The Madras High Court has decided to use Artificial Intelligence (AI) to save time in a commercial dispute involving Chennai Metro Rail Limited and Mumbai-based Gammon-OJSC Mosmetrostory JV. Justice N. Anand Venkatesh approved use of the AI algorithm called Superlaw Courts after seeing a demo and consulting lawyers from both sides. Superlaw Courts is designed to help lawyers find and organise information only from documents given in the case. It does not replace legal judgment or court decisions. The system does not use outside information or draw conclusions. It works like a digital record room, converting scanned papers into searchable text using Optical Character Recognition. It organises records by grouping similar material and breaking them into meaningful parts called chunks. These chunks help the system quickly find relevant information when asked a question. The AI only rephrases or summarises clear excerpts from the documents, without adding or assuming anything new. If no information supports a query, the system says so. Justice Venkatesh said, "Superlaw Courts operates under controls analogous to those expected in court proceedings." Counsel for both parties agreed to use the AI, which will assist until a draft court order is prepared. This draft will include case facts, arguments, evidence, and arbitral findings. After that, AI use will end. The court will review progress on February 12, 2026. This is the first time AI is used for court assistance in India.