Ranjan Gogoi

Ranjan Gogoi
Gogoi in November 2019
46th Chief Justice of India
In office
3 October 2018 – 17 November 2019
Appointed byRam Nath Kovind
Preceded byDipak Misra
Succeeded bySharad Arvind Bobde
Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha
In office
17 March 2020 – 16 March 2026
Nominated byRam Nath Kovind
Appointed byM. Venkaiah Naidu
ConstituencyNominated (Law)
Judge of the Supreme Court of India
In office
23 April 2012 – 2 October 2018
Nominated byS. H. Kapadia
Appointed byPratibha Patil
30th Chief Justice of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
In office
12 February 2011 – 23 April 2012
Nominated byS. H. Kapadia
Appointed byPratibha Patil
Preceded byMukul Mudgal
Succeeded byA. K. Sikri
Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court
In office
9 September 2010 – 11 February 2011
Nominated byS. H. Kapadia
Appointed byPratibha Patil
Judge of the Gauhati High Court
In office
28 February 2001 – 8 September 2010
Nominated byAdarsh Sein Anand
Appointed byK. R. Narayanan
Personal details
Born (1954-11-18) 18 November 1954
SpouseRupanjali Gogoi
Children2
Parents
RelativesJogesh Chandra Borgohain (grandfather)
Padma Kumari Gohain (grandmother)
Anjan Gogoi (brother)
Shrinjan Rajkumar Gohain (nephew/cousin)
Alma materSt Stephen's College, (BA)
Faculty of Law, University of Delhi, (LLB)
Occupation
  • Jurist
  • advocate
AwardsAssam Baibhav (2023)

Ranjan Gogoi (born 18 November 1954) is an Indian jurist and advocate who served as the 46th Chief Justice of India from 2018 to 2019 and as a Member of the Rajya Sabha from 2020 to 2026. Gogoi previously served as a judge of the Supreme Court of India from 2012 to 2018. He was a judge of the Gauhati High Court from 2001 to 2010, and of the Punjab and Haryana High Court from September 2010 to February 2011 where he later was the Chief Justice from 2011 to 2012.

Born and raised in Dibrugarh, Gogoi is from a political family and descends from the Ahom dynasty. His maternal grandparents were both state legislators; his grandmother, Padma Kumari Gohain, was one of the first female MLAs and one of the first female ministers in Assam. His father, Kesab Chandra Gogoi served as the Chief Minister of Assam for two months in 1982. Ranjan Gogoi is the only Chief Justice of India to have been the son of a Chief Minister. His mother, Shanti Priya Gogoi, was a prominent social activist who founded an NGO, SEWA, in 2000. One of five children, Gogoi's four siblings also excelled in their respective careers. He studied at Cotton University and later completed his higher studies at the Faculty of Law, University of Delhi. Gogoi enrolled at the bar in 1978 and practised at the Gauhati High Court under advocate JP Bhattacharjee. He began to practise independently in 1991 and became a senior counsel in 1999 at the court, before being appointed a judge in 2001. He later transferred to the Punjab and Haryana High Court, where during his tenure he made orders which questioned the CBI’s promotion of SPS Rathore, despite the Ruchika Girhotra case, as well as numerous other judgements.

Gogoi was nominated to the Supreme Court in 2012 and was sworn in by S. H. Kapadia. He made various important judgements during his tenure including the updating of the National Register of Citizens for Assam, and the Soumya Murder case. He also served on the bench that created special courts to try MLAs and MPs, and ruled against the Uttar Pradesh Government law wherein former Chief Ministers were allowed to occupy government bungalows. Gogoi made further notable judgements in Orissa Mining Corporation v. Ministry of Environment & Forest & Others and on the income of Amitabh Bachchan. He imposed restrictions on the featuring of certain politicians in government advertisements, and made further judgements related to arbitration practices. Gogoi was appointed the Chief Justice of India (CJI) in 2018, the first holder of the office from Northeast India. As Chief Justice, he struck down rules under the Finance Act 2017, and also brought the office of CJI under the Right to Information act. Gogoi also made landmark judgments in his final month in office, including the judgement on the Ayodhya dispute and the Rafale deal, before retiring in 2019. In 2020 he was nominated to the Rajya Sabha, and served on the committee on communications and information technology, and the committee on external affairs, before he retired in 2026.

A pivotal figure in Indian judicial history, Gogoi's legacy is the subject of scholarly debate amongst sources. He has been accredited with institutional reforms and delivery on landmark judgements, most notably the 134-year old Ayodhya dispute, while his nomination to Parliament sparked national debate. As a Judge, he was known for his "no-nonsense" approach and advocacy for greater judicial transparency and reduction in case pendency. Gogoi is the third Supreme Court judge to serve in the Rajya Sabha, after Ranganath Misra and Baharul Islam, and the first to be nominated to his seat. He published his autobiography, Justice for the Judge, in 2021, and was awarded the Assam Baibhav, the state's highest civilian award, for 2023. The Indian Express named him as the country's third most powerful person of 2019, behind only Amit Shah and Narendra Modi.