Constitution of India, 1950:
Art. 32 read with Art. 217 - Petition for a writ of quo
warranto seeking to quash appointment of Judge of High
Court - Consultation process leading to appointment alleged
to have been vitiated for failure of consideration of a criminal
case pending against the incumbent - Held: 'Eligibility' of the
incumbent is not in issue - As regards 'lack of effective
consultation', a fact that is unknown to anyone cannot be said
to be not taken into consideration and the consultative
process cannot be faulted as incomplete for that reason - At
the time the incumbent was being considered for appointment
as a judge of High Court, he was unaware of any case being
pending in which he was named as an accused -It is not a
case of suppression of any material fact by the incumbent or
at his behest - From the record, it is evident that none of the
members of High Court or Supreme Court College was
aware of the fact - State Government and Central Government
were equally unaware of the fact - No case is made out for
issuing a writ of quo warranto quashing the appointment of
respondent No. 3 as the judge of High Court. Public Interest Litigation:
Writ petition filed in 2012 seeking to quash appointment
of a Judge of High Court made in 2000 - Held: Writ petition
is based on incorrect facts - It is not a sincere and honest
endeavour to correct something which the petitioners truly perceive to be wrong but the real intent of this petition is to
malign respondent No.3 - Writ petition is not only without
merit but also wanting in bona fides.
Respondent no. 3 was appointed as Judge of the High Court as per Notification dated 19.6.2000 and he
took oath on 27.6.2000. Two advocates of the said High
Court filed the instant writ petition seeking a writ in the
nature of quo warranto quashing the appointment of
respondent no. 3 as a Judge of the High Court and a writ
of mandamus commanding the State Bar Council to cancel his enrolment as an advocate. It was stated that
the consultation process leading to appointment of
respondent no. 3 was vitiated as both the High Court and
the Supreme Court Collegia as well as the Central
Government failed to consider that at the time of such appointment a criminal trial was pending in which
respondent no. 3 was an accused and a proclaimed
offender and even at the time of his enrolment as an
advocate he had concealed the factum of criminal
proceedings in his application for enrolment. The Attorney General submitted that the writ petition was not
maintainable and the same was only a camouflage as the
petitioners aimed at removal of the Judge who had been
in office for over 12 years, which would be violative of the
Constitutional scheme.