Justice Lekshmana Chandra Victoria Gowri took oath as an Additional Judge of the Madras High Court on February 7, leaving in her wake a pulsating question directed at the Collegium system of judicial appointments, during a time when it is under attack.
The chain of events
- The Supreme Court Collegium recommended the elevation of advocate Gowri (as she was then) as a judge of the Madras HC on January 17.
- A group of 21 lawyers, shot off a communication to the President and the Collegium on February 1 and February 2, respectively, accusing her of making public utterances amounting to hate speech on social media.
- The petitions alleged that Justice Gowri had in two interviews on YouTube in 2018 launched into a âshocking, distasteful diatribeâ.
- They sought an interim order like in the case of Sri Kumar Padma Prasad versus Union of India in 1992 when the apex court had restrained a judicial appointee to the Gauhati High Court from taking oath and assuming office as a judge.
- Chief Justice Chandrachud made an oral statement in open court that these âdevelopmentsâ came to the notice of the Collegium after the recommendation was âformulatedâ.
- After initially listing the case on February 10, it was advanced to February 7 as by then Law Minister Kiren Rijiju had tweeted her appointment as judge.
- The oath-taking ceremony was scheduled at 10:35 am on February 7. While the petitionersâ lawyers were summoned to Chief Justice Chandrachudâs court at 9.15 am on the same day, a Bench comprising of Justices Sanjiv Khanna and B.R. Gavai dismissed the petitions in a 25-minute hearing.
- A nine-page order published on February 10 reasoned that judicially reviewing a Collegium recommendation would âviolate the law and amount to evaluating and substituting the decision of the Collegium with individual or personal opinion on the suitability and merits of the personâ.
Eligibility versus suitability
- The petitioners, represented by senior advocate Raju Ramachandran and advocate Sanchita Ain, quoted the Supreme Courtâs own 2009 case of Mahesh Chandra Gupta versus Union of India, which had held that questions of eligibility of a candidate and effective consultation for appointment as a HC judge under Article 217(2) of the Constitution, was open to judicial review.
- They contended that the decision-making process was âstymiedâ as the Collegium did not have full information about Justice Gowriâs âvitriolic commentsâ.
- Absence of prejudice was the essence of an independent judiciary and she had made herself ineligible for judicial office.
- The Bench responded that the scrutiny process was âfairly robustâ and included taking the opinion of consultee judges in the Supreme Court and the High Courts.
- Its order said whether a person was âfitâ to be appointed as a judge essentially involved the aspect of âsuitabilityâ and not âeligibilityâ. Aspects of suitability stood excluded from the purview of judicial review.
- The Bench distinguished between âsuitabilityâ and âeligibilityâ of a candidate zeroed in for HC judgeship. Eligibility was based on âobjective factorsâ given in Article 217(2) of the Constitution like citizenship and 10 yearsâ experience as a judicial officer or a lawyer in a High Court.
- The suitability of a candidate was the domain of the Collegium as it involved a procedure âdesigned to test the fitness of a person, including her character, integrity, competence, knowledge and the likeâ.
SOURCE: THE HINDU, THE ECONOMIC TIMES, PIB