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The Chief Justice of India birthday lottery (or if you only see one CJI-related infographic in the next 8 years, let it be this one)

Who will one day be Chief? (Graphic by: Ahmed Raza Khan, Mint)
Who will one day be Chief? (Graphic by: Ahmed Raza Khan, Mint)

Supreme Court judge Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud, who was elevated to the apex court on Friday from the Allahabad high court where he was the chief justice, was born on 11 November 1959.

That makes him 56 years, six months and a few days young, and young he is for a Supreme Court judge.

In judicial circles, your birthday is important.

For one, as in many other jobs too, it determines your retirement age.

Supreme Court judges all have to retire at age 65, which means that justice Chandrachud will sit on the apex court bench longer than most: until 10 November 2024.

This will also be fundamental to him being the chief justice of India (CJI) one day in an elaborate and complex system that has evolved by convention as much as not.

Also read: On SC's last day before long break, the 4 new judges hit the ground running with gusto

How it works

The Chief Justice of India is traditionally appointed by the outgoing Chief Justice of India on the day of his (or her) retirement.

By convention, the outgoing Chief Justice of India selects the most senior then-sitting Supreme Court judge.

Seniority at the apex court is determined not by age, but by:

1. The date a judge was appointed to the Supreme Court.

2. If two judges are elevated to the Supreme Court on the same day,

a) the one who was sworn in first as a judge would trump another;

b) if both were sworn in as judges on the same day, the one with more years of high court service would ‘win’ in the seniority stakes;

c) an appointment from the bench would ‘trump’ in seniority an appointee from the bar.

These tie-breakers aren’t just theoretical though—justice Ruma Pal was pipped to the Chief Justice of India’s post by justice Y.K. Sabharwal, who in 2000 was sworn in at the Supreme Court a few hours before her on the same day.

And justice A.S. Ahmadi became the Chief Justice of India in 1994 instead of justice Kuldip Singh, both appointed to the apex court on the same day in 1988, due to Singh having come from the bar, and Ahmadi therefore having been a judge for longer.

Therefore, barring early retirements, deaths, impeachments or anything else unforeseeable, the order of upcoming Chief Justices of India is basically set in stone.

Interestingly, these rules aren’t really written down anywhere but are a matter of judicial ‘convention’.

What will happen now?

When current Chief Justice of India T.S. Thakur (who became the Chief Justice of India on 3 December 2015) retires on 3 January 2017, he will be succeeded by

  • Justice J.S. Khehar, who will hold the Chief Justice of India’s office until 27 August 2017, at which point
  • Justice Dipak Misra will take over until 2 October 2018, followed by
  • Justice Ranjan Gogoi until 17 November 2019, followed by a longer term for
  • Justice Sharad Arvind Bobde until 23 April 2021; he will be succeeded by
  • Justice N.V. Ramana until 26 August 2022, after which there will be a micro-stint by
  • Justice U.U. Lalit until 8 November 2022, at which point the reign will start of
  • Justice Chandrachud, for just under two years, until 10 November 2024.

Many Supreme Court judges will not get a stab at CJI-ship, of course, through no fault of their own.

The other Supreme Court judges appointed with Chandrachud, for instance, will all have retired before their senior brother judge, Lalit, retires as Chief Justice of India on 8 November 2022: justice Ashok Bhushan will reach retirement on 4 July 2021, justice L. Nageswara Rao will retire on 1 September 2021, and justice A.M. Khanwilkar on 29 July 2022.

Also most likely skipped by the birthday lottery ladder (in order of seniority) will be justices Anil R. Dave, Jasti Chelameswar, Fakkir Mohamed Ibrahim Kalifulla, Madan Bhimarao Lokur, V. Gopala Gowda, Pinaki Chandra Ghose, Kurian Joseph, Arjan Kumar Sikri, Shiva Kirti Singh, Chockalingam Nagappan, R.K. Agrawal, Arun Mishra, Adarsh Kumar Goel, Rohinton Fali Nariman, Abhay Manohar Sapre, R. Banumathi, Prafulla Chandra Pant and Amitava Roy.

But let us wish them well, thank them and remember them.

Their position may never be as visible as that of the Chief Justice of India, it may be less glorious (if you call the often thankless task of administration and people management glorious) and they may make slightly less money than the Chief Justice of India (Rs.90,000 per month base salary, as opposed to the CJI’s Rs.1 lakh per month).

But their service to the country should be as welcome and as appreciated.

This article was first published in Mint. Mint’s association with LegallyIndia.com will bring you regular insight and analysis of major developments in law and the legal world.

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