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ToggleSikkim Paperless Judiciary: 1st Historic State to Revolutionize Courts
In a watershed moment for Indian legal history, the Sikkim paperless judiciary became a reality. Chief Justice of India Surya Kant made the landmark declaration at Gangtok's National Conclave on Technology and Judicial Education.
Overview: A Historic Declaration
On May 1, 2026, India made judicial history. Chief Justice of India (CJI) Justice Surya Kant officially declared the Sikkim paperless judiciary as the first fully digital state court system in India, during the National Conclave on Technology and Judicial Education held at Chintan Bhawan, Gangtok.

The announcement, attended by senior judges, legal experts, advocates, policymakers, and international dignitaries, marks a decisive shift in court administration — moving from centuries-old paper trails to a digitized, technology-driven framework of justice delivery.
"We have moved away from the era of paper trails."— Chief Justice of India, Justice Surya Kant, at the Gangtok Conclave, May 1, 2026
The declaration carries deep constitutional significance: it coincides with Sikkim's 50th Statehood Anniversary, adding a layer of historical and institutional symbolism to what is already a transformative moment for the Indian judiciary.
The Conclave: Setting the Stage
The National Conclave on Technology and Judicial Education was organised jointly by the High Court of Sikkim and the Sikkim Judicial Academy, in collaboration with the eCommittee of the Supreme Court of India. The two-day event (May 1–2, 2026) was held at Chintan Bhawan and Samman Bhawan in Gangtok.
The conclave brought together an extraordinary roster of participants, reflecting both national intent and global interest in the digital transformation of courts:
- CJI Justice Surya Kant — Chief Justice of India (keynote declaration)
- Justice J.K. Maheshwari — Supreme Court of India
- Justice A. Muhamed Mustaque — Chief Justice, High Court of Sikkim
- R. Venkataramani — Attorney General of India
- Prem Singh Tamang (Golay) — Chief Minister of Sikkim
- Rony James Govinden — Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Seychelles
- Mohammad Dhilip Nawaz Abdul Hameed — Judge, Supreme Court of Sri Lanka
- Om Prakash Mathur — Governor of Sikkim
The theme of the conclave — "Technology and Judicial Education" — underscored that the paperless transition is not merely a technical upgrade but a fundamental reimagining of how justice is learned, administered, and delivered.
Key Topics Discussed at the Conclave
Integration of legal technology and AI into judicial functions
Digital pedagogy in judicial training and legal education
Access to justice in remote and terrain-challenged regions
Cybersecurity and data privacy frameworks for digital courts
Replication of the Sikkim model across other Indian states
What is the Sikkim Paperless Judiciary?
The Sikkim paperless judiciary refers to a court system in which all processes — from case filing and documentation to hearings, case management, and record-keeping — are conducted entirely through digital means, eliminating reliance on physical paperwork.
In practical terms, this digital workflow means:
Universal E-Filing
All petitions, affidavits, and documents filed digitally — no physical submissions required at any court level.
Virtual Hearings
Litigants and lawyers attend proceedings online from homes or offices, eliminating travel barriers.
Digital Case Tracking
Real-time updates on case status via the National Judicial Data Grid (NJDG), accessible to all.
Adalat AI Integration
The paperless system was developed using Adalat AI, automating workflows and court processes intelligently.
Automated Workflows
Administrative tasks such as scheduling, notices, and record management are fully automated and digitised.
Citizen-Facing Services
Citizens can interact with courts via apps and portals without visiting courthouses, especially vital in Sikkim's mountainous terrain.
The eCourts Mission: India's Digital Judiciary Journey
Sikkim's achievement is the culmination of India's larger eCourts Mission Mode Project — the national digital infrastructure programme for India's judiciary, conceived under the "National Policy and Action Plan for ICT in the Indian Judiciary – 2005" by the eCommittee of the Supreme Court.
- 2005
National ICT Policy for Judiciary
eCommittee of Supreme Court submits foundational policy document. Formally launched under the National eGovernance Plan in 2007.
- Phase I
Phase I — Infrastructure (2010–2015)
Budget: ₹935 crore. 14,249 district and subordinate courts computerised. Basic hardware, internet connectivity, and the eCourts platform operationalised.
- Phase II
Phase II — Citizen Services (2015–2023)
Budget: ₹1,670 crore. Introduction of e-filing, video conferencing, digital payment, and the NJDG (National Judicial Data Grid) for case data transparency.
- Phase III
Phase III — AI & Full Digitisation (2023–Present)
Approved by Union Cabinet in September 2023 with a budget of ₹7,210 crore. Focus: paperless courts, legacy digitisation, universal e-filing, and AI integration. Sikkim is Phase III's first major success story.
- 2026
Sikkim Declared Fully Paperless — May 1, 2026
CJI Surya Kant makes the historic declaration at Gangtok conclave, marking India's first complete state-level implementation.
Key Features & Technology Stack
The Sikkim model represents a holistic overhaul — not merely digitising paper, but reimagining the entire judicial workflow. Chief Justice A. Muhamed Mustaque of the Sikkim High Court confirmed that the paperless system was developed by Adalat AI, an Indian legal technology company.
Core technological pillars of the system include:
1. Adalat AI-Powered Platform: Developed specifically for the Indian judicial context, the platform handles intelligent case classification, automated cause list generation, and digital document verification at scale.
2. End-to-End E-Filing: Advocates file all documents digitally through secure portals, with digital signatures replacing physical stamps. The system integrates with the eCourts e-filing portal for seamless submissions.
3. Video Conferencing Infrastructure: Dedicated VC facilities enable virtual hearings across all court levels — from the High Court to subordinate courts — addressing Sikkim's unique challenge of frequent travel disruptions due to landslides and monsoon conditions.
4. Legacy Record Digitisation: Decades of physical court records have been scanned, indexed, and uploaded to a secure digital repository, ensuring historical case data is accessible digitally without losing institutional memory.
5. NJDG Integration: All court data feeds into the National Judicial Data Grid, making real-time case statistics publicly accessible and enabling judicial accountability at an unprecedented scale.
6. e-Sewa Kendras: Recognising the digital divide, physical assistance centres have been established to help citizens — especially the elderly and rural population — navigate the digital court system without being left behind.
Reactions: What Key Stakeholders Said
Access to justice in remote and difficult terrains is undergoing a fundamental transformation through technology. For litigants, distance was not measured in kilometres but in days of travel, uncertainty, and hardship.
Sikkim being declared a paperless judiciary is a remarkable moment. It does not replace human judgment; rather, it removes barriers — physical papers, distance, or missing files.
Today's conclave is about starting something at the ground level — a practical approach. This is not about technological showcase, but about practical impact on access to justice.
This is a historic milestone and a matter of pride for the state. It reflects Sikkim's commitment to digital governance and judicial reform. No citizen should be left behind.
Moving towards becoming the country's first fully paperless judiciary by Sikkim is a historic step towards realising the dream of 'Digital India'.
It was historic that a small state like Sikkim set an example for the rest of the country. Initial hesitation among bar members has given way to improved efficiency and acceptance.
Why Sikkim? Why Now? — The Significance Explained
Sikkim's selection as India's first fully digital court system isn't coincidental. Several factors made the Himalayan state uniquely suited to pioneer the Sikkim paperless judiciary:
Manageable Scale: With a relatively small judicial infrastructure — one High Court and a limited number of subordinate courts — Sikkim offered the ideal proving ground for full-scale digitisation without the complexities of larger states with thousands of courts.
Geographic Imperative: Sikkim's mountainous terrain, frequent landslides, and disrupted monsoon connectivity made the case for digital courts not merely aspirational but practically urgent. As Bar Association President Tashi Rapden Barphungpa noted, digital filing and virtual appearances now allow lawyers and litigants to participate in proceedings from their homes or offices — no longer dependent on treacherous mountain roads.
Institutional Will: Chief Justice A. Muhamed Mustaque's leadership and the state judiciary's collaboration with Adalat AI and the Supreme Court's eCommittee created the institutional synergy necessary for implementation.
50th Statehood Anniversary: The timing of the declaration on Sikkim's 50th Statehood Anniversary lends profound constitutional symbolism — marking half a century of Sikkim's integration into India with a leap into its digital future.
"The Indian legal landscape has undergone a fundamental transformation. Digital systems are reshaping access to justice."— CJI Surya Kant, National Conclave on Technology and Judicial Education, Gangtok
Alignment with Digital India: The move aligns with the Digital India initiative and the broader e-Governance agenda of the Government of India, demonstrating that even the most constitutionally independent arm of the state — the judiciary — is embracing the digital transformation imperative.
Challenges & Concerns Ahead
While the achievement is historic, a realistic assessment demands acknowledging the significant hurdles that remain — both for the Sikkim paperless judiciary to sustain its model and for other states to replicate it:
- ⚡The Digital Divide RiskThe CJI himself acknowledged this danger. Litigants in poor, rural, or elderly demographics may lack devices, internet access, or digital literacy. Coverage by e-Sewa Kendras must be genuinely universal — not patchy — to ensure no citizen is excluded from justice.
- 🔒Cybersecurity & Data PrivacyDigital court records contain sensitive personal, financial, and criminal data. India lacks a fully operational, comprehensive data protection framework specifically covering judicial data, creating vulnerability to breaches and privacy violations.
- 📁Legacy Record DigitisationConverting decades of physical records into digital formats is time-consuming, expensive, and error-prone. Incomplete digitisation of legacy cases could create a two-tier system — some cases fully digital, others still reliant on paper records.
- ⚖️AI Bias & Natural JusticeAs AI tools like Adalat AI take deeper roles in judicial workflows, questions about algorithmic bias, transparency, and natural justice principles must be addressed. Justice cannot be automated without robust safeguards.
- 🌐Connectivity in Remote AreasWhile digital courts reduce travel needs, they require reliable internet. Sikkim's remote villages, prone to connectivity blackouts during monsoons, remain a structural challenge for fully inclusive digital justice.
National Impact: Sikkim as India's Judicial Blueprint
The Sikkim model is explicitly intended to serve as a national blueprint. As India Legal reported, the model is "expected to serve as a benchmark for replication across states, as the Indian judiciary accelerates its transition towards a fully digitised ecosystem."
Several dimensions of national impact are already taking shape:
eCourts Phase III Acceleration: With ₹7,210 crore approved for Phase III, the Union Government has the fiscal firepower to scale Sikkim's model. The focus on paperless courts, legacy digitisation, universal e-filing, and AI integration is now validated by a real-world success case.
Inter-State Competition: The declaration is expected to spur competitive adoption among other states, particularly the North-Eastern states that share similar geographic challenges — Meghalaya, Manipur, Tripura, and Arunachal Pradesh — where digital courts could dramatically improve access to justice.
International Visibility: The presence at the conclave of the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Seychelles and a judge from Sri Lanka reflects global interest in the model. India is positioning itself as an exporter of judicial technology frameworks to the developing world.
Legal Education Transformation: The conclave's explicit focus on "judicial education" signals that the revolution extends beyond courtrooms to law schools and judicial academies — where the next generation of lawyers and judges must be trained as digital-native legal professionals.
What Other States Can Learn from Sikkim
Start with manageable jurisdictions — pilot districts before full-state rollout
Invest in e-Sewa Kendras alongside digital infrastructure for inclusive access
Partner with legal-tech companies (like Adalat AI) for India-specific solutions
Ensure bar associations are brought on board early to overcome resistance
Prioritise legacy digitisation in parallel with new digital workflows
Conclusion: A Small State, A Giant Leap
The launch of the Sikkim paperless judiciary is more than a technological achievement — it is a statement about what Indian governance can be when institutional will, technology, and judicial independence converge with purpose. At Vijay Foundations, we continue to monitor how these digital transformations impact everyday citizens.
In a country where pendency of cases runs into tens of millions, where rural litigants spend as much on travel as on litigation, and where justice often literally arrives years late, the paperless judiciary is not a luxury. It is a structural imperative.
As Senior Advocate Jorgay Namka of the Sikkim High Court eloquently noted, for a small state, the accomplishment reflects a strong willingness to embrace innovation and modern governance. Size, it turns out, is no constraint when vision and execution are aligned.
The question for the rest of India is no longer whether to go paperless, but how fast. Sikkim has just set the clock.
"Sikkim has set an example for the rest of the country. A small state with big ambitions has shown that geography need not be destiny."— Tashi Rapden Barphungpa, President, Bar Association of Sikkim


