- The Law
Commission has thrice - in
its 1st, 8th and 116th reports - called for such a service.
- The Supreme
Court first in 1991 and
then in the all-India judges
case (1992) had
endorsed the creation of an AIJS.
- In its 15th
report, the Parliamentary Standing Committee on law and justice too recommended for its
establishment and directed the Union Law Ministry to take immediate
steps.
- The first
National Judicial Pay Commission and the National Advisory Council to the Centre have also supported
the proposal.
- Over and above, Article 312 of the Constitution explicitly provides for the creation of a
national level judicial service.
What are the MERITS ?
- Primarily, the recruitment of judges right from the
entry level will be handled by an independent and impartial agency like
the UPSC through an open competition thereby ensuring fair selection of
incumbents.
- It would naturally help attract bright and capable young law
graduates to the judiciary, who
otherwise prefer immediate remunerative employment in the government and
the private sector.
- For the subordinate judicial officers it would ensure equitable service conditions
besides providing them with a wider field to probe their mettle. As
of now, the subordinate
judges are recruited from a pool of less successful lawyers eventually become judges in higher courts, as
established lawyers are rarely willing to give up their lucrative practice
to join the bench.
- In this scheme of things, the measure of uniformity in standards for selection will improve the quality of personnel in different
high courts, as about
one-third of judges come there on promotion from the subordinate
courts.
- Similarly, judges of the Supreme Court are drawn from
the respective high courts. In this process only persons of proven
competence will preside over the benches of superior courts, thereby minimizing the scope of partiality, arbitrariness
and aberrations in judicial selection.
- Simultaneously, the quality of dispensation of justice
will also improve considerably right from the top to the bottom, as it
essentially depends upon the quality of judges recruited.
- A district judge coming from a different linguistic
region will face a problem of language in assessing and tackling the
critical legal and other issues.
- Several states have used powers under CrPC
and CPC to declare that the local language would be used in lower courts
even for writing orders, a person say selected from Tamil Nadu may find it
difficult to hold proceedings in states like Uttar Pradesh and
Bihar.
- An all India service may hamper the career
progression of state judicial services officers.