Abstract
Justice in India moves at a crawl, especially for civil cases. By the end of 2025, more than 52.5 million cases were still unresolved—district courts alone made up 4.6 crore, while high courts had another 63 lakh. A lot of this backlog comes down to old problems in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (CPC). Courts keep granting endless adjournments (thanks to Order XVII), serving summons drags on, and there just aren’t enough judges—about 40% of high court spots are empty. Things slow down even more once cases reach the evidence stage. No wonder civil suits often drag on for five years or more. This paper dives into the problem by studying CPC amendments from 2002 and 2015, key Supreme Court decisions (like SCG Contracts v. K.S. Chamankar, 2022 and the big 2025 delay cases), and real numbers from the NJDG and Law Commission Report 245. It also looks at reforms—like the Commercial Courts Act, which actually slashes timelines for some business cases—and new steps lined up for 2025, including digital summons and tighter case management rules (Order X Rule 2A). The bigger picture? Business disputes are moving faster, but regular civil cases are still stuck. The main reason: reforms aren’t being put into practice well enough. The paper suggests some big changes—capping adjournments at three, making pre-trial mediation (Section 89A) mandatory, using AI for case triage, and hiring more staff with ₹8,758 crore in extra funding. If these actually happen, average case timelines could fall to under 18 months. That would finally match the promise of Article 21: a speedy trial.