Tribunals: India

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Filling the posts of judicial members in tribunals with bureaucrats

From the archives of The Times of India 2007, 2009

Slams packing of tribunals with babus

New Delhi: The SC on Tuesday paved the way for the functioning of the National Company Law Tribunal and its appellate tribunal, but slammed the practice of filling the posts of judicial members in tribunals with bureaucrats.

The upholding of the validity of amendments to the Companies Act for the birth of NCLT and NCLAT would now result in the transfer to these quasi-judicial bodies of all company-related cases pending before the Company Law Board, Board for Industrial and Financial Reconstruction and high courts.

A five-judge constitution Bench comprising Chief Justice K G Balakrishnan and Justices R V Raveendran, D K Jain, P Sathasivam and J M Panchal, however, were quite critical of the practice of filling the tribunals with bureaucrats saying adjudication of these matters needed judicial bent of mind.

Justice Raveendran, writing the judgment for the Bench, said that bureaucrats at best could be made technical members of the tribunals and all appointments to the post of presiding officers had to be made in consultation with a committee headed by CJI or his nominee and comprising a judge of the SC or the HC, secretaries in the ministries of company affairs and law and justice. TNN

Executive's role in appointment of tribunal heads eliminated by SC

The Times of India Jan 05 2016

Dhananjay Mahapatra

CJ Most Appropriate Person To Name Heads: SC

After quashing the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) to keep intact its dominance in appointment of judges, the Supreme Court on Monday took another step to eliminate the executive's role in the statuteenvisaged consultation process for appointment of heads of judicial tribunals.

The matter, before a bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur, concerned appointing the president and judicial member of the Gujarat State Cooperative Tribunal. The earlier practice was that the chief justice of the high court would send a panel of names of retired judicial officers and the state government would pick two from that list and send it back for the CJ's approval.

But, in a recent judgment, the HC said this practice did not reflect the primacy that the CJ deserved in choosing the president and judicial member of a quasi-judicial tribunal. It ordered that henceforth the CJ would send two names for the two posts and the government must appoint them.It also said that if the government finds something amiss in their names, it could approach the CJ for a fresh name.

Attorney general Mukul Rohatgi, who had recently ended up on the losing side in the pitched legal battle to save NJAC in its constitutional validity test, appeared for the state and argued that the judiciary could not alter the consultation process for appointment of heads of judicial tribunals by citing the approach adopted by the apex court for selection of judges to the SC and HCs on the ground of maintaining the independence of judiciary . “Can the HC say that the CJ will send only one name and that is binding on the government? This is trenching upon the power of the state and the CJ. Where is the question of the CJ giving only one name,“ he argued.

Thakur said for the primacy of the judiciary , the CJ was supremely suitable to determine the suitability of a person to head a tribunal with judicial powers. “Why should the government insist on a panel? This is a judicial forum. If you have problem with a name you can always get back to the CJ for a fresh name. If the CJ is suggesting a name, the government must appoint him,“ he said.

The SC entertained the appeal by the state but asked it to make the tribunal functional by appointing the president and judicial member on the basis of names suggested by the CJ of the HC. “We will decide later whether the process was appropriate,“ it said.

The high court had said: “The Supreme Court has strongly deprecated the practice or rather the method of sending panel names asking the state government to select one from them. This is exactly what has been done in the present case.“ “In such circumstances, it would obviously become primacy of the government and would not remain the primacy of the CJ of the HC, which is the requirement under the law. It is the CJ who would be the most appropriate person to judge the suitability of a retired judge for the purpose of appointing him as the president or judicial member of the tribunal.“

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