Home / Crime and Justice / Courts Get New Names: 'Subordinate' Out, 'District' In
Courts Get New Names: 'Subordinate' Out, 'District' In
15 Jan
Summary
- Courts below High Court now officially 'district courts' or 'trial courts'.
- Previous terms like 'subordinate judge' or 'lower courts' are now prohibited.
- Supreme Court pushed for nomenclature changes in recent years.

The Punjab and Haryana High Court has mandated a significant change in judicial nomenclature across Punjab, Haryana, and Chandigarh. All courts below the High Court level are now to be officially designated as 'district courts,' 'district judiciary,' or 'trial courts.' This directive explicitly forbids the use of terms like 'subordinate judge,' 'subordinate courts,' or 'lower courts' in official correspondence and judicial functioning, unless absolutely necessary.
This shift follows recent pronouncements by the Supreme Court, which has advocated for more appropriate terminology. In February 2026, a Supreme Court bench urged its own registry to cease referring to trial courts as 'lower courts.' Previously, in May 2025, the apex court indicated it would no longer use the term 'subordinate judiciary' for district courts, emphasizing their crucial constitutional role and calling 'subordinate' a misnomer.
Similar directives have been issued by other high courts, including the Karnataka High Court in 2020. While Article 235 of the Constitution grants High Courts administrative control over 'subordinate courts,' the Supreme Court has clarified that this authority does not imply inferiority. The new terminology aims to better represent the independent stature of these vital judicial bodies.




