The story: Indian judiciary is the most important institution amongst all the constitutional ones designed to protect democracy. Its independence is o
Collegium system in Indian judiciary
- The story: Indian judiciary is the most important institution amongst all the constitutional ones designed to protect democracy. Its independence is of supreme importance to one and all.
- Collegium system birthed: Apparently, to ensure democracy in the judicial system, a new mechanism of the Collegium System was established in 1993. It was the result of judicial effort at preserving independence, after the shock of the Emergency years. The purpose was to ensure that the opinion of the Chief Justice of India (CJI) mattered, and it would not just be his individual opinion, but the one formed collectively by a body of judges of the highest integrity in the judiciary. With time, the efficiency of the collegium system was challenged in terms of its independence and transparency of judicial appointments and other decisions.
- Details of Collegium system: For maintaining the faith of citizens in the judiciary, it is important that the Collegium works well.
- It is the system of appointment and transfer of judges that has evolved through judgments of the SC, and not by an Act of Parliament or by a provision of the Constitution.
- The SC collegium is headed by the CJI and comprises four other senior most judges of the court. A HC collegium is led by its Chief Justice and four other senior most judges of that court.
- Constitutional provisions - (i) Article 124(2) of the Indian Constitution provides that the Judges of the Supreme Court are appointed by the President after consultation with such a number of the Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts in the States as the President may deem necessary for the purpose. (ii) As per Article 217, the Judge of a High Court shall be appointed by the President in consultation with the CJI and the State Governor, and, in the case of appointment of a Judge other than the Chief Justice, the Chief Justice of the High Court.
- Government's role - The government’s role is limited to getting an inquiry conducted by the Intelligence Bureau (IB) if a lawyer is to be elevated as a judge in a High Court or the Supreme Court. It can also raise objections and seek clarifications regarding the collegium’s choices, but if the collegium reiterates the same names, the government is bound, under Constitution Bench judgments, to appoint them as judges.
- Issues and problems: Some issues have cropped up over the decades.
- Lack of transparency - The lack of a written manual for functioning, the absence of selection criteria, the arbitrary reversal of decisions already taken, the selective publication of records of meetings prove the opaqueness of the collegium system. No one knows how judges are selected, and the appointments made raise the concerns of propriety, self-selection and nepotism. The system often overlooks several talented junior judges and advocates.
- NJAC, a closed chapter - The National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) could guarantee the independence of the system from inappropriate politicization, strengthen the quality of appointments and rebuild public confidence in the system. The decision was struck down by the SC in 2015 on the ground that it posed a threat to the independence of the judiciary.
- Lack of consensus - The collegium members often face the issue of mutual consent regarding appointment of judges. The shadow of mistrust between the members of the collegium exposes the fault lines within the judiciary. Recently retired CJI Sharad A. Bobde was perhaps the first chief justice to have not made even a single recommendation for appointment as SC judge due to lack of consensus among the collegium members.
- Unequal representation - The other area of concern is the composition of the higher judiciary. While data regarding caste is not available, women are fairly underrepresented in the higher judiciary.
- Delays - The process of judicial appointment is delayed due to delay in recommendations by the collegium for the higher judiciary.
- Summary: It may be the right time to think of a permanent, independent body to institutionalize the process with adequate safeguards to preserve the judiciary’s independence guaranteeing judicial primacy but not judicial exclusivity. It should ensure independence, reflect diversity, demonstrate professional competence and integrity. Instead of selecting the number of judges required against a certain number of vacancies, the collegium must provide a panel of possible names to the President to appoint in order of preference and other valid criteria. The Supreme Court may amend the NJAC Act to have safeguards that would make it constitutionally valid and reorganize the NJAC to ensure that the judiciary retains majority control in its decisions.
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