Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Chelameswa­r: Need to fix system, not impeach CJI

- Ashok Bagriya letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI: Justice Jasti Chelameswa­r of the Supreme Court said on Saturday that he hoped justice Ranjan Gogoi will not be overlooked for the post of chief justice of India (CJI) for taking part in an unpreceden­ted press conference on January 12 where the four senior-most judges aired their difference­s with present CJI Dipak Misra over his handling of sensitive cases.

The second senior-most SC judge also said moves by some opposition parties to seek the impeachmen­t of Misra were not a solution and called for debate on a restructur­ing of the country’s top court. He also ruled out seeking government employment after he retires on June 22.

“I am not an astrologer who can predict if Justice Gogoi will be ignored for the post of the next chief Justice of India. I hope this will not happen,” Chelameswa­r said at an event on ‘The role of Democracy’ organised by the Harvard Club of India here.

“But if it happens, it will prove that the problems that were pointed out in the January 12 press conference were correct.”

The outgoing Chief Justice recommends the name of his successor.

Chelameswa­r was responding to a question whether Justice Gogoi’s chances of being made the next CJI, after Misra retires in October, would be scuttled for being a part of the press conference that focused on lapses in the Supreme court’s functionin­g. Apart from justices Chelameswa­r and Gogoi, judges MB Lokur and Kurian Joseph raised several issues, including allocation of cases, by CJI Misra.

“There have been instances where case having far-reaching consequenc­es for the Nation and the institutio­n had been assigned by the Chief Justices of this Court selectivel­y to the benches “of their preference” without any rationale basis for such assignment. This must be guarded against at all costs,” they wrote in an open letter to the CJI .

On Saturday, among the many sensitive topics that justice Chelameswa­r spoke about in an interview at the event with senior journalist Karan Thapar was the contentiou­s issue of the power exercised by the CJI as the master of the roster .

He said the CJI undoubtedl­y had the power to constitute benches to hear different cases as the mater of the roster. “But this power has to be exercised for achieving some public good. It can’t be exercised just because it is there. All power is trust and it has to be done for some public good,” he said.

HE ALSO SAID MOVES BY SOME PARTIES TO SEEK THE CJI’S IMPEACHMEN­T WERE NOT A SOLUTION

On the Prasad Education Trust case, justice Chelameswa­r said, “I am still struggling with the question that what was it that required the reversal of the orders passed by me . I did not pick up the case. It was brought before me. It was too serious a matter and the matter was required to be heard by a constituti­on bench as the allegation pertained to judges and the suspicion that judicial strings were being pulled by the accused.”

The Prasad Education Trust case surfaced last year when the Central Bureau of Investigat­ion arrested a retired judge of the Orissa High Court and five others in a bribery case. And the case travelled to the Supreme court for an independen­t inquiry. The case was admitted by a bench headed by Justice Chelameswa­r and it passed an order to set up a constituti­on bench of five senior most judges of the Supreme Court to hear the petition that sought an independen­t probe of the case.

CJI Misra set up a five -judge bench to hear the order passed by the justice Chelameswa­r bench. The five-judge bench annulled the order.

Speaking on the problem of cases being assigned to preferenti­al benches by the CJI, Chelameswa­r cited the case of disproport­ionate assets amassed by late former Tamil Nadu chief minister J. Jayalalith­aa. “What happened? The case was assigned as per roster. The judgment was reserved for almost a year. What purpose was served?”

Justice Chelameswa­r confirmed that the Jayalalith­aa case was among the many that caused the four seniormost judges “anguish” that led them to hold the January press conference­t.

“The question is what is the basis on which such sensitive cases are allocated. Is a system being followed, would this kind of allocation be good for the institutio­n when such allocation is underminin­g the system,” he asked.

On the recent move by some political parties to remove the CJI by introducin­g an impeachmen­t motion against him, Chelameswa­r said it would not solve the problems of the judiciary. “I do not know why the nation is obsessed with impeachmen­t,” he said. “Impeachmen­t can’t be an answer to everything. There have to be other mechanisms in place to deal with such problems.”

Justice Chelameswa­r also made it clear that after his retirement on June 22, he would not seek any employment from the government. “I am saying it on record that after my retirement, I will not seek any appointmen­t from the government”.

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