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Issues with Judges’ recusal

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February 19, 2019

What is the issue?

Judges must give their reasons in writing for recusing themselves from specific cases.

What are the recent cases of recusal?

  • Recusal is the process of a judge stepping down from presiding over a particular case in which the judge may have a conflict of interest.
  • In a recent case, challenging the appointment of M. Nageswara Rao as interim director of the CBI, three judges have recused themselves. Click here to know more on the issue.
  • First Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi disqualified himself, purportedly because he was set to be a part of the selection committee tasked with choosing a new CBI Director.
  • He then assigned a bench presided by Justice A.K. Sikri to hear the case.
  • But Justice Sikri too recused, on grounds that he was part of a panel that removed the previous CBI Director Alok Verma from his post. 
  • Next, Justice N.V. Ramana recused himself for apparently personal reasons.
  • However, none of these orders of recusals was made in writing.
  • Apart from the CBI case, recently Justice U.U. Lalit recused himself from hearing the dispute over land in Ayodhya.
  • This is because the judge had appeared for former Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Kalyan Singh in a related contest.
  • Hence, the judge expressed his disinclination to participate in the hearing any further.
  • Even in this case, there is no written order specifically justifying the recusal.
  • Hence, it’s difficult to tell whether the disqualification was really required.

What are the concerns?

  • Undermining judicial independence - In taking oath of office, judges of both the Supreme Court and the high courts, promise to perform their duties, to deliver justice, “without fear or favour, affection or ill-will”.
  • However, there are many cases where the litigants suggest that the judge should recuse himself from the particular case.
  • But this will allow litigants to cherry-pick a bench of their choice, which impairs judicial fairness.
  • Also, the purpose of recusal in these cases undermines both independence and impartiality of the judges.
  • Difference interpretations - There is a rule that no person should be a judge in her own cause.
  • But there are cases where somebody else’s cause becomes the judge’s own as case proceeds.
  • Also, there are some cases where judge has appeared for one of the litigants at some stage in the same dispute.
  • Even then, as there are no rules to determine when the judges could recuse himself in these cases, different interpretations remain.
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  • Absence of rules - In disputes where a judge has a financial interest in the litigation, where a judge owns shares in a company which is party to the case, the fact of owning shares is considered a disqualification.
  • However, when a judge owns shares in one of the litigants, he should be allowed to disclose the fact before the litigants.
  • If neither party objects, the judge should be allowed to hear the case.
  • But in the absence of a well-defined rule that helps establish a basic standard, a decision of this kind can prove troubling somewhere down the line.
  • Also, when judges choose without a rational motive, without expressing their decisions in writing, they hurt the very idea of judicial rectitude.
  • Along with that, a judge refusing the recusal in a case, despite the existence of bias in his/her judgement, is equally destructive.

What should be done?

  • Recusals should not be used as a tool to manoeuvre justice, as a means to picking benches of a party’s choice, and as an instrument to evade judicial work.
  • Judicial officers must resist all manner of pressure, regardless of where it comes from.
  • This is the constitutional duty common to all judicial officers.
  • If they deviate, the independence of the judiciary would be undermined, and in turn, the Constitution itself.
  • Hence, a rule that determines the procedure for recusal on part of judges should be made at the earliest.

 

Source: The Hindu

 

 

 

 

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