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Here’s your Supreme Court Wrap for 2023, courtesy of Bar & Bench. An analysis by the publication for 2023 calendars reveals that the Supreme Court was open for fewer than 200 days, with a prolonged summer and winter break. High Courts averaged a little over 200 working days, with variations in holiday structures. Total working days at the Supreme Court in 2023 were 195, while there were 105 weekly offs and 70 holidays, amounting to a total of 175 non-working days. Meanwhile, the Rajasthan High Court was open for 214 of 365 days, making it the most operational one amongst the lot. The second on the list are the High Courts of Madhya Pradesh and Karnataka, with 212 working days each. Third on the leaderboard are the High Courts of Calcutta and Allahabad, with 211 working days each. The rest of the high courts, including Bombay, Delhi, Madras, Kerala, Gauhati, Punjab & Haryana, and Gujarat remained open for 210 days.
Read more here: https://t.co/oeigkT322z pic.twitter.com/VwPSihcH3Z
— Bar & Bench (@barandbench) December 3, 2023
Rajasthan High Court has the highest number of working days in 2023 – 214 days
Read story: https://t.co/oeigkT322z pic.twitter.com/QMaShyhu76
— Bar & Bench (@barandbench) December 3, 2023
Meanwhile, Supreme Court Justices DY Chandrachud and Sanjay Kaul defended breaks, emphasizing extended hours spent in research and judgment writing. Judges like GS Patel and Prathiba Singh highlighted their demanding schedules, with Singh noting 14 to 15-hour workdays. Despite the evident strain on judges, discarding vacations may not be a panacea for the over 4 crore pending cases burdening the system. The debate on vacation reduction hinges on the full strength of functioning courts, as vacancies exacerbate judges’ workloads. Supreme Court Justice Dipankar Datta, during his tenure as Chief Justice of the Bombay High Court, underscored the challenge of accommodating urgent hearings with an overburdened judiciary losing colleagues regularly. Meanwhile, Justice Prathiba Singh reacted to hearsay of judges playing golf after leave. She said that judges log in two hours before the court opens and then sit until 4:30 p.m. After that, they do their administrative work, finalize orders, and read the next day’s brief. This takes about an hour.
Judges in India work 14 to 15 hours a day, have no work-life balance: Justice Prathiba Singh
Read more here: https://t.co/rn48j88p5e pic.twitter.com/2Ji4Q7s0HJ
— Bar & Bench (@barandbench) November 27, 2023
Read full story here: https://t.co/rn48j88p5e pic.twitter.com/C4nUzJyEyz
— Bar & Bench (@barandbench) November 27, 2023
Reactions galore:
Even kindergarten school kids do not get 47% off-days in a year.
Gyan dene wala #cjidychandrachud , kabhi kabhi kam bhi kar liya karo.
Kindly justify your position and salary that we pay you. https://t.co/eIQF8ynIC6— Soumyadip 🇮🇳 🕉️ (@asksoumya) December 3, 2023
See Also: This Chinese Graduate Took A ‘Simple And Cushy’ Cemetery Job With Perfect Work-Life Balance
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