Meet The New CJI: Justice BR Gavai Takes Charge As 52nd Chief Justice Of India
Justice Gavai will serve as the Chief Justice of India for approximately six months before retiring on Nov. 23.

Justice Bhushan Ramkrishna Gavai was sworn in as the new Chief Justice of India on Wednesday morning. He takes over from Chief Justice Sanjiv Khanna.
Justice Gavai will serve as the fifty-second Chief Justice of India for approximately six months before retiring on Nov. 23. Following Justice KG Balakrishnan, who was elevated to the country's top judicial post in 2007, Justice Gavai will be the second non-upper caste Chief Justice of India.
Meet Justice Gavai
Born on November 24, 1960, in Maharashtra's Amravati, Justice Gavai joined the Bar on March 16, 1985. Till 1987, he worked with late Raja S Bhonsale, former Advocate General and Judge of Bombay High Court. Gavai then started practice as an independent lawyer at the Bombay High Court from 1987 to 1990.
Thereafter, he practised mainly before the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court in several matters related to Constitutional law and administrative law.
He was the standing counsel for the Municipal Corporation of Nagpur, the Amravati Municipal Corporation and the Amravati University and appeared regularly for several autonomous authorities and corporations such as SICOM, DCVL, etc. as well as many Municipal Councils in the Vidarbha region.
Justice Gavai was appointed Assistant Government Pleader and Additional Public Prosecutor in the Nagpur bench of the Bombay HC from August 1992 to July 1993.
In 2000, he was appointed as Government Pleader and Public Prosecutor for the Nagpur Bench. Later on Nov. 14, 2003, he became an Additional Judge of the High Court and further elevated as a permanent Judge of the Bombay High Court in 2005.
Justice Gavai was elevated to the Supreme Court on May 24, 2019. During his tenure at SC so far, he has been involved in several landmark judgments, that include the verdict upholding the Centre's 2016 demonetisation decision and declaring the electoral bonds scheme unconstitutional.