Calcutta High Court

High Court in West Bengal, India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calcutta High Court is the oldest High Court in India.[1] It is located at Esplanade Row West, Kolkata, West Bengal. It has jurisdiction over the state of West Bengal and the Union Territory of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The Gothic Revival building was completed in 1872, and designed by Walter Long Bozzi Granville.[2]

Established1 July 1862; 163 years ago (1862-07-01)
LocationPrincipal Seat: Kolkata, West Bengal
Circuit Benches: Jalpaiguri & Port Blair (A & N Islands)
Quick facts Established, Jurisdiction ...
Calcutta High Court
Calcutta High Court building
Interactive map of Calcutta High Court
22°34′6″N 88°20′36″E
Established1 July 1862; 163 years ago (1862-07-01)
JurisdictionWest Bengal and Andaman & Nicobar Islands
LocationPrincipal Seat: Kolkata, West Bengal
Circuit Benches: Jalpaiguri & Port Blair (A & N Islands)
Coordinates22°34′6″N 88°20′36″E
Composition methodPresidential with confirmation of Chief Justice of India and Governor of respective state.
Authorised byConstitution of India
Judge term lengthTill 62 years of age
Number of positions72
Websitecalcuttahighcourt.gov.in
Chief Justice
CurrentlySujoy Paul
Since16 January 2026
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Currently, the court has a sanctioned judge strength of 72.

History

Calcutta High Court in the 1860s
Calcutta High Court in the 1890s

The Calcutta High Court is one of the three High Courts in India established at the Presidency Towns by Letters patent granted by Queen Victoria, and is the oldest High Court in India. It was brought into existence as the High Court of Judicature at Fort William by the Letters Patent dated 14 May 1862,[3] issued under the High Courts Act, 1861, which was preceded by the Supreme Court of Judicature at Fort William. The court was formally opened on 1 July 1862.

The building was designed by Walter Long Bozzi Granville, and loosely modelled on the Ypres Cloth Hall in Flanders, Belgium, with a similar long facade of serried Gothic pointed arches, and a tall central tower with corner spires.[4] It is constructed of red brick with stucco dressings above a vaulted cloister of Barakur sandstone. It has been described as the only significant secular Gothic building in the city, something of an aberration amid the neoclassical edifices of other government buildings, such as Granville's own earlier General Post Office building in Dalhousie Square.[2]

Despite the name of the city having officially changed from Calcutta to Kolkata in 2001, the Court, as an institution retained the old name. The bill to rename it as Kolkata High Court was approved by the Union Cabinet on 5 July 2016 along with the renaming of its two other counterparts in Chennai and Mumbai.[5] The Bill called High Courts (Alteration of Names) Bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha on 19 July 2016[6] and is yet to be passed by both Houses of Parliament. Hence, the High Court still retains the old name.

Principal seat and benches

The seat of the Calcutta High Court is Kolkata, the capital of West Bengal. As per the Calcutta High Court (Extension of Jurisdiction) Act, 1953, the Calcutta High Court's jurisdiction was extended to cover Chandernagore (now called Chandannagar) and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands as of 2 May 1950. The Calcutta High Court extended its Circuit Bench in Port Blair, the capital of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands and in Jalpaiguri, the divisional headquarters of the North Bengal region. On 7 February 2019, President Ram Nath Kovind finalised the opening of the other circuit bench in Jalpaiguri, West Bengal with the jurisdiction area[7] within 5 districts- Darjeeling, Kalimpong, Jalpaiguri, Alipurduar and Cooch Behar.

Chief Justice and Judges

The court has a Sanctioned strength of 72 (Permanent:54, Additional:18) judges.

Sitting Judges of Calcutta High Court-

Currently, Justice Sujoy Paul is the Chief Justice of the court. Sir Barnes Peacock was the first Chief Justice of the High Court. He assumed the charge when the court was founded on 1 July 1862. Sir Romesh Chandra Mitra was the first officiating Indian Chief Justice and Phani Bhushan Chakravartti was the first permanent Indian Chief Justice of the court. The longest-serving Chief Justice was Justice Sankar Prasad Mitra.

List of Chief Justices

More information #, Chief Justice ...
# Chief Justice Term
1 Sir Barnes Peacock 18621870
2 Sir Richard Couch 18701875
3 Sir Richard Garth 18751886
Sir Romesh Chandra Mitra (acting) 1886[8]
4 Sir William Comer Petheram 18861896
5 Sir Francis William Maclean 18961909
Sir Chunder Madhub Ghose (acting) 1906[8]
6 Sir Lawrence Hugh Jenkins 19091915
7 Sir Lancelot Sanderson 19151926
Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee (acting) 1920, 1923[8]
8 Sir George Claus Rankin 19261934
9 Sir Harold Derbyshire 19341946
10 Sir Arthur Trevor Harries 19461952
After Indian Independence
11 Phani Bhusan Chakravartti 19521958
12 Kulada Charan Das Gupta 19581959
13 Surajit Chandra Lahiri 19591961
14 Himansu Kumar Bose 19611966
15 Deep Narayan Sinha 19661970
16 Prasanta Bihari Mukharji 19701972
17 Sankar Prasad Mitra 19721979
18 Amarendra Nath Sen 19791981
19 Sambhu Chandra Ghose 19811983
20 Samarendra Chandra Deb January 1983 February 1983
21 Satish Chandra 19831986
22 Anil Kumar Sen September 1986 October 1986
23 Chittatosh Mookerjee 1 November 1986 1 November 1987
24 Debi Singh Tewatia 1 November 1987 1988
25 Prabodh Dinkarrao Desai 19881991
26 Nagendra Prasad Singh 4 February 1992 14 June 1992
27 Anandamoy Bhattacharjee 19921994
28 Krishna Chandra Agarwal 19941996
29 V. N. Khare 2 February 1996 20 March 1997
30 Prabha Shankar Mishra 19971998
31 Ashok Kumar Mathur 22 December 1999 6 June 2004
32 V. S. Sirpurkar 20 March 2005 11 January 2007
33 Surinder Singh Nijjar 8 March 2007 16 November 2009
34 Mohit Shantilal Shah 24 December 2009 25 June 2010
35 Jai Narayan Patel 2010 4 October 2012
36 Arun Kumar Mishra 14 December 2012 6 July 2014
37 Manjula Chellur 5 August 2014 21 August 2016
38 Girish Chandra Gupta 21 September 2016 30 November 2016
39 Jyotirmay Bhattacharya 1 May 2018 24 September 2018
40 Debasish Kar Gupta 30 October 2018 – 31 December 2018
41 Thottathil B. Radhakrishnan 4 April 2019 — 28 April 2021
42 Prakash Shrivastava 11 October 2021 — 30 March 2023
43 T. S. Sivagnanam 11 May 2023 — 15 September 2025
44 Sujoy Paul 16 January 2026 – Incumbent
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Judges elevated as Chief Justice

This sections contains list of only those judges elevated as chief justices whose parent high court is Calcutta. This includes those judges who, at the time of appointment as chief justice, may not be serving in Calcutta High Court but this list does not include judges who at the time of appointment as chief justice were serving in Calcutta High Court but does not have Calcutta as their Parent High Court.

More information Name, Image ...
Name Image Appointed as CJ in HC of Date of appointment Date of retirement[a] Tenure Ref..
As Judge As Chief Justice As Chief Justice As Judge[b]
Walter Morgan Allahabad, transferred to Madras 1 July 1862 17 March 1866 7 February 1879 12 years, 328 days 16 years, 222 days [9]
Lawrence Hugh Jenkins Bombay, transferred to Calcutta 24 April 1896 20 April 1899 13 November 1915 16 years, 208 days 19 years, 204 days [10]
John Stanley Allahabad 1898 17 August 1901 21 April 1911 9 years, 248 days [11][12]
George Claus Rankin Calcutta 1918 1926 1934 [10]
Sarat Kumar Ghosh Jammu & Kashmir, transferred to Rajasthan[c] September 1929 29 March 1946 31 March 1949[RES] 3 years, 3 days [13][14]
Ronald Francis Lodge Gauhati 1941 5 April 1948 7 April 1949 1 year, 3 days
Sudhi Ranjan Das Punjab & Haryana 1 December 1942 19 January 1949 20 January 1950[‡][d] 1 year, 2 days 7 years, 50 days
Phani Bhusan Chakravartti Calcutta April 1945 13 June 1952 11 October 1958 6 years, 121 days [10]
Kulada Charan Das Gupta Calcutta June 1948 12 October 1958 17 August 1959[‡] 310 days
Surajit Chandra Lahiri Calcutta 3 January 1949 17 August 1959 10 June 1961 1 year, 298 days 12 years, 159 days [15]
Prasanta Bihari Mukharji Calcutta 15 January 1970 30 July 1972 2 years, 198 days 23 years, 210 days [16]
S. R. Das Gupta Karnataka 13 June 1949 25 July 1957 13 August 1961 4 years, 20 days 12 years, 62 days [17]
Himansu Kumar Bose Calcutta 8 December 1949 10 June 1961 1 March 1966 4 years, 265 days 16 years, 84 days [18]
Deep Narayan Sinha Calcutta 3 July 1950 1 March 1966 14 January 1970 3 years, 320 days 19 years, 196 days [19]
Sankar Prasad Mitra Calcutta 23 December 1957 31 July 1972 25 December 1979 7 years, 148 days 22 years, 3 days [20]
Amarendra Nath Sen Calcutta 15 November 1965 26 December 1979 27 January 1981[‡] 1 year, 33 days 15 years, 74 days
Sambhu Chandra Ghose Calcutta 25 July 1966 28 January 1981 31 December 1982 1 year, 338 days 16 years, 160 days [21]
Samarendra Chandra Deb Calcutta 7 May 1968 1 January 1983 28 February 1983 59 days 14 years, 298 days
Anil Kumar Sen Calcutta 8 November 1968 1 September 1986 31 October 1986 61 days 17 years, 358 days [22]
Chittatosh Mookerjee Calcutta, transferred to Bombay 2 April 1969 1 November 1986 1 January 1991 4 years, 62 days 21 years, 275 days [23]
Pradyot Kumar Banerjee Rajasthan 15 September 1969 23 October 1983 30 September 1985 1 year, 343 days 16 years, 16 days [24]
Dipak Kumar Sen Patna 5 March 1973 1 May 1988 1 May 1989 1 year, 1 day 16 years, 58 days [25]
Rabindranath Pyne Delhi 6 March 1974 20 May 1988 8 October 1990 2 years, 142 days 16 years, 217 days [26]
Bimal Chandra Basak Patna 10 June 1974 18 March 1991 21 October 1993 2 years, 218 days 19 years, 134 days [27]
Ganendra Narayan Ray Gujarat 23 December 1976 2 December 1990 6 October 1991[‡] 309 days 14 years, 288 days
Manoj Kumar Mukherjee Allahabad, transferred to Bombay 17 June 1977 12 November 1991 14 December 1993[‡] 2 years, 33 days 16 years, 180 days
Mukul Gopal Mukherjee Rajasthan 9 January 1984 19 September 1996 24 December 1997 1 year, 97 days 13 years, 350 days [28]
Umesh Chandra Banerjee Andhra Pradesh 1 February 1998 8 December 1998[‡] 311 days 14 years, 334 days
Nirendra Krishna Mitra Allahabad 20 December 1985 12 February 1999 17 April 2000 1 year, 66 days 14 years, 120 days [29]
Shyamal Kumar Sen Allahabad 17 February 1986 18 July 2000 24 November 2002 2 years, 130 days 16 years, 281 days [30]
Tarun Chatterjee Allahabad 6 August 1990 31 January 2003 26 August 2004[‡] 1 year, 209 days 14 years, 21 days
Ajoy Nath Ray Allahabad, transferred to Sikkim 11 January 2005 30 October 2008 3 years, 294 days 18 years, 86 days
Altamas Kabir Jharkhand 1 March 2005 8 September 2005[‡] 192 days 15 years, 34 days
Asok Kumar Ganguly Orissa, transferred to Madras 10 January 1994 2 March 2007 15 December 2008[‡] 1 year, 289 days 14 years, 342 days
Barin Ghosh Jammu & Kashmir, transferred to Sikkim then to Uttarakhand 14 July 1995 3 January 2009 4 June 2014 5 years, 153 days 18 years, 326 days
Bhaskar Bhattacharya Gujarat 17 July 1997 21 July 2012 28 September 2014 2 years, 70 days 17 years, 74 days
Pinaki Chandra Ghose Andhra Pradesh 12 December 2012 7 March 2013[‡] 86 days 15 years, 234 days
Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta Andhra Pradesh 21 May 2013 6 May 2015 1 year, 351 days 17 years, 294 days
Subhro Kamal Mukherjee Karnataka 15 September 2000 23 February 2016 9 October 2017 1 year, 229 days 17 years, 25 days
Girish Chandra Gupta Calcutta 21 September 2016 30 November 2016 71 days 16 years, 77 days
Indira Banerjee Madras 5 February 2002 5 April 2017 6 August 2018[‡] 1 year, 124 days 16 years, 183 days
Jyotirmay Bhattacharya Calcutta 3 December 2003 1 May 2018 24 September 2018 147 days 14 years, 296 days
Aniruddha Bose Jharkhand 19 January 2004 11 August 2018 23 May 2019[‡] 286 days 15 years, 125 days
Debasish Kar Gupta Calcutta 22 June 2006 30 October 2018 31 December 2018 63 days 12 years, 193 days [31]
Biswanath Somadder Meghalaya, transferred to Sikkim 27 April 2020 14 December 2025 5 years, 232 days 19 years, 176 days [32]
Dipankar Datta Bombay 28 April 2020 11 December 2022[‡] 2 years, 228 days 16 years, 172 days
Sanjib Banerjee Madras, transferred to Meghalaya 4 January 2021 1 November 2023 1 year, 343 days 17 years, 133 days
Indra Prasanna Mukerji Meghalaya 18 May 2009 3 October 2024 5 September 2025 338 days 16 years, 111 days
Harish Tandon Orissa 13 April 2010 26 March 2025 Incumbent 1 year, 0 days 15 years, 347 days
Soumen Sen Meghalaya, transferred to Kerala 13 April 2011 8 October 2025 169 days 14 years, 347 days
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  1. this inlcudes date of resignation, death and Elevation to supreme court
  2. also includes tenure as Chief Justice
  3. Then known as High Court of princely state of Jaipur

Judges elevated to Supreme Court

This section includes the list of only those judges whose parent high court was Calcutta. This includes those judges who, at the time of elevation to Supreme Court of India, may not be serving in Calcutta High Court but this list does not include judges who at the time of elevation were serving in Calcutta High Court but does not have Calcutta as their Parent High Court.

More information #, Name of the Judge ...
# Name of the Judge Image Date of Appointment Date of Retirement Tenure Immediately preceding office
In Parent High Court In Supreme Court In High Court(s) In Supreme Court Total tenure[a]
1 Bijan Kumar Mukherjea 8 July 1936 13 October 1948[b] 31 January 1956 12 years, 98 days 7 years, 111 days 19 years, 208 days Judge of Calcutta HC
2 Sudhi Ranjan Das 1 December 1942 20 January 1950[c] 30 September 1959 7 years, 50 days 9 years, 254 days 16 years, 304 days 2nd CJ of Punjab & Haryana HC
3 Amal Kumar Sarkar 25 January 1949 4 March 1957 29 June 1966 8 years, 38 days 9 years, 118 days 17 years, 156 days Judge of Calcutta HC
4 Kulada Charan Das Gupta June 1948 24 August 1959 2 January 1965 5 years, 132 days 12th CJ of Calcutta HC
5 Ranadhir Singh Bachawat 23 January 1950 7 September 1964 31 July 1969 14 years, 228 days 4 years, 328 days 19 years, 190 days Judge of Calcutta HC
6 Gopendra Krishna Mitter 24 November 1952 29 August 1966 23 September 1971 13 years, 278 days 5 years, 26 days 18 years, 304 days Judge of Calcutta HC
7 Ajit Nath Ray 23 December 1957 1 August 1969 27 January 1977 11 years, 221 days 7 years, 180 days 19 years, 36 days Judge of Calcutta HC
8 Arun Kumar Mukherjea 27 February 1962 14 August 1972 23 October 1973[†] 10 years, 169 days 1 year, 71 days 11 years, 239 days Judge of Calcutta HC
9 Alak Chandra Gupta 24 February 1964 2 September 1974 31 December 1981 10 years, 190 days 7 years, 121 days 17 years, 311 days Judge of Calcutta HC
10 Amarendra Nath Sen 15 November 1965 28 January 1981 30 September 1985 15 years, 74 days 4 years, 246 days 19 years, 320 days 18th CJ of Calcutta HC
11 Sabyasachi Mukharji 31 July 1968 15 March 1983 25 September 1990[†] 14 years, 227 days 7 years, 195 days 22 years, 57 days Acting CJ of Calcutta HC
12 Bankim Chandra Ray 10 June 1974 29 October 1985 31 October 1991 11 years, 141 days 6 years, 3 days 17 years, 144 days Judge of Calcutta HC
13 Murari Mohan Dutt 18 September 1969 10 March 1986 29 October 1989 16 years, 173 days 3 years, 234 days 20 years, 42 days Judge of Calcutta HC
14 Ganendra Narayan Ray 23 December 1976 7 October 1991 30 April 1998 14 years, 288 days 6 years, 206 days 21 years, 129 days 11th CJ of Gujarat HC
15 Manoj Kumar Mukherjee 17 June 1977 14 December 1993 30 November 1998 16 years, 180 days 4 years, 352 days 21 years, 167 days 27th CJ of Bombay HC
16 Suhas C. Sen 23 November 1981 11 June 1994 20 December 1997 12 years, 200 days 3 years, 193 days 16 years, 28 days Judge of Calcutta HC
17 Umesh Chandra Banerjee 9 January 1984 9 December 1998 17 November 2002 14 years, 334 days 3 years, 344 days 18 years, 313 days CJ of erstwhile Andhra Pradesh HC
18 Ruma Pal 6 August 1990 28 January 2000 3 June 2006 9 years, 175 days 6 years, 127 days 15 years, 302 days Judge of Calcutta HC
19 Tarun Chatterjee 27 August 2004 14 January 2010 14 years, 21 days 5 years, 141 days 19 years, 162 days 38th CJ of Allahabad HC
20 Altamas Kabir 6 August 1990 9 September 2005 18 July 2013 15 years, 34 days 7 years, 313 days 22 years, 347 days 3rd CJ of Jharkhand HC
21 Asok Kumar Ganguly 10 January 1994 17 December 2008 3 February 2012 14 years, 342 days 3 years, 49 days 18 years, 25 days 34th CJ of Madras HC
22 Pinaki Chandra Ghose 17 July 1997 8 March 2013 27 May 2017 15 years, 234 days 4 years, 81 days 19 years, 315 days CJ of erstwhile Andhra Pradesh HC
23 Indira Banerjee 5 February 2002 7 August 2018 23 September 2022 16 years, 183 days 4 years, 48 days 20 years, 231 days 39th CJ of Madras HC
24 Aniruddha Bose 19 January 2004 24 May 2019 10 April 2024 15 years, 125 days 4 years, 323 days 20 years, 83 days 12th CJ of Jharkhand HC
25 Dipankar Datta 22 June 2006 12 December 2022 Incumbent 16 years, 172 days 3 years, 104 days 19 years, 277 days 45th CJ of Bombay HC
26 Joymalya Bagchi 27 June 2011 17 March 2025 13 years, 262 days 1 year, 9 days 14 years, 272 days Judge of Calcutta HC
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  1. Includes both tenure as High Court Judge as well as Supreme Court Judge
  2. Elevated to the Federal Court of India on 13 October 1948, and became part of the Supreme Court of India after its establishment on 26 January 1950.
  3. Elevated to the Federal Court of India on 20 January 1950, and became part of the Supreme Court of India after its establishment on 26 January 1950.

Building

The neo-Gothic High Court building was constructed in 1872, ten years after the establishment of the court itself. The design, by then government architect Walter Granville, was loosely modelled on the 13th-century Cloth Hall at Ypres, Belgium.[4] In 1977 another building named High Court Centenary Building or annexed building was inaugurated to reduce the pressure.[33]

Connectivity

Rails

Eden Gardens railway station is the nearest railway station, which is 650 meters away from the court. Esplanade metro station, the nearest rapid rail transit is 1.3 km away.[citation needed]

References

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