Calcutta High Court

Calcutta High Court
কলকাতা উচ্চ আদালত

Calcutta High Court Building
Established 1 July 1862
Country  India
Location Kolkata, West Bengal (Principal Seat)
Port Blair (circuit bench)
Coordinates 22°34′6″N 88°20′36″E / 22.56833°N 88.34333°E / 22.56833; 88.34333Coordinates: 22°34′6″N 88°20′36″E / 22.56833°N 88.34333°E / 22.56833; 88.34333
Composition method Presidential with confirmation of Chief Justice of India and Governor of respective state.
Authorized by Constitution of India
Decisions are appealed to Supreme Court of India
Judge term length Till 62 years of age
Number of positions 32
Website calcuttahighcourt.nic.in
Chief Justice
Currently Hon'ble Justice Mrs. Manjula Chellur
Since 6 August 2014

Calcutta High Court is the oldest High Court in India. It was established as the High Court of Judicature at Fort William on 1 July 1862 under the High Courts Act, 1861. It has jurisdiction over the state of West Bengal and the Union Territory of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. It was preceded by the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William. The High Court building's design is based on the Cloth Hall, Ypres, in Belgium.[1]

The court has a sanctioned judge strength of 63. Despite the name of the city having officially changed from Calcutta to Kolkata in 2001, the old name is retained by the court as it is an institution.

Principal seat and benches

The seat of the Calcutta High Court is at Kolkata, capital of West Bengal. As per the Calcutta High Court (Extension of Jurisdiction) Act, 1953, the Calcutta High Court's jurisdiction was extended to cover Chandernagore (now called Chandannagar) and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands as of 2 May 1950. The Calcutta High Court extended its Circuit Bench in Port Blair, the capital of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and in Jalpaiguri, the headquarters of the Jalpaiguri division of West Bengal.

Chief Justice

The current Chief Justice is Manjula Chellur.

Barnes Peacock was the first Chief Justice of the High Court. He assumed the charge when the court was founded on 1 July 1862. Romesh Chandra Mitter was the first Indian officiating Chief Justice and Phani Bhushan Chakravartti was the first Indian permanent Chief Justice of the court. The longest serving Chief Justice was Sankar Prasad Mitra.

On 20 September 1871 the acting Chief Justice, John Paxton Norman, was murdered on the steps of the courthouse by Wahabi Muslims. [2]

List of Chief Justices

For Chief Justices of the previous Supreme Court of Bengal see Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William

Chief Justice Term
Sir Barnes Peacock 18621870
Richard Couch 18701875
Richard Garth 18751886
William Comer Petheram 18861896
Francis William Maclean 18961909
George Claus Rankin 19261934
Harold Derbyshire 19341946
Arthur Trevor Harries 19461952
Phani Bhusan Chakravartti (First Indian Chief Justice in Calcutta High Court) 19521958
Kulada Charan Das Gupta 19581959
Surajit Chandra Lahiri 19591961
Himansu Kumar Bose 19611966
Deep Narayan Sinha 19661970
Prasanta Bihari Mukharji 19701972
Sankar Prasad Mitra 19721979
Amarendra Nath Sen 19791981
Sambhu Chandra Ghose 19811983
Samarendra Chandra Deb January 1983 February 1983
Satish Chandra 19831986
Anil Kumar Sen September 1986 October 1986
Chittatosh Mookerjee 1 November 1986 1 November 1987
Debi Singh Tewatia 1 November 1987 1988
Prabodh Dinkarrao Desai 19881991
Nagendra Prasad Singh 4 February 1992 14 June 1992
Anandamoy Bhattacharjee 19921994
Krishna Chandra Agarwal 19941996
V. N. Khare 2 February 1996 20 March 1997
Prabha Shankar Mishra 19971998
Ashok Kumar Mathur 22 December 1999 6 June 2004
V. S. Sirpurkar 20 March 2005 11 January 2007
Surinder Singh Nijjar 8 March 2007 16 November 2009
Mohit Shantilal Shah 20092010
Jainarayan Patel 20102012
Arun Kumar Mishra 20122014
Manjula Chellur 2014 till date

The building

The neo-Gothic High Court building was constructed in 1872, ten years after the establishment of the court itself. The design, by then government architect Walter Granville, was loosely modelled on the 13th-century Cloth Hall at Ypres, Belgium.[3]

Jurisdiction question

During 2010, over six decades after India's independence, a curious if swiftly quashed[4] legal debate questioned whether the court was still technically under the jurisdiction of the Queen of the United Kingdom rather than the Indian state.

References

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External links

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