High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad

High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the States of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh
హైదరాబాద్ హైకోర్టు
حیدرآباد عدالت عاليہ

High Court Building
Established 1956
Country India
Location Hyderabad, Telangana
Coordinates 17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039Coordinates: 17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039
Composition method Executive selection subject to qualification
Authorized by Constitution of India & state re-organaitaion act 1956
Decisions are appealed to Supreme Court of India
Judge term length mandatory retirement by age of 62
Number of positions 49
Website hc.ap.nic.in
Chief Justice of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana
Currently Hon'ble Justice Ramesh Ranganathan
Since 7 May 2015

The High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad for the States of Telangana and Andhra Pradesh is the common High Court of the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Telangana. High Court of Andhra Pradesh, as it was known earlier, was set up on 5 November 1956 under the State Reorganization Act 1956. The Andhra Pradesh High Court was renamed as High court of Hyderabad in view of bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh state. From 2 June 2014, after the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014 came into force, it has been renamed and serves as a common high court for both the states. A separate high court has to be established for Andhra Pradesh. After a separate High Court for Andhra Pradesh is established, High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad shall remain the High Court for Telangana state.[1]

The seat of the high court is in the administrative capital, Hyderabad and has a sanctioned judge strength of 49.

History of the judiciary

The State of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 by the separation of merger of the Andhra State which was formed in year 1953 from erstwhile Madras state and the Telangana area of the Hyderabad State which was acceded by Government of India on 17 September 1948 from the Nizam's rule.

History of High Court building

High Court building

The High Court stands on the south bank of the River Musi. This is one of the finest buildings in the city, built in red and white stones in Saracenic style, by Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan the ruler of the princely state of Hyderabad

The plan of the High Court was drawn up by Shankar Lal of Jaipur and the local engineer who executed the design was Mehar Ali Fazil. The construction started on 15 April 1915 and was completed on 31 March 1919. On 20 April 1920 the High Court building was inaugurated by Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan.

While digging the foundation for the High Court, ruins of the Qutb Shahi Palaces, namely Hina Mahal and Nadi Mahal were unearthed. The High Court looks beautiful and impressive from the Naya Pul Bridge at sunset.

After its construction, a silver model of the High Court with a silver key was presented to the Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan by the Judiciary during the Silver Jubilee Celebrations in 1936. The facsimile of the buildings was perfectly carved in a thick sheet of silver weighing about 300 kg. The model is now in the Nizam's Museum in Purani Haveli.

The main building of the High Court was constructed in the year 1919 by the then Nizam’s Government accommodating Six Judges besides accommodation for the Office Staff, record rooms and Advocates’ Hall.

After the formation of Andhra Pradesh

When the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 as a consequence of States Reorganisation Act, the Judges strength was increased to 12. The existing accommodation at that time was only inadequate to meet the requirements of the larger High Court and so the additional building was constructed in 1958-59. The entire office rooms, record rooms, chambers of advocates (42 in all) and the rooms for law officers were located in this building. The record rooms, Officer rooms in the main building were modified to provide chambers and Court Hall accommodation for 14 Judges.

Construction of Annexe

The main gate of high court, Hyderabad

By 1970, the institution of cases of the High Court has gone up to 35,000 as against 20,000 in 1958. The Judges strength had also risen from 14 to 21. To provide additional accommodation for Judges, Staff and Advocates and Law Officers, the third building was proposed and the work was completed in 1976. The Law Officers strength was increased from 8 to 18 by 1980 and the institution of cases had gone up to 55,593 cases. In 1979 a plan was drawn for the four storey Annexe building and due to lack of funds that could not be taken up. There are at present 20 Court Halls and 24 Chambers located in the High Court main building and Annexe buildings. The present building for which the foundation stone is being laid by the Hon’ble the Chief Justice will have 8 Court Halls and 8 Chamber for the Judges. Some of the Court Halls located in the Varandahs and in the Office rooms will be restored to their original position. The institution of cases had risen from 20,078 in 1958 to 1982,123 including miscellaneous cases in 1985. Now the pendency of cases in High Court as on 24 July 1987 are 84,855 (i.e., 66,276 main cases + 18,579 miscellaneous cases). The Government of India is contemplating to rise the strength of the Judges of this High Court to 36 and in such case, more funds have to be released for the construction of Annexe buildings. After the completion of this building, the main building and Annexes buildings can locate 24 Court Halls and 26 Chambers.

2009 Major fire

On 31 August 2009 a major accidental fire broke out through the building reportedly causing severe damage to the library housing rare England law reports, Privy Council journals and a lifesize portrait of the Nizam and portraits of judges. However the records of the court are reportedly safe. The structural integrity of the building also may have been compromised.[2][3] but the library was fully damaged

Chief Justices

  1. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Nawab Alam yar jung Bahadur
  2. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Koka Subba Rao (1956–1958)
  3. Hon'ble The Chief Justice P. Chandra Reddy (1958–1964)
  4. Hon'ble The Chief Justice P. Satyanarayana Raju (1964–1965)
  5. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Manohar Pershad (1965–1966)
  6. Hon'ble The Chief Justice N. D. Krishna Rao (1966–1966)
  7. Hon'ble The Chief Justice P. Jagan Mohan Reddy (1966–1969)
  8. Hon'ble The Chief Justice N. Kumarayya (1969–1971)
  9. Hon'ble The Chief Justice K.V.L.Narasimham (1971–1972)
  10. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Gopal Rao Ekbote (1972–1974)
  11. Hon'ble The Chief Justice S. Obul Reddi (1974–1976) & (1977–1978)
  12. Hon'ble The Chief Justice B.J.Divan (1976–1977)
  13. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Avula Sambasiva Rao (1978–1979)
  14. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Challa Kondaiah (1979–1980)
  15. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Alladi Kuppu Swami (1980–1982)
  16. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Konda Madhava Reddy (1982–1984)
  17. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Koka Ramachandra Rao (1984–1984)
  18. Hon'ble The Chief Justice P.Chennakesav Reddi (1985–1985)
  19. Hon'ble The Chief Justice K.Bhaskaran (1985–1988)
  20. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Yogeshwar Dayal (1988–1991)
  21. Hon'ble The Chief Justice S.C.Pratap (1991–1992)
  22. Hon'ble The Chief Justice S.B.Majumdar (1992–1993)
  23. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Sundaram Nainar Sundaram (1993–1994)
  24. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Saiyed Sagir Ahmed (1994–1995)
  25. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Prabha Shankar Mishra (1995–1997)
  26. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Umesh Chandra Banerjee (1998)
  27. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Manmohan Singh Liberhan (1998–2000)
  28. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Satyabrata Sinha (2000–2001)
  29. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Dr A.R.Lakshmanan (2001–2002)
  30. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Devinder Gupta (2003–2005)
  31. Hon'ble The Chief Justice G.S. Singhvi (2005–2007)
  32. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Anil Ramesh Dave (2007–2010)
  33. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Nisar Ahmad Kakru (2010–2011)
  34. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Madan Lokur (2011-2012)
  35. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Pinaki Chandra Ghose (2012-2013)
  36. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta (2013-2015 )
  37. Hon'ble The Chief Justice Dileep Babasaheb Bhosale (2015)

Current Judges of the Court

Current Chief Justice and Justices of the High Court

( Additional Judges

Registrars of High Court

  1. Registrar General.
  2. Registrar (Judicial)
  3. Registrar (Administration)
  4. Registrar (Vigilance)
  5. Registrar (Management)
  6. Registrar (Protocol)
  7. District Judge (Enquiries)
  8. Registrar (Recruitment)
  9. Central Project Coordinator (IT & E-Committee related)

See

References

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