Hindustan Times (Patiala)

MoP in limbo as govt, top judges lock horns

- Jatin Gandhi n jatin.gandhi@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The new Memorandum of Procedure — a fresh set of guidelines for making appointmen­ts to the higher judiciary — is stuck in limbo because of the lack of agreement between the Centre and top judges on three crucial clauses, a top official in the law ministry said.

Any progress is unlikely till the members of the so-called collegium, the Chief Justice of India and the next four judges in order of seniority in the high court, resolve their own difference­s, added this person who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The collegium appoints judges to the Supreme Court (SC) and also Chief Justices of the high courts. The four senior most judges in the apex court after the CJI, Justices J Chelameswa­r, Ranjan Gogoi, MB Lokur and Kurian Joseph went public last month with their difference­s with the Chief Justice of India Dipak Misra.

In a press conference on January 12, they expressed their unhappines­s at his style of functionin­g and said critical cases were being allocated to junior judges. Since then, the CJI and the judges have met several times, but the issue remains unresolved. That impasse may put the MoP on hold at least till the current CJI Dipak Misra retires in October, experts said.

“The judiciary is most likely going to focus on resolving the difference­s within before it can put up a united face and respond to the government on the MoP,” Sumathi Chandrashe­kharan, Senior Resident Fellow at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy, said.

On December 16, 2015, a constituti­on bench of the SC headed by Justice JS Khehar directed the government to finalise a new MoP in consultati­on with the CJI to replace the current one and listed a number of suggestion­s to improve the collegium system of appointmen­t. The judgement stressed on the importance of revisiting the selection procedure for the senior judiciary.

The same bench had, on October 16 that year, struck down as “unconstitu­tional” the National Judicial Appointmen­ts Commission Act, which sought to end the two-decade-old practice of judges appointing judges through the collegium.

The bench, in its December order, stressed on making the system more transparen­t and accountabl­e. The government started working on the draft MOP in early 2016 and began consultati­ons with the judiciary but there is currently no convergenc­e on three sticking points.

In a letter from the law ministry to the SC in July 2017, then secretary, justice, Snehlata Srivastava wrote to the registrar general of the SC Ravindra Mathiani acknowledg­ing the difference­s.

The government, she wrote, wanted to keep the reasons for rejecting a candidate’s selection on the grounds of “national security and overidding public interest” confidenti­al and share it only with the CJI. The letter also mentioned the two other issues of difference between the government and the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court, for its part, was against creating a secretaria­t for vetting and clearing names for judges and forming a committee of judges who were not part of the collegium to screen complaints against sitting judges. It was also not in favour of having search and evaluation committees for selecting candidates.

A top official in the law ministry said that was the last communicat­ion between the two sides.

The SC “has not even acknowledg­ed that letter. Our position has not changed,” he added, speaking on condition of anonymity. The government had cited the December 2015 judgement and another by Justices Chelameswa­r and Gogoi on July 4, 2017, in the suo motu contempt case against high court judge Justice CS Karnan.

“Obviously, there is a failure to make an assessment of the personalit­y of the contemnor at the time of recommendi­ng his name for elevation. Our purpose is not to point fingers to individual­s who were responsibl­e for recommenda­tion but only to highlight the system’s failure of not providing an appropriat­e procedure for making such an assessment,” Chelameswa­r and Gogoi said.

“What appropriat­e mechanism would be suitable for assessing the personalit­y of the candidate who is being considered for appointmen­t to be a member of a constituti­onal court is a matter which is to be identified after an appropriat­e debate by all the concerned – the Bar, the Bench, the State and Civil Society. But the need appears to be unquestion­able,” they added.

Equipped with the observatio­ns, the Centre wrote to the Supreme Court registrar general saying: “It becomes critically important for the government to take the initiative towards making the appointmen­t process transparen­t, fair and accountabl­e.” Experts said after the SC collegium responds, the government may have to start the process of negotiatin­g with it all over again. “For that, probably a new collegium will have to be in place,” a legal analyst who did not want to be named said.

The CJI’s office did not respond to attempts to contact him.

The judiciary is most likely going to focus on resolving the difference­s within before it can put up a united face and respond to the government on MoP. SUMATHI CHANDRASHE­KHARAN, Senior Resident Fellow at Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy

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