High Courts of Malaysia
The High Courts in Malaysia are the third-highest courts in the hierarchy of courts, after the Federal Court and the Court of Appeal. Article 121 of the Constitution of Malaysia provides that there shall be two High Courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction—the High Court in Malaya and the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak (before 1994, the High Court in Borneo). Before 1969, the High Court in Singapore was also part of the Malaysian courts system (see Law of Singapore).
The High Court in Malaya has its principal registry in Kuala Lumpur, with other registries to be found in all states in peninsular Malaysia, while the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak has its principal registry in Kuching, with other registries elsewhere in Sabah and Sarawak. There are in total 22 High Court registries across all 13 states in Malaysia.[1] The two High Courts also travel on circuit to other smaller towns.
The two High Courts, the Court of Appeal and the Federal Court are classified as superior courts, while the Magistrates' Courts and the Sessions Courts are classified as the subordinate courts. The High Courts function both as a court of original jurisdiction as well as an appellate court, and are each headed by a Chief Judge (before 1994, Chief Justice). The Chief Judges of Malaya and Sabah and Sarawak are the third and fourth highest positions in Malaysian judiciary after the Chief Justice of the Federal Court (before 1994, the Lord President of the Federal Court) and the President of the Court of Appeal.[2]
High Court registries in Malaysia
All High Court registries and the subordinate courts found in Peninsular Malaysia including the courts in the Federal Territories of Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya are under the jurisdiction of the High Court in Malaya. Similarly, all courts found in East Malaysia are under the jurisdiction of the High Court in Sabah and Sarawak including the courts in the Federal Territory of Labuan.
List of Chief Justices and Chief Judges
Malaya
Chief Justices of Malaya (1957–present)
- 1957–1963: Tun Sir James Thomson
- 1963–1966: Tun Syed Sheh Hassan Barakbah
- 1966–1968: Mohamed Azmi Mohamed
- 1968–1973: Ong Hock Thye
- 1973–1974: Tun Mohamed Suffian Mohamed Hashim
- 1974–1979: Sarwan Singh Gill
- 1979–1982: Raja Azlan Shah
- 1982–1984: Tun Salleh Abas
- 1984–1988: Tun Abdul Hamid Omar
- 1988–1992: Hashim Yeop Sani
- 1992–1994: Gunn Chit Tuan
- 1994-2000: Tun Eusoff Chin
- 2000-2003: Tun Mohamed Dzaiddin Abdullah
- 2003-2007: Tun Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim
- 2007-2008: Tun Abdul Hamid Mohamad
- 2008-2011: Tun Zaki Tun Azmi
- 2011-present: Tun Arifin Zakaria
Chief Judges of Malaya (1994–present)
- 1994: Tun Eusoff Chin
- 1994–1998: Anuar Zainal Abidin
- 1998–2001: Wan Adnan Ismail
- 2001–2002: Ahmad Fairuz Abdul Halim
- 2002–2004: Haidar Mohamed Noor
- 2004–2006: Siti Norma Yaakob
- 2007–2008: Alauddin Sheriff
- 2008–2011: Arifin Zakaria
- 2011-Present Zulkefli Ahmad Makinudin
Singapore
Chief Justice of Singapore (1963–1969)
- 1963–1969: Wee Chong Jin
Borneo (Sabah and Sarawak)
Chief Justices of North Borneo (to 1951)
- 1934–1941 Charles Frederick C. Macaskie
* 1942–45 Japanese occupation
Chief Justices of the Combined Judiciary of Sarawak, North Borneo and Brunei (1951–1963)
- 1951–1952 Sir Ivor Llewellyn Brace
- 1959–1963 Sir John Ainley
- 1963 Sir William Campbell Wylie
Chief Justices of Borneo (1963–1994)
- 1963–1965: Sir William Campbell Wylie
- 1965–1968: Philip Ernest Housden Pike
- 1968–1973: Ismail Khan Ibrahim Khan
- 1974–1990: Lee Hun Hoe
- 1991–1994: Mohamad Jemuri Serjan
Chief Judges of Sabah and Sarawak (1994–present)
- 1994: Mohamad Jemuri Serjan
- 1995–2000: Chong Siew Fai
- 2000–2006: Steve Shim Lip Kiong
- 2006–present: Richard Malanjum
See also
- Chief Justice of the Straits Settlements
- Federal Court of Malaysia
- Malaysian Court of Appeal
- Judiciary of Malaysia
- Lord President of the Federal Court
- Chief Justice of Malaysia
References
- ↑ "List of court addresses". Judiciary of Malaysia. Retrieved 30 January 2008.
- ↑ "Operation of the court". Judiciary of Malaysia. Retrieved 30 January 2008.