Pramada Charan Banerjee Explained

Honorific-Prefix:Justice
Sir Pramada Charan Banerjee
Office1:Justice, Allahabad High Court
Birth Date:10 April 1848
Death Date:22 March 1930
Death Place:Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh
Nationality:Indian
Education:Graduation, LL.B

Biography

Sir Pramada Charan Banerjee (10 April 1848 – 22 March 1930) was a Bengali Indian jurist of the British Raj era in the Allahabad High Court and also Vice-Chancellor of the University of Allahabad.[1]

Banerjee was born on 10 April 1848. He lived in Uttarpara and attended Presidency College, Calcutta and the University of Calcutta, from which he respectively obtained B.A. and B.L. degrees. He practised at the Bar in Bankipore until moving to Allahabad in 1870.

Life

Banerjee first entered the judiciary of India in January 1872 as a munsif, working at Allahabad, Benares and Ghazipore. He was appointed a subordinate judge in 1880, working first in the Small Causes Courts of Agra, where he was the first Indian judge, and then at Allahabad. He held a brief appointment as an additional civil judge at Lucknow in 1893 before becoming a puisne judge for the North-Western Provinces at Allahabad High Court in December of that year.[2] [3] He remained in that office until August 1923, when he was replaced by Kanhaiya Lal prior to retiring from the bench in March 1924.[4] [5]

Banerjee was the second Indian to be appointed a judge at the Allahabad High Court, the first being Syed Mahmood. Mahmood had retired from the Court in the face of accusations that his chronic drunkenness was affecting his ability and it was his place that Banerjee took. With Mahmood, Chief Justice John Edge and others, he "made indelible imprints greatness as Judges on the pages of [Allahabad High Court’s] law reports".[6]

Appointed a Knight Bachelor in the 1913 Birthday Honours, Banerjee was a member of the law faculty at the University of Allahabad and was Vice-Chancellor of the university from 1917 to 1919,[7] in which year the university conferred on him the degree of Doctor of Laws, honoris causa; later, it also established the P. C. Banerjee Hostel in honour of him.[8] In 1921, he was awarded the Kaisar-i-Hind Medal, first class, by George V in recognition of his public service.[9]

Banerjee died at the age of 82. Among his children was Lalit Mohan Banerjee, who also served as a judge in the Allahabad High Court.[10]

Recognition

Allahabad University established the Sir Pramada Charan Banerjee hostel in 1915 in his honour.[11]

References

NotesCitations

Notes and References

  1. News: Sir P. C. Banarji. . 24 March 1930 . 19 .
  2. The Liberal and the New Dispensation . Calcutta . 17 December 1873 . XII . 50 . 4 . Notes and Comments .
  3. Book: The India List and India Office List . India Office, United Kingdom . Harrison and Sons . London . 1905 . 591 .
  4. Web site: Amitav . Banerji . Sir Pramoda Charan Banerjee . Allahabad High Court . 2014-08-11.
  5. News: Imperial and Foreign News Items . The Times . London, England . 19 September 1923 . 9 . 43450.
  6. Web site: Nasirullah . Beg . Welcome Address . 25 November 1966 . Allahabad High Court.
  7. Web site: Ex- Vice Chancellor . University of Allahabad . https://web.archive.org/web/20130204112621/http://www.allduniv.ac.in/index.php/about-us/introduction/ex-vc-list . 4 February 2013.
  8. Web site: History . University of Allahabad.
  9. News: Kaisar-I-Hind Medal . The Times . London, England . 1 January 1921 . 9 . 42607.
  10. News: Mr. Justice Banarjee . The Times . London, England . 20 October 1932 . 19 . 46269.
  11. Web site: Sir PCB Hostel . Hindi text: Sir P. C. Banerjee Hostel (established 1916 to pay regard to Sir P. C. Banerjee) organised a centenary function on 2, 3, 4 October 2015" . University of Allahabad . 2015-10-06.