Supreme Court flags the risks of using AI for drafting petitions
UPSC Study Note: Supreme Court Flags Risks of Using AI for Drafting Petitions
1. At a Glance
- The Supreme Court of India has publicly flagged the "alarming" trend of lawyers using Generative AI (GenAI) to draft legal petitions, resulting in citation of fictitious/non-existent case laws — a phenomenon called AI hallucination. [S1]
- This is a landmark intersection of technology governance, judicial ethics, and legal accountability — directly relevant to UPSC GS-II (Judiciary) and GS-IV (Ethics). [S1]
- The Court has moved from verbal warnings to formal regulatory drafting: a Draft Regulations for Use of AI in Courts, 2026 was published on 3 June 2026. [S2]
- UPSC aspirants must understand both the technical concept of hallucination and its constitutional/ethical implications for judicial integrity. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- 18 February 2026: A Bench comprising Chief Justice Surya Kant, Justice B.V. Nagarathna, and Justice Joymalya Bagchi described the use of AI for legal drafting as "absolutely uncalled for." [S5]
- Justice Nagarathna specifically recalled a petition that cited a fabricated case — "Mercy vs. Mankind" — which does not exist in any law reporter. [S5]
- The Bench also referenced another case before a Bench led by Justice Dipankar Datta where non-existing judicial precedents were quoted. [S5]
- December 2025: Chief Justice Surya Kant had earlier called the court "very conscious of risks" from "indiscriminate use of GenAI in legal work," while hearing a petition filed by Kartikeya Rawal on GenAI dangers. [S5]
- January 2026: Bombay High Court imposed costs of ₹50,000 on a party for submitting fabricated case laws in written submissions. [S2]
- September 2025: Delhi High Court witnessed a petition withdrawal after opposing counsel exposed entirely fabricated citations. [S2]
- November 2025: The Supreme Court's Centre for Research and Planning released a White Paper on Artificial Intelligence and the Judiciary. [S2]
- 3 June 2026: The AI Committee of the Supreme Court of India published the Draft Regulations for Use of Artificial Intelligence in Courts, 2026, open for stakeholder comments. [S2]
3. Background & Evolution
- Pre-2023: AI tools were minimally used in Indian legal practice; research relied on databases like SCC Online, Manupatra, and Indian Kanoon.
- 2023 onwards: Explosion of Large Language Models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot made AI-assisted legal drafting accessible to any litigant or junior advocate.
- Global precedent — Mata v. Avianca (USA, 2023): A New York attorney submitted a brief with ChatGPT-fabricated citations; the federal judge sanctioned the lawyers — this was the first major global wake-up call. [S3]
- India: Since mid-2023, over 120 cases of AI-generated legal hallucinations were globally identified; 58 occurred in 2025 alone. [S3]
- Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (India): Recalled an order after discovering reliance on fictitious case law — one of the earliest Indian institutional acknowledgements. [S2]
- December 2025: CJI Surya Kant's remarks during the Kartikeya Rawal petition — first formal Supreme Court observation on GenAI risks. [S5]
- February 2026: Supreme Court escalates from concern to formal condemnation ("absolutely uncalled for"). [S5]
- June 2026: Draft Regulations published — India moves toward a formal regulatory framework for AI in courts. [S2]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Issue | AI-generated "hallucinations" — fabricated case citations — in court petitions |
| Term: Hallucination | When a GenAI model confidently generates plausible-sounding but factually false information (e.g., non-existent judgments) |
| Technology involved | Generative AI (GenAI) / Large Language Models (LLMs) |
| Indian Apex Court Bench | CJI Surya Kant + Justice B.V. Nagarathna + Justice Joymalya Bagchi |
| Fictitious case cited | "Mercy vs. Mankind" (referenced by Justice Nagarathna) |
| Regulatory body | AI Committee of the Supreme Court of India |
| Draft framework | Draft Regulations for Use of Artificial Intelligence in Courts, 2026 — published 3 June 2026 |
| SC research arm | Centre for Research and Planning (under Supreme Court) |
| White Paper | AI and the Judiciary — released November 2025 |
| Landmark global case | Mata v. Avianca (SDNY, USA, 2023) — lawyers sanctioned for AI-hallucinated citations |
| HC penalty | Bombay HC: ₹50,000 costs for submitting fake AI-generated case laws (January 2026) |
| Relevant petition | Filed by Kartikeya Rawal on dangers of GenAI (heard December 2025) |
| Draft Regulation requirement | Lawyers must disclose AI tools used, original sources, and human review process in every filing |
| SC's position | AI must NOT "overpower the justice administration process" |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 19(1)(g) (right to practise any profession) read with Bar Council of India Rules impose a duty of accuracy and truthfulness on advocates — citing fabricated precedent may amount to contempt of court and professional misconduct. [S2]
- The Supreme Court's plenary powers under Article 142 and its inherent power to regulate its own procedure give it authority to frame AI-use regulations without waiting for Parliamentary legislation. [S2]
- The Draft Regulations, 2026 propose mandatory disclosure of AI tool identity, source tracing, and human oversight certification — creating a new layer of procedural obligation. [S2]
- Citing non-existent precedent has been categorised by the SC as a "grave form of judicial misconduct" — potentially actionable under the Contempt of Courts Act, 1971. [S2]
Ethical / Governance
- The core tension: efficiency vs. accuracy — the SC explicitly noted that "easy means to do legal research should not be at the cost of accuracy." [S5]
- Access to justice paradox: AI lowers the cost of petition drafting for under-resourced litigants, but hallucinations can undermine the credibility of genuine grievances. [S3]
- Asymmetric risk: A lay litigant using AI cannot verify citations; the burden of verification must rest on the enrolled advocate who signs the petition. [S2]
- Raises the question of algorithmic accountability — who is liable when an AI fabricates a citation: the user, the platform, or both?
Scientific / Technological
- LLM hallucination occurs because these models predict statistically probable token sequences, not retrieve verified facts — legal citation databases are poorly represented in training data, increasing error rates. [S3]
- Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) architectures, which ground outputs in verified document stores (e.g., SCC Online), are a partial technical mitigation but not yet widely deployed in Indian legal AI tools. [S3]
- Global analogues: EU AI Act (2024) classifies AI in justice administration as high-risk, requiring conformity assessments before deployment. [S4]
Administrative
- Judiciary lacks a central verification mechanism — there is no automated system to cross-check cited case numbers against official law reporters in real time. [S2]
- The Draft Regulations propose audit trails for AI-assisted filings, but implementation requires integration with e-Courts infrastructure (eCourts Mission Mode Project, Phase III). [S2]
- Capacity gap: Many district courts and tribunals lack trained personnel to detect AI-hallucinated citations — the problem is most acute below the High Court level. [S2]
Social
- Democratisation of legal drafting via AI disproportionately benefits first-generation litigants and rural users who lack access to experienced lawyers — making the hallucination risk a matter of access-to-justice equity. [S3]
- Vulnerable litigants who rely on AI-drafted petitions without legal counsel face the greatest exposure to penalty (costs, dismissal) for inadvertent hallucinated citations. [S3]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- November 2025: SC's Centre for Research and Planning releases White Paper on AI and the Judiciary. [S2]
- December 2025: CJI Surya Kant, hearing the Kartikeya Rawal petition, publicly flags GenAI risks in legal work for the first time from the Bench. [S5]
- January 2026: Bombay High Court imposes ₹50,000 costs on a party for AI-generated fictitious citations in written submissions. [S2]
- 18 February 2026: Three-judge Supreme Court Bench terms AI use in legal drafting "absolutely uncalled for"; Justice Nagarathna cites "Mercy vs. Mankind" as an example of hallucination. [S5]
- February 2026: SC flags a separate case before Justice Dipankar Datta's Bench involving fabricated judicial precedents. [S5]
- 3 June 2026: AI Committee of the Supreme Court publishes Draft Regulations for Use of AI in Courts, 2026 — seeks stakeholder comments. [S2]
7. Prelims Hooks
- The Supreme Court Bench that flagged AI drafting risks on 18 February 2026 comprised CJI Surya Kant, Justice B.V. Nagarathna, and Justice Joymalya Bagchi. [S5]
- The fictitious case law cited before Justice Nagarathna's Bench was "Mercy vs. Mankind" — it does not exist in any Indian law reporter. [S5]
- The Supreme Court's Centre for Research and Planning released a White Paper on AI and the Judiciary in November 2025. [S2]
- The Draft Regulations for Use of AI in Courts, 2026 were published by the AI Committee of the Supreme Court of India on 3 June 2026. [S2]
- The Bombay High Court imposed costs of ₹50,000 for submitting AI-generated fake case laws — January 2026. [S2]
- The global landmark case on AI hallucination in legal filings is Mata v. Avianca (Southern District of New York, 2023). [S3]
- The term for a GenAI model confidently generating false information (e.g., non-existent judgments) is "hallucination". [S3]
- The EU AI Act (2024) classifies AI tools used in justice administration as high-risk AI systems. [S4]
- The Draft Regulations require lawyers to disclose the AI tool used, original sources, and human review process in every AI-assisted court filing. [S2]
- The petition filed by Kartikeya Rawal specifically highlighted the dangers of Generative AI creating fictitious judgments — heard by the Supreme Court in December 2025. [S5]
- Over 120 global cases of AI-generated legal hallucinations had been identified since mid-2023; 58 occurred in 2025 alone. [S3]
- The SC stated AI must NOT "overpower the justice administration process" — a direct articulation of the principle of human oversight in adjudication. [S5]
- The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal recalled an order after discovering reliance on fictitious AI-generated case law — one of India's earliest institutional acknowledgements. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping:
| GS Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-II | Structure, organisation and functioning of the Judiciary; Role of civil services in a democracy; Transparency and accountability |
| GS-III | Developments and applications in IT; Challenges in implementation; Intellectual property rights |
| GS-IV | Ethical concerns in use of technology; Probity in governance; Professional ethics for advocates and public servants |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
-
"The Supreme Court's flagging of AI-generated hallucinations in legal petitions raises fundamental questions about the intersection of technology, professional ethics, and access to justice. Examine." (GS-II + GS-IV)
-
"Critically analyse the regulatory challenges posed by Generative AI in India's judicial system. What principles should guide the Draft Regulations for Use of AI in Courts, 2026?" (GS-II + GS-III)
-
"Artificial intelligence democratises legal drafting but simultaneously threatens the integrity of judicial proceedings. How should India balance these competing imperatives?" (GS-IV)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| eCourts Mission Mode Project (Phase I–III) | Technology infrastructure on which any AI regulation for courts must be built |
| EU AI Act, 2024 | Global benchmark for high-risk AI classification; India's regulatory approach will be compared |
| National AI Strategy (IndiaAI Mission, 2024) | MeitY's overarching framework — court AI regulations fit within this ecosystem |
| Contempt of Courts Act, 1971 | Legal basis for penalising advocates who file misleading/fabricated citations |
| Bar Council of India Rules (Standards of Professional Conduct) | Duty of accuracy; fabricated citations = professional misconduct |
| Mata v. Avianca (USA, 2023) | The foundational global precedent; compare with India's evolving approach |
| Right to Fair Trial (Article 21) | Hallucinated citations can distort adjudication, impacting the accused's/petitioner's fundamental right |
| Data Protection and AI Governance (DPDP Act, 2023) | Broader legal-tech regulatory environment within which court AI rules will operate |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
-
Confusing "hallucination" with "bias": Hallucination = AI fabricates non-existent information; bias = AI systematically skews outputs based on training data. Both are distinct failure modes — examiners may test this distinction.
-
Attributing the February 2026 warning to a two-judge Bench: It was a three-judge Bench (CJI Surya Kant + Justices Nagarathna and Bagchi) — not a division bench of two.
-
Mixing up the regulatory body: The Draft Regulations, 2026 come from the AI Committee of the Supreme Court, not MeitY or NITI Aayog. Do not confuse with the National AI Strategy or the IndiaAI Mission.
-
Overstating the legal bar: The SC said AI use in drafting is "absolutely uncalled for" — but this is a judicial observation/policy direction, not yet a statutory prohibition. The Draft Regulations are still in the public comment phase as of June 2026.
-
Ignoring the global dimension: UPSC questions on AI in judiciary often expect comparative awareness. The Mata v. Avianca case (USA, 2023) and the EU AI Act are the two key global reference points — not mentioning them in a Mains answer weakens the response.
11. Sources
- [S1] India's AI-Driven Legal Future: Opportunities and Emerging Trends in 2025 — https://indiaai.gov.in/article/india-s-ai-driven-legal-future-opportunities-and-emerging-trends-in-2025 — (tier: 1, IndiaAI/MeitY portal)
- [S2] SC Says Citing AI-Generated Fake Case Laws Is Misconduct — https://www.medianama.com/2026/03/223-supreme-court-ai-fake-case-laws-misconduct/ — (tier: 4, journalism)
- [S3] The Phantom Brief: AI Hallucinations Threaten Legal Integrity and Professional Responsibility — https://markets.financialcontent.com/pennwell.pennenergy/article/tokenring-2025-11-20-the-phantom-brief-ai-hallucinations-threaten-legal-integrity-and-professional-responsibility — (tier: 3/4, reference journalism)
- [S4] India's Supreme Court Proposes Landmark AI Framework for Courts — https://www.indialaw.in/blog/cyber-law/supreme-court-ai-framework-courts-india/ — (tier: 4, legal journalism)
- [S5] Supreme Court flags the risks of using AI for drafting petitions — The Hindu, 18 February 2026 (article excerpt provided as primary source) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-18/ — (tier: 4, Tier 4 primary source for this note)