4.2 Million Cases Pending In High Courts, Allahabad Tops List

49% of the 4.2 million cases pending in the 24 high courts were more than five years old.

Shobhit Mathur & Pallabi Mandal
India
Published:
File photo of the Madras High Court.
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File photo of the Madras High Court.
(Photo: The News Minute)

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High courts nationwide are 37 percent short of judges, and ad hoc appointments–not posting judges to courts that need them most–are worsening delays and affecting India’s economy, according to our analysis of data released by the department of justice.

There were over 4.2 million cases pending in the 24 high courts of India on 4 February 2018, according to the National Judicial Data Grid, with 49 percent of these cases being more than five years old.

Data from central ministries show that infrastructure projects of close to Rs 52,000 crore are affected by court orders, according to the Economic Survey 2017-18.

The Allahabad high court has the highest number of pending cases, exceeding 9,00,000 cases in 2016 and 2017.

The number of pending cases has declined during 2017 by a slight margin in only three of the 24 high courts.

In terms of increase in pending cases, Karnataka high court is the most stressed court with an increase in pendency of 36,479 cases followed by Hyderabad, Punjab and Haryana. The working strength of judges has not changed for the three high courts of Jharkhand, Meghalaya and Sikkim.

The number of judges has declined in Calcutta (seven), Himachal Pradesh (three), Gujarat and Tripura (two) and Manipur and Orissa (one).

The working strength has increased in all other courts with Madras witnessing the maximum increase of 16 judges, followed by Bombay with 10 judges, and Patna, Rajasthan, Gauhati and Chhattisgarh with six judges each.

One would expect that the most stressed courts would get a good share of new judges. The simplest metric to compute the stress is the average number of pending cases per judge. The higher the average case burden per judge, the more stressed the court would be.

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In 2016, although Bombay had a lower workload per judge than Calcutta, Bombay saw an increase of 10 judges while Calcutta saw a decline of seven judges.

Rajasthan and Gauhati got the same increase in judges while Rajasthan had twice the workload per judge than Gauhati. Madras and Bombay have got disproportionally high allocation of judges, while Allahabad, Hyderabad, Karnataka and Jammu & Kashmir have lower allocation despite high caseloads.

New judges should be allotted–or transfers made–to courts depending on pending cases. Judicial appointments and transfers should be based on the metric of workload per judge.

Currently, the collegium (which comprises of the Chief Justice of India and four senior-most judges of the Supreme Court) recommends the appointments and transfers of judges. The collegium does not have any place in the Constitution.

The government had recommended the National Judicial Appointments Commission (NJAC) as a constitutional body to replace the collegium system of appointments of judges. However, the Supreme Court rejected the NJAC Act.

“Given the high pendency of cases and high vacancy in the Allahabad High Court, transparency in the allocation of judges is very important,” said Vinod Kumar Singh, senior advocate, High Court of Allahabad (Lucknow bench). “I hope the collegium makes the allocation process more transparent.”

“But for the system to heal, the process of higher judicial appointments needs a fundamental rejig,” Member of Parliament, Baijayant ‘Jay’ Panda, wrote in The Times of India on 18 January 2018. “SC would do well to review its NJAC decision; if it does not, the Parliament must re-enact something similar.”

( This article was first published on IndiaSpend and has been republished with permission. Mathur is the executive director at Vision India Foundation, a non-profit policy research and training organisation based in New Delhi. Mandal is a BTech student at NSIT, New Delhi.)

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