SC cautions high courts against curbs on trial
February 18th, 2012 - 10:35 pm ICT by IANSNew Delhi, Feb 18 (IANS) The high courts are taking unduly long time in deciding cases in which trial court proceedings are stayed at the stage of registration of first information report (FIR), investigation or framing of charges, the Supreme Court has said.
Describing it as a serious matter, the apex court bench of Justice (since retired) A.K. Ganguly and Justice T.S. Thakur, in a recent order, said: “Undue long delay has the effect of bringing about blatant violation of the rule of law and adverse impact on the common man’s access to justice.”
Justice Ganguly said: “A person’s access to justice is a guaranteed fundamental right under the constitution and particularly article 21. Denial of this right undermines public confidence in the justice delivery system and incentivises people to look for short-cuts and other fora where they feel that justice will be done quicker.”
The court also asked the high courts to exercise their extraordinary powers for staying the trial court proceedings with “due caution and circumspection”.
Once a high court stayed the trial court proceedings, it should not lose sight of the case and decide it as early as possible preferably within six months from the date the stay order was issued, the judges said.
In Allahabad High Court, 32 cases have been pending for 30 years or more.
“A perusal of … information reveals that shockingly 32 cases have been pending for 30 years or more,” the order read.
The apex court noted that in most of the cases in different high courts, the duration for which a case remained pending varied from 1-4 years.
The delay weakened the justice delivery system and posed a threat to rule of law, the court said.
The court said that “the stay of investigation or trial for significant periods of time runs counter to the principle of rule of law, wherein the rights and aspirations of citizens are intertwined with expeditious conclusion of matters”.
The “delay in conclusion of criminal matters signifies a restriction on the right of access to justice itself, thus, amounting to a violation of the citizens’ rights under the constitution, in particular under Article 21″, the order said.
“A sense of confidence in the courts is essential to maintain a fabric of order and liberty for a free people”, the order said.
A delay in disposal of cases would make “people who had long been exploited in the small transactions of daily life come to believe that courts cannot vindicate their legal rights against fraud and overreaching”, the judges said.
Holding that the case pendency was a “localised problem” as it affected a few high courts far more than others, the court noted that 76.9 percent of such pending cases were in four high courts - Calcutta (31.1 percent), Allahabad (28.6 percent), Patna (8.8 percent) and Orissa (8.2 percent).
The apex court asked the law commission to undertake measures to help in elimination of delays, speedy clearance of arrears and reduction in costs.
The court asked the commission to address the question as to what was the rational and scientific definition of “arrears” and delay, of which continued notice needed to be taken.
The court was hearing a petition by Imtiyaz Ahmad challenging the April 9, 2003 order of a high court staying trial court proceedings and subsequent nine orders till Dec 18, 2008.
- Lack of judges, adjournments delaying justice: Experts - Dec 19, 2011
- Judging the judiciary: 32 million pending cases clog up courts - Sep 25, 2011
- Law panel study on backlog of cases sought (Lead) - Jan 19, 2012
- Use discretion to further ends of justice: Apex court - Nov 07, 2011
- Rajendra Sethia trial to run on daily basis, rules apex court - May 18, 2012
- Don't cross 'Lakshman Rekha' on media curbs, apex court urged (Lead) - Apr 11, 2012
- Videograph court proceedings to ensure accurate reporting: Prashant Bhushan - Apr 22, 2012
- Relief for Abu Salem as apex court stays trial in 1993 blasts (Lead) - Feb 17, 2012
- Supreme Court lifts gag order on Amar Singh tapes (Second Lead) - May 12, 2011
- Supreme Court urges self-caution on exercising its powers - Mar 15, 2012
- Apex court names special public prosecutor in 2G scam case (Lead) - Apr 11, 2011
- Over 2.79 crore cases pending in Delhi trial courts - Aug 11, 2011
- Apex court pulls up PMO on Swamy's war on Raja (Second Lead) - Jan 31, 2012
- Bhullar plea: Jurists divided on abolishing death penalty - Nov 20, 2011
- CBI issued notice on petition by retired naval officials (Second Lead) - Feb 15, 2011
Tags: adverse impact, apex court, article 21, blatant violation, circumspection, common man, court bench, court noted that, delivery system, due caution, extraordinary powers, fundamental right, ganguly, high courts, information report, perusal, public confidence, short cuts, thakur, trial court proceedings