First bench comprising Chief Justice Sanjay Kishan Kaul and Justice T S Sivagnanam directed the state and central governments to jointly formulate a security protocol by October 30.
"It may be appropriate to have an inner circle of security manned by the independent force for checking the ingress and egress, and inner security, at least for a period of six months," the bench said.
Bifurcation of security duty by handing over "inner circle" security and access control to the CISF or a similar agency, while retaining peripheral security duty with state police, seems to be the higher judiciary's answer to insulate itself from internal and external disturbances.
The state government had objected to handing over security to CISF or any agency other than state police.
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"The working of courts is not akin to maintaining law and order in a city at large, as the temple of justice requires the right environment where people work in tandem," they said.
A string of unruly incidents by lawyers and an evident lack of faith on the state police by lawyers, resulting in security breaches and slow action since 2009 weighed heavily on the judges, who said bringing the high court campuses under security cover of CISF was an "immediate necessity".
"What we face today is consequences of the lack of faith between police and lawyers, and it is not reflection on the general ability of the police to manage the situation," it said.
The use of a separate security force was really a temporary arrangement to establish a working relationship which is of utmost necessity, the judges said.