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29 December 2023. The Jharkhand High Court is one of the newest high courts in India. It was established in 2000. The court has jurisdiction over Jharkhand state. The seat of the court is at Ranchi, the administrative capital of the state. The court has a sanctioned judge strength of 25. The new building of the Jharkhand High Court has been ...
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 20 May 2024, 340 of the seats, about 30% 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 ...
Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh High Court: Jammu and Kashmir, Ladakh: N. Kotiswar Singh: 15 February 2023 (1 year, 99 days) 28 February 2025 (−280 days) Droupadi Murmu: Jharkhand High Court: Jharkhand: Shree Chandrashekhar (Acting) 29 December 2023 (147 days) 24 May 2027 (−3 years, 0 days) Droupadi Murmu: Karnataka High Court: Karnataka
Born. ( 1965-07-07) 7 July 1965 (age 58) Alma mater. University of Delhi. Aparesh Kumar Singh (born 7 July 1965) is an Indian Judge. Presently, he is the Chief Justice of Tripura High Court. He was the Acting Chief Justice of Jharkhand High Court. [1] [2]
Raghubar Das. BJP. Elected Chief Minister. Hemant Soren. JMM. Legislative Assembly elections were held in Jharkhand, India, from 30 November to 20 December 2019 to elect the 81 members of the 5th Jharkhand Legislative Assembly. Results were declared on 23 December 2019. The pre-election term of the Assembly was set to end on 27 December 2019.
Vishaka and Ors. v. State of Rajasthan was a 1997 Indian Supreme Court case where various women's groups led by Naina Kapur and her organisation, Sakshi filed Public Interest Litigation (PIL) against the state of Rajasthan and the central Government of India to enforce the fundamental rights of working women under Articles 14, 19 and 21 of the Constitution of India.
Arnesh Kumar Guidelines. Arnesh Kumar Guidelines or Arnesh Kumar vs State of Bihar (2014) is a landmark judgement of the Indian Supreme Court, [1] [2] stating arrests should be an exception, in cases where the punishment is less than seven years of imprisonment. [3] The guidelines asked the police to determine whether an arrest was necessary ...
On 8 January 2018, the case (Navtej Singh Johar and others v. Union of India) was listed to be heard by the Chief Justice's bench, which passed an order stating that the case would be heard by a constitution bench. The matter was heard from 17 January 2018 by a five-judge constitution bench of the Supreme Court.