Use[edit]

The term is used almost exclusively in common law jurisdictions: the jurisdiction of England and Wales within the United Kingdom; Australia, including its states and territories; Canada, including its provinces and territories; India, including its states and territories; Pakistan, its provinces, and Azad Kashmir; the British Overseas Territory of Gibraltar; Kenya; Sri Lanka; South Africa in rural provinces and Hong Kong. In Australia, the most senior judge after a chief justice in superior state courts is referred to as the "senior puisne judge".[4]


Use is rare outside of, usually internal, court (judicial) procedural decisions as to which judge(s) will sit or has sat in hearings or appeals. The term is dated in detailed, academic case law analyses and, to varying degree direct applicability in higher courts.[4]


The term excludes the court's chief judge(s)/justice(s); any seniormost judges, often specialists or a managerial head, sitting ex officio (by virtue of their office) as such in the court for which they have duties below; and any technically junior judges who may have been called to serve in a higher court, whom law reports and transcripts customarily specify as "sitting in" a judicial panel of a higher court or "sitting as" a judge of that court.

By jurisdiction[edit]

Bermuda[edit]

In Bermuda, the Supreme Court comprises the Chief Justice and a number of puisne judges.[5] As of January 2020, there are three puisne judges, with a vacancy for a fourth.[6] New puisne judges are appointed by the Governor following a consultation with the Chief Justice.[7]

Canada[edit]

In Canada judges other than the chief justice of a court are referred to as puisne judges.[8][9]

Puisne

(archived 19 April 2015)

Puisne Judge's Office

(archived 12 December 2010)

Puisne judges of the Bombay High Court