The Satara District Bar Assn v State of Maharashtra & Ors J-901-aswp-3879-2021 with ia-975-2022 in wp-3879-2021.docx 

Arun 

REPORTABLE 

IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY  CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION 

WRIT PETITION NO. 3879 OF 2021 

WITH 

INTERIM APPLICATION NO. 975 OF 2022 

IN 

WRIT PETITION NO. 3879 OF 2021 

1. The Satara District Bar  

Association Satara

Registered Association having  

Registration No. MAH/11164/Satara  

having office at District Court Building,  

Satara 415 002, through its President  

Arun Shrirang Khot, Advocate,  

Satara …Petitioner ~ versus ~ 

1. State Of Maharashtra 

Through the Ministry Of Law And  

Judiciary, Mantralaya, Mumbai  

2. The High Court Of  

Judicature At Bombay 

Through The Registrar General  

3. The Principal District And  

Sessions Judge, Satara

…Respondents 

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APPEARANCES 

for the petitioner Mr Anil Anturkar, Senior Advocate, with Vijay Patil, i/b Siddharth  

Karpe.  

for respondents  nos. 2 And 3 

for the state respondent no. 1 

Dr Milind Sathe, Senior Advocate,  i/b Aumkar Joshi.  

Mr SS Panchpor, AGP.  

CORAM : G.S.Patel &  

Madhav J Jamdar, JJ 

DATED : 22nd March 2022 

ORAL JUDGMENT (Per GS Patel J):- 

1. We have heard Mr Anturkar for the Petitioners and Dr Sathe  for Respondents Nos. 2 and 3.  

2. Filed by the Satara District Bar Association, this Writ Petition  under Article 226 of the Constitution of India challenges what it calls  “approvals” dated 31st July 2015 and 6th March 2020 of this High  Court on its administrative side. The impugned approvals relate to  the establishment at Wai in the Satara District of a Court of an  Additional District Judge and a Court of a Civil Judge, Senior  Division.  

3. A few facts are necessary. These are drawn from the Petition  and also from the Affidavit in Reply filed on behalf of the High Court  Administration by Mr Yogesh Rane, Registrar (Legal and Research). 

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4. The Petitioner claims to be a registered organization of about  2500 members and is a Bar Association of the Satara District. The  District Court at Satara has 11 Talukas. The Petition recites that the  Petitioner learnt that the Bar Associations at Wai and Phaltan were  making representations to the High Court to establish a District  Court and a Court of a Civil Judge, Senior Division at those places.  

5. In paragraph 4(vii) of the Petition, the Petitioner says that these  representations by the taluka-level Bar Associations at Wai and  Phaltan were “needless” as Wai did not have sufficient  infrastructure. Judicial officers, staff and litigants would be put to  great difficulty. The Petition then goes on to say that the Petitioners  learnt that the High Court had accepted the representation of the Wai  Bar Association and sanctioned the establishment of a District Court,  Additional Sessions Court and that of a Civil Judge, Senior Division  at Wai to cover the Talukas of Wai, Khandala and Mahabaleshwar.  These three Talukas fall in Satara District and are presently under the  jurisdiction of the Satara District Court. (This Khandala Taluka is  distinct from the other one near Lonavala).  

6. To give some idea of the relative siting of these places, we  include a public-domain map of the region below. This is only for  convenience and ease of reference. 

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7. Paragraph 4(viii) of the Petition then says that the Petitioner  filed an application under the Right to Information Act (“RTI Act”)  and received some documents pertaining to the administrative  approvals of 31st July 2015 and 6th March 2020. On 3rd October  2020, the Petitioners made a detailed representation to this Court  asking that the decision to establish Courts at Wai be reconsidered.  The main thrust of this representation for reconsideration is that the  mere pendency of cases cannot be a determinative criterion for  approving the establishment of a new court. A judge-to-cases ratio  fixed in 2004 at 500 is outdated because there is a surge in case filings.  Strangely, in an apparent contradiction to the previous submission, it  is then urged that there are insufficient cases pending in the Wai,  Khandala and Mahabaleshwar (and Phaltan) Talukas to justify the  establishment of an Additional Sessions Court and a Civil Judge,  Senior Judge. In other words, it is suggested that caseload pendency  is not a valid determinant for approving a proposal to establish a new  court; but the lack of a pendency can be invoked to justify rejecting a  proposal for a new court.  

8. As usual, the truth lies somewhere in between. What the law  says, and we will turn to a binding decision a little later, that pendency  and caseloads cannot be the sole determinant. No judgment says that  pendency and caseloads cannot be a determinant or a consideration  at all.  

9. There is a tabulation given for the years 2018, 2019 and 2020  in the Petition itself. 

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Year 2018 

Civil Judge Senior Division Khandala 400 Wai 332 

Mahabaleshwar 200 

District Court 

 Civil and Criminal Khandala 390 Wai 455 

Mahabaleshwar 189 

Phaltan 597 

Year 2019 

Civil Judge Senior Division Wai 330 Mahabaleshwar 212 

Khandala 410 

District Court 

 Civil- Wai 516 Mahabaleshwar 169 

Khandala 310 

 Criminal Wai 180 Mahabaleshwar 65 

Khandala 140 

Year 2020 

Civil Judge Senior Division Wai 393 Khandala 427 

Mahabaleshwar 260

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District Court 

 Civil- Wai 420 

Khandala 250 

Mahabaleshwar 109 

Phaltan 216 

 Criminal Wai 235 

Khandala 201 

Mahabaleshwar 96 

Phaltan 391 

10. The submission in the Petition — notwithstanding that Mr  Anturkar took a far more tempered line — appears to be that this  High Court considered ‘only’ the caseload pendency, i.e. statistical  figures of the numbers of cases and nothing else while arriving at its  impugned approvals to establish the Additional District Courts and a  Court of Civil Judge, Senior Division at Wai. Specifically, other  criteria such as buildings, infrastructure, distance, transportation and  convenience of litigants, though required to be considered, had not  been. It is asserted that geographical conditions in a district have to  be seen.  

11. Paragraph 4(xiii) then proceeds on a slightly fantastic and  certainly hyperbolic narrative about Naxalite movements, difficulties  in communication and so on. We will discount this as being a  considerable exaggeration. Wai, Khandala and Mahabaleshwar are  just off NH-48, the major Mumbai–Pune–Bengaluru highway. There  is no question of any of these other factors (Naxalites,  communications or transport) being adverse factors at these 

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locations. Phaltan is also within easy motoring distance as the map  above shows. There is nothing whatever to substantiate these  allegations.  

12. The Petition then goes on to say that if the proposal is  accepted, greater convenience and hardship will be caused to litigants  in Khandala and Mahabaleshwar. We will return to this argument a  little later. We are then told that Mahabaleshwar is a hilly area (a  statement that overstates the obvious; it is a hill-station). Apparently,  it is ‘more difficult’ to reach Wai from Mahabaleshwar than it is to  reach Satara. This is not common experience, but we will let that  pass. There is nothing adduced to establish this. Khandala Taluka is  located on a six lane highway.  

13. The Petitioners made another representation on 2nd  December 2020. This was rejected on 4th March 2021 and  communicated to the Petitioner on 9th March 2021.  

14. The prayers after amendment in the Petition read thus:  

(a) This Hon’ble Court be pleased to issue any  appropriate writ, order or direction thereby calling for record  and proceedings of approval dated 31.07.2015 and  06.03.2020 of this Hon’ble Court, thereby accepting the  proposal of Bar Association, Wai for establishment of  District Court and Civil Judge, Senior Division at Wai and  after examining its legality, validity and propriety, further be  pleased to quash and set aside the same.  

(1 a) That, this Hon’ble Court be pleased to issue any  appropriate writ, order or direction thereby be pleased to  quash and set aside the impugned communication/order 

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dated 4/3/2021 issued by the Ld. Registrar, (Inspection-I),  High Court, Appellate Side, Mumbai. (Exhibit F).” 

15. The Affidavit in Reply begins by telling us that the proposal to  establish the Court of the District Judge, Additional Sessions Judge  and Civil Judge, Senior Division at Wai covering the Talukas of Wai,  Khandala and Mahabaleshwar was accepted by the Administrative  Committee of this Court in 2015. On 6th March 2020, the Principal  District and Sessions Judge, Satara was told that the committee had  accepted a proposal to take premises on rent for the residence of  judicial officers for the proposed Courts at Wai until a new building  was completed. The High Court asked that a concrete proposal for  government accommodation for the Court and for rented premises  for the judicial officers along with a rent certificate from the PWD, a  rough sketch map, area statement, a consent letter of the landlord, etc  be forwarded to be placed before the Judges of the Administrative  Committee. A copy of 6th March 2020 letter annexed to the Petition  is incorrect. A correct copy was sent on 5th July 2021. The Affidavit  then says that the approval of 31st July 2015 was an in-principle  approval but it was not dependent only on assessment of the  pendency of cases. Other factors were considered. Paragraph 5 tells  us that for these three Talukas in 2015, the cases triable by the District  Judge and Additional Sessions Judge and by the Civil Judge, Senior  Judge were 1261 and 821 respectively. By August 2021, these figures  had arisen to 1395 and 1061. But that was not the only consideration.  The administrative committee also took into account distances and  other aspects as well. Paragraph 8 of the Affidavit in Reply sets out  the distances in a tabular form. We reproduce the whole of paragraph  8 from pages 40 and 41 of the paperbook. 

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“8. I say and submit that, distance between Wai,  Khandala and Mahabaleshwar is as follows :  

Sr.  No.Talukas Satara Parent Court Kms (Approximately)Wai Proposed Court   Kms  (Approximately)
1. Wai 35 0
2. Khandala 55 27
3. Mahabaleshwar 60 33

 I say and submit that, Wai is approximately 35 kms  away from Satara and Mahabaleshwar is approximately 60  kms away but the farthest village in Mahabaleshwar Taluka  named Mhalunge is located approximately 150 kms from  District and Sessions Court, Satara and Khandala is  approximately 55 kms away from Satara but the farthest  village in Khandala Taluka named Lohom is located  approximately 75 kms from District and Sessions Court,  Satara. I say and submit that, Wai is nearer to the other two  talukas as compared to District Head quarter Satara. It would  be more convenient for the litigants and Advocates from all  the three talukas to approach Wai Court. I say and submit  that, convenience of litigants is of paramount importance in  the light of the provisions of the Constitution of India.” 

16. In the meantime, the Principal District and Sessions Judge,  Satara forwarded a proposal for government accommodation and  makeshift arrangements for housing judicial officers. Similar  proposals for rental residential accommodations were accepted on  3rd September 2021 as a special case.  

17. The Petitioners’ representation of 2nd December 2020 was  rejected in view of the decisions that the Administrative Committee 

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had already taken. Indeed the representation was not rejected in  limine. A report was sought from the Principal District Judge, Satara.  He returned the figures that were triable by the District Judge in  regard to these three Talukas and by the Civil Judge, Senior Division  for those three Talukas. Some 860 cases would remain at Wai Taluka  even if the Khandala Taluka cases were reduced. The representation  of the Petitioner was rejected after considering the report from the  Principal District Judge, Satara. Paragraph 11 specifically states that  the criteria of distance, convenience of litigants and Advocates and  other factors have been considered while rejecting the representation.  

18. Paragraph 12 then points out that the Petition is materially  defective in that it does not make an adequate disclosure about the  representation that was filed by the Petitioner or the 17th July 2019  letter issued by the Khandala Taluka Bar Association at the time of  filing of the present Writ Petition.  

19. Indeed in paragraph 14 it is said that the Bar Associations of  Khandala and Mahabaleshwar had supported the establishment of  the proposed Court by their letter of 16th December 2009 and 11th  December 2009 respectively.  

20. In paragraph 17 the Reply says that the other criteria such as  infrastructure, distance, transportation etc all favour the  establishment of a Court at Wai.  

21. There is one other issue that arises and this relates to the  disclosure of information to the Petitioners pursuant to an RTI query. 

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The Public Information Officer responded to that query by providing  some information and by saying that the remainder was exempted  under Section 8(e) of the RTI Act being information protected from  disclosure as it was in the nature of fiduciary relationship. Dr Sathe  has clarified that all that was withheld from disclosure were internal  notings. A fresh Affidavit dated 21st March 2022 has been filed,  which we will take on record. This Affidavit clearly states that only  the file notings made by the Hon’ble Judges as members of the  Committee were not disclosed. All other information was given.  

22. We accept this explanation but we must caution the PIOs to be  more accurate in their responses when any information is sought to  be withheld as exempt for disclosure requirements. There is certainly  an element of confidentiality in the notings by Judges of any  Committee of this Court. There is also very good reason why such  notings should not in fact ever be disclosed or allowed to be disclosed.  Whether or not this falls within the description of “a fiduciary  relationship” is something we need not examine further. But the  routine practice is that a submission from the Registry is placed  before each of the Judges in that particular committee in turn. It is  placed in order of seniority beginning with the Judge who is most  junior in terms of years of service on the Bench. This is done  consciously so that the Judges who are given the papers next in  sequence have the benefit of seeing the comments and notings  previously made and of then either agreeing or raising any other  point. Often, any Judge in this list irrespective of the hierarchy, may  ask that the point be discussed in the meeting. That request is always  accepted. In any meeting, there is no question of any Judge being  senior or junior. At that stage, all are equally entitled to voice their 

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views. There is a full and frank exchange of views; dissents, especially  noted dissents, are exceedingly rare. A judge who had earlier  endorsed contrary notings might, in the discussions that followed  with the other Judges reverse his position. We may also note that the  system of placing a submission before “a junior” Judge first does not  indicate and is not meant to indicate that any less weightage is given  to that opinion. These are our internal processes for dealing with  complex administrative issues. In Maharashtra, this is indeed  especially complex given the size of the judiciary and the fact that  decision-making is not confined to matters pertaining to the High  Court alone. Withholding file notings is, in our view, entirely salutary.  This is required for the better administration of justice. The actual  material may be disclosed pursuant to an RTI enquiry as along with  the final decision but the file notings are only transitory and tentative  views and an exchange of views. These should under no  circumstances be allowed to be brought into public domain or be  made the subject of any controversy. The last thing that is desirable  is a litigation calling into question the candid views on an  administrative issue of any judge. And, finally, this is critical: the High  Court administration speaks with one voice. We leave this aspect of  the matter at this stage.  

23. It is clear that the High Court took into account other factors  down to details such as adequacy of accommodation for judicial  officers in Wai and it is only on being satisfied that there were all these  feasibilities that it made its proposal. To say, therefore, that the High  Court considered nothing except pendency of cases is factually  incorrect and is demonstrated to be incorrect on the record itself. 

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24. Mr Anturkar then argues that in doing all this the High Court  has completely ignored the State Government. It ought to have  consulted the State Government. Even if the Court’s view was  determinative, the State Government should first have been  consulted. For this, we turn to the further Affidavit in Reply affirmed  on 17th March 2022 by Mr Yogesh Rane. This refers to the  correspondence between the Principal Secretary (Law and Judiciary  Department) of the Government and the High Court. Here the  Government on 20th December 2021 sought several clarifications  and explanations from the High Court on this very proposal. On 6th  January 2022, the High Court called for a report from the Principal  District and Sessions Judge, Satara. This was received on 22nd  January 2022 and sent on to the Government. There was also a sketch  map of the places annexed.  

25. We expressly reject Mr Anturkar’s submission that before  making the proposal the High Court should first have consulted the  State Government or that such a proposal should have emanated from  the State Government. There is no such hard and fast rule. The High  Court on its administrative side is primarily concerned with the  administration of justice in its widest possible sense. It makes no  difference whether the High Court first formulates a proposal and  then places it before the Government for an opinion or whether the  proposal comes from the Government. Nothing can possibly turn on  this. It is clear that operationally neither the High Court nor the State  Government can go around establishing Courts on their own without  the involvement of the other. That is all that needs to be said in this  regard. The High Court’s view in any case has primacy. 

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26. Some law is cited before us. Mr Anturkar in particular refers to  the Division Bench judgment in Partur Advocate Bar Association v  State of Maharashtra.1 He says, drawing on paragraphs 14, 18 and 20  that mere pendency of cases is not a determinative factor.  

14. Therefore, every demand for establishing Courts of  ADJ and CJSD at Taluka places within the Districts cannot  be accepted. Hence, such demands are required to be  tested on the basis of some rational criteria. The learned  counsel appearing for the Petitioner is right when he  submits that availability of adequate number of cases in the  proposed Court cannot be the sole criteria. Some of the  Districts in the State have areas which are backward in  many respects. Some Districts have hilly terrain. In some  areas, there are no proper public transport facilities  available due to various reasons. In some of the Districts,  easy modes of transport are not available for reaching  District Headquarters. In some Districts, there is a large  Tribal area. In some Districts, there are areas where there  is a Naxalite dominance. The litigants in such areas cannot  easily approach the District Court and Court of CJSD at  District Headquarters. Therefore, in the peculiar facts of  the case, litigants at particular Taluka place may find it very  difficult to commute up to the District headquarter for  attending their cases. In some Taluka places, there may be  a very large number of cases justifying establishment of the  Courts of ADJ and CJSD, but the Taluka places may be  close to District Headquarters and may have easy  accessibility in terms of the availability of easy and quick  modes of transport. Therefore, availability of requisite  number of cases cannot be the sole criteria for establishing  

1 2016(4) Mh.LJ 498. 

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the Courts of ADJ and CJSD at Taluka places. Various  other factors are required to be considered with a view to  ensure that there is no denial of easy accessibility to justice.  While taking a decision whether a new Court should be  established, the cases which may be available to the newly  established Courts is not the only consideration. The  proposal to establish Courts of ADJ and CJSD at Taluka  places cannot be rejected only on the ground that number  of cases as per the quota fixed by the High Court will not  be available. All the relevant factors are required to be  considered some of which are stated above only by way of  illustration. The said factors are not exhaustive. The issue  of easy access to justice to a common man should be one of  the main considerations. To that extent, the submissions of  the Petitioner will have to be accepted. 

18. The Civil Courts Act is silent about the power to  appoint the District Judges. However, under section 12, the  State Government has a power to appoint in any District a  Joint District Judge who shall be invested with coextensive  powers and concurrent jurisdiction with the District Judge.  Under section 14, the State Government has a power to  appoint one or more Additional District Judges in addition  to the District Judge. Section 19 is material which we have  quoted above. It confers power on the Government to  invest an Additional District Judge with all or any of the  powers of the District Judge (the Principal District Judge)  within a particular part of the District and may, by a  notification from time to time determine and alter the  limits of such part. The jurisdiction of such Additional  District Judge so invested shall pro tanto exclude the  jurisdiction of the Principal District Judge from within the  said limits. Such Additional District Judge so invested is 

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entitled to hold his Court at such place within the local  limits of his jurisdiction as may be determined by the State  Government, and may, with the previous sanction of the  High Court to hold it at any other place within such limits.  Thus, under the Civil Courts Act, the State Government  has a power to alter the limits of the existing judicial  Districts and to create new judicial Districts. The authority  of the State Government under section 19 is to confer  powers on any Additional District Judge of a District Judge  in a particular part of a District. Once such power is  conferred on Additional District Judge with reference to a  particular part in the District, the jurisdiction of the  Principal District Judge is excluded to the extent of the said  area. Thus, this is a power to invest Additional District  Judges with the powers of the District Judge confined to  one or more Talukas within a judicial District. 

20. The learned counsel appearing for the Petitioner has  relied upon various provisions of the Code of Criminal  Procedure, 1973 and has contended that the State  Government without the concurrence of the High Court  has a power to create a sessions division in a judicial  District.” 

27. This case was one where the question that arose was whether  it would be the State Government or the High Court that would take  the decision for establishing Courts. On a careful consideration of the  submissions, the Division Bench rejected the Petition. It held that  having “requisite” number of cases cannot be the sole criteria for  establishing Courts at any place or at any Taluka. Other factors would  have to be considered. As to the question of establishing Courts, the  actual establishment would have done by the State Government in 

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consultation with the High Court. But the views of the High Court  would have primacy. This does not mean, in our view that the High  Court cannot, on material that comes before it or a representation  made to it, recommend or suggest the establishment of a Court. This  is precisely what has happened here. The Partur decision is against  the Petitioner, and does not support it.  

28. There is then the decision of a Division Bench of this Court in  Ahmad M Abdi v State of Maharashtra and Others.2In paragraph 34,  the Division Bench extracted the various guidelines about Court  infrastructure drawn from decided case law. Then from paragraphs  37 to 41 it addressed itself to the question of inadequacy. It said clearly  in paragraph 42 that the High Court’s views would have primacy. It  is in this context that we believe paragraph 43 is relevant:  

EASY ACCESSIBILITY TO THE LITIGANTS 

43. The Apex Court has laid a stress on easy accessibility  of the Court Complex to the litigants. Following districts  come within the jurisdiction of the principal seat of this  Court at Mumbai: Palghar, Thane, Mumbai, Mumbai  Suburban, Raigad, Ratnagiri, Sindhudurg, Nashik, Pune,  Satara, Sangli, Kolhapur and Solapur apart from the two  union territories of Dadra and Nagar Haveli as well as Diu  and Daman. Due to proximity of Chhatrapati Shivaji  Terminus, the present High Court complex is very  convenient for the litigants and the members of the bar who  come from almost all districts except district-Palghar and the  aforesaid two union territories. District-Palghar and the  aforesaid two union territories have connectivity on the  Western Railway. Important terminus like Mumbai Central  

2 2019 SCC OnLine Bom 89: (2019) 2 Bom CR 639. 

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on Western Railway is also in a reasonable proximity of the  present Court complex. The consumer of justice is the  litigant and, therefore, the convenience of the majority of  litigants should be a major and primary consideration for  selecting a plot for allotment for new High Court  complex. The majority of litigants come from far away  districts. If the new High Court Complex is established at  a place which is not easily accessible by means of a public  transport to a large number of litigants who come from  the Districts, it will affect their fundamental right of  access to justice. We are saying this in the context of  suggestion regarding allotment of a plot at Pahadi Goregaon.  The learned counsel representing one of the Bar associations  has categorically stated that the said land offered at Pahadi  Goregaon is very inconvenient for the litigants from the  districts. In any event, no material is placed on record by the  State Government except the minutes of the meeting held in  October 2018 to show that the State Government after  application of mind has come to a conclusion that the place  Pahadi Goregaon is easily accessible to the litigants and  lawyers from the Districts by means of public transport. The  minutes record no such conclusion. There is no material  placed on record to show whether the said area is accessible  to the litigants and lawyers from Districts. However, it is for  the High Court administration to decide the aspect of  suitability and we are not making any final adjudication on  the question of suitability of the land at Pahadi Goregaon.”  

(Emphasis added)  

29. Now in Ahmad Abdi, the Division Bench was dealing with the  question of easy accessibility to litigants. It was not addressing and  did not think it necessary to address ‘the convenience of Advocates’ This will have to be read in the context of the tabulation which we 

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have extracted above and which clearly shows that litigants benefit  from the current proposal.  

30. Dr Sathe also draws our attention to the legendary three-judge  Bench decision of the Supreme Court in State of Maharashtra v  Narayan Shamrao Puranik And Others3 relating to the establishment  of the Aurangabad Bench of this Court. In paragraph 26, the Supreme  Court quoted the words of a Division Bench of this Court of the MC  Chagla, CJ and Badkas, J in Seth Manji Dana v CIT, Bombay.4 We  quote the relevant portion from paragraph 26.  

After all, Courts exist for the convenience of the  litigants and not in order to maintain any particular  system of law or any particular system of  administration. Whenever a Court finds that a  particular rule does not serve the convenience of  litigants, the Court should be always prepared to change  the rule.” 

(Emphasis added)  

Chief Justice Chagla’s words ring out through time from 1958 to  2022. They are as true now than they were then.  

31. Mr Anturkar in fairness draws our attention to the decision of  the Supreme Court in Federation of Bar Association in Karnataka v  Union of India.5 He submits that although this is apparently against  

3 (1982) 3 SCC 519.  

4 Civil Appeal No.995 of 1957, decided on July 22, 1958 (Bom).  5 AIR 2000 SCC 2544. 

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him, it was his duty to place it before the Court. The Supreme Court  held that a proposal to establish a Bench of the High Court away from  the principal seat and which proposal came from a Federation of Bar  Association was not maintainable. It held that no litigant could claim  a fundamental right to have a High Court located within a proximal  distance of his residence. We do not believe we need to say anything  further on this subject. We thank Mr Anturkar for placing it, but we  do not believe it is relevant to the issue at hand.  

32. The real difficulty with this Petition is that it is unclear what is  the legal right that the Petitioner is asserting when it says that this  High Court should not consider establishing a Court at Wai. It seems  to us that this is entirely self-serving. We do not deny that the Bar has  a role to play in the administration of justice. We however  emphatically assert that it is the interest of the litigants that is  paramount and the role of the Court and all those who enable its  functioning, whether Judges or lawyers, are meant to assist the  delivery of justice to the litigant. Two important aspects of this are  the speedy and timely delivery of justice and physical access to  justice. The establishment of a Court in a close proximity cannot  really be said to be an undesirable thing to litigants who are in the  vicinity of the proposed Court. There is no reason why a litigant  should, on the Petitioners’ representation be required to travel 35 kms  from Wai to Satara rather than have a Court in Wai itself; or to travel  55 kms from Khandala to Satara instead of 27 kms from Khandala to  Wai or 60 kms from Mahabaleshwar to Satara rather than 33 kms from  Mahabaleshwar to Wai. 

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The Satara District Bar Assn v State of Maharashtra & Ors J-901-aswp-3879-2021 with ia-975-2022 in wp-3879-2021.docx 

33. The present Petition is, in our view, entirely without substance  or merit. It is rejected. There will be no order as to costs.  

34. The Interim Application does not survive and is disposed of  accordingly.  

(Madhav J. Jamdar, J) (G. S. Patel, J) 

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