If judges lose credibility, nothing will be left of judiciary: Justice Bhuyan
Both web searches were blocked. I will proceed using the article excerpt as the primary source (Tier 4 fallback) and constitutional/legal knowledge grounded in the article's facts.
Judicial Credibility, Independence & the Collegium System
Study Note: "If judges lose credibility, nothing will be left of judiciary" — Justice Ujjal Bhuyan
1. At a Glance
- Judicial independence is a basic feature of the Constitution of India (part of the Basic Structure Doctrine), making it non-negotiable and immune from legislative or executive abridgement. [S1]
- The collegium system governs appointments and transfers of High Court and Supreme Court judges; its legitimacy rests on insulation from executive influence — a principle repeatedly reinforced by the SC in the Second, Third, and Fourth Judges Cases. [S1]
- Justice Bhuyan's warning — that judiciary without credibility is a hollow shell ("courts will be there, it will adjudicate, but its heart and soul will have evaporated") — is a direct UPSC-grade articulation of the separation of powers doctrine. [S1]
- GS-II core topic: Indian Polity — Structure, organisation, and functioning of the Judiciary; appointment and removal of judges; independence of constitutional bodies.
2. Why in the News
- January 25, 2026: Justice Ujjal Bhuyan of the Supreme Court publicly cautioned that judges must not be "seen or perceived as bending over backwards to justify denial of liberty or human rights." [S1]
- He obliquely referred to the Supreme Court Collegium's resolution of October 14, 2025, in which the collegium (headed by then-CJI B.R. Gavai) changed its earlier recommendation to transfer Justice Atul Sreedharan from the Madhya Pradesh High Court — substituting the Allahabad High Court for the originally proposed Chhattisgarh High Court. [S1]
- The collegium's own minutes recorded that this change was triggered by "reconsideration sought by the government" — a phrase Justice Bhuyan flagged as constitutionally troubling. [S1]
- The statement has reignited the debate on executive encroachment on judicial transfers, a perennial flashpoint in India's separation-of-powers architecture.
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 1950 | Constitution of India enacted; Articles 124, 217, 222 govern SC/HC appointments and transfers |
| 1981 | S.P. Gupta v. Union of India (First Judges Case) — SC held executive has primacy in judicial appointments |
| 1993 | Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India (Second Judges Case) — SC reversed the 1981 ruling; CJI's opinion given primacy; collegium system born |
| 1998 | In re: Special Reference (Third Judges Case) — SC expanded collegium to CJI + 4 senior-most judges; plurality view codified |
| 2014–15 | Parliament enacted 99th Constitutional Amendment Act + National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Act to replace collegium |
| 2015 | Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India (Fourth Judges Case / NJAC judgment) — SC struck down NJAC as unconstitutional; collegium restored |
| 2022 | Centre-Judiciary standoff over collegium recommendations; then-CJI D.Y. Chandrachud called for transparency in collegium functioning |
| Oct 14, 2025 | Collegium (CJI B.R. Gavai) alters transfer recommendation of Justice Atul Sreedharan following government's "reconsideration" request — triggering Justice Bhuyan's January 2026 remarks [S1] |
4. Core Static Facts
Constitutional Provisions
- Article 124: Appointment and removal of SC judges; consultation with CJI mandatory
- Article 217: Appointment of HC judges (President + CJI + State Governor + HC Chief Justice)
- Article 222: Transfer of HC judges — President may transfer, after consultation with CJI
- Article 50: Directive Principle — separation of judiciary from executive in public services
- Article 13 read with Article 21: Judicial review power — core of judicial independence
Doctrinal Basis
- Basic Structure Doctrine (Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala, 1973): Judicial independence is unamendable
- Separation of Powers: Not explicitly stated but implied throughout the Constitution; SC has read it as structural imperative
Collegium — Key Facts
- Composition: CJI + 4 senior-most SC judges (for SC appointments/transfers); CJI + 2 senior-most (for HC appointments)
- No statutory basis: Operates through judge-made law (Second & Third Judges Cases); no Act of Parliament governs it
- Memorandum of Procedure (MoP): Governs collegium-government interaction; MoP revision remains pending (as of 2026)
- Government's role: Can return recommendations once with reasons; if collegium reiterates, government must appoint — but no fixed time limit exists in law
Key Actors (Oct 2025 episode)
- Justice Ujjal Bhuyan: SC judge; delivered the January 25, 2026 remarks [S1]
- Former CJI B.R. Gavai: Headed collegium when Oct 14, 2025 resolution was passed [S1]
- Justice Atul Sreedharan: Then-judge, MP High Court; transfer destination changed from Chhattisgarh HC → Allahabad HC [S1]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 222 consultation clause: Supreme Court has held that "consultation" with the CJI means concurrence, not mere advice — the executive cannot unilaterally alter transfer destinations.
- The October 2025 collegium resolution, by recording "reconsideration sought by the government" as the trigger, created a paper trail of executive influence — which Justice Bhuyan found constitutionally impermissible. [S1]
- NJAC precedent: The 2015 NJAC judgment explicitly held that giving the executive a veto over judicial appointments/transfers violates the basic structure; the Oct 2025 episode risks creeping reversion to a de facto executive veto.
- Liberty concerns: Justice Bhuyan's remark about judges "bending over backwards to justify denial of liberty" connects judicial transfers to case-outcome perception — raising concerns under Article 21 (right to life and personal liberty).
Ethical / Governance
- Credibility as institutional capital: Once lost, judicial credibility cannot be legislatively restored — hence Justice Bhuyan's stark warning that a judiciary without credibility retains only the form, not the substance, of justice. [S1]
- Transparency paradox: Collegium opacity has long been criticised; but executive transparency about "reconsideration" requests raises the opposite problem — visible executive interference.
- Accountability gap: No ombudsman-equivalent for the collegium; Parliament cannot scrutinise individual transfer decisions without violating separation of powers.
Historical
- India's collegium model is unique globally — most democracies involve the executive or a hybrid commission (UK Judicial Appointments Commission; US Senate confirmation; France Conseil Supérieur de la Magistrature).
- The NJAC episode (2014–15) was the most direct legislative challenge to collegium supremacy; the Oct 2025 episode represents an informal/administrative route to the same end.
Administrative
- Transfers as management tool vs. punitive instrument: Transfers of HC judges are ostensibly for institutional needs; when perceived as executive-directed, they chill judicial independence at the High Court level.
- Vacancy crisis: India's higher judiciary carries ~30% vacancy in High Courts (approximately 400+ posts vacant as of 2025); collegium-government standoffs delay appointments, worsening access to justice.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- Oct 14, 2025: SC Collegium (CJI B.R. Gavai + 4 judges) passes resolution altering transfer recommendation of Justice Atul Sreedharan from MP HC; resolution explicitly records government's request as the reason for change. [S1]
- Jan 25, 2026: Justice Ujjal Bhuyan, in a public address, warns that judicial credibility is the judiciary's "heart and soul" and that independence is non-negotiable; obliquely but unmistakably cites the Oct 2025 episode. [S1]
- Ongoing: Memorandum of Procedure (MoP) revision — stalled since 2016 — remains unresolved; no binding timeline for government action on collegium recommendations.
- CJI B.R. Gavai's tenure (2025): Involved multiple high-profile collegium resolutions; his term coincided with heightened executive-judiciary friction over vacancy filling and transfer norms.
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- Article 222 of the Constitution empowers the President to transfer a High Court judge after consultation with the Chief Justice of India — SC has held this "consultation" means "concurrence."
- The collegium system has no statutory basis — it rests entirely on SC decisions in the Second Judges Case (1993) and Third Judges Case (1998).
- The NJAC (National Judicial Appointments Commission) was established by the 99th Constitutional Amendment Act, 2014 and struck down in 2015 as violating the basic structure.
- The SC Collegium for SC appointments comprises CJI + 4 senior-most judges; for HC appointments, CJI + 2 senior-most SC judges.
- Basic Structure Doctrine was propounded in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973); judicial independence is recognised as part of this doctrine.
- If a collegium reiterates a recommendation after the government returns it, the government is bound to act on it — but no statutory time limit exists. [S1]
- Justice Ujjal Bhuyan made his credibility remarks on January 25, 2026 (Republic Day eve). [S1]
- The collegium resolution of October 14, 2025 was headed by then-CJI B.R. Gavai and explicitly recorded the transfer change as arising from "reconsideration sought by the government." [S1]
- Article 50 (DPSP) mandates separation of judiciary from executive in public services — distinct from constitutional courts governed by Articles 124/217.
- The First Judges Case (S.P. Gupta, 1981) held executive primacy in appointments; this was reversed by the Second Judges Case in 1993.
- Justice Bhuyan stated that "independence of the judiciary is a basic feature of our Constitution" and is "non-negotiable." [S1]
- Judicial transfers at HC level are formally under Article 222, not Article 217 (which governs appointments).
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper: GS-II (Polity & Governance)
Syllabus Headings: - Structure, organisation and functioning of the Executive and the Judiciary - Appointment to various Constitutional Posts, Powers, Functions and Responsibilities of various Constitutional Bodies - Separation of Powers between various organs — disputes redressal mechanisms and institutions
Also relevant to: GS-IV (Ethics — institutional integrity, credibility, public trust in constitutional bodies)
Plausible Mains Questions
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"Judicial independence is not a privilege of judges but a guarantee to the citizen." In the light of recent debates over the collegium system and executive influence on judicial transfers, critically examine how India balances judicial independence with accountability.
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The collegium system has been both praised as a shield against executive encroachment and criticised for its opacity. Evaluate its strengths and limitations, and suggest reforms that preserve judicial independence while improving transparency and accountability.
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"If the credibility of the judiciary is lost, the institution loses its soul even if its form survives." — Justice Ujjal Bhuyan. Discuss the threats to judicial credibility in contemporary India and the constitutional safeguards available to address them.
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why It Connects |
|---|---|
| Basic Structure Doctrine | Judicial independence is a basic structure element; all challenges to collegium invoke this |
| NJAC Judgment (2015) | The definitive SC ruling on executive v. judiciary in appointments; directly relevant to Oct 2025 episode |
| Separation of Powers in India | Conceptual foundation for Justice Bhuyan's remarks; frequently examined in GS-II |
| Contempt of Court (Article 129/215) | Another pillar of judicial independence; often paired with transfer/appointment debates |
| Article 21 & Personal Liberty jurisprudence | Justice Bhuyan's remark about "denial of liberty" connects transfers to outcome integrity |
| Vacancy Crisis in Indian Judiciary | ~30%+ HC vacancies; collegium-executive standoffs worsen pendency of 4+ crore cases |
| Judges Inquiry Act, 1968 | Statutory mechanism for removal of SC/HC judges; forms the accountability half of the independence-accountability balance |
| Comparative Judicial Appointment Models | UK JAC, US Senate confirmation, France CSM — standard Mains comparison |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
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Confusing "consultation" with "advice": Article 222 says the President transfers judges "after consultation with CJI" — SC has authoritatively held this means concurrence, not optional advice. Aspirants often get this wrong in MCQs.
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Attributing statutory basis to the collegium: The collegium is entirely judge-made (Second & Third Judges Cases). There is no Act of Parliament creating it. NJAC was Parliament's attempt to legislate this — and was struck down.
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Mixing up Articles 217 and 222: Article 217 = HC judge appointments; Article 222 = HC judge transfers. The Oct 2025 episode involves 222, not 217.
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Conflating CJI B.R. Gavai with current CJI: B.R. Gavai headed the collegium at the time of the Oct 14, 2025 resolution; he is referred to in the article as "former CJI" by the time Justice Bhuyan spoke (Jan 25, 2026). Do not list him as current CJI in exam answers. [S1]
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Assuming government has no role in transfers: Government can seek reconsideration once; however, if the collegium reiterates, the government must comply. The constitutional problem in Oct 2025 was the collegium itself changing its recommendation citing government's request — not that the government asked. [S1]
11. Sources
- [S1] "If judges lose credibility, nothing will be left of judiciary: Justice Bhuyan" — The Hindu, January 25, 2026 (article excerpt provided as primary source; reporter: Krishnadas Rajagopal) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-01-25/th_international/articleGV6FG2S60-13232660.ece — (Tier 4 — Indian journalism; used as primary source per fallback rule)
Note: Web search results were unavailable due to domain access restrictions. This note is grounded in the article excerpt [S1] and well-established constitutional law (Articles 50, 124, 217, 222; Kesavananda Bharati 1973; Second Judges Case 1993; Third Judges Case 1998; NJAC judgment 2015) which is verifiable against Tier 1 sources such as indiacode.nic.in and legislative.gov.in.
Sources: - The Hindu — Justice Bhuyan article (Jan 25, 2026)