Madhya Pradesh High Court

Madhya Pradesh High Court
मध्य प्रदेश उच्च न्यायालय
Panoramic view of the Court building
Official logo Madhya Pradesh High Court
Interactive map of Madhya Pradesh High Court
मध्य प्रदेश उच्च न्यायालय
23°9′38″N 79°56′19″E / 23.16056°N 79.93861°E / 23.16056; 79.93861[1]
Established2 January 1936; 86 years ago
JurisdictionMadhya Pradesh
LocationPrincipal Seat: Jabalpur, M.P.
Circuit Benches: Indore and Gwalior
Coordinates23°9′38″N 79°56′19″E / 23.16056°N 79.93861°E / 23.16056; 79.93861[1]
Composition methodPresidential with confirmation of Chief Justice of India and Governor of respective state.
Authorised byConstitution of India
Appeals toSupreme Court of India
Judge term lengthMandatory retirement by age of 62
Number of positions53
LanguageHindi English
Websitehttp://mphc.gov.in/
Chief Justice
CurrentlySanjeev Sachdeva
Since17 July 2025

The Madhya Pradesh High Court is the High Court of the state of Madhya Pradesh which is located in Jabalpur. It was established as the Nagpur High Court on 2 January 1936 by Letters Patent dated 2 January 1936, issued under Section 108 the Government of India Act, 1935. This Letters Patent continued in force even after the adoption of the constitution of India on 26 January 1950 by virtue of Articles 225 & 372 thereof. The court has a sanctioned judge strength of 53.

History

The present state of Madhya Pradesh was originally created as Central Provinces in the 19th century, as Judicial Commission's territory and was administered by the Judicial Commissioner. The Judicial Commissioner's court at Nagpur was, at that time, the highest court of the territory. It was converted into a Governor's province in 1921, when it became entitled to a full-fledged High Court for the administration of justice.

Later, Berar, a part of Nizam's state of Hyderabad, was transferred in 1933 to the Central Province, for administration. This gave the state its new name Central Provinces and Berar. Thereafter, by virtue of Letters Patent dated 2 January 1936, issued under Section 108 of the Government of India Act, 1935, by King Emperor, George the Fifth, the Nagpur High Court was established for Central Pronvices and Berar. This Letters Patent, under which the Nagpur High Court was constituted and invested with jurisdiction, continued to remain in force even after the adoption of the constitution of India on 26 January 1950, by virtue of Articles 225 & 372 thereof.

On 1 November 1956, the new state of Madhya Pradesh was constituted under States Reorganisation Act. Subsection (1) of Section 49 of the States Re-organisation Act ordained that from the appointed day i.e., 1 November 1956, the High Court exercising jurisdiction, in relation to the existing state of Madhya Pradesh, i.e. Nagpur High Court, shall be deemed to be the High Court for the present state of Madhya Pradesh. Thus Nagpur High Court was not abolished but by a legal fiction it became High Court for the new state of Madhya Pradesh with its seat at Jabalpur. Hon'ble the Chief Justice, vide order dated 1 November 1956 constituted temporary benches of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Indore and Gwalior. Later, by a Presidential Notification Dt. 28 November 1968, issued in the exercise of the powers conferred by the Subsection (2) of section 51 of the States Reorganization Act, 1956, permanent benches of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Indore and Gwalior were established. This state of affairs continued till 1 November 2000, when the state of Chhattisgarh was carved of the existing state of Madhya Pradesh by virtue of the provisions of the Madhya Pradesh Reorganization Act, 2000 and the High Court of Chhattisgarh was established for that state with its seat at Bilaspur. The High Court of Madhya Pradesh at Jabalpur then became High Court for the successor state of Madhya Pradesh.[2][3]

Principal seat & Benches

The principal seat of the court is in Jabalpur. The court is housed in an impressive building constructed by Raja Gokul Das in 1899. The building was designed by Henry Irwin in 1886. The construction work of this building was commenced in 1886 and completed in 1889. The building was constructed in brick-lime with ornamental towers and cornices. The architecture of the building is mixed baroque and oriental. The arches, as well as the bastions at the corners, are ornamental. There are 25 courtrooms in this building.

On 1 November 1956, two temporary benches of the High Court of Madhya Pradesh were constituted, one at Indore and the other at Gwalior. Later by a Notification, these were converted to permanent benches on 28 November 1968.

Judges

The current sitting judges of the court are as follows:[4]

Former Chief Justices

Nagpur High Court

# Chief Justice Term
1 Gilbert Stone 9 January 1936 – 1943
2 Frederick Louis Grille 1943 – 1949
3 Vivian Bose 1949 – 1951
4 Bhuvaneshwar Prasad Sinha 24 February 1951 – 2 December 1954
5 M. Hidayatullah 3 December 1954 – 31 October 1956

Madhya Pradesh High Court

# Chief Justice Tenure
Start Finish
1 M. Hidayatullah 1 November 1956 12 December 1958
2 Ganesh Prasad Bhutt 13 December 1958 22 September 1959
3 P. V. Dixit 22 September 1959 18 March 1969
4 Bishambhar Dayal 19 March 1969 13 March 1972
5 P. K. Tare 14 September 1972 10 October 1975
6 Shiv Dayal Shrivastava 11 October 1975 28 February 1978
7 A. P. Sen 28 February 1978 14 July 1978
8 G. P. Singh 27 July 1978 3 January 1984
9 Goverdhanlal Jamnalal Oza 1 December 1984 27 October 1985
10 J. S. Verma 14 June 1986 27 August 1986
11 Narayan Dutt Ojha 8 October 1986 18 January 1988
12 G. G. Sohani 21 October 1989 23 October 1989
13 Sushil Kumar Jha 27 October 1989 15 December 1993
14 Ullal Lakshminarayan Bhat 15 December 1993 10 October 1995
15 A. K. Mathur 3 February 1996 21 December 1999
16 Bhawani Singh 24 February 2000 19 August 2003
17 Kumar Rajarathnam 6 September 2003 12 March 2004
18 R. V. Raveendran 8 July 2004 8 September 2005
19 A. K. Patnaik 2 October 2005 16 November 2009
20 Syed Rafat Alam 20 December 2009 4 August 2011
21 Sharad Arvind Bobde 16 October 2012 11 April 2013
22 Ajay Manikrao Khanwilkar 24 November 2013 12 May 2016
23 Hemant Gupta 18 March 2017 1 November 2018
24 Sanjay Kumar Seth 10 November 2018 9 June 2019
25 Ajay Kumar Mittal 3 November 2019 29 September 2020
26 Mohammad Rafiq 3 January 2021 13 October 2021
27 Ravi Malimath 14 October 2021 24 May 2024
28 Suresh Kumar Kait 25 September 2024 23 May 2025
29 Sanjeev Sachdeva 17 July 2025 incumbent

Judges elevated to Supreme Court

Currently serving

# Name of the Judge Image Date of Appointment as Judge Date of elevation to Supreme Court Date of Retirement Tenure Immediately preceding office
As HC Judge As Supreme Court Judge Total tenure
(including both SC and HC)
1 Jitendra Kumar Maheshwari 25 November 2005 31 August 2021 28 June 2026 15 years, 279 days 4 years, 302 days 20 years, 216 days 22nd CJ of Sikkim HC
2 Satish Chandra Sharma 18 January 2008 9 November 2023 29 November 2026 15 years, 295 days 3 years, 21 days 18 years, 316 days 32nd CJ of Delhi HC
3 Alok Aradhe 29 December 2009 29 August 2025 12 April 2029 15 years, 243 days 3 years, 227 days 19 years, 105 days 48th CJ of Bombay HC

Former Judges

# Name of the Judge Image Date of Appointment as Judge Date of elevation to Supreme Court Date of Retirement Tenure Immediately preceding office Remarks
As HC Judge As Supreme Court Judge Total tenure
(including both SC and HC)
1 Ananda Prakash Sen 7 November 1967 17 July 1978 19 September 1988 10 years, 252 days 10 years, 65 days 20 years, 318 days 7th CJ of Madhya Pradesh HC
2 Goverdhan Lal Oza 29 July 1968 29 October 1985 11 December 1989 17 years, 92 days 4 years, 44 days 21 years, 136 days 9th CJ of Madhya Pradesh HC
3 Jagdish Sharan Verma 12 September 1972 3 June 1989 17 January 1998 16 years, 264 days 8 years, 229 days 25 years, 128 days 16th CJ of Rajasthan HC 27th Chief Justice of India
4 Faizanuddin 27 November 1978 14 December 1993 4 February 1997 15 years, 17 days 3 years, 53 days 18 years, 70 days Judge of Madhya Pradesh HC
5 Ramesh Chandra Lahoti 3 May 1988 9 December 1998 31 October 2005 10 years, 220 days 6 years, 327 days 17 years, 182 days Judge of Delhi HC 35th Chief Justice of India
6 Devdatta Madhav Dharmadhikari 24 March 1989 5 March 2002 13 August 2005 12 years, 346 days 3 years, 162 days 16 years, 143 days 17th CJ of Gujarat HC
7 Prakash Prabhakar Naolekar 15 June 1992 27 August 2004 29 June 2008 12 years, 73 days 3 years, 308 days 16 years, 15 days 28th CJ of Gauhati HC
8 Deepak Verma 15 December 1994 11 May 2009 28 August 2012 14 years, 147 days 3 years, 110 days 17 years, 258 days 28th CJ of Rajasthan HC
9 Arun Kumar Mishra 25 October 1999 7 July 2014 2 September 2020 14 years, 255 days 6 years, 58 days 20 years, 314 days 36th CJ of Calcutta HC
10 Abhay Manohar Sapre 25 October 1999 13 August 2014 27 August 2019 14 years, 292 days 5 years, 15 days 19 years, 307 days 33rd CJ of Gauhati HC

Former Judges from erstwhile Nagpur High Court

# Name of the Judge Image Date of Appointment as Judge Date of elevation to Supreme Court Date of Retirement Tenure Immediately preceding office Remarks
As HC Judge As Supreme Court Judge Total tenure
(including both SC and HC)
1 Vivian Bose 9 January 1936 5 March 1951 8 June 1956 15 years, 55 days 5 years, 96 days 20 years, 152 days CJ in same High Court
2 Mohammad Hidayatullah 27 June 1946 1 December 1958 16 December 1970 12 years, 157 days 12 years, 16 days 24 years, 173 days 1st CJ of Madhya Pradesh HC 11th Chief Justice of India
3 Janardan Raghunath Mudholkar 11 November 1948 3 October 1960 3 July 1966 11 years, 327 days 5 years, 274 days 17 years, 235 days Judge of Bombay HC Resigned from office

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Latitude and Longitude". satsig.com. Retrieved 19 September 2013.
  2. ^ "History & Constitution | High Court of Madhya Pradesh". mphc.gov.in. Retrieved 29 July 2025.
  3. ^ "High Court Of Bombay-Nagpur Bench | Official Website of e-Committee, Supreme Court of India | India". Retrieved 29 July 2025.
  4. ^ "Hon'ble Judges | High Court of Madhya Pradesh". mphc.gov.in. Retrieved 4 February 2019.

References