Close Menu
LawFilesLawFiles

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    NUSRL Ranchi Invites Submissions for “Kautilya’s Take” Policy Blog: A Valuable Opportunity for Law Students and Young Researchers

    June 1, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
    Monday, June 1
    LawFilesLawFiles
    Facebook X (Twitter)
    • Home
      • Who We Are
      • Our Mission
      • Advisory board
      • Contact US
    • Supreme Court
    • High Courts
      • Gujarat High Court
      • Jharkhand High Court
      • Rajasthan High Court
      • Karnataka High Court
      • Andhra Pradesh High Court
      • Allahabad High Court
      • Himachal Pradesh High Court
      • Chhattisgarh High Court
      • Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh High Court
      • Kerala High Court
      • Punjab and Haryana High Court
      • Patna High Court
      • Madhya Pradesh High Court
      • Madras High Court
      • Bombay High Court
      • Orissa High Court
      • Calcutta High Court
      • Meghalaya High Court
      • Delhi High Court
      • Manipur High Court
      • Gauhati High Court
    • Corporate
    • Taxation Laws
      • Income Tax
      • GST
      • Customs & Excise
    • Global Affairs
    • Articles
      • Sitting Judge’s’ Views
      • Senior Advocate
      • Policy Analysis
      • Tax Expert
    • PILS
      • Free/Affordable Legal Aid
      • PIL Cell
      • Law student Volunteer Cell (research & Drafting)
      • NGO & Legal services Authority Tie-ups
      • Online Legal Formats
      • Online Legal Help Form
    Subscribe Premium
    LawFilesLawFiles
    Home»Tribunals»India’s Tribunal Crisis: Supreme Court Questions Who Guards the Guardians
    Tribunals

    India’s Tribunal Crisis: Supreme Court Questions Who Guards the Guardians

    Hemalatha MahurBy Hemalatha MahurMarch 10, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link WhatsApp

    India’s quasi-judicial framework came under intense scrutiny this week as the Supreme Court trained its lens on a troubling institutional blind spot — the near-complete absence of accountability mechanisms governing the heads and members of the country’s statutory tribunals. A bench comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant and Justice Joymalya Bagchi did not mince words while deliberating on petitions challenging provisions of the Tribunals Reforms Act, 2021, raising a question that strikes at the heart of judicial governance: if tribunal members answer neither to the government nor to the judiciary, who exactly are they answerable to?

    The Court’s discomfort was rooted in observable ground realities. Tribunal members, it noted, were continuing in their positions even when their performance fell well below acceptable standards — some allegedly incapable of independently authoring judgments or resolving cases within reasonable timeframes. Yet, no corrective mechanism existed to address such deficiencies. In the Court’s assessment, this represented a structural failure that the legal framework had so far failed to remedy.

    The constitutional tension underlying this issue is delicate. Placing tribunals squarely under governmental supervision risks turning them into instruments of executive convenience, undermining their independence as adjudicatory bodies. Conversely, bringing them fully within the judicial fold raises separation of powers concerns. This institutional no-man’s land, the bench observed, has allowed underperformance to fester without consequence — a situation untenable for bodies entrusted with dispensing justice to thousands of litigants.

    Compounding the structural concern is the practice of allowing administrative members — those without a judicial background — to preside over tribunals as acting heads. Critics and bar associations have long argued that this arrangement dilutes the judicial character that tribunals are constitutionally obligated to preserve. The bench acknowledged this concern as one requiring urgent legislative attention.

    Attorney General R. Venkataramani, representing the Union of India, sought to assure the Court that the government was not indifferent to these concerns. He disclosed that the Centre was actively working on revising the Tribunals Reforms Act, 2021 — a statute already under judicial challenge for allegedly falling short of the Supreme Court’s own binding guidelines, particularly on matters of minimum tenure and service conditions. He indicated that the proposed amendments would be finalized within approximately six months and committed that no sitting member would be asked to vacate their position upon completion of their current term in the interim, thereby preventing operational disruptions.

    The bench responded by directing petitioner bar associations — who have been vocal critics of the existing framework — to channel their institutional expertise productively by submitting concrete recommendations on how accountability of tribunal members could be effectively and constitutionally structured. The matter has been scheduled for review in May 2026, by which point the Court expects the government to demonstrate tangible legislative headway.

    At its core, this episode reflects a broader unresolved question in Indian administrative law: how does a democracy build expert judicial bodies that are simultaneously independent, accountable, and insulated from political influence? The answer, it appears, remains a work in progress.

    But Who Judges The Tribunals?
    Share. WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email
    Hemalatha Mahur

    Related Posts

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    Supreme Court Rejects Demolition of Navi Mumbai Mall, Signals Shift from Punitive Urban Governance to Proportional Justice

    June 1, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    Wrongful Claim Rejection Amounts to Deficiency in Service: Delhi Consumer Commission Holds Star Health Liable

    March 16, 202667 Views

    Bombay High Court Quashes POCSO Case, Directs Accused to Fund MacBook for Victim’s Education

    February 28, 202650 Views

    Siyahat Meri Syahi Se: A Journey That Transforms Travel into Thought and Entrepreneurship

    March 18, 202643 Views

    Banking Negligence and Consumer Accountability: Supreme Court Reinforces Duty of Care in Cheque Handling

    April 16, 202635 Views
    Don't Miss

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    By Anvita DwivediJune 1, 2026

    In a significant ruling under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC), the Supreme Court…

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    NUSRL Ranchi Invites Submissions for “Kautilya’s Take” Policy Blog: A Valuable Opportunity for Law Students and Young Researchers

    June 1, 2026

    Allahabad High Court’s Intervention in Conversion Plea Rekindles Debate on Religious Freedom, Administrative Power, and UP’s Anti-Conversion Law

    June 1, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Top Posts

    Wrongful Claim Rejection Amounts to Deficiency in Service: Delhi Consumer Commission Holds Star Health Liable

    March 16, 202667 Views

    Bombay High Court Quashes POCSO Case, Directs Accused to Fund MacBook for Victim’s Education

    February 28, 202650 Views

    Siyahat Meri Syahi Se: A Journey That Transforms Travel into Thought and Entrepreneurship

    March 18, 202643 Views
    Don't Miss

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    By Anvita DwivediJune 1, 2026

    In a significant ruling under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (IBC), the Supreme Court…

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    NUSRL Ranchi Invites Submissions for “Kautilya’s Take” Policy Blog: A Valuable Opportunity for Law Students and Young Researchers

    June 1, 2026

    Allahabad High Court’s Intervention in Conversion Plea Rekindles Debate on Religious Freedom, Administrative Power, and UP’s Anti-Conversion Law

    June 1, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • Instagram
    Top Trending
    About Us
    About Us

    LawFiles.in is a comprehensive legal news platform delivering real-time updates from the Supreme Court, High Courts, Tribunals, Corporate and Tax law, Regulators, Politics, Crime, Consumer cases, and Global Affairs.

    Email Us: lawfilesoffical@gmail.com
    Contact: +91 8800026066

    Contact Us:
    India International Centre
    40, Max Mueller Marg
    Lodhi Estate, New Delhi-110003

    Facebook X (Twitter)
    Our Picks

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    Supreme Court Reaffirms Finality of CoC-Approved Resolution Plans: Why This Judgment Matters for Future Insolvency Professionals

    June 1, 2026

    NUSRL Ranchi Invites Submissions for “Kautilya’s Take” Policy Blog: A Valuable Opportunity for Law Students and Young Researchers

    June 1, 2026

    Allahabad High Court’s Intervention in Conversion Plea Rekindles Debate on Religious Freedom, Administrative Power, and UP’s Anti-Conversion Law

    June 1, 2026

    Supreme Court Rejects Demolition of Navi Mumbai Mall, Signals Shift from Punitive Urban Governance to Proportional Justice

    June 1, 2026
    Most Popular

    ED Can Arrest Even If FIRs Are Added to ECIR Later: Punjab & Haryana High Court

    January 30, 20260 Views

    Custodial Death and State Liability : A Critical Analysis of the Allahabad High Court’s ₹10 Lakh Compensation Judgment

    February 22, 20260 Views

    Gujarat High Court Commutes Death Sentence in Child Rape-Murder; Reinforces Capital Sentencing Standards in Light of MP High Court Precedent

    February 23, 20260 Views

    Delhi Family Court Rules Against Enforcement of Australian Property Orders in Shikhar Dhawan Matrimonial Dispute

    February 25, 20260 Views

    Supreme Court Stays Criminal Proceedings Against Jharkhand CM Hemant Soren Over Alleged ED Summons Defiance

    February 25, 20260 Views
    © 2026 LawFiles. Owned by Varta24 Media.
    • Articles
    • Careers
    • Corporate
    • Global Affairs
    • Law Firms & Lawyers
    • PILS
    • Regulatory

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.