"Large number of cases coming to court is a good sign in the sense that people still have faith in judiciary and its efficacy to settle the matters but large number of cases coming against the government cannot be a good sign of good governance," Justice Thakur said.
Asking the government to be responsive to prevent cases coming to the courts, the judge, delivering his key note address on the inauguration of three days Asia Pacific International Mediation Summit, said that large number of cases in the court shows that no mechanism exists to scrutinize the cases "which need to be contested and which not to be contested".
He said that every case filed irrespective of merits is burdening the judiciary, costing the exchequer and increasing the pendency of case.
"This is something I say is deficit in governance. Governance is not just army, police, road, building etc but governance also is adjudicating rights of a citizn which is legitimately due to him," he said.
Recalling that in Jammu and Kashmir, former chief minister Sheikh Mohammad Abdullah had devised a nucleus system within law department to prevent cases from going to the court, Justice Thakur wondered as "why can't a similar system be put in place to decide whether a case is fit to contest in the court".
He said that there are so much litigation in the courts not because the litgations are really inevitable but because of the inability and refusal of the person concerned to take any decision.
