Punjab and Haryana HC suspends ex-CBI court special judge
Punjab and Haryana HC Suspends Ex-CBI Court Special Judge
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Punjab and Haryana High Court suspended judicial officer Rajeev Goyal, formerly serving as Special Judge, CBI Court, Panchkula (Haryana), with immediate effect via an order dated 29 May 2026. [S1][S2]
- The action was taken under Article 235 of the Constitution — the provision vesting control over subordinate courts (including disciplinary powers) in the High Court. [S3]
- The case illustrates the constitutional architecture of judicial accountability within the district/subordinate judiciary — an important UPSC theme under GS-II (Polity: Judiciary). [S3]
- Separately linked to a CBI corruption case involving the discharge of accused Sudhir Parmar, bringing into focus the independence and integrity of special courts. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- On 29 May 2026, the Punjab and Haryana HC's Registrar General issued an order placing Rajeev Goyal — then posted as Additional District & Sessions Judge, Kaithal — under suspension, "in contemplation of initiation of disciplinary proceedings." [S1][S2]
- The suspension relates to his earlier tenure as Special Judge, CBI Court, Panchkula, Haryana — the court that has jurisdiction to hear all CBI cases registered across the State of Haryana. [S1]
- Background trigger: reports link the suspension to a controversial discharge order granted to one Sudhir Parmar in a graft/corruption case while Goyal was the CBI court judge. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
- CBI Special Courts in India were established under Section 3 of the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946 and orders thereunder, enabling state governments (with Central concurrence) to designate courts for exclusive trial of CBI cases.
- In Haryana, the CBI Special Court at Panchkula serves as the single nodal court for all CBI cases across the state, giving it significant jurisdictional weight. [S1]
- Disciplinary control over subordinate judiciary has historically been exercised by High Courts under Article 235, insulating judges from executive interference — a principle affirmed in landmark SC rulings like State of West Bengal v. Nripendra Nath Bagchi (1966) and High Court of Judicature at Bombay v. Shashikant S. Patil (2000).
- Prior to the current case, the Panchkula CBI Court drew national attention in cases such as the Ram Rahim conviction (2017) and Haryana denotified land allotment scams.
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Judicial Officer | Rajeev Goyal |
| Earlier post | Special Judge, CBI Court, Panchkula, Haryana |
| Post at time of suspension | Additional District & Sessions Judge, Kaithal |
| Suspending authority | Punjab and Haryana High Court (via Registrar General) |
| Order date | 29 May 2026 |
| Constitutional provision invoked | Article 235, Constitution of India |
| Service rules invoked | Rule 4(b), Haryana Civil Services (Punishment and Appeal) Rules, 2016 |
| Nature of action | Suspension pending disciplinary proceedings (not a criminal charge) |
| HQ during suspension | Kaithal |
| Movement restriction | Cannot leave HQ without prior permission of District & Sessions Judge, Kaithal |
| CBI Court jurisdiction | All CBI cases registered across Haryana |
| Linked case | Discharge of Sudhir Parmar in a corruption matter |
Key Constitutional Articles:
- Article 233 — Appointment of District Judges (Governor acts on advice of HC)
- Article 234 — Recruitment of persons other than District Judges to judicial service
- Article 235 — Control over subordinate courts vested in the HC (posting, promotion, leave, discipline)
- Article 236 — Interpretation of "District Judge" (includes Sessions Judge, Additional Sessions Judge, etc.)
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 235 is the sole constitutional foundation for HC disciplinary action over subordinate judges; the executive (state government) has no disciplinary role over district/subordinate judiciary. [S3]
- The phrase "in contemplation of disciplinary proceedings" is a technical legal term — suspension at this stage is preventive, not punitive; pay entitlement during suspension is governed by service rules.
- The Supreme Court has held (Registrar General, HC of Orissa v. Sisir Kana Mohanty) that Article 235 covers both administrative and punitive dimensions; a HC can suspend a subordinate judge without prior executive consent.
- CBI Special Courts derive jurisdiction from both the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946 and the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 (Sections 7–11 on constitution of criminal courts).
Ethical / Governance
- A discharge order by a special court in a corruption case carries far-reaching consequences — it ends the trial against an accused at the framing-of-charges stage, making it effectively final unless reversed by a superior court.
- Judicial accountability for special court judges is a recurring governance concern; CBI courts handle sensitive cases (corruption, organized crime) where any compromise has systemic implications.
- Suspension "without stating reasons" in the order (standard practice for pending disciplinary inquiry) raises transparency questions but is legally permissible to protect inquiry integrity.
Administrative
- The Registrar General acts as the administrative arm of the HC for such orders; the Chief Justice and judges collectively exercise the power under Article 235 (collegial exercise).
- Movement restriction to HQ during suspension is a standard service-rule mechanism to ensure availability during inquiry proceedings.
- Transfer to Kaithal (effected over a month before the suspension) may itself be viewed as a preliminary administrative step preceding formal disciplinary action.
Historical
- India has seen several HC-ordered suspensions of CBI/special court judges — notably in cases involving the 2G spectrum scam courts, coal allocation cases, and PMLA special courts, establishing a pattern of HC-led accountability.
- The Veeraswami case (1991) and K. Veeraswami v. Union of India — SC addressed the question of criminal prosecution of judges, holding that prior sanction of the CJI is required for a sitting judge. Subordinate judges, however, fall under Article 235 discipline.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- May 29, 2026: Punjab and Haryana HC issues suspension order against Rajeev Goyal under Article 235 / Haryana Civil Services (Punishment and Appeal) Rules, 2016. [S1][S2]
- ~April 2026 (approx. one month prior): Rajeev Goyal transferred from Panchkula CBI court to Additional District & Sessions Judge, Kaithal — the transfer likely preceded the disciplinary inquiry initiation. [S1]
- June 1, 2026: Matter reported in national press (The Hindu, Pioneer, Outlook India, Prokerala, Daily Excelsior). [S1][S2]
- Linked controversy: Discharge of Sudhir Parmar in a corruption case by the CBI court under Goyal's tenure emerges as the substantive trigger for inquiry. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Article 235 of the Constitution vests control over subordinate courts — including disciplinary powers — exclusively in the High Court, not the state government.
- The CBI Special Court at Panchkula, Haryana, has jurisdiction to hear all CBI cases registered across the State of Haryana.
- CBI Special Courts are constituted under the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946.
- "District Judge" under Article 236 includes Sessions Judges, Additional Sessions Judges, and Additional District Judges.
- During suspension under service rules, a judicial officer's headquarters is fixed and prior permission of the supervising authority is required to leave HQ.
- Suspension "in contemplation of disciplinary proceedings" is preventive, not punitive — pay during suspension is a fraction of regular emoluments as per applicable rules.
- The Haryana Civil Services (Punishment and Appeal) Rules, 2016, govern disciplinary proceedings for Haryana state judicial officers at subordinate level.
- Under Article 235, the HC exercises control "including the posting and promotion of, and the grant of leave to" subordinate judicial officers.
- A Special Judge under the CBI court framework is a post of the Sessions Court level — appointed/controlled via HC under Articles 233–235.
- The Registrar General of a High Court is the administrative officer who issues orders on behalf of the Chief Justice and Judges in routine disciplinary/administrative matters.
- The Supreme Court cannot directly discipline a subordinate (district) court judge; that power lies with the HC of the concerned state under Article 235.
- The discharge of an accused at the framing-of-charges stage (Section 227/228 CrPC) is distinct from acquittal; it can be challenged by the prosecution through revision/appeal before the Sessions Court or HC.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II
Syllabus headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary — Separation of powers; dispute redressal mechanisms - Appointment to various Constitutional posts, powers, functions and responsibilities (subordinate judiciary) - Statutory, regulatory and various quasi-judicial bodies
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"Article 235 of the Constitution strikes a delicate balance between judicial independence and judicial accountability. Critically examine with reference to recent instances of HC disciplinary action against subordinate judges." (GS-II, 15 marks)
-
"Special courts (CBI, PMLA, NIA) are central to India's anti-corruption framework, yet their accountability mechanisms remain weak. Analyse the institutional safeguards available and the gaps therein." (GS-II, 10 marks)
-
"Discuss the constitutional and administrative framework governing the discipline of the subordinate judiciary in India. How does it differ from the mechanism applicable to High Court judges?" (GS-II, 15 marks)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Articles 124–147 (Supreme Court) | Compare removal mechanism for SC/HC judges (impeachment) vs. subordinate judiciary (Article 235) |
| Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946 | Parent statute for CBI; governs CBI court jurisdiction |
| Prevention of Corruption Act, 1988 (amended 2018) | Substantive law tried in CBI/special courts; key anti-corruption legislation |
| PMLA Special Courts | Parallel system of special courts under PMLA, 2002 — similar accountability issues |
| Judicial Standards and Accountability Bill | Proposed but lapsed legislation aimed at codifying judicial accountability |
| All India Judicial Service (AIJS) | Proposed service; would change recruitment/disciplinary architecture for district judiciary |
| Code of Criminal Procedure — Special Courts (Sec. 7–11) | Statutory basis for constitution and jurisdiction of special/CBI courts |
| Veeraswami & Ravichandran Iyer cases (SC) | Leading precedents on judicial accountability and immunity from prosecution |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Confusing Article 235 with Article 124: Article 124 deals with the Supreme Court; subordinate court discipline is Article 235. Students often conflate the two.
- Assuming state government has disciplinary power: Under Article 235, the High Court — not the Governor or state cabinet — holds disciplinary control over district/subordinate judges. The state's role is limited to Article 233 (appointments).
- Treating suspension as punishment: Suspension "in contemplation of disciplinary proceedings" is preventive/administrative — the officer retains a portion of pay (subsistence allowance) and is not yet penalised.
- Jurisdiction confusion — CBI courts: CBI Special Courts are not pan-India in jurisdiction; the Panchkula court covers Haryana only. Separate CBI courts exist for each state.
- Mixing "discharge" with "acquittal": A discharge under Section 227 CrPC occurs before trial begins (at charge-framing stage); an acquittal (Section 235/248 CrPC) occurs after evidence is led. The legal consequences and appeal routes differ significantly.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Punjab and Haryana HC suspends ex-CBI court special judge" — The Hindu / PTI (Article content, June 1, 2026) — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Punjab & Haryana High Court Suspends Judicial Officer Rajeev Goyal Over Disciplinary Proceedings" — Daily Pioneer — https://dailypioneer.com/news/slug-lite/punjab-haryana-hc-suspends-former-cbi-court-special-judge?year=2026 — (Tier 4)
- [S3] The Constitution of India (full text, as on 9 December 2020) — https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/16124/1/the_constitution_of_india.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] "P&H High Court suspends judge who discharged Sudhir Parmar in graft case" — Prokerala / Tribune India — https://www.prokerala.com/news/articles/a1769548.html — (Tier 4)
- [S5] "Punjab And Haryana High Court Suspends Former CBI Court Special Judge" — Outlook India — https://www.outlookindia.com/national/punjab-and-haryana-high-court-suspends-former-cbi-court-special-judge-2 — (Tier 4)