High court in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu
The High Court of Judicature at Madras is a High Court located in Chennai, India. It has appellate jurisdiction over the state of Tamil Nadu and the union territory of Puducherry. It is one of the oldest high courts of India along with Calcutta High Court in Kolkata[1][2][3] and Bombay High Court in Mumbai. The Madras High Court is one of four charter high courts of colonial India established in the four Presidency Towns of Madras, Bombay, Allahabad and Calcutta by letters patent granted by Queen Victoria, dated 26 June 1862. It exercises original jurisdiction over the city of Chennai, as well as extraordinary original jurisdiction, civil and criminal, under the letters patent and special original jurisdiction for the issue of writs under the Constitution of India.[4][5] Covering 107 acres, the court complex is one of the largest in the world, second only to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. The four-storey administrative building serves hundreds of litigants every day.
The High Court consists of the Chief Justice and 74 other judges.[5][6]
From 1817 to 1862, the Supreme Court of Madras was opposite the Chennai Beach railway station. From 1862 to 1892, the High Court was also housed there. The present buildings were officially inaugurated on 12 July 1892, when the then Madras Governor, Beilby, Baron Wenlock, handed over the key to then Chief Justice Sir Arthur Collins.[7]
The statue of Manuneedhi Cholan in the Madras High Court premisesBritish India's three presidency towns of Madras (Chennai), Bombay (Mumbai), and Calcutta (Kolkata) were each granted a High Court by letters patent dated 26 June 1862.[8] The letters patent were issued by Queen Victoria under the authority of the British parliament's Indian High Courts Act 1861. The three courts are unique, established under British royal charter in contrast with the other high courts, which were established under the Indian Constitution. The Constitution of India recognises the older courts.
The Madras High Court was formed by merging the Supreme Court of Judicature at Madras, and the Sadr Diwani Adalat. The Court was required to decide cases in accordance with justice, equity and good conscience. The earliest judges included Holloway, Innes, and Morgan. The first Indian to sit on the High Court was Justice T. Muthuswamy Iyer. Other early Indian judges included Justices V. Krishnaswamy Iyer and P. R. Sundaram Iyer.
The Madras High Court was a pioneer in Original Side jurisdiction reform in favor of Indian practitioners as early as the 1870s.
The history means that the decisions of the British Judicial Committee of the Privy Council are still binding on it, provided that the ratio of a case has not been overruled by the Supreme Court of India.
Although the city was renamed from Madras to Chennai in 1996, the Court continued as the Madras High Court. The Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly passed a unanimous resolution appealing to the Central Government to rename the court as High Court of Tamil Nadu since the Court serves the whole state.[9]
Madras High Court, ChennaiThe High Court complex is located in the southern end of George Town. The building was constructed after relocating temples on the land. The building now used exclusively by the High Court was built to also house the Courts of Small Causes and the City Civil Court. These were subsequently shifted to other buildings on the campus.[10]
The High Court building is an example of Indo-Saracenic architecture. Construction began in October 1888 and was completed in 1892 following the design prepared by J. W. Brassington,[10] and later under the guidance of architect Henry Irwin,[11] who completed it with the assistance of J. H. Stephens.
Brassington initially prepared a plan to construct a building with 11 court halls at an estimate of ₹945,000. Six were meant for the High Court, four for the Small Causes Court, and one for the City Civil Court. An additional building to house lawyers’ chambers was added to the plan, with a first floor walkway to connect it to the main building, increasing the budget to ₹1,298,163. Complementing a 125-feet-tall standalone lighthouse that was already on the site, a dioptric light was built on the 142-feet-high main tower of the building, raising the tower's height to 175 feet.[10]
Save for the steel girders and some ornamental tiles, almost all the material for the construction was procured locally. Brick and terracotta were brought from government brickyards. Most of the construction was executed by local artisans trained at the School of Arts.[10]
The High Court building was damaged in the shelling of Madras by SMS Emden on 22 September 1914, at the beginning of the First World War. It remains one of the few Indian buildings to have been damaged by a German attack.
The building offers several points of architectural interest. The painted ceilings and the stained glass doors are masterpieces. The old lighthouse is housed within the High Court campus but is poorly maintained and in disrepair.
The boundaries of the complex are marked by Prakasam Road (formerly Broadway) and Rajaji Road (the old North Beach Road), stretching northward from the statue of Rajaji in the northeast and the statue of T. Prakasamgaru in the southwest within the complex. The complex houses the largest number of courts in Asia.[12]
Panoramic view of the High Court and its surroundingsThe city civil and sessions courts, which are located inside the High Court campus, are in two blocks, namely, the main and annexe buildings. Some of the city civil courts are located at Additional City Civil Court Complex at Allikulam Commercial Complex in Park Town and M. Singaravelar Maligai in George Town. The District and Session Court for Exclusive Trial of Bomb Blast Cases is located at Karayanchavadi in the neighbourhood of Poonamallee, and the Commercial Court is located in the neighbourhood of Egmore.[13]
The current Chief Justice of the Madras High Court is K. R. Shriram. The court houses 63 judges, including the Chief Justice. They exercise civil, criminal, writ, testamentary and admiralty jurisdiction.[14] The Madurai Bench began functioning in 2004.
The vestiges of the colonial High Court characterise the premises. Justices of the Madras High Court are led by orderlies who bear a ceremonial mace made of silver. Most High Courts and the Supreme Court of India either never had the practice or abandoned it.[15]
Madras Law Journal[edit]The Madras High Court is the birthplace of organised legal reporting in India. It is home to the Madras Law Journal,[16] which was the first journal dedicated to reporting texts of judgments of the High Court. It started in 1891.
The High Courts, c. 1905The Saturday Club met every week. It was started at the house of the Vakil Bar's senior member Sir S. Subramania Iyer in Mylapore in 1888. All leading members of the Madras Bar took part. At one meeting, it was decided to start The Madras Law Journal, which was inspired by other newly established periodicals such as Law Quarterly Review, started by Sir Frederick Pollock in England in 1885 and The Harvard Law Review established by Harvard Law School Association in 1887.
The objectives of the journal were laid out in the preface of the first issue:
In addition to giving our own reports of the decisions of the High Courts in Madras and other places, we hope to place before our readers translations of various Hindu Law Books which remain yet untranslated, insofar as they have bearing on questions which practically arise for decision every day in our Courts of Justice. We propose further from time to time, to place side by side the conflicting decisions of the various Courts in India on the same point in the hope that such procedure will enable the Courts to act in greater harmony than they do at present in the interpretation of Acts and enunciation of general principles of law and when this is not possible, to enable the Legislature to bring about such harmony by removing the ambiguities which may have given rise to such discordant views.
The Madras Law Journal is known for its quickness and reporting accuracy and its discriminating selection of cases to be reported. It occupies a premier place among Indian legal periodicals.
Madras Weekly Notes (criminal and civil)[edit]Madras Weekly Notes is a law journal reporting criminal judgements of the Madras High Court from 1910 to till date.
Citations are formatted as, e.g., "1929 1 MWN(Cr.) 1", where (left to right) 1929 is the year, 1 is the volume, "MWN(Cr.)" is the abbreviated journal name, and "1" is the page number.
Journals that record cases include Current Tamil Nadu Cases, Current Writ Cases, and Tamil Nadu Motor Accident Cases.
Established in 2004, the Madurai bench of the Madras High Court handles cases in the fourteen southern districts of Tamil Nadu, as the court is located in the far-northern capital. The bench is located in Madurai, and has the Kanyakumari, Tirunelveli, Thoothukudi, Tenkasi, Madurai, Dindigul, Ramanathapuram, Virudhunagar, Theni, Sivaganga, Pudukottai, Thanjavur, Tiruchirappalli and Karur districts under its jurisdiction.
The court complex has 12 court halls, and now increased upto 25 halls furnished on the model of the court halls in the Supreme Court, the Delhi and the Madras High Court.
The court, since its inauguration on 24 July 2004, has accelerated the legal process in the southern districts.[17]
List of chief justices[edit] Watercolour "Holy men outside Sir Thomas Strange house." In 1800, Strange became the first Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Fort St. George (Madras), British India. High Court (British Administration)[edit] High Court (Indian Administration)[edit]The Madras High Court sits at Chennai and has jurisdiction over the state of Tamil Nadu. It is permitted to have a maximum of 75 judges, of which 56 may be permanently appointed and 19 may be additionally appointed. Currently, it has 66 judges.[20]
# Judge Date of joining Date of retirement 1 K. R. Shriram (CJ) 21 June 2013 27 September 2025 2 S. S. Sundar 7 April 2016 2 May 2025 3 R. Subramanian 5 October 2016 24 July 2025 4 M. Sundar 5 October 2016 18 July 2028 5 R. Suresh Kumar 5 October 2016 28 May 2026 6 J. Nisha Banu 5 October 2016 17 September 2028 7 M. S. Ramesh 5 October 2016 27 December 2025 8 S. M. Subramaniam 5 October 2016 30 May 2027 9 Dr. Anita Sumanth 5 October 2016 14 April 2032 10 P. Velmurugan 5 October 2016 8 June 2027 11 Dr. G. Jayachandran 5 October 2016 31 March 2027 12 C. V. Karthikeyan 5 October 2016 13 December 2026 13 R. M. T. Teeka Raman 16 November 2016 8 June 2025 14 N. Sathish Kumar 16 November 2016 5 May 2029 15 N. Seshasayee 16 November 2016 7 January 2025 16 V. Bhavani Subbaroyan 28 June 2017 16 May 2025 17 A. D. Jagadish Chandira 28 June 2017 14 February 2028 18 G. R. Swaminathan 28 June 2017 31 May 2030 19 Abdul Quddhose 28 June 2017 7 September 2031 20 M. Dhandapani 28 June 2017 14 April 2030 21 Pondicherry Daivasigamani Audikesavalu 28 June 2017 29 December 2032 22 Vivek Kumar Singh 22 September 2017 24 March 2030 23 R. Hemalatha 1 December 2017 30 April 2025 24 P. T. Asha 4 June 2018 21 August 2028 25 N. Nirmal Kumar 4 June 2018 22 November 2027 26 N. Anand Venkatesh 4 June 2018 3 July 2031 27 G. K. Ilanthiraiyan 4 June 2018 8 July 2032 28 Krishnan Ramasmy 4 June 2018 2 June 2030 29 C. Saravanan 4 June 2018 30 November 2033 30 B. Pugalendhi 20 November 2018 24 May 2029 31 Senthilkumar Ramamoorthy 22 February 2019 1 October 2028 32 Shamim Ahmed 12 December 2019 7 March 2028 33 Battu Devanand 13 January 2020 13 April 2028 34 A. A. Nakkiran 3 December 2020 9 May 2025 35 Veerasamy Sivagnanam 3 December 2020 31 May 2025 36 Ilangovan Ganesan 3 December 2020 4 June 2025 37 Sathi Kumar Sukumara Kurup 3 December 2020 17 July 2025 38 Murali Shankar Kuppuraju 3 December 2020 30 May 2030 39 Manjula Ramaraju Nalliah 3 December 2020 15 February 2026 40 Thamilselvi T. Valayapalayam 3 December 2020 18 June 2030 41 Sundaram Srimathy 20 October 2021 9 January 2029 42 D. Bharatha Chakravarthy 20 October 2021 23 July 2033 43 R. Vijayakumar 20 October 2021 21 December 2032 44 Mohammed Shaffiq 20 October 2021 5 March 2034 45 J. Sathya Narayana Prasad 29 October 2021 14 March 2031 46 Mummineni Sudheer Kumar 24 March 2022 19 May 2031 47 Nidumolu Mala 28 March 2022 23 April 2029 48 S. Sounthar 28 March 2022 28 July 2033 49 Sunder Mohan 6 June 2022 1 November 2031 50 Kabali Kumaresh Babu 6 June 2022 13 December 2031 51 Lekshmana Chandra Victoria Gowri 7 February 2023 20 May 2035 52 Pillaipakkam Bahukutumbi Balaji 7 February 2023 10 April 2035 53 Kandhasami Kulandaivelu Ramakrishnan 7 February 2023 26 May 2035 54 Ramachandran Kalaimathi 7 February 2023 17 April 2030 55 K. Govindarajan Thilakavadi 7 February 2023 25 April 2028 # Judge Date of joining 1 Venkatachari Lakshminarayanan 27 February 2023 2 Periyasamy Vadamalai 27 March 2023 3 Ramasamy Sakthivel 23 May 2023 4 P. Dhanabal 23 May 2023 5 Chinnasamy Kumarappan 23 May 2023 6 Kandasamy Rajasekar 23 May 2023 7 N. Senthilkumar 16 October 2023 8 G. Arul Murugan 16 October 2023 9 R. Poornima 24 September 2024 10 M. Jothiraman 24 September 2024 11 Augustine Devadoss 24 September 2024 VacantMedia related to Madras High Court at Wikimedia Commons
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