Report No. 77662-LK Sri Lanka Justice Sector Review June 2013 Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Sector Unit South Asia Region Document of the World Bank CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS Currency Unit = Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR) US$1 = 128.83 (June 25, 2013) GOVERNMENT FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ADB Asian Development Bank AGD Attorney General’s Department CCC Ceylon Chamber of Commerce CCHC Colombo Commercial High Court CoA Court of Appeal CPC Civil Procedure Code CPS Sri Lanka Country Partner Strategy DBI Doing Business Index DC Districts Court GDP Gross Domestic Product GoSL Government of Sri Lanka HC High Court IP Intellectual Property JSC Judicial Service Commission JTI Judicial Training Institute MC Magistrates Court MoJ Ministry of Justice NCED National Council for Economic Development SC Supreme Court SL Sri Lanka UNDP United Nations Development Programme USAID United States Agency for International Development USD United States Dollars WB World Bank Vice President: Isabel Guerrero, SARVP Country Director: Ivan Rossignol, SACSL Sector Director: Ernesto May, SASPR Sector Director: Antonius Verheijen, SASGP Task Manager: Charles Undeland, SASGP THE WORLD BANK GROUP Sri Lanka Justice Sector Review Table of Contents REVIEW TEAM AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS.................................................................................... 4 ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS..................................................................................................... 5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY.......................................................................................................................... 6 Introduction............................................................................................................................... ................6 The Court System............................................................................................................................... ......6 Courts Performance and Backlog............................................................................................................. 7 Elements of a Potential Reform Program................................................................................................. 9 CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION.............................................................................................................. 10 CHAPTER 2: ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE COURTS........................................ 13 2.1 The Court System....................................................................................................................... 13 2.2 Appointment of Judges............................................................................................................... 16 2.3 Management of the Court System............................................................................................... 17 2.4 Court Operations......................................................................................................................... 19 2.5 Infrastructure............................................................................................................................... 19 2.6 Availability of Information......................................................................................................... 20 2.7 Training............................................................................................................................... ........20 CHAPTER 3: DATA ON CASE HANDLING IN COURTS.................................................................... 21 3.1 Case Statistics............................................................................................................................. 21 3.2 Processing of Commercial Cases................................................................................................ 24 CHAPTER 4: PRIVATE SECTOR APPROACHES TO DISPUTE RESOLUTION..............................26 4.1 Private Sector Experience with Courts....................................................................................... 26 4.2 Alternative Dispute Resolution................................................................................................... 30 CHAPTER 5: LEGAL AND PROCEDURAL ISSUES IN COMMERCIAL CASES..............................31 CHAPTER 6: PAST REFORM EFFORTS................................................................................................ 34 6.1 Initiatives by the Government..................................................................................................... 34 6.2 Donor Supported Efforts............................................................................................................. 35 CHAPTER 7: CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS.............................................................. 36 7.1 Conclusions............................................................................................................................... ..36 7.2 Elements of a Potential Reform Program .................................................................................... 40 REFERENCES............................................................................................................................... ............41 ANNEX JUSTICE SECTOR DATA........................................................................................................ 43 MAP............................................................................................................................... .............................68 2  List of Figures Figure 1: The Judicial System in Sri Lanka............................................................................................... 14 Figure 2: Breakdown of Cases in District and Magistrate Courts, 2012..................................................... 22 Figure 3: Civil Case Statistics..................................................................................................................... 23 Figure 4: Cases in Magistrates and District Courts, Number of Years....................................................... 24 List of Tables Table 1: 2013 Doing Business Sub Index on Enforcement of Contracts.................................................... 11 Table 2: Judges per Population Ratios........................................................................................................ 15 Table 3: District and Magistrates Courts Caseloads................................................................................... 16 Table 4: Case Disposal in the Colombo Commercial High Court, 2012.................................................... 25 3  REVIEW TEAM AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This Report was prepared by Charles Undeland (World Bank SASGP) under the guidance of Tony Verheijen (World Bank , Sector Manager, SASGP). Diarietou Gaye (Country Director, Sri Lanka) provided overall guidance. Core team members were: Nagavalli Annamalai (World Bank LEGPS), Lubomira Beardsley (World Bank LEGJR), and Hafiz Zainudeen (SASEP/SASGP). Anouk Tygarajah (World Bank SASEP) and Zeenath Marikar (World Bank SASEP) provided administrative support. The team is grateful to the collaboration in preparing this review by our partners in Sri Lanka’s Government and Judiciary: Mr. A.M.D.K.K. Arandara and Mr. Srilal Jayakody (Ministry of Justice), Mr. Mohammed Mihal (Judicial Service Commission), Mrs. Avanti Perera (Attorney General Department) and to the court staff of the Commercial High Court. A team led by Dr. Harsha Cabraal P.C., consisting of Mr. Mahela Liyanage and Mr. Nishan Premathiratne provided valuable research input into commercial litigation in Sri Lanka. Discussions on framing the issues have benefited greatly from the views of Mr. Rauff Hakeem, (Minister of Justice) Mrs. Kamalini De Silva (Secretary, Ministry of Justice), Mr. Sisira Ratnayake (secretary of the JSC), Dr. Shirani Bandaranayeke ( former Chief Justice), Mr. Manjula Thilekeratne (former secretary of JSC), Mrs. Indira Samarasinghe (legal draftsman), Mr. Y.J.W. Wijayatilake P.C.(Attorney Generals Department), Mr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakse P.C. (Bar Association of Sri Lanka), Mrs Varuni Silva (Ceylon Chamber of Commerce), the Legal Reforms Committee at the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, corporate lawyers from a large number of leading Sri Lankan companies, Judges of the Commercial High Court, and Judges of the provincial High Court in Galle. Comments from the Ministry of Justice on the initial draft have been reflected. The JSC declined to comment, citing precedent that it refrains from commenting. The JSC subsequently provided additional case statistics which were incorporated into the final draft. 4  EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Introduction 1. Improvement of the performance of the judiciary is an important part of a growth agenda for Sri Lanka as it moves to middle income country status. The present Government has set ambitious targets to double GDP per capita by 2016 and has cited the need for a more efficient judicial sector as a means of reducing poverty. This is consistent with the broad historical evidence that a well-functioning judicial sector is the most effective long-term instrument for securing property rights and enforcing contracts, which in turn are critical factors for investment and commerce, and hence poverty reduction and economic growth. Sri Lanka ranks 133rd in the 2013 Doing Business’s sub-index on enforcement of contracts, a level that is comparable to other South Asian countries but lower than other middle income comparators such as Thailand (ranked 23rd) and Malaysia (ranked 33rd). Identifying the contributing factors to inefficiency in Sri Lanka’s courts in hearing commercial cases is the main purpose of this review. The findings in the report are based on available statistics on court performance and interviews with key stakeholders in the justice sector. The team notes that there were significant limitations in available data. The Court System 2. Sri Lanka has a three-tiered court system consisting of the apex Supreme Court and Court of Appeal; 54 High Courts, 117 first instance District and Magistrate Courts and 32 Labor Tribunals. It established Provincial High Courts by Act in 1996, including the specialized Colombo Commercial High Court (CCHC), which consists of three courts (benches). There are a total of 306 judges which are appointed by the President in the case of apex and High Courts and by the Judicial Service Commission in the case of lower courts. Sri Lanka has a ratio of 1.5 judges per 100,000 population; although jurisdictions differ, this appears quite low against comparators such as Australia, England and Wales, Thailand, and Malaysia where ratios are respectively 4.4, 3.5, 6.8, and 1.5-2.4. First instance judges’ caseloads in general range from several hundred to 2000 for civil cases and between 1000 and 6000 for criminal cases. 3. Overall management of the courts is carried out by a combination of the Judiciary through the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) and the Ministry of Justice (MoJ). The JSC is chaired ex officio by the Chief Justice joined by two other Supreme Court judges appointed by the President and is served by a 65-person secretariat. It sets the rules for and executes the transfers of High Court judges as well as appointment, promotion, transfer, discipline, and dismissal of judges of first instance Courts and most public servants fulfilling supporting roles in the adjudication process courts, The MoJ is responsible for logistical support in the operation of the courts, including all budgeting and asset management. It also oversees several other justice sector institutions such as the Judicial Training Institute and Legal Aid Commission. The duality of management oversight by the JSC’s and MoJ’s functions has not presented practical difficulties in the courts’ operations. 6  4. Personnel policy is guided by a convention of rewarding seniority subject to considerable discretion exercised by the Judicial Service Commission for higher and first instance courts and the President for apex courts. The system for evaluating performance of judges is not formalized, nor are there personnel incentives which would link career progressions to professional development measures and training. Many appointees to the Supreme Court are not career judges but rather are prominent attorneys. A total of 10 of the 12 present Supreme Court judges have considerable experience working in the Attorney General’s Department. 5. Greater access to information about the judiciary’s operations as well as substantive law and judgments may be warranted. Performance information (e.g. case disposal rates disaggregated, reporting by the JSC on its activities) is not publicly available. There also is a lack of a comprehensive, updated searchable database comprising Acts, implementing regulations, and court decisions. The lack of this database is an inconvenience for stakeholders to use and benefit from Sri Lanka’s judicial system. In many countries the provision of legal database services are commercially viable and hence self-sustaining and such an approach may be considered in Sri Lanka. 6. Training capacity, particularly on commercial matters, is very limited. The Judicial Training Institute is able to train about 25 ‘trainee judges’ per year and provide one-day seminars for another 25 judges per year. It is underfinanced and a key component of past and present donor-financed programs for the judiciary is to meet this financing gap. Stakeholders noted that judges outside of the Commercial High Court often lacked sufficient background in commercial matters. 7. There are moderate infrastructure constraints being addressed by Government efforts, though the use of existing court buildings is not intense. The Government has undertaken several efforts to refurbish buildings or construct new courthouses over the past decade. Many of the refurbished buildings are old bungalows and aren’t well-suited to serve as courthouses. At the same time, the practice of one judge for each court has meant that most courtrooms are effectively not used for as much as half of the day. Facilities for keeping records are inadequate. The finding of files can contribute to delays in trials as well as providing an opportunity for rents to low level staff. There is no automation outside of a small case tracking system tested in Colombo and Kandy District Courts and no plans to initiate automated case management. Courts Performance and Backlog 8. Caseloads are high, but long term backlog is driven primarily by partition and to a lesser degree land and commercial (money matters) cases. A total of 91% of criminal cases and 70% of civil cases have been in court for less than five years as of 2012, a small increase from 2011. Therefore, despite high caseloads ranging from several hundred to 2000 and more cases per judge it appears that the court system is not sustaining an increasing level of cases in the system. While five years is a long time for cases to be in the system and it would appear likely that disposition rates for many cases is substantially less than five years, though statistics are not available to provide more detailed analysis of average clearance rates. The main type of cases which remain in the courts for more than five years are partition cases followed by land and money matters cases. Limited available data on conclusions of trials in 2011 shows little increase in the overall number of pending commercial cases, including in the CCHC. 7  9. Businesses and attorneys praise the CCHC as providing timely, predictable adjudication for commercial matters but more can be done to improve performance. There is widespread praise for the CCHC in terms of quality of adjudication and relative efficiency in handling cases. It is viewed as much more competent and efficient than district courts which handle money matters. It is processing cases at roughly the rate the rate of new filings, with no significant backlog. Concerns were raised regarding poor infrastructure for record-keeping, lack of automated case management, and possible rotation of judges thereby losing the expertise gained on the job by current judges. 10. Procedural law provides for a large number of steps and opportunities for stalling in commercial cases, but experience suggests that delays are primarily due to a systemic lack of discipline in conducting trials. Procedures for admission of evidence and cross examination of witnesses allow for a drawn out process. However, observers stressed that exerting greater discipline under existing procedure would reduce the time for carrying out pre-trial and trial procedures. By one practitioner’s estimate, the reduction would be over 60% from the current assessment of 1318 days using the Doing Business methodology. Greater discipline would require more effective, pro-active management of trials by judges. It would also require cooperation among attorneys to adhere to such management and conduct their business in a timely manner. 11. Despite being a last resort, courts are substantially used by businesses and therefore their efficiency is of importance… As much as 10% of all loan recoveries are taken to (usually District) court and other commercial matters eventually require court decisions. While the CCHC provides a higher degree of reliability in hearing cases, relatively poor performance of District Courts is of concern. This is particularly true in Kandy and Colombo District Courts where there were as of 2011 about half of all pending commercial cases. The infrastructure and personnel capacity constraints that allow are therefore a hindrance. 12. … Though court performance overall is not viewed as a major obstacle to conducting business. Though courts are used, businesses nonetheless appear to have factored in the inefficiencies into their business planning. Enterprise surveys conducted by the World Bank in 2011 and 2012 found businesses rank the courts as the least important among 15 constraints to business. While this should not be equated with satisfaction with the courts, the relatively low importance given to court inefficiency suggests that there is weak demand for improvements in courts’ handling of commercial matters. 13. Achieving major improvements in the court system’s performance will require support/engagement of all stakeholders in the justice sector. These stakeholders include: judiciary management and individual judges, the Ministry of Justice, the bar and individual attorneys, training institutions, and litigants. While the President has stated his desire for improvement and there are efforts to improve the capacity, major improvements will need a concerted effort from all stakeholders in actual trials. Judges will need to enforce discipline better, attorneys will need to be prepared to respond to such discipline, and litigants and the public will need to maintain higher expectations of better performance. Other countries’ successful judicial reform efforts have required leadership from the judiciary, but buy-in from all stakeholders has been a crucial ingredient to achieving lasting results. 8  Elements of a Potential Reform Program 14. The findings of this review point to a menu of interventions which could be undertaken in the justice sector to reduce the time and cost in adjudication of commercial cases while maximizing quality of judgment and confidence in the system. Such an approach would focus on having the courts’ play a more prominent role in facilitating economic development. It would not address other issues in the justice sector which are only partially or not at all covered in this review, including the persistent large backlog of cases which appear most likely driven by criminal cases. While any reform program should ultimately be the product of consultations and consensus among stakeholders, the review points to several possible elements of such a program: x Enhanced performance management for courts involved in the reform effort, underpinned by rigorous, regular data collection on courts’ performance, establishment of performance standards and targets, and proactive management oversight and initiative for underperformance; x Introduction of procedural changes to the Civil Procedure Code, in particular introducing more disciplined pre-trial procedure; x Issuance of practical directions or updated Judge’s Manual with respect to commercial cases x Improving access to all legislation, including implementing regulations and court judgments; x Modest investment to increase the number of commercial courts as well as improving the record- keeping systems and infrastructure for existing courts; x Development of automated case management system for the targeted courts; x Changes in the use of human resources, including adding judicial assistants (and associated infrastructure changes) to free up time for judges to hear cases; x Targeted training on commercial transactions, business practices, and specifics of for commercial court judges and District Court judges in courts handling a high volume of money matters cases; 15. Management of such a reform effort would involve an enhancement of current management information systems. More comprehensive, verifiable data is needed to equip the JSC with information to understand the causes of performance issues, monitor trends, and make management actions to improve performance. In particular, in addition to the current monthly reports, information on case disposal rates by type of case, clearance rates, backlog by types of case and time in the court system, and tracking of rates of appeals would be useful. This in turn would place additional requirements on judicial management to monitor, set standards, and provide feedback to courts on performance. Finally, more comprehensive and timely data will allow for setting targets for results to motivate performance as well as increase public confidence in the justice sector’s efforts to improve. 16. Engagement with multiple stakeholders and the public around a reform program is critical. Consultations with stakeholders regarding priorities and sequencing is key to formulating a sustainable program. Enforcing greater discipline in court proceedings requires the participation of all stakeholders. Agreement on changes in procedural law necessarily requires the support of stakeholders as well as engagement with Parliament. Building expectations of higher levels of service by the courts will be served by greater transparency and signaling of the justice sector’s drive to improve performance. Extensive communication among various actors will be critical to developing and carrying out reforms. 9  CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION 17. Sri Lanka is addressing a set of policy challenges as part of its transition to middle income country status. The end of its decades-long military conflict in 2009 has brought new opportunities for increased investment and greater participation of the North and East in the economy. Peace contributed substantially to a jump in the annual real GDP growth to over 8%, albeit with moderate slowing in late 2012. Sustaining this growth in order to meet the Government’s policy objective of doubling per capita GDP to $4000/year will require concerted efforts to build the economy. This in turn hinges on building an environment conducive to foreign and domestic investment and innovation. 18. It is broadly accepted that the security of property rights and certainty in enforcement of contracts are critical factors for investment, commerce, and hence economic growth.1 Certainty of property rights and contract enforcement provides predictability in utilization of one’s assets and facilitates reliable expectations of others’ actions, thereby stimulating longer-term productive behavior. Instruments to obtain such certainty can vary, but the most common long term way to provide the greatest number of market participants with such certainty is a well-functioning justice system2. Alternative approaches to enforcing contracts and ensuring property rights through personal force or through use of the State’s power are difficult to sustain and hence provides less certainty. A justice system is effective when (i) it adjudicates and is perceived to adjudicate fairly and consistently on the basis of rules and not the wishes of individuals and (ii) is efficient3 in so doing. A consistent rules-based system is important in providing for secure property rights as it protects against entities with otherwise greater power, most notably the State itself. At the same time, country’s justice systems are infrequently called upon to protect such rights against infringement. Other regulatory agencies such as real property registers play a role in day-to-day regulation of such matters. State expropriation of property is a rare occurrence while redress against seizure of property by others often does not require intervention by the courts. 19. Enforcement of contracts is a key frequent function of justice systems. Efficiency in carrying out this role is of primary importance: from the days of the Magna Carta delays in adjudication have been recognized as undermining the value of redress eventually provided. This logic of “justice delayed is justice deniedâ€? as being critical for commerce underpins the inclusion of a sub-index to measure the time and steps taken to enforce contracts by courts as one of ten factors making up the World Bank/International Finance Corporation Doing Business rankings of countries. 20. The Government of Sri Lanka wants a justice sector that promotes business development. President Rajapakse in his speech presenting the 2011 Budget cited the problem of slow dispensation of justice and case backlog of some 650,000 cases as a cause of poverty owing to time and resources lost for regular citizens. The Government has taken several measures to improve its Doing Business ratings (e.g.,  1 Montesquieu (1746), Smith (1776) , Weber (1922), North (1990) . 2 Djankov, La Porta, Lopez-de-Silanes, Shleifer (2003) 3 Efficiency in courts can refer to many dimensions of court performance, including accessibility, quality of judgments, and equality for litigants. For the purposes of this report efficiency refers to administrative efficiency, i.e. the minimization of unnecessary effort, including time expended in the process, or expense among participants in the resolution of disputes by the courts. 10  in time taken to register businesses), but the one area where there has been no progress in contract enforcement. Sri Lanka is lagging behind nearby middle income country competitors in this dimension (see Table 1). This in turn undermines its attractiveness for foreign investment. The Ministry of Finance as well as justice institutions and the Ministry of Justice approached the World Bank about engaging in the sector in order to improve its performance and especially its efficiency in handling commercial cases.   Table 1: 2013 Doing Business Sub Index on Enforcement of Contracts Economy Overall Enforcement of Contracts Doing Rank Time (days) Cost Number of Business (% of claim) Procedures Rank Sri Lanka 81 133 1,318 22.8 41 India 132 184 1,420 39.6 46 Pakistan 107 155 976 23.8 46 Malaysia 12 33 425 27.5 29 Korea 8 2 230 10.3 33 Singapore 1 12 150 25.8 21 Indonesia 128 144 498 139.4 40 Thailand 18 23 440 15 36 Vietnam 99 44 400 29 34 S. Asia Average 1075 27 43 21. This review is in response to the Judiciary’s and Government’s requests. It provides an overview of how the justice sector functions with reference to commercial cases and analysis of what factors contribute to delays in the adjudication of commercial cases. While parts of the study likely have relevance for the justice sector as a whole, the review’s scope is limited to the courts’ capacity, efficiency and effectiveness in handling commercial cases. The remainder of this review is divided into six sections: x Organization and Management of the Courts x Data an Case Handling in Courts x Private Sector Approaches to Dispute Resolution and the Courts x Legal and Procedural Issues in Commercial Cases x Past Reform Efforts x Conclusions and Recommendations 11  Box 1. Commercial Cases – A Definition The definition of what is a ‘commercial case’ in Sri Lanka for this review are cases involving commercial transactions drawn from the definition of such cases in the High Court of the Provinces (Special Provisions) Act No. 10 of 1996 which defines the jurisdiction of the specialized Colombo Commercial High Court (CHCC). The CHCC hears cases only above a level set by the Minister of Justice, which is currently 5 million SL rupees (about USD 40,000). Cases involving commercial transaction below that value are heard in district civil courts and are classified in those courts as “money mattersâ€? Commercial cases per the 1996 Act are: “(1) All actions where the cause of action has arisen out of commercial transactions (including causes of action relating to banking, the export or import of merchandise, services affreightment, insurance, mercantile agency, mercantile usage, and the construction of any mercantile document)…â€? (2) All applications and proceedings under sections 31, 51, 131, 210 and 211 of the Companies Act, No. 17 of 1982 (note: dealing with liquidation) (3) All proceedings under the Code of Intellectual Property Act, No. 52 of 1979â€? In addition, enforcement of arbitration awards and admiralty matters are heard at the CCHC. District courts do not hear cased involving intellectual property, arbitration, and admiralty matters. 22. The review is a rapid assessment of Sri Lanka’s justice sector with a focus on performance in adjudication of commercial cases and the factors underlying the courts’ performance. The purpose of conducting such an assessment is to provide an overview of how the judiciary operates and where are potential areas for improvement. The review is based on documentation made available to the team and interviews with key stakeholders in the Judicial Service Commission, Ministry of Justice, a small number of courts, the Judicial Training Institute, private attorneys involved in commercial cases, and corporate lawyers in businesses. It draws upon limited statistics provided for the first half of 2011 for all first instance courts, 2012 statistics for the Colombo Commercial High Court, and published statistics on apex courts’ performance in Ministry of Justice annual reports. The team was unable to carry out a court user survey though this would have been valuable for identifying in detail the state of affairs in the courts and perceptions and priorities of stakeholders. Nonetheless, the information gathered in the analysis provides insight into how the courts carry out their functions. The team hopes that the analysis in the review will feed into discussion and actions undertaken by different justice sector stakeholders to improve the handling of commercial disputes and thereby contributing to Sri Lanka’s growth agenda. 12  CHAPTER 2: ORGANIZATION AND MANAGEMENT OF THE COURTS 2.1 The Court System 23. Sri Lanka’s 1978 Constitution establishes a three-tiered court system consisting of the apex Supreme Court and Court of Appeal; Provincial High Courts for civil and criminal matters; first instance District and Magistrate Courts and Labor Tribunals. The Constitution directly establishes jurisdiction and organizational features for the two apex courts and provides Parliament with exclusive prerogative to establish all other courts, tribunals, and other institutions for adjudication and settlement of disputes. The Supreme Court has exclusive jurisdiction over constitutional matters, fundamental rights, as a final appellate body, and other powers. The Court of Appeal is the chief appellate body, though most civil appeals (including low value money matters commercial cases as defined in Box 1) are now resolved in the Provincial High Courts. First instance District Courts (hearing civil cases) and Magistrate Courts (hearing criminal cases) operate as per the 1978 Judicature Act, subsequently amended 11 times. 24. A major change in the organization of the courts was effected through the passage of the High Court of the Provinces (Special Provisions) Act of 1996. This legislation operationalized Constitutional provisions to establish Provincial High Courts to hear appeals. It also established a specialized Commercial High Court in Colombo (the CCHC) to serve as a court of first instance for cases involving commercial transactions and, through later legislation and convention, matters of company law, intellectual property disputes, and admiralty issues. This reform targeted the problem of backlog of appeals and important commercial cases as well as providing convenience to litigants. Appeals from the Provincial High Courts can then be further appealed to the Supreme Court. According to commentators in the Ministry of Justice, large value commercial cases usually involved litigants from the commercial hub Colombo and hence a single specialized court in this location was adequate. The judiciary and Ministry of Justice are now considering establishing additional commercial courts in Kandy and Galle. In particular with a concerted effort to establish Provincial High Courts over the past decade, there has been a reduction in backlog in the Court of Appeal from over 10,000 in 2008 to just over 5000 appeals as of the beginning of 2013.4 25. Following passage of the Act the Government built or converted old buildings (often older residences for judges maintained by the Ministry of Justice) into court houses throughout the country. The Court of Appeal then transferred cases to corresponding Provincial High Courts as they have been built. 26. There are now 20 Provincial High Courts of Civil Appeal spanning all nine provinces (inclusive of one Commercial Court), 29 District Courts, 45 Magistrate Courts, 49 combined courts (where the court operates as a Magistrates court on certain days of the week and as a District court on the balance days) and 31 Circuit Courts. Circuit Courts are buildings located in more remote areas which will house periodically visiting judges from District Courts. There are also 32 specialized labor tribunals as well as mediation commissions appointed by the Ministry of Justice to which all civil cases involving an amount less than 250,000 Rupees (about USD $2000) are mandatorily referred.  4 Figures from Office of Registrar, Court of Appeal. 13  Figure 1: The Judicial System in Sri Lanka Supreme Court Furthercivil (11 judges – 1 location) appeals Furthercriminaland commercialappeals Commercial appeals Court of Appeal Provincial High (12 judges – 1 location) Criminalappealfrom Courts HighCourt (20 courts, 40 judges) Committals Commercial High Court Criminal High Court for Civil (3 courts, 3 judges) (31 courts, 37 judges) criminal appealsto trial& HighCourt appeal (80HighCourtjudgesͲ25locations) Joint District/Magistrates’ Courts DistrictCourts Magistrates’ Courts (43courts,43judges) (29courts,73judges) (45courts,87judges) (203districtjudges/magistrates Ͳ 75locations) Source: Judicial Service Commission Statistics and Ministry of Justice interviews, 2012 27. Sri Lanka has a total of 306 judges. The Constitution sets out a limit of six to 10 judges plus the Chief Justice (maximum 11 in total) to comprise the Supreme Court and a limit of six to 11 judges plus a President of the Court (maximum 12 in total) for the Court of Appeal. These two apex courts have always had their maximum complement of judges. Provincial High Courts hearing civil matters are to have two judges while High Courts for criminal matters have one judge. The Colombo Commercial High Court in Colombo is an exception insofar as it is composed of three judges one of whom is the court chair. The Commercial Court is divided into three individual “courtsâ€? or benches, of which two predominantly hear commercial cases and a third hears admiralty, intellectual property, and arbitration award cases as well as a smaller number of commercial cases. There is usually a single judge per District and Magistrate Court, though the Judicature Law allows for additional judges. In several jurisdictions there are multiple judges/courts (e.g. Colombo has seven District Courts), while in 43 less populous areas one judge presides over a combined District and Magistrate Court. Sri Lanka’s judiciary also has a provision for Commissioners – specially designated judges serving temporarily in extraordinary situations. As of the writing of this report in the first half of 2013 there are three judges serving as Commissioners (temporary judges) serving in the High Courts in the North and East where there is a deficit of Tamil-speaking judges. 14  28. There are no judges in reserve Table 2: Judges per Population Ratios with academic or other functions who might replace a judge who might become absent while serving in any of the courts. In addition, nine judges presently serve in Country Number of Judges per the courts of Fiji (including two Supreme 100,000 population Court judges). While drawing conclusions Argentina 11.2 from a comparison of judge-to-population Australia 4.4 ratios across varying legal systems, Malaysia 1.5-2.4 nonetheless the total number of judges is Thailand 6.8 relatively low for a population of 21 England and Wales 3.5 million people. The issue of low numbers of judges is compounded by the practice Russia 24.2 of having one judge per court except for a Germany 23 few major urban centers where additional Sri Lanka 1.5 judges have been added. There will be uneven workloads among the judges of various courts. The challenges of Sources: for Sri Lanka World Bank calculations, for other countries adequate staffing are heightened by the cited in World Bank, Progress Report on Malaysia Court Backlog and high caseloads and frequency of appeals Delay Reduction Program (2011)  of decisions to higher courts. 29. There is a large number of cases per judge in District and Magistrates’ Courts as well as considerable variation in caseloads. Statistics for district court caseloads broken down by province show a range of 179 to 2151 civil cases per judge in 2011 and 250 to 1943 civil cases per judge in 2012 (See Table 3). Similarly, Magistrates’ Courts showed a range of 953 to 6721 cases per judge. By way of comparison, there were also reported wide discrepancies within provinces in terms of the number of cases. In all cases this does not take into consideration the relative complexity and hence burden of different types of cases. In addition, the high numbers of cases per judge suggests that many cases are not actively being heard and are ‘stuck’ in the system (see discussion of the types of cases and respective length of time in the court system in Chapter 3). The ratios varied year on year, with Central Province having a 27% drop in the number of civil cases while Western Province saw an increase of 56% from 2011 to 2012 (though this may be a statistical anomaly – see discussion in Chapter 3). The number of cases per judge per year in the Colombo Commercial High Court was about 721 cases per judge as of the beginning of 2012. 15  Table 3: District and Magistrates Courts Caseloads 2011 2012 2011 2012 Province No. of No of Ratio No. of Ratio No. of No of Ratio No. of Ratio District Civil Civil Magi- Crim. Crim. Judges* Cases Cases strates* Cases Cases Central 12 25816 2151 18957 1580 13 34771 2675 47079 3621 Eastern 10 2612 261 2794 279 15 22323 1488 19452 1297 Northern 9 1613 179 2254 250 11 10486 953 20336 1849 North Central 5 3548 710 4358 872 7 47045 6721 41257 5894 North- western 13 9791 753 9599 738 18 56267 3126 61781 3432 Sabara- gamuwa 10 12667 1267 14053 1405 9 53919 5991 65277 7253 Southern 15 19771 1318 19336 1289 15 94647 6310 81029 5402 Uva 6 5186 864 4118 686 7 27639 3948 42082 6012 Western 36 44827 1245 69960 1943 38 221811 5837 182141 4793 Total 116 127842 1102 147441 1271 133 568908 4278 560434 4214 *Inclusive of 46 judges serving as both District Judge and Magistrate Source: Judicial Service Commission, World Bank calculations 2.2 Appointment of Judges  30. The President directly appoints all apex court judges and appoints High Court judges upon recommendation of the Attorney General and the Judicial Service Commission (JSC), a Constitutional judicial governance body headed by the Chief Justice. The JSC appoints, transfers, and disciplines judges of first instance courts. Apex court judges may be removed by the President after a Parliamentary finding of misconduct, while High Court judges may be removed by the President upon recommendation of the JSC. Supreme Court judges mandatorily retire at age 65, Court of Appeal judges mandatorily retire at age 63, although there is no mandatory retirement age for other judges. 31. Convention in the past was that judges from the Court of Appeal would fill a vacancy that emerged in the Supreme Court, while the Chief Justice would be judge with the longest tenure on the Supreme Court bench. However, there are many exceptions to this convention, with superior court appointments coming from the ranks of attorneys, and particularly the Attorney General’s Department. Most notably, Attorney General Silva was directly appointed Chief Justice in 1999 (though he had earlier been a Supreme Court judge) and in 2013 the President appointed the recently retired Attorney General Peiris to be Chief Justice. Of the 11 present Supreme Court justices, two are career judges while nearly all others are senior state counsels with significant experience from the Attorney General’s Department. The President makes a determination of the candidate suitable for the apex courts at his own discretion. There has also recently been some experience of retired judges taking up government positions, most notably in the case of former Chief Justice de Silva becoming a Cabinet Legal Advisor. 16  2.3 Management of the Court System 32. General management of the court system is carried out by a combination of the Judiciary itself through the JSC and the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), which is part of the Executive. The JSC is chaired ex officio by the Chief Justice joined by two other Supreme Court judges appointed by the President. The JSC selects a Secretary and Deputy Secretary from among senior judges of the Courts of First Instance; when appointed, both these judges suspend the service as a judge and work full time for the Commission. The JSC has a supporting Secretariat comprised of 65 persons. The JSC is also empowered to set the rules for and execute the transfers of High Court judges as well as appointment, promotion, transfer, discipline, and dismissal of judges of First Instance Courts and most public servants fulfilling supporting roles in the adjudication process courts, with the exception of apex courts which directly handle their support staff. The public servants under JSC purview are registrars, clerks, fiscals, interpreters, stenographers, typists, and case file binders. The JSC also sets requirements for training of judicial officers, though the Judicial Training Institute is administratively run by the MoJ. The three- judge commission generally meets once a week. The JSC is to operate autonomously, with Article 115 in the Constitution declaring interference in its affairs to be a crime. 33. The JSC monitors courts’ performance and has the right to exercise substantial discretion in taking action to reward or sanction performance. Judges in the past few years have been submitting monthly reports on the status of their caseload, including number of cases filed, processed, the amount of backlog, and a brief summary of the type of case as well. With the recent renewed focus on addressing backlog of cases prompted by the President’s 2011 Budget speech, the JSC has reportedly called upon those judges where disposal rates are low to seek to redress the problem. However, the JSC has not gone beyond monitoring individual judges’ performance through these reports. It also stresses that it must exercise caution in demanding performance while respecting the autonomy of individual judge’s handling of cases. Yet the uneven distribution of backlog of cases in certain courts (outlined in Section III) suggests that a more proactive stance to ascertain the reasons for low performance and address these reasons is merited. 34. A Commercial High Court judge noted high level of interaction with the Chief Justice (meeting at least monthly) and with the JSC (weekly meetings on Monday). There has been close communication and support for the Commercial High Court’s operations. There is also a Commercial High Court Practitioners Committee composed of judges and attorneys which meets monthly. 35. Sri Lanka’s judiciary does not have codified rules for evaluating performance or conduct of judges according to which sanction or rewards might follow. There is also no formal Code of Ethics. The Constitution refers to judges sitting while maintaining good behavior, but there is no further clarification of what would constitute misbehavior (though Parliament is empowered to determine this with regard to Supreme Court judges). Recent Court Rules issued by the Supreme Court and applicable to other courts provide guidelines for the operation of courts and thereby how judges should run their trials, but they do not spell out management or oversight issues. There is also a judge’s manual from the 1950s that relates to handling of cases in court with a planned update that has not been formally sanctioned. 17  36. Rotations and promotion of staff outside of the apex courts are carried out on an annual basis by the JSC, with judges and court public officers usually serving three-year terms in a given position and/location. There are no published criteria or rules governing rotation or promotion of judges and public officers. Convention has been to assign more junior persons to more remote courts handling lower volumes of cases with gradual progression towards courts handling a larger volume and eventually serving in Colombo. There have been some cases over the past 12 years where this convention has not always been followed in JSC personnel decisions.5 37. The Ministry of Justice is responsible for logistical support in the operation of the courts as well as running several other justice sector institutions. The MoJ oversees: hiring, discipline, transfer of administrative staff such as accountants; operations of the Judicial Training Institute; the Government Analyst Department (dealing with material evidence); the Legal Aid Commission providing legal services to the poor; Debt Conciliation Commissions; some 350 civil mediation boards handling low value cases; and 38 labor tribunals. The MoJ plans and executes all spending related to the building and upkeep of all courthouses except for the apex courts as well as equipment, supplies, and vehicles. There is a separate Board of Management headed by the Chief Justice for the Supreme Court and Court of Appeal building complex. The MoJ also oversees the maintenance of record-keeping systems for all courts including the Supreme Court and Court of Appeal though registrars themselves do not fall under the MoJ. Finally, MoJ manages all budgeting and accounting for all courts, including all salaries, through 23 accounting centers around the country (usually co-located with Provincial High Courts). 38. Annual expenditures on court administration in 2011 were 3.7 billion rupees (approximately USD 31 million), of which about 20% was for capital expenditures6. These figures have experienced almost no fluctuation since 2008 (including for 2012, though there was an announced program for increased construction). There are slightly over 6000 regular employees and roughly 2000 part time workers in the justice sector in total falling under the Ministry of Justice’s mandate.7 39. The interlocking nature of the JSC’s and MoJ’s functional responsibilities for courts’ operations requires close communication and cooperation between the two entities. For instance, the recent intensive establishment of the new Provincial High Courts over the past five years has required capital expenditure to refurbish and equip buildings by the Ministry of Justice as well as increasing the number of judges and senior staff and appointments of these persons, a task overseen by the JSC. There are no formal mechanisms for ensuring this coordination but in practice communication is constant. 40. The duality of management oversight is not viewed as a pressing concern by justice sector practitioners in Sri Lanka. A few MoJ employees noted that the Ministry needed to exercise care in waiting for decisions by the JSC related to the organization of the courts out of respect for the JSC’s independence. At the same time, others noted the MoJ’s role in handling almost all budgetary issues was a limitation on the judiciary’s capacity to manage its affairs. Yet persons interviewed for this study did  5 International Crisis Group (2009) 6 Combined figures for court administration and the Supreme Court Complex Board of Management. Ministry of Justice (2012). Excludes amounts for MoJ administration and other institutions (Mediation Boards, Government Analyst, etc.) 7 Ministry of Justice 2010 Estimates Report. 18  not cite the question of split oversight as a factor impeding the work of the courts. There were no reports of differences on management issues leading to problems in organization of the courts. 2.4 Court Operations 41. Judges are responsible for managing their own individual courts. Judges provide input in preparation of budgets and make minor payments within small cash allocations provided on a short term basis by their respective accounting offices. The typical allotment of total staff per District Court is between 20 and 30 persons; for instance Colombo’s relatively busy seven district courts have a total of 186 staff serving in them, while the Mt. Lavinia District Court (serving the southern outskirts of Colombo) has a total of 30 staff. Judges of the apex courts have personal secretaries, but judges at all other levels do not have clerks or personal assistants, which means that the writing and researching of all decisions must be undertaken by the judges themselves. Judges are responsible for overseeing fiscal officers who enforce judgments. All fiscal officers are public officers. Interviewees noted that the greatest problems with staffing issues were relatively weak skills of stenographers in courts, particularly when dealing with the English language. 2.5 Infrastructure 42. Sri Lanka’s courts continue to face physical capacity constraints but these are easing following intensive effort to improve infrastructure over the past dozen years. The Ministry of Justice carried out refurbishment or construction of some 24 courts under a World Bank-financed project from 2000-2007. In addition some 18 other court buildings were refurbished without external financing over the past 12 years. With the defeat of the LTTE in 2009, there has been intense activity to build or refurbish courthouses in the North and East. The Government further committed to setting up 60 new courts over the period 2011-2013, with an additional programmatic allocation of 400 million rupees (slightly more than USD 3 million) for this period in addition to loan financing support received from the Asian Development Bank for three courts in the North and East. Several of the new courts are refurbished buildings which had previously been managed by MoJ. There are preliminary plans to to build a new court complex in Colombo to house the Commercial High Court, district courts, and several labor tribunals. 43. The use of existing court buildings is not intense. Given the practice of one judge per courthouse, whenever that judge is not presiding, the courtrooms are not used. Moreover, several stakeholders noted that common practice in all courts was to begin at 9:30 am and conclude all hearings by 2:00 pm despite JSC circular requiring courts to be in session from 9:30 to 3:30 with a break for lunch. The less than fulltime use of the courtrooms is justified in part by the need for judges to attend to the rest of their work such as writing judgments. However, it would appear possible to reallocate duties among personnel, including perhaps adding judges, in order to more fully utilize the available courthouse infrastructure to hear cases. 44. With the exception of a piloted project started in 2006 to automate case processing in the Colombo and Kandy District Courts, there is no use of computer technology to handle case management in Sri Lanka’s courts. The pilot project itself encompassed a case tracking system, but did not address digitization of records or other elements of case management that might be automated. 19  The system continues to operate but no rigorous assessment of its utility and possible expansion as a system or utilization by other courts has been carried out. There are no immediate plans or allocations to automate other courts. At the same time, the MoJ is keen for assistance to implement automated case management. 2.6 Availability of Information 45. Publicly available and accessible information about the courts’ operations is limited. In terms of management information, the data on court cases and disposal rates that is gathered by the JSC is not publicly available. The Ministry of Justice produces an annual report which captures some performance data of the apex courts, as well as its own work in meeting logistical needs. Scheduling of hearings is done manually through the mail and by daily postings in the courts in question, with the exception of the Supreme Court, which publishes this information on line and in national newspapers. 46. Information about trends in the practice of law in Sri Lanka’s courts is also not consolidated or automated. There is a Government run database of Acts with search capability (Lawnet), but it does not contain important implementing regulations by agencies. Lawnet publishes law reports with judgments, but these are not searchable beyond the alphabetical names of litigants in cases. These constraints pose a difficulty for businesses to keeping up to date, particularly on issues related to customs and taxation that were governed by regulations. 2.7 Training 47. MoJ operates a Judges Training Institute (JTI) which carries out training programs approved by the JSC. Batches of 15 to 20 trainee magistrates and district court judges are trained annually for with the numbers fluctuating as per JSC requirements. There are 4 distinct course programs: a trainee judges course (conducted 5 days a week with a dedicated practical court training course); a short ‘in service’ judges course for appointed judges who need capacity building (on Saturdays only); a labor tribunal course for presidents of labor tribunals; and a course for enhancing report writing and IT skills. The JTI does not conduct any long-term training for Appellate court judges. The Institute also has carried out a number of specialized courses (e.g. on human trafficking) as per separate agreements with interested donors which finance the courses. It also runs occasional weekend seminars for up to 40 judges. Finally, MoJ also established a training institute for non-judicial officers (registrars, assistants, etc.) in 2010, offering roughly 20 short courses for various support staff per year. 48. The amount and breadth of training of judges and staff is cited by several stakeholders in the justice sector as inadequately resourced and substantively insufficient. The JTI develops its content subject to JSC approval and has a corporate development plan. However, it has lacked the resources to conduct detailed needs assessments or develop programs based on evaluations of court performance. In terms of content, persons contacted for this review cited the lack of training on application of law in District Courts for changing and new business practices. Indeed, better training for judges was viewed by members of the judiciary as a key strategy to address the problem of case backlog and insufficiently quick adjudication in the courts. The course manual for trainee judges contains an extensive section on using differentiated case management techniques and suggests time standards. However from the information provided by stakeholders these methods are not followed often in practice. 20  CHAPTER 3: DATA ON CASE HANDLING IN COURTS 49. There are significant limitations in data available regarding courts’ operations which allow tentative conclusions about performance. Available statistics for this review were: (i) Statistics on the number of cases per District Judge and Magistrate broken down by province, and numbers of cases by type and number of years in the respective courts for 2011 and 2012 provided by the JSC (‘JSC composite data’); (ii) January-June 2011 statistics for criminal high courts, district courts, and magistrates courts; (iii) published data in annual reports from the Ministry of Justice for the years 2010 and 2011 regarding types of cases, cases pending, and cases concluded by the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal; and (iv) data and estimates provided on site about the cases filed, pending, and concluded at the Commercial High Court. Pending cases may include cases which may be dismissed owing to case filing deficiencies that will result in the case being removed or set aside if it fails to comply with procedural requirements. 50. Other data reported by courts is not readily available in aggregated form. The JSC has for a number of years required reporting on total numbers of cases by judge on case management statistics from first instance courts under its supervision. This data is not aggregated and does not record pending and concluded cases. The team also lacked information on the number of cases which are in provincial High Courts; anecdotal comments from stakeholders gave a rate of appeal on civil cases ranging from 10% to as much as 50% of all cases.8 In addition, aside from estimates in the CHCC, there is no data on clearance rates and average time of disposition for various types of cases. Nonetheless, this review records such data as is available in order to provide for some conclusions about the general operations of the court system as a whole and particularly in the CHCC. Observations about the court system as a whole provide context for the performance of the District Courts and the CHCC in handling commercial cases. 3.1 Case Statistics 51. The number of cases pending in the Supreme Court has increased from 1345 at the end of 2008 to 3256 as of August in 2012. The number of pending appeals in the Supreme Court from Provincial High Courts has increased from 139 in 2008 to 1105 in the 3rd quarter of 2012. This is a reflection of an additional burden placed on the Supreme Court to serve as a final court of appeal after the Provincial High Courts were established. The number of pending fundamental rights applications has also doubled from 574 in 2008 to 1088 as of the 3rd quarter of 2012 even though the number of new cases being filed annually has decreased from 1010 to 508 in the same period. 52. The number of pending cases in the Court of Appeals declined from 10,821 in at the beginning of 2008 to 5,740 as of the beginning of 2013. This is largely as a result of transfer of cases to Provincial High Courts which have been recently established. The number of cases being registered annually has come down from 1658 in 2008 to 943 in 2012 (see Annex 1 for tables of case data).  8 This estimate does not factor in the relatively successful use of mediation (around 60% resolution rate) for low value civil cases. 21  53. District Courts and Magistrates Courts have between 650,000 and 735,000 cases pending as of early 2013. JSC data on pending cases show that as of January 31, 2013, there were a reported 650,670 criminal and civil cases pending in first instance courts, of which 119, 964 were in trial. However, JSC composite data for 2012 yields a sum of 705,863 cases in first instance courts, including 145,429 cases in District Courts as of the end of 2012 (over 19,000 more than the 125,831 pending as of the end of 2011) and 560,434 in Magistrates Courts (a small decline from 568,908 as of the end of 2011). Finally, the January-June 2011 JSC report shows a total of 735,591 cases pending in District Courts and Magistrates Courts as of January 1, 2011. The differences may be due to the varying dates or inconsistencies in the compilation of statistics. None of the data available capture whether a concluded case that was subsequently appealed (thereby still remaining in the court system, but at a higher court). 54. The Magistrates Courts account for the lion’s share of cases pending in the court system. The aggregate data from individual courts shows that nearly 79% of pending cases in first instance courts were in the Magistrates’ Courts, while 21% were in District Courts in 2012 (see Figure 2 for breakdown). The breakdown of new filings in January-June 2011 is similar: 93% of new filings were in Magistrates’ Courts, 6% in District Courts, and only 1% in the Criminal High Courts. Figure 2: Breakdown of Cases in District and Magistrate Courts, 2012 4% Partition 3% 3% 8% 4% Land 8% 2% Divorce MoneyMatters 27% OtherCivil PenalCode 29% Exciseordinance 9% PoisonOrdinance MotorTraffic 3% MaintenanceAct OtherCriminal 55. Money matters are the most common type of civil case in the District Courts, but partition cases and to a lesser extent land cases contribute most to cases which are not disposed quickly. In 2012, money matters accounted for 33% of all civil cases, while land, partition, and divorce cases account for between 15% and 20% of all cases in District Courts. There was a 25% increase of money matters cases in 2012 compared to 2011 (though this may be a statistical anomaly since it is prompted by unusual figure in just one district court), and small increases in land, partition, and divorce cases. Partition cases account for 45% of cases in District Courts for more than five years and 54% of cases in such courts that are more than 10 years old.  22  Figure 3: Civil Case Statistics Total Civil Cases in District Longstanding Civil Cases Courts, 2011 & 2012 By Type, 2012 60000 15000 50000 40000 10000 30000 >5yrsin 20000 2011 5000 Court 10000 2012 >10yrsin 0 Court 0 Divorce Rent/Eviction OtherCivilCase Partition Land MoneyMatters Testamentry Divorce testamentry Land MoneyMatters rent/eviction Partition custody Special Miscellaneous 56. Most cases in first instance courts are less than five years old. A total of 70% of all civil cases have been in courts for less than five years in 2012 (correspondingly 74% in 2011); 87% of money matters cases are in District Courts for less than five years (83% in 2011). A total of 91% of all criminal cases in Magistrates Courts are less than five years old and only 1% of criminal cases are more than 10 years old. Unfortunately, more precise statistics on the length of time cases are in court (e.g. one, two, or three years) are not available. 57. The high proportion of cases under five years in the system suggests that the backlog problem has stabilized, but is not improving. While the overall caseloads per judge are high, it appears that overall disposition of cases is keeping pace with the influx of new cases being filed. There was virtually no increase or decrease in the total numbers of criminal and civil cases over five years old in the dataset for 2011 and 2012. The data does not provide insight as to how judges are processing caseloads which for must first instance judges number in the thousands. 23  Figure 4: Cases in Magistrates and District Courts, Number of Years Criminal Cases, No. of Years Civil Cases, No. of Years in Magistrates Courts, 2012 in District Courts, 2012 0% 0% 1% 0% 8% 1% 1% 5% 0% <5Year <5Years 05Ͳ10 05Ͳ10 23% 10Ͳ15 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 91% 70% 15Ͳ20 20Ͳ25 >20Years 25Ͳ30 3.2 Processing of Commercial Cases 58. The District Courts of Kandy and Colombo have the most activity overall for civil and criminal cases, in particular with regard to money matters. In 2012 the nine Colombo District Courts accounted for 29,616 money matters cases (53% of all cases) while the three Kandy District Courts accounted for 5,659 money matters cases (10% of all cases). No other District Court account for more than 4% of money matters cases. As noted earlier, there was a 25% increase of money matters cases in 2012 compared to 2011. However, this increase appears traceable to having 23,694 new cases under five years old in 2012 in one specific Colombo District Court (and thus may be the result of an anomalous report). Without this one court the total number of money matters cases dropped in 2012 when compared to the prior year. 59. The Colombo Commercial High Court (CCHC) handles much fewer cases overall with 971 cases filed in 2012. Of course, as the court of first instance for higher value cases, the significance of its operations is greater than the number of cases which it handles. There is no data regarding the aggregate value of cases which are heard, but the existence of the Court and the benefits of a more specialized venue with judges having greater technical qualification were noted by stakeholders interviewed for this review. Based on 2012 data compiled from registrars’ logs for the three benches, a total of 916 cases were concluded. The 1st and 2nd benches each had 225 new cases while 515 new cases were brought before the 3rd Bench. A total of 85% of the cases heard by the 1st and 2nd benches relate to money recovery matters while 60% of the cases heard by the 3rd bench concerned enforcement of arbitration. CCHC staff estimate that in most cases of debt recovery, lease defaults that cases are concluded within two years or less (leading law firms noted that the CCHC would usually resolve cases within 18 months). 24  Table 4: Case Disposal in the Colombo Commercial High Court, 2012 Nature of Type of Estimated Total Pending* Total new cases in Total Concluded case case avg. time cases as of end 2012 cases in 2012 of 2011 disposal (years) Court Court Court Court Court Court Court Court Court 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 Money breach of 4 recovery contract 739 624 155 194 194 139 152 211 125 defaulting 2 - 2.5 on leases Company liquidations 2-4 matters shareholder 2 agreements enjoining 84 71 17 22 22 15 17 24 15 1 week orders board 1-2 resolutions Intellectual Trademarks 1-4 property & patents Unfair 1-4 competition 46 39 29 12 12 26 9 13 24 Copy right infringeme 1-6 nt Arbitration (enforcement 2 _ _ 344 _ _ 309 300 of awards) Admiralty Actions in 3 matters rem _ _ 29 _ _ 26 25 Actions in personam 3 Combined Totals for All 3 Courts 2177 971 915 *Pending cases do not include laid by cases, i.e. cases registered but not admitted for trial owing to procedural matters which must be rectified. There are nearly 3000 such additional cases, of which 60% are estimated to concern arbitration enforcement. Source: Colombo Commercial High Court staff and records  60. Enforcement of arbitration are the single most common type of case filed with the CHCC and this trend will likely continue. In addition to the 344 pending cases there are a large number (over 2800) of such cases which have been laid by until the parties filing the cases take necessary procedural steps. Even with these frequent delays, enforcement of arbitration awards are estimated by CHCC court staff to take three years or less. Furthermore, the last decade has seen more frequent incorporation of arbitration into all leasing agreements which has increased the number of applications for either enforcement or challenging awards. There are also numerous applications dealing with relatively small 25  consumer related claims. More rigorous application of relevant sections of the Arbitration Act (specifically Sections 31(6) and 32(2)) to screen cases might discourage the filing of frivolous applications. 61. The available data on court performance indicates that commercial cases are not the major contributors to backlog in the courts. Pending criminal cases outnumber civil cases by about four to one in Sri Lanka’s court system. Slightly commercial (money matters) cases are not processed quickly Partition and land cases contribute substantially to cases lasting over five years The increase in backlog for the period for which data is available is almost entirely due to criminal cases, albeit that within civil cases the rate of influx of specific money matters cases is higher than disposition rates. However, the available information does not allow for several important assessments, such as known how much time money pending and concluded money matters had been in the system. For instance, while Kandy District Court contributes considerably to overall civil case backlog, its disposition rate in January-June 2011 was relatively good, contributing to a small reduction in backlog. The reasons for this improvement compared to past performance warrant further investigation. 62. Commercial case disposal in the CHCC appears to be fairly expeditious. Conclusion of cases in 2012 (915 cases) was only slightly less than the influx of new cases (977), with a constant of slightly more than 2000 cases that are in process. Staff estimates and comments by practicing lawyers indicate that most cases take about two years to process, keeping the amount of cases taken up by the CHCC roughly constant at around 2000 for at least the past few years. District Courts also have disposal rates for civil cases that are comparable to new filings, though there are fewer disposals than new filings of money matters cases. At the same time just ‘treading water’ in concluding the same number of cases with those that will not address the problem of a large backlog of cases in the District Courts. CHAPTER 4: PRIVATE SECTOR APPROACHES TO DISPUTE RESOLUTION  4.1 Private Sector Experience with Courts 63. The private sector’s behavior in using the court system is important in assessing how well the courts play their role in providing for a better business environment. The team conducted interviews with representatives from three commercial banks, two leasing companies and over 10 corporations to gauge the experience and views of the private sector in dealing with the legal system9. Financial institutions and leasing companies are particularly important users since most commercial cases coming up before the District Courts are money matters involving recoveries on loans and leases. Furthermore, outside of enforcement of arbitration decisions, money recovery cases by these institutions also represent the second largest number of cases in the CHCC. 64. Going to court to settle disputes in commercial cases is, as is true in most systems, only a last resort. Delay in handling of cases was the main reason cited to avoid the legal system. Multiple interviewees cited various kinds of delays: cases taking years to be listed for trial, trial dates being set six months or more apart, arbitrary case postponements due to the court allowing postponement on frivolous  9 The information was provided on condition of the sources remaining anonymous. 26  reasons or judges delaying judgments, and delays by court registrar and fiscals in conducting auctions. Another issue cited was the cost of lawyers’ fees and costs incurred to ensure the enforcement of judgments were also cited as issues. Both time and cost are increased due to procedural inefficiencies. 65. Limited survey results suggest that the qualitative findings noted here are systemic problems, though their impact on businesses is not viewed as significant. The results of the last large survey conducted of the judicial sector’s performance highlight these same issues (See Box on Marga Survey). At the same time, a 2010-11 survey of nearly 600 manufacturing and service enterprises found that the courts were viewed as the least significant obstacle to business out of 15 choices. This ranking may reflect avoidance of the courts or that the performance and time delays are on balance acceptable. 66. The establishment of the Commercial High Court was consistently described by interviewees as a significant step in the right direction. Interviewees felt that the time taken for the disposal of cases was acceptable, though could be improved. Several interviewees noted that the CCHC suffered from poor infrastructure, particularly its record room and filing system. A major source of delay cited by lawyers working in businesses was the difficulty at times of locating files within the Court. 67. Banks generally resort to a lengthy internal recovery process that can last up to two years. Only 5 to 10% of money recovery actions eventually go to court, and nearly 50% of such actions are then settled at the trial stage with the debtor agreeing to pay at least some part of the loan. Interviewed Bank lawyers stated that they recovered less than 2% of the outstanding non-performing advances in 2012 viat the courts, and even then after lengthy proceedings. Financial institutions still suffer a significant loss even after redress to courts but often agree to settle in order to prevent costs from escalating. 68. Private Commercial Banks generally obtain realizable assets as security on loans. A key issue they face is that customers defaulting on loan repayments seek redress by way of injunctive relief through enjoining orders. This procedure on average takes about nine months and generally results in the enjoining order being refused after the bank files an objection and court reviews the application. Financial institutions complain that judges often grant such injunctions with a view to giving the debtor more time to settle notwithstanding the fact that a lengthy settlement procedure has already been followed and legal redress is being sought only as a last resort. Other delaying tactics include engaging creditors to initiate liquidation proceedings and thereby delay the bank from recovering. 69. Recently introduced legislation regarding loan recovery has caused alarm among banks. The Recovery of Loans by Banks (Special Provisions) (amendment) Act of 2011 prevents the initiation of parate auctions10 where the loan is less than 5 million rupees. Financial institutions are forced to recover the loans using other procedures. Interviewees believed that this could result in the court system being flooded with such cases involving lower value loans. 70. Leasing companies also use lengthy internal processes and enlist private recovery agents for the recovery of leased vehicles. For high value cases such as those involving leases for heavy vehicles, leasing companies expressed general satisfaction with the time take for case disposal in the Commercial  10 Extra Judicial sale of property mortgaged for the recovery of debts defaulted without an order of court in that behalf. 27  High Court. However, the companies noted that low value cases which must be taken up in District Courts are subject to significant delays. 71. Usage of the CCHC in instances where liquidations and winding up procedures are taking place have been described as satisfactory in terms of timeliness and quality of judgments. Corporations noted that they had far less confidence in the speed and quality of service in District Courts. There is a perception that the judges in these courts often lack sufficient background on commercial matters and company law, which in turn created delays. 28  Box 2. Marga Institute Survey: Another Assessment of Court Performance The only available survey regarding justice sector performance was undertaken by the nongovernmental Marga Insitute in 2002. The survey was conducted among 1606 respondents including litigants, remand prisoners, judges, lawyers, court staff and legal officers from the corporate sector. The survey reviewed confidence in the judicial system and various aspects of performance. Though the information is dated and reflects perceptions beyond just that of business, nonetheless it is a useful set of assessments of aspects of court performance. Key findings of this survey were: x A minority of court users and stakeholders (and only half of judges surveyed) had a high level of trust in the system; x Nearly 62% of the respondents also believed that political pressures influenced the judicial system to some degree; x A majority of the respondents, including judges themselves, described the quality of services provided by the legal system as average (on a scale of bad, average, and good); x 41 members of the judiciary who responded to the portion of the survey on corruption described 226 incidents of bribery of which the three highest beneficiaries were court clerks, police officers and fiscals. There were few reports of bribes in connection with delivery of judgments were remote. The survey also asked court users to rank 11 obstacles to using the court system. The top three problems were: 1. Legal representation is too expensive 2. Judicial process is too long, and 3. Procedure too complex. Respondents from the corporate sector, judges, court staff and the legal profession were asked to indicate which would be the most effective steps to improve judicial performance. These were in order of importance: 1. Judicial training programs 2. Training programs for court staff 3. Arrangements for better case management including effective registry and file maintenance systems 4. Immunity from political interference and higher salaries to judicial officers (tied)  Source: Marga Institute (2002) 29  4.2 Alternative Dispute Resolution 73. Arbitration within Sri Lanka can be either institutional or ad hoc, with two local centers for arbitration in operation. The Arbitration Act made comprehensive legal provisions for the conduct of arbitration proceedings and for the enforcement of arbitration awards and gave effect to the principles of the New York Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards. Although community mediation is viewed as largely successful, commercial mediation has not been practiced despite an attempt to establish a commercial mediation center in the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce. 74. Arbitration has been described by wide array of stakeholders as being slower than the courts themselves. Arbitration hearings are characterized as being very similar to court sessions, with arbiters almost always being retired judges and parties to the arbitration retaining lawyers to represent their interests in the arbitration. Arbitrations never have continuous sessions and often with considerable delays between them. Because of the role for lawyers, arbitrations typically take place the last two hours of a workday after attorneys representing clients have finisher their work in courts during the earlier part of the day. Full day sittings and sittings on consecutive days was virtually unknown, except in the rare instances of domestically held international arbitration. There is also the perception of a significant number of arbitration awards subsequently being contested in the Colombo High Commercial Court, which undermines the basic principle of arbitration11. Some financial institutions interviewed for this report state that they now avoid using arbitration clauses in agreements and rely instead on clauses that describe the settlement steps involved where disputes may arise. 75. The Arbitration Act was intended to provide the courts with a supervisory role. Party autonomy was foremost and parties have the discretion to invoke the jurisdiction of court only in certain limited occasions. However application to court can be made according to seven out of 13 provisions in the Act12.These provisions are in addition to those which invoke the Court to enforce the award or to set aside the award. However courts have been reluctant to order that any award be made payable shall be brought into Court or otherwise secured pending the determination of the application. Arbitration proceedings can be continued when an application has been made to court to determine whether the arbitration tribunal has jurisdiction13. Using a court order to show that the tribunal does not have jurisdiction is a another ploy used by the party against whom the final award is made, to circumvent proceedings irrespective of the time taken to have several sittings (spanning over years in some cases), and the expenses borne by the parties and other stakeholders in the process. 76. Arbitration proceedings can be continued when an application has been made to court to determine whether the arbitration tribunal has jurisdiction14. Using a court order to show that the tribunal does not have jurisdiction is another ploy used by the party against whom the final award is  11 Over 300 cases of enforcement of arbitration were filed in 2012. There are no estimates of the total number of arbitrations that may have taken place in the same year. 12 Section 7: Appointment of Arbitrators, Section 10 : Grounds for challenge, Section 11 : Competence of Arbitral Tribunal, Section 13 : Interim measures of protection, Section 20 : Parties may obtain summons, Section 21: Refusal or failure to attend before Arbitral Tribunal, Section 30 : Award not to be withheld. 13 As per S. 11 14 AsperS.11 30  made, to circumvent proceedings irrespective of the time taken to have several sittings (spanning over years in some cases), and the expenses borne by the parties and other stakeholders to the process. The Act specifies that arbitration proceedings can continue notwithstanding the application made to court on the jurisdiction of the tribunal. The Act15 also provides that the Supreme Court may make Rules16 that set out the manner in which the procedure of the Court is conducted. Even though these rules have been drafted and approved of by the Law Commission several years ago, they are yet to be implemented up to date. CHAPTER 5: LEGAL AND PROCEDURAL ISSUES IN COMMERCIAL CASES 77. Sri Lanka’s legal system is derived from several sources which reflect its history over the past four centuries. Its system is based on British Commonwealth legal principles but with incorporation of some Roman-Dutch legal norms and in a few cases prior Kandyan law. In particular, Roman-Dutch legal tradition informs certain transactions, notably contracts for land.17 Commercial litigation, like all civil litigation, is governed primarily by the Civil Procedure Code (CPC) of Sri Lanka enacted in 1889 (with amendments) with the exception of the Companies Act No. 7 of 2007 which provides that litigation under the Companies Act is sui generis. The Evidence Ordinance No. 14 of 1895 (as amended) specifies the evidence than can be admitted to court and the procedure that must be followed in producing such evidence. Provisions in the Evidence Ordinance which deal with the admissibility of documents are particularly important for commercial cases.18 Substantive law with regard to commercial transactions are found in the respective Acts which deal with the subject matter, notably the Debt Recovery (Special Provisions) Act No. 2 of 1990, Companies Act No. 7 of 2007, Intellectual Property Act No. 36 of 2003, Arbitration Act No. 11 of 1995, and Admiralty Jurisdiction Act No. 40 of 1983. 78. There are both substantive legal issues and actual practices which contribute to long processing times of commercial cases, though observers tend to stress that most problems lie in the practical application of existing law in the courts.19 The following procedural issues stand out as contributing to delays by providing grounds for one or more parties to take action that will draw out court proceedings: x CPC provisions provide for the cross-examination of all witnesses. The Companies Act stipulates that the all actions stemming from the Act must be disposed of by way of Petition & Affidavit and the Intellectual Property Act provide for affidavit evidence. But all other commercial cases are subject to time-consuming cross examination which, though not required, must be granted if the litigants demand it. Parties often request additional dates for cross-examining a witness without doing so after the conclusion of the examination in chief.  15 As per S. 43 16 With respect to any application or appeal made to any Court under the Act, and the costs of such applications or appeals and the payment of money into and out of Court in satisfaction of a claim which the arbitration apply and the manner in which money is to be invested. 17 Cooray (1972) 18 The discussion of legal and procedural issues is adapted from an overview of commercial litigation commissioned for this review by Dr. Harsha Cabraal. 19 Report of Justice Raja Fernando Committee (2007) 31  x The CPC allows for challenging of each document submitted by the other party with the ultimate requirement of an oral hearing of the document with written submissions after which the presiding judge will issue an order. There is substantial latitude with regard to the timeliness and completeness of submission of documents. x There is no procedural legislation that would provide for a reliable system of electronic submission and exchange of documentation as part of the pre-trial and trial process. Emails are permitted as evidence, but their authenticity may be challenged requiring oral hearings as noted above. Procedural steps effectively require the physical presence of litigants or their representation. This in turn is a cause of frequent adjournments in order to accommodate both parties and/or their representation. x Summons can be drawn out. The CPC allows for up to 3 different ways of the serving of summons (Via registered post, in person or by substituted service) if previous attempts fail. x A judge’s order during the trial may be appealed if there is a question of law to be considered (to Provincial High Courts in the case of District Courts, but to the Supreme Court directly in CHCC cases). The appellate court has to make a grant to leave as to whether an appeal will be heard by the same court and then the actual hearings would be determined. Trial proceedings are laid by (discontinued) until a determination is made with regard to the appeal. 79. There are also a number of scheduling practices that cause unwarranted delays. Trials are never scheduled on a day-to day basis and often large gaps between trial proceedings (often up to four months) are granted by the bench. Of course, there may be legitimate and necessary reasons for taking more time to hear a case. There are physical limitations in terms of the courthouses, numbers of available judges and competent staff, and management of records. However, the consensus among all stakeholders consulted for this review was that overall practice, with some exception in the CHCC, was to tolerate slow trials. Indeed, the Bar had consistently raised objections to introduce more streamlined pre-trial procedures. 80. Changes in substantive and procedural law can close some loopholes that afford opportunity to delay cases, but enforcing greater discipline in carrying out trials under existing legislation will contribute most to tacking the issue of slow justice being served. Achieving such improved discipline will require a concerted effort to change the way in which both the bench and the bar approach trials. This in turn will require consensus among all parties involved, as well as expectations more generally of a better performing court system. 32  Box 3. A Practitioner’s View: Possible Efficiency Gains in Adjudicating Commercial Cases The 2013 Doing Business survey found that enforcement of contracts involves 41 steps taking an average of 1318 days in Sri Lanka. Practicing lawyers concurred with these figures with the two qualifications. One is that the methodology tracks a typical case of a value of 200% of the country’s per capita income or about 4000 US dollars. Such a case would be heard in a District Court as opposed to one heard in the CHCC, which hears cases for a value of over 40,000 US dollars. The CHCC is considered more efficient. The second is that the figure of 256 days for enforcement would apply for enforcement of a foreign judgment, an unusual occurrence. Enforcement of local judgments is estimated to take from 30 to 70 days. For this review a prominent practicing commercial attorney, analyzed the process for the purposes of identifying where from a practitioner’s eye shortening of the process might be obtained. Filing and service is delayed by the lack of rigor and convenience in carrying out pre-trial procedure, especially on the admission of documents. Another cause of delay in this stage is the issuing of interrogatories by the Plaintiff which the Defendant needs to answer. A practice direction for the CHCC without amending the CPC can achieve a reduction of 30 days from the current period of 62 days. Trial and judgment experience significant delays due to the bar taking advantage of provisions to delay trial for strategic reasons and lenience by the bench in controlling the trial process. Generally two dates (each spaced between 45 days to 60 days apart) are given by court to file answer as counsels generally aren’t prepared, nor are they required by judges, to file answer on the first day. A further 60 days are usually provided for counsels to frame issues and admissions after the date of filling answer for the matter. Adjournments to prepare further are routinely awarded in cases. The judge may require a further 60 days from the date of filing the final written submissions to deliver the judgment. On occasion the judge may require a further 45 days later on the date fixed for judgment. A reduction in such delays through stricter discipline could reduce the number of days to 365 days from the current figure of 1000 days. Appeals can be a source of major delays. An appeal from a judgment of the District Court goes to the corresponding Provincial High Court of Civil Appeal and takes an estimated 1000 days from the date of the judgment to be listed in the court. The hearing takes a further 300-500 days. The Supreme Court only grants leave to appeal of a judgment of the Provincial High Court (including the CHCC) only when there is a serious question of law to be considered. Generally matters fixed for Argument in the Supreme Court are not taken until the ‘Leave to Proceed’ and ‘Granting of Leave’ matters have been taken up. Practitioners note that a matter listed for argument is often re-scheduled for argument 60 to 90 days later. A final appeal from the Commercial High Court might take between 700-1000 days for it to be listed in the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court would further require a period of 365- 500 days to inquire into the matter. Therefore entire appeal process is estimated to take between 1065- 1500 days. If the two tier appeal process described above is utilized the estimated total time is between 1990 days - 2590 days (6-7 years). In a commercial case this severely hinders a litigant from obtaining speedy relief unless the remedy of a Writ Pending appeal resorted to. For the trial process in the court of first instance the standard that could be aimed at is a lowering of the number of days 585 days (inclusive of 3 months calculated for interim relief1) from 1318 days. Enforcement of domestic judgments is relatively straightforward and disciplined, taking between 30 and 70 days. 33  CHAPTER 6: PAST REFORM EFFORTS 6.1 Initiatives by the Government 81. Sri Lanka has expended significant effort to improve the justice sector’s performance and in particular to address delays and backlog. The Government has sought to provide for sufficient court infrastructure and to increase physical proximity of courts. The creation of the Commercial High Court is perhaps the most notable attempt to provide for better judicial services to the population. 82. Concomitant with infrastructure the Government has sought to address procedural and management shortcomings that cause delays. A committee headed by President’s Counsel de Silva submitted a report in 2004 with recommended amendments to the practice and procedures in investigations and courts on curbing crime and eradicating procedural delays. Apart from recognizing the need to introduce amendments to the existing legislation the report also confirmed that laws delays were inextricably linked to the lack of adequate resources especially cadre. However even though significant recommendations such as day to day trials were incorporated into amendments to law20 subsequent review committees21 found that such provisions were only implemented in a few courts owing to practical difficulties. 83. A separate committee headed by former Supreme Court Justice Fernando Committee submitted a report which identified the delays in the administration of justice. The committee suggested a series of reforms to procedural and substantive law that would have led to a significant reduction in delays in both the short and medium term. The focus of those recommendations was to improve pre-trial procedures. 84. A committee headed by a previous Secretary of Justice was subsequently appointed in 2007 to implement the recommendations in the Justice Raja Fernando Committee. This committee specified the implementation of six key reforms. The reforms included the introduction of a pre-trial procedure, the provision of necessary human resources and logistical support to court houses, the implementation of available provisions in existing law, the provision of systemic training to judicial officers, the introduction of an incentive scheme for better performance of judicial officers and the introduction of speedy and advanced mechanisms for court houses. Most importantly, this committee emphasized the primary importance of a shared vision endorsed and enshrined in all activities carried out by the various stakeholders in the justice system that strived to achieve the target of ‘’no delays’’. The committee also called for an SWOT assessment of the institutional capacity of the partners in the justice system prior to the introduction of major reforms. 85. Despite considerable analysis and drafting work, no changes to procedural law or practice have been effected. Corresponding amendments to the Civil Procedural Code, as well as to Supreme Court Rules for courts have been drafted, they have not yet been promulgated. The reasons for this appear to be lack of full consensus among stakeholders, particularly the Bar, and lack of urgency or pressure to make the changes within Parliament and the Government.  20 Criminal Procedure Code Act no. 15 of 2005 21 Committee appointed to implement recommendations in the Justice Raja Fernando committee 34  6.2 Donor Supported Efforts 86. The World Bank financed a Legal and Judicial Reform Project from 2000 to 2007. The Project supported capacity development for commercial law development (which played a role in the drafting of the sound Companies Act passed in 2006), the creation of an online database of Acts (Lawnet), launching of commercial mediation, and professional development of judiciary staff as well as other stakeholders such as the Attorney General’s Department and the Office of the Legal Draftsman. The project also supported construction of new court houses in war affected provinces of the country, provision of equipment and a case tracking system in the Colombo and Kandy District Courts. The project was governed by a Steering Committee (later turning into the Legal Cluster under National Council for Economic Development) composed of the Chief Justice, Attorney General, Secretary of the Finance and Justice Ministries and other stakeholders including from the private sector. The project encountered several problems in implementation including uneven ownership among justice sector officials and dropped of some of its intended reform elements. The Project was not successful in making major changes with regard to internal administration and increased transparency. 87. UNDP launched an Access to Justice Project after the 2004 Tsunami. The project focused its interventions on disadvantaged groups such as conflict-affected groups, IDPs, estate sector workers, pre- trial detainees, female-headed households and victims of gender based violence. It also sought to promote human rights based approaches and ensure the effectiveness of the legal aid services provided. Mobile legal and documentation clinics in conflict affected areas and in the estate sector were conducted along with Capacity development of community-based duty-bearers. UNDP is planning a second phase focusing on trust/confidence-building, gender-equity, conflict resolution and community mediation. 88. USAID closed a recently launched $4.5 million dollar technical assistance project entitled "Increased Responsiveness in the Legal System Program.â€? The project was to implement an introductory curriculum and a continuing education program for judges at the Judicial Training Institute, training for other court staff, and capacity building for planning and administration for Ministry of Justice and Judicial Service Commission officials. USAID closed the project soon after its launch in late 2012. 89. Past reform efforts have succeeded in providing infrastructure and training for judicial personnel that reportedly was helpful on professional grounds as well as ‘widening mindsets.’ Other projects to support legal aid commissions and community mediation (support provided by the Asia Foundation) successfully provided capacity for these institutions to operate effectively. Access programs have improved transparency in local courts. The record on legal changes outside of the Companies Act is discouraging with long planned changes to the CPC still not being acted upon. Reforms aimed at performance management within the judiciary remain at a rudimentary stage. There is much that still could be done to promote greater transparency in terms of courts’ performance as well as access to law. 90. The most important lesson has been the challenge of bringing disparate stakeholders together to support a reform package to make lasting change. Project design has tried to ensure this broad engagement but in practice this has been difficult to achieve. This is of particular concern with regard to addressing inefficiency in processing commercial cases since the major issues lie in the behavior of multiple stakeholders in this process that continues to frustrate quick dispensation of justice. 35  CHAPTER 7: CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 7.1 Conclusions 91. The preceding review of available data and comments from stakeholders lead to several conclusions about key features in the courts’ operations in Sri Lanka. In keeping with the scope of this review, these features are in relation to the courts’ role in fostering economic development, primarily through the efficient, fair adjudication of commercial disputes. At the same time, likely several of the conclusions are broadly relevant for the court system overall. These conclusions can be grouped around three key areas: (i) What are the characteristics of case backlog and delays in court proceedings? (ii) How does the organization of the courts contribute to the courts’ capacity? (iii) What are present business community practices in resolving disputes? and (iv) What are lessons from past reform efforts? These conclusions provided the basis for recommendations on areas in which court performance in Sri Lanka may be improved in order to best contribute to providing certainty in efficient contract enforcement and protection of property rights. (i) What are the characteristics of case backlog and delays in court proceedings? 92. Backlog is driven primarily by partition and to a lesser degree money matters cases. A total of 91% of criminal cases and 70% of civil cases have been in court for less than five years as of 2012, a small increase from 2011. Therefore, despite high caseloads per judge it appears that the court system is not sustaining an increasing level of cases in the system, as most cases appear to have been handled in a five year period. Of course, five years is a long time for cases to be in the system and it would appear likely that disposition rates for many cases is substantially less than five years. In terms of longer term cases in the system, the main cause are partition cases, followed by land and money matters cases. Limited available data on conclusions of trials in 2011 shows little increase in the overall number of pending commercial cases, including in the CCHC. 93. Appeals in the Supreme Court are a minor, but important and growing source of backlog. The establishment of Provincial High Courts unburdened the Court of Appeal’s backlog, reducing its backlog by nearly 50% between 2008 and 2013. At the same time, the change created a new requirement for the Supreme Court to serve as a second tier of appeal. This has led to a growing backlog of appeals cases in the Supreme Court’s docket in addition to its continued handling of other types of cases. 94. Procedural law provides for a large number of steps which create opportunities for stalling in commercial cases, but experience suggests that delays are primarily due to a systemic lack of discipline in conducting trials. Procedures for admission of evidence and cross examination of witnesses allow for a drawn out process. However, observers stressed that exerting greater discipline under existing procedure would reduce the time for carrying out pre-trial and trial procedures. By one estimate, the reduction would be over 60% from the current assessment of 1318 days using the Doing 36  Business methodology. Greater discipline would require more effective, pro-active management of trials by judges. It would also require cooperation among attorneys to adhere to such management and conduct their business in a timely manner. 95. The courts’ physical capacity is a modest constraint that contributes to delays. Despite the addition of courts and judges in recent years, nonetheless the judge-to-population ratio remains quite low. Record-keeping facilities are usually inadequate; this area of weakness is noted as a particular constraint for the CCHC. There is virtually no use of ICT in case management or record-keeping. (ii) How does the organization of the courts and management of resources contribute to the courts’ capacity? 96. Management functions in the courts are split between the Judicial Service Commission and the Ministry of Justice, requiring a high degree of coordination but also sensitivity in ensuring the judiciary’s independence. The JSC handles personnel issues for all judges and other senior staff while the MoJ oversees support staff, buildings and movable property, and budgeting for the courts except apex courts. Judges are individually responsible for managing their courts, but functions related to the physical operation of the courts are carried out by MoJ staff. Stakeholders including judges did not identify problems with the management oversight arrangement. . 97. There are promising initiatives to improve performance management but much more can be done. The JSC has instituted a monthly reporting requirement for judges to get a better sense of dynamics of court performance. However, it is not gathering data on disposal and clearance rates for different types of cases, and existing data on time of cases in courts is not broken down by number of years or months. The JSC is not able to check the information in the monthly reports, does not routinely aggregate information beyond a judge by judge breakdown, and information is only partially automated. The JSC of course has a good sense of what is occurring with its regular interaction with judges and meetings, but formalizing information collection methods would provide it with stronger analysis to address performance issues. 98. Personnel policy is guided by a convention of rewarding seniority subject to considerable discretion exercised by the Judicial Service Commission for higher and first instance courts and the President for apex courts. Decisions on the rotation, discipline, and promotion of judges and senior staff in the court system are not governed by an explicit set of rules. Similarly, the system for evaluating performance of judges is not formalized, nor are there personnel incentives for judges to undertake training. Convention has been for judges and other staff to progress from lower courts with smaller caseloads in more remote areas to courts in urban centers and in some cases to high courts. All decisions on personnel matters for first instance and higher courts are taken by the three-member Judicial Service Commission headed by the Chief Justice. Appointments to the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court are the President’s prerogative. Many appointees to the Supreme Court are not career judges but rather are prominent attorneys. A total of 10 of the 12 present Supreme Court judges have considerable experience working in the Attorney General’s Department. 37  99. Training capacity, particularly on commercial matters, is very limited. The Judicial Training Institute is able to train about 25 ‘trainee judges’ per year and provide one-day seminars for another 25 judges per year. It is underfinanced and a key component of past and present donor-financed programs for the judiciary is to meet this financing gap. Stakeholders noted that judges outside of the Commercial High Court often lacked sufficient background in commercial matters, an area of dynamic change. There have been no courses delivered on commercial law by the JTI. 100. The Colombo Commercial High Court is viewed as a success, though more can be done to improve performance. There is widespread praise for the CCHC in terms of quality of adjudication and efficiency in handling cases. It is viewed as much more competent and efficient than district courts which handle money matters. It is processing cases at roughly the rate the rate of new filings, with no significant backlog. Concerns were raised regarding poor infrastructure for record-keeping, lack of automated case management, and possible rotation of judges thereby losing the expertise gained on the job by current judges. 101. Greater access to information about the judiciary’s operations is warranted. There is very little performance information about the courts (e.g. case disposal rates disaggregated, reporting by the JSC on its activities) available to the public. Making such information available provides for increased accountability to the public, which over the long run sustains both demand for performance and confidence in the judiciary. 102. A comprehensive, updated searchable database comprising Acts, implementing regulations, and court decisions is needed. The lack of this database is an inconvenience and often an impediment for all stakeholders to use and benefit from Sri Lanka’s judicial system. These documents should be easily available to all. In most countries the provision of legal database services are commercially viable and hence self-sustaining; Sri Lanka’s authorities should welcome and facilitate access to these documents to the public. (iii) What do businesses’ approach to dispute resolution show about what is needed form the courts? 103. Businesses note little difference in timeliness or quality between arbitration and court adjudication while mediation outside of low value “community mediationâ€? has never been effectively promoted. Many businesses expressed dissatisfaction with alternative dispute resolution methods. Arbitration tends to recreate court conditions but with the downside of usually very short days and the worry that grounds can be found to challenge the arbitration ruling in court. The Ceylon Chamber of Commerce no longer advises firms to include arbitration clauses in contracts. Commercial mediation was earlier piloted but funding was lacking to sustain the effort and win confidence among businesses. 104. Despite being a last resort, courts are substantially used by businesses and therefore their efficiency is of importance… As much as 10% of all loan recoveries are taken are taken to (usually District) court and other commercial matters eventually require court decisions. The CCHC provides a higher degree of certainty of efficient, fair adjudication for higher value disputes, but the continued poor performance of District Courts is of concern. This is particularly true in Kandy and Colombo District 38  Courts where there were as of 2011 about half of all pending commercial cases. The infrastructure and personnel capacity constraints that allow are therefore a hindrance. 105. … Though court performance overall is not viewed as a major obstacle to conducting business. Though courts are used, businesses nonetheless appear to have factored in the inefficiencies into their business planning. A 2012 enterprise survey found businesses rank the courts as the least important among 15 constraints to business. This suggests that there is little user engagement or pressure to prompt improvements in courts’ handling of commercial matters. (iv) What are lessons from past reform efforts? 106. Achieving major improvements in the court system’s performance will require support/engagement of all stakeholders in the justice sector. These stakeholders include: judiciary management and individual judges, the Ministry of Justice, the bar and individual attorneys, training institutions, and litigants. High level commitment has been stressed in the Mahinda Chintana Vision for the Future and other prominent statements by the President. The Government has signaled readiness to invest to provide capacity. Investments in more judges, court facilities, better case management, and more comprehensive, frequent training should plausibly lead to some improvements. But major improvements will need a concerted effort from all stakeholders in actual trials. Judges will need to enforce discipline better, attorneys will need to be prepared to respond to such discipline, and litigants and the public will need to maintain higher expectations of better performance. Other countries’ successful judicial reform efforts have required leadership from the judiciary, but buy-in from all stakeholders has been a crucial ingredient to achieving lasting results. 107. Building larger scale consensus on improving court performance may take time. There is little pressing demand from the business sector or others to change the status quo in courts’ performance. Many attorneys are believed to be supportive of the ability to bring about procedural delays and degree of flexibility in drawing out trial schedules. Such delays are part of litigation strategy. At the same time, the Bar itself is in a state of flux with internal divisions becoming apparent during the 2012-13 impeachment process of the Chief Justice. The judiciary itself faces a period of internal reassessment following the impeachment process and the installation of a new Chief Justice. 39  7.2 Elements of a Potential Reform Program 108. The findings of this review point to a menu of interventions which could be undertaken in the justice sector to reduce the time and cost in adjudication of commercial cases while maximizing quality of judgment and confidence in the system. Such an approach would focus on having the courts’ play a more prominent role in facilitating economic development. It would not address other issues in the justice sector which are only partially or not at all covered in this review, including the persistent large backlog of cases which appear most likely driven by criminal cases. While any reform program should ultimately be the product of consultations and consensus among stakeholders, the review points to several possible elements of such a program: x Enhanced performance management for courts involved in the reform effort, underpinned by rigorous, regular data collection on courts’ performance, establishment of performance standards and targets, and proactive management oversight and initiative for underperformance; x Introduction of procedural changes to the Civil Procedure Code, in particular introducing more disciplined pre-trial procedure; x Issuance of practical directions or updated Judge’s Manual with respect to commercial cases x Improving access to all legislation, including implementing regulations and court judgments; x Modest investment to increase the number of commercial courts as well as improving the record- keeping systems and infrastructure for existing courts; x Development of automated case management system for the targeted courts; x Changes in the use of human resources, including adding judicial assistants (and associated infrastructure changes) to free up time for judges to hear cases; x Targeted training on commercial transactions, business practices, and specifics of for commercial court judges and District Court judges in courts handling a high volume of money matters cases; 109. Management of such a reform effort would involve an enhancement of current management information systems. More comprehensive, verifiable data is needed to equip the JSC with information to understand the causes of performance issues, monitor trends, and ultimately make management actions to improve performance. In particular, in addition to the current monthly reports, information on case disposal rates by type of case, clearance rates, backlog by types of case and more precise time in the court system, including tracking of rates of appeals would be extremely useful. This in turn would place additional requirements on judicial management to monitor, set standards, and provide feedback to courts on performance. It would necessitate the development of objective evaluation systems. Finally, more comprehensive and timely data will allow for setting targets for results to motivate performance as well as increase public confidence in the justice sector’s efforts to improve. 110. Engagement with multiple stakeholders and the public around a reform program is critical. Consultations with stakeholders regarding priorities and sequencing is key to formulating a sustainable program. Enforcing greater discipline in court proceedings requires the participation of all stakeholders. Agreement on changes in procedural law necessarily requires the support of stakeholders as well as engagement with Parliament. Building expectations of higher levels of service by the courts will be served by greater transparency and signaling of the justice sector’s drive to improve performance. Extensive communication among various actors will be critical to developing and carrying out reforms. 40  REFERENCES Asian Development Bank. 2010. Conflict-Affected Region Emergency Project Data Sheet . Manila: Asian Development Bank. 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Washington: World Bank. 42  ANNEX JUSTICE SECTOR DATA  Source:JudicialServicesCommissioncompilationofindividualmonthlyreportsofMagistratesand DistrictCourts.AggregationoftotalsbyWorldBank. NumberofJudges,MagistratesCourts2011Ͳ2012 OfWhichalso Province NumberofJudges Presideinthe DistrictCourt Central 13 6 Eastern 15 5 North 11 7 NorthCentral 7 3 Northwest 18 7 Sabaragamuwa 9 3 Southern 15 6 Uva 7 3 Western 38 6 Total 133 46  NumberofJudges,DistrictCourts2011Ͳ2012 OfWhichNumber ofJudgeswhoalso Province NumberofJudges Presideinthe DistrictCourt Central 12 6 Eastern 10 5 North 9 7 NorthCentral 5 3 Northwest 13 7 Sabaragamuwa 10 3 Southern 15 6 Uva 6 3 Western 39 6 Total 119 46 43  MagistratesCourtCasesfor2011Ͳ2012 Province Year PenalCode ExciseOrdinance Poison,Opium&DDOrdinance <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 12104 744 77 5 5 12935 2112 222 3 0 0 2337 1229 108 3 330 0 1670 Central 2012 15838 844 116 5 1 16804 3510 109 8 0 0 3627 1094 33 2 0 0 1129 yͲoͲy 3734 100 39 0 Ͳ4 3869 1398 Ͳ113 5 0 0 1290 Ͳ135 Ͳ75 Ͳ1 Ͳ330 0 Ͳ541 diff  2011 7084 242 8 1 0 7335 1872 34 2 0 0 1908 610 8 1 0 0 619 Eastern 2012 6645 266 18 2 0 6931 1352 47 1 0 0 1400 417 8 0 0 0 425 yͲoͲy Ͳ439 24 10 1 0 Ͳ404 Ͳ520 13 Ͳ1 0 0 Ͳ508 Ͳ193 0 Ͳ1 0 0 Ͳ194 diff  2011 3837 177 13 0 0 4027 435 2 0 0 0 437 172 1 0 0 0 173 North 2012 7156 676 121 46 25 8024 871 39 0 0 0 910 71 6 0 0 0 77 yͲoͲy 3319 499 108 46 25 3997 436 37 0 0 0 473 Ͳ101 5 0 0 0 Ͳ96 diff  2011 15805 979 152 1 0 16937 2909 313 16 0 0 3238 293 24 5 0 0 322 Central North 2012 18377 1190 75 5 3 19650 3395 156 4 0 0 3555 525 22 0 0 0 547 yͲoͲy 2572 211 Ͳ77 4 3 2713 486 Ͳ157 Ͳ12 0 0 317 232 Ͳ2 Ͳ5 0 0 225 diff  1012 2011 20033 1014 77 1 3 21128 8778 1314 36 0 0 676 36 1 0 0 713 Northwest 8 2012 22999 1096 103 1 0 24199 9637 242 4 0 0 9883 1261 24 1 1 0 1287 yͲoͲy 2966 82 26 0 Ͳ3 3071 859 Ͳ1072 Ͳ32 0 0 Ͳ245 585 Ͳ12 0 1 0 574 diff 44  Province Year PenalCode ExciseOrdinance Poison,Opium&DDOrdinance <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20    2011 12428 1799 552 19 185 14983 5642 3247 753 12 91 9745 651 231 20 0 2 904 Sabaragamuwa 2012 17449 5468 1477 31 82 24507 5680 4077 1163 16 63 10999 564 252 1 0 0 817 yͲoͲy 5021 3669 925 12 Ͳ103 9524 38 830 410 4 Ͳ28 1254 Ͳ87 21 Ͳ19 0 Ͳ2 Ͳ87 diff  2011 26573 2156 290 15 0 29034 6191 1140 41 2 0 7374 2742 304 22 0 0 3068 Southern 2012 25532 2728 271 7 1 28539 4491 711 58 0 0 5260 2292 304 27 0 0 2623 yͲoͲy Ͳ1041 572 Ͳ19 Ͳ8 1 Ͳ495 Ͳ1700 Ͳ429 17 Ͳ2 0 Ͳ2114 Ͳ450 0 5 0 0 Ͳ445 diff  2011 4886 313 11 0 0 5210 3959 135 0 1 0 4095 691 21 0 0 0 712 Uva 2012 10873 964 113 3 0 11953 4504 1331 144 0 0 5979 787 80 16 0 0 883 yͲoͲy 5987 651 102 3 0 6743 545 1196 144 Ͳ1 0 1884 96 59 16 0 0 171 diff  2011 51156 5642 566 356 50 57770 20065 2934 2342 693 64 26098 10999 1421 980 401 34 13835 Western 2012 59024 5912 534 24 2 65496 18371 3552 469 1 0 22393 9921 330 34 0 1 10286 yͲoͲy 7868 270 Ͳ32 Ͳ332 Ͳ48 7726 Ͳ1694 618 Ͳ1873 Ͳ692 Ͳ64 Ͳ3705 Ͳ1078 Ͳ1091 Ͳ946 Ͳ401 Ͳ33 Ͳ3549 diff                      45  Province Year PenalCode ExciseOrdinance Poison,Opium&DDOrdinance <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 153906 13066 1746 398 243 169359 51963 9341 3193 708 155 65360 18063 2154 1032 731 36 22016 Total 2012 183893 19144 2828 124 114 206103 51811 10264 1851 17 63 64006 16932 1059 81 1 1 18074 yͲoͲy 29987 6078 1082 Ͳ274 Ͳ129 36744 Ͳ152 923 Ͳ1342 Ͳ691 Ͳ92 Ͳ1354 Ͳ1131 Ͳ1095 Ͳ951 Ͳ730 Ͳ35 Ͳ3942 diff             46  Province Year MotorTrafficAct MaintenanceAct PrimaryCourtProcedure <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 10805 786 4 0 0 11595 853 174 78 7 3 1115 707 3 0 0 0 710 Central 2012 17740 137 6 1 0 17884 1372 144 84 8 5 1613 278 1 1 0 0 280 yͲoͲy 6935 Ͳ649 2 1 0 6289 519 Ͳ30 6 1 2 498 Ͳ429 Ͳ2 1 0 0 Ͳ430 diff  2011 5753 19 0 0 0 5772 2294 132 20 9 0 2455 73 1 0 0 0 74 Eastern 2012 4582 13 0 0 0 4595 1865 154 48 24 1 2092 35 0 4 0 0 39 yͲoͲy Ͳ1171 Ͳ6 0 0 0 Ͳ1177 Ͳ429 22 28 15 1 Ͳ363 Ͳ38 Ͳ1 4 0 0 Ͳ35 diff  2011 3674 214 1 0 0 3889 754 65 17 0 0 836 152 0 0 0 0 152 North 2012 6859 112 0 0 0 6971 1504 187 33 4 2 1730 159 5 0 0 0 164 yͲoͲy 3185 Ͳ102 Ͳ1 0 0 3082 750 122 16 4 2 894 7 5 0 0 0 12 diff  2011 19765 900 1 0 0 20666 1465 382 46 3 0 1896 17 0 0 0 0 17 Central North 2012 12432 159 1 0 0 12592 2072 192 23 4 1 2292 54 2 0 0 0 56 yͲoͲy Ͳ7333 Ͳ741 0 0 0 Ͳ8074 607 Ͳ190 Ͳ23 1 1 396 37 2 0 0 0 39 diff  2011 16570 584 9 0 0 17163 2267 295 48 27 7 2644 202 60 7 0 0 269 Northwestern 2012 18855 209 4 0 0 19068 2071 469 116 27 5 2688 188 1 0 0 0 189 yͲoͲy 2285 Ͳ375 Ͳ5 0 0 1905 Ͳ196 174 68 0 Ͳ2 44 Ͳ14 Ͳ59 Ͳ7 0 0 Ͳ80 diff  47  Province Year MotorTrafficAct MaintenanceAct PrimaryCourtProcedure <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 17331 2482 323 32 123 20291 1162 401 123 17 19 1722 222 315 14 0 0 551 Sabaragamuwa 2012 19073 2814 421 33 86 22427 1324 380 88 17 19 1828 179 16 5 1 0 201 yͲoͲy 1742 332 98 1 Ͳ37 2136 162 Ͳ21 Ͳ35 0 0 106 Ͳ43 Ͳ299 Ͳ9 1 0 Ͳ350 diff  2011 43210 287 14 0 0 43511 1874 374 181 38 17 2484 619 21 1 0 0 641 Southern 2012 31209 104 8 0 0 31321 1674 437 126 47 20 2304 313 2 1 0 0 316 yͲoͲy Ͳ12001 Ͳ183 Ͳ6 0 0 Ͳ12190 Ͳ200 63 Ͳ55 9 3 Ͳ180 Ͳ306 Ͳ19 0 0 0 Ͳ325 diff  2011 12166 62 1 0 0 12229 1069 240 69 11 5 1394 65 0 0 0 0 65 Uva 2012 16193 323 38 0 0 16554 1330 497 147 16 12 2002 57 1 4 1 0 63 yͲoͲy 4027 261 37 0 0 4325 261 257 78 5 7 608 Ͳ8 1 4 1 0 Ͳ2 diff  2011 92396 2289 622 208 1 95516 4292 750 128 18 7 5195 461 6 0 0 0 467 Western 2012 57734 1211 291 5 0 59241 3240 735 137 35 11 4158 284 2 1 0 0 287 yͲoͲy Ͳ34662 Ͳ1078 Ͳ331 Ͳ203 Ͳ1 Ͳ36275 Ͳ1052 Ͳ15 9 17 4 Ͳ1037 Ͳ177 Ͳ4 1 0 0 Ͳ180 diff                     48  Province Year MotorTrafficAct MaintenanceAct PrimaryCourtProcedure <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 221670 7623 975 240 124 230632 16030 2813 710 130 58 19741 2518 406 22 0 0 2946 Total 2012 184677 5082 769 39 86 190653 16452 3195 802 182 76 20707 1547 30 16 2 0 1595 yͲoͲy Ͳ36993 Ͳ2541 Ͳ206 Ͳ201 Ͳ38 Ͳ39979 422 382 92 52 18 966 Ͳ971 Ͳ376 Ͳ6 2 0 Ͳ1351 diff            49  Province Year Miscellaneous CombinedTotalforMagistratesCourtCases <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Total Total >20 >20   2011 4307 92 9 1 0 4409 32117 2129 174 343 8 34771 Central 2012 5647 83 11 1 0 5742 45479 1351 228 15 6 47079 yͲoͲydiff 1340 Ͳ9 2 0 0 1333 13362 Ͳ778 54 Ͳ328 Ͳ2 12308  2011 4118 41 1 0 0 4160 21804 477 32 10 0 22323 Eastern 2012 3933 35 2 0 0 3970 18829 523 73 26 1 19452 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ185 Ͳ6 1 0 0 Ͳ190 Ͳ2975 46 41 16 1 Ͳ2871  2011 951 20 0 1 0 972 9975 479 31 1 0 10486 North 2012 2031 269 150 10 0 2460 18651 1294 304 60 27 20336 yͲoͲydiff 1080 249 150 9 0 1488 8676 815 273 59 27 9850  2011 3638 325 6 0 0 3969 43892 2923 226 4 0 47045 Central North 2012 2423 134 8 0 0 2565 39278 1855 111 9 4 41257 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ1215 Ͳ191 2 0 0 Ͳ1404 Ͳ4614 Ͳ1068 Ͳ115 5 4 Ͳ5788  2011 3952 251 19 0 0 4222 52478 3554 197 28 10 56267 Northwestern 2012 4292 151 24 0 0 4467 59303 2192 252 29 5 61781 yͲoͲydiff 340 Ͳ100 5 0 0 245 6825 Ͳ1362 55 1 Ͳ5 5514                  50  Province Year Miscellaneous CombinedTotalforMagistratesCourtCases <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Total Total >20 >20   2011 4455 957 225 8 78 5723 41891 9432 2010 88 498 53919 Sabaragamuwa 2012 3411 667 363 6 51 4498 47680 13674 3518 104 301 65277 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ1044 Ͳ290 138 Ͳ2 Ͳ27 Ͳ1225 5789 4242 1508 16 Ͳ197 11358  2011 8236 249 49 1 0 8535 89445 4531 598 56 17 94647 Southern 2012 10350 253 62 1 0 10666 75861 4539 553 55 21 81029 yͲoͲydiff 2114 4 13 0 0 2131 Ͳ13584 8 Ͳ45 Ͳ1 4 Ͳ13618  2011 3845 85 3 1 0 3934 26681 856 84 13 5 27639 Uva 2012 4221 399 27 1 0 4648 37965 3595 489 21 12 42082 yͲoͲydiff 376 314 24 0 0 714 11284 2739 405 8 7 14443  2011 19370 2059 1042 430 29 22930 198739 15101 5680 2106 185 221811 Western 2012 19458 735 79 8 0 20280 168032 12477 1545 73 14 182141 yͲoͲydiff 88 Ͳ1324 Ͳ963 Ͳ422 Ͳ29 Ͳ2650 Ͳ30707 Ͳ2624 Ͳ4135 Ͳ2033 Ͳ171 Ͳ39670  2011 52872 4079 1354 442 107 58854 517022 39482 9032 2649 723 568908 Total 2012 55766 2726 726 27 51 59296 511078 41500 7073 392 391 560434 yͲoͲydiff 2894 Ͳ1353 Ͳ628 Ͳ415 Ͳ56 442 Ͳ5944 2018 Ͳ1959 Ͳ2257 Ͳ332 Ͳ8474   51  DistrictCourtCases Province Year Partition Land Divorce <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2265 1064 560 161 2682 165 1 1 2011 570 589 410 190 215 1974 114 4164 0 2849 Central 2513 1215 235 86 3205 57 2 2 2012 825 581 525 204 186 2321 54 4103 1 3267 yͲoͲy 248 151 Ͳ325 Ͳ75 523 Ͳ108 1 1 255 Ͳ8 115 14 Ͳ29 347 Ͳ60 Ͳ61 1 418 diff             827 75 12 10 516 6 0 0 2011 34 13 1 0 2 50 4 928 0 522 Eastern 982 88 22 7 567 4 0 1 2012 36 12 1 0 1 50 6 1105 0 572 yͲoͲy 155 13 10 Ͳ3 51 Ͳ2 0 1 2 Ͳ1 0 0 Ͳ1 0 2 177 0 50 diff            423 188 21 1 365 5 0 0 2011 34 17 2 0 13 66 11 644 0 370 North 639 320 30 2 646 16 0 0 2012 29 18 3 0 12 62 8 999 0 662 yͲoͲy 216 132 9 1 281 11 0 0 Ͳ5 1 1 0 Ͳ1 Ͳ4 Ͳ3 355 0 292 diff                       52  Province Year Partition Land Divorce <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   554 202 50 9 953 12 1 0 NorthCentral 2011 28 22 11 11 3 75 7 822 0 966 668 264 64 14 1305 85 2 0 2012 14 17 11 7 0 49 8 1018 0 1392 yͲoͲy 114 62 14 5 352 73 1 0 Ͳ14 Ͳ5 0 Ͳ4 Ͳ3 Ͳ26 1 196 0 426 diff              1352 362 91 41 2603 31 6 0 Northwestern 2011 584 350 168 86 80 1268 20 1866 0 2640 1381 382 98 18 2596 39 10 0 2012 709 277 100 105 106 1297 17 1896 0 2645 yͲoͲy 29 20 7 Ͳ23 Ͳ7 8 4 0 125 Ͳ73 Ͳ68 19 26 29 Ͳ3 30 0 5 diff                         1787 807 355 167 1702 96 4 2 2011 1453 1001 680 468 577 4179 136 3252 0 1804 Sabaragamuwa 2013 937 490 179 2355 160 11 8 2012 1569 936 641 389 578 4113 161 3780 0 2534 yͲoͲy 226 130 135 12 653 64 7 6 116 Ͳ65 Ͳ39 Ͳ79 1 Ͳ66 25 528 0 730 diff                      53  Province Year Partition Land Divorce <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   836 2175 952 311 112 55 2438 47 5 0 0 2490 2011 3303 2731 1450 720 9040 3605 Southern 997 2270 909 309 117 47 2302 72 2 0 0 2376 2012 3165 2507 1297 771 8737 3652 yͲoͲy 161 95 Ͳ43 Ͳ2 5 Ͳ8 Ͳ136 25 Ͳ3 0 0 Ͳ114 Ͳ138 Ͳ224 Ͳ153 51 Ͳ303 47 diff         54 811 289 86 34 38 1027 36 2 0 0 1065 2011 179 134 67 41 475 1258 Uva 42 723 228 123 26 21 1095 20 1 0 0 1116 2012 159 105 66 30 402 1121 yͲoͲy Ͳ12 Ͳ88 Ͳ61 37 Ͳ8 Ͳ17 68 Ͳ16 Ͳ1 0 0 51 Ͳ20 Ͳ29 Ͳ1 Ͳ11 Ͳ73 Ͳ137 diff         4604 1415 611 119 7157 344 41 3 2011 2999 1881 1120 690 675 7365 60 6809 1 7546 Western 5364 1614 415 150 8638 218 25 6 2012 3261 1832 1067 690 753 7603 73 7616 1 8888 yͲoͲy 262 Ͳ49 Ͳ53 0 78 238 760 199 Ͳ196 31 13 807 1481 Ͳ126 Ͳ16 3 0 1342 diff 14798 5354 2097 654 19443 742 60 6 2011 9184 6738 3909 2206 2455 24492 445 23348 1 20252 Total 16553 5957 1786 599 22709 671 53 17 2012 9767 6285 3711 2196 2675 24634 395 25290 2 23452 yͲoͲy 1755 603 Ͳ311 Ͳ55 3266 Ͳ71 Ͳ7 11 583 Ͳ453 Ͳ198 Ͳ10 220 142 Ͳ50 1942 1 3200 diff  54    55  Province Year Money Rent&Ejectment Testamentary(RelatingtoWills) <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 10797 3809 203 1 0 14810 32 12 2 0 0 46 210 71 3 6 2 292 Central 2012 6440 1228 97 1 0 7766 39 35 1 1 4 80 212 46 49 1 4 312 yͲoͲy Ͳ4357 Ͳ581 Ͳ106 0 0 Ͳ7044 7 23 Ͳ1 1 4 34 2 Ͳ25 46 Ͳ5 2 20 diff     2011 739 16 2 0 0 757 44 4 0 0 0 48 41 1 0 0 0 42 Eastern 2012 751 8 1 0 1 761 29 0 0 1 0 30 23 1 0 0 0 24 yͲoͲy 12 Ͳ8 Ͳ1 0 1 4 Ͳ15 Ͳ4 0 1 0 Ͳ18 Ͳ18 0 0 0 0 Ͳ18 diff     2011 134 18 1 0 1 154 96 72 7 0 7 182 49 10 1 0 4 64 North 2012 200 24 1 0 1 226 8 0 1 0 0 9 43 2 0 0 4 49 yͲoͲy 66 6 0 0 0 72 Ͳ88 Ͳ72 Ͳ6 0 Ͳ7 Ͳ173 Ͳ6 Ͳ8 Ͳ1 0 0 Ͳ15 diff     2011 1149 135 25 3 1 1313 4 14 1 2 0 21 32 3 3 1 1 40 Central North 2012 1118 312 6 3 0 1439 2 11 1 2 1 17 30 4 3 2 0 39 yͲoͲy Ͳ31 177 Ͳ19 0 Ͳ1 126 Ͳ2 Ͳ3 0 0 1 Ͳ4 Ͳ2 1 0 1 Ͳ1 Ͳ1 diff     2011 2798 250 22 3 3 3076 52 20 8 2 5 87 128 23 12 2 7 172 Northwestern 2012 2390 217 51 7 2 2667 62 14 5 2 6 89 106 21 10 4 9 150 Ͳ408 Ͳ33 29 4 Ͳ1 Ͳ409 10 Ͳ6 Ͳ3 0 1 2 Ͳ22 Ͳ2 Ͳ2 2 2 Ͳ22 yͲoͲy diff 56  Province Year Money Rent&Ejectment Testamentary(RelatingtoWills) <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2436 213 54 11 2 2716 56 5 1 0 1 63 60 4 0 6 1 71 Sabaragamuwa 2011 2231 416 127 3 1 2778 57 5 0 0 1 63 65 6 3 0 0 74 2012 yͲoͲy Ͳ205 203 73 Ͳ8 Ͳ1 62 1 0 Ͳ1 0 0 0 5 2 3 Ͳ6 Ͳ1 3 diff                     2011 2747 279 37 8 2 3073 52 13 7 3 0 75 102 14 7 0 4 127 Southern 2012 2792 333 67 8 3 3203 38 41 5 0 1 85 108 64 4 1 7 184 yͲoͲy 45 54 30 0 1 130 Ͳ14 28 Ͳ2 Ͳ3 1 10 6 50 Ͳ3 1 3 57 diff                    2011 1753 210 32 12 0 2007 13 7 0 2 0 22 37 5 5 2 1 50 Uva 2012 972 112 21 5 0 1110 13 2 3 0 2 20 22 8 4 1 2 37 yͲoͲy Ͳ781 Ͳ98 Ͳ11 Ͳ7 0 Ͳ897 0 Ͳ5 3 Ͳ2 2 Ͳ2 Ͳ15 3 Ͳ1 Ͳ1 1 Ͳ13 diff                    2011 11893 1176 241 33 10 13353 2254 120 47 0 1 2422 1673 72 8 9 16 1778 Western 2012 32210 2457 1745 13 4 36429 613 70 23 5 0 711 1406 103 13 11 12 1545 yͲoͲy Ͳ Ͳ 20317 1281 1504 Ͳ6 23076 Ͳ1641 Ͳ50 Ͳ24 5 Ͳ1 Ͳ267 31 5 2 Ͳ4 Ͳ233 diff 20 1711 2011 34446 6106 617 71 19 41259 2603 267 73 9 14 2966 2332 203 39 26 36 2636 Total 2012 49104 5107 2116 40 12 56379 861 178 39 11 15 1104 2015 255 86 20 38 2414 yͲoͲy 14658 Ͳ999 1499 Ͳ31 Ͳ7 15120 Ͳ1742 Ͳ89 Ͳ34 2 1 Ͳ1862 Ͳ317 52 47 Ͳ6 2 Ͳ222 diff 57  Province Year Custody Special Miscellaneous <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 221 0 0 0 0 221 352 131 0 0 0 483 869 105 0 0 3 977 Central 2012 133 1 0 2 0 136 171 69 0 0 0 240 628 79 16 8 1 732 yͲoͲy Ͳ88 1 0 2 0 Ͳ85 Ͳ181 Ͳ62 0 0 0 Ͳ243 Ͳ241 Ͳ26 16 8 Ͳ2 Ͳ245 diff      2011 24 0 0 0 0 24 121 1 0 0 0 122 110 3 6 0 0 119 Eastern 2012 16 0 0 0 0 16 106 5 0 0 0 111 121 4 0 0 0 125 yͲoͲy Ͳ8 0 0 0 0 Ͳ8 Ͳ15 4 0 0 0 Ͳ11 11 1 Ͳ6 0 0 6 diff   0  0 0  2011 5 0 0 0 0 5 26 3 2 0 0 31 77 16 2 0 2 97 North 2012 14 0 0 0 0 14 95 5 3 0 0 103 111 14 2 0 3 130 yͲoͲy 9 0 0 0 0 9 69 2 1 0 0 72 34 Ͳ2 0 0 1 33 diff   0  0 0  2011 9 0 0 0 0 9 56 9 0 0 0 65 229 7 0 1 0 237 Central North 2012 86 0 0 0 0 86 151 15 3 0 0 169 149 0 0 0 0 149 yͲoͲy 77 0 0 0 0 77 95 6 3 0 0 104 Ͳ80 Ͳ7 0 Ͳ1 0 Ͳ88 diff      2011 44 1 0 0 0 45 195 11 2 0 0 208 424 4 1 0 0 429 Northwestern 2012 58 2 1 0 0 61 294 14 2 0 0 310 475 8 1 0 0 484 14 1 1 0 0 16 99 3 0 0 0 102 51 4 0 0 0 55 yͲoͲy diff  58  Province Year Money Rent&Ejectment Testamentary(RelatingtoWills) <5Years <5Years <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Years Years Total Total Total >20 >20 >20   2011 59 2 0 0 0 61 96 6 1 1 0 104 394 21 1 1 0 417 Sabaragamuwa 2012 107 5 0 0 0 112 104 7 3 1 0 115 450 23 10 1 0 484 yͲoͲy 48 3 0 0 0 51 8 1 2 0 0 11 56 2 9 0 0 67 diff                2011 120 1 0 0 0 121 352 49 16 3 0 420 693 110 15 2 0 820 Southern 2012 192 0 0 0 0 192 413 75 12 0 0 500 398 5 2 1 1 407 yͲoͲy 72 Ͳ1 0 0 0 71 61 26 Ͳ4 Ͳ3 0 80 Ͳ295 Ͳ105 Ͳ13 Ͳ1 1 Ͳ413 diff   2011 44 1 0 0 0 45 92 20 1 0 0 113 136 14 1 0 0 151 Uva 2012 21 0 0 0 0 21 71 26 37 0 0 134 148 3 5 0 1 157 yͲoͲy Ͳ23 Ͳ1 0 0 0 Ͳ24 Ͳ21 6 36 0 0 21 12 Ͳ11 4 0 1 6 diff  2011 104 8 0 1 0 113 801 101 24 5 3 934 4119 293 89 3 3 4507 Western 2012 158 4 0 0 0 162 1105 153 40 16 0 1314 5366 181 138 0 7 5692 yͲoͲy 54 Ͳ4 0 Ͳ1 0 49 304 52 16 11 Ͳ3 380 1247 Ͳ112 49 Ͳ3 4 1185 diff                       2011 630 13 0 1 0 644 2091 331 46 9 3 2480 7051 573 115 7 8 7754 Total 2012 785 12 1 2 0 800 2510 369 100 17 0 2996 7846 317 174 10 13 8360 yͲoͲy 155 Ͳ1 1 1 0 156 419 38 54 8 Ͳ3 516 795 Ͳ256 59 3 5 606 diff 59  Province Year CombinedTotalforDistrictCourtCases  <5Years 05Ͳ10 10Ͳ15 15Ͳ20 Years Total >20   2011 17998 5946 1179 359 334 25816 Central 2012 14166 3311 925 305 250 18957 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ3832 Ͳ2635 Ͳ254 Ͳ54 Ͳ84 Ͳ6859  2011 2456 119 21 10 6 2612 Eastern 2012 2631 122 24 9 8 2794 yͲoͲydiff 175 3 3 Ͳ1  2 182  2011 1209 329 36 1 38 1613 North 2012 1785 399 40 2 28 2254 yͲoͲydiff 576 70 4 1 Ͳ10 641 2011 3014 404 91 27 12 3548  Central North 2012 3523 708 90 28 9 4358 yͲoͲydiff 509 304 Ͳ1  1 Ͳ3  810 2011 8180 1052 310 134 115 9791 western NorthͲ 2012 8071 974 278 136 140 9599 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ109 Ͳ78 Ͳ32 2 25 Ͳ192 2011 8043 2155 1096 656 717 12667 gamuwa SabaraͲ 2012 8951 2495 1285 581 741 14053 yͲoͲydiff 908 340 189 Ͳ75 24 1386  2011 11982 4196 1848 848 897 19771 Southern 2012 11678 4006 1698 898 1056 19336 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ304 Ͳ190 Ͳ150 50 159 Ͳ435  2011 4092 716 194 91 93 5186 Uva 2012 3224 504 260 62 68 4118 yͲoͲydiff Ͳ868 Ͳ212 66 Ͳ29 Ͳ25 Ͳ1068  2011 35604 5410 2181 863 769 44827 Western 2012 58121 6632 3466 891 850 69960 yͲoͲydiff 22517 1222 1285 28 81 25133  2011 92578 20327 6956 2989 2981 125831 Total 2012 112150 19151 8066 2912 3150 145429 yͲoͲydiff 19572 Ͳ1176 1110 Ͳ77 169 19598  60  JudicialServicesReportAllIslandCallingReportforJanuary31,2013 No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total ͳ Â?Â?ƒ”ƒ‹’ƒ––— ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͺͷ ͳ͵͵ ʹͳͺ  Â?Â?ƒ”ƒ‹’ƒ––—  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͶ͹ ͸Ͷ͹ ͺͻͶ Í´ Â?’ƒ”ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͲͶ ͻͳͲ ͳʹͳͶ  Â?’ƒ”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷͺͺ ͳ͵ʹͶ ͳͺͳʹ ͵ Â?‰—Â?ƒÂ?‘Žƒ’‡Ž‡••ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͳ͹ ͹ͷͶ ͺ͹ͳ Ͷ Â?—”ƒ†Šƒ’—”ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ʹͳʹͺ ʹͲͳʹ ͶͳͶͲ Í· Â?—”ƒ†Šƒ’—”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳʹͻ͸ ͺ͸͹͸ ͻͻ͹ʹ  Â?—”ƒ†Šƒ’—”ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͷʹ ͳͲ͵ͷͻ ͳͳͳͳͳ ͹ ––ƒÂ?ƒ‰ƒŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͶͲ͸ ͳʹ͸͹ ͳ͸͹͵  ––ƒÂ?ƒ‰ƒŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͹ͲͶ ͳͲͳͷͷ ͳͳͺͷͻ ͺ ˜‹••ƒ™‡ŽŽƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͹ʹͳ ͳ͵͸͵ ʹͲͺͶ  ˜‹••ƒ™‡ŽŽƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž Ͷͻͳ ͳͶ͸ʹ ͳͻͷ͵ Í» ˜‹••ƒ™‡ŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͷʹ ͳͻͲͷͺ ͳͻ͹ͳͲ ͳͲ ƒ††‡‰ƒÂ?ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž Ͷ͹ ͶͶͷ Ͷͻʹ  ƒ††‡‰ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷ͵͹ ͵Ͳͷʹ ͵ͷͺͻ ͳͳ ƒ†—ŽŽƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ʹͳͳ ͸Ͳ͹ ͺͳͺ ͳʹ ƒ†—ŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͹ͺ ͳͺͻͺ͸ ͳͻͺ͸Ͷ ͳ͵ ƒŽƒÂ?‰‘†ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹ͹Ͳ ͳ͵͹ͻ ͳ͸Ͷͻ  ƒŽƒÂ?‰‘†ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷͷͳ ͷͺͷ͹ ͸͵Ͳͺ ͳͶ ƒŽƒ’‹–‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͲ͵͸ ͸͸ͳ͵ ͹͸Ͷͻ ͳͷ ƒÂ?†ƒ”ƒ™‡Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ͻ͹ ͷ͵ͷͲ ͷ͹Ͷ͹ ͳ͸ ƒÂ?†ƒ”ƒ™‡Žƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͶͲͷ ͺ͹ͳ ͳʹ͹͸ ͳ͹ ƒ––ƒ”ƒÂ?—ŽŽƒ —˜Ǥ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ  ͸ʹͷ ͸ʹͷ ͳͺ ƒ––‹…ƒŽ‘ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͳͶͺ ͳ͸͹͸ ͳͺʹͶ ͳͻ ƒ––‹…ƒŽ‘ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͷ͸ ʹͻ͵ͺ ͵ͶͻͶ ʹͲ ‹„‹Ž‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹʹ͸ ͳ͵͹ͷ ͳ͸Ͳͳ ʹͳ Š‹Žƒ™ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͶͶʹ ͷͺͺ ͳͲ͵Ͳ  Š‹Žƒ™  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺͻͷ ͷͲͻ͹ ͷͻͻʹ Í´Í´ ‘Ž‘Â?„‘  ‹˜‹Ž ͵͹Ͳ ʹͲ͸ ͷ͹͸  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž Ͷͺͷ ͳͶͳ ͸ʹ͸ 61  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ͳͷͷͷ ʹͶ͵͹ ͵ͻͻʹ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ͷͺ͹ ͳͺ͹ ͹͹Ͷ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ʹͲ͵ ͵͹͹ ͷͺͲ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ͵Ͷ ͳ͵ͺ͸ͻ ͳ͵ͻͲ͵  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ʹ͸͵ ͵ͳ͹ ͷͺͲ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††Ž ‹˜‹Ž ͵ʹ͵ ʹͳͺ ͷͶͳ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ —’Ǥ—Â?††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž Í´Í· ͻ͸ ͳʹͳ ʹ͵ ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ Š‹‡ˆ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵͹ͺ ͳͻͻʹ ʹ͵͹Ͳ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͶ͸ ͵͹ͺͷ ͵ͻ͵ͳ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵͸ͳ ͳʹ͸ Ͷͺ͹  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳʹͲ ʹ͸ͷͺ ʹ͹͹ͺ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͳ ͳͳͶ͹ ͳʹͳͺ  ‘Ž‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͹Ͳ ͺʹʹ͹ ͺͶͻ͹ ʹͶ Šƒ˜ƒÂ?ƒ…Š…Š‡”‹ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͹ Í´Í·Í´ Í´Í·Í»  Šƒ˜ƒÂ?ƒ…Š…Š‡”‹  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͸ ͹ͻͷ ͺͺͳ Í´Í· ƒÂ?„—ŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷ͵ͷ ʹͲ͸Ͷ ʹͶͻͻ ʹ͸ ‡Š‹ƒ––ƒÂ?ƒÂ?†‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͳͳ ͳ͵ͳͶ ͳͺʹͷ ʹ͹ ‡‹›ƒÂ?†ƒ”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͲͺ ͳ͹͸Ͷ ʹͳ͹ʹ ʹͺ Ž’‹–‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͻ͵ʹ ͵ͺͶ͸ Ͷ͹͹ͺ Í´Í» Ž’‹–‹›ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͳʹ ͺͶͲ ͳͳͷʹ ͵Ͳ Â?„‹Ž‹’‹–‹›ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž Ͷͻʹ ͷ͵ͻ ͳͲ͵ͳ ͵ͳ ‘”–  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͹͸ ʹͲʹͳ ʹʹͻ͹ ͵ʹ ƒŽ‰ƒÂ?—™ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͻͳ ͳ͹Ͷ͹ ʹͲ͵ͺ ͵͵ ƒŽŽ‡  ‹˜‹Ž ͷͷͲ ͳͲ͸Ͳ ͳ͸ͳͲ  ƒŽŽ‡ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͹ͳͶ ͳͷʹͶ ʹʹ͵ͺ  ƒŽŽ‡ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͷʹ͹ ͳ͸͹͸ ʹʹͲ͵ ͵Ͷ ƒŽŽ‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͵Ͳͺ ͷͳʹͺ ͹Ͷ͵͸  ƒŽŽ‡ ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͶͶ ͵͸ͺͶ Ͷ͵ʹͺ ͵ͷ ƒÂ?’ƒŠƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͶͶ͸ ͹Ͷ͸ ͳͳͻʹ  ƒÂ?’ƒŠƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͵͸ͷ ͷͻͷ ͻ͸Ͳ ͵͸ ƒÂ?’ƒŠƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹͹͵ ͻ͸Ͳ ͳ͹͵͵  ƒÂ?’ƒŠƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ͻͷ Ͷͳͻͷ ͶͷͻͲ 62  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total ͵͹ ƒÂ?’‘Žƒ  ‹˜‹Ž Ͷ͵͸ ͳͳͻ͸ ͳ͸͵ʹ ͵ͺ ƒÂ?’‘Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷͺʹ ͵ͳ͸͸ ͵͸Ͷͺ ͵ͻ ƒÂ?„ƒÂ?–‘–ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͻ͸ ͵͵ͳ ͷʹ͹  ƒÂ?„ƒÂ?–‘–ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͻͷ ʹͻͶͻ ͵ͷͶͶ ͶͲ ƒ––‘Â? ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹͷͺ Ͷ͸͵ ͹ʹͳ  ƒ––‘Â? ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͷ͵ ͳͶͺ͸ ʹʹ͵ͻ Ͷͳ ‡Ž„‘†ƒ ‹”…—‹–  ʹͳ͵ ͸ͷͶ ͺ͸͹ Ͷʹ ‡––‹’‘Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͻͶ͹ ͳ͵ͲͲ ʹʹͶ͹ Ͷ͵ ‘Â?ƒ‰ƒÂ?ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͸ͶͶ ͺ͸Ͳ ͳͷͲͶ  ‘Â?ƒ‰ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͶͷͲ ͵͹ͲͶ ͷͳͷͶ ͶͶ ‘”ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͷͲͺ ʹͳ͹͸ Ͷ͸ͺͶ Ͷͷ ‘”ƒÂ?ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͸ͷͲ ͳͳͺͷ ͳͺ͵ͷ Ͷ͸ ƒˆˆÂ?ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͳͻͶ ͵͹ͳ ͷ͸ͷ Ͷ͹ ƒˆˆÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͷ͸ ͵͹ͺ͹ ͶͲͶ͵ Ͷͺ ƒ†—™‡Žƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͻ͵ ͺ͵ͺ ͳʹ͵ͳ  ƒ†—™‡Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͳ͸ͺ ͶͲʹͷ ͷͳͻ͵ Ͷͻ ƒŽÂ?—Â?ƒ‹  ‹˜‹Ž ͳͳͶ ʹͷ͸ ͵͹Ͳ ͷͲ ƒŽÂ?—Â?ƒ‹  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͻͶ ͳͻʹ͸ ʹͳʹͲ ͷͳ ƒŽ—–ƒ”ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͺ͹ ͷͶ͹ ͻ͵Ͷ  ƒŽ—–ƒ”ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳͺͺ ͷͷͳ ͹͵ͻ Í·Í´ ƒŽ—–ƒ”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͻʹ ͵͹ͷͷ ͶͷͶ͹  ƒŽ—–ƒ”ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͹Ͷ ͳͲ͸ʹ ͳ͵͵͸ ͷ͵ ƒÂ?†›  ‹˜‹Ž ͺͶ͹ ʹʹ͹ͳ ͵ͳͳͺ  ƒÂ?†› ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͺ͸ͺ ͵ͳͷ͹ ͶͲʹͷ  ƒÂ?†› ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳͳͳʹ ͵͵͸ͳ ͶͶ͹͵  ƒÂ?†› ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳͳͶͻ ͳͻ͹ͻ ͵ͳʹͺ ͷͶ ƒÂ?†› ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͺͶ ͹ͷʹͻ ͺͳͳ͵  ƒÂ?†› ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͳʹͺ ͳͷͺͺ ʹ͹ͳ͸ Í·Í· ƒÂ?–ƒŽ‡ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͺͶ ͳ͵Ͳͷ ͳͶͺͻ ͷ͸ ‡„‹–Š‹‰‘ŽŽƒ™ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵͵ ͵Ͳ ͸͵  ‡„‹–Š‹‰‘ŽŽƒ™ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͷͻ ͳͷͳ ͵ͳͲ ͷ͹ ‡‰ƒŽŽ‡  ‹˜‹Ž ͹͹ͳ ͻʹͲ ͳ͸ͻͳ 63  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total  ‡‰ƒŽŽ‡ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͵͵ͺ Ͷ͵ͺ ͹͹͸ ͷͺ ‡‰ƒŽŽ‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͲʹʹ ͵ͺͳ͹ Ͷͺ͵ͻ Í·Í» ‡Â?‹”ƒ™ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͻͺ ͵ͷ͹Ͷ Ͷ͵͹ʹ  ‡Â?‹”ƒ™ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͳ͹͵ ͵Ͳʹ Ͷ͹ͷ ͸Ͳ ‡•„‡™ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž Ͷͺ͹ ͻͲ ͷ͹͹  ‡•„‡™ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷ͵Ͳͻ ͹ͷ͸ ͷͲ͸ͷ ͸ͳ ‹Ž‹Â?‘…Š…Š‹ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͷͲ ͳͳ͵ ͳ͸͵  ‹Ž‹Â?‘…Š…Š‹  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͶ͸ ͳͷ͹ͳ ͳ͹ͳ͹ ͸ͳ —Ž‹›ƒ’‹–‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͶͺͳ ͳ͵ͷͻͶ ͳͷͲ͹ͷ ͸ʹ —Ž‹›ƒ’‹–‹›ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͸ͻͻ ͳͶʹͻ ʹͳʹͺ ͸͵ —”—Â?‡‰ƒŽƒ  ‹˜‹Ž Ͷ͸ͻ ͺ͵Ͷ ͳ͵Ͳ͵  —”—Â?‡‰ƒŽƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͻ͹ ͳͳͷʹ ͳͷͶͻ ͸Ͷ —”—Â?‡‰ƒŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸͵ͳ ͻ͵ͳ ͳͷ͸ʹ  —”—Â?‡‰ƒŽƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͻͺ ͵͸Ͳʹ ͶʹͲͲ ͸ͷ ƒŠƒ”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͻͶͷ ͳͳ͵ͺ ʹͲͺ͵ ͸͸ ƒŠ‹›ƒÂ?‰ƒÂ?ƒ›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž Ͷͻ ͳ͹ͷ ʹʹͶ  ƒŠ‹›ƒÂ?‰ƒÂ?ƒ›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͹Ͷ ʹͷͶͳ ͵Ͷͳͷ ͸͹ ƒŠ‘ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͶ͵ ͵ͷͳ ͶͻͶ  ƒŠ‘  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ʹͻ ͻͻ͹ ͳ͵ʹ͸  ƒŠ‘ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳ͵ʹ ʹ͵Ͷ ͵͸͸ ͸ͺ ƒŽ‹‰ƒÂ?ƒÂ?†ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͷͲʹ ͵͵Ͳ ͳͺ͵ʹ  ƒŽ‹‰ƒÂ?ƒÂ?†ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ͲͶͷ ʹ͸Ͷ ͵͵Ͳͻ ͸ͻ ƒŽŽƒÂ?ƒÂ?  ‹˜‹Ž ͳͳͳ ͺͳͺ ͻʹͻ ͹Ͳ ƒŽŽƒÂ?ƒÂ?  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͵͹ ͻ͸Ͳ ͳͲͻ͹ ͹ͳ ƒ”ƒ™‹Žƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͷͶͶ ͹͹ͻ ͳ͵ʹ͵  ƒ”ƒ™‹Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͳͷͲ ʹͶͻʹ ͵͸Ͷʹ ͹ʹ ƒ–ƒŽ‡ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͷͷͶ ͳ͵ͻͳ ͳͻͶͷ  ƒ–ƒŽ‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͹ͻͷ ͳͶͶ͹Ͳ ͳ͸ʹ͸ͷ ͹͵ ƒ–ƒ”ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͳͶ͵ͻ ͳͲͷͺ ʹͶͻ͹  ƒ–ƒ”ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳͲ͸ͷ ͸Ͷ͹ ͳ͹ͳʹ  ƒ–ƒ”ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͸ʹ͵ ͸ʹͳ ͳʹͶͶ ͹Ͷ ƒ–ƒ”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͺͷ ʹͲ͸Ͷͷ ʹͳͶ͵Ͳ 64  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total ͹ͷ ƒ–—‰ƒÂ?ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͸͵ͻ ͳͲʹͳ ͳ͸͸Ͳ ͹͸ ƒ–—‰ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͳͷͻ ʹ͸ͺͻ ͶͺͶͺ  ƒ–—‰ƒÂ?ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷʹͳ ͹͸ͺ ͳͳͺͻ ͹͹ ƒ™ƒÂ?‡ŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž Ͷ͵ ʹͳͷ ʹͷͺ  ƒ™ƒÂ?‡ŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͵ͷ ͵ͲͲ͵ ͵ͺ͵ͺ ͹ͺ ƒÂ?Â?ƒ” ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽÈ€”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͵͹ ʹͲͲ͸ ʹʹͶ͵ ͹ͻ ‹Â?—™ƒÂ?‰‘†ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸Ͷͳ ͷ͸͹ʹ ͸͵ͳ͵  ‹Â?—™ƒÂ?‰‘†ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ʹ͵ͳ ͶͺͲ ͹ͳͳ ͺͲ ‘Â?ƒ”ƒ‰ƒŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵Ͳʹ ʹ͹ͳ ͷ͹͵  ‘Â?ƒ”ƒ‰ƒŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͲʹ ͹ʹͳ ͳͳʹ͵ ͺͳ ‘”ƒ–—™ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͻͲ ͵͸ͻ Í·Í·Í»  ‘”ƒ–—™ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͻͲ ͵ͳͶͷ ͵͹͵ͷ  ‘”ƒ–—™ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͳͶʹ ʹʹͺ ͵͹Ͳ  ‘”ƒ–—™ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͲͷ ͳͳͻͲ ͳ͵ͻͷ ͺʹ ‘”ƒ™ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷ͵ͺ ͷͷͳͲ ͸ͲͶͺ ͺ͵ ‘”ƒ™ƒÂ?ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž Í´Í·Í» ͹ͶͶ ͳͲͲ͵ ͺͶ –ǤŽƒ˜‹Â?‹ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͵ʹͷ ͸ͷͷ ͻͺͲ  –ǤŽƒ˜‹Â?‹ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͵Ͷ͵ ͸ʹͳ ͻ͸Ͷ ͺͷ –ǤŽƒ˜‹Â?‹ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳʹͷ͵ ʹ͹ͺͶ ͶͲ͵͹  –ǤŽƒ˜‹Â?‹ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸Ͷͺ ͵Ͷ͸͹ Ͷͳͳͷ ͺ͸ —––—” ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽȀ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͸͵ ͳ͸ͳ͹ ͳ͹ͺͲ ͺ͹ —Žƒ–‹˜ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵͹ ͳʹͲ ͳͷ͹  —Žƒ–‹˜  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͶͷ ͻͺͲ ͳͳʹͷ ͺͺ ƒ—Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷʹʹ ʹͳͶ͸ ʹͷ͸ͺ ͺͻ ƒ™ƒŽƒ’‹–‹›ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͳ͵ͷ ͵͵͸ Ͷ͹ͳ ͻͲ ƒ™ƒŽƒ’‹–‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͲ͸ ͳͲͲʹ ͳͶͲͺ ͻͳ ‡‰‘Â?„‘  ‹˜‹Ž ͷ͵͵ ͳͷͷʹ ʹͲͺͷ  ‡‰‘Â?„‘ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͸͵ͻ ͳͲͷͳ ͳ͸ͻͲ ͻʹ ‡‰‘Â?„‘  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͺͷ Ͷ͵͹ͳ ͷͲͷ͸ ͻ͵ ‹Â?ƒ™‡”ƒ–‹›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͺͲ ͵ͳ͵ ͵ͻ͵  ‹Â?ƒ™‡”ƒ–‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͺ͸ ʹ͸͵Ͷ ʹͺʹͲ ͻͶ —‰‡‰‘†ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͸͹ʹ ͵͸ͳͶͷ ͵͹ͺͳ͹ 65  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total ͻͷ —‰‡‰‘†ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͻͲ ͵Ͳ͹͸ ͵Ͷ͸͸ ͻ͸ —™ƒ”ƒŽ‹›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͶͶ ͸͵Ͳ ͻ͹Ͷ  —™ƒ”ƒŽ‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹ͸ͺ ͶͶ͸͹ Ͷ͹͵ͷ ͻ͹ ƒÂ?ƒ†—”ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͶͳͲ ͵ͻͲ ͺͲͲ  ƒÂ?ƒ†—”ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͺ͵ ͹Ͷ͸ ͳͳʹͻ ͻͺ ƒÂ?ƒ†—”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͸ͻͺ Ͷʹ͸͵ ͷͻ͸ͳ ͻͻ ‡ŽÂ?ƒ†—ŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵͸͵ ͳͳ͹ͳ ͳͷ͵Ͷ  ‡ŽÂ?ƒ†—ŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͻ͹ͳ ʹͶʹͲ ͵͵ͻͳ ͳͲͲ ‹Ž‡••ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͲ͸ ͳ͹ͺͲ ʹͳͺ͸ ͳͲͳ ‘‹Â?–‡†”‘ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͻʹ ʹͶ͵ Ͷ͵ͷ  ‘‹Â?–‡†”‘  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͺͷ ͺͲ͵ ͳͲͺͺ ͳͲʹ ‘Ž‰ƒŠƒ™‡Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ͷͷ ͳͷ͵͹ ͳͺͻʹ ͳͲ͵ ‘Ž‘Â?Â?ƒ”—™ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͳͶ Ͷͷͳ ͷ͸ͷ  ‘Ž‘Â?Â?ƒ”—™ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͹͸͹ ͵͸ͻͶ ͷͶ͸ͳ ͳͲͶ ‘–—˜‹Ž ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽȀ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷ͹͵ ͳ͹͹͹ ʹʹͷͲ ͳͲͷ —‰‘†ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͷͷ͵ Ͷ͸ʹ ͳͲͳͷ  —‰‘†ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͳͻ ͳ͸͵ͻ ʹʹͷͺ ͳͲ͸ —––ƒŽƒÂ?ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳ͸ͳͶ ͳ͹Ͳͺʹ ͳͺ͸ͻ͸  —––ƒŽƒÂ?ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͵ͻ͵ ͷ͸ͳ ͻͷͶ ͳͲ͹ ƒÂ?„ƒ†ƒ‰ƒŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͷ͹ ͳ͵ͻͶ ͳͷͷͳ ͳͲͺ ƒ–Â?ƒ’—”ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͷ͹͵ ͳͻʹͶ ʹͶͻ͹  ƒ–Â?ƒ’—”ƒ ††ŽǤ ‹˜‹Ž ͻʹͲ ͳ͹͹͸ ʹ͸ͻ͸ ͳͲͻ ƒ–Â?ƒ’—”ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳͳͺ͹ ͵͵ͻͷ Ͷͷͺʹ  ƒ–Â?ƒ’—”ƒ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͷͷͲ ͶͲʹͻ Ͷͷ͹ͻ ͳͳͲ —™ƒÂ?™‡ŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͵͹ ͺ͸Ͳͺ ͻͶͶͷ  —™ƒÂ?™‡ŽŽƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͸ͷ ͷʹͺ ͷͻ͵ ͳͳͳ ƒÂ?ƒÂ?–—”ƒ‹  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͷ͵ ͳʹ͸ʹ ͳͷͳͷ ͳͳʹ ƒÂ?‰ƒŽŽ‡ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͵Ͷ͵ ͹͸͵ ͳͳͲ͸  ƒÂ?‰ƒŽŽ‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺͺ͵ ͷͲʹͳ ͷͻͲͶ ͳͳ͵ ‡Ž†‡Â?‹›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͻͶ ʹ͸͵Ͷ ͵ͳʹͺ  ‡Ž†‡Â?‹›ƒ  ‹˜‹Ž ͺͻ ͶͲ͵ Ͷͻʹ ͳͳͶ ŠƒÂ?„—––‡‰ƒÂ?ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͺͷ ʹͷͶʹ ͵ʹʹ͹ 66  No Station Court TypeOfCases Trials Calling Total ͳͳͷ ‹••ƒÂ?ƒŠƒ”ƒÂ?ƒ›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹͳͲ ͸ʹ͹ ͺ͵͹  ‹••ƒÂ?ƒŠƒ”ƒÂ?ƒ›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͶͲ ͳ͸ͻͷ ʹͳ͵ͷ ͳͳ͸ ”‹Â?…‘Â?ƒŽ‡‡  ‹˜‹Ž ʹͲͺ ʹ͸ʹ Ͷ͹Ͳ ͳͳ͹ ”‹Â?…‘Â?ƒŽ‡‡  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͲͷ ͺͺͶ ͳʹͺͻ  ”‹Â?…‘Â?ƒŽ‡‡ ††ŽǤ ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͶͷ ͳ͸ʹͶ ʹͲ͸ͻ ͳͳͺ ƒŽƒ…Š…ŠƒÂ?ƒ‹ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͹͸ ʹͲͶ ʹͺͲ  ƒŽƒ…Š…ŠƒÂ?ƒ‹  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ʹͻͲ ʹͷ͹Ͳ ʹͺ͸Ͳ ͳͳͻ ƒ˜—Â?‹›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ͳͲͺ ͵ͻͶ ͷͲʹ  ƒ˜—Â?‹›ƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͳʹͲͶ ͷͳͲͶ ͸͵Ͳͺ ͳʹͲ ƒŽƒ’ƒÂ?‡ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽȀ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺͶ ʹ͵ͺͲ ʹͶ͸Ͷ ͳʹͳ ƒŽƒ•Â?—ŽŽƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹͶͳ ͹Ͳͳ ͻͶʹ  ƒŽƒ•Â?—ŽŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͸ͳͷ ͳͳ͵͸ ͳ͹ͷͳ ͳʹʹ ƒ”‹›ƒ’‘Žƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹͲͳ ʹ͸ͺ Ͷ͸ͻ  ƒ”‹›ƒ’‘Žƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ Ͷͳʹ ʹͻͺͳ ͵͵ͻ͵ ͳʹ͵ ƒ”ƒÂ?ƒ’‘Žƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽȀ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͺ͹ͻ ͵ͷͷͶ ͶͶ͵͵ ͳʹͶ ƒ––ƒŽƒ  ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͶͷͲ ͷͷʹͳ ͷͻ͹ͳ ͳʹͷ ‡Ž‹Â?ƒ†ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹ŽȀ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͵ͷͳ ͷͶͳ ͺͻʹ ͳʹ͸ ‡ŽŽƒ™ƒ›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ‹˜‹Ž ʹͲͷ ͵ͻͳ ͷͻ͸ ͳʹ͹ ‡ŽŽƒ™ƒ›ƒ ‘Â?„‹Â?‡‘—”– ”‹Â?‹Â?ƒŽ ͹ͲͲ ͷͶ͸͹ ͸ͳ͸͹ ͳͳͻͻ ͸ͷͲ͸͹ Total ͸Ͷ ͷ͵Ͳ͹Ͳ͸ Ͳ ͳʹͺ ƒ›–• ‘–‘Â?–ƒ…–  ͳʹͻ ‹‰—”ƒÂ?‰‘†ƒ ‘–‘Â?–ƒ…– PendingCases TotalfiguresforMagistrate'sCourtsandDistrictCourts Trials Calling Total ͳͳͻͻ͸Ͷ ͷ͵Ͳ͹Ͳ͸ ͸ͷͲ͸͹Ͳ    67  IBRD 33485 80°E 81°E I N DIA SRI LANKA 10°N 10°N SELECTED CITIES AND TOWNS PROVINCE CAPITALS it r a Point Pedro NATIONAL CAPITAL St RIVERS k Jaffna MAIN ROADS Pal Delft Elephant Pass RAILROADS Island PROVINCE BOUNDARIES Palk Bay Killinochchi INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES Iranamadu Tank Mullaittivu Ferr y Ad Talaimannar Manakulam am 's B ridge 9 °N Mannar Island Mannar NORTHERN Pulmoddai Aruvi A Vavuniya ru SRI LANKA Trincomalee Gulf of Karaitivu NORTH CENTRAL Island Rambewa Mutur Mannar Anuradhapura Yan Oya Galkulama Kalpitiya Ka Kaud la Oya ulla Oya Bay of Bengal Puttalan Habarane 8 °N 8°N NORTH Madura Oya WESTERN Maho Oya Batticaloa uru ed Kattankudi Mahaweli Ganga D EASTERN Chilaw Madura Oya Kurunegala Reservoir Kalmunai CENTRAL ha O y a Ma Ampara Kandy ya Gal Oy Negombo Kegalla Victoria Falls Reservoir U VA Pidurutalagala Senanayake WESTERN (2,524 m) Samudra 7 °N g Badulla 7°N Kelan Gan COLOMBO Sri Jayewardenepura Kotte Pottuvil Monaragala Moratuwa Ratnapura lu Wellawaya Ka Kirin SABARAGAMUWA Kalutara d i Oya Kumana Laccadive Wala Kataragama w INDIAN eG Sea an OCEAN g a SOUTHERN Hambantota Galle 6 °N Tangalla 0 20 40 60 Kilometers 6°N Matara This map was produced by the Map Design Unit of The World Bank. The boundaries, colors, denominations and any other information Dondra Head shown on this map do not imply, on the part of The World Bank 0 10 20 30 40 Miles Group, any judgment on the legal status of any territory, or any endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. 80°E 81°E 82°E SEPTEMBER 2004