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Chandrachud

Dhananjaya Yeshwant Chandrachud (born 11 November 1959) is an Indian jurist who served as the 50th from 9 November 2022 to 10 November 2024. Born in as the only child of , the 16th who held the longest tenure in that office, he pursued advanced legal studies at , earning an LL.M. in 1983 and an S.J.D. in 1986. Chandrachud's judicial career spanned over two decades, beginning with his appointment as an Additional Judge of the in 2000, followed by elevation to permanent judge in 2002, Chief Justice of the in 2013, and judge in 2016. As a judge and later , Chandrachud contributed to transformative constitutional , participating in benches that recognized the fundamental in 2017, decriminalized consensual homosexual acts under of the in 2018, upheld the abrogation of Article 370 in 2019, resolved the Ayodhya temple-mosque dispute in favor of a in 2019, and invalidated the scheme as unconstitutional in 2024 while mandating disclosure of donor details. He also authored opinions reinforcing legislative immunity limits, advancing in marital rape contexts, and addressing environmental and issues, often emphasizing transformative rooted in empirical equity over rigid . Chandrachud's tenure drew praise for expanding individual liberties and institutional transparency but faced criticism for perceived inconsistencies, such as the timing of the ruling after its political use and selective case prioritization amid a exceeding matters, with detractors questioning in politically charged disputes. These debates highlight tensions between and accusations of , though empirical of his 300+ authored opinions underscores a pattern of rights-affirming decisions grounded in constitutional text and societal impact rather than ideological alignment. Post-retirement, he has engaged in academic discourse on and global .

Family origins

Nobility and historical role in the Maratha Empire

The Chandrachud family, part of the Deshastha Rigvedi Brahmin community, held positions as sardars (nobles) and jagirdars (feudal landholders) in Pune during the height of the Maratha Empire in the 18th century, serving in revenue administration and local governance under the Peshwas. Their roles involved managing jagirs—revenue-yielding land assignments granted by the Peshwa for military and administrative services—which supported the empire's decentralized fiscal system reliant on agrarian collections to fund campaigns and infrastructure. This positioned them amid Pune's elite, where Brahmin families like theirs handled record-keeping, dispute resolution, and tribute flows, essential for sustaining Maratha expansion from the Deccan to northern India between 1720 and 1761. Chandrachud Wada, the family's fortified residence in Pune's Kanhersar Khed area, stood as a symbol of their influence until , incorporating multiple courtyards, temples, and quarters that facilitated both domestic and official functions typical of Maratha seats. Historical accounts from the era highlight such wadas as hubs for administrative deliberations, where families like the Chandrachuds contributed to regional stability by mediating between central authority and local zamindars, particularly during periods of internal factionalism post-1761. Archival references to figures like Yashwant Chandrachud (Gangoba Tatya) in late Maratha service underscore extensions into allied states like , where they acted as diwans (stewards) handling finances amid the confederacy's fragmenting alliances. The empire's collapse after the British victory in the Third Anglo-Maratha War on June 1, 1818, abolished jagirdari privileges and suzerainty, compelling families such as the Chandrachuds to adapt by pursuing in British-established institutions like those in and Bombay. This shift from feudal-military duties to scholarly and legal training preserved their ethos of , evident in the absence of recorded revolts or disloyalty during the transition, and channeled ancestral governance experience into modern civil roles by the mid-19th century.

Notable jurists and lawyers

Y. V. Chandrachud

Yeshwant Vishnu Chandrachud was born on July 12, 1920, in Poona (now ). He received his early education at in Poona, graduated with degrees in History and in 1940 from affiliated to Bombay University, and earned an LL.B. from Bombay University in 1943. Chandrachud enrolled as an advocate of the that year and practiced there as well as before the . Appointed a judge of the in 1961, he served until 1972, when he was elevated to the . Chandrachud became the 16th Chief Justice of India on February 22, 1978, succeeding Justice M. H. Beg, and held the position until his retirement on July 11, 1985, marking the longest tenure of any Chief Justice at approximately 7 years and 4 months. During his time on the Supreme Court prior to becoming Chief Justice, he participated in the 1973 Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala case, dissenting from the majority's establishment of the "basic structure" doctrine limiting Parliament's amendment powers under Article 368, arguing instead for broader legislative authority to alter constitutional provisions. In the 1976 ADM Jabalpur v. Shivkant Shukla case during the national Emergency, Chandrachud joined the 4:1 majority upholding the suspension of habeas corpus rights under Article 21, ruling that no person could move courts for enforcement of fundamental rights amid the proclamation, a decision later deemed flawed and overruled in 2017 for subordinating individual liberties to executive fiat. Chandrachud's judicial philosophy emphasized procedural restraint and fidelity to enacted law, as seen in precedents safeguarding property rights against expansive state claims, such as in interpretations limiting Article 39(b)'s "material resources of the community" to prevent arbitrary deprivation without compensation. Critics, including right-leaning constitutional scholars, have faulted his ADM Jabalpur stance for facilitating state overreach during the imposed by Indira Gandhi's government, viewing it as a capitulation that eroded amid political pressure. Defenders counter that his opinions reflected strict legalism, prioritizing and executive actions validated by constitutional proclamations over activist intervention, consistent with his broader . As , Chandrachud prioritized administrative reforms to streamline court operations, contributing to efficiency in case disposal amid growing pendency. He died on July 14, 2008, at age 88. His legacy endures as one of procedural conservatism, though overshadowed by Emergency-era rulings that prioritized state authority over individual safeguards.

D. Y. Chandrachud

Dhananjaya Yeshwant Chandrachud, born on November 11, 1959, is an Indian jurist who served as the 50th from November 8, 2022, to November 10, 2024. The son of former Y. V. Chandrachud, he completed a at , followed by legal studies at , and advanced degrees at , earning an LL.M. in 1983 and a in 1986. After practicing as an advocate at the , he was appointed an additional judge there on March 29, 2009, became permanent in 2011, and transferred as of the on October 31, 2013, before elevation to the on May 13, 2016. During his Supreme Court tenure, Chandrachud contributed to several landmark rulings expanding constitutional rights. In Justice K. S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India (2017), he formed part of the nine-judge bench that unanimously recognized the as a fundamental right inherent in Articles 14, 19, and 21 of the , overruling prior precedents and setting limits on state surveillance. In Navtej Singh Johar v. (2018), the five-judge bench on which he sat struck down parts of of the criminalizing consensual same-sex relations between adults, with Chandrachud authoring a emphasizing and equality under Article 21. As , he advanced access to justice through technological reforms, including mandatory e-filing of cases to reduce physical filings and pilot live-streaming of Constitution Bench proceedings starting in to enhance transparency and public engagement, though full implementation faced logistical hurdles. Chandrachud's judicial record drew multifaceted criticisms, reflecting divides in perceptions of his jurisprudence. In the 2019 Ayodhya title dispute (M. Siddiq v. Mahant Suresh Das), the five-judge bench including Chandrachud awarded the disputed site to Hindu claimants for a Ram temple while allocating an alternative plot for a mosque, a decision some conservative critics faulted for downplaying evidence of the 1949 placement of idols inside the Babri Masjid as an act of desecration rather than mere possession. In the Gyanvapi Mosque case, delays under his CJI tenure in approving a lower court-ordered survey for Hindu claims of prior temple origins fueled accusations of judicial hesitation on sensitive religious sites. He faced left-leaning critiques for denying bail to activists like Umar Khalid in a 2020 Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act case linked to Delhi riots, with hearings repeatedly adjourned—seven times at the defense's request before withdrawal—prompting post-retirement defenses from Chandrachud attributing delays to counsel tactics amid broader concerns over prolonged pretrial detention. Right-leaning observers accused Chandrachud of "performative ," citing his bench's refusal to order a court-monitored probe or investigation into the Adani-Hindenburg allegations of stock manipulation, interpreting it as undue deference to discretion despite calls for independent scrutiny. Post-retirement, Chandrachud occupied the Justice's official Type VIII at Krishna Menon Marg beyond the six-month grace period under rules, extending nearly eight months until vacating on August 2, 2025, after the Court urged the Centre for resolution amid a housing crunch for incumbent judges. In 2025 interviews, he addressed trolling over case assignments and verdicts, reiterating evidence-based reasoning in and Gyanvapi while critiquing "judge-shopping" as a to judicial integrity.

Abhinav Chandrachud

Abhinav Chandrachud is a practicing advocate at the , focusing on , civil litigation, and media-related matters. He holds degrees including an LLB and BLS from , and an from , where he received the Dana scholarship. His professional work draws from a family tradition of jurisprudence, as the son of former D. Y. Chandrachud, yet emphasizes independent advocacy in high-stakes cases upholding procedural rights and free expression principles. In February 2025, Chandrachud represented YouTuber Ranveer Allahbadia in the amid multiple filed over allegedly remarks made during the show India's Got Latent. During hearings, he acknowledged the remarks as personally "disgusting" while arguing against vague definitions of and securing interim protection from arrest for his client, highlighting tensions between content moderation and constitutional safeguards. This appearance underscored his role in media law disputes, where he has advocated for rule-of-law applications in digital expression cases. Chandrachud has contributed to constitutional discourse through scholarship, including the book Republic of Rhetoric: Free Speech and the Constitution of India, which examines historical and judicial interpretations of (1)(a). His writings and practice reflect a commitment to empirical analysis of judicial processes, such as informal criteria in appointments, without relying on familial influence for case selection or outcomes. This trajectory positions him as a next-generation litigator advancing precedent-based in civil and domains.

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