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Delhi High Court
High Court for NCT of Delhi

The High Court of Delhi is the high court in Delhi, India. It was established on 31 October 1966, through the Delhi High Court Act, 1966. Below it are 11 Subordinate Courts that oversee smaller judicial districts. The court gets its powers from Chapter V in Part VI of the Constitution of India.

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History

Established in 1919, the High Court of Judicature at Lahore exercised jurisdiction over the then provinces of Punjab and Delhi. This continued until the Indian Independence Act 1947, establishing the dominions of India and Pakistan.

On 15 August 1947 the High Courts (Punjab) Order, 1947 established a new High Court for the territory of what was then East Punjab. The India (Adaptation of Existing Indian Laws) Order, 1947 provided that any reference in an existing Indian law to the High Court of Judicature at Lahore, be replaced by a reference to the High Court of East Punjab.

The High Court of East Punjab started functioning from Shimla in a building called "Peterhoff". This building burnt down in January 1981.

When the Secretariat of the Punjab Government shifted to Chandigarh in 1954-55, the High Court also shifted to Chandigarh. The High Court of Punjab, as it is later came to be called, exercised jurisdiction over Delhi through a Circuit Bench which dealt with the cases pertaining to the Union Territory of Delhi and the Delhi Administration.

In view of the importance of Delhi, its population and other considerations, Indian Parliament thought it was necessary to establish a new High Court of Delhi. This was achieved by enacting the Delhi High Court Act, 1966 on 5 September 1966.

The High Court of Delhi initially exercised jurisdiction not only over the Union Territory of Delhi, but also Himachal Pradesh. The High Court of Delhi had a Himachal Pradesh Bench at Shimla in a building called Ravenswood. The High Court of Delhi continued to exercise jurisdiction over Himachal Pradesh until the State of Himachal Pradesh Act, 1970 was enforced on 25 January 1971.3

Chief Justice of the Delhi High Court

The Chief Justice of the High Court of Delhi is appointed by the President of India, in consultation with the Chief Justice of India. During the appointment, the Chief Justice of India is required to consult with two senior-most judges of the Supreme Court. For all other High Courts in India, The Chief Justices are appointed by the President of India, as provided under Article 217 of the Constitution, in consultation with the Chief Justice of India and the Governor of the State.4 The Chief Justice is the senior-most sitting judge of the High Court in a State. Besides performing judicial functions, he/she also exercises administrative powers, as provided under Article 229 of the Constitution of India.5

Current Chief Justice of this court is Justice Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya. He was appointed on 21 January 2025.6

Judges of the Delhi High Court

The Judges of High Court of Delhi (other than the Chief Justice of the Delhi High Court) are appointed by the President by warrant under his hand and seal after consultation with the Chief Justice of India, and on the recommendation of the Chief Justice of the High Court of Delhi. The Chief Justice of India is required to consult with two senior-most judges of the Supreme Court. The Chief Justice of the High Court is also required to consult his two senior-most puisne Judges before recommending a name for appointment to the High Court.7 The Judges of the Delhi High Court are guided by the code of ethics as stated in ‘Restatement of Values of Judicial Life’ adopted by the Supreme Court of India, vide its resolution dated 7 May 1997.8

Currently, the sanctioned strength of Judges of the High Court of Delhi is 45 permanent Judges and 15 Additional Judges.9 Following is the list of sitting Judges of the High Court of Delhi:10

Permanent judges

#JudgeDate of joiningDate of retirement
1Devendra Kumar Upadhyaya (CJ)21 January 202515 June 2027
2Vibhu Bakhru17 April 20131 November 2028
3Prathiba M. Singh15 May 201719 July 2030
4Navin Chawla15 May 20176 August 2031
5C. Hari Shankar15 May 20173 May 2030
6Subramonium Prasad4 June 201821 June 2029
7Jyoti Singh22 October 201830 September 2028
8Prateek Jalan22 October 20183 April 2032
9Anup Jairam Bhambhani22 October 20184 December 2027
10Sanjeev Narula22 October 201823 August 2032
11Manoj Kumar Ohri20 November 201811 November 2031
12Jasmeet Singh24 February 202125 February 2030
13Amit Bansal24 February 20217 February 2031
14Purushaindra Kumar Kaurav8 October 20213 October 2038
15Neena Bansal Krishna28 February 202217 June 2027
16Swarana Kanta Sharma28 March 20224 August 2030
17Tara Vitasta Ganju18 May 202211 August 2033
18Mini Pushkarna18 May 202230 November 2033
19Vikas Mahajan18 May 20227 August 2031
20Tushar Rao Gedela18 May 202217 July 2029
21Manmeet Pritam Singh Arora18 May 202213 February 2036
22Sachin Datta18 May 202214 August 2035
23Amit Mahajan18 May 202219 April 2036
24Saurabh Banerjee18 May 202219 January 2038
25Anish Dayal2 June 202214 March 2035
26Amit Sharma2 June 20226 July 2034
27Girish Kathpalia1 May 202331 December 2026
28Manoj Jain1 May 202327 December 2026
29Shalinder Kaur20 October 20237 September 2025
30Ravinder Dudeja20 October 202316 May 2028
31Ajay Digpaul8 January 20251 September 2030
32Harish Vaidyanathan Shankar8 January 202517 February 2036
33Tejas Dhirenbhai Karia14 February 202531 January 2040
34Renu Bhatnagar21 February 202526 August 2029
35Rajneesh Kumar Gupta21 February 202520 May 2028

Additional judges

Original side civil jurisdiction

The High Court of Delhi is territory.11 This means that civil cases can be filed directly in the High Court, whereas the High Court generally only has appellate civil jurisdiction otherwise. The other High Courts which have original side jurisdiction are Bombay, Calcutta and Madras. 12

Backlog

As per the report released on 2006–08, Delhi High court has a long list of pending cases. The backlog is such that it would take 466 years to resolve them. In a bid to restore public trust and confidence, Delhi court spent 5 minutes per case and disposed of 94,000 cases in 2008–10.13

Former Chief Justices

#Chief JusticesTenure
StartEnd
1K. S. Hegde31 Oct 196616 Jul 1967
-M. K. M. Ismail (acting)17 Jul 196713 Nov 1967
2I. D. Dua14 Nov 196701 Aug 1969
3H. R. Khanna01 Aug 196922 Sep 1970
4Hardayal Hardy22 Sep 197115 May 1972
5Narain Andley15 May 197204 Jun 1974
6T. V. R. Tatachari04 Jun 197416 Oct 1978
7V. S. Deshpande16 Oct 197827 Mar 1980
8Prakash Narain08 Jan 198106 Aug 1985
9Rajinder Sachar06 Aug 198522 Dec 1985
10D. K. Kapur22 Dec 198520 Aug 1986
11T.P.S. Chawla20 Aug 198616 Aug 1987
-R. N. Aggarwal (acting)16 Aug 198721 Aug 1987
12Yogeshwar Dayal21 Aug 198718 Mar 1988
13Rabindranath Pyne18 Mar 198828 Sep 1990
14Milap Chand Jain28 Nov 199021 Jul 1991
15G. C. Mittal05 Aug 199104 Mar 1994
16M. Jagannadha Rao12 Apr 199421 Mar 1997
17Mahinder Narain21 Mar 199730 Dec 1999
18Sam Nariman Variava31 Dec 199915 Mar 2000
19Arijit Pasayat10 May 200019 Oct 2001
20S. B. Sinha26 Nov 200101 Oct 2002
21B. C. Patel05 Mar 200307 Aug 2005
22Markandey Katju12 Oct 200510 Apr 2006
23Mukundakam Sharma04 Dec 200609 Apr 2008
24Ajit Prakash Shah11 May 200812 Feb 2010
25Dipak Misra24 May 201010 Oct 2011
26D Murugesan26 Sep 201210 Jun 2013
-Badar Durrez Ahmed (acting)10 Jun 201301 Sept 2013
27N. V. Ramana02 Sep 201316 Feb 2014
-Badar Durrez Ahmed (acting)17 Feb 201420 Apr 2014
28Gorla Rohini21 Apr 201413 Apr 2017
-Gita Mittal (acting)14 Apr 201710 Aug 2018
29Rajendra Menon11 Aug 201806 Jun 2019
30Dhirubhai Naranbhai Patel07 Jun 201912 Mar 2022
-Vipin Sanghi (acting)13 Mar 202227 Jun 2022
31Satish Chandra Sharma28 Jun 202208 Nov 2023
-Manmohan (acting)09 Nov 202328 Sep 2024
32Manmohan29 Sep 202404 Dec 2024
-Vibhu Bakhru (acting)05 Dec 202420 January 2025

District Courts

Main article: Courts in Delhi

The National Capital Territory of Delhi has 7 District Courts Complex that function under the High Court of Delhi. These 7 are physical locations of the district courts, whereas actually there are 11 district courts headed by individual District Judges. The Tis Hazari complex, Rohini complex and Saket complex hosts 2 Districts each, while the Karkardooma complex hosts 3 Districts and the remaining 3 complexes (Patiala, Dwarka and Rouse Avenue) host 1 District each.

The list of 7 District Courts Complex in Delhi is as follows:

S.No.Year of establishmentDistrictsName of Court
11958Central Delhi and West DelhiTis Hazari Courts Complex
21977New DelhiPatiala House Courts Complex
31993East Delhi, North-East Delhi and ShahdaraKarkardooma Courts Complex
42005North Delhi and North-West DelhiRohini Courts Complex
52008South-West DelhiDwarka Courts Complex
62010South Delhi and South-East DelhiSaket Courts Complex
72019Central Delhi and CBI Courts or labour Court.Rouse Avenue Courts Complex14

Notable cases

Notable cases decided or involving the High Court include:

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Delhi High Court.

References

  1. "History of the High Court of Delhi". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/history

  2. "FAQs: what is the sources of powers of a High Court?". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=6

  3. "History of the Delhi High Court". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/history

  4. "FAQs: How are Chief Justices of High Courts appointed?". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=6

  5. "FAQs: What is the role of the Chief Justice of the High Court". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=6

  6. "Chief Justice (CJ) and Sitting Judges". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/judges/court/cj_sitting/current#:~:text=Chief%20Justice%20Manmohan-,Acting%20Chief%20Justice%20Manmohan,College%20of%20University%20of%20Delhi.

  7. "FAQs: How are judges appointed to the High Court of Delhi?". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=6

  8. "FAQs: Is there a code of ethics for the High Court Judges?". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=5

  9. "FAQs: How many judges, other than the Chief Justice, does the High Court of Delhi have?". The High Court of Delhi. 21 January 2024. Retrieved 21 January 2024. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/court/faq?page=6

  10. "Chief Justice and sitting Judges of Delhi HC". High Court of Delhi. https://delhihighcourt.nic.in/cjsittingjudges.asp

  11. "Delhi High Court (Original Side) Rules, 2018" (PDF). Delhi High Court. http://delhihighcourt.nic.in/writereaddata/upload/Notification/NotificationFile_0XY08957.PDF

  12. "Indian Courts". Daksh. Retrieved 4 May 2020. https://dakshindia.org/indian-courts/

  13. "At 5 minutes per case, Delhi high court clears 94,000 in 2 years". The Times of India. 30 May 2012. http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/At-5-minutes-per-case-Delhi-high-court-clears-94000-in-2-years/articleshow/13663493.cms

  14. "Rouse Avenue court complex opens today". The Times of India. 9 April 2019. https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/delhi/rouse-avenue-court-complex-opens-today/articleshow/68787666.cms