![]() Financial Daily from THE HINDU group of publications Monday, Oct 17, 2005 |
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Mentor
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Courts/Legal Issues Columns - Racy Cases No law, no freedom
A. V. Vedpuriswar
Said China, "Look I surfed the Net and found that as of March 2004 there were 22,000 cases before the Supreme Court, 33 lakh cases before the High Courts (of which 41 per cent were overdue by five years) and 228 lakh cases were hanging fire in subordinate courts (of which 30 per cent were pending for more than five years)." Wafers recalled her senior who in audit was ever preoccupied preparing an ageing schedule of debtors! Rinku sipping his coffee remarked, "According to the Guinness Book, the most protracted lawsuit took place in India. A "temple-keeper (Mahant, in local lingo) filed a suit in Pune in 1205 A.D., and the case was decided a full 766 years later, in 1966!" As Wafers laughed, Rinku chided, "This is not the average time taken by the Indian courts for deciding cases. Normally a case takes between seven and 15 years to be decided". Wafers remembered the Bofors story that had broken out in 1986. Nothing had come of it even after 20 long years. "How are things elsewhere in the world?" she asked. The captain brought in potato chips that China loved. Munching one, China said: "Let me give you an example from the capital market". Wafers sat up. The Sensex had crossed 8400 and she was interested. China was saying, "Back in 1995, the derivative trader Nick Leeson brought the 150-year-old Barings Bank to its knees through his reckless trading in the derivatives market. Today, he has not only completed serving his prison term; last heard of he had written a book on the subject which was made into a movie". Wafers could not miss the irony. In India, the cases relating to the 1992 scam were still on. It was another matter that the principal protagonist Harshad Mehta is no more! Rinku, although appreciative of contempt of court, decided to recount a first-hand experience. A few months back he had to frequently visit a lower court in connection with a criminal case in which a close friend was falsely implicated. "In most of the hearings, the main agenda is to fix the date of the next hearing. If at all they serve any purpose, it is to identify the hidden athletic talent in the country!" Wafers sat up interested. "As soon as one's name is called out by the court clerk, in the most disrespectful way imaginable, one has to push through the milling crowds which block the entrance and make a fifty-metre dash to stand in front of the judge. Any delay would result in a severe reprimand! And having folded his hands in front of the magistrate, one is told when to come for the next hearing." China smiled popping another potato chip into his mouth. And said, "When trials take place, one can make out very little of what is going on. Lawyers speak in hushed tones. The magistrate's voice cannot be heard. Worse still when there is so much backlog pending in the courts, our courts do not even put in a decent eight hours of work a day. Cases keep dragging forever. But the lawyers do not seem unhappy". Wafers asked, "Why is this so?" China responded. "Perhaps it has, in part, to do with the way the fee is structured in India. Unlike in the US where lawyers work on an incentive based system, here, they collect fees per document generated or per court hearing". Wafers thought, "Oh! piece rate workers." Rinku remarked, "So the more the number of hearings, the more the fees they can collect." Wafers murmured, "For the client, a variable cost." China turned to Wafers and asked, "What would you suggest?" Wafers didn't think for long. "Judges must be paid handsomely. There must be incentives for judges to finish cases. We don't want kangaroo courts but cases must be expeditiously dispensed with. The courts must work in two shifts." Rinku, who had done some research on the subject, said, "A national Commission has recommended that there should be 50 judges for every 10 lakh citizens. But we have only 10 judges for every 10 lakh citizens." Wafers nodded. China said, "Despite its lacunae the legal system has stood up in India. But the law must not only work. It should also be seen to be working. You cannot progress as a nation unless the populace has the fear of law in its mind."
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