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'''Konakuppakatil Gopinathan Balakrishnan''' ({{lang-ml|കൊനകുപ്പക്കാട്ടില്‍ ഗോപിനാഥന്‍ ബാലകൃഷ്ണന്‍}}, {{lang-hi|कोनकुप्पक्काट्टिल गोपिनाथन बालकृष्णन}}, born [[12 May]] [[1945]]) known as '''K. G. Balakrishnan''', is the thirty-seventh and current [[Chief Justice of India]].
'''Konakuppakatil Gopinathan Balakrishnan''' ({{lang-hi|कोनकुप्पक्काट्टिल गोपिनाथन बालकृष्णन}}, born [[12 May]] [[1945]]) known as '''K. G. Balakrishnan''', is the thirty-seventh and current [[Chief Justice of India]].


==Early life==
==Early life==

Revision as of 03:04, 12 October 2009

Konakuppakatil Gopinathan Balakrishnan
Justice K. G. Balakrishnan
Chief Justice of India
Assumed office
January 14 2007
Appointed byA. P. J. Abdul Kalam
Preceded byY. K. Sabharwal

Konakuppakatil Gopinathan Balakrishnan (Template:Lang-hi, born 12 May 1945) known as K. G. Balakrishnan, is the thirty-seventh and current Chief Justice of India.

Early life

Judge K.G.Balakrishnan was born at Thalayolaparambu, near Vaikom, in Travancore which will be in present day Kottayam district, Kerala, into a poor family. He belongs to the Pulaya caste.

Education

According to Judge Balakrishnan his parents were the only source of inspiration for him: "Though my father was only a matriculate and my mother had her schooling up to the seventh standard, they wanted to give their children the best education."[1]

After completing his primary education in Thalayolaparambu village, he finished school at the Government School for which he had to walk 5 km every day. Subsequently, he joined the Maharaja's College at Ernakulam, where he studied Science. He took his B. L. degree from the Maharaja's Law College and enrolled as an advocate in the Kerala Bar Council in 1968. He then completed his LL.M. in 1971.

Career

As an advocate he pleaded both criminal and civil cases in the Ernakulam court. He was later appointed as a Munsif in the Kerala Judicial Services in 1973. He later resigned from the services and resumed practice as an advocate in the Kerala High Court. In 1985, he was appointed as a judge of the Kerala High Court, and was transferred to the Gujarat High Court in 1997. He became the Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court in 1998, and in 1999, he assumed charge as the Chief Justice of the High Court of Judicature at Madras. While being Chief Justice of Gujarat High Court, he also discharged duties of Governor of Gujarat for about two months from 16 January 1999 to 18 March 1999. [2] On the 8 June 2000 he was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court. He was sworn in as the Chief Justice of India on 14 January 2007 by then President A. P. J. Abdul Kalam.[3]

Judgments

  • Asking the election commission to debar the political parties, which impose hartals on the public.

Quotes

  • "Really, it is a matter of pride for us, but what I achieved is the result of hard labour and integrity."
  • "Both Advocates and Judges have an equal responsibility towards the society. So both deserve equal respect from the people."
  • "The forcible strikes by political parties has a very bad effect on common people. You can see how patients, passengers, and children suffer during strikes."

References

Preceded by Governor of the Gujarat (Acting)
Jan 1999 – March 1999
Succeeded by
Preceded by Chief Justice of India
14 January 2007
Succeeded by
Incumbent