Chief Justice of Bangladesh
| Chief Justice of Bangladesh | |
|---|---|
| বাংলাদেশের প্রধান বিচারপতি | |
Emblem of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh | |
Flag of the Chief Justice of Bangladesh | |
| Supreme Court of Bangladesh | |
| Style |
|
| Type | Chief Justice |
| Status | Presiding Judge |
| Abbreviation | CJB |
| Member of | Judiciary of Bangladesh |
| Residence | Dhaka, Bangladesh |
| Seat | Supreme Court of Bangladesh, Shahbag, Dhaka |
| Appointer | The President of Bangladesh on the advice of the Chief Adviser |
| Term length | Until the age of 67 or At the pleasure of the President |
| Inaugural holder | Abu Sadat Mohammad Sayem |
| Formation | 16 December 1972 |
| Website | supremecourt.gov.bd |
| This article is part of a series on the |
| Politics of Bangladesh |
|---|
| Bangladesh portal |
The chief justice of Bangladesh (Bengali: বাংলাদেশের প্রধান বিচারপতি – Bānglādēśhēr Prodhān Bichārpoti) is the highest-ranking judge of the Supreme Court of Bangladesh and the head of the country's judiciary, overseeing both the Supreme Court and all subordinate courts. The chief justice is appointed by the president of Bangladesh. The chief justice sits in the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court with other judges to hear and decide cases, presides over meetings of the full Supreme Court to transact business relating to administration of the court, and supervises the discipline of the judges and magistrates of the subordinate courts. Most rules for regulating the practice and procedure of both the Appellate and High Court Divisions of the Supreme Court—including those applicable to subordinate courts and specified in legislative acts such as the Companies Act 1994 and the Banking Companies Act 1991—are duly scrutinized and approved in full court meetings presided over by the chief justice. He also distributes judicial business of the High Court Division by constituting different benches to exercise its original, appellate and revisable jurisdictions.
Administrative control—including the power to create post, grant promotion and approve leave—and disciplinary authority over judges and magistrates of the subordinate courts is exercised by the president in consultation with the Supreme Court. Urgent matters in this regard are dealt with in consultation with the chief justice.