Unreferenced date December 2009 A lower court is a court from which an Appeal law appeal may be taken. In relation to an appeal from one court to another, the lower court is the court whose decision is being reviewed, which may be the original trial court or an court of appeals appellatecourt lower in rank than the superior court which is hearing the appeal. In an absolute sense, a lower court is always the trial court where an appellatecourt is describing the actions under review from the lower court, it is referring to the court that examined the evidence and testimony directly and made rulings upon it, rather than any intermediate appellate courts. However, a court that functions as a trial court in some instances may still be above another court. Relative to other trial courts, a lower court is a court of limited jurisdiction , especially one that is limited to hearing minor offense law offense s, or civil law common law civil lawsuit action s involving a limited amount, as distinct from a superior court. In the United States, most states have two levels of trial courts, and two levels of appellate courts. The jurisdiction of the lower trial court in such jurisdictions is typically restricted to hearing minor claims and trying minor offenses, while the higher court may hear claims without an upper limit on the amount in controversy, and may try all crimes. The higher trial court may also have some power of appellate review over the lower. In Virginia, for example, the lowest level of court is the Virginia General District Court , which can hear claims of up to US 15,000, and can try misdemeanors. Above that court is a second level of trial courts, the Virginia Circuit Court , which may hear claims in excess of US 5,000 and may try certain types of felony cases. The General ... Court to the Circuit Court of that jurisdiction, and the appellant may receive a new trial with a jury. DEFAULTSORT Lower Court Category Court systems fi Alioikeus sv Underr tt zh ... more details
Tax courts are court s of limited jurisdiction that deal with tax issues. United States Tax Court , a United States federal court List of Judges of the United States Tax Court Uniformity and jurisdiction in U.S. federal court tax decisions State court United States Oregon Tax Court of the Oregon Judicial Department Hawaii Tax Appeal Court of the Hawai i State Judiciary Indiana Tax Court Massachusetts Appellate Tax Board Minnesota Tax Court New Jersey Tax Court Tax Court of Canada Tax Court of Canada Act EFTA Court Philippine Court of Tax Appeals disambig Category Courts by type ... more details
distinguish2 American rock band The High Court Merge List of national supreme courts date November 2009 The term High Court usually refers to the superior court or supreme court of a country or state. In some countries, it is the highest court e.g. Australia . In others, it is positioned lower in the hierarchy of courts e.g. in England & Wales . List of High Courts Alphabetically by name of associated country High Court of Australia Supreme Court of Bangladesh composed of High Court division and Appellate division Royal High Court of Bhutan Court of High Commission ecclesiastical court in England High Court Fiji High Court Germany High Court Guyana High Court Hong Kong High Courts of India , several courts High Court Ireland High Court Isle of Man Supreme Court of Israel serves as an Appellatecourt and as the High Court of Justice High Courts of Japan Haute Cour of Jerusalem High Court of Lesotho High Courts of Malaysia High Court of Maldives Not the supreme Court High Court of Morocco High Court Myanmar High Court of New Zealand High Courts of Nigeria High Courts of Pakistan , several courts High Court of Cassation and Justice Romania High Court of Singapore High Court of Sri Lanka High Court of South Africa High Courts of Spain , several courts High Court Sweden High Court of Trinidad & Tobago Supreme Court of Uganda High Court of Justice United Kingdom England and Wales High Court of Justiciary United Kingdom Scotland Law References Unreferenced date November 2009 Category Court systems Category National supreme courts Law stub ko ur zh ... more details
Wiktionary cassation See also Cassation music A Court of Cassation is a high instance court that exists in some judicial systems. Courts of cassation are appellatecourt s of the highest instance. They are roughly equivalent to supreme court s in other countries. Some of them are Court of Cassation Albania Court of Cassation Armenia Court of Cassation Belgium Supreme Court of Cassation of Bulgaria In Ethiopia , the Seber Court of Cassation France Court of Cassation Greece In Iraq , the Court of Cassation of Iraq see Constitution of Iraq Judicial branch Court of Cassation Italy In Romania , the High Court of Cassation and Justice Court of Cassation Qatar Court of Cassation Senegal Supreme Court of Serbia Supreme Court of Cassation of Serbia In Switzerland, some districts cantons such as Zurich have local Courts of Cassation Courts of Cassation Switzerland Court of Cassation Tunisia Court of Cassation Turkey Court of Cassation UAE In Lebanon , there are four Courts of Cassation three courts for civil and commercial cases and one court for criminal cases In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia , the Court of Cassation of Saudi Arabia Disambiguation de Kassationshof es Corte de casaci n fi Kassaatio prosessioikeus fr Cour de cassation it Corte di Cassazione Corte di Cassazione tr Yarg tay ... more details
States district court s. Their appellate jurisdiction is now exercised by the United States ... court of record that has appellate jurisdiction over a county s Virginia General District Court ... Circuit Court In Louisiana , the intermediate appellatecourt s are called the Louisiana Circuit ...Multiple issues confusing February 2010 rewrite February 2010 expert February 2010 Circuit court is the name of court systems in several common law jurisdictions. History Henry II of England King Henry ..., the term circuit court is derived from the practice of having judges ride around the countryside ... Court Ireland In the Republic of Ireland the Circuit Court is part of the Courts of First Instance , senior to the District Court Ireland District Court but junior to the High Court Ireland . It was first established as the Circuit Court of Justice under the Courts of Justice Act 1924 and replaced the County Court on the civil side, and Quarter Sessions and Recorder s Courts on the criminal side, as well as some of the jurisdiction of the Assizes Ireland assizes . The criminal jurisdiction of the court ... on front of a judge and jury . The civil jurisdiction of the court is limited to damages of 38,092.14 ... jurisdiction to hear appeals from the District Court. Appeals from the Court lie to the High Court on the civil side and the Court of Criminal Appeal on the criminal side. The Circuit Court is so called .... The court consist of a President and thirty seven judges. Although there is strictly speaking just one Circuit Court, a sitting of the Circuit Court in any particular location is referred to as name of town Circuit Court, e.g. Trim Circuit Court. The High Court also sits on circuit twice yearly, though this is called the High Court on Circuit rather than a circuit court. In this case on circuit means ..., the United States circuit court s were United States federal courts established in each United ... jurisdiction original first instance and appellate jurisdiction . They existed until 1912. The original ... more details
original research date October 2010 A supreme court is the highest court within the hierarchy of many legal jurisdiction s. Other descriptions for such courts include court of last resort , instance court , judgment court , apex court , and highest court of appeal . Broadly speaking, the decisions of a supreme court are not subject to further review by any other court. In a few places, the court named the Supreme Court is not in fact the highest court examples include the Supreme Court of the State of New York and the former Supreme Court of Judicature of England and Wales . Conversely, the highest court in some jurisdictions is not named the Supreme Court for example, the High Court of Australia . Supreme courts typically function primarily as appellatecourt s, hearing appeal s from decisions of lower trial court s, or from intermediate level appellate courts. ref http dictionary.reference.com ... Court, i.e. a Appellate Division and b High Court Division. Appellate Division is the highest ... Court of Bangladesh is the protector and guardian of Bangladesh Constitution. The judgements of Appellate ... Committee of the Privy Council was abolished. This court hears appeals of decisions rendered by appellate ... Court itself. The Israeli supreme court is both an appellatecourt and the high court of justice. As an appellate ... further to the AppellateCourt of Nauru AppellateCourt . In addition, an agreement between ... court because the Delaware Supreme Court has appellate jurisdiction over it. ref cite ... York Supreme Court Supreme Court , and the intermediate appellatecourt is called the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division Supreme Court, Appellate Division . In West Virginia , the highest ... appellatecourt of continuous operation in the Western hemisphere. Civil law jurisdictions The Roman ... of South Africa Supreme Court of Appeal SCA was created in 1994 and replaced the AppellatecourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa as the highest court of appeal in non ... more details
Image StMaryLeBowChurch.jpg thumb 200px The Arches Court permanent home is St Mary le Bow. Portal Anglicanism The Arches Court , presided over by the Dean of Arches , is an ecclesiastical court of the Church of England covering the Province of Canterbury . Its equivalent in the Province of York is the Chancery Court . Provincial Court The Court of Arches is the provincial court for Canterbury. It has both appellate jurisdiction appellate and original jurisdiction original jurisdiction. It is presided over by the Dean of the Arches, who is styled The Right Honourable and Right Worshipful the Official Principal and Dean of the Arches . The dean must be a barrister of ten years High Court of Justice High Court standing or the holder or former holder of high judicial office. The appointment is made by the two archbishops jointly. At various times the court has sat in the church of St Mary le Bow Sancta Maria de arcubus, formerly the archbishop s principal peculiar in London , whose arches give the court its name later in Doctors Commons and also at 1 The Sanctuary, Westminster and St Paul s Cathedral . Its permanent home remains St Mary le Bow, where regular sittings include those to confirm the election of each new diocesan bishop in the province. The Provincial Registry is at 16 Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2LZ. The proper jurisdiction of the court is only over the 13 peculiar particular ... Council Privy Council , except on matters of doctrine, ritual or ceremony, which go to the Court for Ecclesiastical Causes Reserved . There may also be a Deputy Dean. The court normally consists ... court judges. Original jurisdiction was formerly exercised by a separate provincial court, known as the Court of Audience. Leadership The Provincial Registrar of Canterbury is appointed by the archbishop ... of the provincial court and the joint registrar of the General Synod . See also ecclesiastical court ... RefNo Arches Archives of the Court of Arches at Lambeth Palace Library Category Church ... more details
for the ESPN sports package ESPN Full Court A Full Court or full bench refers to a court consisting of a greater than normal number of judges. Thus, in relation to a court usually presided over by a single judge, a Full Court would comprise a bench of three or more judges for a court which, like many appellate courts, normally comprises three judges, a Full Court of that court would involve a bench of five or more judges. The expression originated in England but seems largely to have fallen into disuse there however it is still used in Scotland ref E.g., in the Court of Criminal Appeal . ref and in many other Commonwealth of Nations Commonwealth jurisdictions such as Australia, ref See, for example, the http www.austlii.edu.au au legis cth consol act ja1903112 Judiciary Act 1903 Aust. section 19 in relation to the High Court of Australia . ref New Zealand, ref See the http www.legislation.govt.nz ... NZ . ref India etc. Although possible, a Full Court typically ref Exceptions being where the participation of all the appointed judges is the usual composition for main hearings, as with the High Court of Australia. ref does not involve the participation of all the existing judges of the court a practice known, in the United States, as the court sitting en banc . The term reflects the practice, before ... by several judges of the same court excluding the judge who gave the decision appealed from . Technically, a judgment of a Full Court is at the same level of the judicial hierarchy as the decision ... applies to the particular court. ref not bind future courts at that level however the greater number ..., as a judgment of the same number of judges in a higher court. The historical trend to create separate courts of appeal, with permanent rather than ad hoc appellate judges, has reduced the need for the use .... The UK Supreme Court , which in 2009 succeeded to the judicial functions of the House of Lords, has ... cases however, it does not appear to use the terms full court or full bench in reference to this practice ... more details
, in the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division Third and Fourth Departments it also has appellate ...Globalize date December 2010 CourtsEnglandWales A county courtcourt based in or with a jurisdiction ... of each county. England and Wales Image CourtsOxford20060325 KaihsuTai.jpg thumb left Crown Court and County Court in Oxford. County Court matters can be lodged at a court in person, by post or via the internet in some cases through the County Court Bulk Centre . Cases are normally heard at the court ... under 5,000 are dealt with in the County Court under the small claims court Small Claims Track sometimes known to the lay public as Small Claims Court, although it is not a separate court . Claims ... before April 2009 to the Multi Track. These tracks are labels for the use of the court system the actual cases will be heard in the County Court or the High Court depending on their value. For personal ... Court of Justice or to the Court of Appeal of England and Wales Court of Appeal . In debt cases, the aim of a plaintiff taking County Court action against a Defendant is to secure a County Court Judgment ... of the plaintiff in a number of ways, including requesting the Court Bailiffs to seize goods ... Court Judgments are recorded in the Register of Judgments, Orders and Fines and in the defendant s credit ... Court Judgement was served unless the judgement was later set aside . If the debt was not fully ... date 2010 09 25. ref Australia Unreferenced section date May 2009 County Court is the name given to the intermediate court in some States and territories of Australia Australian states . For example, the County Court of Victoria . They hear indictable serious criminal offences excluding treason ... of Court is called a District Court. Below them are the Magistrates or Local Courts. Above them are the State Supreme Courts. Some States adopt the two tier appellate system, with the magistrates courts below and the Supreme Courts above. United States Many United States states have a county court, which ... more details
of Appeal is solely an appellatecourt , hearing appeals from the High Courts. The Constitutional Court is primarily an appellatecourt, hearing appeals on constitutional matters from the Supreme Court ... of Appeals appellatecourt . In New Jersey , the New Jersey Superior Court Superior Court comprises ... division. In Maine , the Superior Court is both a trial court of general jurisdiction and an appellate ...for the television courtroom drama Superior Court TV series Globalize North America date December 2010 wiktionary superior court In common law systems, a superior court is a court of general General jurisdiction ... case s. A superior court is superior relative to a court with limited jurisdiction see lower court ... cases involving offenses of a less serious nature. A superior court may hear appeal s from lower courts see Court of Appeals court of appeal . Origin of the Term Superior Court The term superior court has its origins in the English court system. The royal courts were the highest courts in the country ... jurisdictions England and Wales In England and Wales, the Court of Appeal, ref http www.legislation.gov.uk ... Court ref http www.legislation.gov.uk ukpga 1981 54 section 19 Senior Courts Act 1981 , 1981, c. 54, 19 1 ref and the Crown Court ref http www.legislation.gov.uk ukpga 1981 54 section 45 Senior Courts Act 1981 , 1981, c. 54, s. 45 1 ref are all superior courts of record. Canada Main Court system ... c c 30.html Court of Appeal Act , R.S.A. 2000, c. C 30, s. 2 1 http www.canlii.org en ab laws stat rsa 2000 c c 31 latest rsa 2000 c c 31.html Court of Queen s Bench Act , R.S.A. 2000, c. C 31, s. 2 ... 77.html Court of Appeal Act , R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 77, s. 2 1 http www.canlii.org en bc laws stat rsbc 1996 c 443 latest rsbc 1996 c 443.html sec2subsec1 Supreme Court Act , R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 443, s. 3 1 ref ref Manitoba http www.canlii.org en mb laws stat ccsm c c240 latest ccsm c c240.html The Court ... c280.html The Court of Queen s Bench Act , C.C.S.M. c. C280, s. 2 ref ref Ontario http www.canlii.org ... more details
In common law jurisdictions, a court of record is a judicial tribunal having attributes and exercising functions independently of the person of the magistrate designated generally to hold it, and proceeding according to the course of common law, its acts and proceedings being enrolled for a perpetual memorial. ref Jones v. Jones, 188 Mo.App. 220, 175 S.W. 227, 229 Ex parte Gladhill, 8 Metc. Mass., 171, per Shaw, C.J. See, also, Ledwith v. Rosalsky, 244 N.Y. 406, 155 N.E. 688, 689 ref Judgment law Judgments of a trial court of record are normally subject to appellate review . In many jurisdiction s, all courts are courts of record. In many jurisdictions, courts that have the power to Fine penalty fine or prison imprison must be courts of record. In almost all jurisdictions, a court of record will have a court clerk whose primary duty is to maintain the permanent records. Traditionally, a court ... its judgments and copies of its records. A court not of record is an inferior tribunal , such as a justice court presided over by a Justice of the Peace , that does not keep systematic records and is often ... the case of many Administrative court administrative tribunal s that make or review governmental .... In many cases, court records are available over the Internet. A trial court of record creates the record of the case for appellate review . This may include the transcript, audio or videotape ... may also be maintained in the court record, at least for a certain period of time after the case ... hand, a party to a proceeding in a court not of record has in most cases a right to demand a new trial law trial , called a trial de novo trial de novo or a hearing de novo , in a court of record. This is not an appeal ... States, a key difference between the two court types is that only lawyer s specifically, Lawyer attorneys licensed to Practice of law practice law can appear on behalf of other persons in a court of record. References Reflist Category Court systems Category Common law ... more details
in the Church of Scotland . Infobox high courtcourt name Court of Session image Court of Session logo.svg imagesize 175px caption Logo of the Court of Session established 1532 country Scotland ... appointments for the Court of Session publisher Judicial Appointments Board for Scotland accessdate 2009 11 07 ref authority Act of James V of Scotland , 1532 appeals Supreme Court of the United Kingdom ... title Role of the Supreme Court publisher Supreme Court of the United Kingdom accessdate 2009 09 02 ... chiefjudgetitle Lord President of the Court of Session chiefjudgename Arthur Hamilton, Lord Hamilton ... chief ends if applicable The Court of Session C irt an t Seisein in Scottish Gaelic is the Supreme court supreme Civil law common law civil Courts of Scotland court of Scotland , ref cite web url ... . It sits in Parliament House, Edinburgh Parliament House in Edinburgh and is both a Trial courtcourt of first instance and a court of appeal . ref name Session Introduction The court has a largely wikt coextensive coextensive Courts of Scotland jurisdiction with the Sheriff Court the other Scottish civil court, which sits locally with the choice of court being given first to the pursuer but the majority of complex or high value cases are brought in the Court of Session. ref cite web title ... Manson.pdf format PDF publisher Scottish Court Service accessdate 2009 09 02 ref Legal aid , administered by the Scottish Legal Aid Board , is available to some persons for cases of the Court of Session ... has more than doubled to 25,000. accessdate 2009 09 02 ref The Court of Session is notionally a unitary collegiate court, with all judges other than the Lord President of the Court of Session ... Court of Session Introduction url http www.scotcourts.gov.uk session publisher Scottish Court Service ... of temporary judges who are typically either Sheriff Court sheriffs or advocate s in private practice. The judges sit also in the High Court of Justiciary , where the Lord President is named, as president ... more details
The Nebraska State Court of Appeals is the intermediate level appellatecourt for the U.S. state state of Nebraska . Judges Judge Theodore Carlson Judge William Cassel Chief Judge Everett Inbody Judge John Irwin judge John Irwin Judge Frankie Moore Judge Richard Sievers See also Nebraska Supreme Court External links http www.supremecourt.ne.gov appeals court index.shtml?sub2 Nebraska Court of Appeals State Intermediate Appellate Courts Category Nebraska state courts Appeals Category State appellate courts ... more details
in the Circuit Court Ireland Circuit Court and the granting of licences for the sale of alcohol. Israel The District Courts in Israel serve both as the appellate courts and also as the court of first ... , the Florida District Courts of Appeal are intermediate appellatecourt s. In Texas , the Texas District ...District courts are a category of court s which exists in several nations. These include Image GntDistCourt.jpg thumb right 200px A court complex at Guntur , India . Australia main Australian court hierarchy District Court is the name given to the intermediate court in most Australian States. They hear ... claimed is greater than a 75 000 but less than 750 000. ref Homepage, Western Australia District Court ... Australian States. In Victoria, the equivalent Court is called the County Court. ref Homepage, Victorian County Court www.countycourt.vic.gov.au ref Below them is the Magistrates Courts, known as the Local Court in New South Wales. Above them are the State Supreme Courts. Austria Austria has some ... matters. Each court is headed by the Chief Judge and other District Judges. In certain cases, the district court may also have Lay Judges. The cases are handled and resolved either in a session or in chambers. In simple cases decisions can be made by notaries. Hong Kong main District Court Hong ... value does not exceed HK 240,000. In its criminal jurisdiction, the court may try the more serious ... three District Judges sit in the Family Court and two District Judges sit in the Lands Tribunal as Presiding ... and judicial control of the High Courts of India High Court of the State India State to which the district concerned belongs. Ireland main District Court Ireland The District Court in Ireland was established in 1924. The Court handles civil claims of up to 6,350 and summary offence summary criminal ... cite web url http www.israelnationalnews.com News News.aspx 123435 title New District Court Opens Central ... level trial court. The Courts can hear civil claims up to 200,000 and deal with relatively minor ... more details
and any penal case involving a bishop . Appeal The appellatecourtappellate tribunal is known ... the case. The Court is composed of three diocesan bishops and two appellate judges it has jurisdiction ...An ecclesiastical court , also called Court Christian or Court Spiritual , is any of certain court s having ... law that is behind much European law, the procedure of a canonical court is more akin to the inquisitorial ... be introduced before the following Appellate tribunal for the diocese cases against the diocese itself ... s own tribunal, the appeal is taken to a court which the metropolitan designated with approval ..., which serves as the tribunal of third instance . The Rota is a court of fifteen judges called auditors ... from a court case that the Pope has decided personally. Other tribunals The Roman Curia has ... as the highest court in the Roman Catholic Church. Normal cases rarely reach the Signatura, the exception ... initiative pulls a case from another court and gives it to them. The court mainly handles cases regarding ... are normally brought before the court by a person s confessor, who writes up the relevant facts ... of Penance, are still in force in such cases. This court, under the authority of the Cardinal ..., which no court need actually meet to impose , and the power to lift this excommunication is reserved ... involve church doctrine. For non doctrinal cases, the lowest level of the court is the Archdeaconry Court , which is presided over by the local Archdeacon. The next court in the hierarchy is the Bishop s Court, which is in the diocese of Canterbury called the Commissary Court and in other dioceses the Consistory Court . The Commissary Court is presided over by a commissary general a Consistory Court is presided over by a chancellor. The chancellor or commissiary general must be thirty ... 1990 s 71 or have held high judicial office. Specialist courts in the Province of Canterbury are the Court of Faculties , the Court of Peculiars and the Court of the Vicar General of the Province of Canterbury ... more details
Court in 1974 for possession of firearms and ammunition without a licence. They appealed their sentences to Jamaica s highest appellatecourt, the Judiciary of Jamaica Court of Appeals , which ... Court prison The Gun Court is the branch of the Jamaican judicial system that tries criminal cases involving firearm s. The Court was established by Parliament of Jamaica Parliament in 1974 to combat ... of Jamaica Supreme Court , Circuit Courts, and Resident Magistrate s Courts function as Gun Courts whenever they hear firearms cases. There is also a Western Regional Gun Court in Montego Bay . Those convicted by the Gun Court are imprisoned in a dedicated prison compound at South Camp in Kingston, Jamaica Kingston . Until 1999, the Gun Court sessions were also held in the same facility. The long sentences of the Gun Court and its restrictions on the rights of the accused have given ... Council Privy Council in London. These cases have resulted in some modifications to the court, but have upheld it on the whole. The Gun Court system has also been the target of criticism because .... History Establishment The Gun Court Act and the Suppression of Crime Act were passed in special simultaneous ... 06 13 Dead link date April 2012 bot H3llBot ref The new court had several extraordinary features ... features of the Gun Court have faced legal challenges, some of which have forced amendment of the Gun Court Act. The case Hinds et al. v. the Queen was an early test case for the new court. Four men ... of the Privy Council in London , which agreed to review the legality of the Gun Court system. ref name hinds appeal cite news title Jamaica court reverses gun law appeal ruling date November 4, 1974 ... Court and its divisions. The Gun Court Act had established the Full Court division, with Resident ... of the Act improperly encroached on the jurisdiction reserved for the Supreme Court, and that the Full Court division was therefore unconstitutional. This fault was remedied in 1976 by replacing ... more details
The Courts of Justice are the appellatecourt s of the state court system of Brazil. See also Desembargador brazil stub Category Government of Brazil pt Tribunal de Justi a ... more details
Court of Arbitration may refer to Arbitration Court at Saint Petersburg Chamber of Commerce and Industry Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration Court of Arbitration New South Wales Court of Arbitration New Zealand Court of Arbitration for Sport International Court of Arbitration London Court of International Arbitration Permanent Court of Arbitration Hague Supreme Court of Arbitration of the Russian Federation disambig ... more details
court usually refers to a simulated appellatecourt or arbitration arbitral case, while a mock trial usually refers to a simulated jury trial or bench trial . Moot court does not involve actual testimony ... court competition roughly parallels what would happen in actual appellate practice. Participants ... as though in the Appellate division of the High Court of Justiciary commonly known as the Court of Criminal ...File Palacky Court Room 1.JPG thumb 250px right A law school s courtroom A moot court is an extracurricular activity at many law school s in which participants take part in simulated court proceedings ... Kingdom and Commonwealth of Nations Commonwealth countries, the phrase a moot court may be shortened to simply a moot and the activity may be called mooting . Moot court is one of the key extracurricular ..., as well as practising their oral arguments. Whereas domestic moot court competitions tend ... Court Competition Jessup ref cite web url http www.ilsa.org jessup archives.php title ILSA publisher ... Price Media Law Moot Court ref cite web url http pricemootcourt.socleg.ox.ac.uk title Welcome & 124 Price Media Law Moot Court Programme publisher Pricemootcourt.socleg.ox.ac.uk date accessdate 2012 ... Human Rights Moot Court Competition ref http www.chr.up.ac.za index.php moot court 2011.html African Human Rights Moot Court Competition Retrieved June 24, 2011 ref 1992 Human rights in Africa 80 teams ... Moot Court Competition D.M. Harish 2000 Public international law 25 30 teams Mumbai, India Mumbai No ELSA Moot Court Competition on WTO Law ELSA World Trade Organisation 2002 World Trade Organisation 50 70 teams Yes The European Law Moot Court Competition ELMC 1988 European law 80 100 teams Luxembourg Yes Thomas Tang Moot Court Competition Thomas Tang 1993 70 80 teams Varies Yes International Environmental Moot Court Competition ref cite web url http www.law.stetson.edu international iemcc title International Environmental Moot Court Competition & 124 Stetson Law publisher Law.stetson.edu ... more details
was distracted with the appellate cases through the Court of Appeal in Chancery and the Judicial ... would be fused into one court consisting of two levels one of first instance, one appellate. The court ... would prevail. An appeal from each division went to the appellate level, the Court of Appeal ...About the English civil court other uses Court of Chancery disambiguation Image The Court of Chancery ... sceptre and cushion. The Court of Chancery in the reign of George I of the United Kingdom George I The Court of Chancery was a court of Equity law equity in England and Wales that followed a set of loose ... as Keeper of the King s Conscience , the Court was an administrative body primarily concerned with Natural law conscientious law . Thus the Court of Chancery had a far greater remit than the common ... more flexible. Until the 19th century, the Court of Chancery could apply a far wider range of remedies ... law court, the Chancery was the only equitable body in the English legal system. Academics estimate that the Court of Chancery formally split from and became independent of the curia regis in about ... I onwards the Court was severely criticised for its slow pace, large backlogs, and high costs ..., and finally succeeded with the Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1873 1873 and Supreme Court of Judicature Act 1875 1875 Supreme Court of Judicature Acts , which dissolved the Chancery and created a new unified High Court of Justice , with the Chancery Division Chancery Division Chancery Division &ndash one of three divisions of the High Court &ndash succeeding the Court of Chancery as an equitable body. For much of its existence the Court was formally led by the Lord Chancellor, assisted by the judges of the common law courts. The staff of the court included a large number of clerks ... of England Edward I , during whose reign the Chancellor s jurisdiction was established The Court of Chancery ... first the exchequer of pleas , to deal with finance, and then the Court of Common Pleas, to deal ... more details
Commercial Court may refer to Commercial Court Belgium Commercial Court England and Wales Commercial Court Victoria disambig de Handelsgericht ... more details
A court artist may refer to A court painter an artist who painted for the members of a court royal noble court . A sketch artist who makes courtroom sketch es. disambig ... more details
The Court of Claims can refer to Ohio Court of Claims Court of Claims United Kingdom Court of Claims United States , a federal court which existed from 1855 to 1982 United States Court of Federal Claims , an existing federal court established in 1982 Disambig ... more details
Magistrates Court can refer to Magistrates Court England and Wales Magistrates Courts Act 1980 of the United Kingdom Magistrates Courts, Liverpool court building Courts of Jersey Lower courts Magistrate s Court of Jersey Magistrates Court Hong Kong Israeli judicial system Magistrate courts Magistrate Courts of Israel Magistrates Courts of South Africa District Courts of New Zealand , known as the Magistrates Courts of New Zealand until 1980 District Court Ireland , the main court of summary jurisdiction in Ireland Magistrates Court of the Australian Capital Territory Magistrates Court of the Northern Territory Magistrates Court of Queensland Magistrates Court of South Australia Magistrates Court of Tasmania Magistrates Court of Victoria Magistrates Court of Western Australia Magistrate s Court TV series See also Magistrate disamb ... more details
Federal court may refer to a court of the national government in a country that has a Federation federal system of government . Examples include United States federal courts A particular federal court, such as the United States district court s. In some countries, a particular court, for example Federal Court of Australia Federal Court Canada Federal Court of India , existed from 1937 to 1950 Federal Court of Justice of Germany . disambiguation fr Cour f d rale ja ... more details