Friday, 22 May 2020

MCB KOMAN, FIRST MALAYALI ICS JUDGE

He Had an Affair with the Daughter of the Governor General

Four Malayalis have become judges after getting into the Indian Civil Service. They are M C Balachandra Koman, ASP Ayyar, A L Fletcher and P T Raman Nair. While Raman Nair has been celebrated to an extent, Koman remains unsung. People from the backward communities seldom get recognition, since histories are written by the so-called elites. A S P Ayyar and Fletcher have never been identified as Malayalis.

A S P Iyer (1899-1963), or Ayilam Subramania Panchapakesa Ayyar, was born at Ayilam, a Palakkad hamlet.   K P K Menon has written a biography of him. He wrote his service story-Twenty five Years as a Civilian. He presided over the sensational  Alavandar murder cases. 

A. S. P. Ayyar was born on 26 January 1899 at Ayilam, a village near Palghat in Kerala state to a landlord father. He initially studied at Trivandrum and Madras, moved to England in 1919 to study at Oxford University, and became a lawyer. In 1933, he was elected as a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, London. He was appointed the justice of the Madras High Court during 1948–59. He married Vedanayaki Ammal in 1919.  Ayyar's son A P Venkateswaran, was a former foreign secretary.

Ayyar had published about 27 works which include novels, plays, short stories, literary criticism, religious works, jurisprudence, travelogue, biography and an autobiography. He translated several Sanskrit works into English.

Ayyar wrote his novels in the late 1940s and the early 1950s. His novels have historical settings. His first novel, A Historical Romance of Ancient India (1930) tells a story of a Gupta king who resisted the Hun invaders during the 6th century. His novel Three Men of Destiny (1039) is a story of Alexander the Great, with two other main characters: Chandragupta Maurya and Chanakya. 

Anthony Leocadia Fletcher (1909-1974) was also from Kerala. He was the son of Peter Fletcher and Helen Fletcher and was born in a Christian family in Kerala. He completed his school education at St. Joseph's Higher Secondary School, Trivandrum. He did his B.Sc. from the University of Madras and M.Sc. from the University of Nagpur. Then he went to the School of Oriental Studies for further education and joined as an Indian Civil Servant in London, in 1933. He had been the District Judge, Gujranwala (now in Pakistan) moved from the Judicial Branch to the Executive, worked as Commissioner, Jullundur Division and had a long stint as Financial Commissioner at Chandigarh. Fletcher was appointed the first Vice-chancellor of Chaudhary Charan Singh Haryana Agricultural University on 29 March 1970 and served until his death on 14 December 1974.

It was Raman Nair, as Registrar, who led Koman to the dais for the swearing-in as Judge of the Madras High Court in September 1945. Nair opted for Kerala after the state reorganization and became Chief Justice in the Kerala High Court on 22 February 1957. Nair was the Commission that enquired about the Andhra rice scandal during the first EMS government of 1957-1959. Koman enquired about the 5.5 Lakh scandal against Panampilly Govinda Menon.

Koman was thus the first Malayali ICS judge in the Madras High Court; ASP Ayyar followed in 1948. Nair was the only ICS judge in the Kerala High Court. Nair retired as Chief Justice in 1971-the only Malayali ICS officer to become the Chief Justice. It was Raman Nair, the presiding Judge of the Kerala High Court who ordered the liquidation of Palai Central  Bank on 8 August 1960.

38 Best Justice Koman ICS images in 2020 | Justice, Famous ...
Dr M C Koman's home Grants Garden, Vepery

Born on 14 May 1897 at Madras and graduated from Queens College, Cambridge in the UK, Balachandra Koman was called endearingly as Kuttimon received his I.C.S.
training from Haileybury in England.

Besides A S P Ayyar (1921) and K.P.S. Menon (1922), Under Secretary Ministry of External Affairs,  M.C.B. Koman (1923) along with N R Pillai, were the next Malayalis to achieve this coveted position. Pillai became India's first cabinet secretary. After serving in executive capacities, Koman was transferred from the Revenue to Madras Judicial service as Chengalpet District and Sessions Judge in 1935. S K Chettur, the nephew of Sir C Sankaran Nair, joined ICS in 1939, at age 34 and became Chief Secretary of Madras. M K K Nayar, in his autobiography, Story of an Era Without Ill -will, has said that in the 1940s, only one Malayali, K Balachandran had passed the ICS. There was a compulsory Indian language paper; for Malayalam, marks were miserly. In 1942 M S Ram got first class for all subjects, except Malayalam. He got only 46 in Malayalam, making it to the 16 th rank-only three were selected then. If he had got 61, he would have topped.

M K K Nair seems to have forgotten V M M Nair, who got into the ICS in 1942, along with Balachandran-Nair became Balachandran's brother-in-law. Nair belonged to an illustrious family, and his father Chettur Karunakaran Nair was a District Superintendent of Police in pre-independence Madras Presidency, an uncle Sir Chettur Madhavan Nair (a son-in-law of Sir Chettur Sankaran Nair) was a member of the Privy Council, another uncle Diwan Bahadur Chettur Govindar Nair was Law Secretary of Orissa before independence, and an uncle Chettur Krishnan Nair was Public Prosecutor in Madurai before independence.

K P S Menon was the only Malayali topper in the ICS exam.

V M M Nair or Vallilath Madathil Madhavan Nair was the last serving ICS officer when he celebrated his 100 th birth anniversary in 2019. He was educated at Brasenose College, Oxford and at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. In July 1942, he was selected for the second-to-last batch of the Indian Civil Service, both the smallest-ever batch of the ICS and the last for which direct nominations were made by the India Office in London. He was subsequently posted to Bihar Province as an assistant collector and magistrate. In 1946, he transferred to the Foreign and Political Department (the Indian Political Service. He retired in 1975 as India's ambassador to Spain.

M C B Koman was the son of Rao Bahadur Sir Dr M C Koman, Civil Surgeon, Madras General Hospital, and later Vice Principal, Madras Medical College. Balachandra Koman went to Presentation Convent, George Town, and graduated from Madras Christian College. Koman was born in the palatial bungalow, Grants Garden of Dr Koman at Vepery, Chennai. It was bought by G D Naidu in 1970 and the Gothic roof panel was demolished leaving only the tall structure.

M C B Koman was a Barrister-at-Law from the Middle Temple while a probationer with Indian Civil Service at Queens College, Cambridge in 1921. His first appointment was as Assistant Collector at Masulipatanam in Krishna District of erstwhile Madras Presidency He served the usual Revenue grades of District Collector, Under Secretary and Deputy Secretary in the Local Self Government Department and then became District and Sessions Judge at Chengalpet in 1935. 

Justice Koman was,  Assistant Collector and Executive Magistrate, Mangalore (1923 — 1935),  Judge, District & Sessions Court, Chengalpet (1935 —1940), District and Sessions Judge, Madurai (1940 - 1941), District and Sessions Judge, Tiruchirapally (1941 - 1942), District and Sessions Judge, Cuddalore (1942 - 1943),  District and Sessions Judge, Tanjore (1943-1946), Additional Judge, Madras High Court (07-09-1945 — 22-01-1946), Judge, High Court, Madras Sessions (23 -01-1946 — 01-01-1956) and Principal Judge, City Civil and Sessions Court (02-01-1956 — 31-08 -1958).

Koman was elevated to Additional Judge of the High Court in 1945 - 1946 when a European Judge went on furlough. Koman retired as Principal Judge, City Civil Court in August 1958. Thereafter he was appointed Honorary Director of  Legal studies at Madras Law College until his relinquishment.

In this biodata, it may seem that Koman, a High Court Judge, had become just a City Civil Court Judge towards the end-a case of demotion, which doesn't seem to be true. There lies the tragic flaw.

When the editor of Madras High Court Centenary Souvenir reported in 1962 that
"Koman reverted as District Judge, retired as Principal Judge City Civil Court in
1958", the year of his alleged reversal or the reason thereof was not made clear. 
There was no serious allegation or impeachment conducted against Justice
Koman. So what happened? 

Some vested interests were against Koman becoming a Judge. Chief Justice Sir Frederic William Gentle had resigned in 1948 on a difference of opinion with C. Rajagopalachari regarding Justice Koman's elevation to the High Court being made absolute the same year.



In an article on How the Madras High Court works, the High Court Registrar S.P.Thompson I.C.S. in the 1945 volume of Madras Law Journal says: "The original
side criminal work in the High Court consists of the sessions cases committed for
trial in the High Court which is quite distinct from hearing of referred trials. Since
1943 there have also been appeals from decisions at the High Court Sessions."

Randor Guy, the famous Tamil columnist admitted in his Madras Musings: "Until the end of 1955, criminal cases which originated in the city of Madras were tried by a High Court Judge sitting with a Jury of nine". This would help to dispel any adverse impression regarding Koman's alleged reversal.

A cursory reading of Letters Patent enacted by Statute 24 & 25 Vic.Cap. 104 of 1862
in connection with Chartered High Courts would remove any discrepancy regarding
the original criminal side of the High Court of the Sessions jurisdiction in Madras.
Koman's elevation to the High Court was under Section 2 Clause 2 of the same
a statute which stipulates that "members of the Covenanted Civil Service of not less than ten years standing and who shall have served as Zillah Judge shall be selected".

The sensational Alavandar murder case which rocked the city of
Madras in the early fifties was committed for trial before the single High Court sessions bench hearing of Justice M.C.B.Koman; its appeal was heard by a bench of two Judges in the same High Court complex presided over by Justice A.S. Panchapakesa Ayyar I.C.S, who became a judge in 1948. But legal luminaries seldom mention Koman's role in the case.

Alavandar case is a murder trial which was conducted in the Madras State in the early 1950s. The cause of the trial was the murder of a businessman and ex-serviceman named Alavandar whose headless body was found in one of the coaches of the Indo-Ceylon Express. After a trial which became a cause célèbre, Alavandar's ex-lover and her husband were found guilty of the murder and had been sentenced to brief terms of imprisonment.

The Alavandar case ~ Maddy's Ramblings

C. Alavandar, a pen salesman from Chennai was reported missing on August 28, 1952, by his employer Cunnan Chetty (the owner of Gem and Co). The next day a headless body was discovered in a third-class compartment of the Chennai-Dhanushkodi (Indo-Ceylon boat mail) Express. It was found after passengers complained about a foul-smelling trunk when the train was nearing Manamadurai.

Police investigating the complaint, opened the trunk and found the headless body. An autopsy done at Manamadurai concluded that the body belonged to a 25-year-old male. Since it was circumcised, the investigating police officer K.Khaja Syed Mohideen decided that the murder victim was a Muslim. After a few days, police discovered a severed head on Royapuram beach, Chennai. It had been buried in the beach sand but was exposed due to tidal action. The head and body were sent to Madras Medical College for forensic examination. Dr C. P. Gopalakrishnan, who performed the examination concluded that both belonged to the same 42-year-old male. Alavandar's wife later identified them as her husband. Alavandar had served in the British Indian army and his fingerprints were on file there. They were used to conclusively prove that the murdered man was Alavandar.

He was romantically involved with many women. One of them was Devaki Menon from Kerala. In 1951, Devaki broke off her relationship with Alavandar and married Prabhakara Menon. But Alavandar continued to harass her, and hence Devaki and Prabhakaran decided to murder Alavandar. Devaki called Alavandar to her house at the cemetery road on August 28, 1952. There the couple cut his head off and buried it at Royapuram beach in Chennai. They put the body in a trunk and left it in the Indo-Ceylon Express. Then they left Chennai for Bombay.

The couple was arrested in Bombay and brought to Chennai for trial. The trial caused a sensation and large crowds thronged the hearings. Lawyer B. T. Sundararajan, appearing for the defence, argued that it was a homicide and not murder as there had been "grave provocation". The jury found the defendants Devaki and Prabhakaran guilty. On August 13, 1953, Justice A. S. Panchapakesa Iyer in the appeal, awarded a seven-year rigorous imprisonment sentence to Prabhakaran for culpable homicide and sentenced Devaki to three years in prison. They ran a hotel in Palakkad after the case.

The Alavandar case ~ Maddy's Ramblings

Pending a good load of arrears of work in the business of the High Court,
Koman was elevated as Additional Judge of the High Court by the Madras Governor in consultation with Chief Justice Sir Alfred Henry Lionel Leach. As the Chief Justice went on furlough for three weeks, the oath of office was administered to Koman by Acting Chief Justice Sydney Wadsworth I.C.S. on 7 September 1945. Dressed in scarlet robes Koman was sworn in before a gathering of Judges and Advocates assembled in the Second Court hall of the Madras High Court.

The catena of judicial findings reported in Madras Law Journal 1945 — 1946, Madras Law Weekly vol.58, Criminal Law Journal volume 46, and Indian Cases volumes 216 - 221 provide incriminating evidence of Koman's ruling. After a very brief stint as Judge of the Madras High Court for almost five months, Koman was deputed by the Chief Justice to preside over the High Court of the Sessions to hear sessions matters from 23 January1946 till his retirement from office on 31 August1958. 

He left behind him an unequalled reputation of legal erudition remarkable and quite different from the pen of a prosaic and crabbed member of the Indian Civil Service. He proved to be an incomparable chief in the High Court of the Madras Sessions. Long years of experience as a veteran judicial officer at Chengalpet District and Sessions Court resulted in the stewardship of Madras High Court Sessions falling into his hands.

A keen interest in law induced Koman to take pleasure in the discussion of criminal cases. His judgments may lack the stateliness and dignity of T.Muttuswami lyer's pronouncements, or the subtlety and ratiocination of Sir Bhashyam lyengar's, although he lacked the extraordinary patience and insight of Justice Sadasiva Iyer in his appreciation of facts, Koman's judgments were instinctively sound and marked by the accuracy of thought and diction. With refreshing originality and a vivifying spirit, he brought to bear the discussion of well-worn legal intricacies. With a quick grasp of facts and a sure grip of the law, Koman's single bench pronouncement in the Alavandar murder trial remains a landmark in judicial precedents.

In the conduct of the trial, he was assisted by  Prosecutor Govind Swaminathan and by V.L. Ethiraj. Govind was the son of lawyer Subbarama Swaminathan, Tamil brahmin, and his Nair wife Ammu Swaminathan. He was the oldest of three siblings, the others being Lakshmi Sehgal or Captain Lakshmi and Mrinalini Sarabhai. He had his education at Madras and Oxford and qualified as a barrister from the Inner Temple in 1935.

Of the galaxy of Malayali judges who sat on the Bench of the Madras High Court in Colonial times were Justice Sir Chettur Sankaran Nair ( 1907 — 1915),  Sir Chettur Madavan Nair (1924 — 1939), Sir Mannath Krishan Nair,  C.Krishnan Nair (1920 —1927), Justice C.Kunhi Raman (1943 — 1948) and Balachandra Koman (1945 — 1946) and  A.S. Panchapakesa Ayyar (1948-1959). They revealed their glory and proficiency through the columns of the Madras Law Journal. 

Of these half a dozen Malayali Judges, Koman and A S P Iyer were the only ones with an I.C.S credential. Justice Koman sat with such eminent jurists as Sir Alfred Henry Lionel Leach, Sydney Wadsworth, L.C. Horwill, and M. Patanjali Sastri, and in Koman's death in 1968 it was felt that one more ring in the attenuated chain of the old order of the Madras Bench got snapped.

Koman was from Kannur and Kannur's Malikayil Chandappan family was then settled in Madras. That all of them could receive higher education from Edinburgh,
Sandhurst, Woolwich, Cambridge and London, before the end of 1920, 
is by themselves remarkable. This and several other examples from Malabar reveal
that even coastal ethnic groups from erstwhile Malabar district could strive to attain dizzy heights through intellectual attainment. They include Rao Bahadur V V Govindan (1869-1931), Asst Director, Fisheries, Madras, Govindan's niece Dr V V Janaki who became South India's first Gynaecologist in Mangaluru in 1905, V V Kunhiraman who was Magistrate in 1905, Rai Sahib P V Gopalan, President of Malabar District Board and later Member, Madras Legislative Council. Gopalan organized relief work and rehabilitation camps for evacuees and victims of Moplah Outbreaks in Ernad Taluk — taking a cue from his wife's uncle Rao Bahadur V.V Govindan who founded Fisheries Technical Schools under the Presidency (1919) P.V. Gopalan set up Elementary Schools in Malabar District known as Labour Schools (1920) to impart basic education to non - caste Hindus who fall outside Madras Education Rules. His uncle P.V.Chinnan was a boat and launch owner and stevedore contractor at the pier and was Customs Superintendent at Port and Shipping Office, ThalasseryIt gives a convincing impression of the upward social mobility of the seafaring subaltern class and other backwards classes even as early as in Colonial times. The picture painted by the infamous Swadesabhimani Ramakrishna Pillai in his editorial in 1910 that the backwards are intellectual buffaloes in front of the elite intelligent horses, is blown to smithereens even with the example of Dr Palpu, who was helped in the Madras Medical College by Dr Koman,  Koman's father. Dr Koman, who was a professor there, while Palpu was a student, later became its Vice Principal.

Dr Koman

Despite a plethora of printed hocus — pocus puffing with pride on several British Knighted peers of Malayali origin like Sir C Sankaran Nair, member of the Viceroy's Council, Sir Madhavan Nair, British Privy Counselor, Sir Krishnan Nair, Madras High Court Judge, Sir Parakkat Appu Nair, Barrister at Law, and Sir Karunakaran Menon, Vice Chancellor, Madras University, in showering upon them with numerous accolades while extolling their greatness, Sir Dr M.O Koman, Civil Surgeon, General Hospital, Vice Principal, Madras Medical College, and Assistant Director of Ceremonies, British Freemasons Madras Grand Lodge, has had the most misfortune of yielding himself to interminable amateurism of interpretation. People who only have a nodding acquaintance with the Malikayil Chandappan family at Thayyil in Kannur are prone to denounce this stray remark. No one seems to know of these accomplished individuals because newspapers rarely run profiles on them. Such antagonism comes from the fact that he and his children held a mirror to realities that caste Hindus refuse to acknowledge.

For the fraternity of South Indian historians who indulge in a conspiracy of silence on Sir Koman and his equally illustrious son Justice Koman, Major Koman a product of Sandhurst and daughter Vijayalaksmi Korman of Queen Marys College, seems to appear a collection of interrogatives and a gauntlet of anxiety. Perpetual contempt for Sir Koman and his ilk who hail from a family that predominantly shares with Sir Francis Drake and Prime Minister William Pitt in British history the same resources of a common pool sadly resulted in an irascibly incorrect and slipshod approach.


Chief Justice Lionel Leach

The consolidated list of graduates of the Madras University for 1930 printed from
Thompson Press, Madras in 1934 M. Balachandra Koman's name is found changed to M.Balachandra Krishnan and numbered as 1419 who passed in second class in 1918 with Mental and Moral Science as optional subjects. Reliable sources from the M.O family at Kannur reveal that for some time in his life Balachandra Koman styled himself as Balachandra Krishnan. In the pictorial Who's Who of distinguished personages, princes, Zamindars and Noblemen in the Madras Presidency for the year 1938 published by the Pearl Press, Cochin and edited by T.M Satchit it is found on record under the caption M.C.B Koman BA, BL, ICS that he was District and Sessions Judge Chengalpet.

In the biographical details of Indian Puisne Judges mentioned in the Madras High Court centenary volume, Justice Sir Frederic Gentle is the only Judge to be elevated to the Madras Bench (1936) who was a colleague of  Justice Koman  (1945) at Queens College, Cambridge University. The only other Indian Judge who sat on the Madras High Court (1943) being a member of Queens College, Cambridge is Justice P. Rajagopalan ICS. We learn from Columnist Randor Guy's article that Koman was the Judge who tried the case when it was taken up before Madras High Court Sessions in 1952. It is primarily because the Chief Justice generally nominates one or two Judges for Single and Division Bench to preside over each quarter sessions often held four times a year to try offences committed to it arising from the limits of the city of Madras. The Judge sitting in sessions wore scarlet robes and wore wigs. The Sheriff who presents a pair of white gloves to the presiding Judge wore his ceremonial robes carrying the wand and precedes the Judge during the ceremonial procession towards the place of trial by the Jury. The ceremonial procession was escorted to the trial court by the Chopdar carrying the silver mace with two of the Sheriffs' orderlies carrying javelins. 

Lionel Leach.jpg

Although at present Additional Judges of the High Courts invariably have an enforceable right to challenge their non-appointment as permanent Judges should such vacancies in the permanent cadre arise, Koman's alleged reversal cannot be seen as a probationary sent out of office pending completion. It is because there was no Constitution under the Crown, to question or challenge a non-existing entity. Secondly, Koman's alleged reversal was worked out in such a way that no complaint whatsoever could be entertained by philandering Koman.

Koman  had in his possession two automobiles - Studebaker Avanti chassis
No. MSZ 6018 and Buick Riveria of the 1960 model of cars.

Being a chronic bachelor Koman's scandalous affair with an Iyengar lady, the daughter of India's then Governor General C Rajagopalachari, who once eloped with him was the talk of the town in closed quarters. It came in handy to his enemies to connect Koman's amorous affair with his alleged reversal. They said it resulted in his promotion being withheld; Koman was thus constrained to the defunct position of paralysis as Chengalpet District Judge instead of attaining celebrity status as becoming the official of the I.C.S. cadre. Instead, the elevation of Koman as Justice of the Madras High Court has to be seen as a logical culmination of a phenomenally successful academic pursuit.

M.C.B. Koman, during his short tenure in office as Additional Judge of the Madras High Court, delivered no less than eight Single Bench and 19 Division Bench rulings. 

When the Travancore-Cochin assembly in 1955-1956 passed a resolution condemning police high-handedness on Maharajas College students from the Rajendra Maidan (which police action was wrongfully justified by Congress Chief Minister Panampilly Govinda Menon thus leading to his government's dismissal) it resulted in instituting an impartial Commission of Enquiry into the alleged incident by any sitting Judge other than that of Travancore or Cochin High Courts. Hence by a special Notification issued by Cochin State Government, Justice Koman was appointed a Single Member Commission of Enquiry to look into allegations levelled against former Education Minister Panampilly Govinda Menon and allied matters. Menon was education Minister under Chief Minister Parur T K Narayana Pillai during 1948- 1949. Koman's conduct of public enquiry without fear or favour was most scrupulous that he was applauded both by the press and the parlour alike.

Chief Justice Frederic Gentle who resigned

There is a widespread misconception that ICS was conferred upon Koman and he did not compete for the exam from London. This is a gross misconception and error inadvertent because the question of conferment arose only after 1950 when  India became a republic. M.K. Vellodi then working with Binny and Company in Madras was the first one conferred with an ICS after 1950. Vellodi was conferred ICS, along with V Ramakrishna, T Bhaskara Rao Naidu and Mohammad Shahabudin at the instance of the Justice Party to counteract the alleged prominence of the Brahmins in superior services. Koman was a product of Queens College in London like his sister Miss V. Koman of London University and another brother Major S. Koman, a product of Sandhurst.

When Justice P.S. Sivaswami Aiyar in his Reminiscences of the Madras Bar (1924 MLJ 14) states that "Sir Arthur Collins the Chief Justice was once presiding our the sessions court when Mr Johnston was addressing the Jury," shuttle of associations start flying to 1948 MLJ 26, wherein it is found endorsed that "Justice Sir Frederic William Gentle who retired the same year was a Judge who sat on the original side of Madras High Court before his transfer to Chartered High Court at Fort Williams in Bengal". As it is only apposite and appropriate to advert to the observation made by Randor Guy in his Madras Musings afore cited, Justice M.C.B. Koman's deputation to High Court Sessions soon after his elevation to the Madras Bench attains celebrity status. In the unique case with Justice L.C.Horwill I.C.S. who was a judge of the Madras High Court from 20 July 1936 till 4 December 1936 for exactly 4 1/2 months so was the case with Justice Koman I.C.S. who was Judge of the Madras High Court for exactly 4 1/2 months. Despite a plethora of printed hocus -pocus puffing with pride belittling Koman as the only judge who sat on the Bench of the High Court for only just a few months, nothing would be more accurate and precise than drawing this analogy. A report in 1943 MLJ 45 of an unconventional appointment of a District and Sessions Judge who belongs to the permanent service as Advocate General in Sindh as to violate the very spirit of the Government of India Act of 1935 and the conventions attached to that esteemed office, may be cited in this context to show that anomalies and official follies do sometimes creep into the Judicial Department in India considering Justice Koman's alleged reversal in 1956.

Of the only five Indians of the I.C.S. cadre who sat on the Bench of the Madras High Court, the order of precedence was: Justice V.Pandurang Row I.C.S. (1933), Justice M.Shahabuddin I.C.S. (1943), Justice M.C. Balachandra Koman I.C.S.(1945), Justice A.S.Panchapakesa Ayyar I.C.S.(1948) and Justice P.V. Balakrishna Aiyar; I.C.S. (1949). In a suit (Rama Reddi Vs Seshamma dated 22 January 1946) filed against a Hindu widow on a promissory note executed by her in the renewal of a prior promissory note executed by her late husband, Justice Koman ruled that as the debt was originally incurred by her late husband, and as his estate subsequently fell into her hands it is perfectly valid to pass an order against husband's estate. Similarly, at the time of Koman's retirement in 1958, K.Subba Rao who had the privilege of appearing before him earlier on behalf of the Appellants in January 1946 at Madras had become Judge designate at the Supreme Court of India.

Remembering C Rajagopalachari: 10 interesting facts about India's ...
Rajagopalachari, Governor General

If Rajah Sir S. Ramaswami Mudaliyar's name can be clogged to Kottapuram Women and Children Hospital built in 1903 for the only reason of erecting the Hospital on his land, then the New Head Quarters Hospital (presently Beach Hospital) built at Munnalingal in 1951 can justifiably be named after another Knighted peer Sir Dr M.C.Koman, on whose land this building stands. It is learnt from reliable sources that M.C. Andi, retired Revenue Inspector and his cousin M.C.B.Koman I.C.S. relinquished and freely surrendered 71/2 acres of coconut garden land called Mukkuvathodi to the Madras Government without receiving any consideration thereof. Not only is this genuine act of munificence obliterated, but several are privy to many a snide remark attributing ownership of this building site to Dr Mugha Seth.

When Indians were allowed to enter Indian Civil Service — this service,- called heaven-born service where heaven being some pale shadow of Whitehall —became the Elysium of English educated class. A notable feature of the I.C.S. training is that riding used to be compulsory. Shadilal the Chief Justice of Punjab High Court was an I.C.S. candidate in 1902 who came out with flying colours in the written test and interview but was disqualified purely on the ground he failed in riding. This would go not a long way in showing that the riding examination in the I.C.S. was a test of one's skill in trotting, cantering, galloping and jumping over a fence. Riding instils a sense of self-confidence and fearlessness, for a man who could control a horse would also know how to control a mob. In1921 there were four Indians and four Englishmen of the I.C.S. cadre posted to the Madras Presidency. M. C. B. Koman appeared for the test at the Cavalry School at Woolwich in London. 

Normally during the 3rd and 5th year of service of I.C.S. men were generally recruited to the Political Department of the Government of India. These officers were also largely employed in the Foreign and Political Department of the Government of India directly placed under the Chief Secretary, controlled by British Residents or Political Agents. In 1924 a Royal Commission headed by Lord Lee came to India and recommended that 25 per cent of superior Indian Civil Service be Indianised. Though Justice Koman possessed two automobiles — Studebaker and a Buick it is worthy of mention that in those days, only Governors, Army Commanders and High Court Judges were the only persons allowed to use cars.

Madras lost one of the historical traditions of the legal system in 1955 — the High Court of Sessions, where cases of murder, dacoity and rape would be heard was abolished.

M.C.B. Koman undoubtedly showcased an intoxicating aura of grandiosity. That he had an affair with the Governor General's daughter may have naturally offended the conservatism of the society. But again, Koman, the first ICS from a Kerala backward family still languishing in the dark alleys of history, is a testament to the backwardness of our so-called progressive society, where intellectual hooligans like Swadesabhimani Ramakrishna Pillai, still survive as statues, making statutes.


© Ramachandran 

1 comment:

  1. Justice MCBalachandra Koman ICS had a young brother by name MC Somanadha Koman a proud product of Sandhurst bearing in UK. He was a Major in Royal Army Medical Corps.

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