Mundane burden




Shortage of judges, inadequate infrastructure and resource constraints are perennial problems of the judiciary. However, what has led to judicial lamentation in recent times is the question whether too much of the Supreme Court's valuable time is consumed by mundane cases involving nothing more than the rights and interests of rival parties. Concerned about the large number of civil and criminal cases, apart from appeals from various tribunals and authorities, pending before it, a two-judge Bench has flagged the issue once again by observing that "routine appeals may result in the obstruction of the constitutional role assigned to the highest court". There are two separate reasons why the Supreme Court is bogged down by routine litigation: the first is the tendency among litigants to seek special leave to appeal against any order or decision of the high courts and tribunals; the second is the provision for statutory appeals against orders of various tribunals. For instance, the Electricity Act, 2003, and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Amendment) Act, 2000, provide for direct appeals to the Supreme Court against orders of appellate tribunals. The court has asked the Law Commission to examine whether allowing such direct statutory appeals is affecting its primary role.

Part of the blame has to be borne by the judges of the Supreme Court themselves. The power to grant special leave is one that is meant to be used sparingly; in practice it is used much too liberally. This has an impact on the time and number of judges devoted to hearing matters of constitutional importance. In recent times, it is a matter of regret that some major decisions involving interpretation of the Constitution were delivered by two-judge Benches, whereas such significant questions ought to have been decided by at least a five-judge Bench. The verdict reversing the Delhi High Court decriminalising homosexuality and the judgment upholding criminal defamation are two examples. The court's concern also extends to laws ousting the jurisdiction of high courts by the establishment of various tribunals. Such provisions result in the Supreme Court being the first appellate court. The Law Commission in its 229th Report suggested having a Constitution Bench in Delhi, with four 'Cassation Benches' in different regions. Whatever the solution that finds eventual acceptability, there is little doubt that the public will continue to rely on the Supreme Court to play a dual role -- as a constitutional court that decides questions of national importance, and as the final arbiter of all disputes.
inadequate not enough
infrastructure (basic equipment needed for a business or society to operate)
resource useful thing/valuable supply
constraints restrictions
perennial repeating (every year)
judiciary (related to judges and the court system)
judicial (law-related)
lamentation sad complaint
consumed used/ate/drank/destroyed
mundane ordinary and boring
Concerned about Worried about
appeals (taking court cases to a higher court for review)
various different
tribunals courts
authorities people in charge
observing watching/ noticing/ celebrating/ obeying
routine (something commonly done)
obstruction (blocking thing)
constitutional (agreeing with, or related to, the Constitution)
bogged down slowed down
litigation lawsuits
tendency habit/desire
litigants (people involved in a lawsuit)
seek look (for)
provision rule
statutory law-related
Regulatory Legal/law-based
Amendment Change
appellate (related to taking a court case to a higher court for review)
primary first (or most important)
borne carried/held
sparingly (only a little bit)
liberally generously
has an impact on affects
devoted gave/reserved
interpretation (understanding/ explanation)
ought to should
verdict legal decision
decriminalising making legal
upholding supporting/judging as correct
defamation (saying lies that hurt someone's reputation)
ousting kicking out
jurisdiction legal control/area of legal control
the establishment of (the creation of/the beginning of the existence of)
provisions (legal rules/food and supplies)
appellate court (court that hears court cases again)
regions areas
eventual (happening sometime in the future)
acceptability (how appropriate (or good), or how inappropriate (or bad) something is)
rely on depend on
arbiter judge
disputes arguments
Mundane burden  Mundane burden Reviewed by Vivek Kumar on 12:01:00 AM Rating: 5
author

This post was written by: Vivek Kumar

I am Vivek Kumar founder of Study Wrath. I have been writing articles for more than 10 years. Software and Web developments are my professional and habitual stuffs, I would love to do these all my life. I am an internet geek... I waste a lot of my precious time in searching stuffs on the google..

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