Pick Chief Justice of India on merit, and not seniority
The
present Chief Justice of India, Justice Lodha, is retiring on 27th
September , 2014, and the question now is who should be appointed his
successor ?
For quite some time the convention has been to appoint the seniormost
Judge after the Chief Justice as his successor. In my opinion now the
time has come to do away with this convention as it is often leading to
undesirable results which has caused great harm to the judiciary. The
Chief Justice of India is head of the judicial family, and an
undeserving appointment can cause great harm which may last for several
years.
It may be noted that there is no Constitutional provision or even a
statutory rule that the seniormost Judge of the Supreme Court should be
appointed as the Chief Justice of India.
In
England and in the US there is no such rule or convention. In England
the convention was that when the Lord Chancellor, who was the head of
the British judiciary ( until the Supreme Court was created recently),
resigned or died (there was no retirement age) the attorney general was
appointed as the next Lord Chancellor. In fact in India in the early
years after the promulgation of the Constitution, when a certain Chief
Justice of India retired at the age of 65, the then Union law and home
minister, Dr. KN Katju asked the then attorney general, Motilal
Setalvad, whether he was willing to take over as the Chief Justice.
Setalvad replied that he was ineligible as he had crossed the retirement
age of 65 ( see Mr. Setalvad's autobiography 'My Life').
In the US there is no such convention of appointing the seniormost Judge
of the US Supreme Court as the Chief Justice. In fact some of the
outstanding Chief Justices of the US Supreme Court were not even judges
of the US Supreme Court when appointed as its Chief Justice. For
instance, Earl Warren was the governor of California when he was
appointed Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, and he proved to be one
of the most outstanding chief justices, heading the Court which gave
historical judgments e.g. Brown vs. Board of Education (1954). The
present Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court was not even a Judge of
the Supreme Court when he was elevated directly from the DC Circuit
Court in 2005 at the age of 50 years as the Chief Justice of the US
Supreme Court, and he is proving to be a great Judge ( see his judgment
in the Healthcare case).
Perhaps
the convention of appointing the seniormost Supreme Court Judge as the
Chief Justice of India was adopted so as to keep away any controversies.
However, experience has now shown that this convention has proved to be
defective, and often results in grave mistakes.
Shanti
Bhushan, former Union law minister, and presently a very senior lawyer
of the Supreme Court, in an affidavit filed in the Supreme Court has
stated that half of the 16 Chief Justices of India, prior to the filing
of this affidavit, had been corrupt. Even subsequent to the filing of
this affidavit there have been Chief Justices of India, about whose
integrity grave question marks were raised. Their names are well known,
and need not be mentioned. A Chief Justice of India who retired recently
got his sister elevated to his parent high court although she was
almost 60 years old ( the retirement age of high court judges being 62)
and was widely regarded as undeserving. The Chief Justice of the high
court who recommended her name was rewarded by being elevated shortly
thereafter to the Supreme Court, while the Judge next in seniority ( who
has the highest standard of integrity) who strongly objected in writing
to her appointment as she was undeserving,was punished by being denied
elevation to the Supreme Court, while his junior was elevated. This is
the price which has often to be paid for honesty !
In my opinion the convention of appointing the seniormost Judge of the
Supreme Court as the Chief Justice of India should now be given up for
the following reasons :
(1) The seniormost judge may be a person of questionable integrity, or
may have done wrong things. I have with me a dossier ( given to me by a
senior member of the Committee of Judicial Accountability) of one senior
judge of the Supreme Court containing documentary proof of his
corruption, and yet he was appointed as Chief Justice of India being the
seniormost in the Supreme Court. A copy of this dossier had been sent
to the President of India and other high authorities before his
appointment as Chief Justice, but no heed was paid to it.
(2) The seniormost judge may be a man of integrity, but may be a
mediocre person. He, too, should be superseded, and a judge next in
seniority, or one even lower down in seniority, if outstanding ( as
borne out from his judgments),should be made Chief Justice of India.
I may mention in this connection that when I was appointed as Chief
Justice of Madras high court I contacted Justice Venkatachaliah, former
Chief Justice of India, and the father figure in the Indian judiciary,
to seek his blessings. He told me that some chief justices think that
their main job is administrative, and so they get bogged down in
administrative work, and neglect their judicial functions. This, he
said, was a total mistake and misunderstanding. The main function of a
Chief Justice is to give leadership to the Court on the judicial side,
by giving outstanding and landmark judgments.
So if a Judge is mediocre he will be unable to give outstanding and
landmark judgments, even if he is a man of integrity. In my opinion such
a mediocre Judge should be superseded.
(3) If there is an outstanding Chief Justice of a high court, he can be
directly appointed as the Chief Justice of India. In this connection it
may be mentioned that when the then Chief Justice of Bombay high court,
Justice Chagla, who was known to be outstanding, was sought to be
directly appointed as Chief Justice of India when the then Chief Justice
of India retired, this move was strongly opposed by the then Supreme
Court Judges who threatened to resign en bloc, and hence the move could
not fructify ( see Justice Chagla's autobiography 'Roses in December').
In my opinion it was highly improper for Judges to give such threats,
and Justice Chagla should have been appointed Chief Justice of India,
and the Government of India should not have succumbed to such threats.
If the Judges resigned, so be it. They could be replaced by others. No
one is indispensable.
I have already given the example of the present Chief Justice of the US
Supreme Court, Justice John Roberts, who was a Judge of a Court lower
than the US Supreme Court ( the DC Circuit Court) when directly
appointed as Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court, and he is proving to
be an outstanding Chief Justice, though much younger than his
colleagues.
At present I know of some outstanding Chief Justices of High Courts whom
I regard as deserving to be appointed directly as Chief Justice of
India.
In conclusion I repeat : when the present Chief Justice of India,
Justice Lodha retires, the Government of India should not go by
seniority but choose the fittest person and appoint him as the Chief
Justice of India.
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