It said nobody, including the lawyers, can be allowed to hold to ransom the institution which has to remain "effective" by maintaining its "integrity" and "dignity."
The apex court made it clear it was not going to examine the issue at the instance of the state government which has filed an appeal against the High Court order of October 30.
"The Chief Justice (of the High Court) and judges are entitled to say that the police is ineffective. You cannot allow the institution to be held to ransom. We will not allow this to happen," a bench comprising Justices T S Thakur and P C Panth said.
The bench did not agree with the arguments of Tamil Nadu Government counsel and senior advocate L Nageshwar Rao that paying an hefty amount of Rs 36 crore per year to the Centre for deploying CISF would be a problem and, further, deputing central force would affect the morale of the state police.
More From This Section
He said there would also be a language issue with the CISF at the High Court campus which is visited daily by 15,000 lawyers.
The bench told the counsel that the Tamil Nadu Government could go to the High Court and advance all arguments about the language problem and the morale of the state police.
"Go back to the High Court and point out the difficulties," the bench said and added "we don't want to handle the security issue of the High Court. High Court is competent to handle it itself. If High Court feels that there is inadequate security it can certainly ask for CISF cover.