LAW 201 Study Guide - Quiz Guide: Inherent Jurisdiction, Small Claims Court, Provincial Superior
In order to be a Canadian Judge, one requires
> MIN 10 years as a lawyer
> Clean discipline record
> Exemplary contribution to the profession
Supreme Court of Canada
- Court Martial Appeal Court
- Provincial Court of Appeal
- Federal court of appeal
Court Martial Appeal Court
- Military courts
Provincial Court of Appeal
- Provincial/ territorial Superior Courts
- Provincial Courts
- Provincial Administrative tribunals
Federal Court of Appeal
- Federal court trial division
- Tax court of Canada
Federal Court of trial division
- Federal Administrative Tribunals
Document Summary
In order to be a canadian judge, one requires. The supreme court of canada = canada"s ultimate court of appeal. The supreme court hears appeals from the provincial court of appeal. The provincial courts of appeal hear appeals from the provincial superior court trial level. The federal court trial division and the federal court of appeal are both special statutory courts that have no inherent jurisdiction. The judges in the tax courts are appointed by the federal government. The canadian military has its own court, both at the trial level and the appellate level . The military courts hear charges against members of the canadian military, sometimes called courts marshall. The small claims court is part of the ontario superior court of justice. Appeals from the small claims court, superior court interim, & small 31582 matters go to the. Appeals from the provincial court of justice go to the ontario superior court.