cover image: The Calcutta Weekly Notes  Monday  February 5  1934

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The Calcutta Weekly Notes Monday February 5 1934

1934

Morgan in his Rhodes Lectures and they have all expressed the view that the making of such an order by the Court on the Presdent of the Legislature is assumption of a jurisdiction with which the Court is not vested. [...] The King's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice in England is the most iportant Division of the High. [...] The Hanworth Committee's Report recommends that all this Appellate jdrisdiction of the King's Bench Division be abolished and transferred to the Court of Appeal and the Criminal Court of Appeal might sit as a Division of the Court of Appeal. [...] The prposal has met with strong protest in the columns of the English press on the ground that the Lord Justices of Appeal have been found to be judges of a superior calibre who have been found to bring to bear on appeals fresh and unbiassed minds and a broader and more independent outlook than may be expected of the colleagues of the puisne Judges. [...] In practice there are three permanent Judges—the Rcorder the Common Sergeant and the Judge of the City of London Court—while the Judges of the High Court attend according to a rota to try the more important cases.
law
Pages
4
Published in
India
SARF Document ID
sarf.100104
Segment Pages Author Actions
The Calcutta Weekly Notes Monday February 5 1934
xlix-lii unknown view

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