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Bijan Kumar Mukherjea

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bijan Kumar Mukherjea
4th Chief Justice of India
In office
23 December 1954 – 31 January 1956
Nominated byRajendra Prasad
Preceded byMehr Chand Mahajan
Succeeded bySudhi Ranjan Das
Personal details
Born(1891-08-15)15 August 1891
Died22 February 1956(1956-02-22) (aged 64)
NationalityIndian

Bijan Kumar Mukherjea (Bengali: বিজন কুমার মুখার্জী; 15 August 1891 – 22 February 1956[1]) was the 4th Chief Justice of India. He was in his office from 22 December 1954 to 31 January 1956.

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Transcription

Avocation

Joined Calcutta Bar in 1914 Junior Govt. Pleader Calcutta High Court, 1934 Senior Govt. Pleader, Calcutta Court, 1936 Judge Calcutta High Court, November 1936 – 1948 Member Bengal Boundary Commission, 1947 Judge, Federal Court/Supreme Court 14 Oct. 1948-22 Dec.1954. Chief Justice of India 1954-31 Jan 1956

On Patanjali Sastri's retirement in January 1954, Nehru had asked B.K. Mukherjea to take over as Chief Justice. However Mukherjea had declined, saying that Mehr Chand Mahajan was senior to him. When Nehru pressed him, the judge said he would sooner resign than usurp the highest office before his turn. Only after Mahajan retired did Mukherjea become CJI.[2]

Education and academics

After completion of his education in Hooghly Branch Government School, and Hooghly Mohasin College, Hooghly, West Bengal,[3] he joined the Surendranath Law College under the University of Calcutta.[4]

He was an M.A. (History) with specialization in Ancient Indian History, B.L. (Gold Medalist), M.L. (Gold Medalist), Doctor of Law.

He was Anauth Dev Research Prizeman, Tagore Law Lecturer (Calcutta University), and also a Saraswati (Sanskrit).

Personal life

Mukherjea was born to Rakhal Das Mukherjee and Sarat Kumari Devi. Rakhal Das had graduated from Scottish Church College (also popularly called Duf's College), Calcutta, to become a Vakil. Bijan grew up in his maternal home ("Rose Villa", Hooghly District, West Bengal, India). He had an elder sister (Sheila) and a younger brother, Bipin, who died at the age of ten.

Married Labanyalata Devi and had a son Amiya Kumar Mookerji. Labanya died when Amiya was barely two. Amiya studied at St. Paul's School, Kolkata and Scottish Church College, Kolkata. He followed his father's vocation to become a judge of the Calcutta High Court, although he refused the position of Supreme court judge because of health issues. Bijan Kumar's granddaughter, Meera Ganguli (née Mookerji) died in 2022. Mukherjea was survived by his great-grandson Anjan Ganguli and great-granddaughter in law, Reena Kohli Ganguli.

Mukherjea has his ancestral house in Mukherjee Lodge, at Judge Para, Jognath Tala, Ishan Banerjee Lane, Nabadwip, Dist. Nadia, West Bengal, and is a descendant of Krittibas Ojha (the translator and adapter of the first Bengali version of Valmiki's Ramayana) and a first cousin of Prangopal Mukherjee, whose son, Govinda Gopal Mukherjee, became a professor and researcher in philosophy and Sanskrit studies, and a singer of devotional songs in Bengali and Sanskrit.

B. K. Mukherjea and his cousin Prangopal Mukerjee were both disciples of Sri Sri Balananda Brahmachari of Deogharh, Jharkhand, and often visited Balanandaji's Tapovan Ashram at Deogharh.

Memberships and association

Fellow of the Calcutta University President of the Bengal Sanskrit Association

Associated with Scouts Movement in Bengal

Acted as District Commissioner, South Calcutta Boys Sc Association

Connected with Literary and Cultural Society Bibudha Janani Sava, Nabadwip, Gita Sava, Calcutta, St. Sahitya Parishad; Calcutta etc.

Publication

  • Problems & Law
  • Hindu Law of Religious and Charitable Trusts

References

  1. ^ ""Bijan Kumar Mukherjea", Gynad.com". Archived from the original on 22 August 2017. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  2. ^ "Two Lives". Archived from the original on 31 December 2014. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  3. ^ "Education First".
  4. ^ Surendranath Law College. "Alumni". snlawcollege.ac.in. Retrieved 25 February 2017.

External links

  1. Biography at Supreme Court of India website
Legal offices
Preceded by Chief Justice of India
22 December 1954 – 31 January 1956
Succeeded by

2. https://www.lawyersupdate.co.in/book-reviews-releases/a-judge-nonpareil-a-b-k-mukherjea-reader-v-sudhish-pai/


This page was last edited on 23 April 2024, at 19:03
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