Supreme People's Court(File photo)
Supreme People's Court May 1 guideline gets underway, and more than 1.13 million lawsuits have been accepted
Lawyer Lin Zhida could not believe that an administrative case he represented was filed within just seven days.
The speedier filing was the result of changes that took effect on May 1, when courts began to adopt simpler procedures under a reform aimed at removing unnecessary legal barriers.
"In the past, a court took about three months to file a straightforward administrative case. For complicated ones, it could take even longer," said Lin, who specializes in administrative disputes for the Zhongwen Law Firm in Beijing.
In April, the Supreme People's Court issued a guideline that required every court to accept appeals without hesitation and reply to litigants in a timely manner.
It was seen as a key step in enforcing judicial reforms raised by the country's leadership in October 2013.
Under the guideline, lawsuits should be accepted as soon as they are registered instead of waiting for a preliminary review to be completed in order to avoid courts refusing to accept lawsuits or ignoring appeals.
A court should decide whether to file a civil or administrative case within seven days and criminal ones within 15 days.
Since the guideline took effect, Chinese courts have registered more than 1.13 million cases, a 29 percent year-on-year increase, according to the Supreme People's Court.
"It has become easier to appeal to courts," said Deng Yong, a lawyer specializing in administrative cases at the Dacheng Law Firm in Beijing. "The filing procedures have been improved thanks to the reform."
Easier access to appeals
Lawyer Lin said justices looked at the procedures for filing lawsuits and how they related to the country's judicial image and credibility.
Before the reform, Lin had to go to a court frequently to find out whether his administrative cases had been accepted, "which always annoyed me", he said.
"But now, I can get at least two clear replies. If everything is OK, the court will accept my registration and the case will be filed immediately. If not, because of procedural shortcomings, the court will provide a document telling me what I should hand in next time," he said.
"The move marks huge progress because it makes the filing and following steps go smoothly."
Deng agreed with him, saying that the registration opens a court's door and shortens its distance from the public. He believes it is a key step for courts to get rid of interference from local government administrations.
"Litigants found it difficult filing a case because local government departments might block it in order to solve a dispute privately," he said.
"The interference made the court afraid to accept the case, and residents had to solve their problems through petition, which damaged the credibility of courts and was not good for alleviating social conflicts," he said.
Now litigants and their lawyers can at least be told whether their appeals are qualified instead of waiting for the review, he said.
He added that it gives confidence to the public that the law protects them and gives courts less of a cold image.
With the guideline in place, Shanghai courts accepted 65,971 cases after they were registered, according to a statistic from Shanghai High People's Court.
Ruan Chuansheng, a lawyer in the city, said it now only takes him 10 minutes to register and file a civil case whereas in the past a civil dispute might take six months.
"I was given a number when I arrived to file cases at a court and within 30 minutes I was called to hand in the materials," Ruan said. "The registration was fast and the court told me my civil case had been filed."
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