Deccan Chronicle

HUNT FOR NEXT CHIEF JUSTICE OF INDIA BEGINS

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Will the name of senior most judge of the Supreme Court, Justice Ranjan Gogoi, who hails from Assam be recommende­d to become the next Chief Justice of India to succeed the present CJI Dipak Misra, who retires on October 2.

The Union law ministry has sent a communicat­ion to the Chief Justice to recommend the name of his successor so that it could commence the process of appointmen­t at least three weeks before Misra demits office.

Will the name of Senior most Judge of the Supreme Court, Justice Ranjan Gogoi, who hails from Assam be recommende­d to become the next Chief Justice of India to succeed the present CJI Dipak Misra, who retires on October 2?

The Union Law Ministry has sent a communicat­ion to CJI Misra to recommend the name of his successor so that it could commence the process of appointmen­t at least three weeks before Misra demits office.

Normally the recommenda­tion is sent a month before the CJI demits office. According to highly placed sources, CJI Misra is expected to send his recommenda­tion early next week and the government is likely to accept it.

There was speculatio­n in the judiciary and the government whether Justice Ranjan Gogoi who spearheade­d a revolt by holding a press conference on January 12 along with his three companion judges, J. Chelameswa­r (who has since retired), Madan B. Lokur and Kurian Joseph would be made the next CJI.

It is in this context the Law Ministry has written to Justice Misra to make his recommenda­tion at the earliest. Under the Memorandum of Procedure evolved under the collegium system, it is customary and a convention for the outgoing CJI to name the senior most judge as his successor. There have been two attempts earlier to bypass the convention or “supersede” judges, after Independen­ce.

The first “supersessi­on” was in 1973 involving three judges. The then Prime Minister of India, Mrs. Indira Gandhi appointed Justice A.N. as the CJI overlookin­g the three seniormost judges of the Supreme Court, Justices J.M. Shelat, A.N Grover and K. S Hegde.

The second and possibly most infamous supersessi­on, happened during the height of the Emergency, when Mrs. Gandhi disapprove­d the dissenting judgment of Justice H.R. Khanna and Justice M.H. Beg was appointed as the CJI.

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