Supreme Court’s Artificial Intelligence Committee, chaired by Justice P.S. Narasimha, released the draft Regulations for Use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in Courts, 2026. The initiative addresses the growing integration of automated tools in the legal system, balancing efficiency against potential risks to judicial independence, fairness, and constitutional rights.
Background:
The rapid adoption of large language models and machine learning tools in legal workflows prompted the judiciary to codify clear operational boundaries. The framework establishes ethical baselines to prevent algorithms from displacing core legal reasoning.
Key Structural Directives:
|
Category |
Permitted Functions |
Prohibited Applications |
|
Operational Scope |
Administrative and assistive support to streamline court management and reduce pendency. |
High-stakes analytical evaluations directly impacting individual liberty. |
|
Specific Use Cases |
Legal research and citation verificationSummarisation of voluminous pleadingsReal-time vernacular translationAutomated record and file management |
Profiling parties or witnessesAssessing bail eligibilityPredicting recidivism ratesFlight-risk scoring modelsProprietary "black-box" systems lacking explainability |
To ensure continuous compliance, the draft regulations propose the creation of a full-time, high-level supervisory body stationed at the Supreme Court. This council will establish technical standards, certify software before deployment, and oversee ethical audits.
Composition of the Proposed Apex Body:
Develop transparent evaluation methodologies for judicial software to verify that machine learning models explain how they process information before being deployed in administrative tasks.
Implement training modules across state judicial academies to equip judges, registry staff, and legal practitioners with the skills needed to recognize algorithmic errors and use assistive tools responsibly.
Establish sandboxed environments and isolated networks within court registries to process legal documentation securely, preventing leaks or unauthorized training on sensitive legal data.
The draft regulations highlight a proactive effort to leverage technology while protecting fundamental legal principles. By setting clear operational boundaries and introducing multi-stakeholder oversight, the framework ensures that innovation supports, rather than replaces, human judgment in the pursuit of justice.