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


2. Why in the News


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

Doctrinal Basis

Collegium — Key Facts

Key Actors (Oct 2025 episode)


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Legal / Constitutional

Ethical / Governance

Historical

Administrative


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)

  1. 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."
  2. The collegium system has no statutory basis — it rests entirely on SC decisions in the Second Judges Case (1993) and Third Judges Case (1998).
  3. 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.
  4. The SC Collegium for SC appointments comprises CJI + 4 senior-most judges; for HC appointments, CJI + 2 senior-most SC judges.
  5. Basic Structure Doctrine was propounded in Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala (1973); judicial independence is recognised as part of this doctrine.
  6. 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]
  7. Justice Ujjal Bhuyan made his credibility remarks on January 25, 2026 (Republic Day eve). [S1]
  8. 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]
  9. Article 50 (DPSP) mandates separation of judiciary from executive in public services — distinct from constitutional courts governed by Articles 124/217.
  10. The First Judges Case (S.P. Gupta, 1981) held executive primacy in appointments; this was reversed by the Second Judges Case in 1993.
  11. Justice Bhuyan stated that "independence of the judiciary is a basic feature of our Constitution" and is "non-negotiable." [S1]
  12. 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

  1. "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.

  2. 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.

  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. Mixing up Articles 217 and 222: Article 217 = HC judge appointments; Article 222 = HC judge transfers. The Oct 2025 episode involves 222, not 217.

  4. 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]

  5. 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

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)