1 / 25

The Civil Courts and other forms of Dispute Resolution

The Civil Courts and other forms of Dispute Resolution. Outline of civil courts and appeal system. Objectives. Draw a diagram of the civil court structure showing appeal route State the jurisdiction of each court Describe the appeal process. Key Terms. Claimant Defendant Jurisdiction

zalika
Download Presentation

The Civil Courts and other forms of Dispute Resolution

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Civil Courts and other forms of Dispute Resolution Outline of civil courts and appeal system

  2. Objectives Draw a diagram of the civil court structure showing appeal route State the jurisdiction of each court Describe the appeal process

  3. Key Terms Claimant Defendant Jurisdiction Royal Courts of Justice Equity Access to Justice Act 1999 Case stated Leave to Appeal Justices of the Supreme Court Delegated legislation Precedent Parties

  4. Outline of courts and appeal Supreme Court Court of Appeal (Civil Division) High Court Queen’s Bench Division Family Division Chancery Division County Court (including the Small Claims Court)

  5. Courts of first instance Civil disputes between individuals, partnerships, companies and or local or national government departments May disagree on a number of areas (family, tort, contract etc) Dispute between claimant and defendant Claimant issues proceedings and claim sent to defendant for response

  6. Courts of first instance • Two main civil courts • County Court and High Court • Magistrates mainly a criminal court but does have some civil jurisdiction • These courts are known as ‘Courts of First Instance’ • Cases may be commenced and decided there • If a party disputes the decision of the court - may ask a higher court to reconsider - known as appeal

  7. Courts of first instance • 216 County Courts in England and Wales • Hear lower level civil disputes • Trials in High Court may be in London or one of 26 High Court District Registers in England and Wales • Hears higher level civil cases • Does have jurisdiction to hear all types of civil dispute

  8. Magistrates’ Court Jurisdiction over most family matters But not divorce Recovery of unpaid council tax Charges for water, gas, and electricity Hears appeals from local authority about granting of licences for gambling and sale of alcohol

  9. County Court • Deals with many types of civil disputes • Including contract, tort, and divorce • Civil cases divided into three types: • Small claims up to £5000 – District Judges • Fast track - £5000 - £25000 – Circuit Judge • Multi-track over £25000 – Circuit Judge or transferred to High Court • Plans to increase the amounts of claims heard by Small Claims Court and County Courts

  10. High Court • Three divisions • Queen’s Bench Division • Family Division • Chancery Division • These are then sub-divided: • Courts where civil claims may be issued • Court where appeals from lower courts will be heard • 120 High Court Judges

  11. High Court – Queen’s Bench Division • Main court • Deals mainly with contract and tort cases • 74 High Court Judges sitting in this court • Often heard in the Royal Courts of Justice in The Strand, London • May be heard in one of High Courts District Registries • Multi track cases may be heard here (due to money, complexity or certain type of case)

  12. High Court – Family Division • All aspects of family matters • Divorce, related children • Financial clams • Adoption • Care proceedings

  13. High Court – Chancery Division • Historically cases in which rule of equity could be used • Modern version deals with • Partnership disputes • Company law • Wills or trusts • Bankruptcy sale of land • Creation of mortgages • 17 Judges sit in Chancery Division • Heard at Royal Courts of Justices or at one of the eight Chancery centres around the country

  14. Appeal Hearings • When one party unhappy with decision and requests a higher court to review the earlier decision • Access to Justice Act 1999 • Majority of appeals only allowed if either original court or the appeal court has given authorisation • Permission only granted if it involves a matter of importance or appeal has good chance of success

  15. High Court as an Appeal Court • High Court both a Court of First Instance and an appellate court

  16. High Court – Queen’s Bench Division • Judicial review – may review decisions made by local authorities and national government departments and tribunals • Judicial review is about rules of fairness in decision making process • Appeals on point of law by way of case stated from Magistrates or Crown Court • These will be criminal cases • Unlawful detention may apply for writ of habeas corpus

  17. High Court – Family Divisional Court • Hears appeals of decisions made from Magistrates and County Courts in respect of family matters

  18. High Court – Chancery Divisional Court Hears appeals of decisions made in bankruptcy and insolvency cases originally decided in County Court

  19. The Court of Appeal • 37 Judges (Lords Justice of Appeal) sit in CA • Most senior is the Master of the Rolls • CA has a Civil Division which specialises in civil cases • Hears appeals from • County Court (District or Circuit Judge) • High Court in its capacity as a court of first instance • High Court in its position as an appellate court • The Employment Appeal Tribunal

  20. The Court of Appeal • Appeals generally heard by 3 – 5 judges • May be heard by 2 judges if parties agree • In most cases a leave to appeal is required • Not a rehearing but a review of the case • Barristers in Court of Appeal hearings must provide advance copies of written and concise arguments to court and opposing barristers • These are called ‘skeleton arguments’ • Court will look at lower court judges decision to see if the law has been interpreted properly

  21. The Supreme Court • Constitutional Reform Act 2005 created the Supreme Court to replace House of Lords • Change took place in 2009 • Supreme Court now has no connection with Parliament • Has its own building, staff and budget • Final court of appeal in civil law for England • 12 judges called Justices of the Supreme Court

  22. The Supreme Court • Hears about 200 cases per year • Majority are Civil and are matters of general public importance • Most cases heard by 3 – 5 judges • Leave to appeal must be obtained from original court or Supreme Court itself • Majority of appeals are from Civil Division of Court of Appeal

  23. The Supreme Court • There is a ‘leap-frog’ procedure provided by Administration of Justice Act 1969 • If High Court Judge certifies a case suitable for Supreme Court and Supreme Court agrees case will go straight from High to Supreme Court • Case must be one on a point of law • And one of public importance with regard to the statutory interpretation of an Act of Parliament or delegated legislation • And one when the trial judge is bound by precedent of the Court of Appeal or Supreme Court

  24. The Supreme Court • Court of Appeal has a civil and criminal division • Hears more cases than the Supreme Court • Court of Appeal hears 2000 cases per year (ten times more) • Decisions in Court of Appeal are more likely therefore to have an impact on public • Generally Supreme Court restricted in the cases it decides – normally important legal issues

  25. Objectives Draw a diagram of the civil court structure showing appeal route State the jurisdiction of each court Describe the appeal process

More Related