Richard
Cricket Web Staff Member
Broadly and fairly simply speaking, England and Wales (Scotland is slightly different, as is Northern Ireland) has:
For criminal law:
Magistrates courts
The Crown Court
For civil law:
The Small Claims Court which is an affiliate of
The County Court
There is then:
The High Court (which has Family, Queen Bench and Chancery divisions)
The Court of Appeal (which has civil and criminal divisions)
and
The House Of Lords
But the ECJ (European Court of Justice) holds higher authority than any UK court.
I'm sure Mr. z would be able to give a more cogent explanation than that, but I doubt too many are terribly interested anyway.![Original :) :)](/forum/images/smilies/original/original.gif)
For criminal law:
Magistrates courts
The Crown Court
For civil law:
The Small Claims Court which is an affiliate of
The County Court
There is then:
The High Court (which has Family, Queen Bench and Chancery divisions)
The Court of Appeal (which has civil and criminal divisions)
and
The House Of Lords
But the ECJ (European Court of Justice) holds higher authority than any UK court.
I'm sure Mr. z would be able to give a more cogent explanation than that, but I doubt too many are terribly interested anyway.
![Original :) :)](/forum/images/smilies/original/original.gif)