CJI Recusal Debate: Challenges of Uncodified Judicial Ethics in India

CJI Recusal Debate
Important questions for UPSC Pre/ Mains/ Interview:

  1. What is the doctrine of judicial recusal and its basis in natural justice?
  2. How has the standard of recusal evolved in India (key judgments)?
  3. Who decides recusal in India and what are the key limitations?
  4. What did the NJAC case establish regarding recusal principles?
  5. Was the present CJI recusal justified in light of NJAC precedent?
  6. What are the issues with the CJI’s direction on bench composition?
  7. Why is lack of codified recusal law a serious institutional concern?
  8. Why does the present CEC case make reform urgent?
  9. What are the challenges and way forward?

Context

  1. CJI Surya Kant recused from hearing petitions on the CEC Appointment Act, 2023 due to possible conflict of interest.
  2. Directed that the case be heard by judges not in line to become CJI.
  3. Earlier, CJI Sanjiv Khanna also recused from the same case.
  4. This has raised concerns about judicial ethics, consistency, and absence of clear rules.

Q1. What is the doctrine of judicial recusal and its basis in natural justice?

  1. Judicial recusal means a judge withdraws from a case due to bias or conflict of interest.
  2. It is based on the principle “Nemo judex in causa sua”, meaning no one should be a judge in their own case.
  3. The aim is to ensure that justice is fair and appears fair to the public.

Q2. How has the standard of recusal evolved in India (key judgments)?

  1. In Manak Lal v. Dr. Prem Chand 1957, recusal was required in cases of direct financial interest.
  2. In Ranjit Thakur v. Union of India 1987, the Court expanded the rule to reasonable apprehension of bias.
  3. Thus, the standard shifted from actual bias to perceived bias.

Q3. Who decides recusal in India and what are the key limitations?

  1. The decision to recuse is based entirely on the judge’s own conscience.
  2. No party can force a judge to step aside.
  3. There is no law or codified procedure governing recusal.
  4. There is no mechanism to review recusal decisions.

Q4. What did the NJAC case establish regarding recusal principles?

  1. In Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association v. Union of India 2015, recusal was refused despite institutional interest.
  2. Two key principles were established:
    1. Universal conflict principle → If all judges are similarly affected, none should recuse individually.
    2. Doctrine of Necessity → Court must hear the case if no alternative forum exists.
  3. Justice Kurian Joseph stated that judges must give reasons for recusal (transparency duty).

Q5. Was the present CJI recusal justified in light of NJAC precedent?

  1. Under the seniority rule, every Supreme Court judge can become future CJI.
  2. Therefore, the conflict of interest exists for all judges (universal conflict).
  3. According to NJAC principles, such situations require Doctrine of Necessity, not recusal.
  4. Hence, the present recusal appears inconsistent with earlier precedent.

Q6. What are the issues with the CJI’s direction on bench composition?

  1. The CJI directed that judges not in line to become CJI should hear the case.
  2. Recusal is a personal decision, and cannot be imposed on other judges.
  3. If the CJI has recused, it raises a contradiction on how he can still decide the bench as Master of the Roster.
  4. This creates concerns about judicial propriety and institutional consistency.

Q7. Why is lack of codified recusal law a serious institutional concern?

  1. India has:
    1. No law governing recusal
    2. No binding code of conduct
    3. No review mechanism
  2. Recusal depends entirely on individual discretion.
  3. The present case shows institutional confusion (multiple recusals).

Q8. Why does the present CEC case make reform urgent?

  1. Two successive CJIs have recused themselves from the same case.
  2. The issue relates to appointment of Election Commissioners, a key constitutional matter.
  3. The bench is being formed through informal directions instead of clear rules.
  4. This reflects a deeper institutional gap in judicial functioning.

Q9. What are the challenges and way forward?

Challenges Way Forward
No codified recusal law Enact clear legal framework for recusal
Over-reliance on judge’s discretion Introduce objective standards
Lack of transparency Make reasoned recusal mandatory
No review mechanism Create limited oversight mechanism
Inconsistency in decisions Follow established precedents like NJAC
Conflict in bench formation Clearly separate recusal and roster powers

Conclusion

Judicial recusal in India currently lacks clarity and consistency, making it dependent on individual discretion. A codified and transparent framework is essential to ensure fairness, accountability, and institutional credibility.