at the age of 65.
at the age of 65
At the age of 70.
65
If you mean supreme court.The Constitution says.179. Retiring Age-A judge of the Supreme Court shall hold office until he attains the age of sixty five years, unless he sooner resigns or is removed from office in accordance with the Constitution.
The retirement age of a supreme court judge is at 65 years of age.
A plan to set up mandatory retirement age for federal judges >.<
President Franklin Roosevelt tried to expand the Supreme Court to include an additional 15 judges. This was called "court packing," since he was trying to "pack" the court with his favorite judges. It didn't pass.
There is no mandatory retirement age for federal judges, although Congress provides that judges who reach a certain age and have been judges for a certain amount of time may retire from full-time service and still earn their salaries.
age
Position in India:The term of the office of the Chief Justice of the supreme court, the Chief Justice of State High Court and other puisne judges have been prescribed under the Indian Constitution. The provisions are amended from time to time to raise the age of superannuation of these judges.Hemang D. Rana, Senior Advocatecorporatearmour@gmail.com : 9998726651
In India the supreme court judge term is not fixed.A supreme court continues to hold the post until he achieves the age of superannuation.i.e,65 years.
No such law was passed in the United States. You may be thinking of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's 1937 attempt to pack the Supreme Court with younger justices who would be more receptive to his New Deal programs. Roosevelt drafted a judicial reorganization act that included a provision for adding one new justice for each seated justice over the age of 70.5, up to a maximum of six new justices. Congress stripped the court-packing plan from the bill.The Constitution provides that Supreme Court justices receive a lifetime commission. The Judiciary Act of 1869 set a voluntary retirement age allowing justices to retire with full salary and benefits at age 70, if they had served at least 10 years in the federal court system. The formula has since been adapted to allow earlier retirement for justices with more years on the bench, but retirement is not mandatory. Incumbent Justice John Paul Stevens still serves on the Court at age 89 (as of January 2010)In Gregory v. Ashcroft, 501 U.S. 452 (1991), the US Supreme Court ruled that state statutes requiring state judges to retire at age 70 are constitutional.For more information, see Related Questions, below.