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The Madhya Pradesh High Court is the High Court of the state of Madhya Pradesh which is located in Jabalpur. It was established as the Nagpur High Court on 2 January 1936 by Letters Patent dated 2 January 1936, issued under Section 108 the Government of India Act, 1935. This Letters Patent continued in force even after the adoption of the ...
Madhya Pradesh High Court Bench at Indore is a permanent bench of Madhya Pradesh High Court in Indore. Hon’ble the Chief Justice, vide order dated 1 November 1956 constituted temporary benches of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Indore and Gwalior. Later, by a Presidential Notification Dated 28 November 1968, issued in the exercise of the ...
Madhya Pradesh High Court [12] 2 January 1936: Government of India Act 1935: Madhya Pradesh: Jabalpur: Gwalior, [A] Indore [A] 53 39 14 Sheel Nagu (Acting) 15 Madras High Court: 26 June 1862: Indian High Courts Act 1861: Tamil Nadu, Puducherry: Chennai: Madurai [A] 75 56 19 R. Mahadevan (Acting) 16 Manipur High Court: 25 March 2013
[28] [29] Above the gram panchayat is the District Court for Gwalior district sits Lashkar. Above that, the Madhya Pradesh High Court has its main seat in Jabalpur, but also a permanent bench in Gwalior city. The final court of appeal is the Supreme Court of India. [30]
There are 25 High courts in India. The number of total judges sanctioned in these high courts are 1114 of which 840 judges are permanent and remaining 274 sanctioned for additional judges. As of 10 December 2024, 360 of the seats, about 32.3% are vacant. Allahabad High Court, has the largest number (160) of judges while Sikkim High Court has the smallest number (3) of judges. The lists of high ...
Madhya Pradesh High Court: Madhya Pradesh: Suresh Kumar Kait: 25 September 2024 (94 days) 23 May 2025 (−146 days) 240 days Delhi: Madras High Court: Puducherry, Tamil Nadu: Kalpathi Rajendran Shriram: 27 September 2024 (92 days) 27 September 2025 (−273 days) 1 year, 0 days Bombay: Manipur High Court: Manipur: D. Krishnakumar: 22 November ...
Madhya Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2000: The new state of Chhattisgarh was created from the eastern parts of Madhya Pradesh. [22] There were 320 assembly constituencies in undivided Madhya Pradesh. After the split, 230 of them composed the reduced legislative assembly of the state. 230 34 41 2003 [23] 2007 Delimitation Commission Order, 2007 [24]
He then obtained a degree in law. He practised from 1978 to October 1999 in constitutional, civil, industrial, criminal and service matters in the bench of High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Gwalior. He worked as a part-time lecturer in law from 1986 to 1993 and was a member of the faculty of law of Jiwaji University, Gwalior from 1991 to 1996.