The Memorandum of Procedure (MoP) provides the guidelines for appointing the CJI & other Supreme Court (SC) judges.
- CJI of and other SC judges are appointed by the President under Article 124(2) of the Constitution.
How CJI and SC Judges are appointed?
- Appointment of CJI
- Seniority Principle: Conventionally, the senior-most judge of the Supreme Court is elevated as the CJI.
- Government Initiatives Process: Union government asks the current CJI to recommend a successor, usually about a month before retirement.
- Recommendation by CJI: The CJI sends a formal recommendation to the Ministry of Law, naming the senior-most eligible judge.
- Approval & Appointment: After PM’s approval, the President issues the warrant of appointment.
- Appointment of Other Judges
- Other SC judges are appointed by the President, based on recommendations of the Collegium consists of CJI and four other senior-most judges of the SC.
- High Court Judges: Appointed by the President under Article 217, based on recommendations of the Collegium (CJI and two senior-most SC judges).
- Collegium System evolved through the Three Judges Cases (1981, 1993, & 1998).
- Other SC judges are appointed by the President, based on recommendations of the Collegium consists of CJI and four other senior-most judges of the SC.
Concerns Related to Judicial Appointments/ Collegium System
99th Constitutional Amendment & NJAC Act (2014)
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