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06/03/2023, 15:55 Speeding up judicial processes: How AI is reshaping Indian legal system | Business Standard News

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Speeding up judicial processes: How AI is reshaping Indian legal


system

The Indian legal system is deploying artificial intelligence for improved efficiency

Topics: Judicial service | Indian legal system

Debarghya Sanyal | | Last Updated at March 05 2023 17:37 IST

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06/03/2023, 15:55 Speeding up judicial processes: How AI is reshaping Indian legal system | Business Standard News

Tech in Indian legal system

The Indian legal system moves at a snail’s pace. A staggering 47 million cases were pending in Indian
courts as of last year, of which 182,000 were pending for the past 30 years.

This dismal situation could change, thanks to the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in India’s judicial
proceedings. Last month, the Supreme Court adopted an AI-based software to start live-transcription of
hearings. This solution, developed by Bengaluru-based Technology Enabled Resolution (TERES), helped
the court put out the text of the hearing on the Maharashtra political controversy by the evening of the
same day.

While Union Law Minister Kiren Rijiju has urged the judiciary to embrace emerging technologies, the use
of AI to speed up legal proceedings has already begun. Under Phase III of the eCourt project under the
National eGovernance Plan, the SC constituted the Artificial Intelligence Committee last April to help
identify areas where AI can be deployed in judicial matters.

The transcription project is only the latest in AI-aided initiatives after the Supreme Court Portal for
Assistance in Courts Efficiency (Supace), which was launched in 2021, and the Supreme Court Vidhik
Anuvaad Software (Suvas), became operational in 2019. Supace is an AI-powered tool that compiles
facts and laws relevant to a particular case and makes them readily available for judges. It is aimed at
making legal research more efficient and less time-consuming. Suvas, on the other hand, is designed to
translate judgments and orders into nine vernacular languages.

What are the major areas of legal and judicial work that AI can facilitate? Decreasing the massive
backlog of cases will be top priority, experts believe.

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“India has a huge number of pending cases. To reduce this, it is important to understand how similar
matters could be potentially clubbed and decided together. Using AI algorithms will prove quite helpful in
this,” says Pavan Duggal, Supreme Court advocate and chairman of the International Commission on
Cyber Security Law.

Duggal points to the experience of Estonia, where an AI algorithm is used to judge smaller legal claims.
“In Indian courts, challan matters, including traffic challans, take a lot of time and resources. These cases
can be potentially handled by AI algorithms,” he adds.

Prashanth Kaddi, consulting partner at Deloitte India, believes that AI can also automate repetitive tasks
to increase efficiency. “AI and analytics can not only help in collecting and analysing large chunks of data
to find patterns and precedents in related judgments, but also help improve the overall experience by
providing clients with instant access to information.”

Others believe that AI services should be designed to benefit people who cannot afford high legal fees.

A few high courts have already begun deploying AI solutions in new and innovative ways. In 2019, the
Bombay High Court introduced an AI system for case prediction. This system uses machine learning
algorithms to predict the outcome of cases based on past judgments and data analysis. The Jharkhand
and Patna High Courts have implemented optical character recognition, a tool which converts scanned
documents to computer-readable texts, allowing text extraction from legal documents. 

“Tools like ‘Jupitice’, which is an online private digital court powered by AI and blockchain, aims to solve
commercial and civil cases through various alternative dispute resolution mechanisms,” points out
Nandini Gore, senior partner at Karanjawala & Co Advocates.

Besides these, AI assistance for scrutiny of filings, data handling and management, legal research,
predictive analytics, document analysis for patterns in crime, virtual hearings, and even analysing social
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media and news articles for public sentiment around issues such as marital rape and uniform civil code
are some of the other
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local, state and national courts.

Challenges

Nonetheless, fully integrated and uniform deployment of AI solutions across different rungs of the Indian
judiciary may still be far in the future.

A crucial challenge would be to train a skilled workforce within the judicial ecosystem to manage and
deploy AI solutions, experts believe. “The major challenges in deploying these services include training of
member registries of courts for familiarity and access to the technology, uploading accurate and timely
information, adoption of AI tools for legal language, and huge investments required for adoption,” says
Tejas Karia, head of arbitration at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co.

Pranav Srivastava, a partner at Phoenix Legal, adds that the greatest challenge in integrating AI services
will arise in the lower judiciary, thanks to a greater infrastructure deficit. Moreover, “litigants approaching
the courts often lack the resources to access advanced technologies.”

The biggest challenge is inherent in the very nature of AI software, however. AI algorithms require large
amounts of data to be trained, and the quality of this data is critical to the performance of the algorithms.
“The Indian judiciary operates in a data-poor environment, with many cases not being digitised, and the
quality of digitised data being inconsistent. This makes it difficult to build accurate AI models,” notes
Gore.

AI algorithms can also develop and perpetuate biases if not monitored responsibly. Salman Waris of
TechLegis Advocates & Solicitors points out that sensitive personal information of victims or commercially
confidential information not available in the public domain, including in-camera proceedings, will have to
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be excluded from AI bots to protect confidentiality. “Further, a lack of cybersecurity safeguards could
expose the Indian judiciary to possible cyberattacks by state and non-state actors,” says Duggal.

India does not have a legal framework to recognise and regulate AI. “The lone Indian cyber legislation
being the Information Technology Act, 2000, it is not applicable to the use of AI. Many countries have
come up with national AI strategies. India needs to learn from the experiences of the US and European
Union and come up with its own distinct minimal framework to legally regulate AI,” he adds.

While the ministry of electronics and information technology has already constituted four committees to
bring in a policy framework for AI, experts like Waris believe that AI must be introduced in a phased
manner to achieve the stated objectives effectively. An initial phase could focus on enhancing
administrative efficiency, while the later stages can prioritise improvements in decision-making through
case query tools, intelligent analytics, research augmentation, and legal robotics.

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First Published: Sun,March 05 2023 17:31 IST

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