Superior court

In the legal systems of British tradition, a superior court is a court of general Compétence having in an inherent way competence to hear certain types of questions. In the countries of the the Commonwealth, the superior courts inherited the inherent competence of the Court of the Bench of the king (or the queen) of England. A superior court has competence to consider the businesses concerning the statutory right very as much as Common law , out of civil matter as out of criminal matter. It has also a waste competence on any question which is not specifically allotted to a court in particular under the terms of the legal system. Traditionally, among the matters considered as belonging to the inherent competence of the superior courts, one finds for example the capacity to emit special ordinances as well as the capacity of monitoring and reform on the bodies politic, the corporations and the other courses. The capacity of monitoring and reform on the other courses should not however be confused with a role of Court of Appeal. They are rather a control competence and legality the acts posed by the lower court. A superior court can in addition be made allot or not a role of Court of Appeal. Conversely, a court which is not a superior court can see itself entrusting a certain appelate jurisdiction. A court is thus a superior court by its inherent general competence, in opposition to a lower court, whose competence is primarily limited to the matters which are entrusted to him by the legislation which created it.

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