Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The National Association for Court Management (NACM) [1] is a non-profit organization in the United States that promotes professional management education for court administrators and judges. In the United States and most other countries in the common law tradition, supervising judges continue their traditional role as the presiding authorities ...
Former federal courts of Mississippi. United States District Court for the District of Mississippi (extinct, subdivided on June 18, 1838) Footnotes
The Conference of State Court Administrators (COSCA), which was established in 1955 and incorporated in 1982, [clarification needed] consists of the state court administrators and equivalent officials in each of the states and territories of the United States. Its mission is to provide a national forum to assist state court administrators.
Jenifer Branning, a candidate on the ballot for the Mississippi Supreme Court Central District, speaks to attendees during Roger Wicker's victory party at the Westin hotel in Jackson, on Nov. 5, 2024.
Mississippi Supreme Court Spokesperson Beverly Kraft told the Clarion Ledger the court's location has been changed from the War Memorial Building at 120 N. State St. to the Continental Trailways ...
The cases the court hears are assigned to it by the Supreme Court of Mississippi, and generally concern issues in which the law is already settled, but the facts are in dispute. Thus, contrary to federal procedure, Mississippi does not protect the common law right to a trial by jury, since it permits appellate review of facts found by a jury. [ 1 ]
In 2008 she was elected to a full term on the Court. [3] She retired on December 31, 2016. In 2006, Lamar served as president of the William C. Keady American Inns of Court and as a member of the Mississippi Judicial College Board of Governors. She is a former member of the Board of Directors of the Mississippi Prosecutor's Association.
Map of Chancery Court districts. Mississippi Chancery Courts are courts of equity. They also have jurisdiction over family law, sanity hearings, wills, and constitutional law. In counties with no County Court, they have jurisdiction over juveniles. Typically, trials are heard without a jury, but juries are permitted. There are 20 districts. [1]