With only a few days left for the final hearing on appeals against the
acquittal of Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa to commence in the
Supreme Court, the Karnataka government on Tuesday filed point-by-point
highlights of the “errors” made by the Karnataka High Court in deciding
the disproportionate assets case in favour of the AIADMK leader and
three co-accused.
A Bench of Justices P.C. Ghose and Amitava Roy have scheduled the hearing on the Appeals to start from February 02, 2016.
The 7-page document listed 16 points of contention against the May 11, 2015 Judgement of Justice C R Kumaraswamy
which led to the exoneration of Ms. Jayalalithaa, N. Sasikala
Natarajan, V.N. Sudhakaran and J. Elavarasi in the corruption case.
Principally, the State government asks whether the bare fact that it was
neither considered nor ignored as the “sole prosecuting agency” in the
corruption case would not by itself vitiate the High Court judgment.
The Karnataka State wants the Supreme Court to address what would be the effect of
not repairing this omission throughout the appeal hearings in the High
Court till they were disposed of.
The Karnataka State’s document, filed by advocate Joseph Aristotle and settled by
senior advocate B.V. Acharya, asks whether the appeals were not vitiated
as the duly appointed Public Prosecutor was “never given the
opportunity” of an oral hearing.
His role was reduced to just handing over written submission, that too
on the orders of the Supreme Court, at the fag end of the appeals in the
High Court.
The Karnataka State Government pointed out that the acquittal can be set aside by
just correcting the “totalling mistake” to show that the value of
disproportionate assets of the accused comes to Rs. 16.32 crore, that is
76.7 per cent of the income, against the 8.12 per cent arrived at by
the High Court.
“Consequently, the judgment of acquittal is liable to be converted into
one of conviction even as per the purported principle in Krishnanand
Agnihotri’s case,” the State government contended.
The 1977 case law, quoted by the High Court, had held that an offence
was not made out if the value of disproportionate assets was found to be
less than 10 per cent of the income.
It said the logic does not apply in this case in which the disproportionate assets run into crores
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