HomeNewsTrendsLegalSupreme Court judgeship: Why the collegium’s prompt recommendations will go a long way

Supreme Court judgeship: Why the collegium’s prompt recommendations will go a long way

In what could be termed a diligent move, the CJI Chandrachud-led collegium on May 16 recommended Justice PK Mishra and senior advocate KV Viswanathan for Supreme Court judgeship.

May 18, 2023 / 19:37 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
CJI DY Chandrachud
CJI DY Chandrachud

Speaking at an event in April to felicitate the eight new judges of the Supreme Court, Chief Justice of India (CJI) DY Chandrachud said that having the full strength of judges in the top court should not be an aberration but a regular feature.

He said, "There is absolutely no justification or reason for the collegium to keep even a single vacancy unfilled in the Supreme Court and that will be my mission for the future as well."

Story continues below Advertisement

With the collegium’s May 16 recommendations, it is apparent that the CJI meant what he said. In what could be called a diligent move, the Chandrachud-led collegium on May 16 recommended Justice PK Mishra and senior advocate KV Viswanathan for Supreme Court judgeship.

The collegium system is the way judges of the Supreme Court and the high courts are appointed and transferred. The CJI, with the four senior-most judges of the apex court, makes the recommendations and sends them to the government for consideration. The government, upon analysis, either takes the recommendations forward or sends them back to the collegium for reconsideration. The system evolved by means of Supreme Court judgments, not by an act of Parliament or a constitutional provision. The First Judges case (1981), Second Judges Case (1993), Third Judges Case (1998) and the NJAC case (2015) evolved the collegium system and upheld it as the law of the land.