Supreme court's plan to start a physical hearing of cases on a trial basis from this week is not getting support from lawyers. Only 0.87% of advocates agreed to appear in person to argue cases. Supreme Court Bar Association president Dushyant Dave and Supreme Court Advocates-on-Record Association president Shivaji Jadav had strongly urged, either during the virtual hearing of cases or in their meeting with the committee of seven judges, starting physical hearing in the apex court. The Supreme Court has been adjudicating cases since March 25 through video-conferencing. The court registry displayed a list of 517 regular cases and 170 miscellaneous petitions and sought consent from counsel engaged by litigants for physical hearing. “Only in six of the total 687 cases, lawyers from both sides have consented for physical hearing,” a registry source said.