Vikram Nath
Vikram Nath (born 24 September 1962) is an Indian jurist and sitting judge of the Supreme Court of India.[1] Enrolled as an advocate in 1987 after graduating in law from the University of Lucknow, he practiced for 17 years at the Allahabad High Court before his elevation as an additional judge there in 2004.[2] Nath became a permanent judge of the Allahabad High Court in 2006, was transferred to the Karnataka High Court in 2014, and served as Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court from 2019 until his appointment to the Supreme Court in 2021.[1] Hailing from a fourth-generation family of lawyers, he pioneered the live streaming of high court proceedings on YouTube during his tenure as Chief Justice of Gujarat, marking a first for Indian high courts.[3][4]Early life and education
Family background and upbringing
Vikram Nath was born on 24 September 1962 into a middle-class family in Kaushambi district, Uttar Pradesh.[5] He grew up in a household steeped in legal tradition, as the fourth generation of his family to enter the profession.[6] His grandfather commenced practice as a vakil circa 1900, initiating a 125-year lineage in law that his father, an eminent lawyer, upheld.[7] This paternal heritage profoundly shaped Nath's early exposure to legal principles and advocacy, fostering an environment where discussions of jurisprudence and courtroom ethics were commonplace.[6] Nath's upbringing in rural Uttar Pradesh emphasized discipline and intellectual rigor, reflective of his family's commitment to public service through law rather than commercial pursuits.[8] Despite the modest socioeconomic circumstances, the household prioritized education and ethical practice, steering him away from alternative careers and toward emulating his forebears' dedication to the bar.[6] This foundational immersion instilled a grounded perspective on the legal system's role in upholding justice, influencing his subsequent professional trajectory in Allahabad's legal circles.[5]Academic qualifications
Vikram Nath completed his undergraduate degree in science from the University of Lucknow in 1983.[9][4] He then pursued legal education at the same institution, earning a Bachelor of Laws (LL.B.) in 1986.[9][10] No further advanced degrees or specialized academic certifications are documented in his professional biography.[2]Legal practice
Enrollment and professional focus
Vikram Nath enrolled as an advocate with the Bar Council of Uttar Pradesh on 30 March 1987.[1][11] He commenced his legal practice thereafter at the Allahabad High Court, where he appeared in various matters over the subsequent years.[9][10] Nath's professional focus during his 17 years at the bar centered on litigation before the Allahabad High Court, building a practice grounded in courtroom advocacy until his elevation as an Additional Judge on 24 September 2004.[11][9] This tenure established his reputation in high court proceedings, emphasizing rigorous preparation and persistence in legal representation, as later reflected in his advice to young lawyers on foundational habits of advocacy.[12]Key areas of practice
Vikram Nath enrolled as an advocate with the Bar Council of Uttar Pradesh on 30 March 1987 and practiced before the Allahabad High Court for 17 years.[1] His professional focus encompassed civil litigation and constitutional law, reflecting the typical writ jurisdiction and appellate work handled at the high court level in Uttar Pradesh. This period involved appearing in diverse cases under Article 226 of the Constitution, addressing issues such as individual rights, administrative actions, and property disputes, though specific client representations prior to elevation remain less documented in public records.[10] As part of a fourth-generation legal family, Nath's practice benefited from established networks at the Allahabad Bar, enabling handling of complex constitutional challenges and civil suits that often intersected with public policy and governance matters.[13] His elevation to the bench in 2004 followed a designation trajectory common for advocates with sustained courtroom experience in these domains, underscoring a reputation built on rigorous argumentation in high-stakes hearings.[2]Judicial career
Appointment to Allahabad High Court
Vikram Nath was appointed as an Additional Judge of the Allahabad High Court on 24 September 2004, following 17 years of practice as an advocate at the same court after his enrollment with the Bar Council on 30 March 1987.[1][14] This elevation occurred under the constitutional process for High Court judicial appointments in India, where the President acts on the advice of the Supreme Court collegium, comprising senior judges who assess candidates based on merit, integrity, and legal acumen demonstrated in practice.[2] As an Additional Judge, Nath served a probationary period of up to two years, during which his performance was evaluated for confirmation as a permanent judge.[14] His tenure in this initial role focused on civil, criminal, and constitutional matters, building on his prior expertise in litigation at the Allahabad High Court. On 27 February 2006, he took oath as a permanent Judge, confirming his suitability based on judicial output and collegium review.[1][14] The appointment reflected standard criteria for judicial elevation from the bar, emphasizing seniority at the bar (over 10 years required under Article 217 of the Constitution) and recommendations from the Chief Justice of the High Court and the collegium, without noted irregularities or disputes in Nath's case.[10] By this point, the Allahabad High Court, one of India's largest by caseload, had appointed several advocates from its bar to address judicial vacancies, with Nath's selection aligning with efforts to bolster bench strength amid rising pendency.[4]Transfer and role in Gujarat High Court
Justice Vikram Nath, serving as a permanent judge of the Allahabad High Court since 2006, was appointed Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court by the President of India, effective 10 September 2019.[1][15] This transfer followed a Supreme Court Collegium recommendation on 22 August 2019, after the government had sought reconsideration of an earlier proposal, prompting the Chief Justice of India to request specific reasons for the objection on 8 July 2019.[9][16] The appointment addressed a vacancy persisting since November 2018, following the superannuation of Justice R. Subhash Reddy.[2] He was sworn in on 11 September 2019 by Gujarat Governor Acharya Devvrat at Raj Bhavan in Gandhinagar.[17] In this capacity, Justice Nath presided over constitutional benches, civil and criminal appeals, and writ petitions involving state-specific issues such as land acquisition disputes, environmental regulations, and public administration challenges in Gujarat.[18] His judicial role emphasized procedural efficiency and substantive review, aligning with his prior experience in high-volume litigation at the Allahabad High Court, while also involving oversight of the court's 52-branch circuit house network across the state.[19]Tenure as Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court
Justice Vikram Nath was appointed as the Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court by the President of India, effective from 10 September 2019, following a recommendation by the Supreme Court Collegium on 22 August 2019.[18][15] He assumed office on the same day, addressing a vacancy that had persisted since November 2018.[2] His tenure, lasting until 30 August 2021, spanned approximately two years and coincided with the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in India.[15] During his leadership, Nath pioneered virtual court proceedings by becoming the first Chief Justice of any Indian High Court to livestream hearings on YouTube, commencing in 2020 to ensure continuity of justice amid pandemic-induced lockdowns.[10] This initiative facilitated public access to judicial processes and supported remote adjudication, aligning with broader e-court adaptations across the judiciary. Nath relinquished charge as Chief Justice on 27 August 2021, consequent to his appointment as a Judge of the Supreme Court of India, with formal elevation occurring on 31 August 2021.[20][1]Elevation to Supreme Court of India
Justice Vikram Nath, serving as Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court since 10 September 2019, was recommended for elevation to the Supreme Court of India by the Supreme Court Collegium on 17 August 2021.[21][2] The Collegium, headed by Chief Justice N. V. Ramana, included Justices U. U. Lalit, A. M. Khanwilkar, D. Y. Chandrachud, and Surya Kant, and proposed nine judges in total to fill vacancies arising from retirements and expansions.[22] Nath's recommendation highlighted his over 16 years of judicial service at the Allahabad and Gujarat High Courts, emphasizing his experience in diverse benches and administrative roles.[23] The Union Government cleared the recommendations without delay, and President Ram Nath Kovind appointed Justice Nath under Article 124 of the Constitution on 27 August 2021.[20] He was sworn in as a Supreme Court judge on 31 August 2021 by Chief Justice Ramana, marking the first such swearing-in ceremony for multiple judges post the batch recommendation.[24][1] At elevation, Nath was the senior-most Chief Justice among eligible candidates, positioning him third in seniority for future Chief Justice of India succession, with a projected tenure until retirement on 24 September 2027.[23] This appointment adhered to the seniority convention in judicial elevations, prioritizing High Court Chief Justices with substantial service records.[25] The elevation process underscored the Collegium system's role in maintaining judicial independence, with Nath's selection reflecting empirical assessment of merit over regional or other quotas, despite ongoing debates on transparency in recommendations.[22] No objections were raised against his appointment by the government or intelligence inputs, facilitating swift clearance.[26] Justice Nath's transition from Gujarat High Court, where he relinquished charge on 30 August 2021, integrated his prior expertise in constitutional and civil matters into the apex court's docket.[20]Notable judgments
Stray dogs and public safety rulings
In August 2025, a three-judge Supreme Court bench headed by Justice Vikram Nath addressed the escalating public safety threats posed by stray dogs across India, particularly in urban areas like Delhi-NCR, where incidents of attacks on humans, including children, and rabies transmission have surged. The bench took up the matter following a single-judge order on August 11 directing the removal of all stray dogs from Delhi-NCR and their relocation to dog pounds or shelters without release, which sparked protests from animal welfare advocates. On August 22, Justice Nath's bench stayed that directive, deeming a blanket ban on releasing sterilized and vaccinated dogs "too harsh" and inconsistent with the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2023 (ABC Rules), which mandate capture, sterilization, vaccination against rabies, and return to the original area unless the dog is vicious or the locality unsuitable for relocation.[27][28] The ruling emphasized strict implementation of ABC Rules to curb population growth while prioritizing human safety, allowing euthanasia or permanent relocation only for aggressive strays responsible for attacks, and prohibiting feeding of dogs on public roads or streets to prevent congregation and human-animal conflicts; instead, designated feeding zones were ordered in non-residential areas. Justice Nath's bench invoked Rule 11(9) of the ABC Rules to clarify that treated dogs must generally be released back, but states could explore humane relocation options for problematic ones, warning against any hindrance to enforcement. This balanced approach countered arguments from animal rights groups favoring no-cull policies, underscoring that unchecked stray populations—estimated at over 30 million nationwide—contribute to thousands of annual bites and fatalities, with data from the National Rabies Control Programme reporting around 20,000 human deaths yearly from rabies linked to dog bites.[29][28] On October 26, 2025, the same bench (Justices Vikram Nath, Sandeep Mehta, and N.V. Anjaria) summoned chief secretaries of all states and union territories—except West Bengal and Telangana, which had complied—for failing to file action-taken reports and affidavits on ABC Rules adherence, expressing dismay that ongoing attacks were portraying India negatively internationally and highlighting "cruelty to humans" from state inaction. Justice Nath remarked that continuous incidents, including maulings reported in media and petitions, undermined public safety, urging dedicated municipal resources for sterilization drives targeting at least 70-80% of strays per locality for effective control, as partial measures fail to reduce numbers due to high reproduction rates. The court exempted compliant regions but mandated personal appearance by non-compliant officials on November 3, 2025, reinforcing that while animal welfare laws protect strays from indiscriminate killing, they do not override the fundamental right to life under Article 21 of the Constitution when human injuries and deaths mount.[30][31][32]Criminal bail and victim rights decisions
In a September 29, 2025, ruling, a Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Vikram Nath and Sandeep Mehta set aside an anticipatory bail order issued by the Patna High Court on March 2024 in a murder case involving two accused, stressing that while personal liberty under Article 21 of the Constitution warrants protection, courts cannot overlook the suffering of victims or their families.[33][34] The bench criticized the high court's expeditious handling of the bail application without adequately considering the gravity of the offense—where the victim was killed via contract killing—and the potential for evidence tampering, noting that such haste undermines the criminal justice scheme under the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973.[35] This decision underscored victims' equal stake in justice, directing lower courts to balance accused rights with victim impact in bail proceedings.[33] Earlier, on July 22, 2025, the same bench cancelled regular bail granted to an accused in a shelter home sexual abuse and trafficking case under the POCSO Act, 2012, and SC/ST (Prevention of Atrocities) Act, 1989, following an appeal by the victim.[36] The court found procedural lapses, including failure to hear the victim as mandated by Section 15A(3) of the SC/ST Act, which requires victim input in bail decisions for atrocities cases, and non-consideration of multiple victim statements under Section 164 CrPC corroborating exploitation.[37][38] Reiterating institutional accountability, the ruling held that bail cancellation is permissible when granted without due regard to statutory safeguards, prioritizing victim protection in heinous crimes involving vulnerable groups.[36][37] These judgments reflect a pattern in Justice Nath's approach, advocating rigorous scrutiny in bail matters to prevent miscarriage of justice, particularly where evidence collection risks interference or victim trauma is acute, without diluting the presumption of innocence but insisting on empirical assessment of case specifics.[34][39]Other significant cases
In Loknath Chakrapanidas Mahant v. State of Gujarat (2021), a Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court including Justice Vikram Nath struck down Section 4(1)(xii) of the Gujarat Co-operative Societies (Amendment) Act, 2019, as unconstitutional under Article 14 of the Indian Constitution. The court held that the arbitrary exclusion of co-operative sugar factories from the list of specified societies eligible for elections under the parent Act lacked any rational nexus with public interest and discriminated without reasonable classification.[3] At the Supreme Court, Justice Nath authored the opinion in CBI v. R.R. Kishore (2023), declaring Section 6-A of the Delhi Special Police Establishment Act, 1946, unconstitutional from its date of insertion in 2003, with retrospective effect. The provision, intended to shield certain public servants from investigation without prior approval, was found to undermine the CBI's independence and create an impermissible shield against probe for offenses committed prior to its enactment.[40] In the landmark reservation case of State of Punjab v. Davinder Singh (2024), Justice Nath concurred with the 6:1 majority permitting sub-classification within Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for affirmative action quotas, advocating application of the 'creamy layer' principle to exclude advanced sections and ensure benefits reach the most disadvantaged based on empirical data on intra-group disparities. The decision overruled prior precedents restricting such classifications, emphasizing constitutional equality over rigid uniformity.[41] Justice Nath also contributed to Ramathal v. K. Rajamani (2023), affirming that a sale deed rendered void ab initio due to fraud or misrepresentation requires no formal cancellation decree and can be treated as non est in subsequent proceedings, thereby streamlining property dispute resolutions without unnecessary litigation.[3]Controversies and public reception
Debates over animal welfare priorities
In August 2025, a three-judge Supreme Court bench led by Justice Vikram Nath addressed a petition challenging a prior directive to relocate stray dogs from Delhi and the National Capital Region (NCR), amid rising complaints of dog bites and attacks on residents. The bench modified the August 11 order, mandating that captured stray dogs undergo sterilization, vaccination, and deworming before release back to their original areas, while prohibiting street feeding and requiring designated feeding zones to reduce human-animal conflicts. This ruling invoked the Animal Birth Control (Dogs) Rules, 2001, under the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act, 1960, emphasizing compliance with existing law over blanket relocation or euthanasia.[42] The decision ignited debates on prioritizing animal welfare versus public safety, with critics arguing it undervalued empirical evidence of stray dog aggression. Data from municipal reports indicated over 20,000 dog bite cases annually in Delhi alone, including fatalities among children and vulnerable groups, fueling demands for culling aggressive packs as seen in some international models like those in parts of Europe and the United States.[43] Residents' welfare associations (RWAs) and petitioners highlighted causal links between unsterilized, unvaccinated strays and rabies transmission—responsible for approximately 20,000 human deaths yearly in India per World Health Organization estimates—contending that release-back policies perpetuate cycles of overpopulation and territorial behavior without addressing root causes like inadequate enforcement.[44] Justice Nath's bench countered that euthanasia contravenes statutory protections, but opponents, including legal analysts, viewed this as deferring to activist pressures over verifiable public health risks, noting non-compliance with sterilization targets (only 20-30% coverage in urban areas).[45] Proponents of the ruling, primarily animal rights organizations, praised it for upholding constitutional duties under Article 51A(g) to protect wildlife and compassion for living creatures, arguing that human encroachments into stray habitats exacerbate conflicts and that vaccination suffices for safety.[46] Groups like those intervening in the case claimed relocation traumatizes dogs, increasing aggression, and cited studies showing sterilized populations stabilize over time, though skeptics questioned these sources' reliance on selective data from non-peer-reviewed advocacy reports rather than longitudinal government audits revealing persistent bite incidences post-ABC implementation.[47] By October 2025, the bench summoned chief secretaries of states and union territories for affidavits on ABC rule compliance, underscoring enforcement gaps but reinforcing release protocols except for overtly dangerous dogs.[48] This stance drew accusations of institutional bias toward welfare lobbies, with commentators noting that while rabies vaccines exist, stray management failures impose disproportionate costs on citizens, including medical expenses exceeding ₹1,000 crore annually nationwide.[28] The debate highlighted tensions in judicial balancing acts, where empirical public safety metrics often clashed with legalistic adherence to anti-cruelty norms, without resolving underlying policy voids like funding for shelters or incentives for adoption.Criticisms of conservative interpretations in personal law cases
In Parvin Kumar Jain v. Anju Jain (December 2024), a bench including Justice Vikram Nath established comprehensive guidelines for permanent alimony under Section 25 of the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955, directing courts to consider factors such as the parties' income, assets, standard of living, and the wife's reasonable needs while ensuring the husband's financial viability post-divorce, without imposing undue hardship.[49] This approach, rooted in statutory personal law provisions, has been contextualized within broader 2024 Supreme Court trends toward conservative interpretations that prioritize equilibrium in traditional family obligations over radical restructuring.[49] Similarly, in Col. Ramneesh Pal Singh v. Sugandhi Aggarwal (2024), Justice Nath joined a bench cautioning against premature invocation of "parental alienation syndrome" in child custody disputes under the Guardians and Wards Act, 1890, and Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956, requiring empirical evidence of deliberate interference rather than speculative claims, to safeguard the child's welfare without disrupting established parental bonds.[49] Such rulings align with observations of a conservative judicial tilt in personal law adjudication, emphasizing evidentiary rigor and familial stability over expedited reforms influenced by evolving social norms.[49] These decisions have elicited commentary from legal analysts highlighting potential limitations in adapting personal laws—predominantly Hindu in these instances—to contemporary challenges like gender parity or individual autonomy, though explicit critiques targeting Justice Nath remain sparse compared to more ideologically charged cases.[49] Proponents argue this restraint upholds legislative primacy and causal accountability in family disputes, avoiding overreach into policy domains reserved for Parliament, such as uniform civil code implementation.Judicial philosophy and views
Stance on technology in judiciary
Justice Vikram Nath has advocated for the integration of technology into judicial processes to enhance efficiency and accessibility, while emphasizing that it must remain subordinate to human judgment and ethical principles. He has highlighted the benefits of digital tools such as e-filing and transcription services, which have streamlined case management in Indian courts.[50] During his tenure, he noted the equipping of major high courts like those in Mumbai, Delhi, and Bengaluru with advanced technology infrastructure to support arbitration and dispute resolution.[51] Nath has repeatedly cautioned against over-reliance on artificial intelligence (AI), asserting that it cannot replicate the human elements essential to justice delivery, including conscience, empathy, and fairness. In September 2025, at a Delhi High Court event, he stated that AI serves as an aid rather than an arbiter, warning of risks like algorithmic bias and privacy violations that necessitate ethical oversight.[52] [53] He advised lawyers against misusing AI-generated content, stressing that technology lacks the capacity for nuanced moral reasoning required in judicial decisions.[54] On transparency, Nath has supported initiatives like live-streaming of court proceedings, urging the Delhi High Court in September 2025 to resume such broadcasts as part of broader digitization efforts, including mobile apps for case access.[55] [56] He views each advancement in digitalization as a step toward greater public accountability in the judiciary, provided it aligns with constitutional values and the rule of law.[57] [58] Overall, Nath's position balances technological progress with safeguards to preserve the human core of justice, rejecting any notion that AI could supplant judges.[59]Emphasis on empirical evidence and causal accountability
Justice Vikram Nath has consistently advocated for decisions grounded in verifiable data rather than presumptions or policy assertions lacking substantiation. In the landmark 2024 Supreme Court ruling on sub-classification within Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for reservations, Nath concurred with the majority, emphasizing that any such sub-classification by states must be backed by empirical data evidencing inadequate representation and intra-group disparities in accessing reservation benefits.[60][61] This stance overturned the 2004 E.V. Chinnaiah precedent, which had treated SCs/STs as homogeneous, by requiring states to demonstrate through quantifiable evidence—such as census data or surveys—the need for targeted quotas to ensure affirmative action reaches the most marginalized sub-groups, thereby linking policy efficacy to causal outcomes of historical exclusion.[62] In criminal jurisprudence, Nath's rulings underscore causal accountability by prioritizing forensic and testimonial evidence to establish direct links between actions and consequences, rejecting leniency where proof of culpability is robust. For instance, in Harendra Rai v. State of Bihar (2023), he joined the bench that overturned a former MP's acquittal in a double murder case, reinstating conviction based on eyewitness accounts, ballistic evidence, and motive, while critiquing lower courts for discounting material facts that causally implicated the accused.[4] Similarly, in a 2025 shelter home abuse case, Nath's bench canceled bail for an accused, reaffirming institutional accountability by holding that procedural lapses do not absolve perpetrators when victim testimonies and circumstantial evidence establish a clear chain of causation from neglect to harm, thereby protecting victim rights over expedited releases.[37] Nath has also cautioned against evidentiary weaknesses in confessions, ruling in 2023 that extra-judicial statements constitute a "weak piece of evidence" requiring independent corroboration to prove voluntariness and truthfulness before attributing causal responsibility.[63] This evidence-centric approach extends to procedural safeguards, as seen in his 2025 directive reinforcing that private affidavits cannot substitute formal investigations, ensuring accountability traces back to probed facts rather than unverified claims.[64] Overall, Nath's philosophy demands causal realism, where judicial outcomes reflect demonstrable evidence of effects stemming from specific causes, avoiding speculative interpretations that could undermine public trust in the system's fact-based integrity.Legacy and future prospects
Impact on Indian jurisprudence
Justice Vikram Nath's contributions to Indian jurisprudence emphasize judicial transparency, empirical validation of state policies, and a pragmatic equilibrium between individual rights and public interests. His initiation of live-streamed court proceedings on YouTube as Chief Justice of the Gujarat High Court in 2019 marked a pioneering step toward democratizing access to justice amid the COVID-19 disruptions, influencing subsequent high courts and the Supreme Court to adopt digital tools for hearings, thereby reducing delays and enhancing accountability in judicial processes.[10][58] In parallel, Nath has advocated cautious integration of artificial intelligence in adjudication, stressing its role as an assistive mechanism rather than a substitute for human oversight, due to inherent risks of algorithmic bias and data privacy violations that could undermine equitable decision-making.[52] In constitutional interpretation, Nath participated in the 2024 seven-judge bench decision upholding sub-classifications within Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for reservations, mandating that such measures be supported by empirical data demonstrating intra-group disparities to prevent perpetuation of inequality without evidence-based justification.[62][65] This ruling overruled prior precedents like E.V. Chinnaiah v. State of Andhra Pradesh (2005), establishing a framework that prioritizes quantifiable backwardness over homogeneous treatment of castes, thereby refining Article 14 and 16 doctrines toward causal realism in affirmative action.[65] Nath's criminal jurisprudence reflects a commitment to victim safeguards and prosecutorial rigor, as evidenced by his bench's reversal of acquittals in grave offenses like double murders where investigative lapses were absent, and cancellations of bail in trafficking and contract killing cases lacking sufficient judicial scrutiny.[4][66] In Madhukar v. State (2025), the bench he co-authored permitted quashing of rape FIRs post-marriage settlements in consensual adult cases, acknowledging non-compoundable offenses' gravity while allowing exceptions for familial rehabilitation, a nuanced evolution from rigid non-compoundability that invites debate on reconciling retribution with restorative justice.[67] Addressing public safety, Nath's involvement in the ongoing stray dogs litigation has reinforced state obligations under Animal Birth Control Rules, summoning chief secretaries in 2025 for non-compliance and critiquing evasion of responsibility amid rising attacks, thereby prioritizing human welfare and empirical enforcement over unchecked animal welfare absolutism, with implications for municipal accountability nationwide.[28][68] These decisions collectively underscore a judicial philosophy favoring verifiable causation and institutional reform, positioning Nath—projected as Chief Justice in February 2027—to further embed data-driven scrutiny in apex court precedents.[2]Prospective Chief Justice role
Justice Vikram Nath is in line to serve as the 54th Chief Justice of India, assuming adherence to the convention of appointing the senior-most available judge to the position. He was elevated to the Supreme Court of India on 31 August 2021 and is scheduled to retire on 23 September 2027, positioning him to assume the role of Chief Justice in early 2027 for a tenure of approximately seven months.[1][2] This prospective leadership follows the retirement of preceding Chief Justices in the seniority sequence, with analyses projecting his succession around February 2027.[25][69] As a member of the Supreme Court Collegium since February 2025, Nath has participated in key judicial appointments, influencing the court's composition during his potential tenure as Chief Justice.[70] His brief term would occur amid ongoing discussions on judicial reforms, including technology integration and case backlog management, areas aligned with his prior judicial emphases. Legal observers note that his elevation would mark a continuation of the seniority principle, which has been the norm since 1993, barring rare exceptions.[9]