New Delhi, Oct. 19 -- In a stark reminder of the chronic delays in enforcing court decrees, the Supreme Court has revealed that over 882,000 execution petitions remain pending across district courts in the country, lamenting that such staggering pendency makes the very purpose of a court decree meaningless and "a travesty of justice". A bench of justices JB Pardiwala and Pankaj Mithal, which is monitoring compliance of its March 6, 2025 directions to expedite execution proceedings, said the data received from all high courts paints a deeply worrying picture of systemic delay and indifference at the district judiciary level. "The statistics we have received are highly disappointing. The figures of pendency of the execution petitions across the country are alarming," observed the bench, noting that the total number of pending execution petitions stands at 882,578. An execution petition is a legal plea filed by a decree-holder seeking the court's help to enforce or implement a judgment -- for instance, to recover money, take possession of property, or compel compliance with a court order that has already been passed. According to data compiled from all high courts, the district judiciary in Maharashtra accounts for nearly 39% of the total pendency, with 341,000 execution petitions still awaiting disposal. It is followed by the Tamil Nadu (86,148 cases or roughly 10%), Kerala (82,997 cases, around 9%), Andhra Pradesh (68,137 cases, about 8%), and Madhya Pradesh (52,129 cases, about 6%). Together, these four high courts account for more than two-thirds of the total pendency in the country. Other high courts such as Delhi (30,788 cases), Telangana (29,868), and Rajasthan (22,449) also reported significant backlogs, underscoring a widespread problem of delay in enforcing decrees that have already been adjudicated. At the other end of the scale, smaller states reported minimal pendency -- Sikkim (61 cases), Meghalaya (60), and Manipur (556), representing less than 0.1% of the national total. The statistics underscore that the gap between decree and enforcement remains one of the weakest links in India's justice delivery system where even after a decree is won, the litigant may have to wait years, or decades, for actual enforcement....