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The High Court is composed of the Chief Justice of Karnataka and other judges, who are appointed by the President of India. [1] As of February 2022, there are 45 judges in the High Court, [2] out of a sanctioned maximum strength of 62. [3] Nilay Vipinchandra Anjaria has been the Chief Justice since 25 February 2024.
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.
Sub-Judge / Civil Judge (Senior Division) Joint / Deputy Registrar at High Court; Joint Secretary / Law Officer to State; Deputy / Special Registrar at Supreme Court; Deputy Secretary / OSD to Government of India [45] ₹ 111,000 (US$1,300) - ₹ 194,660 (US$2,200) [46] 8 Judicial Magistrate 1st Class / Metropolitan Magistrate (in Metropolitan ...
The Karnataka Public Service Commission is a government body in the state of Karnataka, India, responsible for recruiting candidates for various state government jobs through competitive examinations.
Year of examination Year of joining Year of resignation/ disqualification Rank Final posting Satyendranath Tagore: 1863 1864 Judge, Satara, First Indian ever, who qualified as well as served Imperial Civil Service. [1] Romesh Dutt: 1869 1871 Officiating Commissioner of Orissa; later Dewan, Baroda: Behari Lal Gupta: 1869 1871
From 30 May 2023 - 24 September 2024 (1 year, 118 days) Nilay Vipinchandra Anjaria: Karnataka HC : 25 February 2024 (1 year, 9 days) 22 March 2027 (−2 years, 16 days) 3 years, 26 days Gujarat: 21 November 2011 (13 years, 105 days) 16 Since 16 January 2025: Nitin Madhukar Jamdar: Kerala HC (Kerala, Lakshadweep) 26 September 2024 (161 days)
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]
K. S. Puttaswamy (8 February 1926 – 28 October 2024) was an Indian judge of the Karnataka High Court who was also the original petitioner, challenging the Government of India over making Aadhaar mandatory. [1] He had filed a writ petition in 2012 and over the last five years, 26 other petitions have been tagged along with his, challenging the ...