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P. V. Rajamannar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Indian politician and judge (1901–1979)

P. V. Rajamannar
Advocate General of theMadras Presidency
In office
1944–1945
Preceded byAlladi Krishnaswamy Iyer
Succeeded byK. Rajah Iyer
Chief Justice ofMadras High Court
In office
1948–1961
Preceded bySir Frederick Gentle
Succeeded byS. Ramachandra Iyer
Chairman ofThe Fourth Finance Commission of India
In office
1966–1969
Preceded byA. K. Chanda
Succeeded byMahavir Tyagi
Personal details
Born(1901-05-01)1 May 1901
Died1979(1979-00-00) (aged 77–78)
Signature

Pakala Venkataramana Rao Rajamannar (1901–1979) was an Indian judge and politician who served as the actingGovernor of Madras State from 1957 to 1958.[1] P.V. Rajamannar was the first Indian to become Chief Justice ofMadras High Court after independence from 1948 to 1961.[2] He was also the first Chairman ofSangeet Natak Akademi inNew Delhi.

Early life

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P. V. Rajamannar was born to Dewan Bahadur P. Venkataramana Rao, an eminent lawyer who was a Madras High Court judge and later Chief Justice ofMysore High Court. He completed his schooling at Pachaiyappa's High School, Madras and did his graduation from the Presidency College, securing First Class in English and Philosophy in B.A in 1921. In B.L he won theJurisprudence prize in 1923.[3]

Career in law

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In 1924, Rajamannar started his law practice joining his father's chambers. In 1944 P.V. Rajamannar was appointed Advocate-General in succession to SirAlladi Krishnaswami Iyer. His appointment also made Rajamannar one of the youngest Advocate-Generals at 43 years of age. He also appeared as the Public Prosecutor in one of the most sensational murder cases in South India,Lakshmikanthan murder case involving two popular actors and a journalist with criminal history.

Chief Justice

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Later in 1945, P. V. Rajamannar was appointed Judge of Madras High Court and in 1948 Rajamannar became the first Indian to be elevated as Chief Justice of Madras High Court.[4] He retired in 1961 and continued his active services for government by heading various committees.

Other services

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Finance Commission

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During the years 1966-1969 P. V. Rajamannar was also the Chairman ofThe Fourth Finance Commission of India.[5]

In addition Rajamannar was also the chairman for the Fourth Law Commission and the Banking Laws Committee.[6]

Educational Boards

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P.V. Rajamannar was also the Chairman of Board of Studies of Law and Chaired the Board of Studies in Telugu atSri Venkateswara University and Theater Art Faculty atAndhra University. He was also the Member of Syndicate ofMadras University.[6]

State Autonomy Committee

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In 1969, P.V. Rajamannar was appointed the Chairman of a 3-member committee P.V. Rajamannar committee to study the State Autonomy and Centre-State relations by the then newly electedDMK government under its Chief Minister Dr. M.Karunanidhi.

Arts and literature

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In addition to his career in Law and administration P. V. Rajamannar was active in Arts and was the first appointed chairman ofSangeet Natak Akademi inNew Delhi. During his college years and later he edited aTelugu literary journal calledKala and winning theRamarayaninger Prize for a Telugu workRepresentative Government in Ancient India.[7] In 1964, he was awarded theSangeet Natak Akademi Fellowship the highest honour conferred bySangeet Natak Akademi, India's National Academy for Music, Dance and Drama.[8]

Honours and legacy

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P. V. Rajamannar was conferred Honorary Doctorates fromMadras University,Andhra University andAnnamalai University. Justice P V Rajamannar Salai (Road) inK. K. Nagar, Chennai is named in his honour. He was also nominated twice toUpper House in Madras and on two occasions acted asgovernor.

Works and publications

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  • India: Republic Day 1956 (1956) – English - (Co-Author John Haynes Holmes, K. M. Panikkar, P. V. Rajamannar and N. C. Mehta)
  • Aesthetic experience, (Sir George Stanley endowment lectures) (1960) - English
  • Rajamannaru natikalu: Ayidu ekanka natikalu (1968) – Telugu
  • Report on negotiable instruments law, 1975 (1976) - English
  • Report on indigenous negotiable instruments (hundis), 1978 (1979) - English
  • Report on personal property security law, 1977 (1978) - English
  • First report of the Study Group Reviewing Legislation Affecting Banking: banking legislation (1971) - English
  • Tamil Nadu Report, 1971 by P. V. Tamil Nadu Rajamannar (1971) - English

References

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  1. ^Indian states since 1947, (Worldstatesmen, 16 September 2008)
  2. ^The Honourable Chief JusticesArchived 12 February 2012 at theWayback Machine (Madras High Court, 17 September 2008)
  3. ^Famous Judges and Lawyers of Madras. Sumithra Balakrishnan. 2012. p. 250.
  4. ^Famous Judges and Lawyers of Madras. Sumithra Balakrishnan. 2012. p. 251.
  5. ^"Minute by P.V.Rajamannar"(PDF). fincomindia.nic.in. Retrieved28 December 2013.
  6. ^abRao, P.Rajeswar (1991).The Great Indian Patriots, Volume 2 By P. Rajeswar Rao. Mittal Publications. p. 41.ISBN 978-81-7099-288-2.
  7. ^Famous Judges and Lawyers of Madras. Sumithra Balakrishnan. 2012. p. 253.
  8. ^"SNA: List of Sangeet Natak AkademiRatna Puraskarwinners (Akademi Fellows)". Official website. Archived fromthe original on 6 December 2014.

Sources

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Madras
Tamil Nadu
$ - acting, # - additional charge
1954–1960
1961–1980
1981–2000
2001–2021
2022–2023
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=P._V._Rajamannar&oldid=1301523944"
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