JusticeAdministration of Justice. Certain statutes regarding the administration of justice, were set up by the Buddha for the benefit of bhikkhus, in order to facilitate the dispensation of moral justice according to sound judgment, whenever the occasion arose. By this act the Buddha ensured that the spirit of moral justice which enables us to interpret laws correctly, unlike the imperfect expression of certain aspects of our present day legal administration. At the time of the Buddha and even later, there were kings who took advantage of, and made use of these laws to supplement their own. The judicial procedure adopted by the Buddha is clearly illustrated in the case of the Arahant Theri Kumara Kassapa's mother, who unaware of her pregnant condition,with her husband's consent left her home and entered the Bhikkhuni order. Later, finding her in an advanced state of pregnancy, the bhikkhuni was charged with a serious allegation of misconduct and summoned before a religious court of appeal. The Buddha ordered Upali Thera, foremost among His Arahant disciples in knowledge of Vinaya matters, (and thus equal to that of the Chief Justice of today), to preside, try the innocent victim and to deliver judgment on her. The audience consisted of bhikkhus, bhikkhunis and laymen, including the laywoman Visakha. She screened the victim from the presence of the Buddha and the rest. After careful examination and intimate questioning declared that she was quite innocent. The Arahant Upali on hearing the evidence absolved the bhikkhuni of any transgression.
Administration of Justice.