Oman Daily Observer

CJI faces revolt from four senior-most SC judges

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NEW DELHI: Divisions in the Supreme Court burst out in the open on Friday when four senior-most judges took an unpreceden­ted step of addressing the media to accuse Chief Justice Dipak Misra of breaching rules in assigning cases to appropriat­e benches, with one of them pointing to the plea regarding the mysterious death of Special CBI judge B H Loya.

At a hurriedly called press conference at his residence, Justice J Chelameswa­r and three other colleagues said the Supreme Court administra­tion was “not in order” and their efforts to persuade Justice Misra even this morning “with a specific request” failed, forcing them to “communicat­e with the nation” directly.

The four judges — Justices Ranjan Gogoi, Kurian Joseph and Madan B Lokur besides Justice Chelameswa­r — released a letter they wrote to Justice Misra a couple of months ago, conceding that he was the master of roster but that was “not a recognitio­n of any superior authority, legal or factual of the Chief Justice over his colleagues”.

Asked specifical­ly if they were upset over reference of the matter seeking a probe into the suspicious death of Judge Loya, Justice Gogoi said: “Yes.”

Judge Loya, who was hearing a case relating to the killing of gangster Sohrabuddi­n Sheikh in an alleged fake shootout in which BJP chief Amit Shah was named an accused (later discharged), died of cardiac arrest in 2014. His family has raised doubts over the circumstan­ces in which Judge Loya died and have sought an independen­t probe into it.

Pleas seeking probe came up for a hearing in the Supreme Court on Friday when the top court expressed concerns over it and said it was a “serious issue”. It asked the Maharashtr­a government to produce all the documents related to the case before January 15.

In a seven-page letter, the four judges said they were not mentioning details of the cases only to avoid embarrassi­ng the institutio­n because “such departures have already damaged the images of this institutio­n to some extent”.

The clash among the judges in the highest court also comes in the wake of a controvers­ial order in November in which Justice Misra declared that the Chief Justice “is the master of the roster” having exclusive power to decide which case will go to which judge.

The CJI had given the order a day after a two-judge bench headed by Justice Chelameswa­r had passed an order that a five-judge bench of senior most judges in the apex court should be set up to consider an independen­t probe into a corruption case in which bribes were allegedly taken in the name of settling cases pending before Supreme Court judges.

Holding that the Chief Justice was only the first among equals, the four judges contended that there were wellsettle­d and time-honoured convention­s guiding the Chief Justice in dealing with the strength of the bench required or the compositio­n thereof.

“A necessary corollary to the above mentioned principle is the members of any multi-numbered judicial body, including this court, would not arrogate to themselves the authority to deal with and pronounce upon matters which ought to be heard by appropriat­e benches, both compositio­n-wise and strength-wise with due regard to the roster fixed,” they wrote in the letter.

They said any departure from the two rules would not only lead to “un- pleasant and undesirabl­e consequenc­es of creating doubt in the body politic about the integrity of the institutio­n” but would create “chaos”.

The four judges also touched upon another controvers­ial issue, the Memorandum of Procedure (MoP) on appointmen­t of judges over which the Supreme Court had locked horns with the government.

The government, the letter said, had not responded to the communicat­ion and “in view of this silence it must be taken that the MoP has been accepted by the government on the basis of the order of this court”.

Justice Chelameswa­r told the media that they were “convinced that unless this institutio­n is protected and maintains its requiremen­ts, democracy will not survive in the country or any country... The hallmark of a democracy is independen­t and impartial judges.

“Since all our efforts failed... Even this morning, on a particular issue, we went and met the Chief Justice with a specific request. Unfortunat­ely we could not convince him that we were right.”

Justice Gogoi said they were “dischargin­g debt to the nation that has got us here”.

The government appeared to distance itself from the controvers­y, saying the judges should sort the issue themselves.

Minister of State for Law P P Chaudhary said: “Our judiciary is one of the known, recognised judiciarie­s in the world. It is an independen­t judiciary. At this stage I think no agency is required to intervene or interfere. The Chief Justice and other members should sit together and resolve. There is no question of panic.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? (From left) Justices Kurian Joseph, Chelameswa­r, Ranjan Gogoi and Madan Lokur address the media at a news conference in New Delhi on Friday.
— Reuters (From left) Justices Kurian Joseph, Chelameswa­r, Ranjan Gogoi and Madan Lokur address the media at a news conference in New Delhi on Friday.

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