Nobody wants a "system of opaqueness" but in the name of transparency the judiciary cannot be destroyed, the Supreme Court said Thursday, while hearing the appeals of its registry against the Delhi High Court order that the CJI's office falls under the ambit of RTI Act.
A five-judge Constitution bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi reserved its verdict on three appeals filed in 2010 by Secretary General of the Supreme Court and the Central Public Information officer of the apex court against the High Court and the CIC's orders after lawyer Prashant Bhushan and Attorney General K K Venugopal concluded submissions.
"Nobody is for a system of opaqueness. Nobody wants to remain in the state of darkness or keep anybody in the state of darkness. The question is drawing a line. In the name of transparency, you can't destroy the institution," said the bench which also comprised Justices N V Ramana, D Y Chandrachud, Deepak Gupta and Sanjiv Khanna.
At the outset, Bhushan, appearing for RTI activist S C Agrawal, said though the apex court should not have been judging its own cause, it is hearing the appeals due to "doctrine of necessity".
The lawyer termed as "unfortunate" and "disturbing" the reluctance of judiciary in parting information under the Right To Information Act and asked, "Do judges inhabit different universe?"
It said it has brought about changes in the functioning of the collegium system and said now collegium members have started interacting with prospective candidates. I
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