The government is considering a new law on voluntary out-of-court settlements to ease the massive load of cases on the judiciary.
At a recent meeting of a task force on improving India's ranking in the World Bank report on "Ease of doing business", representatives of the Department of Legal Affairs in the law ministry were asked "to take necessary steps to introduce a stand-alone law to regulate pre-litigation voluntary mediation".
The task force's meeting -- the second so far -- discussed the need for legislation on mediation on the lines of a similar law in Singapore.
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The law secretary of the Delhi government informed the task force that pre-litigation mediation centres had been established to handle petty cases such as neighbourhood and family disputes. Of the 47,000 cases referred to the centres, 17,000 were settled at the pre-litigation stage through mediation.
As of now, the mediation process is mostly used to settle marital disputes, but the new legislation could encourage settlements in areas such as landlord-tenant and industrial disputes which form a major chunk of litigation.
In February last year, the law ministry had mooted a note on similar lines, backing a new law on mediation.
"There is no legislation to back the mediation process in the country...The lack of any statutory backing to the mediation process is a cause of concern/apprehension in the minds of the parties regarding the validity/enforceability of the outcome of mediation. Therefore, some parties may prefer the lawyer-dominated, formal judicial process," it said.
Out-of-court litigation is expected to help reduce the burden on courts in a country where over 3 crore cases are pending.
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