
Only 12% of High Court judges declare assets
The Hindu
Only 12.35% of Indian High Court judges disclose assets, sparking calls for transparency and public declarations.
Among the 769 judges currently serving in the 25 High Courts of India, only 95 — or a mere 12.35% — have chosen to disclose their assets and liabilities on their official websites.
The recent incident involving Justice Yashwant Varma has intensified discussions about transparency within India’s judiciary. On March 14, a fire broke out in the storeroom of Justice Varma’s official residence in Delhi. During the efforts to put it out, rescue personnel reportedly discovered partially burnt currency notes among the debris.
This controversy has brought renewed attention to the broader issue of asset disclosure among judges in India’s higher judiciary.
In response to the situation, all 33 serving Supreme Court judges agreed in a Full Court meeting on April 1 to make their asset declarations public on the official apex court website.
Currently, amongst the six High Courts where judges have declared their assets, the Kerala High Court leads with 41 of its 44 judges having completed the disclosure, accounting for 93.18%. The Himachal Pradesh High Court follows closely, with 11 out of 12 judges (91.66%) having done the same.
In contrast, some courts report significantly lower disclosure rates. In the Chhattisgarh High Court, only one out of 16 judges has declared assets and Madras High Court lags with just 5 out of 65. The Delhi High Court has 7 of its 38 judges declaring their assets—a sharp fall from 2018, when 29 of 35 judges had made public their assets.
Interestingly, Delhi’s High Court archives list disclosures from 64 former judges—many of whom have either retired, been transferred, or elevated to the Supreme Court—some dating as far back as February 2010. But the current numbers paint a different picture.

When reporters brought to her notice the claim by villagers that the late maharaja of Mysore Sri Jayachamaraja Wadiyar had gifted the land to them, Pramoda Devi Wadiyar said she is not aware of the matter, but sought to assure people that no effort will be made to take back the land that had been gifted by the late maharaja.