Delhi High Court

Delhi HC Seeks Centre’s Response on Infrastructure Expansion Plea

The Delhi High Court on Wednesday sought a response from the Centre regarding a plea seeking the expansion of the court, courtrooms, lawyers’ chambers, parking space, and infrastructural requirements.

A bench comprising Acting Chief Justice Manmohan and Justice Manmeet PS Arora issued notice to the Union ministries of Housing and Urban Affairs, Law and Justice, and the administrative side of the high court on the petition.

DHCBA

The petition, filed by the Delhi High Court Bar Association (DHCBA), urged the Centre to hand over possession of the entire land of Bapa Nagar for infrastructural needs to expand the high court, including the DHCBA, by relocating the current occupants of the residential quarters in Bapa Nagar to newly constructed or under-constructed flats under the General Pool Residential Accommodation (GPRA) scheme.

What the Court Stated?

During the hearing, the bench remarked, “The problem is that the high court is confined to this space only. We will require adjacent land. We will examine this and explore available options. Currently, we have virtually no land at our disposal.” The court scheduled further proceedings for July 31.

Representing the Centre was standing counsel Anurag Ahluwalia, while advocate Raavi Birbal represented the administrative side of the Delhi High Court.

Senior advocate Rakesh Tiku, on behalf of DHCBA, urged the court to instruct authorities to promptly take steps, within a defined timeline, to provide additional space for infrastructural expansion of the high court, DHCBA, courtrooms, lawyers’ chambers, parking facilities, record rooms, and related activities by redeveloping adjacent land at Bapa Nagar on Zakir Hussain Road.

The area currently houses old residential quarters for government employees.

The plea emphasized that due to the escalation in litigation, the sanctioned strength of high court judges has risen to 60, while the number of registered lawyers, currently around 35,000 DHCBA members, has also significantly increased.

On any given working day, the high court deals with over 4500 matters, apart from the regular list, involving numerous lawyers and litigants from both sides and other stakeholders.

“This substantial volume of matters entails the movement of lawyers and litigants. Approximately 10,000 lawyers and an equal number of litigants visit the high court daily, along with around 6,000 court staff and security personnel present inside the premises,” the plea elaborated.

It further highlighted the high court’s space shortage, necessitating the need for additional courtrooms, lawyers’ chambers, modern libraries, canteens, parking, bar rooms, and facilities for litigants.

Read More: Supreme Court, Delhi High Court, States High Court, Other Courts, International

Nunnem Gangte

Recent Posts

Defamation Case: “Raut Didn’t Take Care & Caution, Caused Complainant Agony”- Mumbai Court

A Mumbai court has convicted Shiv Sena (UBT) leader Sanjay Raut in a defamation case…

8 hours ago

1984 Anti-Sikh Riots Tytler Case: Delhi Court Records Statement Of Lakhvinder Kaur

The Rouse Avenue court on Thursday recorded the emotional testimony of Lakhvinder Kaur, widow of…

8 hours ago

Satyendar Jain Says Probe In Money Laundering Case Incomplete, Seeks Default Bail In Delhi HC

Former minister Satyendar Jain, currently in jail, urged the Delhi High Court on Thursday to…

8 hours ago

Tirupati Laddus Row: SC To Hear Pleas Seeking Court-Monitored Probe On Oct 4

The Supreme Court is set to hear a series of petitions on Friday regarding the…

9 hours ago

SC Scraps Caste-Based Discrimination In Prisons, Terms It Unconstitutional

The Supreme Court on Thursday delivered a groundbreaking judgment on Thursday, declaring caste-based discrimination in…

9 hours ago

Mahadev Betting App Case: SC Gives Bail To Chhattisgarh Businessman

The Supreme Court on Thursday has granted bail to Chhattisgarh businessman Sunil Dammani, who was…

9 hours ago