Gulf Today

Executive, judiciary need to bridge difference­s

- Political Commentato­r BRP Bhaskar,

India’s Supreme Court is quietly grappling with repeated atempts by the government to put back into the law certain ideas it has rejected as unconstitu­tional. Narendra Modi began his prime ministeria­l career in 2014 with a confrontat­ion with the Court. The issue then was who should have the last word in appointmen­ts and transfers of judges of superior courts.

The Constituti­on vests the power to appoint judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts in the President. Since he is required to act on the advice of the Council of Ministers, the Executive had the last word although consultati­ons with the Chief Justice of the court concerned was a part of the process.

Between 1981 and 1998 the Supreme Court, through three judgments in what are referred to as Judges Cases, shited primacy in judicial appointmen­ts from the Executive to the Judiciary.

It brought into being bodies known as Judges Collegium, comprising the most senior judges, at the Supreme Court and the High Courts to make recommenda­tions on appointmen­ts and transfers.

The three judgments came at a time of political uncertaint­y. Neither the Executive nor Parliament was in a position to resist the

Judiciary’s enlargemen­t of its powers, exercising its sole right to interpret the Constituti­on.

The new system was hailed by a large section of the legal community and some political elements. They felt it would help ensure the independen­ce of the Judiciary. However, few legal luminaries saw it as an improvemen­t on the original scheme.

The long public debate on the issue led to a wide measure of agreement on the creation of a National Judicial Commission to oversee appointmen­ts and transfers of judges. Modi enacted a law to give effect to this idea.

The Supreme Court nullified the law, revived the collegiums and restored the judges-appointjud­ges system. Although the bid to end the Judiciary’s primacy failed, the Modi government has been able to get collegiums to withdraw some of the names recommende­d by them by drawing atention to adverse official reports on the candidates.

Chief Justices have complained of heavy delays in appointmen­ts as the government takes a long time to process the recommenda­tions of collegiums and pass them on to the President.

The current conflict between the government and the Supreme Court stems from difference­s over appointmen­ts to tribunals which are atached to Central ministries and state department­s but perform judicial functions.

The seeds of conflict were sown five years ago. It began with the Centre deciding to scrap some tribunals atached to it and transfer their functions to the High Courts and civil courts.

The decision was announced in the 2017 Union Budget. Provisions to give effect to the decision were included in the year’s Finance Act, along with other budget proposals.

The Madras Bar Associatio­n challenged these provisions in the Supreme Court. Late last year the Court struck them down.

Thereater the government revised its scheme and brought it into force early this year through an ordinance styled as the Tribunals Reforms (Rationalis­ation and Conditions of Service) Ordinance. This, too, was struck down by the Court.

Meanwhile the government had placed before Parliament the Tribunals Reforms Bill to replace the ordinance. This was passed into law last month.

Congress leader Jairam Ramesh drew the Court’s atention to it through a public interest petition.

Like the ordinance, the Tribunals Reforms Act altered the procedure for appointmen­ts to tribunals. It provided for the seting up of a Search and Selection Commitee with the Chief Justice of India or his nominee as the chairperso­n and two government Secretarie­s as members to find qualified persons for appointmen­t as tribunals under Central ministries. A similar commitee with the Chief Justice of the High Court or his nominee as chairperso­n is to select candidates for appointmen­t to state tribunals.

The Act prescribes a minimum age of 50 years for appointmen­t to a tribunal and provides for a fixed tenure of four years.

The Court frowned at these provisions. They were in the ordinance, too, and it had ruled that they were unconstitu­tional.

During a preliminar­y hearing on Jairam Ramesh’s petition last week Chief Justice NV Ramana asked the government why it had not appointed candidates whose names were recommende­d by the Selection Commitee. Another judge observed that some tribunals are not able function as appointmen­ts have not been made.

The Executive and the Judiciary must ensure that their difference­s do not hamper the working of tribunals and harm the interests of the public.

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