Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUB-COMMITTEE ON JUDICIAL ACCOUNTABILITY ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS., ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/10/1991
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
BENCH:
RAY, B.C. (J)
SHARMA, L.M. (J)
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 320 1991 SCR Supl. (2) 1
1991 SCC (4) 699 JT 1991 (6) 184
1991 SCALE (2)844
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1992 SC2219 (1,2,4,8,9,16,17,23,TO 26,33,3
ACT:
Constitution of India. 1950:
Articles 124(4) and (5) and 118--Removal of Judge of
Supreme Court--Motion for presenting an Address to President
and decision of Speaker of Lok Sabha to admit the motion and
constitute a committee under Judges (inquiry) Act for inves-
tigation and proof of grounds--Whether lapses on dissolution
of the Lok Sabha--Whether Judges (inquiry) Act being law
under Article 124(5) excludes operation of doctrine of lapse
and also rules framed under Article 118--Whether Articles
124(5) and 118 operate in different fields-Question whether
the motion lapsed or not on the dissolution of Lok
Sabha--Justiciability of.
Articles 124(4) and (5) and 121--Scope and interpreta-
tion of-Removal of Judge of Supreme Court---Whether Justi-
ciable---Enactment of law under Article 124(5) for regulat-
ing procedure for investigation and proof of misbehaviour or
incapacity of Judges-----Whether mandatory--Word ’may "When
to be construed as ’shall ’.
Articles 124(4) and (5) and 32---Removal of Judge of
Supreme Court ---Apart from constitutional process, whether
Supreme Court has jurisdiction to enquire into alleged
misbehaviour or incapacity and restrain the concerned Judge
from exercising judicial junctions--Whether it can give
legal directive to Chief Justice of India not to allot any
judicial work to the concerned Judge--Judge facing enquiry,
continuing to discharge judicial functions-----Propriety of.
Article 32 ---Public Interest Litigation--Inquiry Com-
mittee constituted by the Speaker of Lok Sabha under Judges
(inquiry) Act to investigate into the alleged misconduct of
Judge of Supreme Court--Writ Petitions seeking directions to
Union Government to enable the Committee to discharge its
functions under the Act and to restrain the Judge from
performing judicial functions during pendency of proceedings
before the Committee---Maintainability of--Locus standi of
Sub-committee on Judi-
2
cial Accountability and Supreme Court Bar Association to
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sue--Whether Court could refuse to interfere on grounds of
infructuousness, propriety and futility--Declaration of
legal and Constitutional position--Duty of Court--Different
organs of State to consider matters within the orbit of
their respective jurisdictions and powers.
Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968:
Constitutional validity of.
Sections 3 and 6--Removal of Judge--Motion for present-
ing an address to President admitted and Committee consti-
tuted by the Speaker of Lok Sabha to investigate into
charges of misconduct----Whether lapses on dissolution of
the House--Whether the Act, being law made under Article
124(5) of Constitution, excludes doctrine of lapse and also
rules of procedure for the Lok Sabha framed under Article
118--Action of Speaker --Whether vitiated on grounds of
denial of notice and pre-decisional opportunity of hearing
to concerned Judge and Speaker’s political affiliation
---Doctrine of statutory exceptions or necessity--Applica-
bility of.
Constitutional Law:
Separation of Powers under federal set-up--Court--Inter-
preter of limits of authority of different organs of
State----Judicial review--Incidental to and flowing from
concept of written Constitution, the fundamental and higher
law.
Interpretation of Constitution:
Constructions which strengthen the fundamental feature
of the Constitution to be adoped-Rule of law--Whether a
basic feature---Independence of Judiciary----Whether essen-
tial attribute of Rule of Law.
Aids to Construction--Constituent Assembly
debates--Whether could be relied upon--Comparative Study of
Constitution of other Countries-Whether afford proper per-
spective--Resort to historical background-Whether permissi-
ble.
Administrative Law--Natural Justice--Motion for removal
of a Judge under Judges (Inquiry) Act-Speaker deciding to
admit the motion and constituting a Committee to enquire
into allegations of misbehaviour-Whether Judge concerned
entitled to pre-decisional opportunity of hearing.
3
Practice and Procedure:
Removal of a Judge Constitutional process
pending--Conduct of members of the bar--Propriety required
that the Judge should not be embarrassed even before the
charges were proved----Level of debate in and out of
Court----To be dignified and decorous.
Words & Phrases: Word ’may ’--When could be read as’shall ’.
HEADNOTE:
Upon a notice given by 108 members of the 9th Lok Sabha
of a Motion for presenting an Address to the President for
the removal of a sitting Judge of the Supreme Court for the
alleged misconduct committed by him while he was functioning
as Chief Justice of a High Court, the Speaker of the Lok
Sabha admitted the Motion and constituted a Committee con-
sisting of a sitting Judge of this Court, Chief Justice of a
High Court and a distinguished jurist in terms of Section
3(2) of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. Subsequently, the
Lok Sabha was dissolved and its term came to an end.
On its understanding that the Motion as well as the
decision of the Speaker thereon had lapsed consequent on the
dissolution of the Lok Sabha, the Union government did not
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act in aid of the decision of the Speaker, and notify that
the services of the two sitting Judges on the Committee
would be treated as "actual-service" within the meaning of
Para 11(B)(i) of Part D of the II Schedule to the Constitu-
tion.
Thereupon, a body called the Sub-Committee on Judicial
Accountability, claiming to be a Sub-Committee constituted
by an All India Convention on Judicial Accountability to
carry forward the task of implementing the resolutions of
the conventions, and the Supreme Court Bar Association,
seeking to prosecute the matter in the larger public inter-
est and, in particular, in the interests of litigant public,
filed two Writ Petitions before this Court. Two prayers
common to both the petitions were, first, that the Union of
India be directed to take immediate steps to enable the
Inquiry Committee to discharge its functions under the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 and, second, that during the
pendency of the proceedings before the Committee the con-
cerned Judge should be restrained from performing judicial
functions and from exercising Judicial powers.
It was contended on behalf of the petitioners that
pending business lapsed on prorogation, and as a general
practice the House was
4
usually prorogued before it was dissolved, but impeachment
motions were sui-generis in their nature and, therefore,
they did not lapse; that the question whether a motion
lapsed or not was a matter pertaining to the conduct of the
business of the House of which the House was the sole and
exclusive master; no aspect of the matter was justiciable
before a Court and Houses of Parliament were privileged to
be the exclusive arbiters of the legality of their proceed-
ings, that it would be highly inappropriate that the Speaker
should issue notice to a Judge and call upon him to appear
before him; that these proceedings could not be equated with
disciplinary or penal proceedings and the Speaker would not
decide anything against the Judge at that stage and would
merely decide whether the matter would bear investigation;
that the constitutional machinery for removal of a Judge was
merely a political remedy for judicial misbehaviour and did
not exclude the judicial remedy available to the litigants
to ensure and enforce judicial integrity, that the right to
move the Supreme Court to enforce fundamental rights was
itself a fundamental right and that took within its sweep,
as inhering in it, the right to an impartial judiciary with
persons of impeccable integrity and character, without which
the fundamental right to move the court itself becomes
barren and hollow, that the court itself had the jurisdic-
tion - nay a duty to ensure the integrity and impartiality
of the members composing it and restrain any member who was
found to lack in those essential qualities and attainments
at which public confidence is built.
Another Writ Petition was filed by an individual by way
of a counter to the second prayer in the Writ Petitions
filed by the SubCommittee on Judicial Accountability and the
Supreme Court Bar Association. It was contended that till
the Inquiry Committee actually found the concerned Judge
guilty of charges, there should be no interdiction of his
judicial functions and that if such a finding was recorded
then thereafter till such time as the Motion for the presen-
tation of the Address for the removal of the Judge was
disposed of by the Houses of Parliament--which should not be
delayed beyond 180 days--the President may ask the Judge
concerned to recuse from judicial functions.
Another Writ Petition was also filed by a practising
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Advocate challenging the constitutional validity of the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 as ultra vires Articles 100, 105,
118, 121 and 124(5) of the Constitution of India and seeking
a declaration that the’ Motion presented by 108 Members of
Parliament for the removal of the Judges
5
had lapsed with the dissolution of the Lok Sabha. The peti-
tioner also sought the quashing of the decision of the
Speaker admitting the Motion, on the ground of denial of
opportunity of being heard to the concerned Judge before the
admission of Motion and constitution of the Committee by
Speaker.
A Transfer Petition was filed seeking the withdrawal by
the Supreme Court to itself from the Delhi High Court the
Writ Petition filed in the High Court, where reliefs were
similar to those prayed for in the Writ Petition filed by
the practising Advocate. The Writ Petition was directed to
be withdrawn to the Supreme Court and was heard along with
other Writ Petitions.
1t was contended on behalf of the petitioners in these
Writ Petitions that before taking a decision to admit the
motion and constituting a Committee for investigation, it
was incumbent upon the Speaker, as a minimum requirement of
natural justice, to afford an opportunity to the Judge of
being heard since such a decision had momentous consequences
both to the Judge and to the judicial system as a whole and
that any politically motivated steps to besmear a Judge
would not merely affect the Judge himself but also the
entire system of administration of justice and therefore it
would greatly advance the objects and purposes of Judges
(inquiry) Act, 1968 if the Judge concerned himself was given
such a hearing; that the Speaker had acted contrary to
Constitutional practice, that the manner in which he had
admitted the motion smacked of malafides and since the
Speaker had not entered appearance and denied the allega-
tions, he must be deemed to have admitted them; that having
regard to the nature of the area the decision of the Court
and its writ is to operate in, the Court should decline to
exercise its jurisdiction, and that any decision rendered or
any writ issued might, ultimately become futile and infruc-
tuous as the constitution of and investigation by the com-
mittee were not, nor intended to be, an end by themselves
culminating in any independent legal consequence, but only a
proceeding preliminary to and preceding the deliberations of
the House on the motion for the presentation of an address
to the President for the removal of a Judge, which was
indisputably within the exclusive province of the Houses of
Parliament over which courts exercised no control or juris-
diction.
On behalf of the Union of india it was contended that a
combined reading of Articles 107, 108 and 109 would lead
irresistibly to the conclusion that upon dissolution of the
House, all bills would
6
lapse subject only to the exception stipulated in Article
108, that on first principle also it required to be accepted
that no motion should survive upon the dissolution of the
House unless stipulated otherwise under the Rules of proce-
dure and conduct of business; the doctrine of lapse was a
necessary concomitant of the idea that each newly constitut-
ed House was a separate entity having a life of its own
unless the business of the previous House was carried over
by the force of statute or rules of procedure and that the
question whether a motion lapsed or not was to be decided on
the basis of the provisions of law guiding the matter and
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the House itself was not its final arbiter and the Court
alone had jurisdiction to examine and pronounce on the law
of the matter.
Disposing of the cases, this Court,
HELD: By majority Per Ray. J. (for himself, Venkatacha-
liah, Verma and Agrawal, J J)
1.1 Where there is a written Constitution which consti-
tutes the fundamental and in that sense a "higher law" and
acts as a limitation upon the Legislature and other organs
of the State as grantees under the Constitution, the usual
incidents of parliamentary sovereignty do not obtain and the
concept is one of ’limited Government’. Judicial review is
an incident of and flows from this concept of the fundamen-
tal and the higher law being the touchstone of the limits of
the powers of the various organs of the State which derive
power and authority under Constitution and that the judicial
wing is the interpreter of the Constitution and, therefore,
of the limits of authority of the different organs of the
State. In a federal set-up, the judiciary becomes the guard-
ian of the Constitution.The inter- pretation of the Consti-
tution as a legal instrument and its obligation is the
function of the Courts. It is emphatically the province and
duty of the judicial department to say what the law is. [51
G-H, 52A, D]
1.2 In interpreting the constitutional provisions con-
cerning the judiciary and its independence the Court should
adopt a construction which strengthens the foundational
features and the basic structure of the Constitution. Rule
of law is a basic feature of the Constitutional fabric and
is an integral part of the constitutional structure. Inde-
pendence of the judiciary is an essential attribute of Rule
of law. [31 D]
1.3 In construing the Constitutional provisions, the law and
7
procedure for removal of Judges in other countries afford a
background and a comparative view. The solution must, of
course, be found within our own Constitutional Scheme. But a
comparative idea affords a proper perspective for the under-
standing and interpretation of the Constitutional Scheme.
[31 G-H]
Barringtons Case [1830]; Terrell v. Secretary of State
for the Colonies and Another, [1953I 2 QB 482, referred to.
Constituent Assembly Debates Vols. I to VI @ pp 899,900
Vol. VIII @ pp. 243-262, referred to.
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Ed. Vol. p 1108; She-
treet ’Judges on Trial’ (1976); pp. 404-405; Rodney Brazier
’Constitutional Texts’ (1990) pp. 606-607; Gall ’The Canadi-
an Legal System’ (1983); pp. 184-186, 189; Lane’s Commentary
on The Australian Constitution (1986) p. 373; Mclelland
’Disciplining Australian Judges’ (1990) 64 ALJ 388, at p.
403; Henry J. Abraham.’ The Judicial Process, 3rd Ed. p. 45;
Robert J. Janosik: Encyclopeadia of the American Judicial
System, Vol II pp. 575 to 578; "The Impeachment of the
Federal Judiciary" Wrisley Brown Harvard Law Review 1912-
1913 684 at page 698; ’The Judicial Process in Comparative
Perspective’ (Clarendon Press-Oxford 1989 at page 73);
(Erskine May’s "The Law, Privileges, Proceeding and Usage of
Parliament" (Twenty-first Edition London Butterworths 1989);
M.N. Kaul and S.L. Shakdher in Practice and Procedure of
Parliament", referred to.
2.1 It is not correct to say that the question whether a
motion has lapsed or not was a matter pertaining to the
conduct of the business of the House, of which the House was
the sole and exclusive master, and that no aspect of the
matter was justiciable before a Court. [29 C ,53 G]
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2.2 The question whether the motion has lapsed is a
matter to be pronounced upon on the basis of the Constitu-
tion and the relevant rules. [53 E]
2.3 On such interpretation of the Constitutional provi-
sions as well as the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, the Courts
retain jurisdiction to declare that a motion for removal of
Judge does not lapse on dissolution of the House. [53F-G]
Bradlaugh v. Gossett, [18841 12 Q.B.D. 271, distinguished.
8
A.K. Gopalan v. The State of Madras, |1950] SCR 88
Special Reference Case, [1965] 1 SCR 413, referred to.
Barton v. Taylor, [1886] 11 AC 197, Rediffuson (Hong
Kong) Ltd. v. Attorney General of Hong Kong, [1970I AC 1136,
referred to.
3.1 The constitutional process for removal of a Judge
upto the point of admission of the motion, constitution of
the Committee and the recording of findings by the Committee
are not, strictly, proceedings in the Houses of Parliament.
The Speaker is a statutory authority under the Act. Upto
that point the matter cannot be said to remain outside the
Court’s jurisdiction. [66 E]
3.2 The scheme of Articles 124(4) and (5) is that the
entire process of removal is in two parts - the first part,
under clause (5) from initiation to investigation and proof
of misbehaviour or incapacity is covered by an enacted law,
Parliament’s role being only legislative as in all the laws
enacted by it, the second part under clause (4) is in Par-
liament and that process commences only on proof of misbeha-
viour or incapacity in accordance with the law enacted under
clause (5). Thus, the first part is entirely statutory,
while the second part alone is the parliamentary process.
[61 D]
3.3 The context and setting in which clause (5) appears
along with clause (4) in Article 124 indicate its nature and
distinguish it from Articles 118, 119 and 121, all of which
relate to procedure and conduct of business in Parliament.
[61 B-C]
3.4 The validity of law enacted by the Parliament under
clause (5) of Article 124 and the stage upto conclusion of
the inquiry in accordance with that law, being governed
entirely by statute, would be open to judicial review as the
parliamentary process under Article 124(4) commences only
after a finding is recorded that the alleged misbehaviour or
incapacity is proved in the inquiry conducted in accordance
with the law enacted under clause (5). For this reason, the
argument based on exclusivity of Parliament’s jurisdiction
over the process and progress of inquiry under the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968 and, consequently, exclusion of this
Court’s jurisdiction in the matter at this stage does not
arise. [59 G-H, 60 A]
4.1 Article 121 suggests that the bar on discussion in
Parliament with respect to the conduct of any Judge is
lifted ’upon a
9
motion for presenting an address to the President praying
for the removal of a Judge as hereinafter provided’. The
words ’motion’ and ’as hereinafter provided’ are obvious
references to the motion for the purpose of clause (4) of
Article 124 which, in turn, imports the concept of "proved"
misbehaviour or incapacity. What lifts the bar under Article
121 is the ’proved’ misbehaviour or incapacity. Clause (5)
of Article 124 provides for an enactment of law for the
purpose of investigation and proof of misconduct or incapac-
ity preceding the stage of motion for removal on the ground
of ’proved’ misbehaviour or incapacity under clause (4). [56
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H, 57 A-B]
4.2 An allegation of misbehaviour or incapacity of a
Judge has to be made, investigated and found proved in
accordance with the law enacted by the Parliament under
Article 124 (5) without the Parliament being involved upto
that stage; on the misbehaviour or incapacity of a Judge
being found proved in the manner provided by that law a
motion for presenting an address to the President for remov-
al of the Judge on that ground would be moved in each House
under Article 124(4); on the motion being so moved after the
proof of misbehaviour or incapacity and it being for pre-
senting an address to the President praying for removal of
the Judge, the bar on discussion contained in Article 121 is
lifted and discussion can take place in the Parliament with
respect to the conduct of the Judge; and the further conse-
quences would ensue depending on the outcome of the motion
in a House of Parliament. If, however, the finding reached
by the machinery provided in the enacted law is that the
allegation is not proved, the matter ends and there is no
occasion to move the motion in accordance with Article
124(4). [57 G-H, 58 A-B]
4.3 Thus prior proof of misconduct in accordance with
the law made under Article 124(5) is a condition precedent
for the lifting of the bar under Article 121 against dis-
cussing the conduct of a Judge in the Parliament. Article
124(4) really becomes meaningful only with a law made under
Article 124(5), without which, the constitutional scheme and
process for removal of a Judge remains inchoate. [66 F]
4.4 The bar in Article 121 applies to discussion in
Parliament but investigation and proof of misconduct or
incapacity cannot exclude such discussion. This indicates
that the machinery for investigation and proof must neces-
sarily be outside Parliament and not within it. In other
words, proof which involves a discussion of the conduct of
the Judge must be by a body which is outside the limita-
10
tion of Article 121. The policy appears to be that the
entire stage upto proof of misbehaviour or incapacity,
beginning with the initiation of investigation on the alle-
gation being made, is governed by the law enacted under
Article 124(5) and in view of the restriction provided in
Article 121, that machinery has to be outside the Parliament
and not within it. Parliament neither has any role to play
till misconduct or incapacity is found proved nor has it any
control over the machinery provided in the law enacted under
Article 124(5). Parliament comes in the picture only when a
finding is reached by that machinery that the alleged misbe-
haviour or incapacity has been proved. The Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968 enacted under article 124(5) itself indicates that
the Parliament so understood the integrated scheme of Arti-
cles 121, 124(4) and 124(5). The general scheme of the Act
conforms to this view. [58 H-59 A-D]
4.5 It is not the law enacted under Article 124(5) which
abridges or curtails the parliamentary process or exclusivi-
ty of its jurisdiction, but the Constitutional Scheme itself
which by enacting clauses (4) and (5) simultaneously indi-
cated that the stage of clause (4) is reached and the proc-
ess thereunder commences only when the alleged misbehaviour
or incapacity is proved in accordance with the law enacted
under clause (5). It is only then that the need for discuss-
ing a Judge’s conduct in the Parliament arises and, there-
fore, the bar under Article 121 is lifted. [60 D-E]
5.1 If the motion for presenting an address for removal
is envisaged by Articles 121 and 124(4) ’on ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity’, it presupposes that misbeha-
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viour or incapacity has been proved earlier. This is more so
on account of the expression ’investigation and proof’ used
in clause (5) with specific reference to clause (4), indi-
cating that ’investigation and proof’ of misbehaviour or
incapacity is not within clause (4) but within clause (5).
Use of the expression ’same session’ in clause (4) without
any reference to session in clause (5) also indicates that
session of House has no significance for clause (5) i.e.,
’investigation and proof’ which is to be entirely governed
by the enacted law and not the parliamentary practice which
may be altered by each Lok Sabha. [61 F-H]
5.2 The significance of the word ’proved’ before the
expression ’misbehaviour or incapacity’ in clause (4) of
Article 124 is also indicated when the provision is compared
with Article 317 providing for removal of a member of the
Public Service Commission. The expression in clause (1) of
Article 317 used for describing the ground
11
of removal is ’the ground of misbehaviour’ while in clause
(4) of Article 124, it is, ’the ground of proved misbeha-
viour or incapacity’.
[62 A]
5.3 Use of the word ’may’ in clause (5) indicates that
for the ’procedure for presentation of address’ it is an
enabling provision and in the absence of the law, the gener-
al procedure or that resolved by the House may apply but the
’investigation and proof’ is to be governed by the enacted
law. The word ’may’ in clause (5) is no impediment to this
view. When a provision is intended to effectuate a right --
here it is to effectuate a constitutional protection to the
Judges under Article 124(4) -- even a provision as in Arti-
cle 124(5) which may otherwise seem merely enabling becomes
mandatory. The exercise of the power is rendered obligatory.
The use of the word ’may’ does not necessarily indicate that
the whole of clause (5) is an enabling provision leaving it
to the Parliament to decide whether to enact a law even for
the investigation and proof of the misbehaviour or incapaci-
ty or not. [62 D, 62 G, 63 E-F]
State of Uttar Pradesh v. Joginder Singh, [1964] 2 SCR
197 at 202; Punjab Sikh Regular Motor Service, Moudhapara
v. The Regional Transport Authority, Raipur & Anr., [1966] 2
SCR 221, referred to.
Erederic Guilder ,Julius v. The Right Rev. The Lord
Bishop of Oxford,’ the Rev. Thomas Tellusson Carter,
[1879-80] 5 A.C. 214 at 244, referred to.
5.4 Similarly, use of word ’motion’ to indicate the
process of investigation and proof in the Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968, because the allegations have to be presented to
the ’Speaker’ does not make it ’motion in the House’ not-
withstanding use of that expression in Section 6. Otherwise,
section 6 would not say that no further step is to be taken
in case of a finding of ’not guilty’. It only means that
when the allegation is not proved, the Speaker need not
commence the process under clause (4) which is started only
in case it is proved. The Speaker is, therefore, a statutory
authority under the Act chosen because the further process
is parliamentary and the authority to make such a complaint
is given to Members of Parliament. Moreover, the enactment
under Article 124(5) cannot be a safe guide to determine the
scope of Article 124(5). [64 A-C]
6.1 Article 124(5) does not operate in the same field as
Article 118 relating to procedure and conduct of business in
Parliament.
[61C]
12
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6.2 Article 118 is a general provision conferring on
each House of Parliament the power to make its rules of
procedure. These rules are not binding on the House and can
be altered by the House at any time. A breach of the rules
amounts to an irregularity and is not subject to judicial
review in view of Article 122. [64 G]
6.3 Article 124(5) is in the nature of a special provi-
sion intended to regulate the procedure for removal of a
Judge under Article 124(4), which is not a part of the
normal business of the House but is in the nature of special
business. It covers the entire field relating to removal of
a Judge. Rules made under Article 118 have no application in
this field. [64 H, 65 A]
6.4 Article 124(5) has no comparison with Article 119.
Articles 118 and 119 operate in the same field viz., normal
business of the House. It was, therefore, necessary to
specifically prescribe that the law made under Article 119
shall prevail over the rules of procedure made under Article
118. Since Articles 118 and 124(5) operate in different
fields; a provision like that contained in Article 119 was
not necessary and even in the absence of such a provision, a
law made under Article 124(5) will override the rules made
under Article 118 and shall be binding on both the Houses of
Parliament. A violation of such a law would constitute
illegality and could not be immune from judicial scrutiny
under Article 122(1). [65 B-C]
7.1 -Neither the doctrine that dissolution of a House
passes a sponge over parliamentary slate nor the specific
provisions contained in any rule or rules framed under
Article 118 of the Constitution determine the effect of
dissolution on the motion for removal of a Judge under
Article 124, because Article 124(5) and the law made there-
under exclude the operation of Article 118 in this area. [49
F]
Purushothaman Nambudiri v.. The State of Kerala, [1962]
Suppl. 1 SCR 753, referred to.
7.2 The law envisaged in Article 124(5) is parliamentary
law which is of higher quality and efficacy than rules made
by the House for itself under Article 118. Such a law can
provide against the doctrine of lapse. [50 H]
7.31n the constitutional area of removal of a Judge, the
law made under Article 124(5) must be held to go a little
further and to exclude the operation of the Rules under
Article 118 and no ques-
13
tion of repugnance could arise to the extent the field is
covered by the law under Article 124(5). [51 C]
State of Punjab v. Sat Pal Dang & Ors, [1969] 1 SCR 478,
relied on.
8.1 The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 reflects the consti-
tutional philosophy of both the judicial and political
elements of the process of removal. The ultimate authority
remains with the Parliament in the sense that even if the
Committee for investigation records a finding that the Judge
is guilty of the charges, it is yet open to the Parliament
to decide not to present an address to the President for
removal. But if the Committee records a finding that the
Judge is not guilty then the political element in the proc-
ess of removal has no further option. The law is, indeed, a
civilised piece of legislation reconciling the concept of
accountability of Judges and the values of judicial inde-
pendence. The provisions of the Judges (Inquiry) Act do not
foul with the constitutional scheme. [65 B-C, 64 C]
8.2 The Speaker, while admitting a motion and constitut-
ing a Committee to investigate the alleged grounds of misbe-
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haviour or incapacity does not act as part of the House. The
House does not come into the picture at this stage. The
provisions of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 are not uncon-
stitutional as abridging the powers and privileges of the
House. The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 is constitutional and
is intra vires. [66 G-H]
9.1 The Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 is law enacted under
Article 124(5) which provides against doctrine of lapse.
9.2 The effect of sections 3(1) and (2) and 6(2) of the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, is that the motion should be
kept pending till the committee submits its report and if
the committee finds the Judge guilty, the motion shall be
taken up for consideration. Only one motion is envisaged
which will remain pending. No words of limitation that the
motion shall be kept pending subject to usual effect of
dissolution of the House can or should be imported. [50 G]
9.3 Section 3 of the Act applies to both the Houses of
Parliament. The words "shall keep the motion pending" cannot
have two different meanings in the two different contexts.
It can only mean that the consideration of the motion shall
be deferred till the report
14
of the Committee implying that till the happening of that
event the motion will not lapse. Therefore, such a motion
does not lapse with the dissolution of the House of Parlia-
ment. [51 D]
10. At the stage of the provisions when the Speaker
admits the motion under section 3 of the Judges (Inquiry)
Act, a Judge is not, as a matter of right, entitled to a
notice. The scheme of the statute and the rules made there-
under by necessary implication, exclude such a right. But
that may not prevent the Speaker, if the facts and circum-
stances placed before him indicate that hearing the Judge
himself might not be inappropriate, might do so. But a
decision to admit the motion and constitute a Committee for
investigation without affording such an opportunity does
not, by itself and for that reason alone, vitiate the deci-
sion. [68 E-G]
11.1 It is true that society is entitled to expect the
highest and most exacting standards of propriety in judicial
conduct, and any conduct which tends to impair public confi-
dence in the efficiency, integrity and impartiality of the
court is indeed forbidden. But, the proposition that, apart
from the constitutional machinery for removal of a Judge,
the judiciary itself has the jurisdiction and in appropriate
cases a duty to enquire into the integrity of one of its
members and restrain the Judge from exercising judicial
functions is beset with grave risks. The court would then
indeed be acting as a tribunal for the removal of a Judge
and is productive of more problems than it can hope to
solve. [69 C, 70 H]
Sampath Kumar & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors, [1985] 4
S.C.C. 458, referred to.
Corpus Juris Secundum, (VoI.48A), referred to.
11.2 The relief of a direction to restrain the Judge
from discharging judicial functions cannot be granted. The
entire Constitutional Scheme, including the provisions
relating to the process of removal of a Judge are to be
taken into account for the purpose of considering this
aspect. Since the Constitutional Scheme is that the Judge’s
conduct cannot be discussed even in the Parliament which is
given the substantive power of removal, till the alleged
misconduct or incapacity is ’proved’ in accordance with the
law enacted for this purpose, it is difficult to accept that
any such discussion on the conduct of the Judge or any
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evaluation or inference as to its
15
merit is permissible according to law elsewhere except
during investigation before the Inquiry Committee constitut-
ed under the statute for this purpose. Therefore, it is
difficult to accept that there can be any right in anyone
running parallel with the Constitutional Scheme for this
purpose contained in clauses (4) and (5) of Article 124 read
with Article 121. No authority can do what the Constitution
by necessary implication forbids. [71 B-F]
11.3 The question of propriety is, however, different
from that of legality. Whether the Judge should continue to
function during the intervening period is to be covered by
the sense of propriety of the concerned Judge himself and
the judicial tradition symbolised by the views of the Chief
Justice of India. It should be expected that the Judge would
be guided in such a situation by the advice of the Chief
Justice of India, as a matter of convention, unless he
himself decided as an act of propriety to abstain from
discharging judicial functions during the interregnum. It is
reasonable to assume that the framers of Constitution had
assumed that a desirable convention would be followed by a
Judge in that situation which would not require the exercise
of a power of suspension.[It would also be reasonable to
assume that the Chief Justice of India is expected to find a
desirable solution in such a situation to avoid embarrass-
ment to the concerned Judge and to the Institution in a
manner which is conducive to the independence of judiciary
and should the Chief Justice of India be of the view that in
the interests of the institution of judiciary it is desira-
ble for the Judge to abstain from judicial work till the
final outcome under Article 124(4), he would advise the
Judge accordingly, and the concerned Judge would ordinarily
abide by the advice of the Chief Justice of India. All this
is, however, in the sphere of propriety and not a matter of
legal authority to permit any court to issue any legal
directive t? the Chief Justice of India for this purpose.
[71 G, 72 A, C-E]
12. Even on the allegations made in the petition and
plea of malafides which require to be established on strong
grounds no such case is made out. A case of malafides cannot
be made out merely on the ground of political affiliation of
the Speaker either. That may not be a sufficient ground in
the present context. At nil events, as the only statutory
authority to deal with the matter, doctrine of statutory
exceptions or necessity might be invoked. [74 B-C]
13. The law as to standing to sue in public interest actions
has
16
undergone a vast change over the years and liberal standards
for determining locus standi are now recognised. The present
matter is of such nature and the constitutional issues of
such nature and importance that it cannot be said that
members of the Bar, and particularly, the Supreme Court Bar
Association have no locus standi in the matter. An elaborate
re-survey of the principles and precedents over again is
unnecessary. Suffice it to say that from any point
view, the petitioners satisfy the legal requirements of the
standing to sue. [74 E-F]
S.P. Gupta & Ors. etc. etc. v. Union of India & Ors.
etc. etc., [1982] 2 SCR 365, relied on.
14. Certain submissions advanced on the prayer seeking
to re.strain the judge from functioning till the proceedings
of the committee were concluded lacked as much in propriety
as in dignity and courtesy with which the Judge is entitled.
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While the members of the bar may claim to act in public
interest, they have, at the same time, a duty of courtesy
and particular care that in the event of the charges being
found baseless or insufficient to establish any moral turpi-
tude, the Judge does not suffer irreparably in the very
process. The approach should not incur the criticism that it
was calculated to expose an able and courteous Judge to
public indignity even before the allegations were examined
by the forum constitutionally competent to do so. The level
of the debate both in and outside the Court should have been
more decorous and dignified. Propriety required that even
before the charges are proved in the only way in which it is
permitted to be proved, the Judge should not be embarrassed.
The constitutional protection to Judges is not for their
personal benefit; but is one of the means of protecting the
judiciary and its independence and is, therefore, in the
larger public interest. Recourse to constitutional methods
must be adhered to if the system were to survive. [74 G, 75
A-C]
15.1 The interpretation of the law declared by this
Court that a motion under section 3(2) of the Judges (In-
quiry) Act, 1968, does not lapse upon the dissolution of the
House is a binding declaration. If the law is that the
motion does not lapse, there can be no occasion for the
House to say so at any time and it is erroneous to assume
that the Houses of Parliament would act in violation of the
law, since the interpretation of the law is within the
exclusive power of the courts. [76 E]
17
25.2 If the House is not required to’ consider this
question since the parliamentary process can commence only
after a finding of guilt being proved, the further question
of a futile writ also does not arise. The point that the
House can decide even after a finding of guilt that it would
not proceed to vote for removal of the Judge is not germane
to the issue since that is permissible in the Constitutional
Scheme itself under Article 124(4), irrespective of the fact
whether Article 124(5) is a mere enabling provision or a
constitutional limitation on the exercise of power under
Article 124 (4). [60 B-C]
15.3 The Union Government has sought to interpret the
legal position for purpose of guiding its own response to
the situation and to regulate its actions on the Speaker’s
decision. That understanding of the law is unsound. [76 G]
15.4 No specific writ of direction need issue to any
authority. Having regard to the nature of the subject matter
and the purpose it is ultimately intended to serve, all that
is necessary is to declare the legal and correct constitu-
tional position and leave the different organs of the State
to consider matters falling within the orbit of their re-
spective jurisdiction and powers. [76 H, 77 A]
15.5 In the circumstances, the question of Court de-
clining to exercise its jurisdiction on the ground that the
Judgment rendered and Writ issued by it would become infruc-
tuous does not arise. [31 A-C, 77 A]
Per Sharma, J. (dissenting);
1.1 On a close examination of the Constitution, it is
clear that a special pattern has been adopted with respect
to the removal of the members of the three organs of the
State. The Executive, the Legislature and the Judiciary--at
the highest level, and this plan having been consciously
included in the Constitution, has to be kept in mind in
construing its provisions. The approach should be that when
a question of removal of a member of any of the three wings
at the highest level-i.e. the President; the Members of the
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Parliament and the State Legislatures; and the Judges of the
Supreme Court and the High Courts-arises, it is left to an
organ other than where the problem has arisen, to be decid-
ed. Consistent with this pattern, Clause (4) of Article 124
in emphatic terms declares that a Judge of the Supreme Court
or the High Court shall not be removed from his office
except on a special majority of the Members of each House of
Parliament. Both the Executive and the Judiciary
18
are thus excluded in this process. The scheme cannot be
construed as lack of trust in the three organs of the State.
There are other relevant considerations to be taken into
account while framing and adopting a written Constitution,
which include the assurance to the people that the possibil-
ity of a subjective approach clouding the decision on an
issue as sensitive as the one under consideration, has been
as far eliminated as found practicable in the situation. And
where this is not possible at all, it cannot be helped, and
has to be reconciled by application of the doctrine of
necessity, which is not attracted in the instant case. [81
F-H, 82 D-E,F-G]
A11 Party Hill Leaders Conference v. M.A. Sangma, [1978]
1 SCR 393 at 411, referred to.
The Federalist: Hamilton, referred to.
1.2 There cannot be two opinions on the necessity of an
independent and fearless judiciary in a democratic country
like ours, but it does not lead to the further conclusion
that the independence of judiciary will be under a threat,
unless the matter of removal of Judges, even at the highest
level, is not subjected to the ultimate control of Courts.
Great care was taken by the framers of the Constitution to
this aspect and the matter was examined from every possible
angle, before adopting the scheme as laid down. So far as
the district courts and subordinate courts are concerned,
the control has been vested in the High Court, but when it
came to the High Court and Supreme Court Judges, it was
considered adequate for the maintenance of their independ-
ence to adopt and enact the Constitution as it is found now.
There is no reason to doubt the wisdom of the Constituent
Assembly in entrusting the matter exclusively in the hands
of the Parliament and there is no ground for suspicion that
the Members of Parliament or their representatives, the
Speaker and the Chairman, shall not be acting in the true
spirit of the Constitutional provisions. The mandate of the
Constitution is binding on all. [100 B-E]
2.1 The exercise of power under clause (4) was not made
conditional on the enactment of a law under clause (5), and
the reason for inserting clause (5) in Article 124 was
merely for elaborating the provisions. Clause (4) does not
state that the misbehaviour or the incapacity of the Judge
will have to be proved only in accordance with a law to be
passed by the Parliament under clause (5) Clause (4) would
continue to serve the purpose as it does now, without any
19
amendment if clause (5) were to be removed from the Consti-
tution today. There is no indication of any limitation on
the power of the Parliament to decide the manner in which it
will obtain a finding on misbehaviour or incapacity for
further action to be taken by it. Clause (5) merely enables
the parliament to enact a law for this purpose, if it so
chooses. [88 E, 88 A, 89 A]
2.2 The word ’may’ has been sometimes understood in the
imperative sense as ’shall’, but ordinarily it indicates a
choice of action and not a command. In the present context,
there is no reason to assume that it has been used in its
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extraordinary meaning. [88 F]
3. The object of Article 121 is to prevent any discus-
sion in Parliament with respect to the conduct of a Judge of
the Superior Courts, except when it cannot be avoided. The
Article, accordingly, prohibits such a discussion except
upon a motion for presenting an address to the President for
removal of a Judge. [89 B]
4.1 The expression "motion" has not been defined in the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968. The Lok Sabha Rules framed under
Article 118 of the Constitution deal with "motions". There
are separate rules of procedures for conduct of business
adopted by the Rajya Sabha. Section 3(1) of the Act states
that if a notice of "motion" is given for presenting an
address to the President for the removal of a Judge, the
Speaker or the Chairman, as the case may be, after consult-
ing such persons as he deems fit, as also such relevant
materials which may be available to him either admit the
"motion" or refuse to admit the same. The manner in which
this section refers to "motion" in the Act for the first
time without a definition or introduction clearly indicates
that it is referring to that "motion" which is ordinarily
understood in the context of the two Houses of Parliament
attracting their respective rules. Section 3 does not speci-
fy as to how and to whom the notice of "motion" is to be
addressed or handed over and it is not quite clear as to how
the Speaker suddenly comes in the picture unless the Lok
Sabha Rules are taken into account. Therefore, the provi-
sions of the Act have to be read alongwith some of the Lok
Sabha Rules. Rules 185, 186 and 137 which are relevant for
the purpose should be treated to be supplementary to the
Act. [90 D-G, 91 B]
4.2 Sub-section (2) of Section 3, which is of vital
importance in the present context, says that if the "motion"
referred to in subsection (1) is admitted, the Speaker
"shall keep the motion pending"
20
and constitute a Committee for investigation into the alle-
gations. 191 C]
4.3 The situs where the "motion" is pending is almost
conclusive on the issue whether the House is seized of it or
not. The Act does not leave any room for doubt that the
"motion" remains pending in the House and not outside it.
This is corroborated by the language used in proviso to
Section 3(2) which deals with cases where notices of "mo-
tion" under Section 3(1) are given on the same date in both
Houses of Parliament. It says that in such a situation, no
Committee shall be constituted unless the "motion" has been
"admitted in both Houses", and where such "motion" has been
admitted "in both Houses", the Committee shall be constitut-
ed jointly by the Speaker and the Chairman. It is not an
inadvertent reference in the Act of the "motion" being
pending in the House: the Act and the Rules made thereunder
envisage and deal with a "motion" which is admitted in the
House and remains pending there to be taken up again when
the date is fixed by the Speaker on receipt of the report
from the Committee. The language throughout the Act has been
consistently used on this premise and is not capable of
being ignored or explained away. [91 D, G-H, 92 A, C-D]
4.4 The scope of the Act and the Rules is limited to the
investigation in pursuance of a "motion" admitted by the
Speaker. At the conclusion of the investigation the Commit-
tee has to send the report to the Speaker (or the Chairman
as the case may be) along with a copy of the original Mo-
tion. If the finding goes against the Judge, the Motion, the
same original Motion, together with the report would be
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taken up for consideration by the House where the Motion is
pending, and the address and the Motion would be put to vote
together in each House of Parliament. What the Act and the
Rules contemplate is the original Motion to be taken up for
consideration by the House, and if this Motion is held to
have exhausted itself on admission by the Speaker nothing
remains on which the Act would operate. [92 E, G]
4.5 Thus, the concept of the original Motion being pending
in the House, to be taken up for debate and vote on the
receipt of the report of the Committee, is the life and soul
of the Act, and if that Motion disappears nothing remains
behind to attract the Act. This idea runs through the entire
Act and the Rules, and cannot be allowed to be replaced by a
substitute. The existence of a Motion pending in the House
is a necessary condition for the application of
21
the Act. Bereft of the same, the Act does not survive. It
is, therefore, not permissible to read the Act so as to mean
that the House is not seised of the Motion and that it does
not have anything to do with the inquiry pending before the
Committee, until the report is received. If clauses (4) and
(5) of Article 124 are construed otherwise the Act will have
to be struck down as ultra vires, or in any event, inopera-
tive and infructuous and, on this ground alone, the Writ
Petitions are liable to be dismissed. [92 H, 93 A-B]
5.1 The mandate of the Constitution against discussion
on the conduct of a Judge in the House is for everybody to
respect, and it is the bounden duty of the Speaker to en-
force it. He has to ensure that Article 121 is obeyed in
terms and spirit. The pendency of the motion in the House
cannot be a ground to violate Article 121, and the apprehen-
sion that if the motion is held to be pending in the House,
on its admission, the object of Article 121 would be defeat-
ed is misconceived. [93 C, F]
5.2 The wider proposition that the House was seized of
the matter so effectively as to entitle every member to
demand a discussion in the House at any stage will not only
violate Article 121, but also offend the provisions of the
1968 Act. It is not correct to assume that if the right of
the individual member to insist on immediate discussion is
denied, the consequence will be to deprive the Parliament of
the control of the motion. The Speaker may consult other
persons before admitting the motion, and while so doing he
may consult the members of the House also, but without
permitting a discussion in the House. The consultation,
which the Act permits, is private in nature, not amounting
to a public discussion, while the object of Article 121 is
to prevent a public debate. It may also be open to the
Speaker to consult the House on a legal issue which can be
answered without reference to the conduct of Judge in ques-
tion, as for example, the issue involved in the instant
case, whether on account of dissolution of the old House the
Motion has lapsed and the Committee of Inquiry is defunct.
What is prohibited is not every matter relating to the
removal of a Judge; the bar is confined to a discussion with
respect to the conduct of a Judge in the discharge of his
duties. [95 E-H, 96A]
5.3 There is no justification for interpreting such
portion of the 1968 Act, which directed or declared the
initial motion admitted by the Speaker to remain pending in
the House, as creating legal fiction limited for the purpose
of ensuring that the bar under Article 121 was not lifted
prematurely. [96 B]
22
East End Dwellings Co. Ltd. And Finsbury Borough Coun-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 79
cil: 1952 A.C. 109, referred to.
5.4 A close reading of the entire Act indicates that the
language therein was consciously chosen to make the House
seized of the matter, and consequently it became necessary
to include the provision directing the motion to remain
pending for the purpose of preventing a premature discus-
sion. The Act has, thus, very successfully respected both
Articles 124 and 121 in their true spirit, by neatly harmo-
nising them. [97 B]
5.5 Parliament is in control of the matter from the very
beginning till the end. By the introduction of the Speaker
and the requirement of a large number of members of either
House to initiate the matter, the House is brought in con-
trol of the proceeding through its representative, the
Speaker or the Chairman. The ground of proved misbehaviour
or incapacity is necessary only for putting the matter to
vote in the House under clause (4), and is not a condition
precedent for initiating a proceeding and taking further
steps in this regard. ]97 G-H, 98 A]
5.6 It is a well established practice for a larger body
to entrust investigations to a smaller body for obvious
practical reasons, and such an exercise cannot be characte-
rised as indulging in abnegation of authority. It could have
asked a Parliamentary Committee to enquire into the allega-
tions or employed any other machinery for the purpose. [98
D]
5.7 So long as the statute enables the House to maintain
its control either directly or through the Speaker, the
entrustment of the investigation does not amount to abdica-
tion of power. It is a case where the Parliament has taken a
decision to respect the verdict of the Committee in favour
of the Judge, consistently with clause (4) and no fault can
be found. 199 B]
State of Uttar Pradesh v. Batuk Deo Pati Tripathi and
Anr., [1978] 2 SCC 102, referred to.
5.8 The House, which is in control of the proceeding is
entitled to take all necessary and relevant steps in the
matter, except discussing the conduct of the Judge until the
stage is reached and the bar under Article 121 is lifted. If
it is held that the Committee is an independent statutory
body not subject to the control of the House
23
directly or through the Speaker, then the Act may be ren-
dered unworkable. Besides, this would lower the dignity of
the Chief Justice of India by providing a machinery consist-
ing of 5 or 4 Judges to sit in ,appeal over him. If the
Committee is held to be functioning under the supervision
and control of the Parliament, with a view to aid it for the
purpose of a proceeding pending in the House, it will be the
Parliament which will be in control of the proceeding and
not the Committee. [99 E-F, H]
6.1 When even after a verdict against the Judge is
returned by the Committee, the Parliament, or for that
matter any of the two Houses can refuse to vote in favour of
the Motion for removal of a Judge, and the Court would not
have any jurisdiction to interfere in the matter, it is not
conceivable, that at the intermediate stage of investigation
the Court has got the power to intervene. This is because,
if the control of the House continues on the proceeding
throughout, which can be exercised through the Speaker, it
cannot be presumed that the Court has a parallel jurisdic-
tion, which may result in issuance of contradictory direc-
tions. Besides, the Court cannot be expected to pass orders
in the nature of step in aid, where the final result is
beyond its jurisdiction. Any order passed or direction
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issued by this Court may result in merely an exercise in
futility, and may cause a situation, embarrassing both for
the highest judicial and legislative authorities of the
country. The Constitution cannot be attributed with such an
intention. [101 A-C]
6.2 In the circumstances the courts, including this
Court, do not have any jurisdiction to pass any order in
relation to a proceeding for removal of a Judge of the
superior courts. [101 C]
7. No opinion is expressed on the controversy whether
the Motion lapsed or not on the dissolution of the earlier
House, as the issue is for the Lok Sabha to decide. [102 E]
8. This Court cannot pass any order whether permanent
or temporary on the prayer that the respondent No. 3, the
concerned Judge, should not be allowed to exercise his
judicial powers. [102 F]
9.1 Although the powers of State have been distributed
by the Constitution amongst the three limbs, i.e. the Legis-
lature, the Executive and the Judiciary, the doctrine of
Separation of Powers has not been strictly adhered to and
there is some overlapping of powers in the gray areas.
[80F-G]
24
Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj Narain, [1976] 2 SCR 347 at p.
415, referred to.
9.2 Generally, questions involving adjudication of
disputes are amenable to the jurisdiction of the courts, but
there are exceptions, not only those covered by specific
provisions of the Constitution in express terms, but others
enjoying the immunity by necessary implication arising from
established jurisprudential principles involved in the
Constitutional scheme. [81 C]
10. It is permissible to take into consideration the
entire historical background of the provisions of the Con-
stitution and the Act as aid to interpretation. [84 C]
Bengal Immunity Company v. The State of Bihar, [1955] 2
SCR 603 at 632 & 633; B. Prabhakar Rao v. State of Andhra
Pradesh, [1985] Suppl 2 SCR 573, referred to.
Heydon’s case: 76 E.R. 637; Eastman Photographic Materi-
al Company v. Comptroller General of Patents, LR. [1898]
A.C. 571, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition (Civil) No. 491 of
1991. (Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India)
WITH
TRANSFER PETITION (CIVIL) No, 278 of 1991. (Under Article
139-A(i) of the Constitution of India)
WITH
WRIT PETITION (CIVIL) Nos. 541,542 & 560/91
G. Ramaswamy, Attorney General, Altar Ahmad, Addl.
Solicitor General, Shanti Bhushan, Ram Jethmalani, P.P. Rao,
Kapil Sibal, P.R.Krishnan, Ms. Indira Jaisingh, Ashok Desai,
Hardev Singh, P.S. Poti, Danial Latifi, Rajinder Sachhar,
M.K. Ramamurthy, R.K. Garg, S.K. Dholakia, Santosh Hegde,
V.N. Ganpule, Tapas Ray, N.B. Shetye, Jayant Bhushan, Mohan
Rao, Prashant Bhushan, Ms. Kamini Jaiswal, A.K. Srivastava,
Manoj Wad, Ms. Rashmi Kathpalia, Ms. Nina Dikshit, E.M.S.
Anam, Rajiv K. Garg, N.D. Garg, G.D. Sharma, Sudhir Walia,
A.M. Khanwilkar, Mrs. Anil Katiyar, Ms. A. Subhashini, R.S.
Suri, M. Veerappa, K.R. Nambiar, Harish Uppal (appeared in
person) and P.H. Parekh for the appearing parties.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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B.C. RAY, J. These writ petitions raise certain consti-
tutional issues of quite some importance bearing on the
construction of Articles 121 and 124 of the Constitution of
India and of the "The Judges
25
(Inquiry) Act, 1968" even as they in the context in which
they are brought, are somewhat unfortunate.
Notice was given by 108 members of the 9th Lok Sabha,
the term of which came to an end upon its dissolution, of a
Motion for presenting an Address to the President for the
removal of Mr. Justice V.Ramaswami of this Court. On 12th
March, 1991, the motion was admitted by the then Speaker of
the Lok Sabha who also proceeded to constitute a Committee
consisting of Mr. Justice P.B. Sawant, a sitting Judge of
this Court, Mr. Justice P.D. Desai, Chief Justice of the
High Court of Bombay, and Mr. Justice O. Chinappa Reddy, a
distinguished jurist in terms of Section 3(2) of The Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968.
The occasion for such controversy as is raised in these
proceedings is the refusal of the Union Government to act in
aid of the decision of the Speaker and to decline to notify
that the services of the two sitting Judges on the Committee
would be treated as "actual-service" within the meaning of
Para 11(b) (i) of Part D of the II Schedule to the Constitu-
tion. It is said that without such a notification the two
sitting Judges cannot take time off from theft court-work.
The Union Government seeks to justify its stand on its
understanding that both the motion given notice of by the
108 Members of the Lok Sabha for presenting an Address to
the President for the removal of the Judge concerned as well
as the decision of the Speaker of the 9th Lok Sabha to admit
the motion and constitute a Committee under the provisions
of the Judges (Inquiry) Act have lapsed with the dissolution
of the 9th Lok Sabha.
Constitutional issues of some importance, therefore,
arise as to the constitutional and the legal position and
status of a Motion for the removal of a Judge under a law
made pursuant to Article 124(5) of the Constitution and as
to whether the Doctrine of Lapse would apply to such a
Motion upon the dissolution of the Lok Sabha and whether, in
view of the contention that such motions for removal, im-
peachment etc. of holders of high constitutional offices are
in their very nature politically introduced, debated and
decided in the Houses of Parliament and not elsewhere, the
matters arising out of or relating to a Motion for removal
of a Judge in either House of the Parliament are at all
justiciable before courts of law. It is also-urged that even
if these issues have some degree of adjudicative disposition
and involve some justiciable areas, the Court should decline
to exercise jurisdiction as its decision and its writ might
become infructous in view of the fact that in the ultimate
analysis, the final arbiter whether at all any Address is to
be presented rests exclusively with the Houses of Parliament
and which, are wholly outside the purview of the Courts.
26
2. The foregoing serves to indicate broadly the com-
plexities of the constitutional issues on which the Court is
invited to pronounce and, as in all constitutional litiga-
tion, the views inevitably tend to reflect a range of policy
options in constitutional adjudications and, in some meas-
ure, value judgments.
3. Writ Petition No. 491 of 1991 is by a body called
the "SubCommittee on Judicial Accountability" represented by
its convener, Sri Hardev Singh, a Senior Advocate of this
Court. Petitioner-body claims to be a Sub-Committee consti-
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tuted by an "All India Convention on Judicial Accountabili-
ty" "to carry forward the task of implementing the resolu-
tions of the conventions". Writ Petition No. 541 of 1991 is
by the Supreme Court Bar Association represented by its
Honorary Secretary. The Bar Association seeks to prosecute
this petition "in the larger public interest and in particu-
lar in the interests of litigant public". The two prayers
common to both the petitions are, first, that the Union of
India be directed to take immediate steps to enable the
Inquiry Committee to discharge its functions under the "The
Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968" and, secondly, that during the
pendency of the proceedings before the Committee the learned
Judge should be restrained from performing judicial func-
tions and from exercising Judicial powers.
4. Writ Petition No. 542 is by a certain Harish Uppal.
This writ petition is more in the nature of a counter to the
second prayer in the WP No. 541/1991 and WP No. 491/1991.
Petitioner, Sri Harish Uppal says that till the Inquiry
Committee actually finds the learned Judge guilty of the
charges there should be no interdict of his judicial func-
tions and that if such a finding is recorded then thereafter
till such time as the Motion for the presentation of the
Address for the removal of the Judge disposed of by the
Houses of Parliament-which petitioner says should not be
delayed beyond 180 days --- the President may ask the Judge
concerned to recuse from judical functions.
In Writ Petition No. 560/1991 brought by Shyam Ratan
Khandelwal, a practising Advocate, the constitutional valid-
ity of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 is challenged as ultra
vires Articles 100, 105, 118, 121 and 124(5) of the Consti-
tution of India. It also seeks a declaration that the Motion
presented by 108 Members of Parliament for the removal of
the Judge has lapsed with the dissolution of the 9th Lok
Sabha. It also seeks quashing of the decision of the Speaker
admitting the Motion on the ground that an opportunity of
being heard had been denied to the Judge before the Speaker
admitted the Motion and proceeded to constitute a Committee.
On the question of the validity of The Judges (Inquiry) Act,
27
1968 the petitioner contends that the law properly construed
vests the powers of admitting a Motion and of constituting a
Committee under Section 3 in the Speaker in his capacity as
Speaker of the House and subject to the well known and well
settled principles of law. procedure and conventions of the
Houses of Parliament and the statute does not depart from
these principles. On the contrary, the statute admits of a
construction which accords with the powers and privileges of
the House and that the Motion even at that stage of admis-
sion would require to be debated by the House. It is urged
that if that be’ the construction, which the language of the
statute admits then there should be no vice of unconstitu-
tionality in it. But if the statute is construed to vest
such power exclusively in the Speaker, to the exclusion of
the House, the statute, on such constitution would be uncon-
stitutional as violative of Articles 100 (1), 105,118 and
121 of the Constitution.
4. Transfer Petition No. 268/1991 is for the withdrawal
by this Court to itself from the High Court of Delhi, the
Writ Petition (Civil) No. 1061/1991 in the Delhi High Court
where reliefs similar to those prayed for by Sri Khandelwal
in WP (Civil) No. 560/1991 are sought. The prayer for trans-
fer has not yet been granted; only the further proceedings
in the High Court are stayed. But full-dress arguments in
all these matters have been heard. It is appropriate that
this writ petition should also be formally withdrawn and
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finally disposed of along with the present batch of cases.
All that is necessary is to make a formal order withdrawing
WP (Civil) No. 1061/1991 from the Delhi High Court, which we
hereby do.
5. Certain allegations of financial improprieties and
irregularities were made against Justice V. Ramaswami, when
he was the Chief Justice of the High Court of Punjab &
Haryana. There were certain audit reports concerning certain
items of purchases and other expenditure. The then Chief
Justice of India, Justice Sabyasachi Mukharji, took note of
the reports in this behalf and of representations submitted
to him in this behalf and advised Justice Ramaswami to
abstain from discharging judicial functions until those
allegations were cleared. Thereafter, a Committee of three
Judges was constituted by the then Chief Justice of India,
to look into the matter and to advise him whether on the
facts Justice Ramaswami might be embarrassed in discharging
judicial functions as a Judge of this Court. The Committee
tendered its advice to the Chief Justice. It noted that
Justice Ramaswami had declined to acknowledge the jurisdic-
tion of any Committee to sit in judgment over his conduct.
The Committee, accordingly, abstained from an inquiry on the
charges but. on an evaluation of the matter before it,
expressed the view that as long as the charges of
28
improper conduct involving moral turpitude were not estab-
lished in the various enquiries then pending the operation
of the constitutional warrant appointing him a Judge of the
Court could not be interdicted.
Thereafter, in February, 1991, 108 Members of the Lok
Sabha presented a Motion to the Speaker of the 9th Lok Sabha
for Address to the President for the removal of the learned
Judge under Article 124(4) of the Constitution read with the
provisions of the Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968. On 12.3.1991
the Speaker of the Lok Sabha in purported exercise of his
powers under Section 3 of the said Act, admitted the Motion
and constituted a Committee as aforesaid to investigate the
grounds on which the removal was prayed for.
Soon after the decision of the Speaker to admit the
Motion and constitute a Committee to investigate the charges
was made, the term of the Ninth Lok Sabha came to premature
end upon its dissolution. The petitioners question the
legality of the Speaker’s order and assert that, at all
events, the Motion had lapsed with the dissolution of the
House. This contention is supported by the Union of India.
They say that the effect of dissolution of the Ninth Lok
Sabha is to "pass a sponge across the Parliamentary slate"
and all pending motions lapse. The motion for removal, it is
urged, is no exception.
6. ’We have heard Sri Shanti Bhushan, Sri Ram Jethmala-
ni, Sri P.P. Rao, Sri R.K. Garg and Ms. Indira Jaising -
learned senior counsel in support of the prayers in writ
petitions Nos. 491 and 541 of 1991 filed by the Sub-Commit-
tee on Judicial Accountability and the Supreme Court Bar
Association respectively; Sri G. Ramaswamy, learned Attorney
General for the Union of India; Sri Kapil Sibal for the
petitioners in writ petition No. 560/91 and transfer peti-
tion No. 278/91. Sri Harish Uppal, petitioner in-person in
writ petition No. 542/91 has filed his written submissions.
The arguments of the case covered a wide constitutional
scheme relating to the removal of members of the superior
judiciary in India and tO the problems of justiciability of
disputes arising therefrom. We shall refer to the arguments
when we assess the merits of these contentions.
7. The contentions urged at the hearing in support of
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the petitions which seek enforcement of Speaker’s decision
as well as those urged in support of the petitions which say
that the Motion has lapsed can be summaried thus:
29
Contention A:
The motion for removal of the Judge moved by
108 Members of Parliament as well as the
purported decision of the Speaker to admit
that motion and to constitute a committee to
investigate into the grounds on which removal
is sought have lapsed upon the dissolution of
the 9th Lok Sabha. The general rule is that no
House of Parliament can seek to bind its
successor. All pending business at the time of
dissolution of House lapses. A motion for
removal of a judge is just another motion and
perishes with the expiry of the term or the
earlier dissolution of the House.
The question whether the motion for the remov-
al of the judge has lapsed or not is a matter
pertaining to the conduct of the business of
the House of which the House is the sole and
exclusive judge. No aspect of the matter is
justiciable before Court.
Contention B:
The constitutional process of removal of a
Judge, both in its substantive and procedural
aspects, is a political process within the
exclusive domain of the Houses of Parliament.
The conduct of the Speaker in regulating the
procedure and business of the House shall not
be subject to the jurisdiction of any Court.
The Speaker of the Lok Sabha in the exercise
of his powers under the Judges (Inquiry) Act,
1%8, acts in an area outside the courts’
jurisdiction. There is nothing in the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968 which detracts from this
doctrine of lapse. On the contrary, the provi-
sions of the ’Act’ are consistent with this
Constitutional position.
Contention C:
Article 124(5) pursuant to which the Judges
(Inquiry) Act, 1968, is a mere enabling provi-
sion. Prior ’proof of misconduct is not a
condition precedent before the bar under
Article 121 against the discussion of the
conduct of the Judge is lifted.
Contention D:
The action of the Speaker in admitting the
notice of motion without reference to the
House and constituting a committee for inves-
tigation without the support of the decision
of the
30
House is ultra vires Articles 100(1), 105, 121
and the rules made under Article 118 of the
Constitution.
The provisions of the Judges (inquiry) Act;
1968 can be read consistently with the Consti-
tutional Scheme under the aforesaid Articles.
But if the provisions of the Act are so con-
strued as to enable the Speaker to exercise
and perform those powers and functions without
reference to and independently of the House,
then the provisions of the Act would be uncon-
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stitutional.
Contention E.
The decision of the Speaker to admit the
motion and to constitute a committee for
investigation is void for failure to comply
with the rules of natural justice as no oppor-
tunity, admittedly, was afforded to the Judge
of being heard before the decision was taken.
Contention F.’
The process of removal by means of a motion
for address to the President is a political
remedy. But the fundamental right to move the
Supreme Court for enforcement of fundamental
rights take within its sweep the right to
access to a court comprising of Judges of
sterling and unsullied reputation and integri-
ty which is enforceable. This judicial remedy
is independent of the constitutional remedy
and that the court has jurisdiction to decide
as to its own proper constitution. In exercise
of this jurisdiction it should examine the
grounds of the alleged misbehaviour and re-
strain the Judge from judicial functioning.
Contention G.’
The Speaker’s decision is vitiated by mala
fides and oblique and collateral motives.
Contention H.’
The Supreme Court Bar Association and the
Sub-Committee on Judicial Accountability - the
petitioners in Writ Petition No. 491 of 1991
and Writ Petition No. 541 of 1991, respective-
ly, do not have the requisite standing to sue
and the writ petitions are, accordingly, not
maintainable at their instance.
31
Contention L’
At all events, even if the Speaker is held to
be a statutory authority acting under the
Statute and not as part of the proceedings or
business of the Lok Sabha and is amenable to
the jurisdiction of the Court, any judgment
rendered and writ issued by this Court have
the prospect of being infructuous in view of
the undisputed constitutional position that,
in the ultimate analysis, the decision to
adopt or turn down the motion is exclusively
within the power of the House and the Court
would have no jurisdiction over that area.
The Court would, therefore, decline to exercise its
jurisdiction on grounds of infructuousness.
8. Before we discuss the merits of the arguments it is
necessary to take a conspectus of the constitutional provi-
sions concerning the judiciary and its.independence. hi
interpreting the constitutional provisions in this area the
court should adopt a construction which strengthens the
foundational features and the basic structure of the Consti-
tution. Rule of law is a basic feature of the Constitution
which permeates the whole of the Constitutional fabric and
is an integral part of the constitutional structure. Inde-
pendence of the judiciary is an essential attribute of Rule
of law. Articles 124(2) and 217(1) require, in the matter of
appointments of Judges, consultation with the Chief Jus-
tices. These provisions also ensure fixity of tenure of
office of the Judge. The Constitution protects the salaries
of Judges. Article 121 provides that no discussion shall
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take place in Parliament with respect to the conduct of any
Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High Court in the dis-
charge of his duties except upon a motion for presenting an
address to the President praying for the removal of the
Judge as hereinafter provided. Articles 124(4) and 124(5)
afford protection against premature determination of the
tenure. Article i 24(4) says "a Judge of the Supreme Court
shall not be removed from his office except" etc. The
grounds for removal are again limited to proved misbehaviour
and incapacity. It is upon a purposive and harmonious con-
struction and exposition of these provisions that the issues
raised in these petitions are to be resolved.
9. In construing the Constitutional provisions the law
and procedure for removal of Judges in other countries
afford a background and a comparative view. The solution
must, of course, be found within our own Constitutional
Scheme. But a comparative idea affords a proper perspective
for the understanding and interpretation of the Constitu-
tional Scheme.
32
10. In England a Judge of the superior courts can be
removed only on presentation of an address by both the
Houses of Parliament to the Crown. Proceedings may be initi-
ated by a petition to either House of Parliament for an
address to the Crown or by a resolution for an address to
the Crown to appoint a committee of inquiry into the conduct
of the person designated, though preferably they should be
commenced in the House of Commons. Sometimes [as in Barring-
tons Case (1830)], a Commission of Inquiry is appointed and
the matter is considered in the light of the report of the
said Commission. The motion for removal is considered by the
entire House. In case any enquiry is to be conducted into
the allegations, it is either referred to a Select Committee
of the House or to the Committee of the whole House Opportu-
nity is given to the Judge whose conduct is impugned to make
defence on public inquiry.
The report of the Committee and its recommendation are
placed before the House where the matter is debated.(See:
Halsbury’s Laws of England, 4th Ed. Vol. p. 1108).
11. This process has been subjected to following criticism -
(i) legislative removal is coloured by
political partisanship inasmuch as the initia-
tion of the process as well as the ultimate
result may be dictated by political considera-
tions and process of fact-finding and deliber-
ations also suffer from party spirit.
(ii) the government has considerable control
not only on the ultimate result of the pro-
ceedings but also on parliamentary time which
enables them to prevent motions for an address
from being adopted if it suits them.
(iii) the legislative procedure is not
adequate for adjudicative fact finding; and
(iv) since Parliament is the master of its
own procedure, the procedures and rules of
evidence appropriate to judicial proceedings
which would seem to be required in a case of
judicial removal are unlikely to be allowed in
Parliament. (See: Shetreet - Judges on Trial
(1976) p. 405-407)
12. The Justice Sub-Committee on the Judiciary consid-
ered the question whether the existing process for removal
by address of the Houses should be substituted for or sup-
plemented by a new mechanism designed to meet changing needs
and conditions. The Sub-Committee, in its 1972 Report,
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answered the said question in the affirmative and has pro-
posed a new procedure for removal of judges. The Sub-Commit-
tee has recommended the establishment of an adhoc judicial
commission to be ap-
33
pointed by the Lord Chancellor, if he decides that the
question of removing a judge is to be investigated. The
Commission should include a majority of, and in any event
not less than three, persons who hold or have held high
judicial office. Members of Parliament or persons who hold
or have held any political appointment would be excluded.
Upon completing its inquiry the ad hoc Commission shall
report the facts and recommend whether the question of
removal of a judge should be referred to the Judicial Com-
mittee of the Privy Council. If the Commission so recommend-
ed, the Privy Council would consider the matter and if it
concluded that the judge should be removed, it would so
advise Her Majesty. [see: Shetreet ’Judges on Trial’,
(1976); pp. 404-405].
Dr. Shetreet has suggested a via-media and has favoured
the establishment of a Judicial Commission for removal (but
not for discipline short of removal) along the lines sug-
gested by the Sub-Committee but has expressed the view that
the existing process of address should also be preserved.
[See: Shetreet ’Judges an Trial’, (1976); p. 409]. Similar
view has been expressed by Margaret Brazier. (See: Rodney
Brazier ’Constitutional Texts’ (1990) pp.606-607).
13. In Canada, under section 99(1) of the Constitution
Act of 1867, the judges of the superior courts hold office
during good behaviour, and are removable by the Governor-
General on address of the Senate and House of Commons. On
petition for removal submitted in 1868 and 1874 the matter
was referred to a Select Committee of the House. In a third
case in 1874 the judge died before any action could be taken
on motion for appointment of a Select Committee. Recently in
1966-67, a motion for removal of Mr. Justice Leo Landreville
of the Supreme Court of Ontario was moved and in that con-
nection a Royal Commission consisting of Mr. Justice Ivan C.
Rand, a retired judge of the Supreme Court of Canada was
appointed under the Inquiries Act R. S. C. 1952 C. 154 to
conduct an enquiry. After considering the report of the said
Commission, a Joint Committee of the Houses recommended
removal but the judge resigned while Parliament was prepar-
ing for his removal by joint address. Thereafter, Judges Act
was enacted in 1971 whereby Canadian Judicial Council has
been created. The functions of the said Council as set out
in s. 39(2) include making the enquiries and the investiga-
tion of complaints or allegations described in s. 40. Sec-
tion 40 provides that the council may conduct an enquiry to
determine whether a judge of superior, district or county
court should be removed from office and it may recommend to
the Minister of Justice of Canada that a Judge should be
removed from office. The grounds on which such a recommenda-
tion can be made are set out in s. 41(2) of the Act and they
are: (a) age or infirmity, Co) having been
34
guilty of misconduct, (c) having failed in the due execution
of his office, or (d) having been placed, by his conduct or
otherwise, in a position incompatible with the due execution
of his office. (Gall ’The Canadian Legal System’ ( 1983 );
pp. 184-186).
In 1’982 the matter of Mr. Justice Thomas Berger, a
Judge of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, was investi-
gated by the Canadian Judicial Council prompted by certain
remarks made by the judge. The Council concluded that the
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public expression of political views in the nature of those
made by Mr. Justice Berger constituted an "indiscretion",
but that they were not a basis for a recommendation that he
be removed from office and on the basis of the said recom-
mendation, no further action was taken though Mr. Justice
Berger tendered his resignation as a judge a few months
later. (See: Gall.’ The Canadian Legal System, (1983) p.
189)
14. Under section 72(ii) of the Commonwealth of Austra-
lia Constitution Act, 1900, the justices of the High Court
and of the other courts created by the Parliament cannot be
removed except by the GovernorGeneral-in-Council, on an
address from both Houses of the Parliament in the same
session praying for such removal on the ground of proved
misbehavior or incapacity. Similar provisions are contained
in the Constitutions of the States with regard to removal of
Judges of State Courts.
Proceedings were initiated for removal of Mr. Justice
Murphy of the High Court of Australia in 1984 under section
72(ii) of the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act. In
connection with those proceedings at first a select Commit-
tee of the Senate was appointed to enquire and report into
the matter. It consisted of six senators drawn from three
political parties. The Committee by majority decision (3: 2,
one undecided) found no conduct amounting to misbehaviour
under section 72(ii). In view of the split vote a second
Committee of four senators from the same three political
parties was established and it was assisted by two retired
judges - one from the Supreme Court of Western Australia and
the other from Supreme Court of the Australian Capital
Territory and the said Committee recorded its finding but
the judge did not appear before either of the committees.
The judge was also prosecuted before the Central Criminal
Court of New South Wales and was found guilty of an attempt
to pervert the course of justice but the said verdict was
set aside by the Court of Criminal Appeal. Fresh trial was
held where under the judge was found not guilty. Thereafter,
an ad hoc legislation, namely, Parliamentary Commission of
Inquiry Act, 1986 was enacted by the Commonwealth Parliament
and a Commission consisting of three retired judges respec-
tively of Supreme Court of Victoria, Supreme Court of Aus-
tralia Capital Territory
35
and the Federal Court and Supreme Court of South Australia
was constituted to investigate into the allegations of
misbehaviour. Before the said commission could give its
report, the judge became gravely ill and the Act was re-
pealed [Lane’s Commentary on the Australian Constitution,
(1986) p. 373].
15. In one other case, proceedings for removal were
initiated against Mr. Justice Vasta of the Supreme Court of
Queensland and for that purpose, the Queensland Legislature
enacted the Parliamentary (Judges) Commission of Inquiry
Act, 1988 whereby a commission comprised of three retired
judges respectively of the High Court of Australia, Supreme
Court of Victoria and the Supreme Court of New South Wales
was constituted.
16. In Australia, there has been criticism of the exist-
ing procedure with regard to removal of judges both by
judges as well as by lawyers. Mr. Justice L.J. King, Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court of South Australia, has ob-
served:
"The concept of removal by an address of both
Houses of Parliament is itself the subject of
a good deal of criticism. Curiously, common
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criticism which are made are contradictory.
One criticism is that the necessity for the
involvement of the legislature ensures that
the procedure will not be used and that the
judges therefore have a practical immunity
from removal. Removal by this means is cer-
tainly extremely tare. That may be, however,
because in the countries in which this proce-
dure prevails, conditions are such that a
judge who commits a serious act of judicial
misconduct would certainly resign. That con-
sideration, together with the fact that stand-
ards of judicial conduct are generally very
high in those countries, renders removal by
the legislature a rarity. The opposite criti-
cism, however, is that there is no established
procedure for the trial of a judge whose
removal by the legislature is sought. It is
assumed that the legislature would itself
institute some form of inquiry at which the
judge would be able to defend himself against
the accusations, but that would be a matter
for the legislature in each case. There are
some who fear that a parliamentary majority,
encouraged by inflamed public feeling about an
unpopular judicial decision, might some day
act to remove a judge, without due process.
It is at least questionable whether the system
of removal by an address of both Houses of
Parliament accords to a judge the
30
degree of security which is required by the
concept of judicial independence.
[ ’Minimum Standards of Judicial Independence’
1984 (58) ALl 340, at p. 345]
Similarly, Mr. Justice M.H. Mclelland of the Supreme
Court, of New South Wales has expressed the view:
"In lieu of measures of the kinds already
discussed, some permanent, and preferably
Australia-wide, machinery should be provided
by legislation for the purpose of establishing
an effective procedure for the determination
by a judicial tribunal
- of the existence of misbehaviour or
incapacity which could warrant a judge’s
removal from office. The design of that ma-
chinery should be such as to produce as little
damage to judicial independence, public confi-
dence in the judicial system, and the authori-
ty of the courts, as is consistent with its
effective operation. It should also be such as
to ensure to a judge both procedural fairness
and protection from public vilification or
embarrassment pending the making of the deter-
mination".
(Disciplining Australian Judges, (1896) 64 ALJ 688 at p.
401)
Mr. Justice Mclelland has also suggested that the tribu-
nal should be subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of,
and an appeal should lie from the tribunal to, the High
Court of Australia. In this context, he has stated:
"Furthermore, the protection of judicial
tenure and independence which the Act of
Settlement provisions were intended to effect,
has in the intervening period lost a great
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deal of its strength. In 1701, the Crown, the
House of Lords and the House of Commons were
three powerful but relatively independent
entities. It was necessary for a judge to
incur the displeasure of all three concurrent-
ly to be at risk of removal under the parlia-
mentary address procedure. The subsequent
development of the party system and cabinet
government (especially with modern ideas of
strict party discipline) has radically altered
the position. In modern times, the executive
government and the lower house (and frequently
the upper house, where there is one) are
effectively under the control of a single
individual or cohesive group, so that now a
judge may be at risk of removal under the
parliamentary address procedure if
37
he or she were to incur the sole displeasure
of that individual or group."
(Disciplining Australian Judges, (1990) 64 ALJ
3 8 8 at p. 402-3)
Sir Maurice Byers, former Solicitor General of the
Commonwealth has also spoken in the same vein:
"A federal system involves a tension between
the High Court and the Parliament and the
executive. Recent years have seen this in-
crease because interpretations of the Consti-
tution have become party dogma. The Court’s
constitutional decisions are seen by many of
the uninformed and quite a few of the informed
as bearing upon party political questions.
When, as in the case of Mr. Justice Murphy and
to a much less degree Sir Garfield Barwick, a
former political figure, hands down a judgment
he attracts the animus and often the abuse of
some in Parliament. Section 72 of the Consti-
tution leaves him exposed to the attack of his
opponents and the often doubtful support of
his former friends. Whether Parliament may
itself decide the judicial question of his
fitness for office or "proved misbehaviour or
incapacity" is at the least doubtful. But the
Court should not be exposed to this hazard, A
Commission of Judges whose membership rotates
is called for." (From the other side of the
Bar Table: An Advocates’ view of the Judici-
ary, (1987) 10 University of New South Wales
Law Journal 179 at p. 185).
A Constitutional Commission was set up in Australia for
suggesting reforms in the Commonwealth Constitution. The
said Commission has recommended that provision should be
made by amendment to the Commonwealth Constitution for (a)
extending the security of tenure provided by section 72 to
all judges in Australia, and (b) establishing a national
judicial tribunal to determine whether facts found by that
tribunal are capable of amounting to misbehaviour or inca-
pacity warranting removal of a judge from office.
(Mclelland ’Disciplining Australian Judges ’, (1990) 64
ALJ 388, at p. 403)
17. In the United States, the removal of a judge of the U.S.
Supreme or a Federal judge is governed by the provisions of
the U.S. Constitution wherein Article 11(4) provides for the
removal from office of the President, Vice-President and all
civil officers of the United States on impeachment for, and
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conviction of, treason, bribery or other high crimes
38
and misdemeanours. Impeachment may be voted by a simple
majority of the members of the House of Representatives,
there being a quorum on the floor and trial is then held in
the Senate, which may convict by a vote of two-thirds of the
members of the Senate present and voting, there being a
quorum. With regard to state judiciary, the process of
removal is governed by the State Constitutions. Majority of
the States follow the federal pattern an4 provide for im-
peachment as the normal process of removal of appointed
judges. In some States, provision is made for removal by an
address of the Governor to both Houses of legislature or by
a joint resolution of the legislature. In some States, the
removal power is vested in the State Supreme Courts while in
some states, special courts are provided to hear removal
charges. In the State of New York, the Court is known as the
Court on the judiciary. (See Henry J. Abraham: The Judicial
Process, 3rd Ed. p.45).
For judicial administration at the national level, there
is Judicial Conference of the United States which consists
of the Chief Justices of the United States, the chief judges
of each of the eleven numbered circuits and of the District
of Columbia and federal circuits but also, since 1957, a
district judge representative from each circuit with the
exception of the federal circuit, which lacks a trial-court
tier. By an Act of the Congress passed in 1932 (incorporated
in Title 28 of the U.S. Code) the Judicial Conference is
charged with the duty to make a comprehensive survey of the
condition of business in the courts; to prepare plans for
assignment of judge,’ to or from circuits or districts where
necessary; and to submit suggestions and recommendations to
the various courts to promote uniformity of management
procedures and the expeditious conduct of court business.
The work of the Judicial Conference is performed in special
committees which include the special committee on judicial
ethics. Another Act of Congress passed in 1939 makes provi-
sion for a judicial council for each circuit composed of
circuit judges of the circuit who is empowered to make all
necessary orders for the effective and expeditious adminis-
tration of the business of the courts within its circuit.
The mandate of the Judicial Councils embraces the business
of the judiciary in its institutional sense (administration
of justice), such as avoiding of loss of public esteem and
confidence in respect to the court system, from the actions
of a judge or other person attached to the courts. The
Judicial Councils have exercised the power of review of
allegations of misconduct on the part of court personnel,
officers and judges. In view of the increased number of
judges, who can be removed only by the process of impeach-
ment, Congress has enacted the Judicial Councils Reform and
Judicial Conduct and Disability Act of 1980 whereby the
Judicial Councils have been explicitly empowered to receive
complaints about judicial
39
conduct opaquely described as "prejudicial to the effective
and expeditious administration of the business of the
courts, or alleging that such a Judge or magistrate is
unable to discharge all the duties of office by reason of
mental or physical disability." It prescribes an elaborate
judicilised procedure for processing such complaints within
the administrative system of the councils and the Judicial
Conference. Should a Council determine that the conduct
constitutes grounds for impeachment the case may be certi-
fied to the Judicial Conference of the United States which
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may take appropriate action and if impeachment is deemed
warranted, the Conference is empowered to transmit the
record and its determination to the House of Representa-
tives.
In so far as the States are concerned, all the fifty
States have central Institutions for disciplining their
judges and in each a variously constituted commission is
organised in either a single tier or in many tiers depending
on the perceived desirability of separating fact-finding
from judgment recommendation tasks. Commission recommenda-
tions are transmitted to the State Supreme Court for its
authoritative imprimatur, except in states where they are
received by legislatures that retain judicial removal power.
(See Robert J.Janosik Encyclopaedia of the American Judicial
System, Vol. II pp.575 to 578).
18. This study of the practice prevailing in the above-
mentioned countries reveals that in Canada, Australia and
the United States, the process of removal of a judge incor-
porates an investigation and inquiry into the allegations of
misconduct or incapacity against a judge by a judicial
agency before the institution of the formal process of
removal in the legislature. England is the only exception
where the entire process is in Parliament but there also
views are being expressed that it should be replaced by a
judicial process of investigation by a judicial tribunal
before the matter is taken up by the Houses of Parliament.
This is also the trend of the recommendations in the resolu-
tions adopted by the United Nations General Assembly and
international conferences of organisations of lawyers.
19. International Bar Association at its 19th Biennial
Conference held at New Delhi in October 1982 adopted Minimum
Standards of Judicial Independence. Paras 27 to 32 relating
to ’Judicial Removal and Discipline’ are as under:
"27.The proceedings for discipline and removal
of judges should ensure fairness to the judge,
and adequate opportunity for hearing.
40
28. The procedure for discipline should be
held in camera. The judge may however request
that the heating be held in public, subject to
final and reasoned disposition of this request
by the Disciplinary Tribunal. Judgments in
disciplinary proceedings whether held in
camera or in public, may be published.
29. (a) The grounds for removal of judges
should be fixed by law and shall be clearly
defined.
(b) All disciplinary action shall be based
upon standards of judicial conduct promulgated
by law or in established rules of court.
30. A judge shall not be subject to removal
unless, by of a criminal act or through gross
or repeated neglect or physical or mental
incapacity, he has shown himself manifestly
unfit to hold the position of judge.
31. In systems where the power to discipline
and remove judges is vested in an institution
other than the Legislature, the tribunal for
discipline and removal of judges shall be
permanent and be composed predominantly of
members of the Judiciary.
32. The head of the court may legitimately
have supervisory powers to control judges on
administrative matters."
20. The First World Conference on the Independence of
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Justice held at Montreal on June 10, 1983 adopted a UniVer-
sal Declaration on the Independence of Justice. It relates
to international judges as well as national judges. The
following paragraphs deal with ’Discipline and Removal’ in
relation to national judges:
"2.32 A complaint against a judge shall be
processed expeditiously and fairly under an
appropriate practice, and the judge shall have
the opportunity to comment on the complaint at
its initial stage. The examination of the
complaint at its initial stage shall be kept
confidential, unless otherwise requested by
the judge.
2.33 (a) The proceedings for judicial removal
or discipline, when such are initiated, shall
be held before a court or a board predominant-
ly composed of members of the judiciary and
selected by the judiciary.
(b) However, the power of removal may be
vested in the Legislature by impeachment or
joint address, preferably upon a recommenda-
tion of a court or board as referred to in
2.33(a).
41
[Explanatory Note: In countries where the
legal profession plays an indispensable role
in maintaining the rule of law and judicial
independence, it is recommended that members
of the legal profession participate in the
selection of the members of the court or
board, and be included as members thereof.]
2.34 All disciplinary action shall be based
upon established standards of judicial con-
duct.
2.35 The proceedings for discipline of judges
shall ensure fairness to the judge and the
opportunity of a full hearing.
2.36 With the exception of proceedings before
the Legislature, the proceedings for disci-
pline and removal shall be held in camera. The
judge may, however, request that the hearing
be held in public, subject to a final and
reasoned disposition of this request by the
Disciplinary Tribunal. Judgments in discipli-
nary proceedings, whether held in camera or in
public, may be published.
2.37 With the exception of proceedings before
the Legislature or in connection with them,
the decision of a Disciplinary Tribunal shall
be subject to appeal to a court.
2.38 A judge shall not be subject to removal
except on proved grounds of incapacity or
misbehaviour, rendering him unfit to continue
in office.
2.39 In the event that a court is abolished
judges serving in this court shall not be
affected, except for their transfer to another
court of the same status."
21. The Seventh United Nations Congress on the Preven-
tion of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders held at Milan
from August 26 to September 6, 1985 adopted the Basic Prin-
ciples on the Independence of the Judiciary. Paragraphs 17
to 20 dealing with ’Discipline, Suspension and Removal’ are
as under:
"17.A charge or complaint made against a judge
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in his/her judicial and professional capacity
shall be processed expeditiously and fairly
under an appropriate procedure, The judge
shall have the right to a fair heating. The
examination of the matter at its initial stage
shall be kept confidential, unless otherwise
requested by the judge.
18. Judges shall be subject to suspension or
removal only for reasons of incapacity or
behaviour that renders them unfit to
42
discharge their duties.
19. All disciplinary, suspension or removal
proceedings shall be determined in accordance
with established standards of judicial con-
duct.
20. Decisions in disciplinary, suspension or
removal proceedings should be subject to an
independent review. This principle may not
apply to the decisions of the highest court
and those of the legislature in impeachment or
similar proceedings."
The Congress Documents were endorsed by the U.N. General
Assembly in its Resolution 40/32 on November 9, 1985 and
Resolution 40/ 146 on December 13, 1985. Resolution 40/146
dated December 13, 1985 of the General Assembly specifically
welcomed the Basic Principles on the Independence of the
Judiciary and invited Government "to respect them and to
take them into account within the framework of their nation-
al legislation and practice" (para 2).
22. Unlike the judges of the Superior courts in England,
the judges in the colonies did not enjoy the security of
tenure as guaranteed under the Act of Settlement, 1700 and
they held office at the pleasure of the Crown. (See: Terrell
v. Secretary of State for the Colonies and Another, 1953(2),
482). The position was not different in India till the
enactment of Government of India Act, 1935. In Clause (b) of
the proviso to sub-Section 2 of Section 200 of the said Act
which related to judges of the Federal Court, it was pre-
scribed that "a judge may be removed from his office by
order of the Governor-General on the ground of misbehaviour
or of infirmity of body or mind, if the Judicial Committee
of the Privy Council, on reference being made to them,
report that the judge ought on any such ground to be re-
moved". Similar provisions were made with regard to judges
of the High Court in Section 220. It would thus appear that
prior to the coming into force of the Constitution of India,
it was necessary to have a determination by a judicial body
about the alleged grounds of misbehaviour or infirmity of
mind and body before a judge of the Federal Court or High
Court could be removed. Does the Constitution seek to alter
this position in a way, as to exclude investigation and
proof of misbehaviour or incapacity by a judicial body and
to rest the power of removal including the investigation and
proof of misbehaviour or incapacity in Parliament alone.
23. Basically, the process of removal or impeachment of
a judge is a political process. A learned author in "The
Impeachment of the Federal
43
Judiciary:’ [Wrisley Brown Harward Law Review 1912-1913 684
at page 698) says:
".... Thus an impeachment in this country,
though judicial in external form and ceremony.
is political in spirit. It is directed against
a political offence. It culminates in a polit-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 79
ical judgment. It imposes a political forfei-
ture. In every sense, say that of administra-
tion, it is a political remedy, for the sup-
pression of a political evil, with wholly
political consequences.
This results in no confusion of the political
and the judicial powers. The line of demarca-
tion is clearly discernible even through the
labyrinth of formal non-essentials under which
ingenious counsel in various cases have sought
to bury it. The judgment of the High Court of
Parliament upon conviction of an impeachment
automatically works a forfeiture of political
capacity; but this is simply an effect of the
judgment, which is to be distinguished from
the judgment itself..."
Mauro Cappelletti in ’The Judicial Process
in Comparative Perspective’[Clarendon Press-
Oxford 1989 at page 731 says:
"Two main features of this accountability type
can be identified; first, the fact that ac-
count has to be given to ’political’ bodies,
ultimately to the legislative and/or the
executive branches by means of essentially’po-
litical’, non-judicial processes; second, and
perhaps even more characteristically, the fact
that account has to be given not, or not
primarily, for ’legal’ violations, but rather
for behaviour (and this might include private,
out-of-office behaviour) which is evaluated on
the basis of ’political’ criteria.
Perhaps the best illustration of political
accountability can be found in the systems of
the common law tradition. In England, judges
(like any other officials) can be impeached
’before the House of Lords, at the suit of the
House of Commons’, although this practice has
fallen into desuetude; moreover, higher court
judges can be ’removed from office by the
Crown on an address presented to Her Majesty
by both Houses of Parliament’. The idea behind
this ’address’ procedure is that judges are
appointed ’during good behaviour’, hence, they
can be removed upon breach of the condition.
Misbehaviour includes such situations as ’the
case of conviction upon an indictment for any
infamous offence of such a nature as to render
the
44
person unfit to exercise the office’, but also
’improper exercise of the functions appertain-
ing to the office, or non-attendance, or
neglect of or refusal to perform the duties of
the office’. Of course the decision of the
Houses and the Crown can only be an essential-
ly political one, not a purely juridical
decision, even though we are informed that the
removal procedure is subject to some extent
’to the rules of natural justice’..."
24. But the Constitutional scheme in India seeks to
achieve a judicious blend of the political and judicial
processes for the removal of Judges. Though it appears at
the first sight that the.proceedings of the Constituent
Assembly relating to the adoption of. clauses, (4) and (5)
of Article 124 seem to point to the contrary and evince ’an
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intention to exclude determination by a judicial process of
the correctness of the allegations of misbehaviour or inca-
pacity on a more careful examination this is not the correct
conclusion. In the submissions of the learned counsel who
contend against the manifestation of an intention to bring
in a judicial element, reliance has been placed on the
proceedings of the Constituent Assembly dated July 29, 1947
relating to adoption of Clause 18 of the report of the Union
Constitution Committee relating to the Supreme Court. Shri
Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar had moved the said clause subject
to modifications and conditions in the said clause which
related to appointment and removal of judges of Supreme
Court. It was provided that "a judge of the Supreme Court of
India shall not be removed from his office except by the
President on an address from both the Houses of Parliament
of the Union in the same session for such removal on the
ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. Further provi-
sion may be made by Federal law for the procedure to be
adopted in this behalf’. Shri K. Santhanam had moved an
amendment in the said Clause relating to removal of judges
and he wanted the last sentence about further provision
being made by Federal law for the procedure to be adopted in
that behalf, to be omitted. Shri M.Ananthasayanam Ayyanagar
proposed amendments suggesting two alternative clauses in
the place of the Clause with regard to removal of the
judges. In one clause, it was suggested that "a judge may be
removed from office on the ground of misbehaviour or infirm-
ity of mind or body by an address presented in this behalf
by both the Houses of the legislature to the President
provided that a committee consisting of not less than 7 High
Court Chief Justices chosen by the President, investigates
and reports that the judge on any such ground be removed".
The other alternative clause suggested by Shri M.Anantha-
sayanam Ayyangar was that "a judge of the Supreme Court may
be removed from office by the President on the ground of
misbehaviour or of infirmity of mind or body, if on refer-
ence being made to it (Supreme Court) by the President, a
special
45
tribunal appointed by him for the purpose from amongst
judges or exjudges of the High Courts or the Supreme Court,
report that the"’judge ought on any such grounds to be
removed." The Constituent Assembly adopted clause 18 with
the amendments as proposed by Shri Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar
and rejected the amendments suggested by Shri M. Anantha-
sayanam Ayyangar. Shri Santhanam did not press his amendment
and it was withdrawn. There is no doubt that in the amend-
ments which were suggested by Shri M.Ananthasayanam Ayyan-
gar, it was provided that there-should be investigation into
the allegations of misbehaviour or infirmity by a committee
consisting of Chief Justices of the High Courts or the
special tribunal consisting of judges or ex-judges of the
High Court or the Supreme Court, but the rejection of the
said amendments moved by Shri Ayyangar does not mean that
the Constituent Assembly was not in favour of determination
about the correctness of such allegations by judicial body
because Shri Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, while moving Clause
18 had emphasised the word ’proved misbehaviour’ and had
stated:
"While the ultimate power may rest with the
two Houses, the Clause provides that the
charges must be proved. How exactly to prove
the charges will be provided for in the Feder-
al law. We need not be more meticulous or more
elaborate, than the people who have tried a
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similar case in other jurisdictions. I chal-
lenge my friend to say whether there is any
detailed provision for the removal of judges
more than that in any other Constitution in
the world. The general principle is laid down
in the Constitution and later on the Federal
law will provide for adequate machinery and
that is the import of the clause"..... There
is sufficient safeguard in the reference
"proved misbehaviour" and we might make elabo-
rate and adequate provision for the way in
which ’,he guilt could be brought home to a
particular judge in any Federal law that may
be passed but that is a different
matter"...... "But I do not think that in a
Constitution it is necessary to provide de-
tailed machinery as to the impeachment, the
charges to be framed against a particular
judge. To make a detailed machinery for all
these could be a novel procedure to be adopted
in any Constitution".
(Constituent Assembly Debates, vols. I to VI
at pp. 899-900)
25. Reference was also made to the debates of the Con-
stituent Assembly dated May 24, 1949 on Article 103 of the
Draft Constitution. Shri Tajamul Hnsain moved an amendment
in Clause (4) of Article 103 which related to the removal of
a judge of Supreme Court and suggested an amendment in the
said clause so as to provide that "a judge of the Supreme
46
Court shall not be removed from his office except by an
order of the President passed, after a Committee consisting
of all the judges of the Supreme Court had investigated the
charge and reported on it to the President and etc." The
said amendment was negatived by the Constituent Assembly.
(Constituent Assembly Debates, vol. VIII at pp. 243 and
262). The said amendment was similar to those moved by Shri
M. Ananthasayanam Ayyangar at the stage of adoption of
Clause 18 of the report of the Union Constitution Committee
noticed earlier. The reasons which were given by Shri Alladi
Krishnaswami Ayyar for opposing the said amendments would
apply to this amendment also.
26. The proceedings in the Constituent Assembly, there-
fore, do not give an indication that in adopting Clauses (4)
and (5) of Article 124 of the Constitution, the intention of
the Costituent Assembly was to exclude_ investigation and
proof of misbehavior or incapacity of the judge sought to be
removed, by a judicial body. Having regard to the views
expressed by Shri Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, who was a
member of the Drafting Committee, while opposing the amend-
ments proposed by Shri M.Ananthasayanam Ayyangar, it is
possible to infer that the intention of the Constituent
Assembly was that the provision with regard to the machinery
for such investigation and proof was a matter which need not
be contained in the Constitution and it is a matter for
which provision could be made by Parliament by law.
27. This is some of the historical material and back-
ground on the topic. We may now proceed to consider the
merits of the contentions.
RE: CONTENTION A:
28. This contention has two aspects: whether a motion
for removal of a Judge lapses upon the dissolution of the
House of Parliament and secondly, the question whether it so
lapses or not is a matter within the exclusive domain and
decision of that House itself. On the first aspect, the
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contention of the learned Attorney General and Shri Kapil
Sibal, learned Senior Counsel, are similar. On the second
aspect, the learned Attorney General would say that the
question whether a motion lapsed or not is to be decided on
the basis of the provisions of law guiding the matter and
the House itself is not its final arbiter. Learned Attorney
General would say that the Court alone has jurisdiction to
examine and pronounce on the law of the matter.
29. On the question of lapse reliance was placed on the
classic treatise of Erskine May’s "The Law, Privileges,
Proceedings and Usage
47
of Parliament" [Twenty-first Edition, London Butterworths
1989]. A motion is described as a "proposal made for the
purpose of illustrating the decision of the House". Accord-
ing to Erskine May, certain matters may be raised by only a
substantive motion. He says:
"Certain matters cannot be debated, except on
a substantive motion which allows a distinct
decision of the House. Amongst these are the
conduct of the sovereign, the heir to the
throne or other members of the Royal Family, a
Governor-General of an independent territory,
the Lord Chancellor, the Speaker, the Chairman
of Ways and Means, Members of either House of
Parliament and judges of the superior courts
of the United Kingdom, including persons
holding the position of a judge, such as a
judge in a court of bankruptcy and a county
court, or a recorder..."
30. ’Sri Sibal placed strong reliance on the following
statements in M.N.Kaul and S.L.Shakdher in "Practice and
Procedure of Parliament" as to the effects of the dissolu-
tion of the House:
"Dissolution, as already stated, marks the end
of the life of a House and is followed by the
constitution of a new House. Once the House
has been dissolved, the dissolution is irrevo-
cable. There is no power vested in the Presi-
dent to cancel his order of dissolution and
revive the previous House. The consequences of
a dissolution are absolute and irrevocable. In
Lok Sabha, which alone is subject to dissolu-
tion under the Constitution, dissolution
"passes a sponge over the parliamentary
slate". All business pending before it or any
of its committees lapses on dissolution. No
part of the records of the dissolved House can
be carried over and transcribed into the
records or registers of the new House. In
short, the dissolution draws the final curtain
upon the existing House".
Adverting to the effect of dissolution on other business
such as motions, resolutions etc., the learned authors say:
"All other business pending in Lok Sabha,
e.g., motions, resolutions, amendments supple-
mentary demands for grants etc., at whatever
stage, lapses upon dissolution, as also the
petitions presented to the House which stand
referred to the Committee on Petitions."
Learned Attorney General urged that a combined reading
of Articles 107, 108 and 109 leads irresistibly to the
conclusion that upon dissolution
48
of the House, all bills will lapse subject only to the
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exception stipulated in Article 108. It is further urged
that on first principle also it requires to be accepted that
no motion should survive upon the dissolution of the House
unless stipulated otherwise under the Rules of Procedure and
conduct of business. The doctrine of lapse, it is urged, is
a necessary concomitant of the idea that each newly consti-
tuted House is a separate entity having a life of its own
unless the business of the previous House is carried over by
the force of statute or rules of procedure. Both the learned
Attorney General and Shri Kapil Sibal took us through the
Rules of Procedure and Conduct of Business in Lok Sabha made
under Article 118 of the Constitution to show that invaria-
bly all pending business come to an end with the expiry of
the term of the House or upon its earlier dissolution.
Shri Ram Jethmalani for the petitioner-sub-committee
referred to the conventions of the British Parliament and
urged that pending business lapses on prorogation and as a
general practice the House is usually prorogued before it is
dissolved. Learned counsel said that impeachment motions are
sui generous in their nature and that they do not lapse. It
is. however, necessary to distinguish the Indian Parliamen-
tary experience under a written Constitution from the Brit-
ish conventions. Indeed, referring to the doctrine of lapse
this Court in Purushothaman Nambudiri v. The State of Kerala
[1962] Suppl. 1 SCR 753 Gajendragadkar J said:
".... In support of this argument it is urged
that wherever the English parliamentary form
of Government prevails the words "prorogation"
and "dissolution" have acquired the status of
terms of art and their significance and conse-
quence are well settled. The argument is that
if there is no provision to the contrary in
our Constitution the English convention with
regard to the consequence of dissolution
should be held to follow even in India. There
is no doubt that, in English, in addition to
bringing a session of Parliament to a close
prorogation puts an end to all business which
is pending consideration before either House
at the time of such prorogation; as a result
any proceedings either in the House or in any
Committee of the house lapse with the session
Dissolution of Parliament is invariably pre-
ceded by. prorogation, and what is true about
the result of prorogation" is, it is said, a
fortiori true about the result of dissolution.
Dissolution of Parliament is sometimes de-
scribed as "a civil death of Parliament".
Ilbert, in his work on ’Parliament’ has ob-
served that "prorogation means the end of a
session (not of a Parliament)"; and adds that
"like dissolution, it kills all bills which
have not yet passed". He also describes disso-
lution as an "end of a Parliament (not merely
of
49
a session) by royal proclamation", and ob-
serves that "it wipes the slate clean of all
uncompleted bills or other
proceedings"..."[p.759 & 760].
After referring to the position in England that the
dissolution of the House of Parliament brought to a close
and in that sense killed all business of the House at the
time of dissolution, the learned Judge said:
" ....... Therefore, it seems to us that the
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effect of cl. (5) is to provide for all cases
where the principle of lapse on dissolution
should apply. If that be so, a Bill pending
assent of the Governor or President is outside
cl. (5) and cannot be said to lapse on the
dissolution of the Assembly."
[p. 768]
" ........ In the absence of cl. (5) it
would have followed that all pending business,
on the analogy of the English convention,
would lapse on the dissolution of the Legisla-
tive Assembly. It is true that the question
raised before us by the present petition under
Pal. 196 is not free from difficulty but, on
the whole, we are inclined to take the view
that the effect of cl. (5) is that all cases
not falling within its scope are not subject
to the doctrine of lapse of pending business
on the dissolution of the Legislative Assem-
bly. In that sense we read cl. (5) as dealing
exhaustively with Bills which would lapse on
the dissolution of the Assembly. If that be
the true position then the argument that the
Bill which was pending assent of the President
lapsed on the dissolution of the Legislative
Assembly cannot be upheld."
[P. 769]
31. It is true that Purushothaman Nambudiri case dealt
with a legislative measure and not a pending business in the
nature of motion. But, we are persuaded to the view that
neither the doctrine that dissolution of a House "passes a
sponge over parliamentary slate" nor the specific provisions
contained in any rule or rules flamed under Article 118 of
the Constitution determine the effect of dissolution on the
motion for removal of a judge under Article 124. the reason
is that Article 124(5) and the law made thereunder exclude
the operation of Article 118 in this area.
Section 3 of the Act provides:
"3(1) If notice is given of a motion for
presenting an address to the President praying
for the removal of a Judge signed,--
(a) in the case of a notice given in the
House of the People, by not less than one
hundred members of that House;
50
(b) in the case of a notice given in the
Council of States, by not less than fifty
members of that Council;
then, the Speaker or, as the case may be, the
Chairman may, after consulting such persons,
if any, as he thinks fit and after considering
such materials, if any, as may be available to
him, either admit the motion or refuse to
admit the same.
(2) If the motion referred to in sub-section
(1) is admitted, the Speaker or, as the case
may be, the Chairman shall keep the motion
pending and constitute, as soon as may be, for
the purpose of making an investigation into
the grounds on which the removal of a Judge is
prayed for, a Committee consisting of three
members of whom --
(a) One shall be chosen from among the Chief
Justices and other Judges of the Supreme
Court;
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Co) one shall be chosen from among the
Chief Justices of the High Courts; and
(c) one shall be a person who is, in the
opinion of the Speaker or, as the case may be,
the Chairman, a distinguished jurist;
Proviso &) Omitted
Sub-sections) as
(3) to (9)) unnecessary here.
Section 6.(2) provides:
"(2) If the report of the Committee contains a
finding that the Judge is guilty of any misbe-
haviour or suffers from any incapacity, then,
the motion referred to in sub-section (1) of
section 3 shall, together with the report of
the Committee, be taken up for consideration
by the House or the Houses of Parliament in
which it is pending."
The effect of these provisions is that the motion shall
be kept pending till the committee submits its report and if
the committee finds the Judge guilty, the motion shall be
taken up for consideration. Only one motion is envisaged
which will remain pending. No words of limitation that the
motion shall be kept pending subject to usual effect of
dissolution of the House can or should be imported. The
reason is that a law made by the Parliament and binding on
the House can provide against the doctrine of lapse. The law
envisaged in article 124(5) is Parliamentary law which is of
higher quality and efficacy than rules made by the House for
itself under Article 118. Such a law can, and under the
present statute does
51
provide against the doctrine of lapse. Further, Art. 118
expressly states that each House of Parliament may make
rules "for regulating, subject to the provisions of this
Constitution".
In State of Punjab v. Sat Pal Dang & Ors. [1969] 1 SCR
478 this Court held that the law for purposes of Article 209
(analogues to Article 119) could even take the form of an
Ordinance promulgated by the Governor of a State under
Article 213 and that wherever there is repugnance between
the Rules of Procedure framed under Article 208 (Article 118
in the ease of Parliament), the law made under Article 209
shall prevail. In the constitutional area of removal of a
Judge, the law made under Article 124(5) must be held to go
a little further and to exclude the operation of the Rules
under Article 118. Indeed, no question of repugnance could
arise to the extent the field is covered by the law under
Article 124(5).
Such a view would indeed obviate some anomalies which
might otherwise arise. Rajya Sabha is not dissolved and a
motion for presentation of address for the removal of the
Judge can never lapse there. Section 3 applies to both the
Houses of Parliament. The words "shall keep the motion
pending" cannot have two different meanings in the two
different contexts. It can only mean that the consideration
of the motion shall be deferred till the report of the
committee implying that till the happening of that event the
motion will not lapse. We are of the view that the argument
that such a motion lapses with the dissolution of the House
of Parliament is not tenable.
32. The second limb of Contention A is that the question
whether a motion has lapsed or not is a matter pertaining to
the conduct of the business of the House of which the House
is the sole and exclusive master. No aspect of the matter,
it is contended, is justificiable before a Court. Houses of
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Parliament, it is claimed, are privileged to be the exclu-
sive arbiters of the legality of their proceedings. Strong
reliance has been placed on the decision in oft-quoted
decision in Bradlaugh v. Gosserr, [1884] 12 Q.B.D. 271.
There the exclusiveness of parliamentary jurisdiction on a
matter related to the sphere where Parliament, and not the
Court, had exclusive jurisdiction even if the matters were
covered by a statute.
But where, as in this country and unlike in England,
there is a written constitution which constitutes the funda-
mental and in that sense a "higher law" and acts as a limi-
tation upon the Legislature and other organs of the State as
grantees under the Constitution, the usual incidents of
parliamentary sovereignty do not obtain and the concept is
one of ’limited Government’. Judicial review is, indeed, an
incident of and flows
52
from this concept of the fundamental and the higher law
being the touchstone of the limits of the powers of the
various organs of the State which derive power and, authori-
ty under Constitution and that the judicial wing is the
interpreter of the Constitution and, therefore, of the
limits of authority of the different organs of the State. It
is to be noted that the British Parliament with the Crown is
Supreme and its powers are unlimited and courts have no
power of judicial review of legislation.
This doctrine is in one sense the doctrine of ultra
vires in the constitutional law. In a federal set up the
judiciary becomes the guardian of the Constitution. Indeed,
in A.K. Gopalan v. The State of Madras, [1950] SCR 88 Arti-
cle 13 itself was held to be ex abundante cautela and that
even in its absence if any of the fundamental rights were
infringed by any legislative enactment, the court had always
power to declare the enactment invalid. The interpretation
of the Constitution as a legal instrument and its obligation
is the function of the Courts. "It is emphatically the
province and duty of the judicial department to say what the
law is". In Re: Special Reference Case, [1965] 1 SCR 413
Gajendragadkar, CJ said:
".......though our Legislatures have plenary
powers, they function within the limits pre-
scribed by the material and relevant provi-
sions of the Constitution.
In a democratic country governed by a written
Constitution, it is the Constitution which is
supreme and sovereig..... "
But it is the duty of this Court to interpret the Con-
stitution for the meaning of which this Court is final
arbiter.
33. Shri Kapil Sibal referred us to the following obser-
vations of Stephen J. in Bradlaugh v. Gosserr, supra:
"......It seems to follow that the House of
Commons has the exclusive power of interpret-
ing the statute, so far as the regulation of
its own proceedings within its own walls is
concerned; and that even if that interpreta-
tion should be erroneous, this court has no
power to interfere with it directly or indi-
rectly..."
[p. 280 & 281]
"....The House of Commons is not a Court of
Justice; but the effect of its privilege to
regulate its own internal concerns practically
invest it with the judicial character when it
has to apply to particular cases the provi-
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sions of Acts of Parliament.
53
We must presume that it discharges this func-
tion properly and with due regard to the laws,
in the making of which it has so great a
share. If its determination is not in accord-
ance with law, this resembles the case of an
error by a judge whose decision is not subject
to appeal. There is nothing startling in the
recognition of the fact that such an error is
possible. If, for instance, a jury in a crimi-
nal case gives a perverse verdict, the law has
provided no remedy. The maxim that there is no
wrong without a remedy does not mean, as it is
sometimes supposed, that there is legal remedy
for every moral or political wrong..... "
[p. 285]
The rule in Bradlaugh v. Gossett, supra, was held not
applicable to proceedings of colonial legislature governed
by the written constitutions Barton v..Taylor, [1886] 11 AC
197 and Redillusion (Hong Kong) Ltd. v. Attorney General of
Hong Kong, [1970] AC 1136.
The principles in Bradlaugh is. that even a statutory
right if it related to the sphere where Parliament and not
the courts had exclusive jurisdiction would be a matter of
the Parliament’s own concern. But the principle cannot be
extended where the matter is not merely one of procedure but
of substantive law concerning matters beyond the Parliamen-
tary procedure. Even in matters of procedure the constitu-
tional provisions are binding as the legislations are en-
forceable. Of the interpretation of the Constitution and as
to what law is the Courts have the constitutional duty to
say what the law is. The question whether the motion has
lapsed is a matter to be pronounced upon the basis of the
provisions of the Constitution and the relevant laws. In-
deed, the learned Attorney General submitted that the ques-
tion whether as an interpretation of the constitutional
processes and laws, such a motion lapses or not is exclu-
sively for the courts to decide.
The interpretation of the laws is the domain of the
courts and on such interpretation of the constitutional
provisions as well as the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968, it
requires to be held that under the law such a motion does
not lapse and the Courts retain jurisdiction to so declare.
Contention A is answered accordingly.
RE: CONTENTIONS (B), (C) AND (D):
34. These contentions have common and over-lapping areas
and
admit of being deal with and disposed of together. On tile
interpretative
criteria apposite to the true meaning and scope of Articles
121, 124(4) and
124(5), indeed, three constructional options become avail-
able:
54
First: The entire power for taking all
steps for the removal of a Judge, culminating
in the presentation of an address by
different Houses of Parliament to the Presi-
dent, is committed to the two Houses of Par-
liament alone and no initiation of
any investigation is possible without the
initiative being taken by the Houses them-
selves. No law made by Parliament under
Article 124(5) could take away this power. The
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bar of Article 121 is lifted the moment any
Member of Parliament gives notice of motion
for the removal of a Judge and the entire
allegations levelled by him would be open for
discussion in the House itself. It will be for
the majority of the Members of the House t
decide if and how they would like to have the
allegations investigated. Any
abridging this power is bad.
Second: Since a motion for presenting an
address to the President referred to in Arti-
cles 121 and 124 (4) has to be on ground of
"proved" misbehaviour and incapacity, no such
motion can be made until the allegations
relating to misbehaviour or incapacity have
first been found to be proved in some forum
outside either Houses of Parliament Law under
Article 124(5) is mandatory and until the
Parliament enacts a law and makes provision
for an investigation into the alleged misbeha-
viour or incapacity and regulates the proce-
dure therefor, no motion for removal of a
Judge would be permissible under Article
124(4) and the House of Parliament would not
be brought into the picture till some authori-
ty outside the two Houses of Parliament has
recorded a finding of misbehaviour or incapac-
ity. The emphasis is on the expression
’proved’.
Third: That Article 124(5) is only an
enabling provision and in the absence of any
enactment by the Parliament under that provi-
sion it would be open to either House to
entertain a motion for the removal of a Judge.
However, it is open to the Parliament under
Article 124(5) to enact a law to regulate the
entire procedure starting with the investiga-
tion of the allegations against the Judge
concerned and ending with the presentation of
the address by the two Houses of Parliament.
It would be open to the Parliament to desig-
nate any authority of its choice for investi-
gating the allegations and also to regulate
the
55
procedure for the consideration of the matter
in either House.
As soon as a law has been enacted all its
provisions would be binding on both Houses of
Parliament and would even override any Rules
flamed by the two Houses under Article 118 of
the Constitution. It will not be permissible
for either House to act contrary to the provi-
sions of such Act. The question as to when and
in what circumstances motion would be allowed
to be moved in either House of Parliament to
lift the ban against the discussion of conduct
of a Judge under Article 121 would be accord-
ing to such Act of Parliament.
In regard to the first and the second alternative propo-
sitions, the deliberations of the Joint Select Committee
would indicate a sharp divide amongst the eminent men who
gave evidence. Particularly striking is the sharp contrast
between the opinions of Mr. K.K. Shah and Mr. M.C. Setalvad.
The first view would tend to leave the matter entirely with
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the House, which can adopt any procedure even differing from
case to case. The matter would be entirely beyond judicial
review. Then there is the inevitable’ element of political
overtone and of contemporary political exacerbations arising
from inconvenient judicial pronouncements thus endangering
judicial independence.
The third view would suffer from the same infirmities
except that Parliament might itself choose to discipline and
limit its own powers by enacting a law on the subject. The
law enacted under Article 124(5) might be a greatly civi-
lized piece of legislation deferring to values of judicial
independence. But then the Parliament would be free to
repeal that law and revert hack to the position reflected in
the first view. The third view can always acquire back the
full dimensions of the first position at the choice of the
Parliament.
35. The second view has its own commendable features. It
enables the various provisions to be read harmoniously and,
together, consistently with the cherished values of judicial
independence. It also accords due recognition to the word
"proved" in Article 124(4). This view would also ensure
uniformity of procedure in both Houses of Parliament and
serve to eliminate arbitrariness in the proceedings for
removal of a Judge. It would avoid duplication of the inves-
tigation and inquiry in the two Houses. Let us elaborate on
this.
56
36. Article 121 ,and the material parts of Article 124 read
as under:
"121. Restriction on discussion in Parlia-
ment. - No discussion shall take place in
Parliament with respect to the conduct of any
Judge of the Supreme Court or of a High Court
in the discharge of his duties except upon a
motion for presenting an address to the Presi-
dent praying for the removal of the Judge as
hereinafter provided.
124. Establishment and constitution of
Supreme Court.
(1)....................................
(2) Every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be
appointed by the President by warrant under
his hand and seal after consultation with such
of the Judges of the Supreme Court and of the
High Courts in the States as the President may
deem necessary for the purpose and shall hold
office until he attains the age of sixty-five
years:
Provided that in the case of appointment of a
Judge other than the Chief Justice of India
shall always be consulted:
Provided further that -
(a) a Judge may, by writing under his hand
addressed to the President, resign his office;
(b) a Judge may be removed from his office in
the manner provided in clause (4).
(4) A Judge of the Supreme Court shall not be
removed from his office except by an order of
the President passed after an address by each
House of Parliament supported by a majority of
not less than two-thirds of the members of
that House present and voting has been pre-
sented to the President in the same session
for such removal on the ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity.
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(5) Parliament may by law regulate the proce-
dure for the presentation of an address and
for the investigation and proof of the misbe-
haviour or incapacity of a Judge under clause
(4)."
Article 121 suggests that the bar on discussion in
Parliament with respect to the conduct of any Judge is
lifted ’upon a motion for presenting an address to the
President praying for the removal of a Judge as hereinaf-
57
provided’. The word ’motion’ and ’as hereinafter provid-
ed’ are obvious references to the motion for the purpose of
clause (4) of Article 124 which in turn, imports the concept
of "proved" misbehaviour or incapacity. What lifts the bar
under Article 121 is the ’proved’ misbehaviour or incapaci-
ty. Then arises the question as to how the investigation and
proof of misbehaviour or incapacity preceding the stage of
motion for removal on the ground of "proved" misbehaviour or
incapacity under Article 124(4) is to be carried on. Clause
(5) of Article 124 provides for enactment of a law for this
purpose.
37. The seminal question is whether clause (5) is merely
an enabling provision particularly in view of the use of the
word ’may’ therein, or it incorporates a condition precedent
on the power of removal of the parliament. In other words,
can the function of removal under Article 124(4) be per-
formed without the aid of a law enacted under clause (5)?If
it can be, then the power for investigation and proof of
misbehaviour or incapacity of a Judge must be found in
clause (4) itself and the scope of clause (5) limited only
to enactment of a law for this limited purpose if the Par-
liament so desires and not otherwise. The other view is that
clause (5) contains a constitutional limitation on the power
of removal contained in clause (4) so that it can be exer-
cised only on misbehaviour or incapacity "proved" in accord-
ance with the law enacted under clause (5). In such situa-
tion, the power of the Parliament would become available
only for enacting the law under clause (5) and if misbeha-
viour or incapacity is "proved" in accordance with such law.
The motion which lifts the bar contained in Article 121 is
really a motion for such removal under clause (4) of Article
124 moved in the House after the alleged misbehavior or
incapacity has been proved in accordance with the law enact-
ed by the Parliament under clause (5) of Article 124. In
this connection, the parliamentary procedure commences only
after proof of misbehaviour or incapacity in accordance with
the law enacted under clause (5), the machinery for investi-
gation and finding of proof of the misbehaviour or incapaci-
ty being statutory. governed entirely by provisions of the
law enacted under clause (5). This also harmonises Article
121. The position would be that an allegation of misbeha-
viour or incapacity of a Judge has to be made, investigated
and found proved in accordance with the law enacted by the
Parliament under Article 124(5) without the Parliament being
involved upto that stage; on the misbehaviour or incapacity
of a Judge being found proved in the manner provided by that
law, a motion for presenting an address to the President for
removal of the Judge on that ground would be moved in each
House under Article 124(4); on the motion being so moved
after the proof of misbehaviour or incapacity and it being
for presenting an address to the President praying for
removal of the Judge, the bar. on
58
discussion contained in Article 121 is lifted and discussion
can take place in the Parliament with respect to the conduct
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of the Judge; and the further consequence would ensue de-
pending on the outcome of the motion in a House of Parlia-
ment. If, however, the finding reached by the machinery
provided in the enacted law is that the allegation is not
proved, the matter ends and there is no occasion to move the
motion in accordance with Article 124(4).
38. If it be accepted that clause (4) of Article 124 by
contains the complete power of removal and the enactment of
a law under clause (5) is merely enabling and not a consti-
tutional limitation on the exercise of the power of removal
under clause (4), then some other questions arise for con-
sideration. If clause (5) is merely an enabling provision,
then it cannot abridge the scope of the power in clause (4)
and, therefore, the power of a House of Parliament under
clause (4) cannot be curtailed by a mere enabling law enact-
ed under clause (5) which can be made only for the purpose
of aiding or facilitating exercise of the function under
clause (4). In that situation, enactment of the enabling law
under clause (5) would not take the sphere covered by the
law outside the ambit of Parliament’s power under clause
(4). The argument that without enactment of the law under
clause (5), the entire process from the time of initiation
till presentation of the address to the President, including
investigation and proof of the misbehaviour or incapacity,
is within the sphere of Parliament, but on enactment of a
law under clause (5) that area is carved out of the Parlia-
ment’s sphere and assumes statutory character appears tenu-
ous. If the argument were correct, then clause (5), would
merely contemplate a self-abnegation.
39. The other view is that clause (4) of Article 124
gives power to the Parliament to act for removal of the
Judge on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity in
the manner prescribed if the matter is brought before it at
this stage; and for reaching that stage the Parliament is
required to enact a law under clause (5) regulating the
procedure for that purpose. This means that making of the
allegation, initiation of the proceedings, investigation and
proof of the misbehaviour or incapacity of a Judge are
governed entirely by the law enacted by the Parliament under
clause (5) and when that stage is reached, the Parliament
comes into the picture and the motion for removal of the
Judge on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity is
moved for presentation of the address to the President in
the manner prescribed. The matter not being before the
Parliament prior to this stage is also indicated by Article
121 which lifts the bar on discussion in Parliament only
upon a motion for presenting an address to the President as
provided later in Article 124(4). The bar in
59
Article 121 applies to discussion in Parliament but investi-
gation and proof of misconduct or incapacity cannot exclude
such discussion. This indicates that the machinery for
investigation and proof must necessarily be outside Parlia-
ment and not within it. In other words, proof which involves
a discussion of the conduct of the Judge must be by a body
which is outside the limitation of Article 121. The word
’proved’ also denotes proof in the manner understood in our
legal system i.e. as a result of a judicial process. The
policy appears to be that the entire stage upto proof of
misbehaviour or incapacity, beginning with the initiation of
investigation on the allegation being made, is governed by
the law enacted under Article 124(5) and in view of the
restriction provided in Article 121, that machinery has to
be outside the Parliament and not within it. If this be so,
it is a clear pointer that the Parliament neither has any
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role to play till misconduct or incapacity is round proved
nor has it any control over the machinery provided in the
law enacted under Article 124(5). The Parliament comes in
the picture only when a finding is reached by that machinery
that the alleged misbehaviour or incapacity has been proved.
The Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 enacted under Article 124(5)
itself indicates that the Parliament so understood the
integrated scheme of Articles 121, 124(4) and 124(5). The
general scheme of the Act conforms to this view. Some ex-
pressions used in the Act, particularly sections 3 and 6 to
suggest that the motion is initiated in the House or is kept
pending in the House during investigation can be reconciled,
if this Constitutional Scheme is accepted. Those expressions
appear to have been used since the authority tO entertain
the complaint is ’Speaker/Chairman’, the complaint is de-
scribed as ’motion’ and the complaint can be made only by
the specified number of Members of Parliament. In substance
it only means that the specified number of M.Ps. alone can
make such a complaint; the complaint must be made to the
’Speaker/Chairman’; on receiving such a complaint if the
Speaker/Chairman form the opinion that there is a prima
facie case for investigation, he will constitute the judi-
cial committee as prescribed; and if the finding reached is
’guilty’ then the Speaker/Chairman commences the parliamen-
tary process in accordance with Article 124(4) for removal
of the Judge and the bar in Article 121 is lifted.
40. If this be the correct position, then the validity
of law enacted by the Parliament trader clause (5) of Arti-
cle 124 and the stage upto conclusion of the inquiry in
accordance with that law being governed entirely by statute
would be open to judicial review as the parliamentary proc-
ess under Article 124(4) commences only after a finding is
recorded that the alleged misbehaviour or incapacity is
proved in the inquiry conducted in accordance with the law
enacted under clause (5). For this reason the argument based
on exclusivity of Parliament’s jurisdiction over
60
the process and progress of inquiry under the Judges (in-
quiry) Act, 1968 and consequently exclusion of this Court’s
jurisdiction in the matter at this stage does not arise. For
the same reason, the question of applying the doctrine of
lapse to the motion made to the Speaker giving rise to the
constitution of the Inquiry Committee under the Act, also
does not arise and there can be no occasion for the House to
say so at any time. If the House is, therefore, not required
to consider this question since the parliamentary process
can commence only after a finding of guilt being proved, the
further question of a futile writ also does not arise. The
argument that the House can decide even after a finding of
guilt that it would not proceed to vote for removal of the
Judge is not germane to the issue since that is permissible
in the Constitutional Scheme itself under Article 124(4)
irrespective of the fact whether Article 124(5) is a mere
enabling provision or a constitutional limitation on the
exercise of power under Article 124(4).
41. It is not the law enacted under Article 124(5) which
abridges or curtails the parliamentary process or exclusive-
ly of its jurisdiction but the Constitutional Scheme itself
which by enacting clauses (4) and (5) simultaneously indi-
cated that the stage of clause (4) is reached and the proc-
ess thereunder commences only when the alleged misbehaviour
or incapacity is proved in accordance with the law enacted
under clause (5).
42. It is only then that the need for discussing a
Judge’s conduct in the Parliament arises and, therefore, the
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bar under Article 121 is lifted. in short, the point of time
when the matter comes first before the Parliament in the
Constitutional Scheme, Article 121 provides that the bar is
lifted. The other view creates difficulties by restricting
discussion in Parliament on a motion which would be before
it. The suggestion to develop a convention to avoid discus-
sion at that stage or to prevent it by any other device
adopted by the Speaker after admitting the motion, does not
appear to be a satisfactory solution or explanation. That
this obvious situation could have been left unprovided for
and the field left to a convention to be developed later,
while enacting these provisions with extreme care and cau-
tion in a written Constitution, is extremely unlikely. This
indicates that this area is not left uncovered which too is
a pointer that the stage at which the bar in Article 121 is
lifted, is the starting point of the parliamentary process
i.e. when the misbehaviour or incapacity is proved; the
stage from the initiation of the process by’ making the
allegation, its mode, investigation and proof are covered by
the law enacted under clause (5); in case the allegation is
not proved, the condition precedent to invoke the Parlia-
ment’s jurisdiction under clause (4), does not exist, which
is the reason for section 6 of 1968 Act saying so; and in
case it is proved, the
61
process under clause (4) commences, culminating in the
result provided in it.
43. In Part V of the Constitution relating to ’The
Union’, Article 124 is in ’Chapter IV - The Union Judiciary’
while Articles 118 and 119 relating to Parliament’s power to
make rules or enact a law to regulate its procedure and the
conduct of its business are in ’Chapter II - Parliament’
under the heading ’Procedure Generally’ wherein Article 121
also finds place. The context and setting in which clause
(5) appears along with clause (4) in Article 124 indicate
its nature connected with clause (4) relating to curtailment
of a Judge’s tenure, clause (4) providing the manner of
removal and clause (5) the pre-requisite for removal distin-
guished from Articles 118, 119 and 121, all of which relate
to procedure and conduct of business in Parliament. Article
124(5) does not, therefore, operate in the same field as
Article 118 relating to procedure and conduct of business in
Parliament.
Accordingly, the scheme is that the entire process of
removal is in two parts the first parts under clause (5)
from initiation to investigation and proof of misbehaviour
or incapacity is covered by an enacted law, Parliament’s
role being only legislative as in all the laws enacted by
it; and the second part only after proof under clause (4) is
in Parliament, that process commencing only on proof in
accordance with the law enacted under clause (5) Thus the
first part is entirely statutory while the second part alone
is the parliamentary process.
44. The Constitution intended a clear provision for the
first part covered fully by enacted law, the validity of
which and the process thereunder being subject to judicial
review independent of any political colour and after proof
it was intended to be a parliamentary process. It is this
synthesis made in our Constitutional Scheme for removal of a
Judge.
If the motion for presenting an address for removal is
envisaged by Articles 121 and 124(4) ’on ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity’ it presupposes that misbehaviour
or incapacity has been proved earlier. This is more so on
account of the expression ’investigation and proof used in
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clause (5) with specific reference to clause (4). This
indicates that ’investigation and proof’ of misbehaviour or
incapacity is not within clause (4) but within clause (5).
Use of the expression ’same session’ in clause (4) without
any reference to session in clause (5) also indicates that
session of House has no significance for clause (5) i.e.,
’investigation and proof’ which is to be entirely governed
by the enacted law and not the parliamentary practice which
may be altered by each Lok Sabha.
62
45.The significance of the word ’proved’ before the
expression ’misbehaviour or incapacity’ in clause (4) of
Article 124 is also indicated when the provision is compared
with Article 317 providing for removal of a member of the
Public Service Commission. The expression in clause (1) of
Article 317 used for describing the ground of removal is
’the ground of behaviour’ while in clause (4) of Article
124, it is, ’the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapaci-
ty’. The procedure for removal of a member of the Public
Service Commission is also prescribed in clause (1) which
provides for an inquiry by the Supreme Court on a reference
made for this purpose. In the case of a Judge, the procedure
for investigation and proof is to be in accordance with the
law enacted by the Parliament under clause (5) of Article
124. In view of the fact that the adjudication of the ground
of misbehaviour under Article 317 (1) is to be by the Su-
preme Court, in the case of a Judge who is a higher consti-
tutional functionary, the requirement of judicial determina-
tion of the ground is re-inforced by the addition of the
word ’proved’ in Article 124(4) and the requirement of law
for this purpose under Article 124(5).
46. Use of the word ’may’ in clause (5) indicates that
for the ’procedure for presentation of address’ it is an
enabling provision and in the absence of the law the general
procedure or that resolved by the House may apply but the
’investigation and proof’ is to be governed by the enacted
law. The word ’may’ in clause (5) is no impediment to this
view.
47. On the other hand, if the word ’shall’ was used in
place of ’may’ in clause (5) it would have indicated that it
was incumbent on the Parliament to regulate even the proce-
dure for presentation of an address by enacting such a law
leaving it no option even in the matter of its procedure
after the misbehaviour or incapacity had been investigated
and found true. ’Sometimes, the legislature uses the word
"may" out of deference to the high status of the authority
on whom the power and the obligation are intended to be
conferred and imposed.’ (See: State of Uttar Pradesh v.
Joginder Singh, [1964] 2 SCR 197 at 202. Indeed, when a
provision is intended to effectuate a right--here it is to
effectuate a constituational protection to the Judges under
Article 124 (4)---even a provision as in Article 124 (5)
which may otherwise seem merely enabling, becomes mandatory.
The exercise of the powers is rendered obligatory. In Fred-
eric Guilder julius v. The Right Rev. The Lord Bishop of
Oxford; the Rev. Thomas Tellsson Carter, [1879-80] 5 A.C.
214 at p. 24zt, Lord Blackburn said:
,.The enabling words are construed as
compulsory whenever the object of the power is
to effectuate a legal right...."
63
In Punjab Sikh Regular Motor Service, Moudhapura v. The
Regional Transport ,Authority, Raipur & Anr, [1966] 2 SCR
221, this Court referring to the word ’may’ in Rule 63 (a)
in Central Provinces and Berar Motor Vehicles Rules, 1940,
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observed:
"....On behalf of the appellant attention was
drawn to the expression ’may’ in Rule 63. But
in the context and the language of the rule
the word ’may’ though permissive in form, must
be held to be obligatory. Under Rule 63 the
power to grant renewal of the counter-signa-
ture on the permit in the present case is
conferred on the Regional Transport Authority,
Bilaspur. The exercise of such power of renew-
al depends not upon the discretion of the
authority but upon the proof of the particular
cases out of which such power arises. ’Ena-
bling words are construed as compulsory when-
ever the object of the power is to effectuate
a legal right’. (See: Julius v. Bishop of
Oxford, 5 A.C. 214, 244)...."
If the word ’may’ in Article124 (5) is given any other
meaning that sub-Article would render itself, to be treated
by the Parliament, as superfluous, redundant and otiose. The
power to prescribe a procedure for the exercise of power
under Article 124 (4) could otherwise also be available to
the House. The law envisaged under Article 124(5) is not
such a law; but one which would effectuate the constitution-
al policy and philosophy of the machinery for removal of
Judges.
The use of the word ’may’ does not, therefore, neces-
sarily indicate that the whole of clause (5) is an enabling
provision leaving it to the Parliament to decide whether to
enact a law even for the investigation and proof of the
misbehaviour or incapacity or not.
The mere fact that clause (5) does not form a part of
clause (4) itself, as appears to have been considered at one
stage when the constitution was being drafted, does not
reduce the significance or content of clause (5). It is
likely that the framers of the Constitution thought of
clearly demarcating the boundaries and, therefore, indicated
that upto the stage of proof of misbehaviour of incapacity
the field is covered by a law enacted by the Parliament, the
first pan being covered by clause (5) and the latter by
clause (4) with the only difference that the Parliament was
given the option to regulate even the procedure for the
presentation of an address after the misbehaviour or inca-
pacity had been proved by enacting a law for the purpose to
make it more definite and consistent.
64
48. Similarly, use of word ’motion’ to indicate the
process of investigation and proof in the Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968 because the allegations have to be presented to
the ’Speaker’ does not make it ’motion in the House’ not-
withstanding use of that expression in Section 6. Otherwise,
section 6 would not say that no further step is to be taken
in case of a finding of ’not guilty’. It only means that
when the allegation is not proved, the Speaker need not
commence the process under clause (4) which is started only
in case it is proved. The Speaker is, therefore, a statutory
authority under the Act chosen because the further process
is parliamentary and the authority to make such a complaint
is given to Members of Parliament. Moreover, to the enact-
ment under Article 124(5) cannot be a safe guide to deter-
mine the scope of Article 124(5).
If this construction of the inter-connection amongst
Articles 118,121, 124 (4) and 124 (5) is the proper one to
be placed on them, as indeed we so do, the provisions of the
Judges (Inquiry) Act do not foul with the Constitutional
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Scheme.
49. On scope of the law under Article 124(5), the idea
of regulating procedure for (i) Presentation of the address;
(ii) Investigation and proof of misbehaviour or incapacity
admit of two possible options of interpretation. The idea of
"Presentation of the address" may be confined to the actual
presentation of address by both Houses of the Parliament; or
may be held to cover the entire process from initiation by
the motion in the House till the final act of delivery of
the address. If the first view is correct the law under
Article 124(5) would apply at the stage of investigation and
proof of misbehaviour or incapacity and at the final stage
of presentation of address after the motion is adopted by
both the Houses. The motion and its consideration and adop-
tion by the House would be outside the ambit of such law and
it would be regulated by the rule of procedure made under
Article I 18. This view is too narrow. By bringing in the
rules of procedure of the House made under Article 118 it
introduces an element of uncertainty and might affect inde-
pendence of the judiciary.
50. Second view is to be preferred. It enables the
entire process of removal being regulated by a law of Par-
liament - ensures uniformity and reduces chances of arbi-
trariness. Article I 18 is a general provision conferring on
each House of Parliament the power to make its own rules of
procedure. These rules are not binding on the House and can
be altered by the House at any time. A breach of such rules
amounts to an irregularity and is not subject to judicial
review in view of Article 122.
51. Article 124(5) is in the nature of a special provi-
sion intended to regulate the procedure for removal of a
Judge under Article 124(4) which
65
iS not a part of the normal business of the House but is in
the nature of special business. It covers the entire field
relating to removal of a Judge. Rules made under Article 118
have no application in this field.
52. Article 124(5) has no comparison with Article 119.
Articles 118 and 119 operate in the same field viz. normal
business of the House. It was, therefore, necessary to
specifically prescribe that the law made under Article 119
shall prevail over the rules of procedure made under Article
118. Since Article 118 and 124(5) operate in different
fields a provision like that contained in Article 119 was
not necessary and even in the absence of such a provision, a
law made under Article 124 (5) will override the rules made
under Article 118 and shall be binding on both the Houses of
Parliament. A violation of such a law would constitute
illegality and could not be immune from judical scrutiny
under Article 122(1).
53. Indeed, the Act reflectS the constitutional philoso-
phy of both the judicial and political elementS of the
process of removal. The ultimate authority remains with the
Parliament in the sense that even if the Committee for
investigation records a finding that the Judge is guilty of
the charges it is yet open to the Parliament to decide not
to present an address to the President for removal. But if
the Committee records a finding that the Judge is not
guilty, then the political element in the process of removal
has no further option. The law is, indeed, a civilised piece
of legislation reconciling the concept of accountability of
Judges and the values of judicial independence.
54. Indeed, the dissenting note of Dr. L.M. Singhvi, in
the Report of the Joint Committee on the Judges (Inquiry)
Bill, 1964 brings into sharp focus the thrust of the report
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of the majority. It is to be recalled that the 1964 Bill
vested the power to initiate the process of removal with the
Executive. That was found objectionable and inconsistent
with the idea of judicial independence. However, as to the
nature of the authority which was the repository of the
power to investigate, the dissenting opinion, by necessary
implication, emphasises the majority view which ultimately
became the law. Dr. Singhvi in his dissent says:
"10. The present Bill seeks to provide only
the modality of a tribunal clothed in the
nomenclature of a Committee. The Committee
contemplated in the Bill may well be consid-
ered a tribunal or an "authority" within the
meaning of Articles 226 and 227 of the Consti-
tution, rendering itS work subject to judicial
review and supervision. What is more, the
Parliament is not left with any choice in the
matter and procedure of parliamen-
66
tary committee has been wholly excluded. With
this I am not in agreement.
11. In both these matters in respect of which
I have dissented from my esteemed colleagues
in the Joint Select Committee, there appears
to be an imprint on the provisions of the Bill
of the now defunct Burmese Constitution, which
provided that a notice of such resolution
should be signed by not less than one-fourth
of the total membership of either Chamber of
Parliament and further that the charge would
be investigated by a special tribunal (S. 143
of the Burmese Constitution). In the Burmese
case, the special tribunal was to consist of
the President or his nominee and the Speakers
of the Chamber of Nationalities and the Cham-
ber of Deputies. I feel that the Burmese
analogue is neither inspiring nor instructive,
and that the more highly evolved procedures of
other democratic constitutions which have been
tried and tested for centuries would have
served us better".
55. Our conclusions, therefore, on contentions B, C and
D are as under:
The constitutional process for removal of a Judge upto
the point of admission of the motion, constitution of the
Committee and the recording of findings by the Committee are
not, strictly, proceedings in the Houses of Parliament. The
Speaker is a statutory authority under the Act. Upto that
point the matter cannot be said to remain outside the
Court’s jurisdiction. Contention B is answered accordingly.
Prior proof of misconduct in accordance with the law
made under Article 124(5) is a condition precedent for the
lifting of the bar under Article 121 against discussing the
conduct of a Judge in the Parliament. Article 124 (4) really
becomes meaningful only with a law made under Article
124(5). Without such a law the constitutional scheme and
process for removal of a Judge remains inchoate. Contention
C is answered accordingly.
The Speaker while admitting a motion and constituting a
Committee to investigate the alleged grounds of misbehaviour
or incapacity does not act as part of the House. The House
does not come into the picture at this stage. The provisions
of the Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 are not unconstitutional
as abridging the powers and privileges of the House. The
Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 is constitutional and is intra
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vires. Contention D is disposed of accordingly.
67
RE: CONTENTION (E)
56. It is urged by Shri Sibal that having regard to the
serious consequences that flow from the admission of a
motion by the Speaker and the decision to constitute a
Committee for investigation, it is incumbent upon the Speak-
er to afford an opportunity to the Judge of being heard
before such a decision is taken. It is urged that such
decision has momentous conseqences both to the Judge and to
the judicial system as a whole and that any politically
motivated steps to besmear a Judge will not merely affect
the Judge himself but also the entire system of administra-
tion of justice. If a motion brought up with collateral and
oblique motives, it would greatly advance the objects and
purposes of Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 if the Judge con-
cerned himself is heard before a decision to admit a
,"notion which has shattering consequences so far as the
Judge is concerned is taken. The minimum requirements of
natural justice, appropriate in the context, says learned
counsel, require that the Judge should have an opportunity
of being heard.
57. Shri Jethmalani, on the contrary, contended that it
would be highly inappropriate that the Speaker should issue
notice to a Judge and call upon him to appear before the
Speaker. That apart, Shri Jethmalani said at that stage of
the proceedings where the Speaker merely decides that the
matter might bear investigation no decisions affecting the
rights, interests or legitimate expectation can be said to
have been taken. Shri Jethmalam sought to point out that
these proceedings could not be equated with disciplinary or
penal proceedings. The Speaker does not decide anything
against the Judge at that stage.
Referring to the nature and purpose of such preliminary
proceedings Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol. 48A) says:
"As a general rule, disciplinary or removal
proceedings relating to Judges are sui generis
and are not civil or criminal in nature; and
their purpose is to inquire into judical
conduct and thereby maintain standards of
judicial fitness".
[p.614]
As to the stage at which there is a need for notice and
opportunity to the Judge to be heard the statement of the
law is:
"The general rule is that before a Judge may
be disciplined, as by removal, he is entitled
to notice and an opportunity to defend even
though there is no statute so requiring.
Ordinarily,
68
the right to defend is exercised in a trial or
hearing, as considered infra 51. More specifi-
cally the Judge is entitled to notice of the
particular charges against him. In addition,
notice of the charge should be given suffi-
ciently in advance of the time for presenting
a defence to permit proper preparation of a
showing in opposition".
(pp. 613-614)
But negativing the position that the Judge would be
entitled to notice even at the preliminary stage it is
stated:
"Investigations may be conducted into matters
relating to judicial conduct as a preliminary
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to formal disciplinary proceedings.
A judiciary commission may conduct an investi-
gation into matters relating to judicial
conduct as a preliminary to formal discipli-
nary proceedings, and a court may, under its
general powers over inferior courts, appoint a
special commissioner to preside over a prelim-
inary investigation. A court rule providing
that a Judge charged with misconduct should be
given a reasonable opportunity in the course
of a preliminary investigation to present such
matters as he may choose, affords him more
protection than is required by constitutional
provisions".
[p. 615]
58. The position is that at the stage of the provisions
when the Speaker admits the motion under section 3 of the
Judges (Inquiry) Act, a Judge is not, as a matter of right,
entitled to such notice. The scheme of the statute and rules
made thereunder by necessary implication, exclude such a
right. But that may not prevent the Speaker, if the facts
and circumstances placed before him indicate that hearing
the Judge himself might not be inappropriate, might do so.
But a decision to admit the motion and constitute a Commit-
tee for investigation without affording such an opportunity
does not, by itself and for that reason alone, vitiate the
decision. Contention E is disposed of accordingly.
RE:CONTENTION (F)
59. The substance of this contention as presented by the
learned counsel for the petitioner, "Sub-Committee" --
argued with particular emphasis by Shri R.K. Garg --is that
the constitutional machinery for removal of a Judge is
merely a political remedy for judicial misbehaviour
69
and does not exclude the judicial remedy available to the
litigants to ensure and enforce judicial integrity. It is
urged that the right to move the Supreme Court to enforce
fundamental rights is in itself a fundamental right and that
takes within its sweep, as inhering in it, the right to an
impartial judiciary with persons of impeccable integrity and
character. Without (his the fundamental right to move court
itself becomes barren and hollow. It is urged that the court
itself has the jurisdiction -- nay a duty -- to ensure the
integrity and impartiality of the members composing it and
restrain any member who is found to lack in those essential
qualities and attainments at which public confidence is
built.
It is true that society is entitled to expect the high-
est and most exacting standards of propriety in judicial
conduct. Any conduct which tends to impair public confidence
in the efficiency integrity and impartiality of the court is
indeed forbidden. In Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol. 48A) refer-
ring to the standards of conduct, disabilities and privi-
leges of Judges, it is observed:
"The State which creates a judicial office may
set appropriate standards of conduct for a
Judge who holds that office, and in many
jurisdictions, courts acting within express or
implied powers have adopted or have followed
certain canons or codes of judicial conduct.
The power of a particular court in matters of
ethical supervision and the maintenance of
standards for the judiciary may be exclusive.
Guidelines for judicial conduct are found both
in codes of judicial conduct and in general
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moral and ethical standards expected of judi-
cial officers by the community. Canons or
codes are intended as a statement of general
principles setting forth a wholesome standard
of conduct for judges which will reflect
credit and dignity on the profession and
illsolar as they prescribe conduct which is
malum in so as opposed to malum prohibitum
they operate to restate those general prinici-
ples that have always governed judicial con-
duct.
Although these canons have been held to be
binding on judges and may have the force of
law where promulgated by the courts, except as
legislatively enacted or judicially adopted
they do not of themselves have the force and
effect of law".
[pp. 593-594]
the nature of prescribed conduct it is stated:
70
"A Judge’s official conduct should be free
from impropriety and the appearance of impro-
priety and generally, he should refrain from
participation in activities which may tend to
lessen public respect for his judicial office.
It is a basic requirement, under general
guidelines and canons of judicial conduct,
that a Judge’s official conduct be free from
impropriety and the appearance of impropriety
and that both his official and personal beha-
viour be in accordance with the highest
standard society can expect. The standard of
conduct is higher than that expected of lay
people and also higher than that expected of
attorneys. The ultimate standard must be
conducted which constantly reaffirms fitness
for the high responsibilities of judicial
office and judges must so comfor’. themselves
as to dignify the administration of justice
and deserve the confidence and respect of the
public. It is immaterial that the conduct
deemed objectionable is probably lawful albeit
unjudicial or that it is perceived as lowhu-
mored horseplay.
In particular, a judge should refrain from
participation in activities which may tend to
lessen public respect for his judicial office
and avoid conduct which may give rise to a
reasonable belief that he has so participated.
In fact even in his private life a judge must
adhere to standards of probity and propriety
higher than those deemed acceptable for oth-
ers. While a judge does have the right to
entertain his personal views on controversial
issues and is not required to surrender his
rights or opinions as a citizen his right of
free speech and free association are limited
from time to time by his official duties and
he must be most careful to avoid becoming
involved in public controversies".
[pp. 594˜596]
In Sampath Kumar & Ors. v. Union of India & Ors, [1985 ]
4 S.C.C. 458, dealing with the qualifications, accomplish-
ments and attainments of the members of the Administrative
Tribunal, which were intended to substitute for the High
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Courts, this court emphasised the qualities essential for
discharging judicial functions.
60. But we are afraid the proposition that, apart from
the constitutional machinery for removal of a Judge, the
judiciary itself has the jurisdiction and in appropriate
cases a duty to enquire into the integrity of one of its
members and restrain the Judge from exercising judicial
functions is beset with grave risks. The court would then
indeed be acting as a tribunal1 for the removal of a Judge.
Learned counsel supporting the proposition
71
stated that the effect of restraining a Judge from exercis-
ing judicial functions is not equivalent to a removal be-
cause the conditions of service such as salary etc. of a
Judge would not be impaired. But we think that the general
proposition that the court itself has such a jurisdiction is
unacceptable. It is productive of more problems then it can
hope to solve.
61. The relief of a direction to restrain the Judge from
discharging judicial functions cannot be granted. It is the
entire Constitutional Scheme including the provisions relat-
ing to the process of removal of a Judge which are to be
taken into account for the purpose of considering this
aspect. It is difficult to accept that there can be any
right in anyone running parallel with the Constitutional
Scheme for this purpose contained in clauses (4) and (5) of
Article 124 read with Article 121. No authority can do what
the Constitution by necessary implication forbids. Inciden-
tally, this also throws light on the question of interim
relief in such a matter having the result of restraining the
Judge from functioning judicially on initiation of the
process under the Judge (Inquiry) Act, 1968. The Constitu-
tional Scheme appears to be that unless the alleged misbeha-
viour or incapacity is ’proved’ in accordance with the
provisions of the law enacted under Article 124(5) and a
motion for presenting an address for removal of the Judge on
the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity is made,
because of the restriction contained in Article 121, there
cannot be a discussion about the Judge’s conduct even in the
Parliament which has the substantive power of removal under
Article 124(4). If the Constitutional Scheme therefore is
that the Judge’s conduct cannot be discussed even in the
Parliament which is given the substantive power of removal,
till the alleged misconduct or incapacity is ’proved’ in
accordance with the law enacted for this purpose, then it is
difficult to accept that any such discussion of the conduct
of the Judge or any evaluation or inferences as to its merit
is permissible according to law elsewhere except during
investigation before the Inquiry Committee constituted under
the statute for this purpose. The indication, therefore, is
that interim direction of this kind during the stage of
inquiry into the alleged misbehaviour or incapacity is not
contemplated it being alien to our Constitutional Scheme.
62..The question of propriety is, however, different
from that of legality. The absence of a legal provision,
like Article 3 17(2) in the case of a Member of Public
Service Commission, to interdict the Judge faced with such
an inquiry from contining to discharge judicial functions
pending the outcome of the inquiry or in the event of a
finding of misbehaviour or incapacity being proved till the
process of removal under Article 124(4) is complete, does
not necessarily indicate that the Judge shall continue to
function during that period. That area is to be covered by
the
72
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sense of propriety of the learned Judge himself and the
judicial tradition symbolised by the views of the Chief
Justice of India. It should be expected that the learned
Judge would be guided in such a situation by the advice of
the Chief Justice of India, as a matter of convention unless
he himself decides as an act of propriety to abstain from
discharging judicial functions during the interregnum. Since
the learned Judge would continue to hold the office of a
Judge unless he resigns or is removed, an arrangement to
meet the situation has to be devised by the Chief Justice.
The Constitution while providing for the suspension of a
Member of a Public Service Commission in Article 3 17 (2) in
a similar situation has deliberately abstained from making
such a provision in case of higher constitutional function-
aries, namely, the Superior Judges and President and Vice-
President of India, facing impeachment. It is reasonable to
assume that the framers of Constitution had assumed that a
desirable convention would be followed by a Judge in that
situation which would not require the exercise of a power of
suspension. Propriety of the desirable course has to be
viewed in this perspective. It would also be reasonable to
assume that the Chief Justice of India is expected to find a
desirable solution in such a situation to avoid embarrass-
ment to the learned Judge and to the Institution in a manner
which is conducive to the independence of judiciary and
should the Chief Justice of India be of the view that the
interests of the institution of judiciary it is desirable
for the learned Judge to abstain from judicial work till the
final outcome under Article 124(4), he would advise the
learned Judge accordingly. It is further reasonable to
assume that the concerned learned Judge would ordinarily
abide by the advice of the Chief Justice of India. All this
is, however, in the sphere of propriety and not a matter of
legal authority to, permit any court to issue any legal
directive to the Chief Justice of India for this purpose.
Accordingly Contention F is rejected.
RE:CONTENTION (G)
63. This relates to the mala fides alleged against the
Speaker. The
averments in this behalf are identical in both Raj
Birbal’s and Sham Ratan Khandelwal’s peti-
tions. We may notice the relevant averments:
"It is, therefore, disconcerting to note that
the Speaker acted contrary to Constitutional
practice. It is assumed that this high Consti-
tutional functionary would have known of the
well settled and established constitutional
practice in regard to the fact that motions
lapse with the dissolution of the House. The
action of the Speaker, therefore, in admitting
the motion in the manner that he did, smacks
of mala fides and, therefore, de-
73
serves to be struck down.
The action of the Speaker is mala fide on yet
another count. The Speaker has not resigned
from the primary membership of the Janta Dal.
The petitioners verily believe that the first
signatory to the motion is the erstwhile Prime
Minister of India Shri V.P. Singh who happens
also to be the leader of the Janta Dal. The
signatories to the said motion, the petition-
ers verily believe, belong mostly to the Janta
Dal, though the details of this fact are not
precisely known to the petitioners. The Speak-
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er, as has been indicated earlier, ought to
have allowed parliament to look into the
matter and discuss as to whether or not the
motion ought to be admitted. The Speaker ought
to have at least tabled the motion in the
House to ascertain the views of the Members of
parliament belonging to various Houses. The
Speaker, to say the least, ought to have
transmitted all materials to Justice Ramaswami
and sought a response from him before attempt-
ing to admit the motion. The Speaker ought to
have dealt with the motion much earlier and
transmitted to Justice Rammaswami all the
materials as well as the views that might have
been expressed to him in the course of his
consultations which enabled him to come to a
decision. The Speaker in the very least ought
to have ascertained the wishes of the House in
this regard. The Speaker ought not to have
decided to admit the motion in the manner he
did on the last evening of the 9th Lok Sabha
amidst din and noise, when what he spoke was
also not entirely audible in the House. The
Speaker is a high Constitutional functionary
and ought to have exercised
his functions in the highest traditions of the
office of this high constitutional function-
ary. The Speaker ought also not to have dealt
with the motion, the prime movers of which are
members of his own party. ’the Speaker ought
to have disqualified himself in this regard
and placed the matter for the discussion of
the House. The conduct of the Speaker in this
entire episode was unbecoming of a high Con-
stitutional functionary. The action of the
Speaker is mala fide and deserves to be struck
down on this count alone."
The averments as to mala fides are intermixed with and
inseparable from touching the merits of certain constitu-
tional issues. Indeed, mala fides are sought to be impugned
to the Speaker on the grounds that he did
74
not hear the Judge, did not have the motion discussed in the
House etc. We have held these were not necessary.
64. But a point was made that the Speaker not having
entered appearance and denied these allegations on oath must
be deemed to have admitted them. It appears to us that even
on the allegations made in the petition and plea of mala
fides which require to be established on strong grounds, no
such case is made out. A case of mala fides cannot be made
out merely on the ground of political affiliation of the
Speaker either. That may not be a sufficient ground in the
present context. At all events, as the only statutory au-
thority to deal with the matter, doctrine of statutory
exceptions or necessity might be invoked. Contention G
cannot therefore be accepted.
RE :CONTENTION (H)
65. This pertains to the locus standi of "Sub-Committee
on the Judicial Accountability" and the Supreme Court Bar
Association to maintain the proceedings. If this is true,
then the petitioners in Transfer Petition No. 278 of 1991
and other writ petitions challenging the Speaker’s decision
would not also have the necessary standing to sue. The law
as to standing to sue in public interest actions had under-
gone a vast change over the years and liberal standards for
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determining locus standi are now recognised. The matter has
come to be discussed at considerable care and length in S.P.
Gupta & Ors. etc. v. Union of India & Ors. etc. etc., [1982]
2 SCR 365. The present matter is of such nature and the
constitutional issues of such nature and importance that it
cannot be said that members of the Bar, and particularly the
Supreme Court Bar Association have no locus standi in the
matter. An elaborate re-survey of the principles and prece-
dents over again is unnecessary. Suffice it to say that from
any point of view the petitioners satisfy the legal equip-
ments of the standing to sue. We, therefore, reject the
Contention H.
66. We are constrained to say that certain submissions
advanced on the prayer seeking to restrain the learned judge
from functioning till the proceedings of the committee were
concluded lacked as much in propriety as in dignity and
courtesy with which the learned judge is entitled. The
arguments seemed to virtually assume that the charges had
been established. Much was sought to be made of the silence
of the Judge and his refusal to be drawn into a public
debate. If we may say so with respect, learned judge was
entitled to decline the invitation to offer his explanation
to his detractors, No adverse inference as to substance and
validity of the
75
charges could be drawn from the refusal of the learned judge
to recognise these forums for his vindication. While the
members of the bar may claim to act in public interest they
have, at the same time, a duty of courtesy and particular
care that in the event of the charges being found baseless
or insufficient to establish any moral turpitude, the judge
does not suffer irreparably in the very process. The ap-
proach should not incur the criticism that it was calculated
to expose an able and courteous judge to public indignity
even before the allegations were examined by the forum
constitutionally competent to do so. We wish the level of
the debate both in and outside the Court was more decorous
and dignified. Propriety required that even before the
charges are proved in the only way in which it is permitted
to be proved, the Judge should not be embarrassed. The
constitutional protection to Judges is not for theft person-
al benefit; but is one of the means of protecting the judi-
ciary and its independence and is, / therefore, in the
larger public interest. Recourse to constitutional methods’
must be adhered to, if the system were to survive. Learned
Judge in his letter to the Registrar-General which he de-
sired to be placed the Court had, indeed, expressed deep
anguish at the way the petitioners had been permitted them-
selves to sit in judgment over him and deal with him the way
they did.
RE: CONTENTION (I)
67. This argument suggests that the court should, having
regard to the nature of the area the decision of the court
and its writ is to operate in, decline to exercise its
jurisdiction, granting it has such jurisdiction. It is urged
that any decision rendered or any writ issued might, in the
last analysis, become futile and infructuous as indeed the
Constitution of and investigation by the committee are not,
nor intended to be, an end by themselves culminating in any
independent legal consequences but only a proceeding prelim-
inary to and preceding the deliberations of the House on the
motion for the presentation of an address to the President
for the removal of a Judge. The latter, it is urged, is
indisputably with in the exclusive province of the Houses of
parliament over which courts exercise no control or juris-
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diction. The constitution of and the proceedings before the
committee are, it is urged, necessarily sequential to and
integral with the proceedings in the Houses of Parliament.
SinCe the committee and its investigations have neither any
independent existence nor separate legal effect-otherwise
than as confined to, and for the purposes and as part of the
possible prospective proceedings in the Houses of Parlia-
ment, the court should decline to exercise jurisdiction on a
matter which is of no independent legal consequence of its
own and which, in the last analysis, falls and remains
entirely in an area outside the courts’ jurisdiction. It is
urged
76
that both from the point of view of infructuousness, propri-
ety and futility, the court should decline the invitation to
interfere even though that part of the proceedings pertain-
ing to the constitution of the committee might not strictly
be within the exclusive area of Parliament. Courts, it is
urged, would not allow its process to expect in a matter
which will eventually merge in something over which it will
have no jurisdiction.
68. The elements of infructuousness, it is suggested,
arise in two areas. The first is, as is posited, what should
happen if the Houses of Parliament choose to say that in
their view the motion has lapsed? Would the court then go
into the legality of the proceedings of the Houses of Par-
liament and declare the decision of the House void?
The second area of the suggested source of infructuous-
ness is as to the consequences of the position that the
Houses of Parliament would, notwithstanding the report of
the committee, be entitled to decide not to present an
address to the President to remove the Judge. It is, it is
said, for the House of Parliament to discipline the Govern-
ment if the House is of the view that Government is guilty
of an illegal inaction on the Speaker’s decision as ulti-
mately the House has dealt with the committee’s report.
69. On the first point there is and should be no diffi-
culty. The interpretation of the law declared by this court
that a motion under section 3(2) of the Judges (inquiry)
Act, 1968, does not lapse upon the dissolution of the House
is a binding declaration. No argument based on an assumption
that the House would act in violation of the law need be
entertained. If the law is that the motion does not lapse,
it is erroneous to assume that the Houses of Parliament
would act in violation of the law. The interpretation of the
law is within the exclusive power of the courts.
70. So far as the second aspect is concerned, what is
now sought by the petitioners who seek the enforcement and
implementation of the Speaker’s decision is not a direction
to the committee to carry out the investigation. Such a
prayer may raise some issues peculiar to that situation. But
here, the Union. Government has sought to interpret the
legal position for purposes of guiding its own response to
the situation and to regulate its actions on the Speaker’s
decision. That understanding of the law is now found to be
unsound.
All that is necessary to do is to declare the correct
constitutional position. No specific writ of direction need
issue to any authority. Having regard to the nature of the
subject matter and the purpose it is ultimately intended to
serve all that is necessary is to declare the legal and
constitu-
77
tional position and leave the different organs of the State
to consider matters falling within the orbit of their re-
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spective jurisdiction and powers. Contention I is disposed
of accordingly.
71. In the result, for the foregoing reasons, Writ
Petition Nos. 491 and 541 of 1991 are disposed of by the
appropriate declarations of the law as contained in the
judgment.
Writ Petition Nos. 542 and 560 of 1991 are dismissed.
Transfer Petition No. 278 of 1991 is allowed. Writ
Petition No. 1061 of 1991 is withdrawn from the Delhi High
Court. The transferred writ petition is also dismissed.
SHARMA, J. I have gone through the erudite Judgment of
my learned Brothers, and I regret that I have not been able
to persuade myself to share their views. In my opinion, all
these petitions are fit to be dismissed.
The stand of the petitioners in W.P. (C) Nos. 491 of
1991 and 541 of 1991 is that the inquiry with respect to the
alleged misbehaviour of Mr. Justice V. Ramaswami, the third
respondent in W.P. (C) No. 491 of 1991, which was referred
to a Committee under the provisions of the Judges (inquiry)
Act, 1968 ought to proceed and accordingly the Union of
India must take all necessary steps.
2. The main arguments on their behalf have been ad-
dressed by Mr. Shanti Bhushan, Mr. Ram Jethmalani and Mr.
R.K.Garg, all appearing for the petitioners in W,P. (C) No.
491 of 1991, which has been treated as the main case. Al-
though in substance their stand is similar, they are not
consistent on some of the points debated during the heating
of the case. They have been supported in general terms by
Ms. Indira Jaising and Mr. P.P. Rao, the learned counsel
representing the Supreme Court Bar Association, the peti-
tioner in W.P. (C) No. 541 of 1991, and for the sake of
convenience the petitioners in these two cases shall be
hereinafter referred to as the petitioners. The opposite
point of view has been pressed by Mr. Kapil Sibal, on behalf
of Mrs. Raj Birbal, the petitioner in T.P. (C) No. 278 of
1991, Mr. V.R.Jayaraman intervenor in W.P. (C) No. 491 of
1991 and Mr. Shyam Ratan Khandelwal, the petitioner in
W.P.(C) No. 560 of 1991; and in view of their stand, they
shall be referred to as respondents in this judgment.
3. The Committee for the investigation into the alleged
misbehaviour of the third respondent was constituted on
12.3.1991 under the provi-
78
sions of the Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 (hereinafter re-
ferred to as the Act) by Shri Rabi Ray, the then Speaker of
the Lok Sabha, not a party in W.P. (C) Nos. 491 of 1991 and
541 of 1991, but impleaded by Mr. Shyam Ratan Khandelwal as
respondent No. 1 in W.P. (C) No. 560 of 1991. The Lok Sabha
was dissolved the very next day, i.e. 13.3.1991.
4. Mr. Attorney General appearing on behalf of the
Union of India has contended that this Court should affirm
the views expressed by the Union of India in its affidavit
that on dissolution of the last Lok Sabha, the Motion
against the third respondent lapsed and the matter cannot
proceed further.
5. According to the case of the petitioners, once the
Committee was constituted, the entire inquiry must be com-
pleted in accordance with the provisions of the Act, and the
stand of the Union Government that the Motion in this regard
lapsed on the dissolution of the House is fit to be reject-
ed. The Union Government, in the circumstances, is under a
duty to act in such manner by way of providing funds et
cetera, that it may be practically possible for the Commit-
tee to complete its task. Since the obligation to act ac-
cordingly, arises under the Act, this Court has full author-
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ity to enforce the performance of the statutory duty; and
having regard to the circumstances in the present case it is
appropriate to exercise that power.
The petitioners further pray that in the meantime the
third respondent should not undertake to dispose of judicial
matters, and since he has not himself refrained from so
doing, no judicial work should be allotted to him. The Chief
Justice of India has also been impleaded as a party respond-
ent but this Court while issuing Rule Nisi after hearing
learned counsel for the parties, did not consider it expedi-
ent to issue notice to the Chief Justice. A prayer for
interim direction in this regard was also rejected. During
the hearing of the cases another application to the same
effect was filed and was heard at considerable length and
ultimately rejected by a reasoned order.
6. Mr. Sibal, the learned counsel for the respondents
has challenged the maintainability of the writ petitions, on
the ground that the matter is not justiciable. It was fur-
ther argued that since the Speaker proceeded to admit the
Notice of Motion initiated by 108 Members of the Lok Sabha
without reference to the House, the order of the Speaker was
void, and the constitution of the Committee is ultra vires.
The Speaker’s order has been challenged also on the grounds
of violation of principles of natural justice and mala
fides. So far as the effect of the dissolution of the
79
last Lok Sabha is concerned the respondents have supported
the stand of the Union Government that the Motion has
lapsed, but consistent with their plea. of non-justiciabili-
ty, Mr. Sibal has indicated that it is for the House to
decide this issue.
Long arguments were addressed by the learned counsel for
the parties on the correct interpretation of Article 124(4)
and (5) and the Act, and Mr. Sibal has contended that if the
construction suggested by him of the provisions of the Act
are not accepted, the Act has to be struck down either in
its entirety or in part as ultra vires the Constitution.
In W.P. (C) No. 560 of 1991 Mr. Shyam Ratan Khandelwal
has, inter alia, prayed for declaring the Judges (Inquiry)
Act, 1968 and the Rules framed thereunder as ultra vires
Article 121 and 124(5) of the Constitution; for quashing the
decision of the Speaker; and, for issuing a Writ of Mandamus
to the Committee not to embark upon or proceed with the
inquiry. He also wants a declaration that the Chief Justice
of India cannot withhold allocation of work to the third
respondent for discharging his judicial functions, and seeks
for consequential directions in this regard. During the
course of his argument, Mr. Sibal, in reply to a query from
the Bench, clarified the position that if his plea of non-
justiciability is accepted, all the petitions may have to be
dismissed.
7. It is appropriate that the point relating to the
jurisdiction of this Court, and for that matter of any court
in India, is considered first. If the stand of the respond-
ents is correct on this issue, it may not be necessary to
deal with the other questions raised by the parties. In
support of his argument, Mr. Sibal has relied upon the
provisions of Article 122(2) of the Constitution read with
Article 93, and has urged that the present matter relates to
the conduct of the business of the Lok Sabha and is included
within the functions of regulating its procedure, and as
such the Speaker who is a Member and officer of the Parlia-
ment cannot be subjected to the jurisdiction of any Court in
respect of the exercise of those powers. The questions
whether the Motion on the basis of which the present inquiry
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by the Committee has been ordered has lapsed or not and
whether the inquiry should further proceed or not are for
the House to determine, and its decision will be final.
Reference was also made to Article 100, but the learned
counsel clarified his stand that in the present context a
special majority as indicated in Article 124(4) will have to
be substituted for a simple majority mentioned in Article
100(1). It has been contended that the Speaker was not free
to take a decision by himself to refer the matter to the
Committee for inquiry and that too without hearing the Judge
concerned; and in any event his order is subject to any
decision
80
to the contrary of the House arrived at, at any stage.
Emphasis was laid on the concept of Separation of State
powers amongst its three wings, and it was claimed that all
matters within the House including moving of motions, ad-
journment motions and debates are beyond the purview of
judicial scrutiny. Counsel said that it does not make any
difference that in the present case it is the Union Govern-
ment, which has taken a decision for itself on the disputed
issue; and the petitioners cannot use this as an excuse for
approaching the Court. The Court should refuse to entertain
the writ petitions on this ground, as it cannot be persuaded
to do indirectly what it cannot do directly. The crux is
that the matter is in the exclusive domain of the Parlia-
ment.
8. Although in my final conclusion I agree with the
respondents that the courts have no jurisdiction in the
present matter, I do not agree with Mr. Sibal’s contention
based on an assumption of the very wide and exclusive juris-
diction of the Parliament in the general terms, as indicated
during his argument. His stand that the Speaker could not
have taken a decision singly also does not appear to be well
founded. He strenuously argued that since the matter relat-
ing to the removal of a Judge is from the very beginning
within the exclusive control of one of the Houses of the
Parliament every decision has to be taken by the entire
House and if necessary a debate will have to be permitted.
As a result, the bar on discussion in the House on the
Judges’ conduct will disappear from the initial stage it-
self, but that cannot be helped. He relied upon the inter-
pretation of Mr. M.C.Setalvad on clauses 4 & 5 of Article
124 as stated by him before the Joint Committee on the
Judges (inquiry) Bill, 1964 (being Bill No. 5 of 1964 which
was ultimately dropped) and his view that the desired object
of avoiding debate on the conduct of a Judge in the Parlia-
ment can be achieved only by the Speaker carefully exercis-
ing his discretion after taking into account the impropriety
of such a debate.
9. Although the powers of State has been distributed by
the Constitution amongst the three limbs, that is the Legis-
lature, the Executive and the Judiciary, the doctrine of
Separation of Powers has not been strictly adhered to and
there is some overlapping of powers in the gray areas. A few
illustrations will show that the courts’ jurisdiction to
examine matters involving adjudication of disputes is sub-
ject to several exceptions. Let us consider a case in which
an individual citizen approaches the Court alleging serious
violation of his fundamental rights resulting in grave and
irreparable injury, arising as a consequence of certain
acts, and the decision of his claim is dependent on the
adjudication of a dispute covered by Article 262 or Article
363. He does not have a legal remedy before the courts.
Similarly a Member of Parliament or of a State Legislature
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who
81
may have a just grievance in matters covered by Article
122(2) or 212(2) cannot knock the doors of the courts. Let
us take another example where a group of citizens residing
near the border of the country are in imminent danger of a
devastating attack from an enemy country in which they are
sure to lose large number of lives besides theft property.
This can be averted only by accepting the terms offered by
the enemy country, which are in their opinion reasonable and
will be highly in the interest of the nation as a whole. The
concerned authorities of the State, however, hold a differ-
ent view and consider starting a war immediately as an
unavoidable strategy, even in the face of imminent danger to
the border area. On an application by the aggrieved citi-
zens, the Court cannot embark upon an inquiry as to the
merits and demerits of the proposed action of the State nor
can it direct that the residents of the threatened area must
be shifted to some safe place before starting of the war.
The examples can be multiplied. Generally, questions involv-
ing adjudication of disputes are amenable to the jurisdic-
tion of the courts, but there are exceptions, not only those
covered by specific provisions of the Constitution in ex-
press terms, but others enjoying the immunity by necessary
implication arising from established jurisprudential princi-
ples involved in the Constitutional scheme. It was observed
by this Court in Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj Narain, [1976] 2
SCR 347 at page 415, that rigid Separation of Powers as
under the American Constitution or under the Australian
Constitution does not apply to our country and many powers
which are strictly judicial have been excluded from the
purview of the courts under our Constitution.
10. Judicial power of the State in the comprehensive
sense of the expression as embracing all its wings is dif-
ferent from the judicial power vested or intended to be
vested in the courts by a written Constitution. The issue
which arises in the present case is whether under the Con-
stitutional scheme a matter relating to the removal of a
Judge of the superior courts (Supreme Court or High Courts)
is within the jurisdiction of the courts or in any event of
this Court. On a close examination of the Constitution it
appears to me that a special pattern has been adopted with
respect to the removal of the members of the three organs of
the State---The Executive, the Legislature and the Judici-
ary--at the highest level, and this plan having been con-
sciously included in the Constitution, has to be kept in
mind in construing its provisions. The approach appears to
be that when a question of removal of a member of any of the
three wings at the highest level - i.e. the President; the
Members of the Parliament and the State Legislatures; and
the Judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts -arises,
it is left to an organ other than where the problem has
arisen, to be decided.
82
11. The President has to be elected by the members of an
electoral college as prescribed by Article 54, in the manner
indicated in Article 55. Since he has to exercise his func-
tions in accordance with the advice tendered by the Council
of Ministers, the matter relating to his impeachment has
been entrusted by Article 61 to the Parliament. In the
constitution of the two Houses of the Parliament and the
Legislatures of the States, the people of the country are
involved more directly, through process of election and any
dispute arising therefrom is finally settled judicially.
When it comes to a disqualification of a sitting member, the
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matter is dealt with by Article 103 or 192 as the case may
be and what is significant for the purpose of the present
case is that instead of entrusting the matter to the rele-
vant House itself, the Constitution has provided for a
different machinery, not within the control of the Legisla-
ture. The decision on such a dispute is left to the Presi-
dent, and he is not to act on the advice of the Council of
Ministers, but in accordance with the opinion of the Elec-
tion Commission which has been held by this Court to be a
Tribunal falling squarely within the ambit of Article 136 of
the Constitution in All Party Hill Leaders Conference
v.M..A. Sangma, [1978] 1 SCR 393 at 411. Thus, the power to
decide a dispute is not to be exercised by the Legislature,
but lies substantially with the courts. Consistent with this
pattern clause (4) of Article 124 in emphatic terms declares
that a Judge of the Supreme Court or the High Court shall
not be removed from his office except on a special majority
of the Members of each House of Parliament. Both the Execu-
tive and the Judiciary are thus excluded in this process.
The provisions of the Constitution and the Act and relevant
materials which ,viII be discussed later all unmistakably
indicate this Constitutional plan.
12. The scheme, as mentioned above, which according to
my reading of the Constitution has been adopted, cannot be
construed as lack of trust in the three organs of the State.
There are other relevant considerations to be taken into
account while framing and adopting a written constitution,
which include the assurance to the people that the possibil-
ity of a subjective approach clouding the decision on an
issue as sensitive as the one under consideration, has been
as far eliminated as found practicable in the situation. And
where this is not possible at all, it cannot be helped, and
has to be reconciled by application of the doctrine of
necessity, which is not attracted here. Hamilton, in "The
Federalist", while discussing the position in the United
States, observed that when questions arise as to whether a
person holding very high office either in the Judiciary or
the Legislature or the President himself has rendered him-
self unfit to hold the office, they are of a nature which
relates chiefly to the injuries done immediately to the
society itself. Any proceeding for their removal will,
83
for this reason seldom fail to agitate the passions of the
whole community and divide it into parties more or less
friendly or inimical to the person concerned. The delicacy
and the magnitude of a trust which so deeply concerns the
reputation and existence of every man engaged in the admin-
istration of public affairs speak for themselves.
13. Mr. Sibal has further relied on Hamilton stating
that "the awful discretion which a court of impeachment must
necessarily have to doom to honour or to infamy the most
confidential and the most distinguished characters of the
community, forbids the commitment of the trust, to a small
number of persons." The counsel added that presumably that
is the reason that the question of removal of a Judge of the
superior court has been exclusively entrusted to the parlia-
ment and further in that spirit the Act requires a large
number of Members of the parliament to even give the Notice
of Motion. Quoting from ’Harvard Law Review’ (1912-1913
vol.), counsel argued that judicial office is essentially a
public trust, and the right of the public to revoke this
trust is fundamental. In a true republic no man can be born
with a right to public office, Under such a system of gov-
ernment, office, whether elective or appointive, is in a
sense a political privilege. The grant of this privilege
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flows from the political power of’the people, and so, ulti-
mately must it be taken away by the exercise of the politi-
cal power resident in the people. After referring to the
view of many Jurists of international repute Mr. Sibal again
came back to "The Federalist", considering the inappropri-
ateness of the Supreme Court of United States of America to
be entrusted with the power of impeachment in the following
words:-- "It is much to be doubted whether the members of
that Tribunal at all times be endowed with so eminent a
portion of fortitude, as would be called for in the execu-
tion of so difficult a task, and it is still more to be
doubted whether they would possess the degree of credit and
authority, which might, on certain occasions be indispens-
able towards reconciling the people to their decision". I am
not sure whether these are the.precise considerations which
appealed to the framers of our Constitution to adopt the
Scheme as indicated earlier, but there is no doubt that the
subject dealing with the removal of the very high function-
aries in three vital limbs of the State, received special
treatment by the Constitution. My conclusion is further
supported by the materials discussed below.
14. Learned counsel for the parties referred to the
historical background of the relevant provisions of the
Constitution and the Act, as also to the constitutional
provisions of several other countries, as aid to the inter-
pretation of the legal position in relation to removal of
Judges of the superior courts. Mr. Sibal laid great emphasis
on the evidence of Mr.
84
Setalvad and several other persons before the Joint Commit-
tee on the Judges (inquiry) Bill, 1964. His argument is that
the Bill was dropped as a result of the opinion expressed
before the Joint Committee, and consequently another Bill
was drafted which was ultimately adopted by the Parliament
as the 1968./Act. The provisions of the earlier Bill, objec-
tions raised thereto, and the fact that the Act of 1968 was
passed on a subsequent Bill, reconstructed immediately after
the decision to drop the original Bill, are all permissible
aids to the interpretation of the legal position which has
to be ascertained in the present cases before us. Although
the learned counsel for the petitioners challenge their
admissiblity, portions of the documents referred to by Mr.
Sibal were attempted to be construed on behalf of the peti-
tioners as supporting their stand. In my view, it is permis-
sible to take into consideration the entire background as
aid to interpretation. The rule of construction of statutes
dealing with this aspect was stated as far back as in 1584
in Heydon’s case: 76 E.R. 637, and has been followed by our
Court in a large number of decisions. While interpreting
Article 286 of our Constitution, reliance was placed by this
Court in the Bengal Immunity Company v. The State of Bihar,
[1955] 2 SCR 603 at 632 & 633, on Lord Coke’s dictum in
Heydon s case and the observations. of the Earl of Halsbury
in Eastman Photographic Material Company v.. Comptroller
General of Patents L R., [1898] A.C. 571 at p. 576 reaffirm-
ing the rule in the following words:-
"My Lords, it appears to me that to construe
the statute in question, it is not only legit-
imate but highly convenient to refer both to
the former Act and to the ascertained evils to
which the former Act had given rise, and to
the later Act which provided the remedy. These
three being compared I cannot doubt the con-
clusion".
In B. Prabhakar Rao v. State of Andhra
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Pradesh, [1985] Suppl. 2 SCR 573, the observa-
tions at p. 591, quoted below, are illuminat-
ing:-
"Where internal aids are not forthcoming, we
can always have recourse to external aids to
discover the object of the legislation. Exter-
nal aids are not ruled out. This is now a well
settled principle of modern statutory con-
struction. Thus ’Enacting History’ is rele-
vant: "The enacting history of an Act is the
surrounding corpus of public knowledge rela-
tive to its introduction into Parliament as a
Bill, and subsequent progress through, and
ultimate passing by, Parliament. In particular
it is the extrinsic material assumed to be
within the contemplation of Parliament when it
passed the Act." Again "In the period im-
85
mediately following its enactment, the history
of how an enactment is understood forms part
of the contemporanea expositio, and may be
held to throw light on the legislative inten-
tion. The later history may, under the doc-
trine that an Act is always speaking, indicate
how the enactment is regarded in the light of
development from time to time". "Official
statements by the government department admin-
istering an Act, or by any other authority
concerned with the Act, may be taken into
account as persuasive authority on the meaning
of its provisions". Justice may be blind but
it is not to be deaf. Judges are not to sit in
sound proof rooms.
Committee reports, Parliamentary debates,
Policy statements and public utterances of
official spokesmen are of relevance in statu-
tory interpretation. But ’the comity, the
courtsey and respect that ought to prevail
between the two prime organs of the State, the
legislature and the judiciary’, require the
courts to make skilled evaluation of the extra
textual material placed before it and exclude
the essentially unreliable. "Nevertheless the
court, as master of its own procedure, retains
a residuary right to admit them where, in
rare cases, the need to carry out the legisla-
tor’s intention appears to the court so to
require".
With a view to correctly interpret the Act which was the
subject matter of that case, the history and the succession
of events including the initial lowering the age of superan-
nuation, the agitation consequent upon it, and the agreement
that followed the agitation were all taken into considera-
tion. I, accordingly, propose to briefly state the relevant
background of both the Constitutional provisions and of the
Act.
15. At the time of framing of the Constitution of India,
the Constitutions of several other countries, which appeared
to be helpful were examined, and a Draft was initially
prepared. On the amendment moved by Sir Alladi Krishnaswamy
Iyyar the relevant provision was included in the Draft in
terms similar to section 72(ii) of the Commonwealth of
Australia COnstitution Act (1900) except the last sentence
in the following terms:-
"Further provision may be made by the Federal Law for the
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procedure to be adopted in this behalf."
When the matter was finally taken up by the Constituent
Assembly the Debates indicate that there was a categorical
rejection of the suggestion to entrust the matter to the
Supreme Court or a Committee of a
86
number of sitting Judges of the Supreme Court; and while
doing so, the law of the other Commonwealth countries were
taken into consideration. So far the last sentence of the
draft was concerned, Sir Alladi explained the position by
stating "that such a provision does not occur in other
Constitutions, but there is a tendency to overelaborate the
provisions on our side and that is the only justification
for my putting in that clause."
16. Before further considering the Debates and the other
steps in flaming of the Constitution, it may be useful to
appreciate the relevance and importance of the point which
has an impact on the controversial issue before us. Accord-
ing to the petitioners, the question relating to the removal
of a Judge comes to the Parliament only on receipt of a
report by the Committee under the Act. The Parliament or any
of its Houses, not being in the picture earlier, does not
have any control over the Committee, which is to function
purely as a statutory body, and, therefore, amenable to the
jurisdiction of this Court. If this stand is correct, what
was the position before 1968, when there was no Act? The
question is whether the Parliament did not have any power to
take any action even if an inquiry in the alleged misbeha-
viour or incapacity of a Judge was imminently called for. In
other words whether the exercise of the power under clause
(4) of Article 124 by the Parliament was dependent on the
enactment of a law under clause (5) and until this condition
was satisfied no step under clause (4) could be taken. If on
the other hand the Parliament’s power was not subject to the
enactment of a law, was it divested of this jurisdiction
when it passed an Act? On what principle could the initial
jurisdiction of the Parliament disappear in 1968? Since this
aspect has a bearing, it was the subject matter of some
discussion during the arguments of the learned advocates.
17. Mr. Sibal was emphatic in claiming that clause (5)
was enabling in nature, and clause (4) could not be inter-
preted as dependent on clause (5). He relied on Mr. Setal-
vad’s evidence before the Joint-Committee of Bill No. 5 of
1964. The stand of Mr. Shanti Bhushan, instructed by Mr.
Prashant Bhushan, the Advocate-on-record on behalf of the
petitioner in the leading case Writ Petition (C) No. 491 of
1991, has been that clause (5) was merely enabling, but not
in the sense as stated by Mr. Setalvad in his evidence. In
the view of the latter, it is open to the Parliament either
to follow the procedure laid down by an Act made under
clause (5) or to ignore the same in any case and adopt any
other procedure. In other words, even after the passing of
the 1968 Act, the Parliament can choose either to proceed
according to the said Act or to act independently ignoring
the same. Mr. Shanti Bhushan said that this is not permissi-
ble. Once the 1968 Act was enacted, the Parliament is bound
to follow it, but earlier
87
it was free to proceed as it liked. He, however, was quite
clear in his submission that the exercise of power under
clause (4) could not be said to be conditional on the enact-
ment of a law under clause (5), and that to interpret the
provisions otherwise would lead to the extraordinary result
that the Parliament was in a helpless condition for about 18
years till 1968, if a Judge was rendered unfit to continue.
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I agree with the learned counsel.
18. The other learned advocates appearing for the peti-
tioners did not advert to this aspect pointedly. The stand
of Mr. Garg is that whether or not the third respondent is
removed, or whether the inquiry proceeds before the Commit-
tee or not, he must cease to function as a Judge, as his
image being under a cloud, must be cleared so that the
people may have trust in the judiciary. Mr. Ram Jethmalani,
the other learned counsel who appeared on behalf of the
petitioner in Writ petition (C).No. 491 of 1991, was ini-
tially of the view as Mr. Shanti Bhushan on the co-relation
of clause (4) and (5), but after some discussion, he recon-
sidered the position and took a positive stand that the
exercise of power under clause (4) was dependent on a law
being enacted under clause (5), and that the Parliament was
bound to proceed in accordance with the provisions of the
Act.
19. Now coming back to the Debates, Mr. Santhanam sug-
gested an amendment for including more details to which the
answer of Sir Alladi was as follows:
"We need not be more meticulous and more
elaborate than people who have tried a similar
case in other jurisdictions. I challenge my
friend to say whether there is any detailed
provision for the removal of Judges more than
that in any other Constitution in the world".
He requested the House to accept the general principle,
namely, that the President in consultation with the Supreme
Legislature of this country shall have that right, and
assured that, "That does not mean that the Supreme Legisla-
ture will abuse that power". He rejected the idea of making
further additions to the provision relating to the framing
of the law by saying, "To make a detailed provision for all
these would be a noble procedure to be adopted in any Con-
stitution. You will not find it in any Constitution, not
even in the German Constitution which is particularly de-
tailed, not in the Dominion Constitution and not even in the
Act of Settlement and the later Acts of British Parliament
which refer to the" removal of Judges". Some members strong-
ly suggested that the Supreme Court of India or a number of
sitting Judges of the Court should be
88
involved in the proceeding, to which Sir Alladi had strong
objection. He called upon the members, "not to provide a
machinery consisting of five or four Judges to sit in judg-
ment over a Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Are you
really serious about enhancing the dignity of the Chief
Justice of India ? You are. I have no doubt about it". The
clause was ultimately drafted as mentioned above vesting the
power in the "Supreme Parliament" as "there must be some
power of removal vested somewhere". He pointed out that the
matter was not being left in the discretion of the either
House to remove a Judge, but ultimate soverign power will be
vested in the two Houses of the Parliament and, "that is the
import of my amendment". In this background, the Article was
finally included in the Draft.
Although as was clear from the statements of Sir Alladi
as also the language used, the intention of the Sub-commit-
tee preparing the Draft was not to make clause (4) dependent
on clause (5), still presumably with a view to allaying any
misapprehension which could have arisen by including the
entire provisions in one single clause, they were divided
and put in two separate clauses and while so doing, the
language was slightly changed to emphasise the limited scope
of the law. Clause (4) does not state that the misbehaviour
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or incapacity of the Judge will have to be proved only in
accordance with a law to be passed by the Parliament under
clause (5). Clause (4) would continue to serve the purpose
as it does now, without any amendment if clause (5) were to
be removed from the Constitution today. There is no indica-
tion of any limitation on the power of the Parliament to
decide the manner in which it will obtain a finding on
misbehaviour or incapacity for further action to be taken by
it. Clause (5) merely enables the Parliament to enact a law
for this purpose, if it so chooses. The word ’may’ has been
sometimes understood in the imperative sense as ’shall’, but
ordinarily it indicates a choice of action and not a com-
mand. In the present context, there does not appear to be
any reason to assume that it has been used in its extraordi-
nary meaning. It is significant to note that while fixing
the tenure of a Judge in clause (2) of Article 124, proviso
Co) permits the premature removal in the manner provided in
clause (4) without mentioning clause (5) at all. The signif-
icance of the omission of clause (5) can be appreciated by
referring to the language of clause 2(A) of Article 124
directing that the "age of a Judge of the Supreme Court
shall be determined by such authority and in such manner as
Parliament may by law provide".
On an examination of all the relevant materials, I am of
the view that the exercise of power under clause (4) was not
made conditional on the enactment of a law under clause (5),
and the reason for inserting
89
clause (5) in Article 124 was, as indicated by Sir Alladi,
merely for elaborating the provisions.
20. The other provisions with reference to which the
matter needs further examination are Article 121 of the
Constitution and the Act of 1968. The object of Article 121
is to prevent any discussion in Parliament with respect to
the conduct of a Judge of the Superior Courts, except when
it cannot be avoided. The Article, accordingly, prohibits
such a discussion except upon a motion for presenting an
’address’ to the President for removal of a Judge. The point
is that if the entire proceeding in regard to the removal of
a Judge from the very initial stage is assumed to be in the
House, does the bar under Article 121 get lifted at that
very stage, thus frustrating the very purpose of the Arti-
cle. There is a complete unanimity before us, and rightly
so, that the object of Article 121 to prevent a public
discussion of the conduct of a Judge is in public interest
and its importance cannot be diluted. Mr. Shanti Bhushan
elaborated this aspect by saying that any such discussion in
the House is bound to be reported through the media and will
thus reach the general public and which by itself, irrespec-
tive of the final outcome of the discussion, will damage the
reputation of the Judge concerned and thereby the image of
the entire judiciary; and must not, therefore, be permitted
until a report against the Judge after a proper inquiry is
available. Mr. Sibal also agreed on the significance of
Article 121 and relied on the views of several eminent
international jurists, but we need not detain ourselves on
this point, as there is no discordant note expressed by
anyone before us. The question, however, is as to whether
the object of Article 121 will be defeated, if clause (4) of
Article 124 is construed as complete in itself and independ-
ent of clause (5), and clause (5) be understood as merely
giving an option to the Parliament to enact a law, if it so
chooses; and further whether the inquiry before the Commit-
tee is within the control of the House of the Parliament so
as to exclude an outside interference by any other authori-
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ty, including the courts.
21. It is true that the provisions of an Act control or
determine the constitutional provisions, but where the
meaning of an Article is not clear it is permissible to take
the aid of other relevant materials. Besides, in the present
context, where it is necessary to assess the effect of the
construction of the other provisions of the Constitution and
of the Act on Article 121, the Act provides useful assist-
ance; and its importance has been greatly enhanced in view
of the points urged in the arguments of the learned counsel
for the parties before us. All the learned advocates for the
petitioners as also the Attorney General are positive that
the Act is a perfectly valid piece of legislation and no
part of it is illegal or ultra vires. It is on
90
this premise that the writ petitions of the petitioners have
been filed and the reliefs are prayed for. Mr. Sibal repre-
senting the respondents has halfheartedly challenged the
Act, making it clear at the same time that if his interpre-
tation of the provisions is accepted no fault can be found
with the Act. Besides, the foundation of the reliefs, asked
for in the writ petitions, is the Act and the inquiry there-
under and if the Act itself goes, the reference to the
Committee of Inquiry itself will have to be held as nonex-
istent in the eye of Law and the writ petitions will have to
be rejected on that ground alone. We must, therefore, assume
for the purpose of the present cases, that the Act is good
and on that basis if the petitioners be found to be entitled
to any relief, it may be granted. I am emphasising this
aspect as the Act gives a complete answer to the main ques-
tion as to whether the Committee is subject to the control
of the Lok Sabha, and whether this construction of the
provisions defeats the purpose of Article 121.
22. The Judges (inquiry) Act, 1968 is a short enactment
containing only seven sections. Section 1 gives the title
and the date of commencement, Section 2 contains definitions
and Section 7 deals with power to make rules. The expression
"motion" which has not been defined in the Act is signifi-
cant in the scheme and naturally, therefore, has been sub-
ject of considerable discussion during the hearing of these
cases. The Lok Sabha Rules flamed under Article 118 of the
Constitution deal with "motions" in Chapter XIV. There are
separate rules of procedures for conduct of business adopted
by the Rajya Sabha. In view of the facts of this case, I
propose to refer only to the Lok Sabha Rules. Section 3(1)
of the Judges (Inquiry) Act, 1968 states that if a notice
of"motion" is given for presenting an address to the Presi-
dent for the removal of a Judge, signed, in the case of a
notice given in the Lok Sabha, by not less than 100 members,
and in the case of a notice given in the Rajya Sabha, by not
less than 50 members of the House, the Speaker or the Chair-
man, as the case may be, after consulting such persons as he
deems fit, as also such relevant materials which may be
available to him, either admit the "motion" or refuse to
admit the same. The manner in which this section refers to
"motion" in the Act for the first time without a definition
or introduction clearly indicates that it is referring to
that "motion" which is ordinarily understood in the context
of the two Houses of Parliament attracting their respective
rules. Section 3 does not specify as to how and to whom this
notice of "motion" is to be addressed or handed over and it
is not quite clear how the Speaker suddenly comes in the
picture unless the Lok Sabha Rules are taken into account.
Rule 185 states that notice of "motion" shall be given in
writing addressed to the Secretary General and its’ admissi-
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bility should satisfy the conditions detailed in Rule 186.
Rule 187 directs the
91
Speaker to examine and decide the admissibility of a "mo-
tion" or a part thereof. Rule 189 says that if the Speaker
admits notice of a "motion" and no date is fixed for discus-
sion of such "motion", it shall be notified in the BUlletin
with the heading "No,Day-Yet-Named Motions". It is at this
stage that 1968 Act by Section 3(1) takes over the matter
and asks the Speaker to take a decision for admitting this
"motion" or refusing it after consulting such persons and
materials as he deems fit. The conclusion is irresistible
that the provisions of the Act have to be read along with
some of the Lok Sabha Rules. Rules 185, 186 and 187 should
be treated to be supplementary to the Act. Then comes sub-
section (2) of Section 3 which is of vital importance in the
present context. It says that if the "motions" referred to
in sub-section (1) is admitted, the Speaker "shall keep the
motion pending" and constitute a Committee for investigation
into the allegations consisting of three members of whom one
shall be chosen among Chief Justice and other Judges of the
Supreme Court and another from among the Chief Justices of
the High Court.
23. The situs where the "motion" is pending is almost
conclusive on the issue whether the House is seised of it or
not. Unless the "motion" which has to remain pending, as
directed by Section 3(2) is outside the House and the Speak-
er while admitting it acts as a statutory authority and not
qua Speaker of the Lok Sabha, as is the case of the peti-
tioners before us, the petitioners will not have any base to
build their case on. If the Speaker has admitted the "mo-
tion" in the capacity as the Speaker and consequently,
therefore, representing the House, and has constituted a
Committee, it will be entirely for him and through him the
House, to pass any further order if necessary about the
future conduct of the Committee, and not for this Court,
for, the Committee cannot be subjected to a dual control. So
the question to ask is where is the "motion" pending, which
is promptly answered by the provisions in the Act, by de-
claring that it remains pending in the House. Section 6
deals with the matter from the stage when the report of the
Committee is ready and sub-section (1) says that if the
report records a finding in favour of the Judge, "the motion
pending in the House" shall not be proceeded with. If the
report goes against the Judge, then "the motion referred to
in sub-section (1) of Section 2 shall, together with a
report of the Committee, be taken for consideration by the
House or the Houses of Parliament in which it is pending".
The Act, therefore, does not leave any room for doubt that
the "motion" remains pending in the House and not outside
it. This is again corroborated by the language used in
Proviso to Section 3 (2) which deals with cases where no-
tices of"motion" under Section 3(1) are given on the same
date in both Houses of Parliament. It says that in such a
situation, no Committee shall be constituted unless the
"motion" has been "admitted in
92
both Houses" and where such "motion"has been admitted "in
both Houses", the Committe shall be constituted jointly by
the Speaker and the Chairman. The rule making power dealt
with in Section 7 is in the usual terms enumerating some of
the subject matters without prejudice to the generality of
the power, and permits the Joint Committee of both Houses of
Parliament to frame the rules, and accordingly, the Judges
(Inquiry) Rules, 1969 were made. Rule 2(e) of these Rules
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describes "motion" as motion admitted under Section 3(1) of
the Act. Supplementing the provisions of Section 6(2), Rule
16(2) provides that "a copy of the motion admitted under
sub-section (1) of section 3 shall be reproduced as an
Annexure to such an address". Sub-rule (4) states that "the
address prepared under subrule (1) and the motion shall be
put to vote together in each House of Parliament". It is
clear that it is not an inadvertent reference in the Act of
the "motion" being pending in the House; the provisions
unmistakably indicate that the Act and the Rules envisage
and deal with a "motion" which is admitted in the House and
remains pending there to be taken up again when the date is
fixed by the Speaker on receipt of the report from the
Committee. The language throughout the Act has been consist-
ently used on this premise and is not capable of being
ingored or explained away. Nowhere in the Act or the Rules,
there is any provision which can lend any support to the
stand of the petitioners before us.
24. The scope of the Act and the Rules is limited to the
investigation in pursuance of a "Motion" admitted by the
Speaker. At the Conclusion of the investigation the Commit-
tee has to send the report to the Speaker (or the Chairman
as the case may be) along with a copy of the original Mo-
tion. If the finding goes against the Judge, section 6(2) of
the Act directs that the Motion, the same original Motion,
shall together with the report be taken up for consideration
by the House where the Motion is pending. The relevant part
of section 6(2) mentions:
"the Motion referred to in sub-section (1) of
section 3 shall together with the report of
the Committee, be taken up for consideration
by the House...... in which it is pending".
Rule 16(4) states that the address and the Motion shall
be put to vote together in each House of Parliament. What
the Act and the Rules contemplate is the original Motion to
be taken up for consideration by the House, and if this
Motion is held to have exhausted itself on admission by the
Speaker, as has been urged on behalf of the petitioners,
nothing remains on which the Act would operate. The concept
of the original Motion being pending in the House, to be
taken up for debate and vote on the receipt of the report of
the Committee, is the life and soul of the Act, and if that
Motion disappears nothing remains behind to attract the Act.
This
93
idea runs -through the entire Act and the Rules, and cannot
be allowed to be replaced by a substitute. The existence of
a Motion pending in the House is a necessary condition for
the application of the Act. Bereft of the same, the Act does
not survive. It is, therefore, not permissible to read the
Act consistent with the stand of the petitioners that the
House is not seised of the Motion and does not have anything
to do with the inquiry pending before the Committee, until
the report is received. If clauses (4) and (5) of Article
124 are construed as suggested on behalf of the petitioners,
the Act will have to be struck down as ultra vires, or in
any event inoperative and infructuous and on this ground
alone the Writ Petitions are liable to be dismissed.
25. It has been contended that if the Motion is held to
be pending in the House on its admission, the object of
Article 121 shall be defeated. The apprehension appears to
be misconceived. The mandate of the Constitution against
discussion on the conduct of a Judge in the House is for
everybody to respect, and it is the bounden duty of the
Speaker to enforce it. He has to ensure that Article 121 is
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obeyed in terms and spirit, and as a matter of fact there is
no complaint of any misuse during the last more than 41
years. The question, however, is whether it will not be
feasible for the Speaker to maintain the discipline, if the
Motion on admission becomes pending in the House. Before
1968 Act was passed, the motion, like any other motion, was
governed by the Lok Sabha Rules, and Rule 189 enabled the
Speaker to notify it as a No-Day-Yet-Named Motion without
fixing a date, and to permit the matter to be discussed only
at the appropriate stage. After the Act, what was left
within the discretion of the Speaker, has been replaced by
mandatory statutory provision, directing that the motion
shall remain pending in the House, to be taken up only on
receipt of a finding of the Committee against the Judge. The
pendency of the motion in the House, therefore, cannot be a
ground to violate Article 121.
26. Mr Sibal, however, claimed that the members of the
House are entitled to express their opinion on the proposed
endictment from the very initial stage and as a part of his
argument relied upon the statement of Mr. Setalvad before
the Joint-Committee. Mr. Shanti Bhushan challenged the views
of Mr. Setalvad on the ground that they would foul with
Article 121. I am afraid, the statements of Mr. Setalvad,
referred to above, have not been properly appeciated by
either side. The modified Bill, on the basis of which the
1968 Act was passed, had not been drafted by then and Mr.
Setalvad was expressing his opinion on the earlier Bill,
which substantially vested the power of removal of a Judge
in the Executive, and kept the Parliament out of the picture
until the receipt of a report on the
94
alleged misbehaviour or incapacity. If that Bill had been
passed, the effect would have been that the entire proceed-
ing beginning with the initiation of the inquiry and con-
cluding with the report would have remained completely
outside the House, an interpretation which is being attempt-
ed by the present petitioners before us, on the present Act
too. The objection to the entrustment of the power to the
Executive was mainly on the ground that the intention of the
Article 124 to leave the removal of a Judge in the hands of
the Parliament would be frustrated. In answer to a query of
the Chairman of the Committee, Mr. Setalvad said that as a
result of the provisions of the Bill (then under considera-
tion) the Parliament would be completely kept out until a
finding of another body was received by the House and this
would militate against the constitutional scheme. In this
background when his attention was drawn to the bar of Arti-
cle 121 he replied that it was possible to prevent a prema-
ture discussion in the Parliament, by the Speaker exercising
his authority with discretion. He referred to the Lok Sabha
Rules in this context and furher recommended for the Speaker
to be vested with larger powers. He was emphatic that the
President should not be entrusted with the matter, even at
the initial stage, and that it should be left in the hands
of the Speaker to take appropriate steps. The suggested
substitution of the Speaker (and the Chairman) in place of
the President was in accordance with the view that the
matter is within the exclusive domain of the two Houses of
the Parliament which could exercise its powers through the
respective representatives Speaker and the Chairman. About
Mr. Setalvad’s evidence I would like to clarify the position
that I am not treating his opinion as an authority, and I
have taken into account the same as one step in the history
of the present legislation starting from the original Bill
of 1964. The report of the JointCommittee (presented on 17th
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May, 1966) sets out the observations of the Committee with
regard to the principal changes proposed in the Bill. Para-
graph 17 of the Report dealing with clause (2) states that
the expression "Special Tribunal" has been substituted by
"Committee" and "Speaker" and "Chairman" have been brought
in "with a view to ensuring that the Committee may not be
subject to writ jurisdiction of the Supreme Court & the High
Courts". With respect to clause (3), the following observa-
tions of the Committee are relevant:
"The Committee are of the view that to ensure
and maintain the independence of the judici-
ary, the Executive should be excluded from
every stage of the procedure for investigation
of the alleged misbehaviour or incapacity of a
Judge and that the initiation of any proceed-
ing against a Judge should be made in Parlia-
ment by a notice of a motion. The Committee
95
also feel that no motion for presenting an
address to the President praying for the
removal of a Judge should be admitted unless
the notice of such motion is signed in the
case of a motion in the Lok Sabha, by not less
than one hundred members of that House and in
the case of a motion in Rajya Sabha, by not
less than fifty members of that House. Fur-
ther, the Committee are of the opinion that
the Speaker or the Chairman or both, as the
case may be, may after consulting such persons
as they think fit and after considering such
materials, as may be available, either admit
or reject the motion and that if they admit
the motion, then they should keep the motion
pending and constitute a Committee consisting
of three members, one each to be chosen from
amongst the Chief Justice and other Judges of
the Supreme Court, Chief Justice of the High
Courts and distinguished Jurists, respective-
ly".
Paragraph 20 of the Report deals with clause (6) and the
proposed changes, that were more consistent with the motion
being pending in the House or Houses. Ultimately, another
Bill on the lines suggested by the aforesaid Joint-Committee
was drafted and adopted. Mr. Setalvad’s opinion is relevant
as an important step in this history of legislation and can
be referred to as such.
27. The wider proposition put forward by Mr. Sibal that
the House was seised of the matter so effectively as to
entitle every member to demand a discussion in the House at
any stage is, however, not fit to be accepted. This will not
only violate Article 121, but also offend the provisions of
the 1968 Act. It is not correct to assume that if the right
of the individual member to insist on immediate discussion
is denied, the consequence will be to deprive the Parliament
of the control of the motion. When the Speaker exercises
authority either under the Lok Sabha Rules or under the.1968
Act, he acts on behalf of the House. As soon as he ceases to
be the Speaker, he is divested of all these powers. When he
acts the House acts. It is another matter that he may con-
sult other persons before admitting the motion, and while so
doing, he may consult the members of the House also, but
without permitting a discussion in the House. The consulta-
tion, which the Act permits, is private in nature, not
amounting to a public discussion while the object of Article
121 is to prevent a public debate. It may also be open to
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the Speaker to consult the House on a legal issue which can
be answered without reference to the conduct of Judge in
question, as for example, the issue (involved in the present
case) whether on account of dissolution of the old House the
Motion has lapsed and the Committee of Inquiry is defunct.
What is prohibited is not every matter
96
relating to the removal of a Judge; the bar is confined to a
discussion with respect to the conduct of a Judge in the
discharge of his duties.
28: Mr. Shanti Bhushan strenuously contended that such
portion of the 1968 Act which direct or declare the initial
motion admitted by the Speaker to remain pending in the
House, should be interpreted as creating a legal fiction
limited for the purpose of ensuring that the bar under
Article 121 is not lifted prematurely. I do not see any
justification for placing this construction on the Act. This
issue could not arise with reference to the original Bill
which was ultimately dropped, as under its scheme the matter
could not have reached the Parliament before the report the
Special Tribunal was laid before the Houses under the Presi-
dent’s direction. The petitioners are trying to put an
interpretation on the present Act that may lead to the same
conclusion, that is, that the Parliament does not come in
the picture until the receipt of the report from the Commit-
tee. This is wholly inconsistent with the original Bill not
Finding favour with the Parliament. But apart from this
consideration, let us assume that the petitioners are right,
and the matter does not reach the Parliament at all before
it is ready for consideration on the basis of the Inquiry
Report. It cannot be suggested that even at that stage a
discussion on the conduct of a Judge is banned; and before
this stage is reached there is no occasion for relying upon
Article 121 to prevent a discussion. The situation, there-
fore, does not require the aid of any legal fiction. The
consequence of accepting the argument of Mr. Shanti Bhushan
will be to render the aforesaid provisions of the statute
wholly superfluous. Also, had it been a case of a legal
fiction as suggested, it would attract the observations of
Lord Asquith in East End Dwellings Co. Ltd And Finsbury
Borough Council: 1952 A.C. 109, (followed in’this country in
numerous cases) to the effect that if you are bidden to
treat an imaginary state of affairs as real, you must also
imagine as real the consequences and incidents which, if the
putative state of affairs had in fact existed, must inevita-
bly have flowed from or accompanied it; and if the statute
says that you must imagine a certain state of affairs, it
does not say that having done so, you must cause or permit
your imagination to boggle when it comes to the inevitable
corollaries of that state of affairs. The alternative sug-
gestion of Mr. Shanti Bhushan that the motion, on its admis-
sion, having served its purpose, is completely exhausted,
and a new motion is to be moved again by a member on the
receipt of the Report from the Committee, has also no merit,
for if the motion completely exhausts itself and there. fore
does not remain in existence any further, no problem about
the lifting of the bar under Article 121 arises for being
solved with the help of a legal fiction.
An attempt was made by mr. Shanti Bhushan to derive some
support
97
from that part of clause (4) of Article 124 which requires
the voting in the two Houses to take place in the same
session. The provision appears to me to be absolutely irrel-
evant. The clause does not require that the entire proceed-
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ing with respect to the removal of a Judge commencing with
the notice of motion has to be within the same session. It
refers only to the voting part. A close reading of the
entire Act indicates that the language therein, which com-
pletely demolishes the petitioners’ case, was consciously
chosen to make the House seised of the matter, and conse-
quently it became necessary to include the provisions di-
recting the motion to remain pending for the purpose of
preventing a premature discussion. The Act has, thus, very
successfully respected both Articles 124 and 121 in their
true spirit, by neatly harmonising them.
29. Let us consider another argument of the petitioners
that by reason of the expression "on the ground of proved
misbehaviour or incapacity" occurring in clause (4) of
Article 124 it should be held that until an adverse verdict
of misbehaviour or incapacity by some other body is received
by the House, the matter does not come within its purview.
The body in contemplation of clause (4) may be an authority,
completely unassociated with either House of the Parliament
or the Speaker or the Chairman, and the Parliament may not
have any control over the same. Such authority would be
purely statutory, not amenable to the discipline of the
Parliament, but subject to the Court’s jurisdiction. Merely
for the reason that a statute under clause (5) prescribes
the procedure in this regard by entrusting the Speaker to
take a decision at the initial stage, he could not cease to
be a statutory authority. In other words, he acts in his
individual capacity under the power vested by the law and
not in a representative capacity. 1 do not find this con-
struction of clauses (4) and (5) acceptable. This would, in
substance, deny the Parliament the power to remove a Judge
exclusively vested in it by Constitution. Let us ignore the
present Act and consider another statute with provisions in
express terms on the lines suggested by the petitioners,
that is, entitling the statutory authority to act independ-
ently of the Parliament, the Speaker and the Chairman. If
that could be permissible it would lead to the Parliament
being reduced to a helpless spectator, dependent on the
statutory authority, to act on or to ignore a complaint.
This would be in complete violation of the intention of the
Constitution to vest the power to remove a Judge exclusively
in the Parliament. It must, therefore, be held that the
Parliament is in control of the matter from the very begin-
ning till the end, and it acted correctly in accepting the
objections of the Joint-Committee to the original Bill,
aforementioned, and in passing the Act of 1968, iii the form
we find it. By the introduction of the Speaker and the
requirement of a large number of members of either House to
initiate the matter, the
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House is brought in control of the proceeding through its
representative the Speaker or the Chairman. It has to be
noted that "the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity"
is necessary only for putting the matter to vote in the
House under clause (4), and is not a condition precedent for
initiating a proceeding and taking further steps in this
regard.
30. Mr Sibal projected another extreme point of view by
contending that a finding of the Committee in favour of the
Judge cannot be held to be binding on the Parliament on
account of the limited scope of a statute passed under
clause (5). There is no merit in this argument either.
Clause (4) authorises the Parliament to act on the ground of
proved misbehaviour or incapacity and clause (5) permits it
to pass a law to lay down the manner in which it may become
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possible to do so. It is true that the Parliament can exer-
cise its power without formally framing a law. The House in
question could in the absence of a law, decide on the proce-
dure to be followed in a given case but it was perfectly
open to it to pass an Act laying down a general code to be
followed until the Act is repealed or amended. It is a well
established practice for a large body to entrust investiga-
tions to a smaller body for obvious practical reasons, and
such an exercise cannot be characterised as indulging in
abnegation of authority. It could have asked a Parliamentary
Committee to enquire into the allegations or employed any
other machinery for the purpose. The ratio in State of Uttar
Pradesh v. Batuk Deo Pati Tripathi and Anr., [1978] 2 SCC
102, is attracted here. In that case the Administrative
Committee of the High Court, constituted under the Rules of
the Court resolved that the District Judge should be retired
compulsorily from the service, and the Registrar of the High
Court communicated the decision to the State Government and
thereafter circulated to all the Judges of the High Court
for their information. The State Government passed orders
retiring the District Judge, whereupon he filed a writ
petition in the High Court. The matter was heard by a Full
Bench and the majority of the Judges held that the writ
petitioner could not have been compulsorily retired on the
opinion recorded by the Administrative Committee, as the
Full Court was not consulted. The application was allowed
and a writ was accordingly issued. On appeal by the State
Government this Court reversed the decision holding that
Article 235 of the Constitution authorised the High Court to
frame the rules for prescribing the manner in which the
power vested in the High Court had to be exercised, and
observed that though the control over the subordinate courts
is vested constitutionally in the High Court by the Article,
it did not follow that the High Court has no power to pre-
scribe the manner in which that control may, in practice, be
exercised; and in fact, the very circumstance that the power
of control, which comprehends matters of a wide ranging
authority, vests in the entire body of Judges
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makes it imperative that the rules are flamed so that the
exercise of the control becomes feasible, convenient and
effective. The parliament is a far larger body than the High
Court and the observations apply to it with greater force.
So long as the statute enables the House to maintain its
control either directly or through the Speaker, the entrust-
ment of the investigation does not amount to abdication of
power. It is a case where the Parliament has taken a deci-
sion to respect the verdict of the Committee in favour of
the Judge, consistently with clause (4) and no fault can be
.found.
31. It has been stated on behalf of the respondents that
the question whether the Motion against the respondent no. 3
has lapsed as a result of the dissolution of the old House
is agitating the minds of the members of the Lok Sabha and
the issue is under consideration of the new Speaker. In
support, he produced a copy of the proceeding of the House.
If the present Speaker holds that the Motion has lapsed, and
the Committee does not have any duty to perform, the pro-
ceeding cannot be proceeded with any further. In reply the
learned counsel for the petitioners claimed that after the
matter is entrusted to the Committee, neither he nor the
Parliament at this stage can undo the admission of the
Motion by the earlier Speaker, or withdraw the investiga-
tion. If the petitioners are right, then what happens if a
member of the Committee becomes unavailable by any reason
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whatsoever or another member renders himself unfit to be on
the Committee, say by reason of his apparent and gross bias,
against or in favour of the Judge concerned, coming to light
after the formation of the Committee ? The answer is that
the House which is in control of the proceeding is entitled
to take all necessary and relevant steps in the matter,
except discussing the conduct of the Judge until the stage
is reached and the bar under Article 121 is lifted. If on
the other hand it is held that the Committee is an independ-
ent statutory body not subject to the control of the House
directly or through the Speaker, as the petitioners suggest,
the Act may be rendered unworkable. Besides, this would
impute to the Parliament to have done exactly what the
Constituent Assembly refused to do by accepting Sir Alla-
di’s impassioned appeal, referred to above in para-
graph 19, not to lower the dignity of the Chief Justice of
India by providing a machinery consisting of 5 or 4 Judges
to sit in appeal over him. It may be noted here that the
Constitution has considered it fit to entrust the inquiry in
the alleged misbehaviour of a member of a Public Service
Commission, a constitutional functionary but lower in rank
than the Supreme Court, to the Supreme Court without associ-
ating a Chief Justice of the High Court or any other person
lower in rank. If the Committee is held to be functioning
under the supervision and control of the parliament, with a
view to aid it for the purpose of a proceeding pending in
the House, it will be the parliament which will be in con-
trol of the proceeding and not the Committee.
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32. Mr Jethmalani was fervent in his exhortation to
construe the Constitution and the Act in a manner which will
protect the independence of the judiciary from the politi-
cians, and this, according to him, is possible only if this
Court comes to an affirmative conclusion on the question of
justiciability. There cannot be two opinions on the necessi-
ty of an independent and fearless judiciary in a democratic
country like ours, but it does not lead to the further
conclusion that the independence of judiciary will be under
a threat, unless the matter of removal of Judges, even at
the highest level, is not subjected to the ultimate control
of Courts. The available materials unmistakably show that
great care was taken by the framers
the Constitution to this aspect and the matter was
examined from every possible angle, before adopting the
scheme as indicated earlier. So far as the district courts
and subordinate courts are concerned, the control has been
vested in the High Court, but when it came to the High Court
and Supreme Court Judges, it was considered adequate for the
maintenance of their independence to adopt and enact the
Constitution as we find it. I do got see any reason to doubt
the wisdom of the Constituent Assembly in entrusting the
matter exclusively in the hands of the Parliament and I do
not have any ground for suspicion that the Members of Par-
liament or their representatives, the Speaker and the Chair-
man, shall not be acting in the rue spirit of the Constitu-
tional provisions. Similarly, the task of enacting
a law under clause (5) was taken up seriously by consid-
ering every relevant aspect, and the process took several
years before the Act was passed. do not propose to deal with
this point any further beyond saying that the mandate of the
Constitution is binding on all of us, and I would close by
quoting the following words from Hamilton:
"If mankind were to resolve to agree in no
institution of government, until every part of
it had been adjusted to the most exact stand-
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ard of perfection, society would soon become a
general scene of anarchy, and the world a
desert. Where is the standard of perfection to
be found ? Who will undertake to unite the
discordant opinions of a whole community, in
the same judgment of it; and to prevail upon
one conceited projector to renounce his infal-
lible criterion for the fallible criterion of
his more conceited neighbour? To answer the
purpose of the adversaries of the Constitu-
tion, they ought to prove, not merely that
particular provisions in it are not the best
which might have been imagined, but that the
plan upon the whole is bad and pernicious".
33. It has not been suggested on behalf of the petition-
ers or by anybody else that it is open to the Court to
examine the legality of a final decision taken by the Par-
liament under clause (4). Even after a verdict
against the Judge is returned by the Committee, the Parlia-
ment or for that matter any of the two Houses can refuse to
vote in favour of the Motion for removal of a Judge, and the
Court shall not have any jurisdiction to interfere in the
matter. Is it conceivable, in the circumstances, that at the
intermediate stage of investigation the Court has got the
power to intervene ? The answer is in the negative for more
than one reason. If the control of the House continues on
the proceeding throughout, which can he exercised through
the Speaker, it cannot be presumed that the Court has a
parallel jurisdiction, which may result in issuance of
contradictory directions. Besides, the Court cannot he
expected to pass orders in the nature of step in aid, where
the final result is beyond its jurisdiction. Any order
passed or direction issued by this Court may result in
merely an exercise in futility, and may cause a situation,
embarassing both for the highest judicial and legislative
authorities of the country. The Constitution cannot he
attributed with such an intention. I, therefore, hold that
the courts including the Supreme Court do not have any
jurisdiction to pass any order in relation to a proceeding
for removal of a Judge of the superior courts.
34. Reference was made by the learned counsel for the
parties to the Constitutions of several other countries, but
I do not consider it necessary to discuss them excepting the
Australian Constitution as they do not appear to be helpful
at all. As has been mentioned earlier the language of Arti-
cle 124 (4) is similar to section 72(ii) of the Common-
wealth of Australia Constitution Act (1900), except-with
this difference that the Australian Constitution Act.does
not specifically provide for any law to he made for regulat-
ing the procedure and investigation. However, the constitu-
tional and the legal position in Austraila is not helpful to
resolve the present dispute before us, as the Commonwealth
of Australia Constitution Act (1900) has adopted rigid
Separation of Powers between the Executive, Legislature and
Judiciary (as has been observed by this Court on many occa-
sions including at page 415 in Smt. Indira Gandhi v. Raj
Narain, [1976] 2 SCR 347, relented to above in paragraph 9.
Reference has been made by P.H. Lane in his commentary on
the Australian Constitution to the proceedings which were
initiated for removal of Mr. Justice Murphy under section 72
(ii) of the Constitution Act. On account of sharp difference
amongst the members of the Select Committee of the Senate
appointed to inquire into the matter and a further failure
to resolve the situation by establishing a second Committee
and in view of certain other facts an adhoc legislation was
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passed under the name of Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry
Act, 1986. Under this Act further steps were being taken
when Mr. Justice Murphy moved the High Court of Austraila
for an order of injunction challenging the validity of the
Act and alleging that one of the members of the Commission
constituted under the Act (a
102
retired Judge) was disqualified on account of bias. The
application was dismissed on merits without adverting to the
question of justiciability.. This decision, to my mind, is
of no help to the petitioners before us,
mainly on account of the difference in the Constitutional
scheme of the two countries with respect to the Separation
of Powers. The judicial powers there have been exclusively
vested in the courts by section 71 of the Constitution Act
of 1900. Lane has at page 372 of his book opined that sec-
tion 72 (ii) may be non-justiciable, since it seems to place
the exercise under the section in Parliament itself. He,
however, further proceeds to say that the Parliament could
seek the High Court’s help, for example, in the peripheral
matter of the meaning of misbehaviour or incapacity in
section 72(ii). He has also referred to certain other provi-
sions of the Constitution Act, and analysed the roles of
Parliament and Court with his comments. I do not consider it
necessary to proceed further beyond saying that Mr. Justice
Murphy’s case does not provide any aid in deciding the issue
in the cases before us. Although our Constitution was made
after examining the Constitutions of many other countries,
it has adopted a pattern of its own. The learned counsel
also placed a large number of decisions; both Indian and
foreign and since I have not found them relevant, I have
refrained from discussing them. None of the cases in which
this Court has either interfered with the decision of the
House or has refused to do so, related to a proceeding for
removal of a Judge, and are clearly distinguishable in view
of my opinion expressed above. I am also not dealing with
the other points urged by Mr. Sibal, as I agree with him on
the main issue of justiciability. I am avoiding to express
any opinion on the controversy whether the Motion lapsed or
not on the dissolution of the earlier House, as the issue is
for the Lok Sabha to decide.
35. In view of the above findings this Court cannot
pass any order whether permanent or temporary on the prayer
that the respondent No. 3 should not be allowed to exercise
his judicial powers. In the result all the F writ petitions
are dismissed. The prayer for transfer of Writ Petition No.
1061 of 1991 in Transfer Petition No. 278 of 1991 is allowed
and that Writ Petition is also dismissed. There will be no
order as to costs.
N.P.V. Petitions dis-
posed of.
103