Paves Way for NCR Lawyers in Chamber Race, Defers to Experts
In a pragmatic move echoing wisdom, the has sidestepped a direct ruling on restrictive residence rules for lawyers' chambers, instead directing specialist committees to rethink eligibility amid Delhi's suburban boom. The bench of Justice V. Kameswar Rao and Justice Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora disposed of W.P.(C) 2473/2026 filed by advocate against the and others on .
Chambers at Stake: The Urban Commute Conundrum
The dispute centers on allotment rules for lawyers' chambers in Delhi's bustling district courts— , , and . Current regulations under the , rules, and rules limit eligibility to advocates residing strictly within the National Capital Territory (NCT) of Delhi. Petitioner , representing broader advocate interests, argued this excludes practicing lawyers from the National Capital Region (NCR)—areas like Noida, Gurugram, Faridabad, and Ghaziabad—who daily commute to Delhi courts.
Gupta sought a to quash the NCT-only criterion, harmonize district rules with the more inclusive Lawyers’ Chambers Rules, (amended for NCR), and reserve chambers for affected seniors during pendency. The plea invoked constitutional fairness, non-discrimination, and , highlighting how NCR residents form part of the seniority pool yet face outright rejection.
Petitioner's Plea vs. Respondent's Referral Strategy
Gupta's counsel, led by , spotlighted the 's chambers in Delhi's own setup, where Noida, Greater Noida, Faridabad, and Gurugram residents qualify—underscoring a glaring inconsistency. They pressed for immediate relief, including costs and chamber reservations for nine rejected advocates (listed in annexure E), who could pursue separate remedies.
Respondents, represented by Standing Counsel for the Chamber Allotment Committees of the specified courts, countered by invoking the 's ruling in Gopal Jha v. Hon’ble of India ( 13 SCC 161). Paras 39-40 of that decision noted evolving demographics: NCR suburbs closer to courts than some Delhi locales, urging reconsideration of over rigid NCT boundaries. Vashisht proposed referring the issue to the High Court's via the , a suggestion Malhotra endorsed.
Drawing from Playbook
The High Court leaned heavily on Gopal Jha , where the apex court declined to rewrite Bar Association rules but nudged the Judges' Allotment Committee to factor in NCR commutes and proximity:
“It is time to reconsider as to whether requirement of residence in Delhi or New Delhi... should be extended to some areas of neighbouring States which are quite close to the vicinity of the . May be, by fixing a particular from the , the problem can be tackled.”
This precedent mirrored the Delhi district courts' scenario, prompting the bench to deem it an "appropriate issue" for expert panels handling , , and .
Key Observations from the Bench
The oral judgment distilled the essence:
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“In effect, the petitioner is challenging the eligibility condition... that a member of the association who is a resident of National Capital Territory of Delhi to be eligible for allotment of chamber and not a resident of National Capital Region.”
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On referral: “...the issue which has been raised by the petitioner in this petition be referred to the Portfolio Committee of the High Court through the learned of this Court... for a decision.”
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On rejected advocates: “We take on record Mr. Malhotra’s submission that the nine Advocates... shall seek their remedy as available in law.”
No Final Verdict, But a Clear Path Forward
“The petition is disposed of.”
The court closed the writ without costs or interim stays, mandating to decide and inform the petitioner. Pending CM Appl. 12042/2026 was dismissed. This defers substantive relief but signals potential reform, aligning district allotments with High Court and norms.
For NCR-based advocates frozen out of seniority lists, the ruling opens a procedural door—committees must now weigh constitutional equity against administrative logistics. Future allotments hang in balance, promising a uniform framework if panels expand to radial or NCR criteria, easing Delhi's chamber crunch for cross-border practitioners.