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Why We Need an Independent Judiciary

🎓 Class 11 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 6 — Judiciary ⏱ ~25 min
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Class 11 · Political Science · Indian Constitution at Work

Chapter 6 · Judiciary — Part 1: Why We Need an Independent Judiciary & the Appointment of Judges

Picture a society where one citizen cheats another, the executive grabs your land without due process, or a State law clashes with the Constitution. Who decides? In our democracy that umpire is the judiciary. The Supreme Court of India is, in fact, one of the most powerful courts anywhere in the world. But its power flows from a single non-negotiable condition: independence. In this part we ask — why must the judiciary be independent of the executive and legislature, how does the Constitution actually protect that independence, and who decides which judges get appointed under Article 124 and the famous “collegium” system?

6.0 Setting the Stage — More Than an Arbitrator

Many people see courts only as arbitrators in disputes between individuals or private parties. But the judiciary performs important political functions too — it interprets the Constitution, controls executive overreach, and protects fundamental rights. Right from 1950, the Indian judiciary has played a central role in interpreting and protecting our Constitution. As the chapter on rights showed, the judiciary is also the chief guardian of every citizen’s liberty.

By the end of this part you will be able to explain the meaning of independence of the judiciary?, list the constitutional safeguards that protect it, and describe the modern collegium? system through which judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts are actually appointed.

📖 Definition
Judiciary: The organ of government that adjudicates disputes, interprets laws and the Constitution, and protects the rights of citizens. In India, the judiciary is a single integrated pyramid — Supreme Court at the apex, then High Courts, then District and Subordinate Courts.

6.1 Why Do We Need an Independent Judiciary?

In any society, disputes are bound to arise — between individuals, between groups, and between citizens or groups and the government itself. All such disputes must be settled by an independent body in accordance with the principle of the rule of law?. The idea of rule of law implies that all individuals — rich or poor, men or women, forward or backward castes — are subjected to the same law. The principal role of the judiciary is to safeguard this rule of law and ensure the supremacy of law. It protects rights of the individual, settles disputes according to law, and ensures that democracy does not slide into individual or group dictatorship.

To do all this effectively, the judiciary must be free of political pressures. If a judge fears the minister whose action she is reviewing, or worries about losing her salary if she rules against the legislature, she cannot do justice. Independence is therefore not a bonus — it is the precondition of judicial work in a constitutional democracy.

Rule of law
Equal subjection of every person — rich, poor, official or citizen — to the same law administered by the courts.
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Dispute resolution
Settles civil and criminal conflicts among individuals, groups, and between citizens and the government.
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Protection of rights
Through writs (Art. 32 / 226) the courts restore violated fundamental rights of any citizen.
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Judicial review
Power to declare any law or executive order unconstitutional if it violates the Constitution.

6.1.1 What “Independence” Actually Means

Simply stated, independence of the judiciary means three things:

  • the other organs of government — the executive and the legislature — must not restrain the functioning of the judiciary in such a way that it is unable to do justice;
  • those other organs should not interfere with the decisions of the judiciary;
  • judges must be able to perform their duties without fear or favour.
💡 Independence is not arbitrariness
Independence of the judiciary does not mean arbitrariness or absence of accountability. The judiciary is a part of the democratic political structure of the country. It is therefore accountable to the Constitution, to democratic traditions and to the people of the country. As Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar reminded the Constituent Assembly, the doctrine of judicial independence cannot be raised to the level of a dogma so as to enable the judiciary to function as a kind of “super-legislature” or “super-executive”.

6.2 How the Constitution Protects Judicial Independence

The Indian Constitution ensures the independence of the judiciary through a number of carefully designed measures. Each of them targets a specific kind of pressure that the executive or legislature might otherwise apply on a judge.

Six constitutional safeguards for the independence of judges
SafeguardWhat it does
Limited role of legislature in appointmentThe legislature is not involved in appointing judges — this prevents party politics from dictating selections.
Professional qualificationTo be appointed a judge, a person must have experience as a lawyer and/or be well-versed in law. Political opinions or political loyalty cannot be the criteria.
Security of tenureJudges have a fixed tenure; they hold office till the age of retirement. Only in exceptional cases can they be removed — and the procedure is deliberately very difficult.
Financial independenceSalaries and allowances of judges are not subjected to the approval of the legislature; the judiciary is not financially dependent on the executive or legislature.
Contempt powerDecisions and actions of judges are immune from personal criticism. The court can punish for contempt of court?, protecting judges from unfair attack.
No discussion in ParliamentParliament cannot discuss the conduct of judges except when a removal motion is being carried out.

6.2.1 Security of Tenure — The Bedrock

The Constitution prescribes a very difficult procedure for the removal of judges. The framers believed that a hard-to-trigger removal procedure would give judges genuine security of office. Knowing that a hostile minister cannot send them home, judges can rule against the government if the law and the Constitution demand it — that is what “without fear or favour” really means in practice.

📜 Voice from the Constituent Assembly
While there can be no two opinions on the need for the maintenance of judicial independence, it is also necessary to keep in view one important principle. The doctrine of independence is not to be raised to the level of a dogma so as to enable the judiciary to function as a kind of super-legislature or super-executive. The judiciary is there to interpret the Constitution or adjudicate upon the rights.
— Alladi Krishnaswami Ayyar, CAD, Vol. XI, p. 837, 23 November 1949
DISCUSS — What constrains a judge?
Bloom: L4 Analyse

NCERT asks the class to debate which factors actually work as constraints on judges when they decide a case — and whether those constraints are justified.

  1. The text of the Constitution itself.
  2. Precedents set by earlier cases.
  3. Opinions of other courts (especially higher benches).
  4. Public opinion, the media, traditions of law.
  5. Time and staff constraints; fear of public criticism; fear of action by the executive.
✅ Pointers
The Constitution and law are justified constraints — they are precisely what a judge has sworn to apply. Precedent and the views of higher courts give the system stability and predictability. Public opinion and media pressure are problematic constraints — they may push a judge towards the popular ruling rather than the right one. Fear of action by the executive is the most dangerous; the entire architecture of judicial independence exists to neutralise it.

6.3 Appointment of Judges — A Political Tug-of-War

The appointment of judges has never been free from political controversy. It is part of the political process. It makes a difference who serves in the Supreme Court and a High Court — their judicial philosophy decides how the Constitution gets interpreted. Whether judges are activist or restrained, committed or independent, has an impact on the fate of every legislation. The Council of Ministers, Governors, Chief Ministers and the Chief Justice of India all influence the process of appointment.

6.3.1 Article 124 — What the Constitution Says

Article 124 of the Constitution provides that every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by the President after consultation with such Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts as the President may deem necessary. It expressly requires consultation with the Chief Justice of India for the appointment of any Judge other than the Chief Justice himself.

📜 Article 124
Every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by the President of India by warrant under his hand and seal after consultation with such of the Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts in the States as the President may deem necessary for the purpose — and shall hold office until he attains the age of sixty-five years.

6.3.2 The CJI Convention — and the Two Breaks of 1973 and 1975

Regarding the appointment of the Chief Justice of India (CJI), a clear convention developed over the years: the senior-most judge of the Supreme Court was appointed CJI. This convention was broken twice, both times during politically tense periods.

Two famous breaks of the ‘senior-most judge’ convention
YearAppointmentWho was superseded
1973A. N. Ray appointed CJIThree senior judges of the Supreme Court superseded
1975Justice M. H. Beg appointed CJIJustice H. R. Khanna superseded

6.3.3 The Long Battle — the Three Judges Cases (1982–1998)

The other Judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts are appointed by the President “after consulting” the CJI. In effect, this seemed to mean the final decision on appointments rested with the Council of Ministers. What, then, was the status of the consultation with the Chief Justice?

This question came before the Supreme Court again and again between 1982 and 1998. The court’s position evolved through three landmark rulings:

The Three Judges Cases — how the “collegium” was born
CaseYearWhat the Court held
First Judges Case1982Initially, the Court felt that the role of the Chief Justice was purely consultative. The President (in effect, the executive) had primacy.
Second Judges Case1993The Court reversed itself: the opinion of the Chief Justice must be followed by the President. The CJI’s view became binding.
Third Judges Case1998The Court created a novel procedure — the CJI must recommend names in consultation with four senior-most judges of the Supreme Court. Thus the principle of collegiality was established.

At the moment, therefore, in matters of judicial appointment, the decision of the group of senior judges of the Supreme Court — the collegium — carries the greatest weight. Both the Supreme Court and the Council of Ministers play important roles, but the collegium has the decisive say on names.

CJI + 4 Seniormost Supreme Court Collegium Recommends Names to the Government Council of Ministers Advises President May return for reconsideration Collegium reiterates Then binding on government President appoints Judge Article 124(2) · Warrant under hand and seal First Judges Case (1982): executive primacy · Second Judges Case (1993): CJI binding · Third Judges Case (1998): four-judge collegium
How a Supreme Court judge is actually appointed today — the collegium recommends, the executive may return the file once, but if the collegium reiterates the name, it is binding.

6.3.4 NJAC 2015 — The Attempt That Was Struck Down

In 2014, Parliament enacted the 99th Constitutional Amendment establishing the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC)? to replace the collegium. The NJAC would have included the CJI, two senior-most judges, the Union Law Minister and two “eminent persons”. In Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India (2015), a 5-judge bench struck down the NJAC by 4–1, holding that the involvement of the political executive in judicial appointments violated the independence of the judiciary — which is part of the basic structure of the Constitution. The collegium was thereby restored.

⚠ Why this matters
The NJAC episode shows the constitutional “tug-of-war” between Parliament and the judiciary over who chooses judges. Parliament can always amend the Constitution, but if the amendment damages a basic feature like judicial independence, the Supreme Court can — and did — strike it down. We will return to this “basic structure doctrine” in Part 3.

6.4 Removal of Judges — The Difficult Door

The removal of judges of the Supreme Court and High Courts is also extremely difficult. A judge can be removed only on the ground of proved misbehaviour or incapacity. A motion containing the charges against the judge must be approved by a special majority? in both Houses of Parliament. This is the same special majority used for amending the Constitution: a majority of the total membership of each House and a two-thirds majority of those present and voting.

Unless there is a broad consensus across parties, a judge cannot be removed. Notice the design: in making appointments, the executive plays a crucial role; for removal, the legislature has the power. This split has ensured both balance of power and independence of the judiciary.

📜 Box: Unsuccessful attempt to remove a judge
In 1991 the first-ever motion to remove a Supreme Court Justice was signed by 108 members of Parliament. Justice V. Ramaswami, during his tenure as Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court, was accused of misappropriating funds. In 1992, a year after Parliament had begun the proceedings, a high-profile inquiry commission consisting of Supreme Court judges found him “guilty of wilful and gross misuse of office and moral turpitude by using public funds for private purposes”. Despite this strong indictment, Ramaswami survived the parliamentary motion: it secured the required two-thirds majority among members present and voting, but the Congress party abstained from voting, so the motion could not get the support of one-half of the total strength of the House.

6.4.1 The Three-Step Removal Procedure (Impeachment)

How a judge can be removed under Article 124(4)
StepWhat happens
1. MotionNotice of motion signed by at least 100 Lok Sabha or 50 Rajya Sabha members; presented to the presiding officer.
2. InquiryIf admitted, a three-member committee (a Supreme Court judge, a Chief Justice of a High Court and a distinguished jurist) investigates the charges.
3. VoteIf the committee finds the judge “guilty of proved misbehaviour or incapacity”, the motion is voted in both Houses by special majority — majority of total membership AND two-thirds of those present and voting.
4. Address to PresidentBoth Houses then present an address to the President in the same session, and the President orders the removal.
Case Study · Why making removal hard is good for citizens
The two-key lock
Imagine an executive that controls the bureaucracy and the police, and a Parliament with a comfortable majority. If a judge could be removed easily by a simple majority, the ruling party could threaten any judge who decided against the government. The Constitution’s deliberately tough threshold — special majority in both Houses, after a judicial inquiry — means that only when there is a wide cross-party consensus can a judge be sent home. This is precisely why Justice Ramaswami remained in office in 1992: the threshold protected even an indicted judge from a partisan vote.

6.5 Summing Up — Why Independence Is the Foundation

The judiciary’s strength rests on its independence; its independence rests on a chain of constitutional safeguards — appointment shielded from party politics, fixed tenure, financially protected salary, contempt power, and an extraordinarily difficult removal procedure. The collegium system, born out of the Three Judges Cases between 1982 and 1998, ensures that judges and not politicians take the lead in choosing future judges — and the 2015 verdict striking down the NJAC reaffirmed that this is a non-negotiable feature of our constitutional design. In the next part we look upward through the pyramid — how the Supreme Court, High Courts and lower courts are arranged, and what jurisdictions each can exercise.

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Competency-Based Questions — Part 1

Case Study: The Union government, frustrated that several of its policy decisions have been struck down by the Supreme Court, proposes a Bill that would (a) let the Cabinet directly nominate judges of the Supreme Court, (b) make judges’ salaries subject to Parliament’s annual approval, and (c) allow Parliament to remove a judge by simple majority. Citizens are debating whether the Bill will reform the system or wreck it.
Q1. Under Article 124 of the Constitution, every Judge of the Supreme Court is appointed by:
L1 Remember
  • (A) The Prime Minister, after a vote of the Lok Sabha
  • (B) The President, after consultation with the CJI and other judges
  • (C) The Chief Justice of India alone
  • (D) The Vice-President, after consultation with the Council of Ministers
Answer: (B) — Article 124 expressly requires the President to appoint judges “after consultation with” such judges of the Supreme Court and the High Courts as the President deems necessary, and consultation with the CJI is mandatory for all judges except the CJI himself.
Q2. The collegium system, in which the CJI and the four senior-most Supreme Court judges recommend names for appointment, was finally crystallised in the:
L2 Understand
  • (A) First Judges Case, 1982
  • (B) Second Judges Case, 1993
  • (C) Third Judges Case, 1998
  • (D) Kesavananda Bharati case, 1973
Answer: (C) — The Third Judges Case (1998) established the present procedure: the CJI must consult the four senior-most judges of the Supreme Court before sending names to the government. The Second Judges Case (1993) had already made the CJI’s opinion binding.
Q3. Evaluate, in about 60 words, why the Constitution makes appointments ‘executive-led’ (in practice now collegium-led) but removals ‘legislature-led’. How does this design protect judicial independence?
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Splitting the two powers prevents either organ from monopolising control over judges. If the same body that picked judges could also fire them, judges would be permanently beholden to it. By requiring a special majority in both Houses for removal, the Constitution ensures that only a broad cross-party consensus — not a one-party government — can dismiss a judge.
HOT Q. The proposed Bill (in the case study above) seeks to make judges’ salaries subject to annual parliamentary approval. Construct an argument explaining why this is dangerous, even if Parliament currently has no plans to misuse the power.
L6 Create
Hint: A judge whose salary is reviewed every year cannot rule fearlessly against the government, since Parliament could retaliate by freezing or cutting pay. The very possibility of financial pressure compromises independence. The Constitution therefore charges judges’ salaries to the Consolidated Fund of India — not subject to annual vote — precisely so that money never becomes a tool of executive influence.
⚖ Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 1
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): Independence of the judiciary is essential for the rule of law.
Reason (R): Judges must be able to decide cases without fear of pressure from the executive or the legislature.
Answer: (A) — Both statements are true and R is the precise reason: rule of law requires that everyone, including the government, is subject to law as administered by impartial judges, which only an independent judiciary can guarantee.
Assertion (A): A judge of the Supreme Court can be removed by a simple majority of the Lok Sabha.
Reason (R): The Constitution gives the legislature the power to remove judges in order to prevent abuse of office.
Answer: (D) — A is false: removal requires a special majority in both Houses, on grounds of “proved misbehaviour or incapacity”. R is true: the legislature does carry the removal power, but with a deliberately high threshold to protect independence.
Assertion (A): The collegium system is explicitly written into Article 124 of the Constitution.
Reason (R): The Three Judges Cases (1982, 1993, 1998) developed the collegium through judicial interpretation of Article 124.
Answer: (D) — A is false: the word “collegium” appears nowhere in Article 124; the Article only requires “consultation”. R is true: the Supreme Court built the collegium through its rulings in the three landmark cases, and the 2015 verdict struck down the NJAC and revived it.
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