Begin typing your search above and press return to search.
proflie-avatar
Login
exit_to_app
DEEP READ
Schools breeding hatred
access_time 14 Sep 2023 10:37 AM GMT
Ukraine
access_time 16 Aug 2023 5:46 AM GMT
Ramadan: Its essence and lessons
access_time 13 March 2024 9:24 AM GMT
exit_to_app
Homechevron_rightIndiachevron_rightTo clear backlog in...

To clear backlog in SC's justice delivery system, 13,147 old cases discarded

text_fields
bookmark_border
To clear backlog in SCs justice delivery system, 13,147 old cases discarded
cancel

New Delhi: The Supreme Court recently disposed of 13,147 old "diarized but unregistered" cases, including one that was submitted more than three decades ago, in one large sweep, taking a significant step toward clearing the backlog of cases that have been pending before the highest court.

All of these cases were submitted more than eight years ago, according to an order made on Thursday by Registrar Judicial-1 Chirag Bhanu Singh, however, the errors that the Registry pointed out to the relevant counsel or petitioners in person were not "cured."

The cases got the diary numbers prior to the year 2014, and the list included a case filed way back in 1987.

As per the data uploaded on the Supreme Court website, there were as many as 70,310 pending cases as on September 1, 2022.

These included 51,839 miscellaneous matters and 18,471 related to regular hearings.

The order by the Supreme Court registrar said the parties to the cases seemingly do not intend to prosecute the litigations any further as they did not cure the defects even after a lapse of several years.

"These bunch of 13,147 unregistered but diarized cases have been registered prior to the year 2014, to be precise before August 19, 2014. These cases had been filed more than 8 years ago. As per the practice then in vogue, the matters had been returned to the counsel/petitioner-in-person for rectifying the defects noticed in the matters respectively. They have never been rectified ever," the order said.

"For all the reasons discussed hereinabove, I am constrained but to hold that there is no valid and plausible reason to allow the aforesaid matters to be received for registration. I decline to register the aforesaid diary numbers," it noted.

The court official said, in consonance with the earlier practice no papers were retained by the registry while notifying the defects.

The counsel would file a complete set of pleadings only after curing all the defects so notified.

It was only after August 19, 2014, that a provision was made to retain one copy of the plaint and court fee stamps with the Registry.

Under the old rules, the parties concerned were to cure the defects within 28 days, which was extended up to 90 days.

"The parties have failed to take any effective steps for years at end to rectify and cure the defects so notified. The statutory period for curing the defects is well over. Seemingly the parties do not intend to prosecute the lis (litigation) any further. Umpteen numbers of years were allowed to the parties to cure the defects, but to no avail," the registrar's order said.

The official said "no steps worth the name" were taken by any of the parties concerned to even seek an enlargement of time to cure the defects after the completion of 28 days.

"It is also not the case that the defects were merely formal in nature. The defects have remained unaltered to date and that too for no reasonable cause. It is not days, but years that have gone by. One of the oldest diary numbers relating back as far as the year 1987."

"No effective steps have ever been taken by anyone to even keep the lis (litigation) alive. The matters have died with the efflux of time itself. Nothing literally survives now," it said.

Out of the 70,310 cases pending in the apex court as on September 1, 2022, 17.28 per cent or 12, 092 cases are miscellaneous matters which are incomplete or not ready and where preliminaries have to be completed.

The data showed there are 493 matters before various Constitution benches.

Of these, 343 are pending before five-judge benches, 15 with seven-judge benches and 135 are matters that have to be heard by nine-judge Constitution benches.

Justice U U Lalit, who took over as the 49th Chief Justice of India on August 27, has laid particular emphasis on clearing the pending cases and under him, the apex court has adopted a new system of listing cases.

Responding to his felicitation by the Supreme Court Bar Association on Thursday, Justice Lalit had said since August 29, when the new system was launched, till September 14, 5,200 cases were decided by the top court as against 1135 fresh filings.


With PTI inputs


Show Full Article
TAGS:supreme courtDelhi
Next Story