Daily Vocab Capsule th 12 February 2019

Musical Chairs In Supreme Court

Time to replace seniority convention (परिपाटी) with an alternate, clearly articulated method of appointments

A curious spectacle (drama) unfolds in the courtrooms of the Supreme Court whenever a senior member of the Bar walks in. Since chairs are scarce, (limited) one might imagine the senior member waiting his turn or being offered a seat by a relatively junior member. Though both of these possibilities do manifest themselves sometimes, quite often an amusing sequence of events ensues as the senior occupies his rightful place in the front row of the courtroom.

This causes others on the row shifting one seat in order of seniority to accommodate the new entrant. This pattern of adult musical chairs repeats itself if another even more senior member walks in. While one might dismiss such a harmless practice as yet-another arcane courtroom convention, it is symptomatic of the pervasive influence of seniority over every conceivable aspect of the legal profession.

From seat availability of lawyers to the choice of bungalows for judges, the right to argue first in court to who gets appointed , seniority applies to mundane and significant matters in equal measure. So when the collegium of the Supreme Court recommended Justice Sanjiv Khanna, the third-most senior sitting judge of the Delhi high court (fifth, if Delhi high court judges serving as chief justices in other courts are included) and Justice (whose junior from the Rajasthan high court, Justice is already a judge of the Supreme Court) it was subject to severe opprobrium (disrespect).

In the case of Justice Khanna, not only was seniority breached but also Justices Mittal, Nandrajog, Menon and Bhat, all fine judges in their own right, were overlooked. Justice Maheshwari’s case was more far-reaching in its impact – by recommending him to the Supreme Court after a judge junior to him had been appointed, the sanctity of the very principle of seniority was questioned.

This assault on seniority is not without precedent. In several instances, junior judges in high courts have been appointed to the Supreme Court over their senior brethren. In fact, two present judges in the Supreme Court – Justices Shantanagoudar and Nazeer – were not the seniormost judges of the Karnataka high court when they were appointed to the Supreme Court.

However what makes this particular instance stand out is how everyone involved in the process looks the worse for it. The collegium headed by Chief Justice Gogoi looks bad for not offering reasons for their decision. Such reasons were critical to its popular and legal validity. The Second Judges’ Case requires reasons if seniority is departed from; equally importantly, having seemingly found two other more senior judges suitable for the Supreme Court a month previously, an unexplained recommendation of two distinct names lent itself to hearsay of the worst kind.

Chief Justice Gogoi’s participation at the press conference last year suggested a new dawn of transparency and accountability in judicial functioning. One year on, in the absence of publicly disclosed reasons in controversial collegium recommendations, little seems to have changed.

The judges who accepted such appointments look bad for two distinct reasons. When in the past, Justice UL Bhat of the Kerala high court was passed over for the Supreme Court in favour of his junior colleague Justice KS Paripoornan from the same court, he claimed to have refused his consent to a later appointment to the Supreme Court. In the same situation, Justice Maheshwari seems to have forsaken such institutional convention.

Justice Sanjiv Khanna’s elevation presents a more poignant case. His uncle, the hallowed Justice HR Khanna, brave dissenter during the Emergency, resigned from his office when he was superseded in favour of Justice Beg by . His nephew, now in Justice Beg’s shoes, jumped the queue. Institutional integrity and personal memory appears to have counted for little.

Finally the government looks selfserving having recently kicked up a storm about seniority not being adhered to in the appointment of Justice KM Joseph. The alacrity with which Justices Khanna and Maheshwari were appointed without the faintest objection being raised on similar grounds reveals the truth about seniority – it is a wolf of favouritism in sheep’s clothing of convention.

Taken together, this episode points to a fundamental disjunct in matters pertaining to the Supreme Court. We have an unstated expectation that vintage conventions from a more genteel time will prevail in the court, isolated, as it is, from the hurly-burly of politics. But in fact, the writing has been on the wall from the time of the NJAC judgment – judicial appointments are no longer about convention, they are primarily about power.

This is precisely why seniority, time and again, is cast aside, without articulating a clear alternate principle of merit or an optimally transparent process of selection. The reputational damage that such opaque decision-making causes to otherwise upright collegium judges, competent prospective appointees and the institution of the judiciary is immense. It is also entirely avoidable.

There are enough good reasons for the seniority convention to be given a decent burial. It isn’t as objective it pretends to be, leads to absurdly short tenures for chief justices and is a strategic device wielded when convenient. But for that we need an alternate, clearly articulated method of appointment to take its place. Without that, all appointments, no matter how well-intentioned, will appear like skulduggery. Just as it would, if senior members of the Bar suddenly found no empty chairs to sit on in court and were left wondering why.

Courtesy : The Times of India (national)

1. Convention (noun): a way in which something is usually done. (परिपाटी / स륍मेलन)

Synonyms: conference, tradition, custom, succession, usage

Antonyms: strangeness, disagreement, innovation

Example: Before the law can be appealed, a formal convention must be held with all of the lawmakers present.

2. Spectacle (noun): something exhibited to view as unusual, notable, or entertaining especially: an eye-catching or dramatic public display (कौतुक/तमाशा)

Synonyms: demonstration, drama, comedy, pageant

Antonyms: ordinariness, normality

Example: The protestors made quite a spectacle when they started jumping on police cars.

3. Scarce (adjective): insufficient for the demand (कम / अ쥍प)

Synonyms: insufficient, deficient, limited, rare, scanty

Antonyms: adequate, ample, plentiful, sufficient, abundant

Example: The club only had a scarce amount of members since the dues were so high and the meeting location was far away from the center of town.

4. Pervasive (adjective): spreading widely throughout an area or a group of people (핍यापक)

Synonyms: Ubiquitous, rife, prevalent, omnipresent

Antonyms: rare, scarce, limited, uncommon Example: Voters are concerned about the pervasive rate of unemployment that is harming both the rich and the poor.

5. Mundane (adjective): lacking interest or excitement; dull (सा車सारिक)

Synonyms: ordinary, banal, day-to-day, earthly, humdrum

Antonyms: abnormal, exciting, heavenly, extraordinary, wonderful

Example: The restaurant should spice up their menu and replace the dull and mundane dishes.

6. Opprobrium (noun): public disgrace arising from shameful conduct (अपमान /ततिकाि)

Synonyms: ignominy, infamy, blemish, debasement, humiliation, disrespect

Antonyms: honor, esteem, pride, respect

Example: The celebrity chef earned opprobrium when she made a racial slur in front of the media.

7. Sanctity (noun): the state or quality of being holy, sacred, or saintly (पतित्रता) Synonyms: divinity, solemnity, purity, goodness

Antonyms: abjection, meanness, dirtiness, villainy

Example: The priest decreed the sanctity of the marriage.

8. Poignant (adjective): evoking a keen sense of sadness or regret (मातमिक)

Synonyms: bitter, heart-breaking, pathetic, disturbing

Antonyms: cheerful, indifferent, unaffecting

Example: Water pollution is a poignant example of how little people care about our environment.

9. Adhere (verb): believe in and follow the practices of (पालन किना/तिपकना)

Synonyms: comply, obey, maintain, follow

Antonyms: disobey, ignore, condemn, disregard

Example: Students who do not adhere to my rules will be sent home.

Verb forms: Adhere, Adhered, Adhered

10. Immense (adjective): extremely large or great, especially in scale or degree. (तिशाल/अ配यतिक)

Synonyms: boundless, colossal, enormous, gigantic, mammoth

Antonyms: bounded, finite, insignificant, limited

Example: The museum was so immense it took us two days to make our way through it.