AskDefine | Define courts

User Contributed Dictionary

English

Pronunciation

Noun

courts
  1. Plural of court

Verb

courts
  1. third-person singular of court

French

Pronunciation

  • /kuʁ/

Adjective

courts
  1. Plural of court
    Ses cours sont trop courts. - His lessons are too short.

Noun

courts
  1. Plural of court
    Notre complexe dispose de plusieurs courts de tennis.

Extensive Definition

A court is a public forum used by a power base to adjudicate disputes and dispense civil, labour, administrative and criminal justice under its laws. In common law and civil law states, courts are the central means for dispute resolution, and it is generally understood that all persons have an ability to bring their claims before a court. Similarly, those accused of a crime have the right to present their defense before a court.
Court facilities range from a simple farmhouse for a village court in a rural community to huge buildings housing dozens of courtrooms in large cities.
A court is a kind of deliberative assembly with special powers, called its jurisdiction, to decide certain kinds of judicial questions or petitions put to it. It will typically consist of one or more presiding officers, parties and their attorneys, bailiffs, reporters, and perhaps a jury.
The term "court" is often used to refer to the president of the court, also known as the "judge" or the "bench", or the panel of such officials. For example, in the United States, and other common law jurisdictions, the term "court" (in the case of U.S. federal courts) by law is used to describe the judge himself or herself.
In the United States, the legal authority of a court to take action is based on three pillars of power over the parties to the litigation: (1) Personal jurisdiction; (2) Subject matter jurisdiction; and (3) Venue.

Jurisdiction

Jurisdiction, meaning "to speak the law" is the power of a court over a person or claim. In the United States, a court must have both personal jurisdiction and subject matter jurisdiction. Each state establishes a court system for the territory under its control. This system allocates work to courts or authorized individuals by granting both civil and criminal jurisdiction (in the United States, this is termed subject-matter jurisdiction). The grant of power to each category of court or individual may stem from a provision of a written constitution or from an enabling statute. In English law, jurisdiction may be inherent, deriving from the common law origin of the particular court.

Trial and appellate courts

Courts may be classified as trial courts (sometimes termed "courts of first instance") and appellate courts. Some trial courts may function with a judge and a jury: juries make findings of fact under the direction of the judge who reaches conclusions of law and, in combination, this represents the judgment of the court. In other trial courts, decisions of both fact and law are made by the judge or judges. Juries are less common in court systems outside the Anglo-American common law tradition.

Civil law courts and common law courts

The two major models for courts are the civil law courts and the common law courts. Civil law courts are based upon the judicial system in France, while the common law courts are based on the judicial system in Britain. In most civil law jurisdictions, courts function under an inquisitorial system. In the common law system, most courts follow the adversarial system. Procedural law governs the rules by which courts operate: civil procedure for private disputes (for example); and criminal procedure for violation of the criminal law.

Tribunal

see arbitration.

Notes

See also

External links

courts in Bosnian: Sud
courts in Breton: Lez (roue)
courts in Bulgarian: Съд
courts in Czech: Soud
courts in Welsh: Llys (cyfraith)
courts in Danish: Domstol
courts in German: Gericht
courts in Estonian: Kohus
courts in Modern Greek (1453-): Δικαστήριο
courts in Spanish: Tribunal de justicia
courts in Esperanto: Tribunalo (juro)
courts in French: Tribunal
courts in Western Frisian: Rjochtbank
courts in Galician: Tribunal
courts in Korean: 법원
courts in Croatian: Sud
courts in Indonesian: Pengadilan
courts in Italian: Tribunale
courts in Hebrew: בית משפט
courts in Swahili (macrolanguage): Mahakama
courts in Lao: ສານ
courts in Lithuanian: Teismas
courts in Hungarian: Bíróság
courts in Macedonian: Суд
courts in Dutch: Rechtbank
courts in Nepali: अदालत
courts in Japanese: 裁判所
courts in Norwegian: Domstol
courts in Norwegian Nynorsk: Domstol
courts in Occitan (post 1500): Tribunal
courts in Polish: Sąd
courts in Portuguese: Tribunal
courts in Quechua: Taripay suntur
courts in Russian: Суд
courts in Simple English: Court
courts in Slovak: Súd
courts in Slovenian: Sodišče
courts in Serbian: Суд
courts in Serbo-Croatian: Sud
courts in Finnish: Tuomioistuin
courts in Swedish: Domstol
courts in Thai: ศาล
courts in Vietnamese: Tòa án
courts in Cherokee: ᏧᎾᏓᏱᎵᏓᏍᏗ
courts in Turkish: Mahkeme
courts in Ukrainian: Суд
courts in Yiddish: געריכט
courts in Chinese: 法院
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