NEW DELHI:
The Supreme Court today grilled the Government over the demand for revisiting its 1993 judgement that brought in the collegium system giving primacy to the Chief Justice of India in appointments to higher judiciary and wanted to know how the new Appointments Commission will not “impinge” upon judiciary’s independence.
“If you are successful in showing to us that the interpretation of the nine-judge giving primacy to the CJI is wrong, you still don’t succeed unless you succeed in showing that the present (NJAC) system does not undermine or impinge upon the independence of judiciary,” a five-judge bench headed by Justice J S Khehar said.
“According to us your argument on nine-judge bench judgement has no meaning on the hearing of this matter,” the bench said but allowed the Centre to advance its arguments on the collegium system.
The remarks were made by the bench when Attorney General Mukul Rohatgi was arguing that the issue of primacy to the CJI espoused by the nine-judge bench in the 1993 judgement does not exist in the Constitution.
The bench, which is examining the constitutional validity of the National Judicial Appointment Commission Act (NJAC), 2014 replacing the two-decade-old collegium system of appointment of judges by judges, wanted to know from the AG why he wanted to contest the nine-judge judgement when it was not the subject matter before it.
“We are not in challenge of the nine-judge judgement. At present we are on the issue of independence of judiciary and we have to protect it.
“Why don’t you want to say that this (new) system is equally independent. You are not willing to show that this system is equally independent,” the bench, also comprising Justices J Chelameswar, M B Lokur, Kurian Joseph and Adarsh Kumar Goel said. (AGENCIES)