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The Telangana High Court is the High Court for the Indian state of Telangana.Founded by the 7th Nizam of Hyderabad Mir Osman Ali Khan, [1] initially, it was set up as High Court of Hyderabad for the then princely state of Hyderabad Deccan and later renamed High Court of Andhra Pradesh, as it was set up on 5 November 1956 under the States Reorganisation Act, 1956.
Telangana Lok Adalat or Telangana State Legal Services Authority (People's Court) is a statutory and autonomous body formed under Legal Services Authorities Act, 1987 as an alternative dispute resolution mechanism used in the state of Telangana, as per Constitution of India.
Thus cases built up during this interim period are judged when the circuit court is in session. According to a study conducted by Bangalore-based N.G.O, Daksh, on 21 high courts in collaboration with the Ministry of Law and Justice in March 2015, it was found that average pendency of a case in high courts in India is 3 years. [3]
1.9 Himachal Pradesh (11) 1.10 Jharkhand (24) ... Telangana (12) Adilabad; Hyderabad- City Civil Court ... Hyderabad- City Civil Court; Hyderabad- City Small Cause ...
Thereafter the High Court started functioning from the then capital city of state, Hyderabad. However, post bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh, as per the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014, the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad was constituted as a common High Court, until the new High Court for the State of Andhra Pradesh is created ...
Mamidanna Satyaratna Ramachandra Rao (born 7 August 1966) is an Indian Judge. Presently, he is the Chief Justice of Jharkhand High Court. [1] He was a former Chief Justice of Himachal Pradesh High Court andJudge of Punjab and Haryana High Court and Telangana High Court.
The 2008 Gram Nyayalayas Act had foreseen 5,000 mobile courts in the country for judging petty civil (property cases) and criminal (up to 2 years of prison) cases. [16] However, the Act was not enforced, with only 151 functional Gram Nyayalayas in the country (as of May 2012) against a target of 5000. [ 31 ]
There are 25 High courts in India. The number of total judges sanctioned in these high courts are 1122 of which 846 judges are permanent and remaining 276 sanctioned for additional judges. As of 1 March 2025, 359 of the seats, about 32% 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 court ...