CHECK YOUR ENGLISH VOCABULARY FOR LAW
Types of court
Exercise
1:
Complete definitions 1 – 18 with words
/ expressions from the box. Note that several of these are related to British
or English and Welsh law only, although other countries will usually have an
equivalent.
→ Admiralty
Court
→ Commercial
Court
→ coroner’s
court
→ County Court
→ courthouse
→court-martial
→ Court of
Appeal
→ Court of
Protection
→ Crown Court
|
→ employment
tribunal
→ European
Court of Human Rights
→ European
Court of Justice
→ High Court
→ House of
Lords
→ Lands
Tribunal
→ magistrates'
court
→ rent tribunal
→ small claims
court
|
1
|
A _______________ is a court
that deals with disputes over small amounts of money.
|
2
|
A _______________ is a civil
or criminal court to which a person may go to ask for an award or sentence
to be changed.
|
3
|
A _______________ is a court
which tries someone serving in the armed forces for offences against military
discipline.
|
4
|
A ______________ is the
general word for a building in which trials take place.
|
5
|
A _______________ is one of
the types of court in England and Wales which hears local civil cases.
|
6
|
The _______________ is a court
which considers the rights of citizens of states which are parties to the
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights.
|
7
|
An _______________ is a body
responsible for hearing work-related complaints as specified by statute.
|
8
|
A _______________ is a court
which hears cases of petty crime, adoption, affiliation, maintenance and
violence in the home (= domestic violence), and which can also
commit someone for trial or sentencing in a Crown Court.
|
9
|
A _______________ is a court
presided over by a public official (usually a doctor or lawyer) who investigates
sudden, unexpected and violent deaths.
|
10
|
A _______________ is a court
above the level of a magistrates' court which hears criminal cases.
|
11
|
A _______________ is a court
which deals with compensation claims relating to land.
|
12
|
A _______________ is a court
in the Queen's Bench Division (= one of the main divisions of the High
Court) which hears cases relating to business disputes.
|
13
|
A _______________ is a court
which adjudicates in disputes about money paid or services provided in
return for borrowing something – usually buildings or land.
|
14
|
The _______________ is the
main civil court in England and Wales.
|
15
|
The _______________ is the
court set up to see that the principles of law as laid out in the Treaty of
Rome are observed and applied correctly in the European Union.
|
16
|
A _______________ is a court
appointed to serve the interests of people who are not capable of dealing
with their own affairs, such as patients who are mentally ill.
|
17
|
The _______________ is court
which is part of the Queen's Bench Division (see number 12 above), which
decides in disputes involving ships.
|
18
|
The _______________ is the
highest court of appeal in the United Kingdom (although appellants unhappy
with a decision made here can appeal to the European Court of Justice).
|
Exercise
2:
Decide which of the courts above is
most likely to deal with the following situations.
1
|
HMS Decrepit and HMS
Leaky collide during exercises in the North Sea. The captains of both vessels
blame each other.
|
2
|
Mr Johnson and Mrs Johnson are
getting divorced. Mrs Johnson demands to have the house, the car, 75% of Mr
Johnson's life savings and their pet cat, Tigger. "No way!" says
an angry Mr Johnson.
|
3
|
One evening, Mr Waring goes to
his favourite seafood restaurant for dinner. The next morning he is found
dead in bed.
|
4
|
Two separate companies, English
International Telecommunications and Britphone, both bring out a
new mobile phone which they call the 'Smell-O-Phone'. Both companies
claim that the name was their own idea.
|
5
|
Five workers have been sacked
from the computer manufacturing company 'Compucrash' for incompetence. They
believe that they have been unfairly dismissed.
|
6
|
Mr Cassington is 98 years old
and going deaf and senile. The local Social Services believe he should be
put in a special home. Mr Cassington refuses to leave his own house.
|
7
|
Mr and Mrs Waugh had a new
window installed in their house. The window company now wants the Waughs to
pay, but Mr Waugh is refusing because he thinks the quality of workmanship
is poor.
|
8
|
Jamie Yarnton pays £500 a
month to live in Mrs Witney's house. Suddenly, Mrs Witney asks him for
£1,000 a month instead. Mr Yarnton thinks this is completely unreasonable.
|
9
|
Newspaper editor Mr Hislop
publishes an article describing the Prime Minister as a 'useless, incompetent
fool who can barely tie his own shoelaces, let alone run the country'. The
PM decides to take immediate legal action against the paper.
|
10
|
Corporal Jones ignored
Sergeant Wilson's orders, then went 'absent without leave' for two weeks.
|
|
ANSWER
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