Karnataka High Court


The Karnataka High Court officially known as, Karnataka Uccha Nyayalaya is the High Court of the Indian state of Karnataka. It is located in Bangalore, the capital city of Karnataka. It was previously called as the High Court of Mysore. The High Court functions out of a red brick building known as Attara Kacheri. It is in front of Vidhana Soudha, which is the seat of the legislature of Karnataka.The Karnataka High Court is currently functional in Bangalore, Hubli-Dharwad and Gulbarga.

Premises

The High Court is located in a building called as Attara Kacheri. It is a two-storied building of stone and brick, painted red, in the Graeco-Roman style of architecture – a structure of vast expanse with Ionic porticoes at the center and at the two ends of the elevation. The construction of the building was supervised by Rao Bahadur Arcot Narayanaswami Mudaliar and completed in the year 1868. It was earlier named as Old Public Offices and got its name of Attara Kacheri when the eighteen departments in the general and revenue secretariat of the Mysore Government were shifted here from their crowded premises in Tipu Sultan's summer palace. Tipu's Palace was only a temporary house for the offices. When Bowring took over as Commissioner after Mark Cubbon, he found the building unsuitable, both because of its state of maintenance as well as its limited accommodation which no longer sufficed for the much increased work of administering the State. It was he who conceived and prepared the plans for a full-fledged secretariat building in the city area. The construction was taken up in 1864 and completed at a cost of Rs. 450,000 in 1868.

There was a proposal to demolish this building in the year 1982. However, a public interest litigation was filed in order to save this old building from getting demolished. This was the first PIL to be filed in the Karnataka High court and the case was heard in the very building that was supposed to be demolished. In August 1984, the judges M. N. Venkatachaliah and Vittal Rao pronounced a judgement that stayed the demolition.

The equestrian statue of Mark Cubbon was formerly located in front of the High Court. It was moved to Sri Chamarajendra Park on 28 June 2020, following public pressure amidst mass worldwide protests.

Judges

The High Court has a sanctioned judge strength of 62. Many judges have presided in the High Court with four of them including E. S. Venkataramiah, M. N. Venkatachaliah, S. Rajendra Babu and H.L. Dattu, going on to become the Chief Justice of India and others including Kalmanje Jagannatha Shetty, N. Venkatachala, R. V. Raveendran, Shivaraj Patil, Venkate Gopala Gowda, Mohan Shantanagoudar and S. Abdul Nazeer being appointed as judges in the Supreme Court of India.

The Chief Justices

Raja Dharma Praveena Diwan Bahadur P Mahadevayya, M Sadasivayya, Nittoor Srinivasa Rau, Sam Piroj Bharucha and G. T. Nanavati were some of the famous Chief Justices who presided over this court. Presently, Abhay Shreeniwas Oka is the Chief Justice of the court.

List of former Chief Justices

;High Court of Mysore
Chief JusticeTerm
Charles George Plumer1884 – July 1890
Sir T. R. A. Thumboo ChettyJuly 1890 – 4 November 1895
James William Best4 November 1895 – 1907
Stanley Ismay1908–1912
P. Mahadevayya1931–1934

;High Court of Karnataka
#Chief JusticeTerm
1R.Venkataramaiah1 November 1956 – 16 July 1957
2S. R. Das Gupta25 July 1957 – 13 August 1961
3Nittoor Srinivasa Rau29 March 1962 – 7 August 1963
-H. Hombe Gowda 20 January 1964 – 1 August 1969
-A. R. Somanath Iyer 1 August 1969 – 30 August 1969
-M. Sadasivayya 31 August 1969 – 23 October 1969
-A. R. Somanath Iyer 24 October 1969 – 22 November 1969
4A. R. Somanath Iyer23 November 1969 – 29 December 1969
5M. Sadasivayya30 December 1969 – 16 September 1970
6A. Narayana Pai17 September 1970 – 6 June 1973
7G. K. Govinda Bhat7 June 1973 – 14 December 1977
8D. M. Chandrashekar22 March 1978 – 25 September 1982
-K. Bhimaiah 26 September 1982 – 27 October 1982
9K. Bhimaiah28 October 1982 – 10 April 1983
10V. S. Malimath6 February 1984 – 24 October 1985
-Kalmanje Jagannatha Shetty 24 October 1985 – 27 August 1986
11Prem Chand Jain28 August 1986 – 16 September 1989
12S. Mohan26 October 1989 – 7 October 1991
13S. P. Bharucha1 January 1991 – 30 June 1992
14S. B. Majumdar2 July 1993 – 13 September 1994
15G. T. Nanavati28 September 1994 – 4 March 1995
16M. L. Pendse28 July 1995 – 25 March 1996
17S. A. Hakeem3 May 1996 – 9 May 1996
18R. P. Sethi29 June 1996 – 6 January 1999
-Y. Bhaskar Rao 17 January 1999 – 8 March 1999
19Y. Bhaskar Rao9 March 1999 – 26 June 2000
-Ashok Bhan 27 June 2000 – 20 October 2000
20P. V. Reddi21 October 2000 – 16 August 2001
21Nagendra Kumar Jain31 August 2001 – 20 October 2004
22N. K. Sodhi19 November 2004 – 29 November 2005
23Cyriac Joseph7 January 2006 – 6 July 2008
24P. D. Dinakaran8 August 2008 – 7 August 2010
25Jagdish Singh Khehar8 August 2010 – 12 September 2011
26Vikramajit Sen24 December 2011 – 23 December 2012
-K Shridhar Rao 24 December 2012 – March 2013
27Dhirendra Hiralal WaghelaMarch 2013 – 31 May 2015
28Subhro Kamal Mukherjee1 June 2015 – 9 October 2017
-H. G. Ramesh 10 October 2017 – 11 February 2018
30Dinesh Maheshwari12 February 2018 – 17 January 2019
-Lingappa Narayana Swamy 18 January 2019 – 9 May 2019
31Abhay Shreeniwas Oka10 May 2019 – Incumbent

Additional Benches

The Karnataka High Court is currently functional in Bangalore, Dharwad and Gulbarga. There was a long-standing demand for an additional bench: the location of Bangalore in south-east corner of the state caused hardship for people visiting the High Court from the distant northern regions of the state. This issue led to agitation, including boycott of court proceedings by lawyers in the northern region. The demand was finally met in the year 2006 when it was decided that circuit benches of the High Court would be set up in Dharwad and Gulbarga. The new branches were inaugurated on 4 and 5 July 2008, respectively. There was later demand to make both Dharwad and Gulbarga benches permanent. Consequently, Dharwad circuit bench became a permanent bench from 25 August 2013 and Gulbarga circuit bench became a permanent bench from 31 August 2013.

Controversy

In late 2002, 14 newspapers and periodicals reported that some judges from the High Court of Karnataka were allegedly involved in a sex scandal in Mysore. A high-level judicial inquiry committee was established by the Chief Justice. Later, the committee acquitted the judges as they could not find any substantive evidence.