Supreme Court Vacancies: Who Will Be The Next Six?
Source – livelaw.in
The Supreme Court collegium of five senior Judges, which met on Friday, agreed “in principle” that it would reiterate its previous recommendation – returned by the Centre for reconsideration – on appointing the chief justice of the Uttarakhand high court, Justice K.M.Joseph, as a judge of the apex court. But it has decided to do so only while recommending – presumably on May 16 – the elevation of other chief justices of high courts, who may be in the zone of consideration, for appointment as Supreme Court judges.
There are currently seven vacancies in the Supreme Court, with two more vacancies likely to arise in the next two months, due to the retirement of Justices J. Chelameswar on June 22, and Justice Adarsh Kumar Goel, on July 6. But it is likely that the collegium may first consider six chief justices, in addition to K.M. Joseph, for filling the current vacancies in the apex court.
Who are these six judges likely to be?
The high courts which are not represented in the Supreme Court currently include Calcutta, Chhattisgarh, Gujarat, Rajasthan, Jharkhand, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Manipur and Meghalaya.
Among these, the chief justice of the Calcutta high court, Jyotirmay Bhattacharya’s date of initial appointment as a judge is December 3, 2003. However, as he has taken over as the chief justice of the high court only on May 1, elevating him to the Supreme Court within a month of having taken charge may not make sense. Besides, his date of retirement as a high court judge is September 24 this year.
While elevation to the Supreme Court could give him three more years of service, there is a concern that using the post of high court chief justice as a stop-gap arrangement for an appointee to the Supreme Court –without the incumbent getting an opportunity to contribute as the high court chief justice – may belittle the post of a high court chief justice, which is very important in India’s federal scheme.
Judges of high courts retire at the age of 62, while judges of the Supreme Court retire at 65. Only those chief justices whose tenure in the Supreme Court is likely to be around four years are generally considered for elevation, even though there have been a few exceptions to this in the recent past. Justice K.M. Joseph’s date of retirement as high court chief justice is June 16, 2020; if appointed to the Supreme Court now, he will have a tenure of about five years – till June 16, 2023.