Appointment of Judges in Supreme Court
Appointment of Judges in Supreme Court
Appointment of Judges in Supreme Court
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Post-retirement Restrictions:
After retirement, a judge of the Supreme Court is prohibited from practicing
law in any court in India or pleading before any government authority.
As per Article 128 of Indian Constitution, any retired judge of the Supreme
Court of India can be called back to sit and act as a Supreme Court judge by
the Chief Justice of India with the prior permission of the President of India.
Removal:
A judge of the Supreme Court can only be removed from office by an order of the
President.
The removal process requires an address by each House of Parliament,
supported by a special majority i.e., a majority of the total membership of that
House and a majority of not less than two-thirds of the members present and
voting.
The grounds for removal are proven misbehaviour or incapacity.
Parliament has the authority to regulate the procedure for presenting the address
and investigating and proving the misbehaviour or incapacity of a judge.
Once appointed, judges can serve until the age of 65 and cannot be removed
during their tenure except for proved misbehaviour or incapacity.
Collegium System for Judicial Appointments:
Judges of the higher judiciary are appointed through the collegium system.
The collegium, consisting of the Chief Justice of India and the four
senior-most judges of the Supreme Court, decides on appointments,
elevations, and transfers of Judges.
The term "collegium" is not mentioned in the Indian Constitution but has
been established through judicial pronouncements.
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Fourth Judges Case (2015):
The 99th Constitutional Amendment Act of 2014 and the National Judicial
Appointments Commission Act of 2014 has replaced the collegium system of
appointing judges to the Supreme Court and High Courts with a new body called
the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC).
However, in 2015, the Supreme Court declared both the 99th Constitutional
Amendment as well as the NJAC Act as unconstitutional and void in the
fourth judge case. Consequently, the earlier collegium system became
operative again.
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