V. S. Sirpurkar

Hon'ble Justice (Retd.)
Vikas Sridhar Sirpurkar
Judge of Supreme Court of India
In office
12 January 2007 – 21 August 2011
Nominated byY. K. Sabharwal
Appointed byA. P. J. Abdul Kalam
32nd Chief Justice of Calcutta High Court
In office
20 March 2005 – 11 January 2007
Nominated byR. C. Lahoti
Appointed byA. P. J. Abdul Kalam
Preceded by
Succeeded bySurinder Singh Nijjar
3rd Chief Justice of Uttarakhand High Court
In office
25 July 2004 – 19 March 2005
Nominated byR. C. Lahoti
Appointed byA. P. J. Abdul Kalam
Preceded by
Succeeded byCyriac Joseph
Judge of Madras High Court
In office
December 1997 – 24 July 2004
Nominated byJ. S. Verma
Appointed byK. R. Narayanan
Judge of Bombay High Court
In office
9 November 1992 – December 1997
Nominated byM. H. Kania
Appointed byS. D. Sharma
Personal details
Born (1946-08-22) 22 August 1946
Alma materMorris College, Nagpur, University College of Law, Nagpur

Vikas Shridhar Sirpurkar (born 22 August 1946) is a retired judge of the Supreme Court of India.[1] He was appointed Supreme Court judge on 12 January 2007 and retired on 21 August 2011, completing a four-and-a-half-year tenure.[2]

Career

Sirpurkar became a judge of Bombay High Court on 9 November 1992[3] and was transferred to the Madras High Court in December 1997.[4] He was elevated to Chief Justice of Uttarakhand High Court where he served from 25 July 2004 to 19 March 2005. He then assumed office of the Chief Justice of the Calcutta High Court from 20 March 2005 up to 11 January 2007. Finally he was appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court of India on 12 January 2007 and retired on 21 August 2011, after reaching the retiring age of 65. After retiring from the Supreme Court of India, he is expected to take office as the Chairman of the Competition Appellate Tribunal from July, 2012, following the retirement of Justice Arijit Pasayat from that position in May, 2012.

Notable judgements

His notable judgements include the confirmation of death sentence on Pakistani national Mohammed Arif alias Ashfaq in the 2000 Delhi Red Fort attack,[5] part of a two judge bench with Justice T. S. Thakur. In December 2009, he reduced the death sentence to life imprisonment in a case of "honour killing" of a girl by her brother. In the hooch case in which he pulled up the Kerala government. He also ruled that the services provided by the office of Regional Provident Fund Commissioner would come under the ambit of "service" under the Consumer Protection Act of 1986 and that a PF scheme subscriber was a "consumer" under this act.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Hon'ble Mr. Justice V.S. Sirpurkar". Supreme Court of India. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  2. ^ Venkatesan, J. (20 August 2011). "Sirpurkar retires, he was part of Bench that gave landmark verdicts". The Hindu. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  3. ^ Kaushik, Narendra (6 April 2016). "First Stirrings : Law in his blood". Gfiles India. Retrieved 27 November 2025.
  4. ^ "Official Website of High Court of Bombay". bombayhighcourt.nic.in. Archived from the original on 11 September 2025. Retrieved 31 December 2025.
  5. ^ Venkatesan, J. (11 August 2011). "Death sentence upheld for Red Fort attacker". The Hindu. Retrieved 20 August 2011.
  6. ^ archive, From our online (13 December 2019). "All you need to know about VS Sirpurkar, the retired SC judge probing Telangana encounter deaths". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 31 December 2025.