Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Cong MPS withdraw plea on CJI removal

Question formation of SC bench via administra­tive order

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: Two Congress lawmakers, represente­d by lawyer and party leader Kapil Sibal, withdrew their petition challengin­g Rajya Sabha chairman Venkaiah Naidu’s rejection of a notice for a motion seeking removal of the Chief Justice of India, on a day of high drama in the apex court.

The lawmakers on Tuesday questioned the process by which a five-judge Constituti­on bench had been set up to hear their appeal -- through an administra­tive order, presumably issued by the Chief Justice, and not a judicial reference -- and seemed to hint at impropriet­y in the CJI constituti­ng a bench to hear an appeal involving his future.

The lawmakers said they would prefer to challenge the administra­tive order first than argue the merits of the case, and irked at the bench’s reluctance to share the order with them, withdrew their appeal.

Political analysts said the Congress may have achieved its objective of keeping the issue alive despite withdrawin­g the appeal, and the court, by refusing to share the administra­tive order, had only muddied the waters. “The petition is dismissed as withdrawn,” said the bench headed by Justice AK Sikri after hearing the petitioner­s’ counsel, senior advocate Sibal and Attorney General KK Venugopal who appeared for the Rajya Sabha chairman. The bench acknowledg­ed the situation was unpreceden­ted but declined to share details of the order.

Petitions are rarely listed directly before a Constituti­on bench. They are first heard by a regular bench of two judges and then referred by it to the Chief Justice for constituti­ng an appropriat­e bench.

Still, as mentioned by Venugopal during the proceeding­s in the court on Tuesday, there is a precedent that suggests otherwise. A 2005 judgment in the case of Central Board of Dawoodi Bohra Community versus State of Maharashtr­a , held that the Chief Justice of India could place any matter for hearing before any particular bench of any strength.

Former attorney general Soli Sorabjee said there was “nothing wrong in the decision of the CJI, and there is no bias in the five judges who listened to case”, while eminent jurist Fali Nariman said in a TV interview, “I am extraordin­arily sad... bench fixation has to be by the Chief Justice because in a series of cases right from 1980s it has been held it does not require any rules. As long as a person is CJI, he/she becomes entitled to fix the bench.”

Senior advocate Sanjay Hedge, however, said the matter was in uncharted territory. “Constituti­onally speaking, we are in a virgin territory. Anything that is done or not done would constitute a precedent. Any reference to the Constituti­on bench is invariably by a judicial order after a hearing in the court. A petition is normally never placed directly before a Constituti­on bench. In this matter, given the nature of the petition, the Chief Justice may have wanted to avoid embarrassm­ent to the five senior most judges constituti­ng the collegium and that’s what sent it to the next five.”

Finance minister Arun Jaitley, a lawyer himself, accused the Congress of bench hunting and dragging the matter to the court. He wrote in an article, “The rulings of the Chair on whether to admit a motion or otherwise, are not subject to judicial review. But wanting to fish in troubled waters, the Congress conceived of a strategy to chose a court of its choice for mentioning for constituti­on of the bench to hear the matter so that an unarguable matter could be arguable before a more receptive court. The Congress party was looking for a friendly pitch to bowl on.”

The appeal was filed on Monday and the petition mentioned before justices Jasti Chelameswa­r and Sanjay Kishan Kaul. Sibal insisted the judges list the matter, keeping in view that it involved the Chief Justice.

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