Locked Gates, Endless Waits: Why India’s Judiciary Needs a Roster, Not a Vacation
Every summer, while the rest of the country grinds through the heat—factories running, hospitals treating patients, and police stations open—the highest courts in India largely fall silent. For about six weeks, the Supreme Court and major High Courts go on a traditional summer recess.
Meanwhile, nearly three out of four people in Indian jails are undertrials—individuals legally presumed innocent, waiting for a trial that might take years to finish.
Here is a simplified breakdown of the crisis, the debate surrounding it, and the actionable solutions for your GS Paper II (Polity & Governance) preparation.
The Scale of the Crisis
The Backlog: As of late 2025/early 2026, over 5.39 crore cases are pending across the Indian judiciary.
The Timeline: At the current pace of disposal, it could take nearly three centuries to clear the entire backlog.
The Overburdened Bench: Indian judges are among the most overworked in the world. The recess is not spent relaxing; judges use this time to write long-pending, reserved judgments. The issue is not laziness—it is systemic structure.
The Core Debate: Vacations vs. Vacancies
1. The Colonial Legacy
The mass summer shutdown is a hand-me-down from the British era, designed for English judges who could not tolerate the intense Indian summer and retreated to cooler regions. In 2024, the Supreme Court renamed the break to "partial court working days," but the actual number of sitting days (around 190 a year) remained unchanged.
2. The Vacancy Counter-Argument
Defenders of the judicial calendar argue that the real issue is a shortage of judges, with up to one-third of High Court seats lying vacant. However, critics point out that if the courts are already running at half-strength, closing them entirely for six weeks only worsens the bottleneck.
The Way Forward: Practical Solutions for UPSC
To reform the system, India needs to move away from cosmetic name changes and adopt structural shifts:
A. Staggered Leaves (The Hospital Model)
Instead of the entire court shutting down en masse, judges should take staggered leaves. Just as hospitals maintain a rotational roster so that healthcare never stops, courts should maintain full Benches throughout the year by rotating judicial leave. This has been strongly recommended by the Law Commission, the Justice Malimath Committee, and a 2023 Parliamentary Standing Committee.
B. Out-of-Court Settlements (ADR)
Courts should be the last resort, not the first stop. India already has highly effective mechanisms that need better utilization:
Lok Adalats: Massively successful, settling over 25.9 million cases in a single national sitting in Dec 2025.
Mediation Act, 2023: Legalized pre-litigation mediation to settle disputes before they ever reach a judge.
Arbitration: Speeding up commercial dispute resolutions outside the traditional courtroom.
C. Harnessing Retired Judicial Brainpower
India has a massive, underutilized resource: healthy, highly experienced retired judges who step down at 62 or 65. A dedicated task force of retired judges could be appointed exclusively to clear bottlenecks, set strict public targets for case disposals, and bring accountability to the backlog without adding to the daily administrative burden of the active courts.
Key Takeaway for Mains: Judicial reforms do not require choosing between the well-being of judges and the rights of litigants. By institutionalizing staggered rosters and scaling up Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR), the judiciary can ensure that the doors of justice never stay closed for those who need them most.