VR KRISHNA IYER: (15 November 1914-4
December 2014)
Vaidyanathapura
Rama Krishna Iyer,
popularly known as Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer, is a former judge in the
Supreme Court of India. He was born at Vaidyanathapuram near Palakkad, in Malabar
region of Kerala in a Tamil Brahmin family, but grew up at Koilandy,Kozhikkode
District.
Justice Iyer educated in Annamalai and
Madras universities before beginning his life as a lawyer at Tellichery, an old
town in East India Company days and known for export of spices. Called to the
Bar way back in 1938, he says, “I sprang to lawyerly life with great élan and
lucrative practice as a junior in the chambers of my father V.V. Rama Iyer, a
leading member of the Tellichey Bar. Young in age, but with propitious
opportunities to cross swords with vintage wonders of the Malabar Bar and
beyond, it fell to me to spend my vernal years in versatile professional life.”
Justice Iyer got married in 1945 to
Sarada with whom he “had a happy span of conjugal, intellectual, aesthetic,
ideological, philosophical, spiritual and pubic-spirited community of interests
and a hundred other common bonds.” He was so happy with her that he adds,
“Rarest of rare is the marvel of matrimony when two souls, in all their finer
facets, fuse into one and face the changes and challenges of the world with
dynamism too deep to be ruptured and a cultural harmony that beats the sweetest
symphony.” He pays glowing tributes to his wife Sarada with whom he built two
lovely houses with “aesthetic attention.”
He started practicing law and defending
peasants and workers against the exploitation by feudal lords who had full
support of the colonial regime. In 1956, he was elected initially to Madras
Legislative Assembly and later, after reorganisation of states, to the Kerala
Assembly. In 1957, he
became a minister in the first Communist government in Kerala, serving until
1959. Having been the minister of law, power, prisons, irrigation and social
welfare in the Government of Kerala, he was instrumental in bringing about many
significant changes in these sectors.
He was appointed judge of the Kerala
High Court in July 1968 and his speech on the occasion of assuming office was,
“When my metamorphosis from lawyer to judge or its probability became known,
many of my friends and well-wishers were puzzled and some were even
scandalised. I was asked why did you? Did you really? I did not give any clear
reply. The truth was that the Hamletial dilemma of to-be-or-not-be affected me
too when I gave hesitant consent. Life is a rugged journey with its sharp and
strange turns; it is an odd adventure where the exciting forenoons are followed
by the mellow afternoons.”
He had excellent command over both
English and Malayalam, “but there was no conceit. Whatever he had to say he
would say euphonically, beautifully and emphatically. He pleaded, he urged, he
demanded and he warned, using his huge vocabulary as a sabre.”
Justice Iyer, in a glowing tribute to
Motilal Setalvad, Attorney General, says, “Lawyers beware. Today is bad enough.
Tomorrow may be too late. Let us create a legal profession for the people as a
tribute to Motilal Setalvad, who was a warm human being with a happy family
life, a clean career and sensitive span and a long tenure untarnished by
temptations to which many in commanding positions succumb.” He is no less in
his praise of Justice MC Chagla and Justice PN Bhagwati.
Two years after becoming judge of the
Kerala High Court, he became a member of the Law Commission of India. In 1973, he was sworn in as a Judge
of the Supreme Court Of India as of 2014, he is the last but one Supreme Court
judge to have previously served as a politician. He played an important role in an era of judicial
activism, public intent litigation, affirmative action though courts and a
wide-ranging exercise of judicial review for which the Indian judiciary is
hailed throughout the world today. Though his tenure in the apex court was
relatively short, he managed to make a lasting impression on the public.
The annexure to the book carries
correspondence exchanged by Justice Iyer with many eminent personalities
including the then Prime Minister and others. His view on the Ram Janmabhoomi
site was that the site should be excavated and if a Hindu shrine is found
beneath it, then the Muslim community should willingly agree to the removal of
the mosque and handing over the site to the appropriate authority in the Hindu
community. “In case the finding is against the existence of a temple,
consequential orders regarding possession and removal of the idols must be passed.”
He was conferred
with Padma Vibhushan in the year 1999.
When his wife passed away and he was
left alone, he said, “Now that I am alone, alone among six billion humans on
earth, the past slowly ebbs away and I conclude with Lord Byron, ‘What is the worst
of woes that wait an age? What stamps the wrinkle deeper on the brow? To view
each loved one blotted from life’s page, and be alone on earth, as I am now’.”
Eminent jurist and
former Supreme Court judge, Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer, passed away at a
private hospital in Kochi around 3.30 p.m. on Thursday. He died due to renal
and cardiac failure, hospital sources said. He was hospitalised for a
fortnight.
Justice Iyer, known
for his forthright views, turned 100 recently. He was sworn in as the judge of
the Supreme Court on July 17, 1973 and retired at the age of 65 on November14,
1980.
RED SALUTE.
C.Sunish.
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