CJI Gavai recommends Justice Surya Kant as his successor
Justice Surya Kant was born in a middle-class family on 10 February 1962, in Hisar district of Haryana.
PTI
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Justice Surya Kant was part of the bench that kept the colonial-era sedition law in abeyance (PTI)
New Delhi, 27 Oct
Chief Justice of India Bhushan Ramkrishna Gavai has
recommended to the Centre the name of Justice Surya Kant as the next CJI.
Justice Surya Kant, the second senior-most Supreme Court
judge after the incumbent CJI Gavai, is set to become the 53rd chief justice of
India on 24 November after CJI Gavai's retirement on 23 November.
CJI Gavai, who was sworn in on 14 May this year, recommended
to the Union law ministry to appoint Justice Surya Kant as the next CJI.
"Hon'ble the Chief Justice of India, Mr Justice Bhushan
Ramkrishna Gavai, recommends the name of Hon'ble Mr Justice Surya Kant, the
senior most Judge of the Supreme Court, as his successor to be the 53rd Chief
Justice of India," a press note from the top court said.
Justice Surya Kant, who was elevated as a judge of the
Supreme Court on 24 May, 2019, would have a tenure of nearly 15 months years as
the CJI. He is due to retire on 9 February, 2027.
The retirement age of Supreme Court judges is 65 years.
According to the memorandum of procedure, a set of
documents, which guide the appointment, transfer and elevation of Supreme Court
and high court judges, states that appointment to the office of the chief
justice of India should be the senior-most judge of the Supreme Court considered
fit to hold the office.
The Union law minister would, "at the appropriate
time", seek the recommendation of the outgoing CJI for the appointment of
his successor.
Conventionally, the letter is sent a month before the
incumbent CJI retires on attaining the age of 65 years.
Justice Surya Kant, was born in a middle-class family on 10 February,
1962, in Hisar district of Haryana.
Justice Surya Kant brings to the country's top judicial
office a wealth of experience spanning two decades on the bench, marked by
landmark verdicts on Abrogation of Article 370, free speech, democracy,
corruption, environment and gender equality.
Justice Surya Kant was part of the bench that kept the
colonial-era sedition law in abeyance, directing that no new FIRs be registered
under it until a government review.
In an order that underlined transparency in the poll
process, he nudged the Election Commission to disclose the details of 65 lakh
names excluded from the draft electoral rolls during the Special Intensive
Revision (SIR) in Bihar.
Justice Surya Kant is also credited with directing that
one-third of seats in bar associations, including the Supreme Court Bar
Association, be reserved for women.
He upheld the One Rank-One Pension (OROP) scheme for defence
forces, calling it constitutionally valid, and continues to hear petitions of
women officers in the armed forces seeking parity in permanent commission.
Justice Surya Kant was on the seven-judge bench that
overruled the 1967 Aligarh Muslim University judgment, opening the way for
reconsideration of the institution's minority status.
He was part of the bench that heard the Pegasus spyware case,
which appointed a panel of cyber experts to probe allegations of unlawful
surveillance, famously stating that the state cannot get a "free pass
under the guise of national security."
Justice Surya Kant was part of the bench that appointed a
five-member committee headed by former Supreme Court Justice Indu Malhotra to
probe the security breach during Prime Minister Narendra Modi's 2022 Punjab
visit, saying such matters required "a judicially trained mind."
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