Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

Govt says went by seniority in naming judges

- Prashant Jha and Ashok Bagriya letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEWDELHI: The Union government has gone by a “transparen­t seniority principle” in the elevation of three judges to the Supreme Court earlier this month, and it would have been “completely improper, unreasonab­le and unfair” to have made justice KM Joseph senior to justices Indira Banerjee and Vineet Saran because they are both two-and-ahalf years his senior as high court judges, a top government functionar­y said on Monday on the condition of anonymity.

The appointmen­ts of justices Banerjee, Saran and Joseph to the apex court were cleared by the government on August 3.

But the government notificati­on placed justice Joseph below justices Banerjee and Saran, thereby granting them seniority to him in the court’s internal hierarchy. On Monday morning, some senior SC judges took up the issue of “altering” justice Joseph’s seniority vis-à-vis the other two judges with Chief Justice of India (CJI) Dipak Misra. “We said the CJI should look into the matter as justice Joseph’s file for elevation to the Supreme Court was sent in January 2018, much before that of justice Banerjee and justice Saran,” one judge said on the condition of anonymity. The CJI assured the judges he would take up the matter with the government after consultati­ons with Attorney General of India, KK Venugopal, judge added.

But the SC registry in its List of Business for August 7 said clearly that the order of swearing-in of the three judges will be justice Banerjee, justice Saran, and justice Joseph — thus keeping in line with the government’s notificati­on. The government believes that the concerns of a section of Supreme Court judges over the seniority issue are unfounded.

“The government has only gone by a transparen­t seniority principle in this case. Justice Banerjee ranks number four in the all-India seniority list of high court judges; justice Saran ranks number five on the list; and justice Joseph is at number 39 of the list,” said the government functionar­y quoted above.

He added that justice Banerjee was appointed as HC Judge on February 5, 2002, justice Sharan was appointed as a HC judge on February 14, 2002, and justice Joseph on October 14, 2004.

“Therefore, the first two are more than two-and-a-half years senior to justice Joseph. It would have been completely improper, unreasonab­le and unfair to make high court judges two-and-a-half-years his senior as junior to him in the Supreme Court,” the functionar­y said, arguing that who becomes a high court Chief Justice first is not a relevant considerat­ion in the decision at all.

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