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NJAC Act violates 'basic structure' of Constitution, Bar bodies tell Supreme Court

A day after Chief Justice of India HL Dattu refused to attend meeting to select two members to the NJAC panel, various Bar bodies on Tuesday told the Supreme Court that the validity of new law on appointment of judges cannot be sustained as it violates "basic structure" of the Constitution.

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A day after Chief Justice of India HL Dattu refused to attend meeting to select two members to the NJAC panel, various Bar bodies on Tuesday told the Supreme Court that the validity of new law on appointment of judges cannot be sustained as it violates "basic structure" of the Constitution.

"Basic Structure is violated because the body (National Judicial Appointments Commission-NJAC) sought to be created, does not have the salient features of the body (collegium) substituted," senior advocate Fali S Nariman, appearing for Supreme Court Advocates on Record Association (SCAORA), told a five-judge Constitution bench headed by Justice JS Khehar.

SCAORA, Bar Association of India (BAI) and few others are challenging validity of the National Judicial Appointments Commission Act, 2014 and enabling Constitution (99th amendment) Act 2014.

The noted jurist, citing judgements, told the bench, also comprising Justices J Chelameswar, Madan B Lokur, Kurian Joseph and Adarsh Kumar Goel, that in the NJAC, no "weightage or primacy" has been given to the views of the CJI in selection of judges and moreover, "the question here is as to whether independence of judiciary is part of the basic structure".

He then referred to the constitution of the six-member panel, comprising three senior-most SC judges including the CJI, the Union Law Minister and two eminent citizens and said, "who will decide" if the panel gets divided vertically on the question of appointment of a judge.

The primacy of views of judiciary is not there, he said. "A Chief Justice of a High Court is not a participant of the NJAC but can only send his recommendation to the NJAC", Nariman said, adding that it is a major flaw of the new law.

"Preponderance" of views of three senior most judges of the apex court, as recommended by the Venkatachaliah panel, has not been not provided for by the NJAC Act, he said.

Nariman was supported by senior advocate Anil Divan, appearing for BAI, who said, "The manner, it (NJAC) has been constituted, the Act has altered the basic structure of the Constitution."

"The direct and inevitable" effect of these two laws on independence of judiciary has to be looked into, he said. "We will examine the enactments as they stand today," the bench said.

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