Does the
government’s involvement in the appointment of judges to higher courts pose a
threat to the independence of the judiciary? This question is central to the
ongoing debate over the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC). The
NDA government's decision to replace the collegium system which has been in
place since 1993, has left the legal fraternity somewhat divided.
A few members of the fraternity firmly believe the collegium
system is "unconstitutional and anti-democratic" where judges are
appointed through "secret soundings and cronyism" while others say
that the government wants to "interfere" in the independence of the
judiciary and it needs to be resisted.
The
collegium comprises the Chief Justice of India, four senior most judges of the
Supreme Court and the chief justice of a particular high court and its two
senior most judges. The NJAC, which was brought into existence after inserting
a new article (Article 124A) in the Constitution, consists the Chief Justice of
India as ex-officio chairperson, two other senior judges of the Supreme Court,
the Union Minister of Law and Justice and two eminent persons to be nominated
by a committee consisting the Chief Justice of India, the Prime Minister, the
Leader of Opposition in the Lok Sabha or where there is no such Leader of
Opposition, then the Leader of the single largest Opposition party in Lok
Sabha. The eminent persons shall be nominated for a period of three years and
shall not be eligible for re-nomination.
At present, the Supreme Court is examining the constitutionality
of the NJAC and has refused to accept the government’s demand that the matter
be referred to a larger bench of 11 judges from the existing five-judge bench
headed by Justice JS Khehar. The court has said the hearing of the case will
"continue on merits".
Justice VN Khare, former Chief Justice of India, says there is
nothing bad with the existing system but accepts that there is scope for its
improvement. "There is nothing bad with the collegium system. It is, in
fact, superior to the NJAC in many ways. It will also be unfair to say that it
is not transparent. But yes, it can be further improved by making it more
transparent. One or two persons nominated by the President can be included in
the selection committee,” he toldFirstpost.
When asked who should be nominated, he says the President can
nominate an ex-CJI or judge in the collegium. But he strictly says there should
be “no say of politicians in the appointment of judges because usually, the
government is the main opponent in the people’s cases and there is chances
abuse of executive powers”.
He refused to accept the allegation of bias, favouritism and
nepotism in the appointment of judges but accepted that there is corruption in
judiciary. “I cannot claim that there is no corruption in the judiciary but its
prevalence is negligible,” he added.
Adding that the government passed the NJAC Act in “undue haste
and without consulting the judiciary”, Professor Faizan Mustafa, vice
chancellor of NALSAR University of Law, Hyderabad, told Firstpost, “The independence
of the judiciary is not the private right of judges; it is the right of
citizens. Ultimately, judicial legitimacy rests on public confidence in the
courts. Appointment of judges is seen as a crucial mechanism to achieve
judicial independence. Judges must be independent of executive, senior judges
and in their ideology.”
“The NJAC in its present form may not achieve these
ideals," he says arguing "We had the primacy of executive in the
appointment of judges in the first four decades of our republic. Though most of
the judges picked up under this system were independent, upright and fearless,
at times the government did succeed in appointing several pliant and submissive
judges." He feared that the NJAC with Law minister as member may be used
by the government in appointing judges of its choice. “Moreover, since the
government is biggest litigator, it should not be allowed to cherry pick
judges.”
There’s no clarity even on the two ‘eminent persons’ and the
vagueness is deliberate, he said. "They are to be selected by the Prime
Minister, the Leader of Opposition and the Chief Justice of India. One
possibility is that two politicians would join hands and make the CJI’s opinion
irrelevant as there is no mention that the selection should be unanimous or
alternatively the CJI in the hope of becoming Lokpal, Governor or NHRC Chairman
would join the Prime Minister and make the opinion of the Leader of Opposition
insignificant”.
Advocate Shahid Ali, senior lawyer at the Delhi High Court, says
the “attempt to interfere in the independence of judiciary through the NJAC
will prove to be fatal for the democracy and detrimental for fundamental rights
guaranteed in the Constitution”.
Advocate KC Mittal, former president of Delhi High Court Bar
Association and ex-chairman of the Bar Council of Delhi, strongly opposes the
collegium system but appears to be apprehensive about the future of the NJAC.
“After an extensive debate about the role and power of the
judicial processes, the framers of Constitution never agreed to absolute power
to the judiciary in matter of appointment of judges, leave aside the so-called
innovative idea of collegium. The text of our solemn document is very clear and
unambiguous,” he told Firstpost.
“Prior to 1993, the executive alone had the over-riding power to
make the appointments in consultation with the judiciary. The names of
aspirants to judgeship or recommendations thereto by the Chief Justice of a
High Court would get examined in the closed system of the executive. It was not
bound by the recommendations and was competent to take final decision,” he
argues.
However, in the Supreme Court Advocates-on Record Association vs
Union of India case, the nine-judge bench took over the power by judicial
interpretation to introduce the collegium system and make recommendations
binding on executive. Thus, the concept of “consultation” was judicially
transformed into “concurrence”.
“The system introduced by the judgment as reinforced by 1998
reference to the Supreme Court has been practiced by the apex court and blindly
followed by the government since then. The Constitution remains as it was
before the 1993 verdict.
Interestingly, he says, the reaction of the bar then was
positive as it thought that the removal of “evils” in the appointment of judges
would lead more welcome reforms, which would take care of “massive complaints
of nepotism, favouritism and even corruption”. “But soon, within a couple of
years, disappointment with the system was creeping as the scenario did not
change. Post 1993, the experience of two decades is that the system made by the
judiciary proved to be no less worse than what was prevalent in the
pre-collegium days.
The veteran lawyer alleged some compromise matrix works in
recommending the names at the whim and fancies of each member of the collegium.
“This is not gossip but truth filtering out of the experience and knowledge
gathered over the years. Everyone connected with the administration of justice
pontificates on the need to fill up vacancies but refuses to remove the basic
causes affecting the process of appointment based on give-and-take. This
pick-and-choose formula is disastrous as it undermines the creditability and
veracity of collegium mechanism. To put it differently, the experiences have
shown that those who have God Father in the higher ups make task easy and
smooth to push the name(s), even get cleared by the IB (intelligence Bureau) to
ultimately make appointment comfortably,” Mittal said.
He said people believe in evolution of the system but with the
passage of time it becomes redundant. “When the executive-controlled system
failed, the collegium came in. When collegium is now under shadow, we jumped to
the NJAC but where is the guarantee that the new law would not go the same way?
Is it humanly possible that six members of a supreme body will have firsthand
knowledge of each and every candidate? They would ultimately depend either on
hearsay or some source of their own. This again would be unscientific,
irrational, unpractical and unworkable,”
http://www.firstpost.com/india/collegium-system-not-perfect-superior-njac-says-former-cji-2242812.html
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