Somasunderam
Nadesan Q.C.
Reference to Death of late
Mr.S.Nadesan, Queens Counsel
made in Sri Lanka Supreme Court in Ceremonial
Sitting
at Hulftsdorp, Colombo, Sri Lanka at 10.00 in the
forenoon on 16 January 1987
"...Nadesan was a front rank lawyer who
was a crusader for human rights and an aggressive
champion of social justice...He will be gratefully
remembered by many a person coming from various strata
of our society. The Civil Rights Movement has lost one
of its founder members and an ardent human rights
activist and the country has lost a pre eminent lawyer
with a social conscience..." Sri Lanka Chief Justice
S.Sharvananda
Present:
The
Honourable Suppiah Sharvananda, Chief Justice
The Honourable R.S. Wanasundera , Judge of the
Supreme Court
The Honourable Percy Colin-Thome, Judge of the
Supreme Court
The Honourable Parinda Ranasinghe, Judge of the
Supreme Court
The Honourable E.A.D. Atukorale, Judge of the Supreme
Court
The Honourable,H.D. Tambiah, Judge of the Supreme
Court
The Honourable L.H.de. Alwis, Judge of the Supreme
Court
The Honourable O.S.M. Seneviratne, Judge of the
Supreme Court.
The Honourable H.A.G. de Silva, Judge of the Supreme
Court
Ranjan Perera Esquire, Registrar of
the Supreme Court
High Court Judges of Colombo, District Judges of
Colombo and Magistrates of Colombo
The
Honourable Shiva Pasupati, President's Counsel,
Attorney General
Dr. H.W. Jayawardene, Queen's Counsel
A.H.C.de Silva Esquire, Queen's Counsel
P. Navaratnarajah Esquire, Queen's Counsel
S.J. Kadirgamar Esquire, Queen's Counsel
V.C.P.G.Wijetunga Esquire, Queen's Counsel
G.F. Sethukavalar, Esquire, President's Counsel
H.L.de. Silva , Esquire, President's Counsel
W.Daya Perera ,Esquire, President's Counsel
Nimal
Senanayake, Esquire, President's Counsel
C.R. Gunaratne, Esquire, President's Counsel
E.R.S.R. Coomaraswamy Esquire, President's
Counsel
N.R.M. Daluwatte, Esquire, President's Counsel
P.A.D. Samarasekera , Esquire, President's
Counsel
M.D.H.Fernando, Esquire, President's Counsel
Edward Silva, Esquire President's Counsel
and a representative gathering of
both branches of the Profession
The Honourable, the Attorney General:
Your Lordship,
Hardly a day has passed since Mr. Nadesan's death some
weeks ago without an appreciation in some newspaper or
other, from among the very large circle of friends,
admirers and a grateful public.
He graced the Bar for 55 years and lived up to his 83rd
year when most others would have outlived their
usefulness to society. However, when Mr. Nadesan died, it
was on everyone's lips that his demise was a tragedy. A
lawyer who for decades had fought and continued to fight
right up to the time of his death for many a cause was no
more.
He was a student at the Jaffna Hindu College and came
over later to Royal College on winning the Governor's
Scholarship. A colleague of his who was with him at Royal
College mentioned to me a few days ago an incident in his
class in the year 1921, which he recalled. A foreign
teacher referred to the great philosophers of the western
world and in answer to a query why there were no such
great men in the East at that time, the teacher referred
to Gauthama Buddha. Thereupon there was a sneer in the
class which was understandable in the context of the
composition of the class in the colonial days of that
time. It was then that young Nadesan jumped up and
rebuked those in the class responsible for this and
implored them not to exhibit such servile mentality. It
was this same fiery spirit that manifested itself
throughout his life.
He stood up for certain principles, regardless of the
consequences. He had one of the most incisive and logical
minds and for counsel of his eminence there was no
distinction between civil, criminal or constitutional
matters. He handled all of them with equal facility and
left his indelible impression in all branches of the
law.
Lord Macmillan said that the duty of the advocate is five
fold . In the discharge of his office the advocate has a
duty to his client, a duty to his opponent, a duty to the
Court, a duty to himself and a duty to the State and
added that "to maintain a perfect poise amidst these
various and sometimes conflicting claims is no easy
feat." However, Mr. Nadesan performed this feat with
ease. He would graciously concede matters of facts or
law, even if they were unfavourable to his case He would
narrow down his case to only a few matters which he would
emphasis were basic. From then on, he would with patience
unravel his submissions. The written submissions which he
often handed over at the end of a protracted case
evidenced not only the logic of his reasoning but also
the dedication with which he espoused the cause of his
client.
Future generations will remember him not merely for his
triumphs at the Bar but for the dynamic and valiant
efforts he made throughout his long and eventful career,
to preserve through the judicial process, the cherished
values of any democratic society.
Nimal
Senanayake, President's Counsel and the President of
the Bar Association of Sri Lanka:
Your Lordships,
This nation has lost a champion of democracy. In a
country whose Constitution proclaims that it is a
Democratic Republic many have to protest that they
cherish democratic ideals. They do so as mere slogans to
be forgotten as quickly as they are uttered. But Mr.
Nadesan in his sagacity knew that those cherished ideals
were indispensable for the progress of a nation, that
there could be no progress without a sense of national
dignity, and national dignity comes only each and every
citizen known that each and every other citizen is
assured of fair play. It is this pre occupation with fair
play which made Mr. Nadesan such a relentless fighter
against arbitrariness and corruption.
Yet, Mr. Nadesan was not dogmatic in any matter. He
could always be persuaded to change his point of view. A
classic instance was when Mr. Nadesan as a Senator
supported the infliction of the death penalty. Later he
acknowledged the total irrationality of the death penalty
and became a member of the Committee for the abolishment
of the death penalty.
A combination of his insistence on justice for all and
his rational approach to any case won him recognition in
almost every field of law whether in matrimonial
disputes, money claims, company law, arbitration or
constitutional law. Dearest to his heart however were
those cases where he had to secure the freedom of an
individual or the Press.
He had his weakness. When a press photographer was dealt
with by parliament for a breach of Parliamentary
privilege, Mr. Nadesan's ire was aroused. He volunteered
a penetrating critique of Parliament's attitude which he
criticised as lacking a proper appreciation of what
Parliamentary privilege was all about. The members of
that August assembly resenting his expose reacted with
proceedings against Mr. Nadesan. He appeared to revel in
being made a martyr to a cause, much to the consternation
of his friends and seemed merely disappointed when he was
acquitted. He could chuckle at his own situation. When I
congratulated him he told me that the court had acquitted
him after giving all the reasons for a conviction when
usually it is the other way round.
My Lords there are many men and women here and abroad who
walk as free persons because of Mr.Nadesan. To them and
his friends, to the Judges and the Bar and above all to
the members of his family his passing away was a sad
blow. May Your Lordship be pleased to communicate these
proceedings to the members of his family .
The Honorable Chief Justice:
On behalf of the Judges of this Court, I associate myself
with the tributes paid by you to the late Mr. S.
Nadesan.
When just before the Christmas vacation Mr.Nadesan got an
appeal especially fixed for hearing on the 21st of this
month, neither he nor others in Court had any reason to
suspect that he would not be able to keep the date.
Though he was well past the biblical span of life and was
reaching 83 years of age next month, he was still
vibrating with good health, physically fit and
intellectually alert, nobody looking at him would have
said that death was waiting next door to pounce on him.
Mr. Nadesan passed away from our midst on the 21st of
last month, The large gathering that had assembled at his
funeral inspite of heavy rain at Kanatte on the 22nd was
an index of the esteem, respect and affection in which he
was held by members of the Bar and the public,
irrespective of race, religion or party.
Mr,Nadesan was a distinguished old boy at Jaffna Hindu
College and Royal College which he entered on a
scholarship. After passing out as an Advocate in 1931, he
started practice in Colombo. It was only after some
struggle that he was able to find his feet at Hultsdorp.
But, once he survived the testing period which a junior
without the advantage of any legal connection has to
endure, he by sheer dint of merit climbed the spiral
stairway of success and became a Queen's Counsel in 1954.
That according to the high standards of the day he fully
deserved that honour of silk was undisputed.
His services were much in demand in the several Courts
and tribunals in the Island. It could be said of several
eminent lawyers that they specialised and made their mark
in the civil or criminal side or in the original or
appellate Court or in some commercial subject or other.
But it can be said of only Mr. Nadesan that be was an
all-rounder, quite at home whether it be in the Privy
Council, Supreme Court, Election Court, the Income Tax
Board of Review or Industrial Arbitrator or Parliamentary
Committee. I am told that the performance before the
Parliamentary Committee where he appeared for
the last Chief Justice was simply brilliant.
In 1943, during the height of the second world war when
Ceylon was a crown Colony Mr,Nadesan appeared in the
Colombo Assize Court for Mr. Aziz , who faced a charge of
sedition and secured an acquittal inspite of a hostile
bench. Mr.Aziz and witnesses of the trial are still full
of praise for Mr. Nadesan's forensic talent.
Mr. Nadesan as recently as a few months ago appeared in
the High Court ,Colombo for Mr. Paul Nallanayagam, a
Canadian citizen who was indicted for treason. After a
hard-fought and doughty trial Mr. Nallanayagam was
acquitted. The acquittal is in a great measure
attributable to the matchless skill and advocacy of
Mr.Nadesan.
The secret of Mr. Nadesan's success as a lawyer was his
keen sense of relevancy, his grasp of fundamental
principles of law and his uncanny perception of the weak
points in his opponent's case. He had a flair for
detecting the flaws in his opponent's case and reasoning.
No perjurer could get off his hands without being
exposed. He never bullied witnesses but would laugh with
an adverse witness and laugh out the opposite party's
case.
Mr. Nadesan ably expounded the cause of the freedom of
the Press when he challenged the Press Council Bill
before the Constitutional Court in 1975. The 1978 Constitution gave the opportunity to
Mr. Nadesan to expatiate on Fundamental Rights, when such
rights were made justiciable before the Supreme Court. He
was a passionate advocate of Fundamental Rights. His
exposition of Fundamental Rights gave a new dimension to
the concept of Fundamental Rights . He was dedicated to
the championship of Human Rights. His role as a human
right activist is too be well known to be dwelt upon
here. So is his role as a Senator. His sober ,
enlightened, and critical contribution to the Senate
debates vindicated the high regard in which he was held
by all the political parties of the day.
Mr. Nadesan believed not only in a sound mind but also in
a sound body. If I may strike a personal note, his advice
to me always was not to neglect my health, but to keep
physically fit. He believed in nature cure and made a
special study of it and freely made available the benefit
of his knowledge to any suppliant.
Mr. Nadesan was a versatile person. One can dwell at
length on his multi-faceted personality. He was not
without his professional and political detractors; who
has not? But there is no denying the fact that he was a
dynamic personality who made a lasting impact in the
sphere of law and politics. He was a front rank lawyer
who was a crusader for human rights and an aggressive
champion of social justice. He is a class by himself. He
can never be imitated. He has left a void in the legal
world. He will be gratefully remembered by many a person
coming from various strata of our society. The Civil
Rights Movement has lost one of its founder members and
an ardent human rights activist and the country has lost
a pre eminent lawyer with a social conscience.
|