The Supreme Court on Wednesday directed the Lieutenant Governor (LG) V K Saxena, who also holds the office of the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) chairperson, to file his personal affidavit by October 22 on issues concerning alleged felling of trees in the Delhi Ridge area. A bench of Chief Justice D Y Chandrachud and Justices J B Pardiwala and Manoj Misra was hearing a contempt case against the DDA and others over the alleged felling of trees in the area.
After going through the materials on record, the top court noted an ambiguity on certain aspects.
It wanted clarity on whether there was any discussion or intimation to the DDA chairperson on the top court's permission for felling trees during his site visit on February 3.
"In the event of the answer to the one above being positive, what steps, if any, were taken to ensure that the permission of this court was taken," it said.
The apex court further said if the answer was in the negative, when did DDA chairperson learn of the permission required.
It noted the actual felling of trees had allegedly commenced on February 16 even before a plea was moved before the top court and eventually dismissed.
The top court will further be informed about the steps taken for the restoration -- suggested in its orders -- of the ecological damage. "What steps have been taken against the officers for the willful suppression before this court of the fact that the felling of trees took place before the application was filed," it added.
The Supreme Court directed the LG to further inform if any disciplinary proceedings and criminal action were initiated against the erring persons.
The bench posted the case for hearing on October 22 and said that the affidavit be filed on or before the next date of hearing.
The contempt case against DDA vice-chairperson Subhasish Panda and others over the alleged felling of trees in the Ridge area was being heard by a bench headed by the CJI.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan had previously heard the matter.
The earlier bench had issued a criminal contempt notice against Panda for allegedly allowing large-scale felling of trees in the southern Ridge's Satbari area for the construction of a road from Chattarpur to the South Asian University.
It had expressed displeasure over a misleading affidavit filed by the vice-chairperson.
On July 24, another bench of Justices B R Gavai, P K Mishra and K V Viswanathan took note of two separate contempt proceedings pending before different benches over the felling of trees in Delhi's Ridge area and said it believes in "judicial propriety" and does not want any conflicting orders to be passed.
Two different benches were hearing related but separate aspects of the contempt case against the DDA reportedly leading to a potential judicial standoff and possibility of conflicting orders.
After going through the materials on record, the top court noted an ambiguity on certain aspects.
It wanted clarity on whether there was any discussion or intimation to the DDA chairperson on the top court's permission for felling trees during his site visit on February 3.
"In the event of the answer to the one above being positive, what steps, if any, were taken to ensure that the permission of this court was taken," it said.
The apex court further said if the answer was in the negative, when did DDA chairperson learn of the permission required.
It noted the actual felling of trees had allegedly commenced on February 16 even before a plea was moved before the top court and eventually dismissed.
The top court will further be informed about the steps taken for the restoration -- suggested in its orders -- of the ecological damage. "What steps have been taken against the officers for the willful suppression before this court of the fact that the felling of trees took place before the application was filed," it added.
The Supreme Court directed the LG to further inform if any disciplinary proceedings and criminal action were initiated against the erring persons.
The bench posted the case for hearing on October 22 and said that the affidavit be filed on or before the next date of hearing.
The contempt case against DDA vice-chairperson Subhasish Panda and others over the alleged felling of trees in the Ridge area was being heard by a bench headed by the CJI.
A bench of Justices Abhay S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan had previously heard the matter.
The earlier bench had issued a criminal contempt notice against Panda for allegedly allowing large-scale felling of trees in the southern Ridge's Satbari area for the construction of a road from Chattarpur to the South Asian University.
It had expressed displeasure over a misleading affidavit filed by the vice-chairperson.
On July 24, another bench of Justices B R Gavai, P K Mishra and K V Viswanathan took note of two separate contempt proceedings pending before different benches over the felling of trees in Delhi's Ridge area and said it believes in "judicial propriety" and does not want any conflicting orders to be passed.
Two different benches were hearing related but separate aspects of the contempt case against the DDA reportedly leading to a potential judicial standoff and possibility of conflicting orders.
You may also like
'Dance of death': Bengal governor on Mamata govt's Durga Puja carnival amid doctors' protest
New chip-based blood test can diagnose heart attacks in minutes
Inside Coleen Rooney's I'm A Celebrity stint with record £1.5m deal and hubby Wayne 'worried'
Major update after couple and their dog all found dead at home by horrified daughter
Jharkhand Police seek deployment of 590 paramilitary personnel for Assembly elections
Jharkhand's Healthcare Crisis: Pregnant Woman Gives Birth Outside Hospital, Sparking Outrage
Anjum Chopra Surprised By India's Number Three Dilemma In Batting Line-up
Reports: Pat Cummins to miss two-match Test series against Sri Lanka next year
Tesco announces major change to its meal deal
The world will be fueled by electricity but even more clean energy is needed, report says
Ratan Tata: 'Ratan Tata was Akash Ambani's guru', Nita Ambani paid a heart touching tribute
Typhus: Know All About The Silent Killer That's Spreading Fast
'I need them all' Primark shoppers swoon over £15 Christmas pyjamas
Watch Thomas Tuchel press conference LIVE as England confirm new manager
Car Tyre Tips: Tyre bursting while driving can lead to a major accident, in such a situation, you should know the maximum speed to prevent the car tyre from bursting.
Indian Navy is biggest guarantee of peace in Indian Ocean Region, says Rajnath Singh
Abu Dhabi: Free breast cancer screening announced across multiple locations
Gold hits fresh record high of Rs 78,900 per 10g in Delhi
NATO to make fresh push for common arms standards
Denmark Open: Sindhu enters second round; Treesa-Gayatri, Sumeeth-Sikki exit