New Delhi:The Supreme Court on Friday rejected the plea seeking copies of the agenda, of the decisions and of the resolution of a 2018 meeting of the Collegium. Raising an article published in the media of an interview given by a member of the Collegium, the petitioner has contended that some decisions were apparently taken. Some discussions might have taken place. The petitioner asked for the copies of agenda, decisions and resolution.
The SC said "whatever is discussed shall not be in public domain. Only final decision required to be uploaded. Reliance on articles, we do not want to comment on the same. The subsequent resolution was very clear."
The plea seeking to disclose details under the Right to Information (RTI) of a collegium meeting in which decisions were taken regarding the elevation of judges to the apex court. A bench headed by Justice M.R. Shah said, "Only a resolution drawn and signed by all the collegium members can be said to be the final decision..."
The bench added that "it is to be noted that final decision is taken by the collegium only after due consultation and during the consultation some decision takes place, but no final decision is taken and no resolution is drawn, it cannot be said that a final decision is taken by the collegium". "Collegium is a multi-member body whose decision embodies into the resolution that may be formally drawn up and signed...," said the bench, adding that only the final decision was required to be uploaded on the Supreme Court's website.
"The actual resolution passed by the SCC can only be said to be the final decision and till then it can only be said to be a tentative decison....During the consultation if some decision takes place but no final decision is taken and no final resolution is drawn, it cannot be said that any final decision taken by the SCC," ruled the court.
It further added that whatever was discussed in the collegium was not required to be put out in the public domain, that too under the RTI Act. The top court judgment came on a petition by activist Anjali Bhardwaj against the Delhi High Court order, which dismissed her plea seeking apex court collegium's agenda in connection with a meeting held on December 12, 2018 when certain decisions were purportedly taken on the elevation of some judges to the apex court. On December 2, the Supreme Court, taking a dig at retired judges, said,
"It has become a fashion for them to comment about earlier decisions taken by the collegium, and the existing collegium system should not be derailed on the basis of statements of some busybody". The apex court emphasized that the collegium was the most transparent institution. The bench said that it did not want to comment on what a few former apex court judges, who were once members of the Supreme Court Collegium, were now saying about the mechanism. Advocate Prashant Bhushan, representing the petitioner RTI activist Anjali Bhardwaj, said Justice Madan Lokur, former apex court judge, who was part of the Supreme Court Collegium in 2018, had said that one of the decisions, should have been uploaded on the Supreme Court website.
The bench said, "Nowadays, it has become a fashion to comment upon earlier decisions (of the collegium) made when they (former judges) were part of the collegium". It further added, "We don't want to say anything on their comments".The collegium, which was headed by then CJI Ranjan Gogoi and comprising four senior-most judges Justices Lokur, AK Sikri, SA Bobde, and NV Ramana took certain decisions regarding the appointment of judges. However, details were not uploaded on the website. In January 2019, the collegium revisited the decisions "in the light of additional materials".