In the matter of Pooja Ramesh Singh vs. Jammu and Kashmir Bank Ltd. & Anr. (2026 INSC 668), the Supreme Court of India set aside the judgments of the National Company Law Tribunal (NCLT) and the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal (NCLAT) because they relied upon “fake and hallucinated” legal precedents generated through Artificial Intelligence (AI). The Court declared a “zero-tolerance” policy regarding the use of unverified AI-generated material in judicial proceedings, emphasizing that any decision based on such material is unsustainable and violates the sanctity of the adjudicatory process.
Background and Legal Issue
- Case Origin: The appellant, a suspended director of a corporate guarantor, challenged an NCLT order that initiated a corporate insolvency resolution process against the corporate debtor due to financial defaults.
- The Dispute: During the appeal, it was revealed that the NCLT had relied on several judicial precedents that were either non-existent or contained fabricated paragraphs likely generated by AI. The NCLAT failed to identify these inaccuracies and confirmed the NCLT’s decision.
- AI Oversight: An independent examination by the Supreme Court confirmed that six specific judgments cited in the NCLT’s decision were either entirely non-existent or contained fake, AI-hallucinated content attributed to genuine cases.
Court’s Analysis
- Integrity of Adjudication: The Court highlighted the dangers of delegating judicial reasoning to AI, noting that “hallucinated” material acts like a “catastrophic” pollutant in the justice system.
- Zero Tolerance: The Court mandated that courts and tribunals must adopt a zero-tolerance approach toward citing or relying on AI-generated precedents without rigorous verification. It clarified that such reliance constitutes a serious lapse, and any decision tainted by even an “iota” of such material must be set aside.
- Accountability: The Court directed the Bar Council of India to constitute a committee to deliberate on the submission of fake precedents by advocates and to prescribe strict guiding principles and disciplinary actions.
- Human-in-the-Loop: While acknowledging the utility of AI, the Court asserted that human oversight is essential at every stage of adjudication to ensure truth and justice.
Final Order
- Judgment Set Aside: The Court set aside the impugned orders dated August 28, 2024 (NCLT) and September 11, 2025 (NCLAT).
- Remand and Expedited Disposal: The Section 7 insolvency application was restored to its original number, and the NCLT was directed to dispose of the matter on its merits expeditiously, preferably within two weeks.
Status Quo: The parties were directed to maintain the status quo pending the fresh disposal of the application.
2026 INSC 668
Pooja Ramesh Singh vs. Jammu and Kashmir Bank Ltd. & Anr (D.O.J. 02.07.2026)



