The Supreme Court issued notice on a petition filed by the Supreme Court Bar Association exposing a glaring legislative gap, advocates who argue the nation's most consequential cases before the Apex Court have no dedicated welfare safety net of their own, leaving them financially exposed during medical emergencies, disability, and other hardships while welfare stamp proceeds from their own filings flow away to State Bar Councils that may never serve them.
The controversy centres on a structural anomaly buried within the Advocates' Welfare Fund Act, 2001. While Section 27 of the Act mandates welfare stamps on vakalatnamas filed before all courts including the Supreme Court, the proceeds are credited exclusively to State Bar Council funds, bodies geographically and administratively removed from the daily realities of Supreme Court practitioners who operate on a pan-India basis and often maintain no meaningful connection with their parent State Bar.
The SCBA, represented by its President and Senior Advocate Vikas Singh, argued before a bench of Justice PS Narasimha and Justice Alok Aradhe that this arrangement created a direct constitutional infirmity, advocates at the apex of India's legal pyramid were being denied the social security protections guaranteed under Articles 14, 19(1)(g), and 21, constituting a legislative vacuum that no existing framework had addressed. The petition proposed a concrete remedy: insertion of a new Rule 15A into the Supreme Court Rules, 2013, mandating a Rs.500 welfare stamp on every vakalatnama filed before the Court, with proceeds administered by a high-powered committee under the aegis of the Chief Justice of India.
The bench appeared receptive to the structural concern raised. Justice Narasimha observed that "SC Rule 15A... something can be done. It is the need of the hour", a pointed acknowledgment that the existing framework had left a professional class of national significance without institutional protection.
The Court issued notice to the Supreme Court on its administrative side, the Union of India, the Bar Council of India, and the Bar Council of Delhi, setting the stage for a reckoning with how India's legal system protects, or fails to protect, those who sustain it.
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