High Court of Error and Appeal: Difference between revisions

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==Noted rulings==
==Noted rulings==
===''Kraw nLui v. R.'' (1950)===
===''Kraw nLui v. R.'' (1952)===
In 1949, Parliament resurrected the process of impeachment to convict Lieutenant-general Kraw Har of rape and sentenced him to death ''in absentia''.  Kraw was implicated in Dayashina over the suicide of a 16-year-old Dayashinese girl, who accused Kraw of raping her and forcing her to commit suicide to regain her honour.  The girl's parents complained to the [[Themiclesian Army]], which ran an internal inquiry and found insufficient evidence to convict him.  However, this matter was published widely by the Dayashinese press and threatened to become a rallying cry for Dayashinese communities to resist occupation.  The Army refused to proceed further, citing the lack of witnesses.  The girl's parents then petitioned the Themiclesian Parliament, which convicted Kraw in Feb. 1950, taking in statements from witnesses who claimed they did not dare come forth for fear of retaliation.  To great surprise, Parliament sentenced him to death on Mar. 1, 1950.  Kraw hanged himself in Dayashina on Mar. 4.  Since the process of impeachment was not regulated under the Uniformity of Process Act of 1880, Kraw's real and movable properties were confiscated to the state.


Kraw's son and would-be heir Kraw nLui challenged the decision to confiscate his estate, but the broader question was whether Parliament still possessed the judicial power to hold impeachment trials, which had not occurred since the 1400s.  Kraw's attorney argued that the Uniformity of Process Act implicitly abolished the process of impeachment, since its forth section provided that the Act applied to "all judicial causes, civil and criminal, arising in the Demesne and abroad where subjects of the Crown shall be implicated".  He further cited the sixtieth section, which provided that "no forfeiture of the person or estate shall henceforth occur upon conviction of crime".  These two sections, he argued, combined to mean that Parliament had no power to try Lt. Gen. Kraw before the case was appealed to it via the Court of Appeal, and at any rate his property should not have been confiscated.  He further claimed that "a great number of constitutional changes" have intervened between the exercise of impeachment, which was a royal prerogative exercised by the legislature, and the customary and accepted process in the modern day. 
In 1951, the Supreme Court ruled that it had no power to question the substantive decisions made by Parliament, saying it "possessed and exercised the supreme and unlimited power".  Next year, the decision was contested in the Court of Appeal.  The Chief Justice of Appeal, Nem Njing-mjet, led the court to affirm the Supreme Court's judgment, adding that "the power of impeachment is, as the Plaintiff-in-Error claims, founded on royal prerogative and is akin to primary law, which cannot be restricted by another primary law".  Questioned whether Parliament was able to impose any punishment it liked whatsoever, Nem verbally replied that he believed this to be true.  The plaintiff's attorney then asked if the court believed Parliament's decision was just, to which Nem said that they can only decide whether things were legal, not whether they were just, and "Parliament's decisions are, by definition, legal".  Nem and other conservative justices, who dominated the court until the late 60s, did not recognize the principle of judicial review and constrained the activities of the court to deciding whether secondary legislation, such as executive orders, contravened primary laws.  These justices also generally believed there was no legal distinction between the military and civilian jurisdictions, holding that parliamentary laws applied to both unless specifically excluded.


==Premises==
==Premises==
The Court of Appeal sits in the Supreme Court (building) and usually shares its courtrooms and other facilities, though the staff of the two courts are kept separate.
The Court of Appeal sits in the Supreme Court (building) and usually shares its courtrooms and other facilities, though the staff of the two courts are kept separate.

Revision as of 22:57, 4 December 2019

Court of Appeal
廷讞寺, m-lêng-ngjanh-lje′
Establishedtime immemorial
1820 (current jurisdiction)
LocationKien-k'ang
Composition methodAppointed by the monarch on the advice of the prime minister
Authorized byJudicial precedents
Writs of Error Act (1820)
Appeals toHouse of Lords
Appeals fromSupreme Court
Judge term lengthLife
Number of positions10
Chief Justice of Appeal
CurrentlyTjung Gwra-nlem
Since2012

The Court of Appeal (廷讞寺, m-lêng-ngjanh-lje′) is an appellate court in Themiclesia. Appeals from this court went to the court of dernier resort, the House of Lords. Today, Themiclesia has a four-tier judicial system for both civil and criminal cases, where the Court of Appeal is the third tier.

Name

The Themiclesian name of the Court of Appeal is m-lêng-ngjanh-lje′ (廷讞寺). m-lêng means "courtyard", generally meaning the place where the monarch held court and decided disputes. Due to its political prominence, it is used as a synecdoche for the government as a whole. ngjanh means "review". lje′ is somewhat unclear in meaning, but it may have been a general term for "office". Together, the name meant a department of reviewing affairs that came before the court, which here means the central government.

The Tyrannian name "Court of Appeal" was officially adopted in 1875. Before then, it was also called the Court of Error or the Exchequer Chamber, after the analogous court in Anglia and Lerchernt.

History

This court was originally part of the traditional judicial apparatus in antiquity and continued to hear appeals from regional courts in both civil and criminal matters, but it is unclear whether it possessed original jurisdiction under ordinary circumstances. Its jurisdiction over cases involving aliens was split in 1708 to accommodate the newly-created Supreme Court, to which it lost primary appellate jurisdiction over regional courts in 1820. In 1833, it acquired appellate jurisdiction over the Supreme Court. The Uniformity of Process Act of 1880 removed the Court of Appeal's jurisdiction in error over all trial courts, transferred to the Supreme Court.

Jurisdiction

After the Uniformity of Process Act passed in 1880, the Court of Appeal has jurisdiction in appeal over the entire Supreme Court. Compared to that court, the Court of Appeal has been relatively conservative in civil matters between subjects and the state, preferring to rule in favour of the state.

Noted rulings

Kraw nLui v. R. (1952)

In 1949, Parliament resurrected the process of impeachment to convict Lieutenant-general Kraw Har of rape and sentenced him to death in absentia. Kraw was implicated in Dayashina over the suicide of a 16-year-old Dayashinese girl, who accused Kraw of raping her and forcing her to commit suicide to regain her honour. The girl's parents complained to the Themiclesian Army, which ran an internal inquiry and found insufficient evidence to convict him. However, this matter was published widely by the Dayashinese press and threatened to become a rallying cry for Dayashinese communities to resist occupation. The Army refused to proceed further, citing the lack of witnesses. The girl's parents then petitioned the Themiclesian Parliament, which convicted Kraw in Feb. 1950, taking in statements from witnesses who claimed they did not dare come forth for fear of retaliation. To great surprise, Parliament sentenced him to death on Mar. 1, 1950. Kraw hanged himself in Dayashina on Mar. 4. Since the process of impeachment was not regulated under the Uniformity of Process Act of 1880, Kraw's real and movable properties were confiscated to the state.

Kraw's son and would-be heir Kraw nLui challenged the decision to confiscate his estate, but the broader question was whether Parliament still possessed the judicial power to hold impeachment trials, which had not occurred since the 1400s. Kraw's attorney argued that the Uniformity of Process Act implicitly abolished the process of impeachment, since its forth section provided that the Act applied to "all judicial causes, civil and criminal, arising in the Demesne and abroad where subjects of the Crown shall be implicated". He further cited the sixtieth section, which provided that "no forfeiture of the person or estate shall henceforth occur upon conviction of crime". These two sections, he argued, combined to mean that Parliament had no power to try Lt. Gen. Kraw before the case was appealed to it via the Court of Appeal, and at any rate his property should not have been confiscated. He further claimed that "a great number of constitutional changes" have intervened between the exercise of impeachment, which was a royal prerogative exercised by the legislature, and the customary and accepted process in the modern day.

In 1951, the Supreme Court ruled that it had no power to question the substantive decisions made by Parliament, saying it "possessed and exercised the supreme and unlimited power". Next year, the decision was contested in the Court of Appeal. The Chief Justice of Appeal, Nem Njing-mjet, led the court to affirm the Supreme Court's judgment, adding that "the power of impeachment is, as the Plaintiff-in-Error claims, founded on royal prerogative and is akin to primary law, which cannot be restricted by another primary law". Questioned whether Parliament was able to impose any punishment it liked whatsoever, Nem verbally replied that he believed this to be true. The plaintiff's attorney then asked if the court believed Parliament's decision was just, to which Nem said that they can only decide whether things were legal, not whether they were just, and "Parliament's decisions are, by definition, legal". Nem and other conservative justices, who dominated the court until the late 60s, did not recognize the principle of judicial review and constrained the activities of the court to deciding whether secondary legislation, such as executive orders, contravened primary laws. These justices also generally believed there was no legal distinction between the military and civilian jurisdictions, holding that parliamentary laws applied to both unless specifically excluded.

Premises

The Court of Appeal sits in the Supreme Court (building) and usually shares its courtrooms and other facilities, though the staff of the two courts are kept separate.