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


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


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

Ethical / Governance

Scientific / Technological

Administrative

Social


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. 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]
  2. The fictitious case law cited before Justice Nagarathna's Bench was "Mercy vs. Mankind" — it does not exist in any Indian law reporter. [S5]
  3. The Supreme Court's Centre for Research and Planning released a White Paper on AI and the Judiciary in November 2025. [S2]
  4. 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]
  5. The Bombay High Court imposed costs of ₹50,000 for submitting AI-generated fake case laws — January 2026. [S2]
  6. The global landmark case on AI hallucination in legal filings is Mata v. Avianca (Southern District of New York, 2023). [S3]
  7. The term for a GenAI model confidently generating false information (e.g., non-existent judgments) is "hallucination". [S3]
  8. The EU AI Act (2024) classifies AI tools used in justice administration as high-risk AI systems. [S4]
  9. The Draft Regulations require lawyers to disclose the AI tool used, original sources, and human review process in every AI-assisted court filing. [S2]
  10. 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]
  11. Over 120 global cases of AI-generated legal hallucinations had been identified since mid-2023; 58 occurred in 2025 alone. [S3]
  12. The SC stated AI must NOT "overpower the justice administration process" — a direct articulation of the principle of human oversight in adjudication. [S5]
  13. 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:

  1. "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)

  2. "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)

  3. "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

  1. 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.

  2. 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.

  3. 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.

  4. 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.

  5. 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