'District Judiciary Breathes Life Into Law' : CJI Surya Kant Inaugurates Madurai Additional District Court Complex
The Chief Justice of India, Surya Kant, today expressed that the District Judiciary has to be viewed as the legal system's "lifeblood, its vital organs, the sinews", and having a good infrastructure at the grass roots lays "the groundwork for a more responsive, more dignified system of justice."
The CJI was speaking at the inauguration of the Additional Court Buildings at the Madurai District Court Campus, under the auspices of the Madras High Court
The CJI observed that for the overwhelming majority of citizens, district courts represent both the first and final point of interaction with the justice system. In that sense, he noted, while constitutional courts may interpret, refine, and shape the law, it is the district judiciary that operationalises it in the everyday lives of litigants.
"I have said on many occasions that the District Judiciary is the backbone of our Justice Delivery System. I do not use that phrase as a pleasantry or a ceremonial compliment. I use it because it is a statement of structural fact. For the vast majority of our citizens, the district court is the first court they will ever enter. For many, it is the only court they will ever know."
Drawing a distinction between institutional roles, the CJI characterised the higher judiciary as the “mind” of the system, whereas district courts function as its “vital organs,” sustaining the system through their daily engagement with disputes and litigants.
"The Supreme Court and the High Courts may interpret, refine, and shape the law. But it is the District Judiciary that breathes life into it, that gives the law its daily meaning in the lived experience of ordinary people. If the Higher Judiciary is the mind of the legal system, the District Judiciary is its lifeblood, its vital organs, the sinews that hold the entire body together."
Thus, he stressed how ensuring an efficient infrastructure for the district judiciary was not just an administrative goal but also integral to the quality of justice dispensed.
" When we invest in district court infrastructure, we are not merely laying bricks and pouring mortar. We are laying the groundwork for a more responsive, more dignified system of justice. The environment in which justice is administered shapes the quality of that justice in both visible and subtle ways. A well-designed courtroom fosters discipline, promotes efficiency, and lends a measure of institutional decorum, elevating every participant in the process."
Highlighting the often-overlooked relationship between physical spaces and institutional functioning, the CJI pointed out that courtroom design and infrastructure have both “visible and subtle” impacts on justice delivery.
A well-designed courtroom, he explained, promotes discipline, enhances efficiency, and reinforces institutional decorum. These effects, though incremental in isolation, cumulatively contribute to reshaping the culture of dispute resolution.
The CJI further added that the additional courtrooms and improved facilities are expected to reduce case backlogs and minimise unnecessary adjournments, which were issues that have historically undermined public confidence in the system.
" I speak of the judge who presides, the lawyer who argues, and the litigant who waits for a hearing. Each of these improvements may appear small in isolation, but taken together, they cumulatively transform the culture of dispute resolution."
"The additional court buildings we inaugurate today at the Madurai District Court campus contribute to this very transformation. I am confident that these new facilities will ease the considerable infrastructural pressure on the existing complex, reduce the unnecessary adjournments that erode public faith, and bring a renewed sense of dignity to proceedings that the people of this district so richly deserve," he opined.
The CJI also lauded the efforts of the Madras High Court in creating an additional High Court Guest House at the Madurai Bench campus, which eases the ultimate cause of efficient justice delivery.