Longest serving attorney general of india

  1. APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY
  2. M. C. Setalvad
  3. [Solved] The Attorney
  4. List of all Chief Justices of India (1950
  5. Truth behind Mukul Rohatgi stepping down as attorney general of India


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APPOINTMENT OF ATTORNEY

The Attorney-General of India is the Chief Legal Advisor to the Government of India and its primary lawyer in the Supreme Court of India. He is the highest Law Officer in the country. He is usually a highly respected Senior Advocate of the court, and is appointed by the ruling Government. The office of the Attorney-General was created by the Constitution of India. The Attorney-General of India is appointed by the President of India under Article 76(1) of the Constitution and holds office during the pleasure of the President. Unlike the United States, in India, the Attorney-General does not have executive authority and is not a government minister; those functions are performed by the law minister. The Attorney-General is assisted by the Solicitor General of India and several additional Solicitors General. The solicitor general is the second law officer of the state after the Attorney-General. The solicitor General is subordinate to the Attorney-General of India. The solicitor General is himself assisted by four Additional Solicitors General for India. Unlike the Attorney-General, Solicitor General does not tender legal advice to the Government of India. His workload is confined to appear in courts on behalf of the Union of India. Article 76 of Indian Constitution describes the appointment and functions of the Attorney- General. Under Article 76(1) The President shall appoint a person who is the citizen of India and is qualified to be appointed a Judge of the Supreme Court ...

M. C. Setalvad

Motilal Chimanlal Setalvad (c. 1884 – 1974) was an eminent He was awarded the Biography [ ] The son of noted lawyer Sir He started practicing law in Bombay and eventually became Advocate General of Bombay and Attorney General for India in 1950, in the formative years of Government of India, under He appeared for the government in a host of important and, at times, controversial cases. He was also involved with the He died in 1974. Personal life [ ] His son, Atul Setalvad (25 October 1933 - 22 July 2010) Bibliography [ ] • My life; law and other things, 1970. • Motilal Chimanlal Setalvad (1968). Bhulabhai Desai. Publications Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Government of India. References [ ]

[Solved] The Attorney

The correct answer is Article 76. Key Points • Attorney-General of India • In India Attorney-General (AG) is the chief legal advisor ofthe Indian government's. • The President of India appoints the AG on the advice of Union Cabinet under Article 76 of the Constitution of India, 1950. • The Attorney-General have an advisory role to counsel the government of India in the legal matters and their positions are hold as per the President's pleasure.This indicates that there is no specific tenure,and that they serve until the President appoints their removal. • In addition to serving as the government's primary legal counsel, the AG of India should also appearsin the Supreme Courton behalf of the government. • In India, there have been 15 AGs since 1950. K. K. Venugopal is the 15th and current attorney general of India. In 2020, President Ram Nath Kovind renewed his appointment. He started his service on June 30, 2017. Additional Information • The Attorney-General of Indiais also a first law officer of the country. • Motilal Chimanlal Setalvadwas appointed as the first attorney-general of India.His tenure as attorney general from 1950 to 1963 is still the longest tenure served by any attorney-general. • The AGs hasthe right of audience to appear in all Indian Court's and to take part in the Parliamentary sessions, but not to vote. • The Attorney General of India lacks executive authority, in contrast to the Attorney General of the United States. TheLaw Minister of India is the in...

List of all Chief Justices of India (1950

With the establishment of the Supreme Court of India on 26 January 1950, 50 judges have served as the Chief Justice of India to date. Justice DY Chandrachud is the 50th Chief Justice of India. The Chief Justice of India is appointed by the President of India and can hold office up to the age of 65 years. Generally, the senior-most Judge of the Supreme Court of India is appointed as the Chief Justice of India. The constitution and jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of India are stated in detail from Article 124 to Article147 of the Indian Constitution. List of all the Chief Justices of India Name Date of Appointment as C.J.I. Held Office till 1. Hon’ble Justice Harilal Jekisundas Kania 26/01/1950 06/11/1951 2. Hon’ble Justice M. Patanjali Sastri 07/11/1951 03/01/1954 3. Hon’ble Justice Mehr Chand Mahajan 04/01/1954 22/12/1954 4. Hon’ble Justice Bijan Kumar Mukherjea 23/12/1954 31/01/1956 5. Hon’ble Justice Sudhi Ranjan Das 01/02/1956 30/09/1959 6. Hon’ble Justice Bhuvneshwar Prasad Sinha 01/10/1959 31/01/1964 7. Hon’ble Justice P.B. Gajendragadkar 01/02/1964 15/03/1966 8. Hon’ble Justice A.K. Sarkar 16/03/1966 29/06/1966 9. Hon’ble Justice K. Subba Rao 30/06/1966 11/04/1967 10.Hon’ble Justice K.N. Wanchoo 12/04/1967 24/02/1968 11. Hon’ble Justice M. Hidayatullah 25/02/1968 16/12/1970 12. Hon’ble Justice J.C. Shah 17/12/1970 21/01/1971 13. Hon’ble Justice S.M. Sikri 22/01/1971 25/04/1973 14. Hon’ble Justice A.N. Ray 26/04/1973 28/01/1977 15. Hon’ble Justice M. Hameedullah Beg...

Truth behind Mukul Rohatgi stepping down as attorney general of India

He has also left behind a stunned silence. For, although attorney generals are appointed by the president of India, they are essentially the prime minister’s men (so far no woman has won that glory). Politics plays an important role in their appointment. They guard the interests of the state in judicial processes and resign only when a government falls. Some hint at the way Rohatgi’s contract was renewed on June 3. With Prime Minister Modi out on his three-nation tour of Germany, Spain and Russia from May 29, the Appointments Committee of the Cabinet had extended his term of service (along with that of solicitor general and the five additional solicitor generals) on an ad hoc basis, “until further orders”. Why didn’t the PM sign before he left, ask some. Others pooh-pooh the idea: “That’s how governments work.” But the speculation refuses to die down that as AG Rohatgi’s biggest moment (or failure) was the year-long power struggle between the judiciary and executive over National Judicial Appointment Commission (NJAC) in 2015. The government’s defeat in the NJAC matter is something of a blot that he could not live down. Some wonder if it is a case of wounded pride and hurt ego at his exclusion from the International Court of Justice battle with Pakistan on the Kulbhushan Jadhav case in May. As the first officer of law of the Modi government, why was he bypassed for Harish Salve, both contemporaries and competitors and among India’s top 10 most influential (and most expensi...