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Mayor's courts are state courts in Ohio created by some municipalities. Mayor's courts hear traffic cases , violations of city ordinances and other misdemeanors . The presiding officer is a magistrate (not a judge ) appointed by the mayor , or even being the mayor, and paid by the city or village.
In 2008, O'Shaughnessy ran for and was elected Clerk of the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas. She was unopposed in her 2012 election, and received 67% of the vote in both her 2016 and 2020 re-election campaigns.
The first spaces for the court was in rented rooms, and the first county building was a log jail ordered built in 1804; it is not known whether the building housed records. The first courthouse was built 1807-08 in Franklinton (then the county seat); its awarded builder was Lucas Sullivant, also first clerk of the court and founder of Franklinton.
The site at the southwest corner of High and Mound streets was at one time occupied by St. Paul's Church, a German Lutheran Church. The tallest building in the complex is the 27-floor, 464-foot (141 m) Franklin County Courthouse at 373 South High Street. It is the seventh tallest building i
The first municipal court was created in 1910, and county courts were created in 1957 as a replacement for justice courts. In 2014, there were 129 municipal courts and 35 county courts. [ 2 ] They are created by the General Assembly as provided in R.C. 1901 and 1907, and are limited by subject-matter jurisdiction .
The clerk of courts office keeps records for the common pleas, municipal, appeals and domestic relations courts. The juvenile and probate courts, which have the same judge, have their own clerk.
Franklin County is a county in the U.S. state of Ohio.As of the 2020 census, the population was 1,323,807, [3] making it the most populous county in Ohio.Most of its land area is taken up by its county seat, Columbus, [4] the state capital and most populous city in Ohio.
On March 11, 2015, the Supreme Court of Ohio approved a consent-to-discipline agreement between Salerno and the Ohio State Bar Association. As part of the settlement, all parties agreed that Salerno violated Ohio Code of Judicial Conduct Rule 1.2, which requires a judge to respect and comply with the law and to act at all times in a manner that ...