Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

SC fines lawyer for trying to block selection of HC judge

THE COLLEGIUM SYSTEM, WHICH DOES NOT FIND MENTION IN THE CONSTITUTI­ON, WAS EVOLVED THROUGH THE JUDGMENTS OF THE TOP COURT

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the High Court considers recommendi­ng the names and in case of judicial officers by seniority and on merits,” said the bench.

It further noted: “Thereafter, the proposed IB (Intelligen­ce Bureau) inputs and other inputs are obtained and the Government processes the names. The collegium of the Supreme Court has the benefit of all the material before taking a call on whether to recommend the name or not. The appointmen­t takes place thereafter by issuance of warrants of appointmen­t. Thus, sufficient safeguards exist in the system.”

The collegium system, which does not find mention in the Indian Constituti­on, was evolved through the judgments of the Supreme Court, starting 1981 and culminatin­g in the final judgment in 1998 when it was declared that the Chief Justice of India, along with four seniormost judges of the apex court, will make recommenda­tions to the Union government for appointmen­t of judges in the high courts and the Supreme Court.

The judgments also laid down that while the government will be consulted on names, the CJI will have primacy in matters of appointmen­t.

The Centre tried to have a greater say in the appointmen­t process by bringing in the National Judicial Appointmen­t Commission (NJAC) in 2014 through a law that envisaged a role for the law minister and some independen­t jurists.

But the constituti­onal amendment validating the NJAC was quashed by the Supreme Court in 2015 while ruling that judges’ appointmen­ts shall continue to be made by the collegium system in which the CJI will have “the last word”.

However, the collegium system continues to be criticised by a section for being non-transparen­t and lacking objective yardsticks for the appointmen­t of judges.

Meanwhile, the bench observed that the collegium system has in-built safeguards to take into account seniority, comparativ­e merit and other relevant factors of the candidates being considered for appointmen­ts. In the present case, it noted that multiple proceeding­s were initiated by advocate B Sailesh Saxena targeting Telangana high court’s registrar general Venkateswa­ra Reddy to stall his elevation as a judge in the high court.

“This is gross abuse of process of law...we consider the endeavour of the petitioner (Saxena) as one of harassing Respondent No. 4 (Reddy) and abusing the court proceeding­s and since nothing else seem to deter the petitioner in such endeavours, we are of the view that appropriat­e imposition of costs seems to be the only solution,” held the bench in its order last Friday.

The court also asked the Bar Council of Telangana to examine Saxena’s conduct and take appropriat­e action.

A bench terms it a “gross abuse of process of law” to file petitions in constituti­onal courts with the motive of obstructin­g a candidate’s elevation to the high court as a judge

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