Agency Name: | Bar Council of India |
Type: | Statutory body |
Headquarters: | New Delhi, India |
Preceding: | State-level bar councils |
Chief1 Name: | Manan Kumar Mishra |
Chief1 Position: | Chairman |
Chief2 Name: | S. Prabakaran |
Chief2 Position: | Vice Chairman |
Chief3 Name: | Satish Abarao Deshmukh |
Chief3 Position: | Co-chairman |
Bar Council of India (BCI) is a statutory body established under section 4 of the Advocates Act 1961 that regulates the legal practice and legal education in India. Its members are elected from amongst the lawyers in India and represent the Indian bar. It prescribes standards of professional conduct, etiquettes and exercises disciplinary jurisdiction over the bar. It also sets standards for legal education and grants recognition to universities whose law degrees will qualify students to enrol themselves as advocates upon graduation.[1] [2] [3]
In March 1953, the 'All India Bar Committee', headed by S. R. Das, submitted a report that proposed the creation of a bar council for each state and an all-India bar council as an apex body. It was suggested that the All India Bar Council would regulate the legal profession and set the standard of legal education. The Law Commission of India was assigned the job of assembling a report on judicial administration reforms and helping India to reform justice and equity to the whole country.
In 1961, the Advocates Act was introduced to implement the recommendations made by the 'All India Bar Committee' and 'Law Commission'. M. C. Setalvad and C. K. Daphtary were the first chairman and vice chairman respectively. In 1963, C. K. Daphtary became the chairman and S. K. Ghose became the vice chairman.[4]
Section 7 of the Advocates Act, 1961 lays down the Bar Council's regulatory and representative mandate. The functions of the Bar Council are to:
As per the Advocates Act, the Bar Council of India consists of members elected from each state bar council, and the Attorney General of India and the Solicitor General of India who are ex officio members.
The council elects its chairman and vice-chairman for two years from amongst its members. Assisted by the various committees of the council, the chairman acts as the chief executive and director of the council.
Manan Kumar Mishra | Chairman, Bar Council of India | |
Satish Abarao Deshmukh | Executive Committee | |
S.Prabakaran Senior Advocate | Vice-chairman, Bar Council of India | |
D.P. Dhal | Managing Trustee, BCI Trust | |
Suresh Chandra Shrimali | Co Chairman | |
Attorney General of India, ex-officio member | ||
Solicitor General of India, ex-officio member | ||
Shailendra Dubey | Member | |
Sadhashiva Reddy | Co Chairman | |
Ved Prakash Sharma | Co Chairman | |
Apurva Kumar Sharma | Chairman, Executive Committee | |
N. Manoj Kumar | Member, vice chairman, Executive Committee | |
Ramireddy, | Member | |
Prashant Kumar | Member | |
Dilip Patel | Member | |
Deshraj Sharma | Member | |
Partap Singh | Member | |
Vishnuvardhan Reddy | Member | |
Srinath Tripathi | Member | |
Ishann Gupta | Member | |
Ashok Dev | Member |
Manan Kumar Mishra is the present chairman. He was preceded by Biri Singh Sinsinewar, who was in turn preceded by the current chairman, Manan Kumar Mishra.[5] [6]
Eligible persons having a recognised law degree are admitted as advocates on the rolls of the state bar Councils. The Advocates Act, 1961 empowers state bar councils to frame their own rules regarding the enrollment of advocates. The council's enrollment committee may scrutinise a candidate's application. Those admitted as advocates by any state bar council are eligible to take the All India Bar Examination which is conducted by the Bar Council of India. Passing the All India Bar Examination awards the state-enrolled advocate with a 'Certificate of Enrolment' which enables the state-enrolled advocate to practice law as an advocate in any High Court and lower court within the territory of India. However, to practise Law before the Supreme Court of India, Advocates must first appear for and qualify in the Supreme Court Advocate on Record Examination conducted by the Supreme Court.[3]
The Bar Council of India has various committees which make recommendations to the council. The members of these committees are elected from amongst the members of the council.
Other than these, there are the Finance Committee, Special or Oversee Committee and All India Bar Examination Committee.[7]
The Bar Council of India has established a Directorate of Legal Education to organise, run, conduct, hold, and administer the following:
On 10 April 2010, the Bar Council of India resolved to conduct an All India Bar Examination that tests an advocate's ability to practice law. It is required for an advocate to pass this examination to practice law. This examination is held biannually and tests advocate on substantive and procedural law. The syllabus for this examination has to be published at least three months before the examination. An advocate may appear for the examination any number of times. Once the advocate passes the examination, they will be entitled to a Certificate of Practice law throughout India.[8] [9] It is clarified that the Bar Examination shall be mandatory for all law students graduating from academic year 2009-2010 onwards and enrolled as advocates under Section 24 of the Advocates Act, 1961.[10]
From 2020 onwards, the All India Bar Examination is being conducted only once a year. Moreover, AIBE is no longer an open-book examination as BCI banned reference material inside the exam centres in 2022. Candidates could only take Bare Acts without comments inside the examination hall. So far 16 editions of the AIBE examination have been conducted successfully allowing law graduates to obtain the Certificate of Practice. In 2022, BCI[11] has also launched mobile application AIBESCOPE, available exclusively on the Google Playstore. BCI is planning to make the AIBE stricter than its previous editions, as the exam is an evaluation tool to ensure high-quality legal education and profession in India.