Bar Association shuts door on relocation of Punjab and Haryana High Court
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Take your experience further with Premium access. Thought-provoking Opinions, Expert Analysis, In-depth Insights and other Member Only BenefitsThe Punjab and Haryana High Court Bar Association’s general body today shut the door on shifting the high court to a new site, opting instead to retain the institution within its current premises. The decision was taken through a clear show of hands, amidst warnings from the court about severe space constraints that could make relocation unavoidable.
The bench had earlier asked Bar president Sartej Singh Narula to place before the court the Bar’s opinion on whether it was willing to shift. The judges had clarified that they were open to relocation, provided the general body of Bar Association agreed.
“The executive committee has passed a resolution that they are ready and willing to search for an alternative site for the high court. Let the resolution of the executive committee be placed before the general body, which if passed, would definitely be accepted by the court, not otherwise,” the bench headed by Chief Justice Nagu had asserted.
The matter, as such, was placed before the general body this afternoon, where the relocation proposals and other issues were discussed. Initially, formal voting was contemplated, but the general body chose to decide through a show of hands.
The development is significant as the court had previously acknowledged the acute shortage of space in its existing complex, while discussing the proposals to move the high court to Sarangpur or IT Park. But the rejection by the Bar today virtually has closed the door on any immediate relocation.
“We are forced to think about an alternative site for the high court…. Such a good building you have. It’s a unique building. I have not seen such a building in the entire country. And yet you are compelling people to leave this building by your adamancy,” the bench had earlier asserted, while making clear its stand.
Currently, the high court functions with 69 courtrooms against a sanctioned strength of 85 judges. The bench, during the course of hearing, was informed that the number of functional courtrooms could rise to 89 if certain staff occupying existing courtrooms were relocated.
The bench is now virtually left with two proposals: converting adjoining forest land into non-forest area to allow expansion of the current premises, and constructing a new judicial complex opposite High Court Bar Room.
The Chandigarh Administration has already approved the plan to construct 16 additional courtrooms across two floors, along with two basement levels for parking, which would provide nearly two lakh square feet of additional space.
On the issue of forest land conversion, UT senior standing counsel Amit Jhanji has all along been maintaining that de-reservation could not be considered. He pointed out that the proposed land was an eco-fragile patch of reserve forest notified under the Indian Forest Act, 1927, forming part of the Sukhna Lake/wetland catchment, and fell within the eco-sensitive zone of Sukhna Wildlife Sanctuary as per the Environment (Protection) Act notification of January 10, 2017.
Additional Solicitor-General of India Satya Pal Jain, on the other hand, has been stating that the real obstacle is not legality but a lack of willpower. “People who have to do it lack willpower,” he remarked during a hearing, highlighting bureaucratic inertia as the key challenge in expanding the high court’s infrastructure.