CRM 1300 Lecture 14: Lect. 14 - The Courts

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Federal courts have jurisdiction over all of canada, but only towards the highest level of appeal. Larger towns and cities will have provincial or territorial courts. In rural areas, they may not have their own courts. Cases will build up to a certain number and the circuit courts (courts that move around) will arrive and attend to those crimes. Each province has an appeal court, so if someone appeals a decision, the case will move up on the canadian court structure. This has final authority over all public and private law in canada. It generally hears over 100 cases per year. More than half of these are handpicked" by subcommittees of 3 supreme court judges because they involve legal issues of general importance. Any serious criminal cases that the accused or crown doesn"t agree with has the right to be heard by. The supreme court has the ability to do two main things:

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