A three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur observed that the "poor state" of the consumer courts was mainly due to gross inadequate infrastructure, poor organisational set up, absence of adequate and trained manpower and lack of qualified members in the adjudicating bodies.
Referring to an interim report submitted by a apex-court constituted committee, headed by former Supreme Court judge Justice Arijit Pasayat, the bench noted that the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission (NCDRC) and consumer courts in various states, including Delhi, Maharashtra, Punjab, Haryana Tamil Nadu and Jammu and Kashmir, were not functioning effectively as expected.
"A systemic overhaul of the entire infrastructure is necessary if the Consumer Protection Act, is not to become a dead letter. With the proliferation of goods and services in a rapidly growing economy, Parliament envisaged the enactment to be the corner-stone of a vibrant consumer movement. Reality has been distant from the aspirations of the law," it said.
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The bench said, "The model rules shall provide for the
payment of salary, allowances and for the conditions of service of the members of the consumer fora commensurate with the nature of adjudicatory duties and the need to attract suitable talent to the adjudicating bodies. These rules shall be finalized upon due consultation with the President of the National Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, within the period stipulated above."
While noting the reasons for the poor state of affairs at the consumer courts, the bench said, "Benches of the state and district fora sit, in many cases for barely two or three hours every day and remain non-functional for months due to a lack of coram. Orders are not enforced like other orders passed by the civil courts".
It noted that state governments have failed to respond to the suggestions of the committee for streamlining the state of affairs and quality of the presiding members, especially of non-judicial members at state and district levels is "poor".
The apex court directed Tamil Nadu and Jammu and Kashmir to appoint the president and members of the its state consumer commission at the earliest.
It also asked the state governments to implement the recommendations of the committee within a period of three months.