Sam Piroj Bharucha

30th Chief Justice of India From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Sam Piroj Bharucha (6 May 1937) is a former Chief Justice of India, serving from November 2001 until his retirement in 2002.[2]

Quick facts 30th Chief Justice of India, Appointed by ...
Sam Piroj Bharucha
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30th Chief Justice of India
In office
1 November 2001  5 May 2002
Appointed byK. R. Narayanan
Preceded byAdarsh Sein Anand
Succeeded byBhupinder Nath Kirpal
Judge of Supreme Court of India
In office
1 July 1992  31 October 2001
Nominated byMadhukar Hiralal Kania
Appointed byK. R. Narayanan
13th Chief Justice of Karnataka High Court[1]
In office
1 November 1991  30 June 1992
Nominated byRanganath Misra
Appointed byRamaswamy Venkataraman
Preceded byShanmughasundaram Mohan
Succeeded byS. B. Majumdar
Judge of Bombay High Court
In office
19 September 1977  31 October 1991
Nominated byMirza Hameedullah Beg
Appointed byNeelam Sanjiva Reddy
Personal details
Born (1937-05-06) 6 May 1937 (age 88)
Gangtok, Sikkim, British India
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The President of India, K. R. Narayanan administering the oath of office of the Chief Justice of India to Sam Piroj Bharucha at the Ashok Hall of the Rashtrapati Bhavan

He began his legal career as an advocate of the Bombay High Court in 1960, and was appointed an Additional Judge in 1977. His judgeship was made permanent in 1978, and in 1991 he was appointed Chief Justice of the Karnataka High Court. In 1992, he was appointed to the Supreme Court of India, and became Chief Justice in 2001.[3]

Bharucha is responsible for many significant legal decisions. He was part of the five-judge constitutional panel which unanimously ruled on the 2001 dismissal of J. Jayalalithaa as Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu. It was the first and only such dismissal of a chief minister in India's history.[4]

Over the course of his Supreme Court tenure, Bharucha authored 344 judgments and sat on 1,307 benches.[5]

References

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