel on his own without any instructions, the judges said, in such a case, the counsel concerned must be pulled up as rightly contended by senior counsel C. Ariyama Sundaram and P.S. Raman representing the hospital.

Authoring the judgment, Justice Subbiah went on to state: “We also wish to observe that the CoI is a fact-finding body and during the course of such inquiry, the commission need not attribute collusion, conspiracy or fraud etc. Therefore, we find some force in the submission of the learned senior counsel for the petitioner that the second respondent (the commission) exceeded its scope and ambit in conducting inquiry proceedings by attributing negligence or collusion against the hospital.”

The Commission could only offer its opinion on the nature of treatment given to Jayalalithaa, the judges clarified. They hoped that the CoI would strictly confine itself to the terms of reference and that remarks made against the hospital in the counter statement might not form part of the final report. It would be up to the government to act upon the report, they added.

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