Circuit
court
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
History
It is written that the Biblical
figure, Samuel went from year-to-year in "circuits" and judged Israel
[1 Samuel 7:15-16][1].
Judge James Kent, called the "Father of the American Judiciary"
referenced the precedent of Samuel in his diary as he wrote of riding circuit [2].
King Henry II instituted the custom of having judges ride around the
countryside ("ride circuit") each year to hear cases, rather than
forcing everyone to bring their cases to London (see Assize of Clarendon). Thus, the term "circuit court" is derived from
the practice of having judges ride around the countryside each year on pre-set
paths − circuits − to hear cases. Especially on the United States
frontier,
a judge might travel on horseback along with a group of lawyers. Abraham Lincoln
was one such attorney who would ride the circuit in Illinois. In more settled
areas, a stagecoach would be used. Eventually the legal caseload in a county
would become great enough to warrant the establishment of a local judiciary.
Most of these local judicial circuits (that is, in terms of the actual routes
traveled by judges) have been thus replaced by judges regularly stationed at
local courthouses, but in
many areas the legacy term remains in use.
Republic
of Ireland
In the Republic of Ireland the Circuit Court is part of the Courts of First
Instance, senior to the 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.
The criminal jurisdiction of the court extends to all indictable offences
other than murder,
rape,
and treason,
and these are heard on front of a judge and jury . The civil jurisdiction of the
court is limited to damages of €38,092.14 and actions involving land with a
ratable value of less than €254.95 (Land value worth approx. €3 million)[citation needed]. These are heard by a judge sitting alone. It also has
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
because of the circuits on which its judges travel, namely Dublin, Cork,
Northern, Western, Eastern, South Western, South Eastern, and Midland, each of
which are composed of a number of counties. 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 sitting in a
location other than Dublin.
United
States
Federal
courts of appeals
In the United States,
circuit courts were first established in the British
Thirteen Colonies. In 1789, the United
States circuit courts were United
States federal courts established in each federal judicial district.
These circuit courts exercised both original (first instance) and appellate jurisdiction. They existed until 1912. The original jurisdiction
formerly exercised by the United States circuit courts is now exercised by the United
States district courts. Their
appellate jurisdiction is now exercised by the United States courts of appeals,
which were known as the United States circuit courts of appeals from its
establishment in 1894 until 1947.
The federal courts of appeals sit
permanently in 13 appellate circuits (11 regional circuits as well as a DC Circuit
and the Federal Circuit).
Note that there are several other federal courts that bear the phrase
"Court of Appeals" in their names, but they are not Article III
courts and are not considered to sit in appellate circuits.
The federal courts of appeals are
intermediate courts, between the district
courts (the federal trial courts)
and the Supreme Court. Smaller circuits, such as the Second Circuit
and Third Circuit,
are based at a single federal courthouse, while others, such as the large Ninth Circuit,
are spread across many courthouses. Since three-judge federal appellate panels
are randomly selected from all sitting circuit judges, Ninth Circuit judges
must often "ride the circuit," though this duty has become much
easier to carry out since the development of modern air travel.
Supreme
Court of the United States
Under the original Judiciary Act of 1789 and subsequent acts, the justices
of the Supreme Court of the United States in Washington, D.C. had the responsibility of
"riding circuit" and personally hearing intermediate appeals, in
addition to their caseload back in the capital. This onerous duty was abolished
by Congress with the Judiciary Act of 1891. The U.S. Supreme Court justices still retain vestiges of
the days of riding circuit; each justice is designated to hear certain interlocutory appeals from specific circuits and can unilaterally decide them or
refer them to the entire Court. The Court's customary summer recess originated
as the time during which the justices would leave Washington and ride circuit
(since dirt roads were more passable in the summer).
State
courts
Many U.S. states
have state
courts called "circuit courts."
Most are trial courts of general, original jurisdiction.
- Alabama
- Alabama Circuit Courts
- Arkansas
- Arkansas Circuit Courts
- Florida
- Florida Circuit Courts
- Hawaii
- Hawaii State Circuit Courts
- Illinois
- Illinois Circuit Courts
- Indiana
- Indiana Circuit Courts
- Kentucky
- Kentucky Circuit Courts
- Maryland
- Maryland Circuit Courts
- Michigan
- Michigan Circuit Courts
- Mississippi - Mississippi Circuit Courts
- Missouri
- Missouri Circuit Courts
- New Hampshire - New Hampshire Circuit Courts
- Oregon
- Oregon Circuit Courts
- South Carolina - South Carolina Circuit Court
- South Dakota - South Dakota Circuit Court
- Tennessee
- Tennessee Circuit Courts
- Virginia
- Virginia Circuit Court
- court of record that has appellate jurisdiction over a county's general district court
and juvenile and domestic relations court and original jurisdiction over major civil cases and
all the county's felony cases. A circuit court has the power to issue death sentences and impanel grand juries. The court's decisions become legal precedents.
- West Virginia - West Virginia Circuit Court
- Wisconsin
- Wisconsin Circuit Court
In Louisiana,
the intermediate appellate courts are called the Louisiana Circuit Courts of Appeal. There are five separate judicial circuits.
In many states, such as Missouri,
a judicial circuit can encompass one or more counties (see Missouri Circuit Courts). Each circuit court can have several divisions, including
circuit, associate, small claims, probate, family or drug court. Each division hears cases within its
particular area of subject-matter
jurisdiction, and jurisdiction is based on the
size or type of a civil claim, or the severity or type of a criminal charge. Drug court,
for example, hears only drug-related criminal cases.
Several U.S. states
have state supreme courts that traditionally "ride the circuit" in the
sense of hearing oral arguments at multiple locations throughout their jurisdictions each
year. Among the states with circuit-riding supreme courts are California,
Idaho,
Oregon,
Pennsylvania,
and Washington.
England
and Wales
England and Wales is divided into
six regions or circuits for the purposes of the administration of
justice.[3]
- Northern Circuit
- North Eastern Circuit
- Wales and Chester Circuit (also known as Wales and
Cheshire)
- Midland Circuit
- Western Circuit
- South Eastern Circuit
The system is overseen by the Lord Chancellor.
The membership consists of High Court Judges, Circuit Judges, District Judges,
law practitioners and academic lawyers. The Circuits also form the basis for
administration of the Bar in England and Wales. The Circuit Bars are
represented on the Bar Council through the Circuit Leaders.[3]
The entire wiki article can be found
at:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circuit_court
Poster's comments:
I can imagine in small communities if times get hard, having
a local judge will have advantages.
There will always be disagreements, and having a "fair"
judge decide on an outcome is a big deal if we are to try preserve our culture
of laws.
The intent of this post is to provide the reader with ideas
for their future, rather than trying to restore the past.
"Fair" judging can be a barterable skill, also. Of
course, both sides have to trust the outcome as fair.
If even interested, consider the KISS (Keep It Simple
Stupid) approach as a way to start. Examples of KISS can be: 1) a Council of
Elders, 2) a jury of our peers, and 3) a "fair" judge both sides
trust, and a local leader that both sides trust.
Trust, faith, and confidence are key. All else pales in comparison.
The alternatives are pretty bleak. Examples are like
fighting, and bribery.
Other people have thought of such things. Now it is your
turn to think of such things where you live.
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