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The High Court's principal bench is located in Bengaluru, in a building called the Attara Kacheri. It is a two-storry building made of stone and brick, painted red, in the neoclassical style of architecture. The building was constructed between 1864 and 1868 [9] and is located in Bengaluru's Cubbon Park. Karnataka High Court Plaque
The Calcutta High Court is the oldest high court in the country, brought into existence on 14 May 1862. [2] High courts that handle numerous cases of a particular region have permanent benches established there. Benches are also present in states which come under the jurisdiction of a court outside its territorial limits.
Anu Sivaraman (born 25 May 1966) is the judge of Karnataka High Court. Sivaraman was initially appointed as an additional judge of the Kerala High Court in April 2015, and was made a permanent judge in April 2017. Sivaraman, by a communication to supreme court dated 16 October 2023 sought a transfer out of the State of Kerala. [1] [2] [3]
He enrolled as an advocate in 1985. He was appointed as an additional judge of the Bombay High Court on 18 July 2008, and made permanent on 15 July 2011. He was elevated to chief justice of the Karnataka High Court on 15 October 2022. He was elevated as a judge of the Supreme Court of India on 25 January 2024.
Attara Kacheri (Kannada pronunciation: [ˌʌˈtɑːrɑː kəˈtʃeːrɪ] ⓘ, formerly the Old Public Offices Building) in Bangalore, India, is the seat of the principal bench of the Karnataka High Court, the highest judicial authority in the state of Karnataka.
2. In December 2020, Karnataka Lok Adalat and Karnataka High Court jointly by resolving 2,61,882 in a single day through mega Lok Adalat, created a record. [13] 3. In August 2021, Karnataka Lok Adalat, through Mega Lok Adalat settled 3,244 cases in Udupi district and 5,235 cases in Dakshina Kannada. [14]
Karnataka Sexual Minorities Forum versus State of Karnataka & Ors. (2017), a case of the Karnataka High Court, which resulted in an amendment of Section 36A of the Karnataka Police Act, which categorized the intersex, non-binary gender and transgender individuals as predisposed to criminal activity.
Kumar became Additional Judge of Karnataka High Court on 2 January 2015 [5] and was made a permanent judge on 30 December 2016. In 1990, he started his legal practice in the High Court of Karnataka. In 1998, he became an Additional Central Government Standing Counsel and in 2003, he was elevated as Senior Standing Counsel. [1]