Bytecode transpilers
Grasshopper can take a CLR bytecode and transpile it for JVM. Intended primarily for web apps, it does not provide e.g. JVM implementation of Windows Forms classes. Seems somewhat dated, though. The web talks about ASP.NET 2.0, Visual Studio 2008 and so on. First mentioned by @alex
XMLVM can take CLR or JVM bytecode as input and produce either as output. Additionally it can output Javascript or Objective-C. No releases yet, only Subversion. "Experimental development version that is not to be used in a production environment."
IKVM goes in the other direction than OP wants. It provides a JVM implementation running on CLR, a JVM to CLR bytecode transpiler and a CLR library method stub generator for Java. http://www.ikvm.net/uses.html Mentioned by @Jon Skeet
RPC
Why not have CLR and JVM running alongside and make the communication as much frictionless as possible? This is not what the OP wants, but some other answers are already quite off topic in different ways, so let's cover it.
RabbitMQ, has a free option, it is a RPC server written in Erlang with API libraries for C#, Java and more.
jnBridge, the licence may be too expensive for some prospective users.
gRPC, and similar modern RPC libraries offer wide language support, code generation for client libraries in these languages, language independent wire format for data, advanced features like cascading call-cancellation and so on.
Programming languages
Write once, run everywhere ;)
Haxe, compiles to C#/CLR, Java/JVM, Javascript, Flash, Python, … Provides interop mechanisms for each of the target languages. Can be thought about as an ActionScript3 successor to some degree. Seems pretty solid stuff, with at least one company actually depending on it. Much more trustworthy than Stab, mentioned next.
Stab brings some C# features and Java interoperability. Not very useful, you get some C# features, but what you interact with is Java code which does not use them. https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/a/132080/45826 The language is relatively obscure, possibly abandoned, with little promise to become better. First mentioned here by @Vns.
Gust of fresh air for the JVM platform ;)
Scala, Kotlin, others, are fairly nice languages running on top of JVM which bring features that a C# programmer may miss in Java. Especially Kotlin feels like a reasonable alternative to C# in the JVM world. Scala may be a bit too large language for a programmer to get comfortable with in a short time.
Mono
That is certainly an option too. Why transpile to JVM if Mono can run it as it is. First mentioned by @ferhrosa
NEW YORK — Nov. 12, 2014 — On Wednesday, Microsoft Corp. reinforced its commitment to cross-platform developer experiences by open sourcing the full server-side .NET stack and expanding .NET to run on the Linux and Mac OS platforms.
According to this press release from which the quote comes, Visual Studio 2015 will add Linux/Mono as a supported platform.
This is a blog written by the Mono project people about it, from the other side: .NET Source Code Integration (November 2014).
.NET Core
A Windows/Linux multiplatform version of (some of) .Net governed by Microsoft. 'nuff said https://github.com/dotnet/core.
Conclusion
It would be now necessary to give these tools/frameworks a try and see how much friction there is. The OP wants to write in C# for the JVM, which may actually work quite well using Grasshopper.
Doing this with the goal to mix C# and Java world libraries in a single codebase may not work so well.
Sources
http://blog.pluralsight.com/new-course-making-java-and-c-work-together-jvm-and-net-clr-interop