XXX v. Union of India (2025): Supreme Court Confirms Legal Sanction of the “In-House” Judicial Discipline Procedure and the Chief Justice of India’s Reporting Power

XXX v. Union of India (2025): Supreme Court Confirms Legal Sanction of the “In-House” Judicial Discipline Procedure and the Chief Justice of India’s Reporting Power

1. Introduction

On 7 August 2025 the Supreme Court of India delivered a reportable judgment in XXX v. Union of India & Ors. (2025 INSC 943), dismissing a writ petition filed by a sitting High Court judge (“the Petitioner”). The Judge questioned the constitutionality of two clauses—para 5(b) and para 7(ii)—of the “In-House Procedure” adopted by the Full Court of the Supreme Court on 15 December 1999 for dealing with complaints of judicial misconduct. He also sought to quash the adverse report submitted against him and the Chief Justice of India’s (CJI’s) decision to transmit that report, with a recommendation, to the President and the Prime Minister.

The central controversy, therefore, was whether the judiciary’s internal disciplinary mechanism is legally valid and whether the CJI, after receiving an adverse In-House report, can advise the Executive Branch that the misconduct revealed may warrant impeachment proceedings.

2. Case Background

  • Incident: A fire in the Petitioner’s official bungalow led to discovery of burnt currency notes, triggering suspicion of corruption.
  • Immediate response: The CJI invoked the 1999 In-House Procedure, constituted a three-member Committee, advised the Delhi High Court Chief Justice to withdraw judicial work from the Petitioner and placed certain photographs/video footage in the public domain.
  • Committee report (3 May 2025): Found “sufficient substance” in the allegations; recommended initiation of removal proceedings.
  • CJI’s letter (4 & 8 May 2025): Offered the Petitioner the option to resign or seek voluntary retirement; later transmitted the report to the President/Prime Minister.
  • Writ Petition (17 July 2025): Challenged the impugned clauses, the Committee’s report, and the CJI’s intimation, alleging violation of Articles 14, 21, 124, and 218 of the Constitution.

3. Summary of the Judgment

The two-judge Bench (Dipankar Datta and Augustine George Masih, JJ.) held:

  1. The petition was liable to be dismissed because of the Petitioner’s conduct—he participated in the inquiry without demur and raised the constitutional challenge only after an adverse report was issued; yet the Court still examined the merits.
  2. The In-House Procedure, including para 5(b) (permitting the Committee to opine that misconduct is serious enough to warrant removal) and para 7(ii) (requiring the CJI to forward the report/advice to the President and the Prime Minister), is constitutional. It has legal sanction derived from (a) Article 141 precedent (C. Ravichandran Iyer, 1995), and (b) Section 3(2) of the Judges (Protection) Act 1985.
  3. The In-House inquiry is merely preliminary and fact-finding; it does not usurp Parliament’s exclusive power to remove a judge under Articles 124(4)&(5), 217, and 218.
  4. The CJI is not a mere “post-office”; he can transmit the report with his views. Such communication does not breach separation of powers because Parliament remains free to accept, ignore, or dismiss the advice.
  5. Uploading photographs/video footage was improper but, as the Petitioner never objected earlier, it does not vitiate the inquiry.
  6. The Judges (Protection) Act 1985 does not bar disciplinary action under the In-House mechanism; rather, Section 3(2) expressly enables the Supreme Court to take “otherwise” action.

4. Analysis

4.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

  1. C. Ravichandran Iyer v. A.M. Bhattacharjee (1995) 5 SCC 457
    Recognised a “yawning gap” between impeachment and lesser misconduct, urged self-regulation, and sowed the seeds for the 1999 In-House Procedure. The present Bench treats this decision as the chief legal foundation; by virtue of Article 141 it gives the Procedure binding force.
  2. Indira Jaising v. Supreme Court Of India (2003) 5 SCC 494
    Held that an In-House report is confidential and preliminary. The petitioner relied on a stray sentence that the CJI’s power was “moral/ethical”, but the present Court clarifies that subsequent judicial adoption converts it into legal authority.
  3. Sub-Committee on Judicial Accountability v. Union of India (1991) 4 SCC 699
    Concerned lapsing of impeachment motions; petitioner invoked para 111 to argue courts cannot restrain a judge during inquiry. The Bench distinguishes that case: it preceded the In-House Procedure and did not forbid internal fact-finding.
  4. Additional District & Sessions Judge “X” v. Registrar General, M.P. (2015) 4 SCC 91
    Affirmed the validity of the Procedure, called it confidential but enforceable, and directed its publication on the Supreme Court website. The present judgment leans heavily on its reasoned approval.
  5. P.D. Dinakaran (1) v. Judges Inquiry Committee (2011) 8 SCC 380
    Emphasised that a judge who participates in proceedings without timely objection is deemed to have waived procedural complaints. Used here to criticise petitioner’s delay.

4.2 Court’s Legal Reasoning

  • Source of Power: The Court reads Section 3(2) of the Judges (Protection) Act and Article 141 together—any law “for the time being in force” includes judge-made law. Hence the 1999 administrative resolution, backed by C. Ravichandran Iyer, has statutory flavour.
  • Nature of Inquiry: It is preliminary—a fact-finding mechanism similar to a “pre-show-cause enquiry” in service law. It neither violates natural justice (the judge is heard) nor determines guilt; any impeachment will still trigger a full-fledged inquiry under the Judges (Inquiry) Act 1968.
  • Role of the CJI: As primus inter pares and head of the judiciary, the CJI has a duty to safeguard institutional integrity. Forwarding the report with observations is permissible and even necessary; it does not prejudice Parliament because (a) the communication is private to the constitutional functionaries, and (b) MPs decide independently whether to move a motion.
  • Separation of Powers: The In-House Procedure does not encroach upon legislative functions. Instead it fills a constitutional vacuum: intermediate misconduct that falls short of the impeachment threshold.
  • Waiver & Conduct: Constitutional rights cannot be waived, but litigants must act bona fide. The petitioner’s silence while the inquiry proceeded and until an adverse outcome was “tardy” and “acquiescent”, a discretionary ground to refuse relief.
  • Confidentiality vs. Transparency: Uploading evidence was unnecessary and contrary to Indira Jaising, but cured by petitioner’s own acquiescence and did not invalidate the process.

4.3 Potential Impact

  1. Reinforced Accountability Framework: The judgment settles a lingering constitutional doubt: the In-House Procedure is here to stay and has binding legal force. Future challenges on similar grounds are unlikely to succeed.
  2. Expanded CJI Authority (Yet Constrained): The CJI’s discretion to forward an adverse report is upheld, but the Bench reminds future holders of the office to scrupulously follow the Procedure and maintain confidentiality (no public “leaks”).
  3. Waiver Doctrine for Judges: Judges under probe must raise procedural objections before submitting to jurisdiction; delay will be fatal. This will likely encourage proactive filings at early stages.
  4. Clarification of Judges (Protection) Act: Section 3(2)’s word “otherwise” now judicially interpreted to include In-House inquiries. Tribunals and High Courts can cite this interpretation when handling objections based on the Act.
  5. Parliamentary Removal Motions: The judgment recognises the supremacy of Parliament and anticipates that not every adverse In-House report will necessarily culminate in impeachment, preserving legislative discretion.

5. Complex Concepts Simplified

In-House Procedure (1999)
An internal protocol of the higher judiciary for (i) screening complaints against Supreme Court/High Court judges, (ii) appointing a 3-member committee, and (iii) deciding next steps: closure, advice, or forwarding for possible impeachment.
Preliminary vs. Formal Inquiry
Preliminary inquiry is fact-finding, flexible, and guided by natural justice (no cross-examination). Formal impeachment inquiry under the 1968 Act is quasi-judicial, with strict rules of evidence and cross-examination.
Judges (Protection) Act 1985 – Section 3(2)
Shields judges from civil/criminal suits for official acts (sub-s. 1) but allows authorised bodies (including the Supreme Court) to take “civil, criminal, departmental or otherwise” action, thereby enabling the In-House process.
Separation of Powers
The doctrine that legislative, executive and judicial powers are vested in distinct organs. The Court clarifies that internal discipline by the judiciary does not impinge on Parliament’s impeachment mandate.
Waiver and Acquiescence
A litigant’s delay or silence may not waive a fundamental right, but courts can deny discretionary relief if conduct is inequitable.

6. Conclusion

XXX v. Union of India is now the definitive pronouncement on the legal validity and operational contours of the In-House Judicial Discipline Procedure. The Supreme Court has:

  • Affirmed that the Procedure has binding legal status, springing from Article 141 precedents and fitting comfortably within Section 3(2) of the Judges (Protection) Act.
  • Upheld the CJI’s authority to communicate adverse findings to the President and Prime Minister without violating separation of powers.
  • Clarified that the Procedure is preliminary, confidential and non-punitive, complementing—not competing with—Parliament’s exclusive impeachment role.
  • Signalled that judges must be vigilant in asserting procedural objections; mere participation in an inquiry may bar later challenges.
  • Expressed caution about public disclosure of evidence, balancing transparency with the need to protect judicial reputation until due process is complete.

In the broader constitutional landscape, the decision strengthens public confidence by demonstrating that the higher judiciary possesses an internal, legally sound mechanism to police its own ranks while still respecting the supremacy of Parliament in matters of removal. It thus harmonises judicial independence with judicial accountability—reinforcing both pillars on which the legitimacy of the institution ultimately rests.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Supreme Court Of India

Judge(s)

HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE DIPANKAR DATTA HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AUGUSTINE GEORGE MASIH

Advocates

VAIBHAV NITI

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