According to data collated by the Department of Justice in the Law Ministry for Parliament and put out in public domain, as on December 31, 2015, 20.3 lakh cases were pending in various district and subordinate courts which are more than 10 years old.
Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Bihar, Odisha and West Bengal account for 84.7 per cent cases which are pending for over a decade.
The e-Committee of Supreme Court had launched the National Judicial Data Grid to provide data on cases pending in the district courts across the country.
The data is segregated into civil and criminal cases and further broken down on the basis of the number of years the cases have been pending.
According to a note prepared by the Department of Justice for a high-level meeting on Justice Delivery and Legal Reforms held in February, usual attempts to reduce pendency include increasing the number of judges or creating additional benches, and while there is no disagreement that the number of judges does need to be increased, this cannot be the only measure to reduce the pendency.
A total of nearly 3.1 crore cases, right from the Supreme Court down to the lower courts, are pending in Indian courts.
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