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Judiciary of India

The judiciary of India is a system of courts that interpret and apply the law in the Republic of India. India uses a common law system, first introduced by the British East India Company and with influence from other colonial powers and Indian princely states, as well as practices from ancient and medieval times.[3][4][5] The constitution provides for a single unified judiciary in India.

Indian Judiciary
Service Overview
Formerly known asFederal Judiciary
FoundedMayor's Court, Madras (1726)
Country India
Training Institute1. National Judicial Academy (Bhopal)[1]
2. State Judicial Academy
Controlling authoritySupreme Court
High Court
Legal personalityJudiciary
DutiesJustice Administration
Public Interest Litigation
Guardian of the Constitution
Hierarchy of Courts in India1. Supreme Court
2. High Court
3. Subordinate Courts
4. Executive /Revenue Court
Post DesignationJustice
Judge
Magistrate - Judicial & Executive
Cadre strength23,790 Judges strength (34 in Supreme Court, 1079 for High Court, 22677 for Subordinate Court)
Selection / Appointment1. President of India for SC & HC Judges (as per the recommendations of Collegium)
2. Governor for Subordinate Judiciary (after passing the Judicial Service Exam)
AssociationsAll India Judges Association[2]
Head of Judiciary
Chief Justice of IndiaJustice Dhananjaya Y. Chandrachud (50th CJI)

The Indian judicial system is managed and administrated by officers. Judges of Subordinate Judiciaries are appointed by the governor on recommendation by the High Court. Judges of the High Courts and Supreme Court are appointed by the President of India on the recommendation of a collegium.

The judicial system is structured in three levels with subsidiary parts. The Supreme Court, also known as the Apex Court, is the top court and the ultimate appellate court in India. The Chief Justice of India leads that court. High Courts are the top judicial bodies in individual states, controlled and managed by state Chief Justices. Below the High Courts are District Courts, also known as subordinate courts, that are controlled and managed by District and Sessions Judges. The lower subordinate courts are Civil Court and the District Munsif Court, headed a Sub-Judge. The higher subordinate Criminal Court is headed by Chief Judicial/Metropolitan Magistrate at top and followed by ACJM /ACMM and JM/MM[clarification needed] at the lower level.

The Executive and Revenue Courts are managed by the state government through the district magistrate and commissioner, respectively. Although the executive courts are not part of the judiciary, various provisions and judgements empower the High Courts and Session Judges to inspect or direct their operation.

The Ministry of Law and Justice at the Union level is responsible for raising issues before Parliament relating to the judiciary. It has jurisdiction to deal with the issues of any court. It also deals with the appointment of Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court. At the state level, the law departments of the states deal with issues regarding the High Court and the Subordinate Courts.

The Constitution and the Judiciary

The Indian Constitution empowers the Judiciary to act as the Guardian of the Law. A number of provisions deal with the Judiciary's role, power, function, and officer appointments. The major provisions are:

  • Part V - Chapter IV - Union Judiciary i.e., Supreme Court - appointment and removal, role and function
  • Part VI - Chapter V - High Court - appointment and removal, role and function
  • Part VI - Chapter VI- Subordinate Courts - appointment and removal, role and function
  • Article 50 - Independence of Judiciary - separates judiciary from executive branch
  • Other provisions appear under parts and articles that deal with the court's responsibilities.

The judiciary acts as the arbiter on legal matters. The Inner Conflict of Constitutionalism: Judicial Review and the 'Basic Structure' – India's Living Constitution: Constitution, acts as its watchdog by calling for scrutiny any act of the legislature or the executive from overstepping bounds set for them by the Constitution.[6] It acts as a guardian in protecting the fundamental rights of the people, as enshrined in the Constitution, from infringement by any organ of the state. It also balances the conflicting exercise of power between the centre and a state or among states.

The judiciary is expected to remain unaffected by pressures exerted by other branches of government, citizens or interest groups. Independence of the judiciary is a basic and inalienable feature of the Constitution,[7][8][9] One such protection is that no minister can suggest a name to the President,[10][11] who ultimately appoints judges from a list recommended by the collegium of the judiciary. Judges of the Supreme Court or a High Court cannot be removed from office once appointed, unless a two-thirds majority of members of any of the Houses of the Parliament back the move on grounds of misconduct or incapacity.[12][13] A person who has been a judge of a court is barred from practising in the jurisdiction of that court[citation needed].

Appointment

Under Parts V and VI of the Constitution, the President of India appoints Judges of the Supreme Court and High Court with the consent of the Chief Justice. In practice, cultural norms are followed in the appointment of judges to the Supreme Court and High Courts. In accordance with the principles set forth in the Three Judges Cases, the President selects from a list recommended by the collegium  – a closed group consisting of the Chief Justice and the most senior judges of the Supreme Court. Prior to the Three Judges Cases, the President appointed judges upon their recommendation by the Union Cabinet. In 1993, as a result of the Second Judges Case, the executive was given the power to reject a name recommended by the judiciary. The executive has since faced criticism for its decisions relating to this power.[14][15][16]

Decisions by the collegium have been the subject of legal scrutiny. In Mahesh Chandra Gupta vs. Union of India and Ors., the court held that who could become a judge was a matter of fact, and that any person therefore had a right to question the court's determination regarding a candidate's qualifications. However, the court also wrote that who should become a judge was a matter of opinion and could not be questioned. As long as a judge's appointment is the subject of a legitimate consultation by the collegium, the content or material it uses to form its opinion cannot be scrutinized by a court.[17]

In contrast to the historical norms concerning Supreme Court and High Court appointments, appointments for Subordinate Court Judges are handled as prescribed under the constitution and other laws and codes. Appointments are generally made by the Public Service Commission of a particular state. However, in some states, the respective High Court can appoint judges of subordinate courts. Regardless of the source of the appointment, the process for the appointment of judges is the same, and is based on the results of a competitive examination. Junior Division civil judges may advance to judicial positions in the Provincial Civil Service, while entry level district judges with at least 7 years of experience can complete the Higher Judicial Service (HJS) exam in order to advance.[citation needed]

History

The history of jury trials in India dates to the period of European colonisation. In 1665, a petit jury in Madras composed of twelve English and Portuguese jurors acquitted Ascentia Dawes, who was on trial for the murder of her enslaved servant.[18] During the period of Company rule in India, jury trials within dual-court system territories were implemented in Indian territories under East India Company (EIC) control. In Presidency towns (such as Calcutta, Bombay, and Madras), Crown Courts employed juries to judge European and Indian defendants in criminal cases. Outside of Presidency towns, Company Courts staffed by EIC officials judged both criminal and civil cases without the use of a jury.[18]

In 1860, after the British Crown assumed control over the EIC's possessions in India, the Indian Penal Code was adopted. A year later, the Code of Criminal Procedure was adopted.[18] These provisions stipulated that criminal juries were only mandatory in the High Courts of Presidency towns; in all other parts of British India, they were optional and rare. In cases where the defendants were either European or American, at least half of the jury was required to be European or American men, with the justification given that juries in these cases had to be "acquainted with [the defendant's] feelings and dispositions."[18]

During the 20th century, the jury system in British India came under criticism from both colonial officials and independence activists.[18] The system received no mentions in the 1950 Indian Constitution and went unimplemented in many jurisdictions after independence. In 1958, the Law Commission of India recommended its abolition in the fourteenth report that the commission submitted to the Indian government.[18] Jury trials in India were gradually abolished during the 1960s, culminating with the 1973 Criminal Procedure Code, which remained in effect in the 21st century.[18]

Evolution of independent judiciary

The Sapru Committee Report, published in 1945, considered the judiciary in detail and reiterated what the Government of India Act 1935 had set out: a Federal Court of India would be the forerunner to the Supreme Court. To separate the judiciary from the executive, the Sapru Committee suggested that judges have fixed salaries and tenures, and that they could only be removed for gross misbehaviour. Judges were to be appointed by the president, in consultation with the CJI. The committee appointed to deal with judicial questions as part of the Constituent Assembly in 1946 was influenced by the Sapru Report, though there was concern over the power given to the President. Jawaharlal Nehru, however, supported the Sapru Committee's proposals. In 1949, Nehru said that Constituent Assembly judges ought to be individuals of "the highest integrity," who could "stand up against the executive government, and whoever may come in their way." B. R. Ambedkar emphasised the need for judicial independence stating, "There can be no difference of opinion in the House that our judiciary must both be independent of the executive and must also be competent in itself." Finally, the constitution stated that "Every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by the President by warrant under his hand and seal after consultation with such of the Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts in the tates as the President may deem necessary for the purpose," given that "in the case of appointment of a Judge other than the Chief Justice, the Chief Justice of India shall always be consulted."[19]

Career progression

Lower-level officers are eligible to progress to any higher judicial rank, including Chief Justice; however, no judicial officer from a subordinate judiciary has achieved that position. Several subordinate officers have reached the rank of Supreme Court Judge.[20] A judicial officer typically begins his or her career as a civil judge in a Court of Judicial Magistrate of First Class. After seven years of experience judges can be appointed to the post of District Judge via a competitive examination. The retirement age for Indian Judicial Officers is 60 years in the Subordinate (District) court, 62 years in the High Court, and 65 in the Supreme Court.

Entry-level positions in the Courts of Judicial Magistrate of First Class are generally considered probationary, or training posts. After completing the probationary assignment, a candidate is posted either as Judicial Magistrate of First Class in the criminal side, or in the District Munsiff Court for civil appointments. Unlike many Indian Union civil service officer positions, judicial roles are mostly field positions. In order to allow officers to diversify their experience, many deputy posts answering to higher judiciary officers were created. Officers are not initially placed in these deputy roles, but after several years of courtroom experience they may receive such an appointment.[citation needed] After five years in the junior division, an officer is eligible to be promoted to Civil Judge (Senior Division).

In 1996, the first National Judicial Pay Commission (NJPC) was created by Supreme Court Justice K.J. Shetty to examine the issues of subordinate judiciaries and set uniform service conditions.[21] The first NJPC introduced the Assured Career Progression (ACP) scheme in order to assure subordinate judicial officers of benefits in the event of delayed career progression. According to the ACP scheme, if an officer's promotion is delayed, after a span of five years of service in their respective grade they are entitled to receive the first stage of the increased ACP pay scale for the next five years. If they are not promoted for another five years, their pay scale under the ACP is increased accordingly. In 2017, the 2nd NJPC revised the pay and service conditions of subordinate judiciaries with the objective to attract talent.[22]

The same methodology is applied at the level of District Judge. After completing the required service in the senior division the High Court, with the consent of the Governor of the respective state, they are eligible for promotion to the cadre of entry level District Judge or Additional District (ADJ) and Session Judge. When District judges are vested with administrative power, they are known as Principal District and Session Judges.

The officers of Junior and Senior division are subordinate to the District and Session Judges and also to CJMs.CJM? ADJs are under the general control of their respective high courts. Specific judicial officers are vested with certain special powers as Special Judges or Magistrates to deal with specific matters regarding their areas of practice (e.g. railway, MP-MLA-Ministers, Terrorism, or other specific departments), as needed.

One-third of High Court Judge positions are filled from the Subordinate Judiciary. High Court and Supreme Court Judges are constitutional posts, and have strict processes for appointment that take more time. Several Supreme Court Judges were promoted from the Subordinate Judiciary. Most Judicial officers appointed directly from the bar as a District Judge or in areas of higher judicial service (HJS) have a chance of promotion to the High Court, and potentially to the Supreme Court.

Various departments and ministries were created by state and union government to broaden the experience of judicial officers. State government-created positions range from undersecretary to principal secretary. Union ministries include Deputy Secretary posts, which typically answer to officers in the High Courts and the Supreme Court. Temporary deputy posts for officers of certain judicial rankings provide similar perks and career allowances to comparable civil servants. The most common departments involving deputations of judicial officers at civil secretarial posts are- Law and Justice Ministry, Legal Affairs Department, and Legislative Department.

Judicial hierarchy

Position and Designation held by Judges (in Hierarchy) in their career and Pay Scale

Rank District / Field Posting State / High Court Posting Central / Supreme Court Posting Current Pay Scale (Level) Proposed Pay Scale
1 Chief Justice of India 280,000 (US$3,500) (NA) Pay scale already increased
2 Sitting Judges of the Supreme Court 250,000 (US$3,100) (18)
3 Chief Justice of the High Court
4 Justice of the High Court ₹225,000(17)
5
  • District Judge ₹51550(13A) to ₹76450(15)
  • District Judge ₹1,44,840 to ₹2,24,100[29]
6
  • Addl. Registrar at High Courts
  • Legal advisor / Special Secretary to State Government, Governor of State[30]
  • Additional /Joint Registrar at Supreme Court of India[31]
  • Additional or Joint Law Secretary of India
7
  • Joint / Deputy Registrar at High Court
  • Joint Secretary / Law Officer to State
  • Deputy / Special Registrar at Supreme Court[32]
  • Deputy Secretary / OSD to Government of India[33]
  • Civil Judge (Senior Division) - ₹39530 (12) to ₹63070 (13A)
  • Civil Judge (Senior Division) - ₹1,11000 to ₹1,94,660[34]
8
  • Assistant Registrar at High Court
  • Under Secretary to State Government
  • N/A
  • Civil Judge (Junior Division) - ₹27700 (10) to ₹54010 (12)
  • Civil Judge (Junior Division) - ₹77840 to ₹1,63,030[35]
Notes

(1) The Court of JM 2nd Class is just a district training post or probations period where HC grant 2nd class power to inducted judicial officers till training period. After end of training the officers first posted as JM 1st Class and so on.
(2) The posts of Judicial Commissioners and Additional Judicial Commissioners existed pre-Independence and continued till the enactment of CrPC in 1973 and Article 50 of the Constitution of India. Before the separation of the judiciary from the executive branch, these posts were held either by the senior members of the Indian Civil (Administrative) Services (in the level of Chief Secretary) or District Judges (in the level of Super Time Scale). However, the courts of Judicial Commissioners has completely abolished and replaced with post of District and Sessions Judge except in one district.[36] Currently, Ranchi, Jharkhand is the only district in India where this post still exists, although it is now occupied by the officers of the Higher Judicial Services of Jharkhand Judiciary.[37]
(3)The Secretary General of SC of India and Law Secretary of India is the deputation post of District and Session Judge cadre officers in the rank of Secretary to Govt. of India and they received same pay and perk till deputation period as admissible to Secretary of Govt. of India. It is to note that the Secretary of Govt. of India only holds equivalent pay scale with Hon'ble Judges of High Courts but not equivalent rank.[38]

Supreme Court

 
Supreme Court building with the sculpture in the foreground

The Supreme Court is the highest court established by the Constitution. The Constitution states that the Supreme Court is a federal court, guardian of the Constitution, and the highest court of appeal. Articles 124 to 147 of the Constitution lay down the court's composition and jurisdiction. Primarily, it is an appellate court that takes up appeals against judgments of the High Courts of the states and territories. It also takes writ petitions in cases of serious human rights violations or any petition filed under Article 32, which is the right to a constitutional remedy, or if a serious case involves needs immediate resolution.[39]

The Supreme Court comprises the Chief Justice and 33 judges.

It first sat on 26 January 1950, the day India's constitution came into force,[40] and thereafter delivered more than 24,000 reported judgements.

Proceedings are conducted in English only. The Supreme Court Rules of 1966 were framed under Article 145 of the Constitution, which exists to regulate its practices and procedures.[41][42] Article 145 was amended and is governed by the Supreme Court Rules of 2013.[43][clarification needed]

High courts

27 High Courts operate at the state level. Article 141 of the Constitution mandates that they are bound by the judgements and orders of the Supreme Court of India by precedence. These courts have jurisdiction over a state, a union territory or a group of states and union territories. High courts were instituted as constitutional courts under Part VI, Chapter V, Article 214 of the Constitution.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
HighCourts in Chennai, Mumbai, Kolkata, Prayagaraj, Kochi, Bengaluru, Hyderabad and Chandigarh respectively

The High Courts are the principal civil courts of original jurisdiction in the state (along with the subordinate District Courts). However, High Courts civil and criminal jurisdiction applies only if subordinate courts are not authorized to try matters for lack of pecuniary or territorial jurisdiction. High Courts may enjoy original jurisdiction in certain matters if so designated in a state or federal law. For example, company law cases are instituted only in a high court.

The primary work of most High Courts consists of deciding appeals from lower courts, and writs in terms of Article 226 of the Constitution. Writ jurisdiction is also an original jurisdiction of High Courts. The precise territorial jurisdiction of each High Court varies by province.

Judges in these courts are appointed by the President after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, Chief Justice of the High Court, and the state governor. The number of judges in a court is decided by dividing the average institution of main cases during the last five years by the national average, or the average rate of disposal of main cases per judge per year in that High Court, whichever is higher.[citation needed]

The Calcutta High Court is the country's oldest, established on 2 July 1862, while the Allahabad High Court is the largest, hosting 160 judges.

High Courts that handle large numbers of cases have permanent benches (or a branch of the court). For litigants of remote regions, 'circuit benches' work on those days when judges visit.[44]

District / Subordinate courts

The District courts of India are established by state governments for every district or group of districts, taking into account the number of cases and population distribution. These courts are under administrative control of the state's High Court. Decisions are subject to the appeal to the High Court.[45]

The district court is presided over by one District Judge appointed by the Governor with the consultation of High Court. Additional District Judges and Assistant District Judges may be appointee depending on the workload. The Additional District Judge has equivalent jurisdiction as the District Judge.[46] The District Judge is called a "Metropolitan session judge", when he is presiding over a district court in a city which is designated a "Metropolitan area" by the state government.[47]

The district court has appellate jurisdiction over subordinate courts on all matters. Subordinate courts, on the civil side (in ascending order) are Junior Civil Judge Court, Principal Junior Civil Judge Court, Senior Civil Judge Court (also called sub-court). Subordinate courts, on the criminal side (in ascending order) are, Second Class Judicial Magistrate Court, First Class Judicial Magistrate Court, Chief Judicial Magistrate Court. In Family Courts deal with matrimonial disputes.

Family Court and Mahila Court matters are handled by the Principal Judge. The Judges appointed to this post are from the pool of District Judges. In Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh and some other states, judges are appointed from the pool of retired judicial officer either directly or through exam.


Structure of Civil Courts

  1. Supreme Court of India (appex appellate court)
  2. High Courts (highest appellate court in the states)

Metropolitan area:

  • District Courts
    • Additional District Courts
  • Courts of Senior Civil Judges
  • Courts of Junior Civil Judges

District Level:
District level civil courts is given below (ascending order):

  • District Courts
    • Additional District Court
  • Sub Courts (Courts of Subordinate judges)
    • Additional Sub Courts (Courts of Additional Subordinate judges)
  • Munsif Court/ Court of Junior Civil Judge

Structure of Criminal Judiciary

  1. Supreme Court of India (appex appellate court)
  2. High Courts (appex appellate court in the states)

Metropolitan area

  1. Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Courts (CMM)
  2. Courts of Metropolitan Magistrates (MM)

District Level
District level Criminal Courts is given below (ascending order):

Executive and Revenue Court

Below the judicial hierarchy sits the executive hierarchy. Cr.P.C. empowers the Executive Court to deal with petty offences, but the power does not imply that they hold judicial power. Section 3 of CrPC clearly splits matter to be handled by both magistrates. Section 20 of CrPC empowers the State Government to appoint Executive Magistrates (EM) in every metropolitan area and in every district. It has the authority to appoint one Executive Magistrate as the District Magistrate and to appoint any EM as the ADM. Such a magistrate has the same power as enjoyed by the District Magistrate (DM).

If the office of a DM is left vacant then any officer who temporarily succeeds to the executive administration of the district exercises the same power as enjoyed by the DM. The State Government is empowered to give charge of a sub-division to the EM, who is called Sub-divisional Magistrate. The EM role generally smaintain law and order under section 107–110, 133, 144, 145, and 147 of the CrPC., cancelling or granting licenses, handling land acquisition matters, or any other matter raised by state government.

Section 21 empowers state government to appoint special Executive Magistrates (Sp. EM). Under Section 20(5) of Crpc, the Commissioner of Police (CP) can be appointed as EM, but only when the district is declared by state government as a Commissionerate. The DG(P) holds the rank of CP but can't exercise power of EM (special) until his designation changes into CP. The appeal of executive court lies in the court of Session Judge or Additional Session Judge of the district or to the High Court.

Order Executive Court
1 District Magistrate / ADM / Commissioner of Police
2 Sub-Divisional Magistrate
3 Other Executive Magistrate

To deal with the land revenue matters, each state established a Revenue Court. These courts adjudicate matters related to:

  • land revenue
  • tenancy (ownership - in a loose sense)
  • property boundaries
  • succession
  • land transfers
  • partition of holdings
  • removal of encroachments, eviction of trespassers, and in some states, declaratory suits.

The Revenue Court is a quasi-judicial body and holds only limited power to deal with specific civil matters. As per Section 5(2) of Civil Procedure Code; Revenue Courts have jurisdiction to deal with suits related to rent, revenue or profits of land used for agricultural purposes, but does not include civil court matters. Therefore, certain matters of the Revenue Courts are barred from jurisdiction of Civil Courts as specified under the code. The Court of Additional Commissioner and above are appellate courts. However, it is a state controlled organization. Generally the officers of the rank of Collector and above ar from the pool of the Indian Administrative Service, while lower positions can be from either IAS or SAS and inferior to that are from the State Administrative Services.[48]

Order Revenue Court Cadre
1 Board of Revenue IAS + Higher Judicial Service (HJS)[49]
2 Principal Revenue Commissioner Indian Administrative Service
3 (Divisional /Revenue) Commissioner
4 Additional Commissioner IAS / SAS (Super Senior)
5 Commissioner Land Record
6 Additional Commissioner Land Record
7 Collector
8 Addl. Collector
9 Chief Revenue Officer
10 Sub Divisional Officer
11 Assistant Collectors
12 Settlement Officer State Administrative Service

(PCS etc.)

13 Assistant Settlement Officer
14 Record Officer
15 Ass. Record Officer
16 Tahsildars
17 Additional Tahsildars
18 Naib Tahsildars

Village courts / Panchayat / Rural Court

Village courts, Lok Adalat (people's court) or Nyaya panchayat (justice of the villages), offer alternative dispute resolution.[18] They were recognized through the 1888 Madras Village Court Act, then developed (after 1935) in various provinces and (after independence) Indian states.[18] The model from

Gujarat State (with a judge and two assessors) was used from the 1970s onwards.[18] In 1984 the Law Commission recommended to create Panchayats in rural areas with laymen ("having educational attainments").[18] The 2008 Gram Nyayalayas Act had foreseen 5,000 mobile courts in the country for judging petty civil (property cases) and criminal (up to 2 years of prison) cases.[18] However, the Act was not enforced, with only 151 functional Gram Nyayalayas in the country (as of May 2012) against a target of 5000.[50] The major reasons were include financial constraints, reluctance of lawyers, police and other government officials.[50]

Compensation

Supreme Court and High Court Judges

The President of India, vice-president, Supreme Court and High Court Judges and other constitutional authorities are paid from the Consolidated fund.[51] Two acts deal with SC and HC judge compensation. The Supreme Court Judges (Salaries and Condition) Act deals with the compensation for Supreme Court Judges.[52] The High Court Judges (Salaries and Condition) Act (1954) regulate the compensation of High Court judges.[53] Whenever compensation is amended, the Central Government must present it as a normal bill before Parliament.[54]

Subordinate Judiciary

NJPC decides the pay scale, allowances, facilities, etc. for subordinate judiciaries throughout the country.[55] This commission was set up by the Government to comply with a Supreme Court order. The recommendations of NJPC, when accepted by the Supreme Court (after hearing any objection of Central or State Govt.), become binding The commission was set up based on recommendations from All Indian Judges Association.[2] The Chief Justice of India recommended that the central government constitute a permanent body to avoid unnecessary delays.

The first NJPC was constituted on 21 March 1996 on the order of Supreme Court in the landmark judgment All India Judges Association v UOI. The commission was headed by Justice K. J. Shetty (Ex- Supreme Court Judge). The commission submitted its report in 1999. It recommended raising the salaries of the subordinate judiciary and fixed their overall compensation. Ten years later, the second NJPC was headed by P.V. Reddi (Ex-Judge SC).[56]

Judicial Academies

The institute[clarification needed] provides training to Subordinate Judiciary officers on topics that State Judicial Academies do not cover. It also offers training to High Court judges of states and judges and judicial officers of other nations. Indian judicial academies:[1]

Academy National / State
National Judicial Academy
Andhra Pradesh Judicial Academy
Judicial Academy Assam and North Eastern Judicial Officers' Training Institute (NEJOTI)
Bihar Judicial Academy
Chhattisgarh State Judicial Academy
Gujarat State Judicial Academy
Chandigarh Judicial Academy
Himachal Pradesh Judicial Academy
Judicial Academy Jharkhand
Karnataka Judicial Academy
Kerala Judicial Academy
Madhya Pradesh State Judicial Academy
Maharashtra Judicial Academy and Indian Mediation Centre and Training Institute
Manipur Judicial Academy
Meghalaya Judicial Academy
Odisha Judicial Academy
Rajasthan State Judicial Academy
Sikkim Judicial Academy
Tamil Nadu State Judicial Academy
Telangana State Judicial Academy
Tripura Judicial Academy
Judicial Training Institute, Uttar Pradesh
Uttarakhand Judicial and Legal Academy
West Bengal Judicial Academy

Issues

According to the World Bank, "although India's courts are notoriously inefficient, they at least comprise a functioning independent judiciary"[57]

Citizens are, after many negative experiences, often unaware of their rights, or resigned to their fate before an inefficient court.[58] Court efficiency is crucial, as a backlog of cases creates opportunities for corruption.[59]

Judiciary Issues have been depicted in several films, such as Court.

Backlog

As of May 2022, India has a sanctioned strength of 25,628 judges with 4.7 crore(47 million) cases pending in judiciary. Nearly 1,82,000 cases have been pending for over 30 years. According to National Judicial Data Grid, Indian courts had 27% rise in backlog between December 2019 and April 2022.[60]

The legal maxim justice delayed is justice denied is honored only in the breach. On average about 20% of approved judicial positions are vacant. The annual backlog increase is less than 2%. If the vacancies were filled, the backlog would decline.[61][62] Minor infractions make up nearly half of pending cases.[63][64]

In 2015, some 400 vacancies were reported in the 24 high courts. The Supreme Court backlog is 70,572 as of May 2, 2022.[60] Some 30 million cases await resolution in various courts. The budget allocation is a 0.2 per cent of gross domestic product. The judge-population ratio is 10.5 to one million, about 20% of the recommended 50 to one million.[65]

The government is the largest single litigant, adding cases to the docket, losing most, and then appealing to the next court.[66] The Law Commission found that most such appeals were pointless.[67][68]

Jagdev claimed that the Judiciary does not attract the best legal talent in part because of disparity in compensation. In recent years scandals have besmirched the judiciary's reputation. The sub-ordinate judiciary works in appalling conditions.[69]

On 12 January 2012, the Supreme Court said that confidence in the judiciary was decreasing, posing a threat to the country. It acknowledged the problems of vacancies in trial courts, unwillingness of lawyers to become judges, and the failure of the apex judiciary in filling vacant HC posts. One proposal is that access to justice must be made a constitutional right requiring the executive to provide the necessary infrastructure for protecting that right. The Court also wanted the Government of India to detail the work being done by the National Mission for Justice Delivery and Legal Reforms.[70][71][72]

Undertrials outnumber convicts in the prison population. Ordinary citizens have been imprisioned for espionage for overstaying their visa or straying across international borders, languishing in prison for years due to the slow redressal process.[73] According to Prison Statistics- India 2015, 67.2% of the total prison population of India is under trial, which means they have not yet(by 2015) been convicted by the court.[74]

To reduce pendency, 'Fast-track courts', 'Evening courts/Morning courts' were set up and met with mixed success.[75][76] Mobile courts were set up to bring 'justice at the doorsteps'[77] of litigants of judge-poor rural areas.[78]

Lok Adalats is an informal, alternative mechanism that has been a success in tackling backlogs, especially in pre-litigation matters, settling cases before they enter the courts.[79][80][81]

According to a report released by Centre for Public Policy Research and British Deputy High Commission "a total of 16,884 commercial disputes [are] pending in High Courts with original jurisdiction. Of these Madras High court tops with 5,865. With the number of commercial disputes growing rapidly, facilitating a seamless dispute resolution system through alternate means has become crucial."[82]

Economists Boehm and Oberfeld calculated that the backlog costs the Indian economy several percentage points of GDP.[83]

Judicial corruption

According to Transparency International, judicial corruption in India is attributable to factors such as "delays in the disposal of cases, shortage of judges and complex procedures, all of which are exacerbated by a preponderance of new laws".[84] Corruption has reached the Supreme Court. Notable cases include:

  • In April 2017, a judicial Magistrate Debanjan Ghosh gave bail to a murder suspect
  • In December 2015, in Darjeeling District an unjustifiably large number of undeserving acquittals and undeserving bails was alleged by then Additional Chief JM.[85]
  • In December 2009, legal activist and Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan stated in court, "out of the last 16 to 17 Chief Justices, half have been corrupt"[86][87] In November 2010, former Law Minister, Shanti Bhushan echoed Prashant Bhushan's claim.[88]
  • There have been allegations that judges with doubtful integrity were elevated within the higher judiciary and campaigns held for their impeachment.[89]
  • In 2011, Soumitra Sen, former judge at the Calcutta High Court became the first judge in the India to be impeached by the Rajya Sabha for misappropriation of funds.[13]
  • In November 2011, a former Supreme Court Justice Ruma Pal slammed the higher judiciary for what she called the seven sins. She listed the sins as:[90]
    • Turning a blind eye to the injudicious conduct of a colleague.
    • Hypocrisy – the distortion of the norm of judicial independence.
    • Secrecy – lack of transparency in the appointment of judges to the High and Supreme Court
    • Plagiarism and prolixity – SC judges often lift whole passages from earlier decisions without acknowledgement – and use long-winded, verbose language
    • Arrogance – the higher judiciary has claimed superiority and independence to mask their own indiscipline and transgression of norms and procedures
    • Professional arrogance – judges arrive at decisions of grave importance ignoring precedent or judicial principle
    • Nepotism – wherein favours are sought and dispensed by some judges.

Representation in Judiciary

Around 50% of the judges of high courts and 33% judges in the Supreme Court are family members of those in higher echelons of judiciary. Supreme Court has a sanctioned strength of 31 judges, out of which six judges were sons of former judges and appointments of over 88 judges from 13 high courts who were either born to a family of lawyers, judges, or worked under some legal luminaries. [91] Union Minister of State, HRD, Upendra Kushwaha notes that only 250-300 families have sent judges to Supreme Court and there is negligible representation of women and Scheduled Castes in higher judiciary.[92]

E-Courts Mission Mode Project

The E-courts project was established in 2005.[93] All courts were to get computerised. As per the project in 2008, all the District courts were initialised under the project. In 2010, all District courts were computerised. Digital services began in the Supreme Court in June 2011. The case lists and the judgements of most district courts were available[94][95] Data is updated daily. Most District and Taluka Courts in the country are computerised. Cause list of each of the Court are available.[96][97]

Judicial service centres are available for all courts. The public assess case status, stage and next hearing dates.[citation needed]

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Justice can be delivered in reasonable time
  • Judicial delay may become a thing of the past
  • Has India failed because of its Judicial System?
  • e-courts in India still a distant dream

judiciary, india, judiciary, india, system, courts, that, interpret, apply, republic, india, india, uses, common, system, first, introduced, british, east, india, company, with, influence, from, other, colonial, powers, indian, princely, states, well, practice. The judiciary of India is a system of courts that interpret and apply the law in the Republic of India India uses a common law system first introduced by the British East India Company and with influence from other colonial powers and Indian princely states as well as practices from ancient and medieval times 3 4 5 The constitution provides for a single unified judiciary in India Indian JudiciaryService OverviewFormerly known asFederal JudiciaryFoundedMayor s Court Madras 1726 Country IndiaTraining Institute1 National Judicial Academy Bhopal 1 2 State Judicial AcademyControlling authoritySupreme Court High CourtLegal personalityJudiciaryDutiesJustice Administration Public Interest LitigationGuardian of the ConstitutionHierarchy of Courts in India1 Supreme Court 2 High Court3 Subordinate Courts4 Executive Revenue CourtPost DesignationJusticeJudgeMagistrate Judicial amp ExecutiveCadre strength23 790 Judges strength 34 in Supreme Court 1079 for High Court 22677 for Subordinate Court Selection Appointment1 President of India for SC amp HC Judges as per the recommendations of Collegium 2 Governor for Subordinate Judiciary after passing the Judicial Service Exam AssociationsAll India Judges Association 2 Head of JudiciaryChief Justice of IndiaJustice Dhananjaya Y Chandrachud 50th CJI The Indian judicial system is managed and administrated by officers Judges of Subordinate Judiciaries are appointed by the governor on recommendation by the High Court Judges of the High Courts and Supreme Court are appointed by the President of India on the recommendation of a collegium The judicial system is structured in three levels with subsidiary parts The Supreme Court also known as the Apex Court is the top court and the ultimate appellate court in India The Chief Justice of India leads that court High Courts are the top judicial bodies in individual states controlled and managed by state Chief Justices Below the High Courts are District Courts also known as subordinate courts that are controlled and managed by District and Sessions Judges The lower subordinate courts are Civil Court and the District Munsif Court headed a Sub Judge The higher subordinate Criminal Court is headed by Chief Judicial Metropolitan Magistrate at top and followed by ACJM ACMM and JM MM clarification needed at the lower level The Executive and Revenue Courts are managed by the state government through the district magistrate and commissioner respectively Although the executive courts are not part of the judiciary various provisions and judgements empower the High Courts and Session Judges to inspect or direct their operation The Ministry of Law and Justice at the Union level is responsible for raising issues before Parliament relating to the judiciary It has jurisdiction to deal with the issues of any court It also deals with the appointment of Judges of the High Courts and the Supreme Court At the state level the law departments of the states deal with issues regarding the High Court and the Subordinate Courts Contents 1 The Constitution and the Judiciary 1 1 Appointment 2 History 2 1 Evolution of independent judiciary 3 Career progression 4 Judicial hierarchy 4 1 Position and Designation held by Judges in Hierarchy in their career and Pay Scale 4 2 Supreme Court 4 3 High courts 4 4 District Subordinate courts 4 5 Structure of Civil Courts 4 6 Structure of Criminal Judiciary 4 7 Executive and Revenue Court 4 8 Village courts Panchayat Rural Court 5 Compensation 5 1 Supreme Court and High Court Judges 5 2 Subordinate Judiciary 6 Judicial Academies 7 Issues 7 1 Backlog 7 2 Judicial corruption 7 3 Representation in Judiciary 8 E Courts Mission Mode Project 9 See also 10 References 11 Further readingThe Constitution and the Judiciary EditThe Indian Constitution empowers the Judiciary to act as the Guardian of the Law A number of provisions deal with the Judiciary s role power function and officer appointments The major provisions are Part V Chapter IV Union Judiciary i e Supreme Court appointment and removal role and function Part VI Chapter V High Court appointment and removal role and function Part VI Chapter VI Subordinate Courts appointment and removal role and function Article 50 Independence of Judiciary separates judiciary from executive branch Other provisions appear under parts and articles that deal with the court s responsibilities The judiciary acts as the arbiter on legal matters The Inner Conflict of Constitutionalism Judicial Review and the Basic Structure India s Living Constitution Constitution acts as its watchdog by calling for scrutiny any act of the legislature or the executive from overstepping bounds set for them by the Constitution 6 It acts as a guardian in protecting the fundamental rights of the people as enshrined in the Constitution from infringement by any organ of the state It also balances the conflicting exercise of power between the centre and a state or among states The judiciary is expected to remain unaffected by pressures exerted by other branches of government citizens or interest groups Independence of the judiciary is a basic and inalienable feature of the Constitution 7 8 9 One such protection is that no minister can suggest a name to the President 10 11 who ultimately appoints judges from a list recommended by the collegium of the judiciary Judges of the Supreme Court or a High Court cannot be removed from office once appointed unless a two thirds majority of members of any of the Houses of the Parliament back the move on grounds of misconduct or incapacity 12 13 A person who has been a judge of a court is barred from practising in the jurisdiction of that court citation needed Appointment Edit Under Parts V and VI of the Constitution the President of India appoints Judges of the Supreme Court and High Court with the consent of the Chief Justice In practice cultural norms are followed in the appointment of judges to the Supreme Court and High Courts In accordance with the principles set forth in the Three Judges Cases the President selects from a list recommended by the collegium a closed group consisting of the Chief Justice and the most senior judges of the Supreme Court Prior to the Three Judges Cases the President appointed judges upon their recommendation by the Union Cabinet In 1993 as a result of the Second Judges Case the executive was given the power to reject a name recommended by the judiciary The executive has since faced criticism for its decisions relating to this power 14 15 16 Decisions by the collegium have been the subject of legal scrutiny In Mahesh Chandra Gupta vs Union of India and Ors the court held that who could become a judge was a matter of fact and that any person therefore had a right to question the court s determination regarding a candidate s qualifications However the court also wrote that who should become a judge was a matter of opinion and could not be questioned As long as a judge s appointment is the subject of a legitimate consultation by the collegium the content or material it uses to form its opinion cannot be scrutinized by a court 17 In contrast to the historical norms concerning Supreme Court and High Court appointments appointments for Subordinate Court Judges are handled as prescribed under the constitution and other laws and codes Appointments are generally made by the Public Service Commission of a particular state However in some states the respective High Court can appoint judges of subordinate courts Regardless of the source of the appointment the process for the appointment of judges is the same and is based on the results of a competitive examination Junior Division civil judges may advance to judicial positions in the Provincial Civil Service while entry level district judges with at least 7 years of experience can complete the Higher Judicial Service HJS exam in order to advance citation needed History EditThe history of jury trials in India dates to the period of European colonisation In 1665 a petit jury in Madras composed of twelve English and Portuguese jurors acquitted Ascentia Dawes who was on trial for the murder of her enslaved servant 18 During the period of Company rule in India jury trials within dual court system territories were implemented in Indian territories under East India Company EIC control In Presidency towns such as Calcutta Bombay and Madras Crown Courts employed juries to judge European and Indian defendants in criminal cases Outside of Presidency towns Company Courts staffed by EIC officials judged both criminal and civil cases without the use of a jury 18 In 1860 after the British Crown assumed control over the EIC s possessions in India the Indian Penal Code was adopted A year later the Code of Criminal Procedure was adopted 18 These provisions stipulated that criminal juries were only mandatory in the High Courts of Presidency towns in all other parts of British India they were optional and rare In cases where the defendants were either European or American at least half of the jury was required to be European or American men with the justification given that juries in these cases had to be acquainted with the defendant s feelings and dispositions 18 During the 20th century the jury system in British India came under criticism from both colonial officials and independence activists 18 The system received no mentions in the 1950 Indian Constitution and went unimplemented in many jurisdictions after independence In 1958 the Law Commission of India recommended its abolition in the fourteenth report that the commission submitted to the Indian government 18 Jury trials in India were gradually abolished during the 1960s culminating with the 1973 Criminal Procedure Code which remained in effect in the 21st century 18 Evolution of independent judiciary Edit The Sapru Committee Report published in 1945 considered the judiciary in detail and reiterated what the Government of India Act 1935 had set out a Federal Court of India would be the forerunner to the Supreme Court To separate the judiciary from the executive the Sapru Committee suggested that judges have fixed salaries and tenures and that they could only be removed for gross misbehaviour Judges were to be appointed by the president in consultation with the CJI The committee appointed to deal with judicial questions as part of the Constituent Assembly in 1946 was influenced by the Sapru Report though there was concern over the power given to the President Jawaharlal Nehru however supported the Sapru Committee s proposals In 1949 Nehru said that Constituent Assembly judges ought to be individuals of the highest integrity who could stand up against the executive government and whoever may come in their way B R Ambedkar emphasised the need for judicial independence stating There can be no difference of opinion in the House that our judiciary must both be independent of the executive and must also be competent in itself Finally the constitution stated that Every Judge of the Supreme Court shall be appointed by the President by warrant under his hand and seal after consultation with such of the Judges of the Supreme Court and of the High Courts in the tates as the President may deem necessary for the purpose given that in the case of appointment of a Judge other than the Chief Justice the Chief Justice of India shall always be consulted 19 Career progression EditLower level officers are eligible to progress to any higher judicial rank including Chief Justice however no judicial officer from a subordinate judiciary has achieved that position Several subordinate officers have reached the rank of Supreme Court Judge 20 A judicial officer typically begins his or her career as a civil judge in a Court of Judicial Magistrate of First Class After seven years of experience judges can be appointed to the post of District Judge via a competitive examination The retirement age for Indian Judicial Officers is 60 years in the Subordinate District court 62 years in the High Court and 65 in the Supreme Court Entry level positions in the Courts of Judicial Magistrate of First Class are generally considered probationary or training posts After completing the probationary assignment a candidate is posted either as Judicial Magistrate of First Class in the criminal side or in the District Munsiff Court for civil appointments Unlike many Indian Union civil service officer positions judicial roles are mostly field positions In order to allow officers to diversify their experience many deputy posts answering to higher judiciary officers were created Officers are not initially placed in these deputy roles but after several years of courtroom experience they may receive such an appointment citation needed After five years in the junior division an officer is eligible to be promoted to Civil Judge Senior Division In 1996 the first National Judicial Pay Commission NJPC was created by Supreme Court Justice K J Shetty to examine the issues of subordinate judiciaries and set uniform service conditions 21 The first NJPC introduced the Assured Career Progression ACP scheme in order to assure subordinate judicial officers of benefits in the event of delayed career progression According to the ACP scheme if an officer s promotion is delayed after a span of five years of service in their respective grade they are entitled to receive the first stage of the increased ACP pay scale for the next five years If they are not promoted for another five years their pay scale under the ACP is increased accordingly In 2017 the 2nd NJPC revised the pay and service conditions of subordinate judiciaries with the objective to attract talent 22 The same methodology is applied at the level of District Judge After completing the required service in the senior division the High Court with the consent of the Governor of the respective state they are eligible for promotion to the cadre of entry level District Judge or Additional District ADJ and Session Judge When District judges are vested with administrative power they are known as Principal District and Session Judges The officers of Junior and Senior division are subordinate to the District and Session Judges and also to CJMs CJM ADJs are under the general control of their respective high courts Specific judicial officers are vested with certain special powers as Special Judges or Magistrates to deal with specific matters regarding their areas of practice e g railway MP MLA Ministers Terrorism or other specific departments as needed One third of High Court Judge positions are filled from the Subordinate Judiciary High Court and Supreme Court Judges are constitutional posts and have strict processes for appointment that take more time Several Supreme Court Judges were promoted from the Subordinate Judiciary Most Judicial officers appointed directly from the bar as a District Judge or in areas of higher judicial service HJS have a chance of promotion to the High Court and potentially to the Supreme Court Various departments and ministries were created by state and union government to broaden the experience of judicial officers State government created positions range from undersecretary to principal secretary Union ministries include Deputy Secretary posts which typically answer to officers in the High Courts and the Supreme Court Temporary deputy posts for officers of certain judicial rankings provide similar perks and career allowances to comparable civil servants The most common departments involving deputations of judicial officers at civil secretarial posts are Law and Justice Ministry Legal Affairs Department and Legislative Department Judicial hierarchy EditPosition and Designation held by Judges in Hierarchy in their career and Pay Scale Edit Rank District Field Posting State High Court Posting Central Supreme Court Posting Current Pay Scale Level Proposed Pay Scale1 Chief Justice of India 280 000 US 3 500 NA Pay scale already increased2 Sitting Judges of the Supreme Court 250 000 US 3 100 18 3 Chief Justice of the High Court 4 Justice of the High Court 225 000 17 5 Principal District and Session Judge Principal Judge Family Court Judicial Commissioner Registrar General and Registrar at High Courts 23 Principal Secretary to State 24 25 26 Law Secretary to the Government of India 27 Secretary General and Registrar at Supreme Court of India 28 District Judge 51550 13A to 76450 15 District Judge 1 44 840 to 2 24 100 29 6 Additional District and Session Judge Additional Judicial Commissioner Addl Registrar at High Courts Legal advisor Special Secretary to State Government Governor of State 30 Additional Joint Registrar at Supreme Court of India 31 Additional or Joint Law Secretary of India7 Chief Judicial Magistrate Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Sub Judge Civil Side Joint Deputy Registrar at High Court Joint Secretary Law Officer to State Deputy Special Registrar at Supreme Court 32 Deputy Secretary OSD to Government of India 33 Civil Judge Senior Division 39530 12 to 63070 13A Civil Judge Senior Division 1 11000 to 1 94 660 34 8 Judicial Magistrate 1st Class Metropolitan Magistrate in Metropolitan area District Munsif Civil Side Assistant Registrar at High Court Under Secretary to State Government N A Civil Judge Junior Division 27700 10 to 54010 12 Civil Judge Junior Division 77840 to 1 63 030 35 Notes 1 The Court of JM 2nd Class is just a district training post or probations period where HC grant 2nd class power to inducted judicial officers till training period After end of training the officers first posted as JM 1st Class and so on 2 The posts of Judicial Commissioners and Additional Judicial Commissioners existed pre Independence and continued till the enactment of CrPC in 1973 and Article 50 of the Constitution of India Before the separation of the judiciary from the executive branch these posts were held either by the senior members of the Indian Civil Administrative Services in the level of Chief Secretary or District Judges in the level of Super Time Scale However the courts of Judicial Commissioners has completely abolished and replaced with post of District and Sessions Judge except in one district 36 Currently Ranchi Jharkhand is the only district in India where this post still exists although it is now occupied by the officers of the Higher Judicial Services of Jharkhand Judiciary 37 3 The Secretary General of SC of India and Law Secretary of India is the deputation post of District and Session Judge cadre officers in the rank of Secretary to Govt of India and they received same pay and perk till deputation period as admissible to Secretary of Govt of India It is to note that the Secretary of Govt of India only holds equivalent pay scale with Hon ble Judges of High Courts but not equivalent rank 38 Supreme Court Edit Main article Supreme Court of India Supreme Court building with the sculpture in the foreground The Supreme Court is the highest court established by the Constitution The Constitution states that the Supreme Court is a federal court guardian of the Constitution and the highest court of appeal Articles 124 to 147 of the Constitution lay down the court s composition and jurisdiction Primarily it is an appellate court that takes up appeals against judgments of the High Courts of the states and territories It also takes writ petitions in cases of serious human rights violations or any petition filed under Article 32 which is the right to a constitutional remedy or if a serious case involves needs immediate resolution 39 The Supreme Court comprises the Chief Justice and 33 judges It first sat on 26 January 1950 the day India s constitution came into force 40 and thereafter delivered more than 24 000 reported judgements Proceedings are conducted in English only The Supreme Court Rules of 1966 were framed under Article 145 of the Constitution which exists to regulate its practices and procedures 41 42 Article 145 was amended and is governed by the Supreme Court Rules of 2013 43 clarification needed High courts Edit Main article High courts of India 27 High Courts operate at the state level Article 141 of the Constitution mandates that they are bound by the judgements and orders of the Supreme Court of India by precedence These courts have jurisdiction over a state a union territory or a group of states and union territories High courts were instituted as constitutional courts under Part VI Chapter V Article 214 of the Constitution HighCourts in Chennai Mumbai Kolkata Prayagaraj Kochi Bengaluru Hyderabad and Chandigarh respectively The High Courts are the principal civil courts of original jurisdiction in the state along with the subordinate District Courts However High Courts civil and criminal jurisdiction applies only if subordinate courts are not authorized to try matters for lack of pecuniary or territorial jurisdiction High Courts may enjoy original jurisdiction in certain matters if so designated in a state or federal law For example company law cases are instituted only in a high court The primary work of most High Courts consists of deciding appeals from lower courts and writs in terms of Article 226 of the Constitution Writ jurisdiction is also an original jurisdiction of High Courts The precise territorial jurisdiction of each High Court varies by province Judges in these courts are appointed by the President after consultation with the Chief Justice of India Chief Justice of the High Court and the state governor The number of judges in a court is decided by dividing the average institution of main cases during the last five years by the national average or the average rate of disposal of main cases per judge per year in that High Court whichever is higher citation needed The Calcutta High Court is the country s oldest established on 2 July 1862 while the Allahabad High Court is the largest hosting 160 judges High Courts that handle large numbers of cases have permanent benches or a branch of the court For litigants of remote regions circuit benches work on those days when judges visit 44 District Subordinate courts Edit Main article District courts of India The District courts of India are established by state governments for every district or group of districts taking into account the number of cases and population distribution These courts are under administrative control of the state s High Court Decisions are subject to the appeal to the High Court 45 The district court is presided over by one District Judge appointed by the Governor with the consultation of High Court Additional District Judges and Assistant District Judges may be appointee depending on the workload The Additional District Judge has equivalent jurisdiction as the District Judge 46 The District Judge is called a Metropolitan session judge when he is presiding over a district court in a city which is designated a Metropolitan area by the state government 47 The district court has appellate jurisdiction over subordinate courts on all matters Subordinate courts on the civil side in ascending order are Junior Civil Judge Court Principal Junior Civil Judge Court Senior Civil Judge Court also called sub court Subordinate courts on the criminal side in ascending order are Second Class Judicial Magistrate Court First Class Judicial Magistrate Court Chief Judicial Magistrate Court In Family Courts deal with matrimonial disputes Family Court and Mahila Court matters are handled by the Principal Judge The Judges appointed to this post are from the pool of District Judges In Maharashtra Andhra Pradesh and some other states judges are appointed from the pool of retired judicial officer either directly or through exam Structure of Civil Courts Edit Supreme Court of India appex appellate court High Courts highest appellate court in the states Metropolitan area District Courts Additional District Courts Courts of Senior Civil Judges Courts of Junior Civil JudgesDistrict Level District level civil courts is given below ascending order District Courts Additional District Court Sub Courts Courts of Subordinate judges Additional Sub Courts Courts of Additional Subordinate judges Munsif Court Court of Junior Civil JudgeStructure of Criminal Judiciary Edit Supreme Court of India appex appellate court High Courts appex appellate court in the states Metropolitan area Chief Metropolitan Magistrate Courts CMM Courts of Metropolitan Magistrates MM District Level District level Criminal Courts is given below ascending order District and Sessions Court Additional Sessions Court Assistant Sessions Court Chief Judicial Magistrate Court CJM Court Additional Chief Judicial Magistrate Court Courts of Judicial Magistrate of First Class JFCM Court Courts of Judicial Magistrate of Second ClassExecutive and Revenue Court Edit Below the judicial hierarchy sits the executive hierarchy Cr P C empowers the Executive Court to deal with petty offences but the power does not imply that they hold judicial power Section 3 of CrPC clearly splits matter to be handled by both magistrates Section 20 of CrPC empowers the State Government to appoint Executive Magistrates EM in every metropolitan area and in every district It has the authority to appoint one Executive Magistrate as the District Magistrate and to appoint any EM as the ADM Such a magistrate has the same power as enjoyed by the District Magistrate DM If the office of a DM is left vacant then any officer who temporarily succeeds to the executive administration of the district exercises the same power as enjoyed by the DM The State Government is empowered to give charge of a sub division to the EM who is called Sub divisional Magistrate The EM role generally smaintain law and order under section 107 110 133 144 145 and 147 of the CrPC cancelling or granting licenses handling land acquisition matters or any other matter raised by state government Section 21 empowers state government to appoint special Executive Magistrates Sp EM Under Section 20 5 of Crpc the Commissioner of Police CP can be appointed as EM but only when the district is declared by state government as a Commissionerate The DG P holds the rank of CP but can t exercise power of EM special until his designation changes into CP The appeal of executive court lies in the court of Session Judge or Additional Session Judge of the district or to the High Court Order Executive Court1 District Magistrate ADM Commissioner of Police2 Sub Divisional Magistrate3 Other Executive MagistrateTo deal with the land revenue matters each state established a Revenue Court These courts adjudicate matters related to land revenue tenancy ownership in a loose sense property boundaries succession land transfers partition of holdings removal of encroachments eviction of trespassers and in some states declaratory suits The Revenue Court is a quasi judicial body and holds only limited power to deal with specific civil matters As per Section 5 2 of Civil Procedure Code Revenue Courts have jurisdiction to deal with suits related to rent revenue or profits of land used for agricultural purposes but does not include civil court matters Therefore certain matters of the Revenue Courts are barred from jurisdiction of Civil Courts as specified under the code The Court of Additional Commissioner and above are appellate courts However it is a state controlled organization Generally the officers of the rank of Collector and above ar from the pool of the Indian Administrative Service while lower positions can be from either IAS or SAS and inferior to that are from the State Administrative Services 48 Order Revenue Court Cadre1 Board of Revenue IAS Higher Judicial Service HJS 49 2 Principal Revenue Commissioner Indian Administrative Service3 Divisional Revenue Commissioner4 Additional Commissioner IAS SAS Super Senior 5 Commissioner Land Record6 Additional Commissioner Land Record7 Collector8 Addl Collector9 Chief Revenue Officer10 Sub Divisional Officer11 Assistant Collectors12 Settlement Officer State Administrative Service PCS etc 13 Assistant Settlement Officer14 Record Officer15 Ass Record Officer16 Tahsildars17 Additional Tahsildars18 Naib TahsildarsVillage courts Panchayat Rural Court Edit Village courts Lok Adalat people s court or Nyaya panchayat justice of the villages offer alternative dispute resolution 18 They were recognized through the 1888 Madras Village Court Act then developed after 1935 in various provinces and after independence Indian states 18 The model fromGujarat State with a judge and two assessors was used from the 1970s onwards 18 In 1984 the Law Commission recommended to create Panchayats in rural areas with laymen having educational attainments 18 The 2008 Gram Nyayalayas Act had foreseen 5 000 mobile courts in the country for judging petty civil property cases and criminal up to 2 years of prison cases 18 However the Act was not enforced with only 151 functional Gram Nyayalayas in the country as of May 2012 against a target of 5000 50 The major reasons were include financial constraints reluctance of lawyers police and other government officials 50 Compensation EditSupreme Court and High Court Judges Edit The President of India vice president Supreme Court and High Court Judges and other constitutional authorities are paid from the Consolidated fund 51 Two acts deal with SC and HC judge compensation The Supreme Court Judges Salaries and Condition Act deals with the compensation for Supreme Court Judges 52 The High Court Judges Salaries and Condition Act 1954 regulate the compensation of High Court judges 53 Whenever compensation is amended the Central Government must present it as a normal bill before Parliament 54 Subordinate Judiciary Edit NJPC decides the pay scale allowances facilities etc for subordinate judiciaries throughout the country 55 This commission was set up by the Government to comply with a Supreme Court order The recommendations of NJPC when accepted by the Supreme Court after hearing any objection of Central or State Govt become binding The commission was set up based on recommendations from All Indian Judges Association 2 The Chief Justice of India recommended that the central government constitute a permanent body to avoid unnecessary delays The first NJPC was constituted on 21 March 1996 on the order of Supreme Court in the landmark judgment All India Judges Association v UOI The commission was headed by Justice K J Shetty Ex Supreme Court Judge The commission submitted its report in 1999 It recommended raising the salaries of the subordinate judiciary and fixed their overall compensation Ten years later the second NJPC was headed by P V Reddi Ex Judge SC 56 Judicial Academies EditThe institute clarification needed provides training to Subordinate Judiciary officers on topics that State Judicial Academies do not cover It also offers training to High Court judges of states and judges and judicial officers of other nations Indian judicial academies 1 Academy National StateNational Judicial AcademyAndhra Pradesh Judicial AcademyJudicial Academy Assam and North Eastern Judicial Officers Training Institute NEJOTI Bihar Judicial AcademyChhattisgarh State Judicial AcademyGujarat State Judicial AcademyChandigarh Judicial AcademyHimachal Pradesh Judicial AcademyJudicial Academy JharkhandKarnataka Judicial AcademyKerala Judicial AcademyMadhya Pradesh State Judicial AcademyMaharashtra Judicial Academy and Indian Mediation Centre and Training InstituteManipur Judicial AcademyMeghalaya Judicial AcademyOdisha Judicial AcademyRajasthan State Judicial AcademySikkim Judicial AcademyTamil Nadu State Judicial AcademyTelangana State Judicial AcademyTripura Judicial AcademyJudicial Training Institute Uttar PradeshUttarakhand Judicial and Legal AcademyWest Bengal Judicial AcademyIssues EditAccording to the World Bank although India s courts are notoriously inefficient they at least comprise a functioning independent judiciary 57 Citizens are after many negative experiences often unaware of their rights or resigned to their fate before an inefficient court 58 Court efficiency is crucial as a backlog of cases creates opportunities for corruption 59 Judiciary Issues have been depicted in several films such as Court Backlog Edit Main article Pendency of court cases in India As of May 2022 India has a sanctioned strength of 25 628 judges with 4 7 crore 47 million cases pending in judiciary Nearly 1 82 000 cases have been pending for over 30 years According to National Judicial Data Grid Indian courts had 27 rise in backlog between December 2019 and April 2022 60 The legal maxim justice delayed is justice denied is honored only in the breach On average about 20 of approved judicial positions are vacant The annual backlog increase is less than 2 If the vacancies were filled the backlog would decline 61 62 Minor infractions make up nearly half of pending cases 63 64 In 2015 some 400 vacancies were reported in the 24 high courts The Supreme Court backlog is 70 572 as of May 2 2022 60 Some 30 million cases await resolution in various courts The budget allocation is a 0 2 per cent of gross domestic product The judge population ratio is 10 5 to one million about 20 of the recommended 50 to one million 65 The government is the largest single litigant adding cases to the docket losing most and then appealing to the next court 66 The Law Commission found that most such appeals were pointless 67 68 Jagdev claimed that the Judiciary does not attract the best legal talent in part because of disparity in compensation In recent years scandals have besmirched the judiciary s reputation The sub ordinate judiciary works in appalling conditions 69 On 12 January 2012 the Supreme Court said that confidence in the judiciary was decreasing posing a threat to the country It acknowledged the problems of vacancies in trial courts unwillingness of lawyers to become judges and the failure of the apex judiciary in filling vacant HC posts One proposal is that access to justice must be made a constitutional right requiring the executive to provide the necessary infrastructure for protecting that right The Court also wanted the Government of India to detail the work being done by the National Mission for Justice Delivery and Legal Reforms 70 71 72 Undertrials outnumber convicts in the prison population Ordinary citizens have been imprisioned for espionage for overstaying their visa or straying across international borders languishing in prison for years due to the slow redressal process 73 According to Prison Statistics India 2015 67 2 of the total prison population of India is under trial which means they have not yet by 2015 been convicted by the court 74 To reduce pendency Fast track courts Evening courts Morning courts were set up and met with mixed success 75 76 Mobile courts were set up to bring justice at the doorsteps 77 of litigants of judge poor rural areas 78 Lok Adalats is an informal alternative mechanism that has been a success in tackling backlogs especially in pre litigation matters settling cases before they enter the courts 79 80 81 According to a report released by Centre for Public Policy Research and British Deputy High Commission a total of 16 884 commercial disputes are pending in High Courts with original jurisdiction Of these Madras High court tops with 5 865 With the number of commercial disputes growing rapidly facilitating a seamless dispute resolution system through alternate means has become crucial 82 Economists Boehm and Oberfeld calculated that the backlog costs the Indian economy several percentage points of GDP 83 Judicial corruption Edit According to Transparency International judicial corruption in India is attributable to factors such as delays in the disposal of cases shortage of judges and complex procedures all of which are exacerbated by a preponderance of new laws 84 Corruption has reached the Supreme Court Notable cases include In April 2017 a judicial Magistrate Debanjan Ghosh gave bail to a murder suspect In December 2015 in Darjeeling District an unjustifiably large number of undeserving acquittals and undeserving bails was alleged by then Additional Chief JM 85 In December 2009 legal activist and Supreme Court lawyer Prashant Bhushan stated in court out of the last 16 to 17 Chief Justices half have been corrupt 86 87 In November 2010 former Law Minister Shanti Bhushan echoed Prashant Bhushan s claim 88 There have been allegations that judges with doubtful integrity were elevated within the higher judiciary and campaigns held for their impeachment 89 In 2011 Soumitra Sen former judge at the Calcutta High Court became the first judge in the India to be impeached by the Rajya Sabha for misappropriation of funds 13 In November 2011 a former Supreme Court Justice Ruma Pal slammed the higher judiciary for what she called the seven sins She listed the sins as 90 Turning a blind eye to the injudicious conduct of a colleague Hypocrisy the distortion of the norm of judicial independence Secrecy lack of transparency in the appointment of judges to the High and Supreme Court Plagiarism and prolixity SC judges often lift whole passages from earlier decisions without acknowledgement and use long winded verbose language Arrogance the higher judiciary has claimed superiority and independence to mask their own indiscipline and transgression of norms and procedures Professional arrogance judges arrive at decisions of grave importance ignoring precedent or judicial principle Nepotism wherein favours are sought and dispensed by some judges Representation in Judiciary Edit Around 50 of the judges of high courts and 33 judges in the Supreme Court are family members of those in higher echelons of judiciary Supreme Court has a sanctioned strength of 31 judges out of which six judges were sons of former judges and appointments of over 88 judges from 13 high courts who were either born to a family of lawyers judges or worked under some legal luminaries 91 Union Minister of State HRD Upendra Kushwaha notes that only 250 300 families have sent judges to Supreme Court and there is negligible representation of women and Scheduled Castes in higher judiciary 92 E Courts Mission Mode Project EditThe E courts project was established in 2005 93 All courts were to get computerised As per the project in 2008 all the District courts were initialised under the project In 2010 all District courts were computerised Digital services began in the Supreme Court in June 2011 The case lists and the judgements of most district courts were available 94 95 Data is updated daily Most District and Taluka Courts in the country are computerised Cause list of each of the Court are available 96 97 Judicial service centres are available for all courts The public assess case status stage and next hearing dates citation needed See also EditLaw of India Constitution of India Indian Penal Code Three Judges Cases Supreme Court of India Minister of Law and Justice Law enforcement in India Code of Criminal Procedure India Pendency of court cases in India List of Acts of the Parliament of India National Judicial Appointments Commission Sections of the Indian Penal Code List of amendments of the Constitution of IndiaReferences Edit a b National Judicial Academy 24 March 2020 Retrieved 24 March 2020 a b All India Judges allindiajudges org Brief History of law in India The Bar Council of India Retrieved 28 May 2022 Jois Justice M Rama April 2004 Legal and ConstFirst 1984 ISBN 9788175342064 Retrieved 6 November 2015 History of Judiciary All India Judges Association Retrieved 29 April 2015 Bhattacharyya Bishwajit Supreme Court Shows Govt Its LoC the day after No 1 15 Nov 2015 Archived from the original on 5 May 2016 Retrieved 10 November 2015 1 New Delhi 26 September 2001 A Consultation Paper on the Financial Autonomy of the Indian Judiciary Report National Commission to Review the Working of the Constitution Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Chakrabarty Bidyut 2008 Indian Politics and Society Since Independence Events Processes and Ideology First ed Oxon UK New York USA Routledge p 103 ISBN 978 0 415 40867 7 Retrieved 5 November 2015 Sorabjee Soli J 1 November 2015 A step in the Wrong Direction The Week Retrieved 12 November 2015 Venu M K 5 July 2013 Government may drop gag clause wants judges to show restraint The Hindu Retrieved 5 November 2015 Hegde Sanjay 19 October 2015 Judging the Judge Maker The Hindu Retrieved 24 October 2015 Bhushan Prashant A historic non impeachment PDF Frontline 4 June 1993 Archived from the original PDF on 9 December 2014 Retrieved 5 December 2014 a b Motion for removal of Mr Justice Soumitra Sen Judge Calcutta High Court PDF Rajya Sabha Secretariat New Delhi October 2011 pp 414 419 Retrieved 4 December 2014 Venkatesan V Interview with Justice J S Verma former Chief Justice of India The Judiciary Honesty Matters Frontline No Volume 25 Issue 20 27 Sep 10 October 2008 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Krishna Iyer V R 7 August 2001 Higher judicial appointments II The Hindu Archived from the original on 6 January 2016 Retrieved 8 November 2015 Thomas K T 13 August 2014 In defence of the collegium The Indian Express Retrieved 8 November 2015 Mahesh Chandra Gupta v Union of India amp Ors Transferred Case C No 6 of 2009 Supreme Court of India 2009 8 SCC 273 18 59 6 July 2009 Archived from the original on 8 December 2015 Retrieved 7 November 2015 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jean Louis Halperin in French 25 March 2011 Lay Justice in India PDF Ecole Normale Superieure Archived from the original PDF on 3 May 2014 Retrieved 3 May 2014 Dev Atul What the Indian judiciary has done to itself The Caravan Retrieved 16 July 2019 Journey of Judicial Magistrate to Supreme Court Judge National Judicial Pay Commission summary SNJPC Administrative Setup of High Court Uttar Pradesh Legislative Assembly UPLA Principal Secretary www upvidhansabhaproceedings gov in Retrieved 15 December 2019 Home Law and Legislative Affairs Department Government of Madhya Pradesh www law mp gov in Home law bih nic in For the first time serving judge appointed Union Law Secretary The Economic Times 21 October 2019 Retrieved 15 December 2019 Supreme Court of India Second National Judicial Pay Commission The High Court of Judicature at Patna www patnahighcourt gov in Deputation of Judges at Hon ble Supreme Court High Court of Madhya Pradesh https mphc gov in gradation list a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Posting in Centre Proposed perks of Judges in India PDF Proposed pay of sub ordinate judges in India PDF Ranchi District Court in India Official Website of District Court of India districts ecourts gov in Former Judicial Commissioners प र व न य य य क त District Court in India Official Website of District Court of India districts ecourts gov in Indian Order of Precedence PDF Introduction to the Constitution of I Ahmed History Archived 19 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Supreme Court of India Retrieved 15 July 2012 The Supreme Court Rules 1966 PDF New Delhi The Supreme Court of India 2010 Article 145 in The Constitution of India 1949 indiankanoon org Supreme Court Rules 2013 supremecourtofindia nic in Supreme Court of India 27 May 2014 Patnaik Jagadish K ed 2008 Mizoram Dimensions and Perspectives Society Economy amp Polity New Delhi Concept Publishing Co p 444 ISBN 9788180695148 Retrieved 29 April 2015 Check Court Judgements JUDIS Archived 5 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Government of India website District Courts of India official website Archived from the original on 22 January 2013 Retrieved 16 March 2012 CrPc Section 8 Metropolitan areas Indian Kanoon Retrieved 16 March 2012 UP Revenue Code PDF MP Land Revenue Code a b Mohapatra Dhananjoy 22 May 2012 Funds crunch lukewarm response mar Gram Nyayalayas The Times of India Retrieved 1 May 2013 Funds of Central Govt Consolidated Fund Public Account etc Polity Notes for UPSC BYJUS Supreme Court Judges Salary Act PDF High Court Judges Salary Act PDF Latest Pay Hike 30 January 2018 Judicial Pay Commission National Judicial Pay Commission Drishti IAS Governance in India World Bank Retrieved 21 January 2012 Unninayar Indira 28 April 2016 The fault lies not in our stars but in ourselves The Financial Express Archived from the original on 30 April 2016 Retrieved 28 April 2016 Transparency International Annual Report 2010 Transparency International Archived from the original on 15 January 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2012 a b Sumeda 10 May 2022 Explained The clogged state of the Indian judiciary The Hindu Retrieved 26 August 2022 Justice can be delivered in reasonable time 3 November 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Supreme Court of India History supremecourtofindia nic in Archived from the original on 31 October 2015 Retrieved 2 July 2017 Report No 245 July 2014 Arrears and Backlog Creating Additional Judicial Wo manpower PDF Law Commission of India Retrieved 29 April 2015 Sharma Pankaj 2 July 2012 HC meet to clear backlog The Telegraph Calcutta Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Antony M J 5 November 2015 New CJI has his task cut out Business Standard Retrieved 2 July 2017 Gupta Suresh C Government Litigation and Supreme Court Supreme Court Cases Eastern Book Company 1996 5 SCC Jour 12 Retrieved 10 November 2015 Kasturi Kannan 25 March 2008 25 March 2008 Justice Delayed Government itself to blame for backlog of cases indiatogether Retrieved 10 November 2015 Seth Leila 2014 Talking of Justice People s Rights in Modern India New Delhi Aleph p 115 ISBN 9789383064823 Retrieved 10 November 2015 Karan Jagdev Indian Judiciary Does our system promote mob justice Rich Vs Poor Immediate Closure vs Denied justice Beyond News Supreme Court chides itself govt for judicial backlog The Times of India Times News Network 12 January 2012 Archived from the original on 26 January 2013 Retrieved 11 January 2012 Reforms could see disposal of cases in three years The Hindu 24 June 2011 Retrieved 11 January 2012 Government sets up National Mission for Justice Delivery First Post 2 August 2011 Retrieved 11 January 2012 Your World The Nowhere Man Rupa Jha 21 October 2012 BBC retr 2012 10 20 Program link The Nowhere Man Bhandari Vrinda 26 May 2017 India s criminal justice system An example of justice delayed justice denied Firstpost Retrieved 26 August 2022 Thevar Velly 20 April 2011 Oh What a Terrible Morning The Telegraph Calcutta Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Starred Question No 80 Reforms in Judicial System Answered on 29 July 2010 Lok Sabha Parliament of India Minister of Law amp Justice Archived from the original on 28 April 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Cutting India s legal backlog on the move The Express Tribune Pakistan Agence France Presse 7 August 2010 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Punjab gets its first mobile court The Hindu Press Trust of India 3 October 2007 Retrieved 28 April 2015 National Lok Adalat disposes 10 25 million cases The Times of Oman 6 December 2014 Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Lok Adalats dispose of over 2 lakh family labour cases Deccan Herald 29 April 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Lok adalats dispose 8 80 lakh cases The Free Press Journal 16 March 2015 Archived from the original on 16 December 2015 Retrieved 28 April 2015 Max trade dispute pendency in Madras HC The New Indian Express Retrieved 24 November 2017 Boehm Johannes Oberfield Ezra November 2020 Misallocation in the Market for Inputs Enforcement and the Organization of Production Quarterly Journal of Economics 135 4 2007 2058 doi 10 1093 qje qjaa020 hdl 10 1093 qje qjaa020 India Corruption Study 2005 PDF Transparency International India Retrieved 28 April 2015 nhrc diary no 2817 17 My Honest And Bonafide Perception outlook india 9 December 2009 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Six corrupt CJIs named by Prashant Bhushan canarytrap in 6 October 2010 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Shanti Bhushan makes news again Bar amp Bench 11 November 2010 Archived from the original on 17 January 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Wrong people sometimes elevated to higher judiciary Ex CJI Verma The Times of India 27 June 2011 Archived from the original on 3 January 2013 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Former Indian Supreme Court Justice Examines Corruption in the Judiciary Fair Observer 18 November 2011 Retrieved 21 January 2012 50 HC judges related to senior judicial members Report Hindustan Times 19 June 2015 Retrieved 9 November 2022 Only 250 300 families have sent judges to SC Upendra Kushwaha The Indian Express 12 December 2017 Retrieved 9 November 2022 NIC Project Monitoring System 24 August 2011 Archived from the original on 20 November 2011 Retrieved 26 November 2011 Home judis nic in District Court Website 8 April 2006 Archived from the original on 8 April 2006 Retrieved 23 July 2022 Home District Court in India Official Website of District Court of India districts ecourts gov in Retrieved 23 July 2022 Welcome to NJDG National Judicial Data Grid njdg ecourts gov in Retrieved 23 July 2022 Further reading EditJustice can be delivered in reasonable time Judicial delay may become a thing of the past National policy and action plan for implementation of IT in the Indian judiciary Has India failed because of its Judicial System e courts in India still a distant dream Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judiciary of India amp oldid 1139536315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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