Supreme Court reiterates that chief justice is the master of the roster, dismisses petition
Governance

Supreme Court reiterates that chief justice is the master of the roster, dismisses petition

Supreme Court says there ‘cannot be any mistrust in the functioning of a high constitutional office of the CJI’.

   
President Ram Nath Kovind with Chief Justice of India Deepak Misra.

The President, Shri Ram Nath Kovind greets CJI Dipak Misra, after administering the oath of office to him, at a swearing-in ceremony, at Rashtrapati Bhavan | Source: pib.nic.in

Supreme Court says there ‘cannot be any mistrust in the functioning of a high constitutional office of the CJI’.

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Wednesday reiterated that the Chief Justice of India has the last word in assigning cases to other benches in the court.

While dismissing a petition that sought to regulate the CJI’s administrative powers to allocate cases, the court said that there “cannot be any mistrust in the functioning of a high constitutional office of the CJI”.

The court’s ruling came in a public interest litigation filed by Asok Pande, a Lucknow-based advocate and president of the Hindu Personal Law Board. It was admitted Monday and the case was listed for judgment Wednesday.

A three-judge bench comprising CJI Misra, justices A.M. Khanwilkar and D.Y. Chandrachud had admitted the plea Monday and agreed to pass “judicial orders” in a hearing that lasted less than five minutes.

The court’s dismissal of Pande’s plea essentially thwarts another controversial plea on similar grounds filed by former Union law minister Shanti Bhushan and his lawyer-activist son Prashant Bhushan.

Bhushans had written to the court’s registry, saying that since the petition directly involves the CJI and since he is a respondent, he should not hear the case or decide the roster to hear the case.

If the Bhushans’ plea were to be allowed the case could be heard by Justice Chelameswar, the second most senior judge in the apex court. Chelameswar is due to retire on 23 June.

Pande had sought guidelines for a “transparent and codified procedure for the constitution of benches and allocation of cases” in the apex court.

In 2013, the apex court had imposed a fine of Rs 1 lakh on Pande for filing frivolous PILs. Pande claims to have filed over 200 PILs.

Since the court did not issue any “guidelines”, the ruling would not, however, prohibit future CJIs from regulating the issue on their own. It, however, will be a roadblock for a judge to entertain a plea in court.

The CJI, by virtue of being the administrative head of the court, is the ‘master of the roster’ and has the prerogative to allocate cases to all the other judges. On the judicial side, rulings of all judges, irrespective of seniority have equal value.