Live Law has today carried
this detailed opinion piece authored by Justice Virender Singh, former Chief
Justice of the High Court of the State of Jharkhand & Former Chairperson of the Armed
Forces Tribunal, and Major Navdeep Singh, Advocate, Punjab & Haryana High
Court.
Rebooting
Tribunals and recalibrating delivery of justice
Justice
Virender Singh
and
Major
Navdeep Singh
One of the lesser realised aftershocks of the Emergency
was tribunalisation as it exists today. A blow so hard that despite multiple
efforts by our High Courts and the Supreme Court, including Constitution Benches,
to wipe out the deleterious consequences, the ruinous scars remain.
Tribunals in the present form were introduced through the
42nd Constitutional Amendment when the concept was employed as a tool by the
executive of the day to blunt-out judicial functioning and it was probably thought
that by creating such bodies some of the subjects of litigation could be taken
out of the purview of the independent judiciary with the said bodies functioning
under and manned by the executive. Though the Supreme Court put its judicial
weight against such blatant attempts through various landmark decisions such as
RK Jain Vs Union of India 1993 AIR
1769, L Chandra Kumar Vs Union of India
(1997) 3 SCC 26, Union of India Vs R
Gandhi (2010) 11 SCC 1, Madras Bar
Association Vs Union of India (2014) 10 SCC 1 and Rojer Mathew Vs South Indian Bank Limited 2019
SCC Online SC 1456, yet, despite such heavy dicta favouring independence of
tribunals and streamlining of their functioning, the practical situation
remains almost the same as it did without these judicial milestones.
In the latest Constitution Bench decision in Rojer Mathew (supra), the Supreme Court
set aside the Tribunal, Appellate
Tribunal and other Authorities (Qualifications, Experience and other Conditions
of Service of Members) Rules, 2017 promulgated by the Government which gave
the Government unbridled power in the functioning and control of tribunals. The
Court directed the Government to institute fresh rules in line with its decisions
pertaining to independence of tribunals. New rules were then framed earlier
this year by the Central Government but these carry out only superficial
changes to the earlier rules and directly contravene law laid down by the
Supreme Court.
Let us scan a few examples.
The new rules do not correct the current dispensation of
tribunals functioning under parent administrative ministries against which they
have to pass orders. This contravenes the Seven Judge Bench decision in L Chandra Kumar as well as the Five
Judge Bench in R Gandhi wherein it
was held that tribunals must not function under the ministries against which
they have to pass orders and neither should the Members be granted facilities
by such ministries. Hence, for example, the Armed Forces Tribunal today
functions under the Ministry of Defence which is the first party in all
litigation before it and against which it has to pass all orders. But
reflecting a complete conflict of interest, the Ministry also happens to control
its infrastructure, finances and staffing. Ditto is the case with the National
Green Tribunal and other tribunals which have to pass orders against the
Government and its instrumentalities. To top it all, complaints against Members
of tribunals are also to be routed through the same Ministries. Even if it is
taken only as a perception, the visible and invisible strings in such a scenario
and the impact on the psyche of litigants can hardly be ignored.
The new rules also provide for the Secretary of the
Ministry/Department to sit in the Selection Committee for Members of tribunals.
Therefore, the person against whom orders are to be passed, also selects
his/her adjudicators. This arrangement was deprecated and called “mockery of
the Constitution” in Madras Bar
Association. In fact, the Selection Committee has been incorporated in such
a manner that it can function even in the absence of judicial representation
whereas the Supreme Court has repeatedly called for primacy to judicial
representatives in such selections.
In R Gandhi,
the Constitution Bench had called for a minimum tenure of 5 to 7 years for Members
of tribunals, however under the new rules, the tenure prescribed is 4 years with
an upper age of 65 years, which also is theoretical. In case a retired High
Court Judge is to be appointed, he or she gets a maximum of 3 years in chair since
the retirement from the High Court is at 62 years. Practically, the tenure
would be even lesser since only in rare circumstances is a Judge appointed soon
after retirement. In such a situation, the non-judicial members get a longer
tenure in comparison since they join tribunals at an earlier age. Interestingly,
under these rules, the prohibition imposed on Members for further employment
with the State and Central Governments has been removed.
Again in R Gandhi,
vague qualification criterion for Members such as experience in economics,
business, commerce, finance, management etc was eschewed and struck down. Still,
in the new rules, the said criterion has strangely again been introduced for tribunals
such as the Armed Forces Tribunal and the TDSAT, the logic and legality both of
which is suspect.
For efficient delivery of justice, tribunals cannot
function as stand-alone entities in vacuum without being configured with an
efficient countrywide justice delivery system and our Constitutional Courts.
Time and again the Supreme Court has emphasized on reducing the burden on the
highest Court of the land but there seems to be no end to routine, innocuous
and sometimes frivolous litigation reaching its gates. A Constitution Bench in Bihar Legal Service Society Vs Chief Justice
of India 1987 AIR 38 had observed that the Supreme Court was only meant for
exceptional cases and in most matters the High Court must remain the final
arbiter. It was repeated thereafter in many decisions that the highest Court of
the land must only interfere in Constitutional matters of general public
importance or ones with pan India implication, however the Court is on the
contrary burdened by mundane appeals and issues such as consumer and
matrimonial disputes and direct appeals from tribunals which should not
otherwise find themselves at the entrance invoking the majesty of the highest
Court of the largest democracy. Today, the term “Special” in “Special Leave
Petition” itself has become almost otiose and redundant. Even otherwise, access
to the Supreme Court remains difficult and unaffordable for most litigants as
also observed in RK Jain, L Chandra
Kumar and recently again in Rojer
Mathew.
There could be a few suggested practical solutions to the
conundrum:
(a) In line with the original thought behind the
availability of Special Leave to Appeal under Article 136, the matters reaching
the Supreme Court by their very nature must be very rare, involving points of
law of general public importance or interpretation of the Constitution, pan
nation implication or where there is a major conflict on a point of law between
two or more High Courts. The Division Benches of the jurisdictional High Court,
an equally efficacious Constitutional Court, must be the final arbiter as
observed in Bihar Legal Service Society,
L Chandra Kumar and Rojer Mathew.
Of course, jurisdictions such as the exclusive and advisory jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court cannot be exercised by any other Court.
(b) Tribunals must function only under the Ministry of
Law & Justice and not under parent administrative ministries and with the
best possible facilities to Members to attract the optimum talent, with a
sufficiently long tenure and under the aegis of an overarching body such as the
National Tribunals Commission as suggested by jurists like Mr Arvind Datar and
also observed by Justice DY Chandrachud and Justice Deepak Gupta in their
separate observations in Rojer Mathew. The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal is a
shining and successful example of a Tribunal functioning under the Ministry of
Law & Justice.
(c) Excessive tribunalisation must be avoided except in
highly technical areas since litigants are known to express more faith in the
regular judiciary. Whenever instituted, tribunals must not be laden with vague
eligibility criteria such as experience in economics, business, commerce,
finance, management etc thereby making all and sundry eligible. Rather than
creating more tribunals, the High Courts need to be strengthened. Giving stable
rosters to High Court Judges can also bring in more understanding in various specialised
branches of law.
(d) Tribunals can also be created within the regular
judicial system with existing judges since there is a view prevalent, and not
without valid basis, that non-judicial ‘experts’ appointed as Members carry
over to the tribunal with them a certain over-familiarity with the subjects
which can breed subjectivity. Calling specialized bodies a cause of decadence
and decay, American jurist Judge Simon Rifkind, way back in 1951, stated that
it “intensifies the seclusion of that branch of law and further immunizes it
against the refreshment of new ideas, suggestions, adjustments and compromises
which constitute the very tissue of any living system of law”. There is yet
another reason for the regular Court system being more robust, and that is that
Courts never stop functioning even when facing critical shortage of judges,
while tribunals and other quasi-judicial bodies come to a complete standstill
because of non-appointment of Members or retirements. Interestingly, in certain
classes of litigation, the pendency has rather increased after creation of
tribunals.
(e) Widening of the intra-court appellate jurisdiction of
the High Courts for appeals from Single Bench decisions to Division Benches,
thereby giving finality within the same High Court in more subject matters, must
be given due thought so as to provide an affordable and accessible remedy and
to unburden the Supreme Court from hackneyed cases. This could be more
practical than deliberating upon a ‘Court of Appeal’ sandwiched between High
Courts and the Supreme Court.
The issues concerning tribunalisation and interconnected
delivery of justice are not ones which cannot be tackled. It seems that though
the political will to harmonise these issues was never lacking, due to some
reason or the other, and want of consensus amongst stakeholders including
opposition by various ministries, we remain stuck in a whirlwind of total chaos.
As back as on 2nd August 2001, the then Law Minister, late Mr Arun Jaitley, had
stated in Parliament that the Government was moving towards implementation of
the decision in L Chandra Kumar by
creating a separate Central Tribunals Division. Something that has not
fructified. More recently, the current Law Minister had also appreciably alluded
to the decisions of the Supreme Court dealing with tribunals in his opinion
piece for the Indian Express on 20th April 2017. The Prime Minister had also red-flagged
issues related to tribunals in a speech rendered on 4th April 2015.
With the political
executive having shown its willingness to tackle these vexed issues, and on the
strength of existing dicta of the Supreme Court, there should be no reason why
these matters should not be resolved to the full satisfaction of all stakeholders,
including the litigating public, at the earliest. It would rather be in the
fitness of things to robustly overrule opposing voices that are not letting the
vision of the political executive, the spirit of the Constitution and the
decisions of Constitutional Courts take full effect and shape.
Justice
Virender Singh is Former Chief Justice, High Court of Jharkhand & Former
Chairperson, Armed Forces Tribunal.
Major
Navdeep Singh is a lawyer at the Punjab & Haryana High Court.
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