Telangana High Court

High Court for the State of Telangana
Telaṅgāṇa Rāṣṭra Unnata N'yāyasthānaṁ
Telangana State High Court Building
Interactive map of High Court for the State of Telangana
Telaṅgāṇa Rāṣṭra Unnata N'yāyasthānaṁ
17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039
Established1 January 2019 (1 January 2019)
JurisdictionTelangana
LocationHyderabad, Telangana
Coordinates17°22′09″N 78°28′19″E / 17.369181°N 78.472039°E / 17.369181; 78.472039
Composition methodExecutive selection subject to qualification
Authorised byConstitution of India & Andhra Pradesh Reorganization Act, 2014
Judge term lengthmandatory retirement by age of 62
Number of positions42 {Permanent 32; Addl. 10}
Websitetshc.gov.in
Chief Justice
CurrentlyAparesh Kumar Singh
Since19 July 2025

The Telangana High Court is the High Court for the Indian state of Telangana. Founded by the 7th Nizam of Hyderabad Mir Osman Ali Khan,[1] It was established as the High Court for the erstwhile Hyderabad State and in November 1956 after the formation of Andhra Pradesh renamed as High Court of Andhra Pradesh. In 2014, after the bifurcation of Andhra Pradesh, the court was again renamed as High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad.[2]

The President of India, on 26 December 2018, issued orders bifurcating the High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad into High Court for the State of Telangana with the principal seat at Hyderabad and the High Court of Andhra Pradesh, with the principal seat at Amaravati. The bifurcation and the constitution of separate High Courts for Telangana and Andhra Pradesh came into effect from 1 January 2019.

From 2 June 2014, after the Andhra Pradesh Reorganisation Act, 2014 came into force, the court was renamed and served as a common high court for both of the states until 1 January 2019. A separate high court was established for Andhra Pradesh and inaugurated on 1 January 2019 and it was named as Andhra Pradesh High Court.

The Telangana High Court, which has its seat in Hyderabad, has a total sanctioned strength of 42 judges, comprising 32 permanent judges and 10 additional judges.[3][4]

Since July 2025, Aparesh Kumar Singh has been serving as the Chief Justice of Telangana High Court.[5][6]

A new building for the High Court is under construction at a site spanning 100 acres at Budvel, Rajendranagar, in Ranga Reddy district, Telangana.[7]

History of the judiciary

The court during the Nizam era was known as Adalatul Aaliya Osmania (Higher court of Osman Ali Khan) and on November 5, 1956, after Andhra Pradesh was formed under the States Reorganisation Act 1956 it was renamed as ‘High Court of Andhra Pradesh’.[8] On 1 January 2019, the High Court was bifurcated into Andhra Pradesh High Court and Telangana High Court after the formation of the state of Telangana.[9]

History of the High Court building

The High Court building today stands on the south bank of the River Musi. Built in red and white stones in Indo-Saracenic style, the court building is one of the finest buildings in the city. The construction was started under Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan, then ruler of Hyderabad.[8][10]

The High Court functioned from five different locations, before the present location was finalised. The court was earlier located at Pathergatti. In 1909 it was shifted to the residence of Nawab Sir Asman Jah. Later in 1912, the court was shifted to Public Gardens and within 4 months it was once again shifted to the residence of Nawab Nawab Salar Jung Bahadur, at Chatta Bazaar. In 1914, the court was once again shifted to the residence of Nawab Sartaj Jung at Saifabad. During this period the construction of the present building was started and the court shifted to its new location in 1919. The building could accommodate six judges besides accommodation for the office staff, record rooms, and advocates' hall. As number of judges increased a second building was built in 1958 and later in 1978, third building was added. In 2023, it was proposed to shift the court to a new building to be constructed at Rajendranagar.[8][11][12]

The plan of the High Court was drawn up by Shankar Lal of Jaipur and the local engineer who executed the design was Mehar Ali Fazil. Its chief engineer was Nawab Khan Bahadur Mirza Akbar Baig. The High Court was built on the ruins of the Qutb Shahi palaces, Hina Mahal and Nadi Mahal.[8] The construction started on 15 April 1915 and was completed on 31 March 1919. On 20 April 1920, the high court building was inaugurated by the seventh Nizam Mir Osman Ali Khan.

In 1944, on the occasion of the silver jubilee celebrations a silver model of the high court weighing about 300 kg was presented to the Nizam VII Mir Osman Ali Khan by the judiciary. The model is now in the Nizam's Museum in Purani Haveli.[13]

The High Court building has been included in the list of heritage structures compiled by INTACH. World Monuments Fund has included the building in 2025 World Monuments Watch.[14]

After the formation of Andhra Pradesh

When the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was formed in 1956 as a consequence of States Reorganisation Act, the number of judges was increased to 12. The existing accommodation was inadequate to meet the requirements of the larger High Court and so the additional building was constructed in 1958–59. The entire office rooms, record rooms, chambers of advocates (42 in all) and the rooms for law officers were located in this building. The record rooms, Officer rooms in the main building were modified to provide chambers and Court Hall accommodation for 14 Judges.

Construction of Annexe

By 1970, the institution of cases of the High Court has gone up to 35,000 as against 20,000 in 1958. The number of judges increased from 14 to 32. To provide additional accommodation for judges, staff, advocates and law officers, the third building was proposed and the work was completed in 1976. The law officers strength was increased from 8 to 18 by 1980 and the institution of cases had gone up to 55,593 cases. In 1979 a plan was drawn for the four-storey annexe building and due to lack of funds that could not be taken up. There are currently 32 court halls and 38 chambers located in the High Court main building and annexe buildings. The present building for which the foundation stone is being laid by the Chief Justice will have eight court halls and eight chambers for the judges. Some of the court halls located in the verandahs and in the office rooms will be restored to their original position. The institution of cases had risen from 20,078 from 1958 to 1982, 123 including miscellaneous cases in 1985. The pending cases in the High Court as on 24 July 1987 was 84,855 (i.e., 66,276 main cases + 18,579 miscellaneous cases). After the completion of this building, the main building and annexes buildings can locate 32 court halls and 38 chambers.

2009 Major fire

On 31 August 2009 a major accidental fire broke out through the building reportedly causing severe damage to the library housing rare England law reports, Privy Council journals and a life-size portrait of the Nizam and portraits of judges. However, the records of the court are reportedly safe. The structural integrity of the building also may have been compromised.[15][16]

The Judges

The Telangana High Court sits at Hyderabad and has jurisdiction over the state of Telangana. It may have a maximum of 42 judges of which 32 may be permanently appointed and 10 may be additionally appointed. Currently, it has 29 judges.[17]

Judges of the Telangana High Court Serving on Transfer in Other Courts

# Judges Source Date of Joining Date of Retirement Current High Court
1 M. S. Ramachandra Rao Bar 29 June 2012 6 August 2028 Tripura High Court
2 Todupunuri Amarnath Goud Bar 21 September 2017 28 February 2027 Tripura High Court
3 T. Vinod Kumar Bar 26 August 2019 16 November 2026 Madras High Court
4 Annireddy Abhishek Reddy Bar 26 August 2019 6 November 2029 Patna High Court
5 Perugu Sree Sudha Judicial Service 15 October 2021 5 June 2029 Karnataka High Court
6 Chillakur Sumalatha Judicial Service 15 October 2021 4 February 2034 Karnataka High Court
7 Munnuri Laxman Judicial Service 15 October 2021 24 December 2027 Rajasthan High Court
8 Kasoju Surendhar Bar 24 March 2022 10 January 2030 Madras High Court
9 Mummineni Sudheer Kumar Bar 24 March 2022 19 May 2031 Madras High Court
10 Ragul Reddy Judicial Service 24 March 2022 19 May 2031 Madras High Court
11 Gunnu Anupama Chakravarthy Judicial Service 24 March 2022 20 March 2032 Patna High Court

Judges elevated as Chief Justice

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

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]
Puligoru Venkata Sanjay Kumar Manipur 8 August 2008 14 February 2021 5 February 2023[‡] 1 year, 357 days 14 years, 181 days [18]
Mamidanna Satyratna Ramachandra Rao Himachal Pradesh, transferred to Jharkhand then to Tripura 29 June 2012 30 May 2023 Incumbent 2 years, 295 days 13 years, 264 days [19]

From erstwhile Undivided Andhra Pradesh High Court

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]
Penmetsa Satyanarayana Raju Andhra Pradesh 1 November 1954 30 December 1964 19 October 1965[‡] 294 days 10 years, 353 days [20]
N. D. Krishna Rao Andhra Pradesh 21 February 1955 8 July 1966 18 July 1966 11 days 11 years, 148 days
Manohar Pershad Andhra Pradesh 20 November 1946 20 October 1965 7 July 1966 261 days 19 years, 230 days
Mohammed Ahmed Ansari Kerala 29 November 1946 29 March 1960 25 November 1961 1 year, 242 days 14 years, 362 days [21]
Pingle Jaganmohan Reddy Andhra Pradesh 16 February 1952 19 July 1966 31 July 1969[‡] 3 years, 13 days 17 years, 166 days [22]
N. Kumarayya Andhra Pradesh 18 August 1955 1 August 1969 14 June 1971 1 year, 318 days 15 years, 301 days [20]
Canakapalli Sanjeevrow Nayudu Gauhati 13 March 1958 7 February 1967 7 March 1968 1 year, 30 days 9 years, 361 days
K. V. L. Narasimham Andhra Pradesh 9 December 1959 15 June 1971 31 March 1972 291 days 12 years, 114 days
Gopal Rao Ekbote Andhra Pradesh 7 June 1962 1 April 1972 31 May 1974 2 years, 61 days 11 years, 359 days
Seshareddi Obul Reddy Andhra Pradesh, transferred to Gujarat then back to Andhra Pradesh 8 July 1966 1 June 1974 8 April 1978 3 years, 312 days 11 years, 275 days
Avula Sambasiva Rao Andhra Pradesh 22 April 1967 9 April 1978 15 March 1979 341 days 11 years, 328 days
Challa Kondaiah Andhra Pradesh 21 August 1967 16 March 1979 3 July 1980 1 year, 110 days 12 years, 318 days
Alladi Kuppu Swami Andhra Pradesh 23 November 1980 22 March 1982 1 year, 120 days 14 years, 214 days
Konda Madhava Reddy Andhra Pradesh, transferred to Bombay 28 May 1968 14 April 1983 21 October 1985 2 years, 191 days 17 years, 147 days [23]
Koka Ramachandra Rao Andhra Pradesh 21 August 1968 1984 4 July 1984 15 years, 319 days [20]
Palem Chennakesava Reddy Andhra Pradesh, transferred to Gauhati 10 May 1972 1985 2 November 1986 14 years, 177 days
Anisetti Raghuvir Andhra Pradesh, transferred to Gauhati 17 October 1974 6 May 1988 21 March 1991 2 years, 320 days 16 years, 156 days
Benjaram Pranaya Jeevan Reddy Andhra Pradesh 17 July 1975 16 April 1990 6 October 1991[‡] 1 year, 174 days 16 years, 82 days
Mamidanna Jagannadha Rao Andhra Pradesh, transferred to Delhi 29 November 1982 8 August 1991 20 March 1997[‡] 5 years, 225 days 14 years, 112 days
Ambati Lakshman Rao Allahabad 10 December 1982 10 April 1995 14 January 1996 280 days 13 years, 36 days
Makani Narayana Rao Himachal Pradesh 11 July 1986 6 November 1997 21 April 1998 167 days 11 years, 285 days
Yarabati Bhaskar Rao Karnataka 9 March 1999 26 June 2000 1 year, 110 days 13 years, 352 days
P. Venkatarama Reddi Karnataka 16 March 1990 21 October 2000 16 August 2001[‡] 300 days 11 years, 154 days
Bollampally Subhashan Reddy Madras, transferred to Kerala 25 November 1991 12 September 2001 2 March 2005 3 years, 172 days 13 years, 98 days
Buchireddy Sudarshan Reddy Gauhati 2 May 1995 5 December 2005 11 January 2007[‡] 1 year, 38 days 11 years, 255 days
Jasti Chelameswar Gauhati, transferred to Kerala 23 June 1997 3 May 2007 9 October 2011[‡] 4 years, 160 days 14 years, 109 days
Toom Meena Kumari Meghalaya 23 February 1998 23 March 2013 3 August 2013 134 days 15 years, 162 days
Nuthalapati Venkata Ramana Delhi 27 June 2000 2 September 2013 16 February 2014[‡] 168 days 13 years, 235 days
Gorla Rohini Delhi 25 June 2001 21 April 2014 13 April 2017 2 years, 358 days 15 years, 293 days
Lingappa Narasimha Reddy Patna 10 September 2001 2 January 2015 31 July 2015 211 days 13 years, 325 days
Ramayyagari Subhash Reddy Gujarat 2 December 2002 13 February 2016 1 November 2018[‡] 2 years, 262 days 15 years, 335 days [24]
  1. ^ a b this inlcudes date of resignation, death and Elevation to supreme court
  2. ^ a b also includes tenure as Chief Justice

Judges elevated to Supreme Court

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

# 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 Puligoru Venkata Sanjay Kumar 8 August 2008 6 February 2023 Incumbent 14 years, 181 days 3 years, 43 days 17 years, 224 days 6th CJ of Manipur HC

From erstwhile Undivided Andhra Pradesh High Court

# 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 Penmetsa Satyanarayana Raju 1 January 1954 20 October 1965 20 April 1966[†] 11 years, 292 days 183 days 12 years, 110 days CJ in same High Court
2 Pingle Jaganmohan Reddy 16 February 1952 1 August 1969 22 January 1975 17 years, 166 days 5 years, 175 days 22 years, 341 days CJ in same High Court
3 Ontethupalli Chinnappa Reddy 21 August 1967 17 July 1978 24 September 1987 10 years, 330 days 9 years, 70 days 20 years, 35 days Judge of Andhra Pradesh HC
4 Katikithala Ramaswamy 29 September 1982 6 October 1989 12 July 1997 7 years, 7 days 7 years, 280 days 14 years, 287 days Judge of Andhra Pradesh HC
5 K. Jayachandra Reddy 7 March 1975 11 January 1990 14 July 1994 14 years, 310 days 4 years, 185 days 19 years, 130 days Judge of Andhra Pradesh HC
6 Benjaram Pranaya Jeevan Reddy 17 July 1975 7 October 1991 13 March 1997 16 years, 82 days 5 years, 158 days 21 years, 240 days 31st CJ of Allahabad HC
7 Mamidanna Jagannadha Rao 29 November 1982 21 March 1997 1 December 2000 14 years, 112 days 3 years, 256 days 18 years, 3 days 17th CJ of Delhi HC
8 Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri 11 July 1986 4 December 1997 5 April 2003 11 years, 146 days 5 years, 123 days 16 years, 269 days Acting CJ of Andhra Pradesh HC
9 P. Venkatarama Reddi 16 March 1990 17 August 2001 9 August 2005 11 years, 154 days 3 years, 358 days 15 years, 147 days 20th CJ of Karnataka HC
10 Buchireddy Sudershan Reddy 2 May 1995 12 January 2007 7 July 2011 11 years, 255 days 4 years, 177 days 16 years, 67 days 30th CJ of Gauhati HC
11 Jasti Chelameswar 23 June 1997 10 October 2011 22 June 2018 14 years, 109 days 6 years, 256 days 21 years, 0 days 29th CJ of Kerala HC
12 Nuthalapati Venkata Ramana 27 June 2000 17 February 2014 26 August 2022 13 years, 235 days 8 years, 191 days 22 years, 61 days 28th CJ of Delhi HC
13 Ramayyagari Subhash Reddy 2 December 2002 2 November 2018 4 January 2022 15 years, 335 days 3 years, 64 days 19 years, 34 days 24th CJ of Gujarat HC
  1. ^ a b Includes both tenure as High Court Judge as well as Supreme Court Judge

Chief Justices

No. Judge Term start Term end
Andhra High Court, Guntur
1 Koka Subba Rao 5 July 1954 31 October 1956
United Andhra Pradesh High Court
1 Koka Subba Rao 1 November 1956 30 January 1958
2 P. Chandra Reddy 16 June 1958 22 November 1964
3 P. Satyanarayana Raju 30 December 1964 19 October 1965
4 Manohar Pershad 20 October 1965 7 July 1966
5 N. D. Krishna Rao 8 July 1966 18 July 1966
6 P. Jagan Mohan Reddy 19 July 1966 31 July 1969
7 N. Kumarayya 1 August 1969 14 June 1971
8 K.V.L. Narasimham 15 June 1971 31 March 1972
9 Gopal Rao Ekbote 1 April 1972 31 May 1974
10 S. Obul Reddi 1 June 1974 6 July 1976
11 B. J. Divan 7 July 1976 27 August 1977
(10) S. Obul Reddi 28 August 1977 8 April 1978
12 Avula Sambasiva Rao 9 April 1978 15 March 1979
13 Challa Kondaiah 16 March 1979 3 July 1980
14 Alladi Kuppu Swami 23 November 1980 22 March 1982
15 Konda Madhava Reddy 14 April 1983 7 April 1984
16 Koka Ramachandra Rao 1984 4 July 1984
17 P. Chennakesav Reddi 1985 29 September 1985
18 K. Bhaskaran 9 October 1985 18 March 1988
19 Yogeshwar Dayal 19 March 1988 21 March 1991
20 S.C. Pratap 1991 1992
21 S.B. Majumdar 12 October 1992 1 July 1993
22 Sundaram Nainar Sundaram 14 December 1993 1994
23 Saiyed Sagir Ahmed 23 September 1994 4 March 1995
24 Prabha Shankar Mishra 15 May 1995 27 October 1997
25 Umesh Chandra Banerjee 1 February 1998 9 December 1998
26 Manmohan Singh Liberhan 28 December 1998 10 November 2000
27 S. B. Sinha 11 December 2000 25 November 2001
28 Arunachalam R. Lakshmanan 26 November 2001 19 December 2002
29 Devinder Gupta 6 March 2003 3 April 2005
30 G.S. Singhvi 27 November 2005 11 November 2007
31 Anil Ramesh Dave 7 January 2008 11 February 2010
32 Nisar Ahmad Kakru 19 February 2010 25 October 2011
33 Madan Lokur 15 November 2011 4 June 2012
34 Pinaki Chandra Ghose 12 December 2012 8 March 2013
35 Kalyan Jyoti Sengupta 21 May 2013 5 May 2015
High Court of Judicature at Hyderabad
36 T.B. Radhakrishnan 7 July 2017 31 December 2018[a]
Telangana High Court
1 T.B. Radhakrishnan 1 January 2019 2 April 2019
2 Raghvendra Singh Chauhan 22 June 2019 6 January 2021
3 Hima Kohli 7 January 2021 30 August 2021
4 Satish Chandra Sharma 11 October 2021 27 June 2022
5 Ujjal Bhuyan 28 June 2022 13 July 2023
6 Alok Aradhe 23 July 2023 20 January 2025
7 Aparesh Kumar Singh 19 July 2025 Incumbent
  1. ^ During his tenure separate Telangana High Court was established and he became the First Chief Justice of new Telangana High Court

Present Registrars of High Court

  1. Registrar General – E. Tirumala Devi
  2. Registrar (Judicial I) – Sri Sura Srinivas Reddy
  3. Registrar (Judicial II)-K Gangadhara rao
  4. Registrar (Administration) – V. Bala Bhaskar Rao
  5. Registrar (I.T.)-cum-Central Project Coordinator (IT & E-Committee related) – T Venkateswara Rao
  6. Registrar (Vigilance) – E. Tirumala Devi
  7. Registrar (Management)-V Ramesh
  8. Registrar (Protocol)-T Venkateswara Rao
  9. District Judge (Enquiries)
  10. Registrar (Recruitment) – Sri Sura Srinivas Reddy

Present unit heads

  1. Adilabad – M. R. Sunitha
  2. Karimnagar – B. Prathima
  3. Khammam – P Chandrashekara Prasad
  4. Mahabubnagar -S Premavathi
  5. Medak – B Papi Reddy
  6. Nalgonda – S Jagjeevan Kumar
  7. Nizamabad -Kunchala Suneetha
  8. Rangareddy – R Tirupathi
  9. Warangal – Narsing Rao Nandikonda
  10. Hyderabad-City Civil Court – Renuka Yara
  11. Hyderabad-City Small Causes Court -V B Nirmala Geethamba
  12. Hyderabad-Metropolitan Sessions Court – E Tirumala Devi
  13. Hyderabad – Principal CBI – Ch. Ramesh Babu

See also

References

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  2. ^ "About Us". tshc.gov.in. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  3. ^ Today, Telangana (22 July 2022). "'27 Judges working in Telangana HC against sanctioned strength of 42'". Telangana Today. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  4. ^ "Chief Justice of India Approves Increase in Number of Judges to 42 from 24 in Telangana High Court". The Frontline.
  5. ^ "Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh sworn in as Chief Justice of Telangana High Court". The Hindu.
  6. ^ "Justice Aparesh Kumar Singh, Chief Justice of Telangana HC". The Deccan Chronicle.
  7. ^ "Telangana Govt allots 100 acre land of agri and horticulture varsities for construction of new High Court Building Complex". The Hindu. 5 January 2024. Retrieved 7 October 2025.
  8. ^ a b c d Moin, Ather (20 April 2019). "Hyderabad high court building turns 100 years old". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
  9. ^ "Andhra Pradesh and Telangana to have separate HCs". The Hindu. 26 December 2018. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
  10. ^ "As Hyderabad High Court turns 100, city historians recall rich legacy". The News Minute. 20 April 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2023.
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  12. ^ "About Us".
  13. ^ Richi, Priyanka (20 April 2019). "As Hyderabad High Court turns 100, city historians recall rich legacy". The News Minute. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
  14. ^ Banerjee, Mrittika (16 January 2025). "Hyderabad's Heritage Sites Make it to 2025 World Monuments Watchlist". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 6 March 2025.
  15. ^ "HC up in flames". Deccan Chronicle. Archived from the original on 3 September 2009.
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  17. ^ "HON'BLE JUDGES PROFILE". hc.tap.nic.in. Retrieved 4 February 2019.
  18. ^ "High Court for the State of Telangana". tshc.gov.in. Archived from the original on 21 May 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  19. ^ "High Court for the State of Telangana". tshc.gov.in. Archived from the original on 15 May 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  20. ^ a b c "High Court of Andhra Pradesh". aphc.gov.in. Archived from the original on 15 August 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  21. ^ "Justice P. Jaganmohan Reddy | Supreme Court of India | India". www.sci.gov.in. Archived from the original on 9 September 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  22. ^ "Justice P. Jaganmohan Reddy | Supreme Court of India | India". www.sci.gov.in. Archived from the original on 9 September 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  23. ^ "Official Website of High Court of Bombay". bombayhighcourt.nic.in. Archived from the original on 16 July 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.
  24. ^ "Justice R.Subhash Reddy | Supreme Court of India | India". www.sci.gov.in. Archived from the original on 9 September 2025. Retrieved 16 December 2025.