Supreme Court Notes
Introduction
- Supreme Court is the highest judicial authority in India.
- Also known as Guardian of the Constitution and Protector of Fundamental Rights.
- Established in 1950, succeeding the Federal Court of India (1937–1950).
- Articles 124 to 147 of the Constitution.
Composition
- Chief Justice of India (CJI) + other judges (as fixed by Parliament).
- Originally: 1 CJI + 7 judges
- Now (as per 2019 amendment): 1 CJI + 33 judges = 34 total
Appointment of Judges
- Appointed by the President
- Consultation with judges of SC & HCs (collegium system in practice)
Collegium System (Established by Judgments):
- Judges select judges.
- Headed by CJI + 4 senior-most SC judges.
Qualifications
- Citizen of India
-
Must have:
- Judge of HC for 5 years, or
- Advocate of HC for 10 years, or
- Eminent jurist (rarely used)
Tenure & Removal
Jurisdiction of Supreme Court
A. Original Jurisdiction (Art. 131)
-
Disputes between:
- Union and State(s)
- State(s) and State(s)
- Only SC can hear these.
B. Writ Jurisdiction (Art. 32)
- For enforcement of Fundamental Rights
- Known as Heart and Soul of the Constitution (B.R. Ambedkar)
- Note: SC only for Fundamental Rights, while HC (Art. 226) for FR + legal rights
C. Appellate Jurisdiction
- Civil, Criminal, and Constitutional matters
- From High Courts to SC
D. Advisory Jurisdiction (Art. 143)
- President can refer matters of public importance
- SC’s opinion is not binding
E. Review Jurisdiction (Art. 137)
- Can review its own judgments
F. Curative Petition
- Introduced in 2002 (Rupa Ashok Hurra case)
- Last remedy after review petition is dismissed
Independence of Supreme Court
- Security of tenure
- Fixed service conditions
- Prohibition on practice after retirement
- Powers to punish for contempt
- Separation from executive (Art. 50)
Court of Record (Art. 129)
- SC proceedings and judgments are recorded
- Has power to punish for contempt of court
Other Powers
- Judicial Review: Can declare laws unconstitutional
- Guardian of the Constitution
- Binding Precedent: All courts in India must follow SC decisions (Art. 141)
Key Articles
Quick Revision Points
- CJI and other judges are appointed by President
- SC judge retires at 65 years
- Impeachment requires special majority in both Houses
- SC is Court of Record (Art. 129)
- Writs under Art. 32 are for FR only
- Review power under Article 137
- Curative petition – last legal resort after review is rejected
- SC’s law is binding under Article 141