Tuesday 13 September 2016

Order, Order : Justice delayed is Justice Denied

Order, Order : Justice delayed is Justice Denied

India had a total of 31,035,237 cases pending at all levels of the three-tiered judiciary. In which over two crore cases are pending in subordinate courts only, a Parliamentary Committee has observed. Being a law student I observe that it’s not a new problem but it became a topic of discussion when the Chief Justice claimed that the country needs 70,000 judges to handle the burden.
Some of the major reasons for high pendency of cases in subordinate courts are poor judge-population ratio, costly litigation caused by lawyers, poor infrastructure and weak alternative dispute resolution mechanisms. Unlike most other countries where the political executive appoints the judges, in India the selection of judges is actually made by the judges itself through collegium system. Thus, trial court judges are appointed on the basis of a selection process conducted by the High Court in that State; High Court judges are appointed on the basis of a recommendation by the senior most judges of the Supreme Court and that High Court; and the Supreme Court judges themselves are appointed on the basis of the recommendation of the five senior-most judges of the Supreme Court.
A man carries a pile of documents outside one of the court

The National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) Act, 2015 which had been struck down by the Supreme Court of India which termed that the bill is against the concept of independent judiciary, but I found that the collegium system also has too many flaws and lacks transparency.
Our courts need to get out of the “tareekh pe tareekh“ trap of endless adjournments. Another sensible measure is to discourage frivolous cases and appeals which is creating logjam in higher courts.
During his Raipur visit on Sunday, Chief Justice of India T S Thakur pointed out that “If the logjam in Indian courts is terrible today, it's only going to get worse tomorrow ­ unless major course correction is undertaken with urgency as the country succeeds in increasing literacy and prosperity and thereby the courts' caseloads will also rise.”
The Chief Justice’s comments and the eagerness of the Union Government to pass the Commercial Courts Act is an indication perhaps of the urgency being felt to undertake serious judicial reform and as a result the first Commercial court of India has been opened in our Raipur by CJI which will facilitate the investors in their commercial dealings.
As the legal maxim says “Justice Delayed is Justice Denied” therefore it’s time India to put judicial reforms on the fast track.


                                                                    -Romit Chandrakar, Raipur
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Twitter- @RomitChandrakar