Needed: Dialogue, statesmanship
Because we cannot risk another judicial decision on appointments, writes FALI S. NARIMAN.
In the Constitution of India, 1950, the
appointing authority for judges in the higher judiciary is the
government of India, acting in the name of the president of India.
Judges of the Supreme Court are appointed after consultation with the
chief justice of India (CJI) and other judges of the Supreme Court (or
high courts) as the appointing authority deems necessary for the
purpose; judges of high courts are appointed after consultation with the
CJI, the governor of the concerned state and the chief justice of the
concerned high court. This simply worded prescription — expressed in
Articles 124(2) and 217(1) — worked well in practice for the first two
decades. By convention, whosoever the CJI recommended as judge was,
almost invariably, appointed; whom the CJI did not recommend was not
appointed.
But in 1981, in the S.P. Gupta case, much
later known as the “first judge’s case”, a bench of seven judges of the
Supreme Court presided over by Justice P.N. Bhagwati held (4:3) that
the recommendations of the CJI for judges to be appointed in the higher
judiciary were, constitutionally, not binding on the government of
India. The (Congress) government, then in office, was delighted. It was
now payback time. So when Bhagwati assumed office as CJI, the Congress
government, still in office, declined to appoint judges recommended by
him, since it was he who had judicially declared (in the S.P. Gupta
case) that “consultation” in Article 124 did not mean “concurrence”.
It was much later, with the accumulated
experience of the deleterious consequences flowing from the majority
judgment in the first judges case, that new faces on the bench decided
to take a “fresh look” at Article 124(2). In what has now become known
as the “second judges case” (1993), a bench of nine judges held (by a
majority, 7:2) that a collegiate opinion of a collectivity of judges was
to be preferred to the opinion of the CJI. It also said that if the
government did not accept the “recommendation” of the “collegium” (then
consisting of the three senior-most judges), it would be presumed that
the government had not acted bona fide.
Even after the judgment in the second
judges case, recommendations made by the collegium were not made in the
spirit in which the new doctrine had been propounded, since the
collegiate of the three highest constitutional functionaries (the
senior-most judges of the court) could not see eye to eye in the matter
of appointment of judges to the higher judiciary. So when (again, by
convention) the then senior-most judge, Justice M.M. Punchhi, became the
CJI in January 1998 and recommended, with the concurrence of his two
senior-most colleagues, that a particular list of five named persons be
appointed to fill the vacancies in the highest court (all strictly in
accordance with the methodology laid down in the second judges case),
the government took exception to some of the names — justifiably,
according to disinterested and knowledgeable persons.
But the CJI was adamant. When the
government said that some of the names suggested could be accepted, but
not all, the CJI said: “It will be all or none.” Apprehending the
initiation of contempt proceedings, the government of the day (the NDA
government with the BJP in the driving seat) thought it expedient to
seek a presidential reference under Article 143 of the Constitution for
the advisory opinion of the Supreme Court on certain dicta expressed in
the second judges case.
All that ultimately happened after the
presidential reference was that the collegiate was enlarged (by judicial
diktat) from three to five of the senior-most justices, perhaps on the
principle that there was greater safety in larger numbers. Meanwhile,
Chief Justice Punchhi demitted office since he had reached the
constitutional age of retirement. His successor, along with the four
senior-most justices in the collegium, recommended names of appointees,
which were accepted. This shows (it is said) that the collegium system
worked. The response of lawyers has been, “Yes, but not always in this
manner.”
The truth is that the system of
recommendation for judicial appointments by a collegium of the five
senior-most judges (like that of the three that went before) is not
institutionalised: no mechanism is prescribed (by the collegium itself),
no office is set up, no data gathered in advance, no criteria evolved
as to who among the high court judges — all aspirants to a place in the
Supreme Court — should be recommended. There is no reason given as to
why a broad consensus among all the justices of the Supreme Court is not
to be preferred to the views only of the five senior-most.
The entire system operates ad hoc, based
on no principle. And the choice of judges to be recommended has varied
in quality with the collegium’s fast-changing composition. The system
has failed, according to me and many others. But in the opinion of the
judges, including a succession of chief justices of India, it has not.
More importantly, the BJP government that is now in office had, as part
of the NDA government in 1998, categorically informed the nine-judge
bench hearing the presidential reference that it was not seeking a
review of the judgment in the second judges case — the judgment that
first initiated the novel idea of a “collegium” of senior-most judges.
In this situation, what would be the
right thing to do? I believe that before embarking on the new experiment
of a broad-based National Judicial Commission, even one loaded with a
majority of sitting judges as members, it is imperative that there
should be meaningful dialogue between the executive and the collectivity
of all the judges of the Supreme Court (represented by its chief
justice), so that a mutually acceptable solution can be found. It must
be found. Statesmanship is the need of the hour, because we cannot risk
another judicial decision. The executive, the judges and the lawyers
must resolve to avoid, at all cost, a fourth judges case.
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