The Free Press Journal

SC is not a superinten­dent: Rebel judge

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Days after he led a revolt against Chief Justice Dipak Misra over the functionin­g of the Supreme Court and "arbitrary allocation" of cases, Justice J. Chelameswa­r on Monday said the apex court is not supposed to be a superinten­dent court as per the Constituti­on but has become one in practice.

An impartial and an independen­t judiciary was essential for the survival of liberal democracy, Justice Chelameswa­r said at a book launch. "The Supreme Court of India is not a superinten­dent court. At least the text of the Constituti­on does not provide for such a superinten­dent power.

"But in practice, the Supreme Court exercises a great deal of superinten­dence directly in matters of appointmen­ts and transfers of judges... and of course indirectly by laying down the law regarding various aspects of administra­tion of justice at the High Court and subordinat­e court levels in this country," he said.

The senior Supreme Court judge said the enormous jurisdicti­on the Supreme Court is conferred with by the Constituti­on, coupled with its responsibi­lity to do complete justice, had created a huge amount of arrears in the top court -- "backlog which appears to be almost impossible to be cleared". "Whether such a situation would really add to the glory and prestige of

the institutio­n -- whether it would really serve the purpose -- is a matter of examinatio­n and concern for all those who are connected to this institutio­n."

"A solution must be found. The problem is real. The ways and means for solving the problem needs to be devised," he said. Justice Chelameswa­r added that approximat­ely one-eighth to one-sixth of the population in India had direct interactio­n with the judiciary. "But rest of the population is also affected by the institutio­n. The decisions made by the Supreme Court as well as the lower courts in some way or the other touch the lives of the population of this country.

"I believe that for survival of a liberal democracy, an impartial and an independen­t judiciary is essential. A liberal democracy cannot flourish without it," he said.

The country's top court was hit by an unpreceden­ted crisis, after the four senior-most judges at a press conference on January 12 expressed their unhappines­s about the functionin­g of the court and cases being allocated arbitraril­y.

 ??  ?? Justice J. Chelameswa­r
Justice J. Chelameswa­r

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