(Redirected from High Court of Justice of England and Wales):''For the Cameroonian court by this name, see
High Court of Justice (Cameroon), for the Israeli court of this name, see
Supreme Court of Israel.'' ''The
Court of First Instance of Hong Kong was also known as the High Court of Justice before 1997.''
:''For the
English Civil War court, see
High Court of Justice for the trial of Charles I.''
'Her Majesty's High Court of Justice' (usually known more simply as the 'High Court') is, together with the
Crown Court and the
Court of Appeal, part of the
Supreme Court of Judicature of England and Wales (which under the
Constitutional Reform Act 2005, is to be known as the
Senior Courts of England and Wales).
It deals at
first instance with all the most high value and high importance cases, and also has a supervisory jurisdiction over all subordinate courts and tribunals. Appeal from the High Court in civil matters lies to the Court of Appeal and thence to the
House of Lords, except when the High Court is sitting as a
Prize Court when appeal lies to the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
The High Court is based at the
Royal Courts of Justice on
The Strand, in central
London. However, it also sits as 'District Registries' all across England and Wales and virtually all proceedings in the High Court may be issued and heard at a district registry. It is headed by the
Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales. By convention, all of its male judges are made
Knights Bachelor, while all of its female ones are made
Dames Commander of the British Empire.
The High Court is split into three main divisions: the Queen's Bench Division, the Chancery Division and the Family Division. The Supreme Court Costs Office is the part of the High Court that deals with legal costs and falls outside these divisions.
Queen's Bench Division
Main articles: Queen's Bench
The Queen's Bench Division — or King's Bench Division when the monarch is a King — has two roles. It hears a wide range of contract law and personal injury / general negligence cases, but also has special responsibility as a supervisory court. Until 2005, the head of the QBD was the
Lord Chief Justice (currently
Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers). A new post of
President of the Queen's Bench Division was created under the provisions of the
Constitutional Reform Act 2005, leaving the Lord Chief Justice as President of the Courts of England and Wales, Head of the Judiciary of England and Wales and Head of Criminal Justice.
[1] Sir Igor Judge became the first person to hold this office in October 2005.
[2] [3]
Queen's Bench Division judges, along with circuit judges also exercise a criminal jurisdiction when sitting in the
Crown Court. In addition, the Divisional Court of the Division hears appeals on points of law from
magistrates' courts and from Crown courts which have heard appeals from magistrates' courts (see
Courts of England and Wales for an explanation of these courts). These are known as Appeals by way of
Case Stated. All claims for judicial review of administrative decisions or decisions of inferior tribunals are heard by a Queen's Bench judge or a Divisional Court. Appeals from the High Court in civil matters lie to the
Court of Appeal (Civil Division); in criminal matters appeal lies only to the House of Lords.
Sub-divisions of the Queen's Bench Division include the Technology and Construction Court, Commercial Court, the
Admiralty Court and the
Administrative Court.
Chancery Division
The Chancery Division deals with
business law,
trusts law,
probate law,
land law in relation to issues of
equity. In addition it has specialist courts within it which deal with
intellectual property and
company law. All tax appeals are assigned to the Chancery Division. The head of the Chancery Division was known as the
Vice-Chancellor until October 2005. The title was changed under the provisions of the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 to
Chancellor of the High Court. The first Chancellor (and the last Vice-Chancellor) is Sir
Andrew Morritt. One may read reported cases heard before the Chancery Division in the Chancery Division law reports.
Family Division
The Family Division deals with matters such as
divorce,
children,
probate and
medical treatment. Its decisions may concern life and death and are perhaps inevitably regarded as controversial. For example, it permitted a hospital to separate
conjoined twins without the parents' consent; and allowed one woman to have her life support machines turned off, while not permitting a husband to give his severely disabled wife a lethal injection with her consent. The High Court Family Division has jurisdiction to hear all cases relating to children's welfare and interest, and exercises an exclusive jurisdiction in wardship cases. The head of the Family Division is the
President of the Family Division Sir Mark Potter. Its most senior court is the
Principal Registry of the Family Division which is based in First Avenue House, Holborn, London.
The Family Division is comparatively modern, having been formed by combining the Admiralty Court and probate courts into the then ''Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division'' of the High Court, or ''Wills, Wrecks and Wives'' as it was informally called.
Judges
Main articles: High Court judge
The judges in the High Court are known formally as ''Justices of Her Majesty's High Court of Justice'' and informally as ''High Court judges'', and are styled formally and in judicial matters ''The Hon. Mr(s) Justice (Forename) Surname''. (The first judge with a particular surname is called, e.g., "Mr Justice Smith", and all subsequent judges with that surname are distinguished as "Mr Justice John Smith", "Mr Justice Robert Smith", etc., and female judges are called, e.g., "Mrs Justice Jones" regardless of marital status.) Socially they are known simply by the knighthood or damehood they acquire on appointment, without the prefix "The Hon.".
See also
List of High Court Judges of England and Wales.
Supervisory role of the High Court and Circuits
Historically, the source of all justice in England was the monarch. All judges sit in judgement on her behalf (hence why they have the royal coat of arms behind them) and criminal prosecutions made by the state are generally made on her behalf. Historically, local lords were permitted to administer justice in
Manorial Courts and other ways. Inevitably, the justice administered was patchy and appeals were made direct to the King. The King's travelling representatives (whose primary purpose was tax collection) acted on behalf of the king to make the administration of justice more even. The tradition of judges travelling in set areas of the country or 'circuits' remains to this day, where they hear cases in the district registries of the High Court.
It is also on behalf of the monarch that the Queen's Bench Division oversees all lesser courts and all government authority. Generally, unless other appeal processes are laid down in law, anyone who wants to challenge any decision of a lesser court, tribunal, government authority or state authority brings a claim for
judicial review in the Queen's Bench Division. This is a special procedure in the Administrative Court of the Queen's Bench Division. A single judge first decides whether the matter is fit to bring to the court (to weed out frivolous or unwinnable cases) and if so the matter is allowed to go forward to a full judicial review hearing. This is not a jury matter. Appeals are to the Court of Appeal (Civil Division) and then to the House of Lords, or in criminal matters, directly to the House of Lords.
See also
★
Court of First Instance (Hong Kong)