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The intermediate courts were reformed in 1973 by the District Court Act 1973, [1] which abolished the courts of quarter sessions and each of the district courts and amalgamated their jurisdictions into a single District Court of New South Wales, with a statewide criminal and civil jurisdiction. [2]
The Court of Appeal operates pursuant to the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW). The Court hears appeals from a variety of courts and tribunals in New South Wales, in particular the Supreme Court, the Industrial Court, the Land and Environment Court, the District Court, the Dust Diseases Tribunal, the Workers Compensation Commission, and the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal. [1]
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:
In 1858 the district courts were established with a civil jurisdiction up to £ 200 replacing the Court of Requests which only sat in limited places, [a] and had a general claim limit of £ 10 to £30. [2] Initially each judge was appointed to a specific district. [3] From 1955 judges were appointed to all district courts.
However, all states and territories have a supreme court, which is a superior court of record and is the highest court within that state or territory. These courts also have appeal divisions, known by various names across the country, including the full court, court of appeal, and court of criminal appeal. [27]
On Thursday, 22 June 2017, Justices Gordon and Edelman of the High Court of Australia granted special leave to appeal the decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal to the High Court. [ 9 ] It was believed that the practical effect of this decision is that tenants in New South Wales could discover their tenancy agreements are unenforceable ...
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 ...
The New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal, part of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, is the highest court for criminal matters and has appellate jurisdiction in the Australian State of New South Wales. [1]