⚖️ High Court Law in Pakistan – Complete Overview

The High Courts of Pakistan are the highest judicial authority at the provincial level. They interpret the law, supervise lower courts, and hear appeals in civil, criminal, and constitutional matters. Each province has its own High Court established under the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973.


🏛️ 1. High Courts in Pakistan

Province / RegionHigh Court
PunjabLahore High Court (LHC) – Lahore (with Benches at Rawalpindi, Bahawalpur, Multan)
SindhSindh High Court (SHC) – Karachi
Khyber PakhtunkhwaPeshawar High Court (PHC) – Peshawar (Benches in Abbottabad, D.I. Khan, Bannu, etc.)
BalochistanBalochistan High Court (BHC) – Quetta
IslamabadIslamabad High Court (IHC) – Islamabad
Gilgit-BaltistanChief Court + Appellate Court (not a constitutional high court)

📜 2. Constitutional Basis

Under Article 175 & Article 192 to 203 of the Constitution of Pakistan (1973):

  • Each High Court is a constitutional court

  • Functions as appellate, revisional, and constitutional authority

  • Has original jurisdiction in constitutional and certain civil cases


👨‍⚖️ 3. Composition of High Courts

PositionAppointed by
Chief JusticePresident of Pakistan (on PM & CJ of Pakistan’s recommendation)
Other JudgesAppointed similarly through Judicial Commission of Pakistan
Retirement Age62 years (for High Court judges)

📥 4. Jurisdiction of High Courts

A. Original Jurisdiction (Writ Jurisdiction)

Under Article 199 of the Constitution, High Courts can issue writs against:

  • Government authorities

  • Public officials

  • Tribunals and subordinate courts

Types of Writs:

  1. Habeas Corpus – unlawful detention

  2. Mandamus – order to perform legal duty

  3. Certiorari – quashing an illegal order

  4. Prohibition – stopping illegal action

  5. Quo Warranto – questioning legality of a public office

✴ This jurisdiction ensures enforcement of fundamental rights under Chapter 1 of the Constitution.


B. Appellate Jurisdiction

  • Civil Appeals from District Courts

  • Criminal Appeals from Sessions Courts

  • Appeals against tribunals (NAB, Service Tribunals, etc.)

  • Company & Banking appeals


C. Supervisory & Revisional Jurisdiction

  • High Courts supervise civil and criminal lower courts under Section 115 CPC and Section 435–439 CrPC

  • Can call records, correct legal errors, or re-examine evidence


D. Other Specialized Jurisdiction

  • Contempt of Court under Article 204

  • Company and Commercial Cases under Company Ordinance and special benches

  • Election Petitions for local bodies and bar councils

  • Service Matters not covered by service tribunals (certain exceptions)


 

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