[http://www.ndtv.com/convergence/ndtv/story.aspx?id=NEWEN20070012633]
Link to reportSunetra ChoudhuryIt's easier said than done - the homily
couldn't be more true when it comes to new laws.And when the Supreme
Court defined ragging as a crime on Wednesday, it added to the burden
of pending litigation.Legal experts are expecting a rush of FIRs and
complaints in the new admission season.''There is just too much
pressure for instance, the changes in the motor vehicles act, have
justincreased litigation for us. When domestic violence law came,
again, there was a lot of pressure, many many courts needed which
aren't there,'' said Naveen Matta, Delhi lawyerBut now, for the first
time in India's legal history, an attempt is being made to understand
the burden of each new law.A three-member panel will assess the
judicial impact of such legislation and work out just what it will take
to implement it.They will work out the cost and the number of courts
and workforce needed to hear the new cases.''They amended just Section
138 of the Negotiable Act in 2002 that deals with bouncing cheques.
That single change led to 40 lakh new cases and nobody could cope.
Courts were reduced to money recovering agents,'' said Prof Madhav
Menon, Council member.The council plans to create a system that will
absorb the shock of extra work that new laws create, and hopefully,
reduce the long list of pending cases in the Indian courts.At the
moment, the only way courts prepare for a new law is to put a copy of
it in the court library. Lawyers say that they are not expecting any
overnight answers from the council but at least, a beginning has been
made.

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Posted By Ragging News to Ragging News from Indian Colleges -
www.noragging.com at 5/20/2007 08:22:00 PM

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