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Never faced any pressure from Executive: Gavai

Defends Collegium system, vows not to accept any post-retirement official assignments

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Outgoing Chief Justice of India (CJI) BR Gavai during an interaction with journalists at his official residence on his last day in office in New Delhi on Sunday. PTI
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As he demitted office as the 52nd Chief Justice of India on Sunday, Justice BR Gavai sought to dispel the notion that a judge will not be seen as independent unless he ruled against the government.

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Asserting that he never faced any pressure from the Executive, the outgoing CJI said, “As a judge, you do not decide cases based on whether the parties are the government or private individuals. You decide as per the papers (case file) before you. But in some quarters, there is a notion that unless you decide everything against the government, you are not an independent judge. It is not the correct approach.”

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Interacting with Supreme Court correspondents at his official residence here on his last day in office, Justice Gavai lamented that in the contemporary jurisprudence, a judge was called ‘independent’ only if he gave decisions against the government.

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“I am leaving the institution with a full sense of satisfaction and contentment,” he said, adding that he would not accept any post-retirement official assignments.

“I made it clear when I took office that I am not going to accept any post-retirement official assignment. For the next nine-10 days, it’s a cooling-off period. After that, a new innings,” he said.

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Justice Gavai, who will be succeeded by Justice Surya Kant on Monday, said he wanted to devote his time to the welfare of tribal communities in his native district Amravati in Maharashtra.

He favoured a law to deal with rising incidents of hate speech. He, however, said, “This is for the government to take a call.”

The outgoing CJI defended the Presidential Reference verdict that disapproved of timelines for Governors and the President in grant of assent to Bills passed by state Assemblies, saying the Constitution did not prescribe any timelines.

“We cannot read something that is not there in the Constitution. We have allowed limited judicial review,” the CJI said, clarifying that Governors can’t sit over the Bills indefinitely.

He also defended the Collegium system of appointing judges, saying it continued to maintain institutional autonomy, while considering inputs from the Intelligence Bureau and Union Ministry of Law and Justice.

Incorrect to say judges will not be seen as independent unless they ruled against govt – Justice BR Gavai, Outgoing CJI

Justice Gavai rejected allegations of nepotism in the judiciary. “The perception is wrong… Not more than 10 or 20 per cent (judges) are appointed as such. But if they are meritorious, should we discard them? If they are related to someone in the profession, we apply a little higher standard to them,” he said.

Regarding Justice BV Nagarathna’s dissent in the Collegium on the elevation of Justice Vipul Pancholi to the top court, Justice Gavai said it was not accepted by other Collegium members. “It’s not happening for the first time …If the dissent had any merit, four other judges would have agreed on it,” Gavai said.

Justice Gavai regretted not appointing any women judges to the top court during his tenure as the CJI, saying there was no consensus in the Collegium of some names discussed.

The first Buddhist and second Dalit CJI after KG Balakrishnan, Justice Gavai said it was for the government to consider giving legislative effect to the top court’s judgment on exclusion of creamy layer from Scheduled Caste reservation.

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