Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Don’t doubt govt’s intent on next CJI: Law minister

NORM Says name of new appointee will be discussed after current CJI’S recommenda­tion

- Jatin Gandhi

Our government’s record on appointmen­ts has been better than previous government­s. In 2016, we appointed a record 126 judges after By the end of this year, we will pass that number. RAVI SHANKAR PRASAD, law minister, on charge that govt was delaying judicial appointmen­ts

NEW DELHI: The government’s intentions over the appointmen­t of the next Chief Justice of India (CJI) should not be questioned, law minister Ravi Shankar Prasad said on Monday, adding that the name would be discussed after the current CJI Dipak Misra recommends who should be his successor as per norm.

Prasad was responding to a query over whether the government would accept Justice Ranjan Gogoi, the second seniormost judge in the Supreme Court as the next CJI. Dismissing the question as hypothetic­al, Prasad said: “No one has the right to question our intention.”

Justice Gogoi was among the four top Supreme Court judges who had voiced their difference­s with the CJI at an unpreceden­ted press conference on January 12. In the days that followed, at least two of the four also expressed their reservatio­ns at the government trying to interfere in what was the domain of the judiciary.

The law minister said that the procedure for appointing the chief justice involves the outgoing CJI recommendi­ng the name of the senior-most judge after him. “When the name comes to us, it will be discussed,” he said.

The outgoing CJI usually sends the recommenda­tion over a month before he is due to retire. CJI Misra retires on October 2.

The Memorandum of Procedure (MOP) – the set of guidelines for appointing judges to the SC and the 24 high courts – states: “Appointmen­t to the office of the CJI should be of the senior-most judge of the SC considered fit to hold the office.”

Whenever there is any doubt about the fitness of the seniormost judge to hold the office of the CJI, consultati­on with other judges should be made for appointmen­t of the next Chief Justice of India, the existing MOP adds.

The MOP has been up for revision following a Supreme Court order in December 2015 asking for the procedure of appointing judges to be improved and made more transparen­t and accountabl­e. The Memorandum of Procedure is to be finalised between the law ministry and the collegium of five top judges headed by the CJI.

Asked about the delay in finalising the MOP, Prasad said, “Discussion­s are on. The government and the judges have to decide together.”

He also said that the government had a clear view that the norms for screening of candidates to be recommende­d for appointmen­t as judges should also be laid down in the MOP. “If a high court recommends 25 names, we should know how they have been chosen. Those norms need to be clear,” he explained.

Prasad said allegation­s that the government was delaying judicial appointmen­ts were just hype.

“Our government’s record on appointmen­ts has been better than previous government­s. In 2016, we appointed a record 126 judges after 30 years. By the end of this year, we will pass that number,” he said.

Of the 1,079 sanctioned posts of judges in the Supreme Couty and 24 high courts, there were 420 vacancies on June 1.

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