Heat Wave Impact on Legal System
Subject : Legal - Court Proceedings
Soaring temperatures in India's capital have proven to be too much for some courts and are putting to the test a law in place since 1961 that requires lawyers to wear heavy black robes and coats.
At least three High Courts have permitted lawyers to discard the robes and coats for the summer, although the Supreme Court is being urged to make it a general rule for all lawyers in the country.
Judges at one
While Supreme Court and most High Courts have air conditioning, many lower courts and consumer forums depend on fans and have poor ventilation.
They have also deployed paramedics to polling stations for the final day of India's massive general election on Saturday in case any voters fall ill as they queue in the heat. A 40-year-old laborer died of heat stroke on Wednesday.
The northwest of India has been experiencing high temperatures for several weeks. India's Meteorological Department has predicted two or three times the usual number of heat wave days in the region this month, or days defined by abnormally hot weather.
For Delhi, that means sweltering temperatures are affecting people across the city, including its legal system.
At a consumer court in the southwestern district of Dwarka, which Reuters visited on Thursday, judges presided over cases against insurance companies in a courtroom fitted with two non-functioning air conditioners. Ceiling fans and open windows offered the only respite from the weather.
Three of the court's judges issued a written order this week stating they had declined to hear a case due to high temperatures in the courtroom. They adjourned the case for the cooler month of November.
"There is neither air conditioner nor cooler in the courtroom... There is too much heat. There is no water supply even to go to the washroom to ease ourselves ... In these circumstances, arguments cannot be heard," the order said.
In 2021, the Supreme Court Chief Justice said courts "still operate from dilapidated structures without proper facilities", which was "severely detrimental" for both litigants and lawyers.
A Delhi-based lawyer,
Black coats absorb more heat and endanger health, Tripathi says in his filing, which the justices have yet to hear.
Forcing lawyers to wear them "is neither fair nor reasonable," he says.
heat wave - court facilities - lawyer dress code - courtroom conditions - heat impact on legal system - court operations disruption - temperature extremes - infrastructure challenges
#LegalHeatwave #CourtCoolingCrisis #LawyersDitchRobes
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