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The primary courts currently sitting in New South Wales are: Court of Appeal of New South Wales; Court of Criminal Appeal of New South Wales; Supreme Court of New South Wales; Land and Environment Court of New South Wales; District Court of New South Wales; Local Court of New South Wales; Additional, specialist courts include:
District Court of New South Wales Local Court of New South Wales: Judge term length: Mandatory retirement by age of 72: Number of positions: 52: Website: supremecourt.nsw.gov.au: Chief Justice of New South Wales; Currently: Justice Andrew Bell: Since: 7 March 2022 () Chief Judge at Common Law; Currently: Ian Harrison: Since: 9 November 2023 ()
Kelly Anne Rees is an Australian judge. She has been a judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales since 5 September 2018. [1] [2]Rees was raised on her family's cattle farm in the Bellingen Valley and was dux of Bellingen High School.
The building is 114 metres tall, with 27 floors housing 34 state and 27 federal courtrooms, built in 1976 with the NSW Government and Commonwealth Government sharing the construction cost. [3] It was designed by Geoffrey Atherden of the prominent architectural firm, McConnel Smith and Johnson, with an emphasis on making courts more humane and ...
Sully formerly lectured in advocacy during autumn at the Law School. Sully also coached students in mooting for the internal Witness Examination Competition during the Autumn Semester. Sully, among two other guests from either the Bench or the Bar, previously Judged the Internal Championship Moot held at the Supreme Court of NSW every year.
The modern, high-rise Supreme Court building, located on the other side of Queen's Square, was completed in 1977. The Banco Court room moved to level 13 of the new building. The King Street Courts were used for a time by the District Court of New South Wales, until 1994, but are now used again by the Supreme Court. The building was awarded the ...
Level 1 of the chambers is occupied by the Supreme Court of New South Wales and contains two Court Rooms and Judge's Chambers. [10] The NSW Bar Association and the Library for the NSW Bar Association continue to occupy the lowest 2 levels of the building. The building continues to be owned by practising barristers through Counsel's Chambers ...
Acting Judge of the District Court of NSW (1928) Acting Judge of the Supreme Court (1929–1930 & 1934) [116] Francis Stewart Boyce: 28 August 1932: 27 June 1940: 7 years, 304 days: Acting Judge of the District Court of NSW (1916–1917) [117] Harold Sprent Nicholas: 1 February 1935: 7 January 1948: 12 years, 340 days [75] Sir Thomas Bavin KCMG ...