There are three elephants in the room pointing their accusing trunks at the judiciary, and these are the issues Justice Thakur ought to address first.
Three C’s lie at the heart of the judiciary’s failures: constitutional hijack; corruption, and cause-fixation.
The Chief Justice of India’s outburst at a
conference of chief ministers and chief justices in Delhi yesterday (24 April) may
have come out of genuine anguish over the high pendency of cases in courts
(nearly 3.3 crore), but he was surely wrong to presume that the current impasse
over judicial appointments is more due to the government.
CJI TS Thakur was quoted by The Times of India as saying; “It is not only in the name of the litigant or people languishing in jails, but also in the name of development of the country, its progress, that I beseech you to rise to the occasion and realise that it is not enough to criticise. You cannot shift the entire burden on the judiciary.”
While the sight of a CJI pleading with the
government is sure to tilt the balance of public opinion against the
government, Justice Thakur should know that for every finger pointed outwards,
three point inwards - towards yourself. Judges are supposed to about reason and
the law, not pure emotion. It would have been equally easy for Prime Minister
Narendra Modi to make an emotional point about delays in settling court cases involving
the poor, but he did the sensible thing of seeking a closed door meeting
between executive and judiciary to sort out issues. He made more mature points
than the CJI.
If the delay in appointing judges is a finger pointing towards the government (assuming it is deliberately sitting on current judicial appointments), other fingers point towards the judiciary. The raw numbers, according to Justice Thakur, are the following: there has been an increase in vacancies in high courts to 470, with only 58 new appointments being made after the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) was struck down. The Law Commission wanted 50 judges per million population, but India has barely 17-18.
To blame this government for all the recent delays
is surely uncharitable, for the simple fact is that it is the court’s
predilections that have held up appointments. The NJAC was put into effect
around mid-April 2015; the Supreme Court bench took six months to reject the
NJAC (so no new appointments in-between); then, two months later, it asked the
government to prepare a memorandum of procedure (MoP) for short-listing and
finalising judges for appointment; this again is a work-in-progress. This MoP is
now stuck in the government-judiciary cold war. The recent build-up of
vacancies is largely because of the freeze in judicial appointments between
last April and now. And most of the delay was due to the judiciary’s decision
to block the NJAC, when it could well have allowed the NJAC to be constituted
and function as an interim measure while the case was being decided.
It is also wrong of the CJI to presume that
judicial appointments can be fast-tracked when the two players in the game, the
executive and the top judiciary, still cannot agree on the process of selection.
There are three elephants in the room pointing their accusing trunks at the judiciary, and these are the issues Justice Thakur ought to address first. Three C’s lie at the heart of the judiciary’s failures: constitutional hijack; corruption, and cause-fixation. The judiciary has run a coach-and-four over the constitutional provisions on judges’ selection since the early 1990s; it has failed to tackle corruption in the judiciary; and it has become besotted with sundry populist causes and made public interest litigation (PIL) the central element in the delivery of justice.
Let’s get into some detail on this.
Constitutional
hijack: As one has repeatedly pointed out, the
judiciary began excluding the executive from any role in the appointment of
judges after the second judges case in 1993 (which made the CJI the primary player
in higher judicial appointments), and the third judges case (1998), which shifted
power from the CJI to a collegium. When the government tried to claw back some
of its original powers under article 124 (which said the President will consult
the CJI while making judicial appointments) by enacting the NJAC, the Supreme
Court again nixed that.
The only correct position is that both executive
and judiciary must have equal roles in judicial appointments. The imbalance of
power, where the government is excluded, was created by the judiciary, and it
is the judiciary which must correct this. This imbalance is at the root of the
current tensions. The NJAC gave both the judiciary and the government decent roles
in the appointment of judges. It would have made transparency explicit, and
could have been made to work, but the judiciary voted in its own favour.
Till this power imbalance is corrected,
tensions will remain. Unlike the UPA, which “managed” the judiciary by promising
them post-retirement jobs, the NJAC was a more honest effort by the Modi
government to get the judiciary to share power in appointing judges with the
executive, as was the original intent of the constitution. Between January 2008
and 2012, the UPA gave jobs to 18 out of 23 retiring Supreme Court judges –
which tells its own story about the kinds of influence the government could indirectly
have on Supreme Court judges. The NJAC would have made things more transparent
and accountable, but the court nixed that.
Corruption: This is the second elephant in the room. It is an open secret
that the Indian judiciary has many rotten apples, and the collegium system of
judges appointing judges helped perpetuate this by allowing even corrupt judges
to be appointed. The procedure for getting rid of corrupt judges is simply too
elaborate to be a deterrent. Only parliament can impeach bad judges, and this
almost never happens. Sixty-six years after we adopted a constitution, only two
higher judiciary judges have ever been sought to be impeached.
This means many, many corrupt judges exist in
the system, and judicial delays have a lot to do with their existence: it is
corrupt judges who play mischief with the law either by giving wrong judgments
or by endless delays that benefit rich or crooked litigants.
The Supreme Court done little to end judicial
corruption despite the free hand it has had on judicial appointments so far. On
the contrary, it has copped out whenever it was confronted with charges of
corruption.
In September 2010, senior counsel Shanti
Bhushan made an application in the Supreme Court alleging that eight of 16
former Supreme Court CJIs were corrupt. He even sent their names in a sealed
cover to the bench hearing the appeal. The application said: “The judiciary has
adopted the policy of sweeping all allegations of judicial corruption under the
carpet in the belief that such allegations might tarnish the image of the
judiciary. It does not realise that this policy has played a big role in
increasing judicial corruption. There was a common perception that whenever
such efforts were made by anyone, the judiciary tries to target him by the use
of the power of contempt.”
Interestingly, the Supreme Court neither did
anything about judicial corruption nor did it haul up Bhushan for contempt for
his act of calling eight former judges corrupt. Prashant Bhushan, Shanti
Bhushan’s son, then actually made allegations against six of them: Justice
Ranganath Mishra, Justice KN Singh, Justice AM Ahmadi, Justice MM Punchi,
Justice AS Anand and Justice YK Sabharwal.
In 2014, former Supreme Court judge Markandey
Katju wrote in his blog that three former CJIs were effectively complicit in
the appointment of a corrupt judge in Tamil Nadu (read here).
And yet, the Supreme Court thinks independence
is about judges having the last say in appointing other judges.
Causes – popular
and unpopular: Public interest litigation (PIL) has become a
key weapon of justice delivery. It has empowered ordinary NGOs to go directly
to courts to seek remedies. While this has been very useful in cases like the
2G scam or the coal blocks allocation scandal, PILs have also clogged up the
courts’ case-books. According to data given in reply to an RTI query in 2015,
the Supreme Court alone had 1,598 PILs pending with it. The number of PILs
filed shot up from a low of two in 1994 to 905 in 2014.
And these numbers only relate to the Supreme Court. The high courts are also keen to pick up hot-button cases that appeal to the popular imagination. The recent case, where the Bombay High Court asked the Indian Premier League to move cricket matches out of the state due to the drought, is a case in point. Pictures of cricket pitches being watered apparently infuriated citizens, and the court, but this is a bit like saying those who have enough food should not eat because someone else is starving.
There is a fair chance that the judicial obsession with PILs is prompting more NGOs and mischief-mongers to file PILs so that they can take their problems directly to the higher courts.
Does Justice Thakur believe that this obsession with PILs is not making a difference to court delays? It is time for the judiciary to introspect, too.