The government had earlier cleared the extension of Bombay High Court additional judge V L Achliya made by the collegium before it was scrapped on April 13 when the National Judicial Appointments Commission Act and an accompanying Constitutional Amendment Act were brought into force.
Since the members of the collegium who had recommended his name were the same, the government had approved Achliya's extension after the old system staged a comeback when the Supreme Court struck down the NJAC Act.
The additional judges from Calcutta High Court granted extension are Samapati Chatterjee, Sahidullah Munshi, Subrata Talukdar, Tapabrata Chakraborty, Arindam Sinha, Arijit Banerjee and Debangsu Basak. Their term has been extended for a period of three months with effect from October 30.
Additional judges from the Karnataka High Court granted three-month extension with effect from October 24 are Arakalagudu Venkataramaiah Chandrashekara, Rathnakala, Budihal Rudrappa Bhimappa, Pradeep Dattatraya Waingankar and Koratagere Narasimha Murthy Phaneendra.
Additional judges are appointed for a period of two years following which most of them are elevated as permanent judges.
There was no system in place between April 13 and October 16 on appointments to the Supreme Court and the 24 high courts. The NJAC Act was notified on April 13, but it was declared as unconstitutional by the apex court on October 16.
To overcome shortage of judges when the NJAC case was being heard by a Supreme Court Bench, government had sought permission of the apex court to give extension to additional judges in various high courts whose tenure of two years was coming to an end as an interim measure.
The Law Ministry had on October 18 sent files of 21 additional judges to the collegium whose terms are coming to an end by October 30 for its immediate consideration.
Now the collegium may meet in the coming days to decide on whether these additional judges should be elevated as permanent judges.
