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单词 court
释义

court


court

C0697600 (kôrt)n.1. a. An extent of open ground partially or completely enclosed by walls or buildings; a courtyard.b. Abbr. Ct. A short street, especially a wide alley walled by buildings on three sides.c. A large open section of a building, often with a glass roof or skylight.d. A large building, such as a mansion, arranged around a courtyard.2. a. The place of residence of a sovereign or dignitary; a royal mansion or palace.b. The retinue of a sovereign, including the royal family and personal servants, advisers, and ministers.c. A sovereign's governing body, including the council of ministers and state advisers.d. A formal meeting or reception presided over by a sovereign.3. Law a. A person or body of persons that presides over the hearing of cases; a judge or panel of judges.b. The building, hall, or room where cases are heard.c. The session at which cases are heard.4. An ecclesiastical court.5. Sports An open level area marked with appropriate lines, upon which a game, such as tennis, handball, or basketball, is played.6. The body of directors of an organization, especially of a corporation.7. A legislative assembly.v. court·ed, court·ing, courts v.tr.1. a. To attempt to gain; seek: courting wealth and fame.b. To behave so as to invite or incur: courts disaster by taking drugs.2. To try to gain the love or affections of, especially to seek to marry.3. To attempt to gain the favor of by attention or flattery: a salesperson courting a potential customer.4. Zoology To behave so as to attract (a mate).v.intr.1. To pursue a courtship; woo.2. Zoology To engage in courtship behavior.Idiom: pay court to1. To flatter with solicitous overtures in an attempt to obtain something or clear away antagonism.2. To seek someone's love; woo.
[Middle English, from Old French cort, from Latin cohors, cohort-, courtyard, retinue; see gher- in Indo-European roots.]

court

(kɔːt) n1. (Architecture) an area of ground wholly or partly surrounded by walls or buildings2. (Architecture) (capital when part of a name) a. a block of flats: Selwyn Court. b. a mansion or country housec. a short street, sometimes closed at one end3. (Architecture) a space inside a building, sometimes surrounded with galleries4. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a. the residence, retinues, or household of a sovereign or noblemanb. (as modifier): a court ball. 5. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) a sovereign or prince and his retinue, advisers, etc6. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) any formal assembly, reception, etc, held by a sovereign or nobleman with his courtiers7. homage, flattering attention, or amorous approaches (esp in the phrase pay court to someone)8. (Law) law a. an authority having power to adjudicate in civil, criminal, military, or ecclesiastical mattersb. the regular sitting of such a judicial authorityc. the room or building in which such a tribunal sits9. (Tennis) a. a marked outdoor or enclosed area used for any of various ball games, such as tennis, squash, etcb. a marked section of such an area: the service court. 10. (Squash & Fives) a. a marked outdoor or enclosed area used for any of various ball games, such as tennis, squash, etcb. a marked section of such an area: the service court. 11. (Commerce) the board of directors or council of a corporation, company, etc12. (Education) chiefly Brit the supreme council of some universities13. (Banking & Finance) a branch of any of several friendly societies14. (Law) go to court to take legal action15. hold court to preside over admirers, attendants, etc16. (Law) without a trial or legal case: the case was settled out of court. 17. too unimportant for consideration18. Brit so as to ridicule completely (in the phrase laugh out of court)19. the ball is in your court you are obliged to make the next movevb20. to attempt to gain the love of (someone); woo21. (tr) to pay attention to (someone) in order to gain favour22. (tr) to try to obtain (fame, honour, etc)23. (tr) to invite, usually foolishly, as by taking risks: to court disaster. 24. old-fashioned to be conducting a serious emotional relationship usually leading to marriage[C12: from Old French, from Latin cohors cohort]

Court

(kɔːt) n (Biography) Margaret (née Smith). born 1942, Australian tennis player, winner of a record 24 Grand Slam singles titles: Australian Open champion 1960–66, 1969–71, and 1973; US Open champion 1962, 1965, 1969–70, and 1973; Wimbledon champion 1963, 1965, and 1970; French Open champion 1962, 1965, 1969–70, and 1973

court

(kɔrt, koʊrt)

n. 1. a. a place where legal justice is administered. b. a judicial tribunal duly constituted for the hearing and determination of cases. c. a session of a judicial assembly. 2. an area open to the sky and mostly or entirely surrounded by buildings, walls, etc. 3. a high interior usu. having a glass roof and surrounded by several stories of galleries or the like. 4. Chiefly Irish. a stately dwelling. 5. a short street. 6. a. a smooth, level quadrangle on which to play tennis, basketball, etc. b. one of the divisions of such an area. 7. the residence of a sovereign or other high dignitary; palace. 8. a sovereign's or dignitary's retinue. 9. a sovereign and councilors as the political rulers of a state. 10. a formal assembly held by a sovereign. 11. devoted attention in order to win favor; homage: to pay court to a beloved. 12. a branch or lodge of a fraternal society. 13. the group of insects, as honeybees, surrounding the queen; retinue. v.t. 14. to try to win the favor or goodwill of: to court the rich. 15. to seek the affections of; woo. 16. (of animals) to attempt to attract (a mate) by engaging in certain species-specific behaviors. 17. to attempt to gain (applause, favor, etc.). 18. to hold out inducements to; invite. 19. to act so as to cause, lead to, or provoke: to court disaster. v.i. 20. to seek another's love; woo. 21. (of animals) to attempt to attract individuals of the opposite sex for mating. Idioms: 1. hold court, to act as the center of attention for one's admirers. 2. out of court, without a legal hearing; privately: The case will be settled out of court. [1125–75; Middle English co(u)rt < Anglo-French, Old French < Latin cohortem, acc. of cohors farmyard; see cohort]

Court

 the retinue of a sovereign; an organization for the administration of justice; directors, managers, delegates, or courtiers collectively.

court


Past participle: courted
Gerund: courting
Imperative
court
court
Present
I court
you court
he/she/it courts
we court
you court
they court
Preterite
I courted
you courted
he/she/it courted
we courted
you courted
they courted
Present Continuous
I am courting
you are courting
he/she/it is courting
we are courting
you are courting
they are courting
Present Perfect
I have courted
you have courted
he/she/it has courted
we have courted
you have courted
they have courted
Past Continuous
I was courting
you were courting
he/she/it was courting
we were courting
you were courting
they were courting
Past Perfect
I had courted
you had courted
he/she/it had courted
we had courted
you had courted
they had courted
Future
I will court
you will court
he/she/it will court
we will court
you will court
they will court
Future Perfect
I will have courted
you will have courted
he/she/it will have courted
we will have courted
you will have courted
they will have courted
Future Continuous
I will be courting
you will be courting
he/she/it will be courting
we will be courting
you will be courting
they will be courting
Present Perfect Continuous
I have been courting
you have been courting
he/she/it has been courting
we have been courting
you have been courting
they have been courting
Future Perfect Continuous
I will have been courting
you will have been courting
he/she/it will have been courting
we will have been courting
you will have been courting
they will have been courting
Past Perfect Continuous
I had been courting
you had been courting
he/she/it had been courting
we had been courting
you had been courting
they had been courting
Conditional
I would court
you would court
he/she/it would court
we would court
you would court
they would court
Past Conditional
I would have courted
you would have courted
he/she/it would have courted
we would have courted
you would have courted
they would have courted
Thesaurus
Noun1.court - an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial businesscourt - an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial businessjudicature, tribunalcourt of justice, court of law, lawcourt, court - a tribunal that is presided over by a magistrate or by one or more judges who administer justice according to the lawsassembly - a group of persons who are gathered together for a common purposeInternational Court of Justice, World Court - a court established to settle disputes between members of the United NationsBench - the magistrate or judge or judges sitting in court in judicial capacity to compose the court collectivelyappeals court, appellate court, court of appeals - a court whose jurisdiction is to review decisions of lower courts or agenciesassizes, court of assize, court of assize and nisi prius - the county courts of England (replaced in 1971 by Crown courts)chancery, court of chancery - a court with jurisdiction in equityconsistory - a church tribunal or governing bodycriminal court - a court having jurisdiction over criminal casesdivorce court - a court having jurisdiction over the termination of marriage contractscourt of domestic relations, domestic relations court, family court - a court in some states in the United States that has jurisdiction over family disputes (especially those involving children)federal court - a court establish by the authority of a federal governmentF.I.S.C., Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court - a secret federal court created in 1978 by the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act; responsible for authorizing wiretaps and other forms of electronic surveillance and for authorizing searches of suspected spies and terrorists by the Department of Justice or United States intelligence agenciesinferior court, lower court - any court whose decisions can be appealed to a higher courtInquisition - a former tribunal of the Roman Catholic Church (1232-1820) created to discover and suppress heresyjuvenile court - a court having jurisdiction over dependent and delinquent childrenkangaroo court - an irregular unauthorized courtmilitary court - a judicial court of commissioned officers for the discipline and punishment of military personnelmoot court - a mock court where law students argue hypothetical casespolice court - a court that has power to prosecute for minor offenses and to bind over for trial in a superior court anyone accused of serious offensesprobate court - a court having jurisdiction over the probate of wills and the administration of estatesquarter sessions - a local court with criminal jurisdiction and sometimes administrative functionsRota - (Roman Catholic Church) the supreme ecclesiastical tribunal for cases appealed to the Holy See from diocesan courtsStar Chamber - a former English court that became notorious for its arbitrary methods and severe punishmentssuperior court - any court that has jurisdiction above an inferior courthigh court, state supreme court, supreme court - the highest court in most states of the United Statestraffic court - a court that has power to prosecute for traffic offensestrial court - the first court before which the facts of a case are decidedjury - a body of citizens sworn to give a true verdict according to the evidence presented in a court of law
2.court - a room in which a lawcourt sitscourt - a room in which a lawcourt sits; "television cameras were admitted in the courtroom"courtroombar - (law) a railing that encloses the part of the courtroom where the judges and lawyers sit and the case is tried; "spectators were not allowed past the bar"bench - (law) the seat for judges in a courtroomcourthouse - a building that houses judicial courtsjury box - an enclosure within a courtroom for the juryroom - an area within a building enclosed by walls and floor and ceiling; "the rooms were very small but they had a nice view"witness box, witness stand - a box enclosure for a witness when testifyinglaw, jurisprudence - the collection of rules imposed by authority; "civilization presupposes respect for the law"; "the great problem for jurisprudence to allow freedom while enforcing order"
3.court - the sovereign and his advisers who are the governing power of a stateroyal courtauthorities, government, regime - the organization that is the governing authority of a political unit; "the government reduced taxes"; "the matter was referred to higher authorities"Court of Saint James's - the British royal courtPorte, Sublime Porte - the Ottoman court in Constantinople
4.court - a specially marked horizontal area within which a game is played; "players had to reserve a court in advance"badminton court - the court on which badminton is playedbasketball court - the court on which basketball is playedhandball court - the court on which handball is playedpiste - a flat rectangular area for fencing boutssquash court - the indoor court in which squash is playedtennis court - the court on which tennis is playedvolleyball court - the court on which volleyball is playedathletic field, playing area, playing field, field - a piece of land prepared for playing a game; "the home crowd cheered when Princeton took the field"
5.court - Australian woman tennis player who won many major championships (born in 1947)Court - Australian woman tennis player who won many major championships (born in 1947)Margaret Court
6.court - the family and retinue of a sovereign or princecourt - the family and retinue of a sovereign or princeroyal courtentourage, retinue, cortege, suite - the group following and attending to some important person
7.court - a hotel for motoristscourt - a hotel for motorists; provides direct access from rooms to parking areamotor hotel, motor inn, motor lodge, tourist courthotel - a building where travelers can pay for lodging and meals and other servicesmotel - a motor hotel
8.court - a tribunal that is presided over by a magistrate or by one or more judges who administer justice according to the lawscourt of justice, court of law, lawcourtcourt, judicature, tribunal - an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial business
9.court - the residence of a sovereign or nobleman; "the king will visit the duke's court"residence - the official house or establishment of an important person (as a sovereign or president); "he refused to live in the governor's residence"
10.court - an area wholly or partly surrounded by walls or buildingscourt - an area wholly or partly surrounded by walls or buildings; "the house was built around an inner court"courtyardarea - a part of a structure having some specific characteristic or function; "the spacious cooking area provided plenty of room for servants"atrium - the central area in a building; open to the skybailey - the outer courtyard of a castlebuilding, edifice - a structure that has a roof and walls and stands more or less permanently in one place; "there was a three-story building on the corner"; "it was an imposing edifice"cloister - a courtyard with covered walks (as in religious institutions)food court - an area (as in a shopping mall) where fast food is sold (usually around a common eating area)forecourt - the outer or front court of a building or of a group of buildingsparvis - a courtyard or portico in front of a building (especially a cathedral)
11.court - respectful deferencecourt - respectful deference; "pay court to the emperor"homagedeference, respect - a courteous expression (by word or deed) of esteem or regard; "his deference to her wishes was very flattering"; "be sure to give my respects to the dean"
Verb1.court - make amorous advances towards; "John is courting Mary"romance, solicit, wooact, move - perform an action, or work out or perform (an action); "think before you act"; "We must move quickly"; "The governor should act on the new energy bill"; "The nanny acted quickly by grabbing the toddler and covering him with a wet towel"chase after, chase - pursue someone sexually or romanticallydisplay - attract attention by displaying some body part or posing; of animals
2.court - seek someone's favor; "China is wooing Russia"woo
3.court - engage in social activities leading to marriage; "We were courting for over ten years"act, move - perform an action, or work out or perform (an action); "think before you act"; "We must move quickly"; "The governor should act on the new energy bill"; "The nanny acted quickly by grabbing the toddler and covering him with a wet towel"

court

noun1. law court, bar, bench, tribunal, court of justice, seat of judgment At this rate, you could find yourself in court for assault.2. playing area, park (U.S. & Canad.), ground, field, ring, arena, circus, enclosure, rink The hotel has several tennis and squash courts.3. palace, hall, castle, manor She came to visit England, where she was presented at the court of James I.4. royal household, train, suite, attendants, entourage, retinue, cortege tales of King Arthur and his courtverb1. cultivate, seek, flatter, solicit, pander to, curry favour with, fawn upon Britain's political parties are courting the vote of the lesbian and gay community.2. invite, seek, attract, prompt, provoke, bring about, incite If he thinks he can remain in power by force he is courting disaster.3. woo, go (out) with, go steady with (informal), date, chase, pursue, take out, make love to, run after, walk out with, keep company with, pay court to, set your cap at, pay your addresses to I was courting him at 19 and married him when I was 21.

court

noun1. An area partially or entirely enclosed by walls or buildings:atrium, close, courtyard, enclosure, quad, quadrangle, yard.2. A judicial assembly:bar, tribunal.verb1. To behave so as to bring on (danger, for example):invite, provoke, tempt.2. To attempt to gain the affection of:pursue, spark, woo.Informal: romance.
Translations
法院球场院落企求宫廷

court

(koːt) noun1. a place where legal cases are heard. a magistrates' court; the High Court. 法院 法院2. the judges and officials of a legal court. The accused is to appear before the court on Friday. 法庭 法官3. a marked-out space for certain games. a tennis-court; a squash court. 球場 球场4. the officials, councillors etc of a king or queen. the court of King James. 朝廷大臣 朝廷大臣5. the palace of a king or queen. Hampton Court. 宮廷 宫廷6. an open space surrounded by houses or by the parts of one house. 庭院 院落 verb1. to try to win the love of; to woo. 求愛 求爱2. to try to gain (admiration etc). 企求 企求3. to seem to be deliberately risking (disaster etc). 招致(危險等) 招致(危险等) ˈcourtier (-tiə) noun a member of the court of a king or queen. He was one of King James' courtiers. 侍臣,朝臣 廷臣,朝臣 ˈcourtly adjective having fine manners. 有教養的 优雅的ˈcourtliness noun 有教養 礼貌ˈcourtship noun courting or wooing. 求愛 求爱ˈcourthouse noun a building where legal cases are held. 法院 法院ˌcourt-ˈmartialplural ˌcourts-ˈmartial noun a court held by officers of the armed forces to try offences against discipline. 軍事法庭 军事法庭ˈcourtyard noun a court or enclosed ground beside, or surrounded by, a building. the courtyard of the castle. 庭院 庭院

court

法院zhCN, 球场zhCN
  • How much does it cost to use a tennis court? (US)
    How much is it to hire a tennis court? (UK) → 租一个网球场多少钱?
  • Where can I reserve a court? (US)
    Where can I book a court? (UK) → 哪儿能租球场?

court


See:
  • (one's) day in court
  • a friend at court
  • a full-court press
  • a kangaroo court
  • appear in court
  • ball's in your court, the
  • be laughed out of court
  • be ruled out of court
  • day in court, have one's
  • friend at court
  • friend in court
  • friend(s) in court
  • full-court press
  • full-court press, a
  • get (one's) day in court
  • have (one's) day in court
  • have the ball in (one's) court
  • have the ball in court
  • hold court
  • in contempt (of court)
  • kangaroo court
  • laugh (someone or something) out of court
  • laugh out of court
  • laugh out of court, to
  • laugh somebody/something out of court
  • laugh someone or something out of court
  • out of court
  • pay court to
  • pay court to (someone)
  • pay court to someone
  • rule (something) out of court
  • rule/throw something out of court
  • someone's day in court
  • stand up in court
  • take (someone or something) to court
  • take to court
  • the ball is in (one's) court
  • the ball is in court
  • the ball is in someone’s court
  • the ball is in someone's court
  • the ball is in your court
  • the ball is in your/somebody's court

court


court,

in law, official body charged with administering justice. The term is also applied to the judge or judges who fill the office and to the courtroom itself. Courts come into existence when legal relations are no longer entirely a private matter. Thus, courts do not exist in a society governed by vendettavendetta
[Ital.,=vengeance], feud between members of two kinship groups to avenge a wrong done to a relative. Although the term originated in Corsica, the custom has also been practiced in other parts of Italy, in other European countries, and among the Arabs.
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, and they are of little consequence in one where compositioncomposition,
in ancient and medieval law, a sum of money paid by a guilty party as satisfaction to the family of the person who was injured or killed. Failure to make the payment might justify retaliation in kind against the offender or his family.
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 for wrongs is the rule. In addition to law courts there are ecclesiastical courts, arbitral tribunals (e.g., for labor cases), administrative tribunals, and courts-martial (see military lawmilitary law,
system of rules established for the government of persons in the armed forces. In most countries the legislature establishes the code of military law. It is distinguished from both martial law (rule by domestic military forces over an area) and military government
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).

See also conflict of lawsconflict of laws,
that part of the law in each state, country, or other jurisdiction that determines whether, in dealing with a particular legal situation, its law or the law of some other jurisdiction will be applied.
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.

Early Court Systems

The most ancient courts known, e.g., those of Egypt and Babylonia, were semiecclesiastical institutions that used religious rituals in deciding issues. In Greece the functions of a court were chiefly undertaken by citizens' assemblies that heard the arguments of orators. In Rome there was a clear evolution of the court system from priestly beginnings to a wholly secular, hierarchal organization staffed by professional jurists (see Roman lawRoman law,
the legal system of Rome from the supposed founding of the city in 753 B.C. to the fall of the Byzantine Empire in A.D. 1453; it was later adopted as the basis of modern civil law.
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). Western Europe (after the collapse of Rome) and Anglo-Saxon England had mainly feudal courts of limited territorial authority, administering customary law, which differed in each locale.

Courts in England

In England, after the Norman Conquest (1066), royal authority was gradually extended over the feudal lords, and by the early 13th cent., although purely local courts had not been abolished, the supremacy of the central courts that had evolved from the Curia Regis [Lat.,=king's court], namely, the Court of ExchequerExchequer, Court of
, in English history, governmental agency. It originated after the Norman Conquest as a financial committee of the Curia Regis. By the reign of Henry II it had a separate organization and was responsible for the collection of the king's revenue as well as for
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, the Court of Common Pleas, and King's Bench, was established. The Court of Common Pleas heard cases between ordinary subjects of the king, while King's Bench heard cases involving persons of high rank and acted as a court of appeals. Soon itinerant royal courts were established to spare civil litigants the labor and expense of going to the capital at Westminster and to afford hearings to persons held on criminal charges in county jails. By the 14th cent. the principal function of the central courts was to hear appeals from the circuit courts.

Unity was at least temporarily disrupted by the emergence (16th cent.) of equityequity,
principles of justice originally developed by the English chancellor. In Anglo-American jurisprudence equitable principles and remedies are distinguished from the older system that the common law courts evolved.
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 as a distinct body of law administered by the chancery. The conflict of jurisdiction continued to some extent until 1875, when the Judicature Act of 1873 went into effect. As presently constituted as a result of subsequent reforms, the courts of England and Wales consist of the Court of Appeal, the High Court (with civil jurisdiction), the Crown Court (with criminal jurisdiction), the county courts, and the magistrates' courts. The High Court is divided, purely for administrative purposes, into three divisions: Chancery, Family, and King's (or Queen's) Bench. Appeals were in some instances taken from the court of appeal to the House of Lords, but the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 established a Supreme Court for Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which began work in 2009, ending the role of the House of Lords as the highest court of appeal. The judicial committee of the privy council, of which the Supreme Court justices are members, hears appeals from overseas territories still under British domain and from some Commonwealth countries.

Courts in the United States

In the United States there are two distinct systems of courts, federal and state. Each is supreme in its own sphere, but if a matter simultaneously affects the states and the federal government, the federal courts have the decisive power. The district court is the lowest federal court. Each state has at least one federal district, and some of the more populous states contain as many as four districts. There are 11 circuit courts of appeals (each with jurisdiction over a defined territory) and a court of appeals for the District of Columbia; these hear appeals from the district courts. There are, in addition, various specialized federal courts, including the Tax Court and the federal Court of Claims. Heading the federal court system is the U.S. Supreme CourtSupreme Court, United States,
highest court of the United States, established by Article 3 of the Constitution of the United States. Scope and Jurisdiction
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.

The court systems of the states vary to some degree. At the bottom of a typical structure are local courts that have authority only in specific matters and jurisdictions (e.g., court of the justice of the peace, police courtpolice court,
court with jurisdiction limited to minor offenses, chiefly the least grave misdemeanors and breaches of municipal ordinances. In practice the trial is usually held before a judge sitting without a jury.
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, and court of probateprobate
, in law, the certification by a court that a will is valid. Probate, which is governed by various statutes in the several states of the United States, is required before the will can take effect.
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). County courts, or the equivalent, exercising general criminal and civil jurisdiction, are on the next level. All states have a highest court of appeals, and some also have intermediate appellate courts. In a few states separate courts of equity persist.

See court system in the United Statescourt system in the United States,
judicial branches of the federal and state governments charged with the application and interpretation of the law. The U.S. court system is divided into two administratively separate systems, the federal and the state, each of which is
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 for a fuller discussion of this topic.

Bibliography

See H. Potter, Historical Introduction to English Law and Its Institutions (4th ed. 1958, repr. 1969); L. Mayers, The American Legal System (rev. ed. 1964); R. M. Jackson, The Machinery of Justice in England (5th ed. 1967); M. Shapiro, Courts: A Comparative Political Analysis (1986); E. C. Surrency, History of the Federal Courts (1987); J. L. Waldman and K. M. Holland, The Political Role of Law Courts in Modern Democracies (1988).

Court

An open space about which a building or several buildings are grouped, completely or partially enclosing the space. They may be roofed over with glass or open to the air.

Court

 

a specialized organ of the state, whose competence includes the administration of justice in the interests of the ruling class—or under socialism, in the interests of all the people. A court performs its functions through the settlement—in a manner provided for by law—of criminal cases, civil, labor, and other disputes, and administrative and other violations of the law.

The courts arise contemporaneously with the state but are differentiated into independent organs only as the state mechanism grows and a specialized state apparatus takes shape. In prestate society, conflicts and disputes were settled by tribal elders or leaders, special clan or tribal assemblies, and the councils (for example, the rachinburgen, or rachimbourgs) chosen by such assemblies. Conflicts were also settled without resort to the courts, as in the customs of blood feud and talion.

In the slaveholding state, the various functions of state administration were initially still undifferentiated. One and the same organs of the slaveholding class exercised administration, commanded the military, and performed judicial functions. As slave-holding states developed and clan relations died out, however, a judicial system and courts emerged as an independent organ of the ruling class. In Athens and in Rome of the late republican period (third to first centuries B.C.), the courts were already separate and distinct from administration. Judicial collegia existed, such as the heliastic courts, and the institution of judicial defense was taking shape. The judicial institutions of the classical states underlay those used and developed in the epoch of feudalism. Usually, in the judicial proceedings of slaveholding society, only free citizens could defend their interests in court; slaves could not even be witnesses. The killing of a slave was not punishable; if a slave committed a crime, he was dealt with without recourse to the courts.

For the courts of feudal states, organization by estate was characteristic, so that there were peasant courts, ecclesiastical courts, and courts for other groups. Also characteristic were the broad judicial powers enjoyed by large landowners, who had judicial immunity and who meted out justice to their serfs. Centralization of the judicial system and increased state intervention in the work of the courts went hand in hand with the general centralization of authority and the establishment of absolutism. In this period, higher judicial organs made their appearance, such as the King’s Bench in England and the imperial court (Reichshofgericht) in Germany. Judicial centralization, in turn, went hand in hand with change in procedural forms, rejection of such irrational methods of proof as the ordeal and “God’s Judgment,” and abandonment of accusatory forms of judicial proceedings.

The bourgeoisie, which took shape within feudal society, attacked the feudal judicial system in its struggle for political power. The ideologists of the bourgeois revolutions of the 17th and 18th centuries, including the French Encyclopedists and other figures of the Enlightenment, proposed a series of democratic principles for judicial organization (notably, the theory of separation of powers) and procedure: namely, the equality of all before the court and the law, trial by jury, the need for open and oral proceedings, the rejection of the system of formal proofs, the election of judges, and the presumption of innocence. Many of these principles are contained in the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen of 1789, in the constitutions of a number of bourgeois states (including the Bill of Rights, the first ten amendments to the US constitution), and in the constitutional acts of Great Britain.

On the whole, however, these principles have never been fully put into practice in the bourgeois states; some have even been rejected formally. For example, most judges are not elected but, in most states, are appointed for indefinite terms (seeIRREMOVABILITY OF JUDGES). The bourgeois courts have always been a naked tool in the hands of the ruling class of the bourgeoisie, “a blind, subtle instrument for the ruthless suppression of the exploited, and an instrument for protecting the interests of the moneybags” (V. I. Lenin, Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vol. 35, p. 270). Economic inequality deprives the working people of the real right to defense; as a rule, judges and juries are representative of the propertied strata of the population.

The bourgeois state’s introduction of new procedural forms and principles by no means signified a complete rejection of earlier forms of judicial procedure. Whenever the class struggle grows sharper, the bourgeoisie abandons the very legal system it itself has created, making use of simplified forms of judicial procedure (for example, the inquest-indictment) and disembarrassing itself of the role of law in the consideration of cases. The rejection of bourgeois-democratic principles of judicial procedure reached its extreme in fascist Germany and Italy, where reactionary criminal laws were adopted and extrajudicial punishment of progressives flourished.

In the epoch of the general crisis of capitalism, the law’s role in the working of the courts has diminished. Many bourgeois theorists, such as the legal realists, maintain that the courts should not be bound by legal norms and that the discretion of judges be broadened to an extraordinary degree, which has in practice led to judicial arbitrariness.

Contemporary bourgeois states have complex, ramified judicial systems, including civil, criminal, administrative, commercial, ecclesiastical, and other courts. These systems are headed by higher judicial organs, which often perform the functions of a constitutional court. The working of bourgeois courts, as parts of the mechanism of the bourgeois states, is regulated in detail by special legislation. However, the development of the bourgeois courts has generally tended toward enhancement of the punitive-repressive functions in the struggle against the interests of the working people. In the era of imperialism, on the other hand, certain functions of the courts have been transferred to other state organs of special competence, such as the separate and joint investigative committees of the US House and Senate and special commissions.

In prerevolutionary Russia, the history of the courts dates back to Kievan Rus’, where justice was the province of the prince and his officials, the posadniki and tiuny. In the Novgorod Feudal Republic, judicial authority rested with the veche (the town assembly, which was the court of highest instance), the prince, the posadniki (chief administrative officials), the archbishop, the starosta (a lower elected official), and bratchiny (fraternities endowed with the right to judge and to settle quarrels and conflicts among participants). In Muscovite Rus’ of the 15th to 17th centuries, it rested with the grand duke (tsar), the Boyar Duma, certain prikazy (government offices), and in the provinces, with the namestniki (vicegerents), the volosteli (the chief officials of the volosti, or small rural districts), and votchinniki (the owners of votchiny, or patrimonial estates). With the abolition of the system of kormleniia (“feeding”), judicial powers were transferred to the gubnye izby (offices in the guby, or judicial and police districts).

Peter I made the first attempts to separate the courts from the administration. In 1713 the office of landrikhter (magistrate) was established in the provinces, and in 1718, the office of oberlandrikhter (chief magistrate). However, the competence of these magistrates was not precisely defined, and the more complex cases had to be settled by the Justice Collegium. A military court and ecclesiastical court were also created. The Senate was the court of highest instance. Catherine II established a system of judicial institutions, from 1802 under the Senate, a system that comprised uezd (district) and zemskii (land) courts for the nobility, city and provincial courts for townsmen, and lower and upper rural courts (raspravy) for free peasants.

In the 1860’s, the judicial reform of 1864 was carried out, and the fundamentals of bourgeois judicial procedure therewith were introduced in Russia. A jury court, an elected justice of the peace court (mirovoi sud), and a body of professional attorneys were established.

After the Great October Socialist Revolution, by dint of Lenin’s decree on the courts of Nov. 22,1917, the judicial system of tsarist Russia was dismantled from top to bottom, from the Governing Senate to the justice of the peace courts. The basic link in the Soviet judicial system was the people’s court of the city or raion, which considered the overwhelming majority of civil and criminal cases. V. I. Lenin wrote, “The new court has been needed first and foremost for the struggle against the exploiters, who are trying to restore their domination, or to defend their privileges. ... But, in addition, the courts ... have another, still more important task. This task is to ensure the strictest discipline and self-discipline of the working people” (ibid., vol. 36, p. 163).

In socialist society, the courts are called upon to protect from any infringements: (1) the socialist social and state regime, the socialist system of economy, and socialist property, (2) the rights and legally protected interests of state enterprises, institutions, kolkhozes, and cooperative and other public organizations, and (3) the lawful rights and interests of citizens. It is likewise called upon to educate citizens in the spirit of loyalty to the homeland and to the cause of socialism, and in the spirit of exact and unde-viating execution of the laws and observance of discipline.

In most socialist countries, judges are selected either by the organs of state power or by the people through direct election. For courts of first instance, judges are elected by the citizens by universal, direct, secret, and equal suffrage; people’s assessors are elected at meetings of the working people of the particular enterprises and organizations. The judges and people’s assessors of the higher courts are usually elected at meetings of working people by the appropriate representative organs—in the USSR, for example, by the soviets of people’s deputies. The judges are responsible to the voters or organs that chose them and may be recalled or removed from office. As a rule, judicial organs correspond to administrative-territorial divisions. Cases are considered in the courts collegially, and judges and assessors enjoy equal rights during the examination of cases.

In the administration of justice in the socialist countries, judges are independent and subordinate only to the law; that is, they must decide cases independently of outside influence and pronounce sentences and decisions solely in accord with the law. Judicial proceedings are conducted in the language of the majority of the population of the region. Persons not having command of that language are secured a full acquaintance with the materials of the case through an interpreter; they also have the right to speak in court in their native language. Of great importance in the organization of the judicial system is the principle of open judicial examination; judicial examination is usually oral and open and may be closed only in instances provided for by law. The legislation of the socialist countries secures the accused person’s right to defense.

The fundamental principles of the organization and work of the courts are defined by the Constitution of the USSR and set forth in greater detail in the Basic Principles of Legislation on Judicial Organization of the USSR, Union Republics, and Autonomous Republics (1958), the Basic Principles of Criminal Procedure (1958), and the Basic Principles of Civil Procedure (1961). On the basis of and in accordance with these all-Union laws, the Union republics have adopted republic laws, including codes of criminal and civil procedure.

The judicial system of the USSR embraces the Supreme Court of the USSR, the supreme courts of the Union and autonomous republics, the krai, oblast, and city courts, the courts of the autonomous oblasts and autonomous okrugs, the raion and city people’s courts, and the military tribunals of the armed forces. The highest judicial organ, the Supreme Court of the USSR, supervises the administration of justice by the courts of the USSR and of the republics. The organization and procedure of the Supreme Court of the USSR are defined in the Law on the Supreme Court of the USSR, adopted by the Supreme Soviet of the USSR on Nov. 30,1979.

Judicial activity comprises the consideration and decision of civil cases with respect to disputes that affect the rights and interests of citizens, state enterprises, institutions, kolkhozes, cooperatives, and other public organizations. It also comprises the consideration of criminal cases and either the acquittal of the innocent or the application of measures of punishment prescribed by law to those found guilty of the commission of a crime.

All courts in the USSR are formed on the principle of the elec-tiveness of judges and people’s assessors. People’s judges of the raion and city people’s courts are elected by the citizens of a given raion or city on the basis of universal, equal, secret, and direct suffrage. The people’s assessors of these courts are elected at meetings of citizens at their places of work or residence. The people’s assessors of these courts are elected at general meetings of the working people. The people’s assessors and members of the oblast, krai, and supreme courts are elected by the respective oblast, krai, and supreme soviets. In all courts, cases are considered collegially—in courts of first instance by a judge and two people’s assessors; cases on appeal or on protest are considered in judicial collegia of higher courts by three members of the particular court.

Under the procedure established by legislation, the procurator takes part in the consideration of criminal and civil cases in administrative or judicial sessions. In addition, a public prosecutor or public defense counsel may take part in the judicial session.

Judicial proceedings are conducted in the language of the Union or autonomous republic, the autonomous oblast, or the autonomous okrug, or in the language spoken by the majority of the population in the region. Persons participating in court proceedings who do not have command of the language in which they are being conducted are secured full acquaintance with the materials in the case, are provided the services of an interpreter during the proceedings, and have the right to speak in court in their native language. The examination of cases in all courts is open. Hearings in camera are permitted in exceptional instances if this is required by the interests of state security or by reasonable determination of the court in cases of crimes committed by persons under 16 years of age, in cases of sex crimes, and in cases in which both parties so request if intimate aspects of their lives will be discussed in a court session. In all cases, sentence is pronounced publicly. All the accused have the right to defense. The court must ensure that the accused has the opportunity to defend himself from the charges by those means and methods provided for by law. In a civil trial, the parties are also given broad rights for the defense of their personal and property rights and interests.

REFERENCES

Lenin, V. I. Poln. sobr. soch., 5th ed., vols. 36 and 39.
Marksistsko-leninskaia obshchaia teoriia gosudarstva i prava: Osnovnye instituty i poniatiia. Moscow, 1970. Page 272.
Chernilovskii, Z. M. Vseobshchaia istoriia gosudarstva i prava. Moscow, 1973.

L. N. SMIRNOV

What does it mean when you dream about a court? (of Law)

Courts stand for a place of authority, presumed justice, and order, or the facade of these characteristics. The dreamer may be struggling with issues of fear and guilt, and this kind of dream may be the person’s conscience trying to communicate. Courts also reflect issues of judging or feeling judged. (See also Judge/Judgment).

court

1. An open, uncovered, and unoccupied space partially or fully surrounded by walls or buildings. 2. A courtroom. 3. Residence of a dignitary or member of royalty and its enclosed grounds.

court

1. an area of ground wholly or partly surrounded by walls or buildings 2. Brita. a block of flats b. a mansion or country house c. a short street, sometimes closed at one end 3. a space inside a building, sometimes surrounded with galleries 4. a. the residence, retinues, or household of a sovereign or nobleman b. (as modifier): a court ball 5. a sovereign or prince and his retinue, advisers, etc. 6. any formal assembly, reception, etc., held by a sovereign or nobleman with his courtiers 7. Lawa. an authority having power to adjudicate in civil, criminal, military, or ecclesiastical matters b. the regular sitting of such a judicial authority c. the room or building in which such a tribunal sits 8. a. a marked outdoor or enclosed area used for any of various ball games, such as tennis, squash, etc. b. a marked section of such an area 9. a. the board of directors or council of a corporation, company, etc. b. Chiefly Brit the supreme council of some universities 10. go to court to take legal action 11. out of courta. without a trial or legal case b. too unimportant for consideration

Court

Margaret (née Smith). born 1942, Australian tennis player: Australian champion 1960--66, 1969--71, and 1973; US champion 1962, 1965, 1969--70, and 1973; Wimbledon champion 1963, 1965, and 1970

COURT


A trial comparing MACE in patients receiving iodixanol or ioxaglate during PTCA for acute coronary syndromes
Primary endpoints In-hospital MACE
Conclusion MACE is lower in high-risk patients without renal insufficiency undergoing PTCA with iodixanol than with ioxaglate

court


Related to court: royal court, court records

Court

A judicial tribunal established to administer justice. An entity in the government to which the administration of justice is delegated. In a broader sense, the term may also refer to a legislative assembly; a deliberative body, such as the General Court of Massachusetts, which is its legislature. The words court, judge, or judges, when used in laws, are often synonymous. A kangaroo court is a mock legal proceeding that disregards law and justice by issuing a biased, predetermined judgment regardless of the evidence presented before it.

Judicial courts are created by the government through the enactment of statutes or by constitutional provisions for the purpose of enforcing the law for the public good. They are impartial forums for the resolution of controversies between parties who seek redress from a violation of a legal right. Both civil and criminal matters may be heard in the same court, with different court rules and procedures for each.

The public has a right to attend judicial proceedings. This right ensures that the proceedings will be conducted in a fair and unbiased manner. Anyone who wants may attend trials as a spectator unless a judge has closed a courtroom for particular proceedings in order to maintain order, to assure Due Process of Law, or to protect a witness's identity.

The U.S. Judicial System consists of 52 separate court systems, plus territorial courts, in the United States. Each state and the District of Columbia has its own independent system, and the United States government maintains federal courts throughout the country. The federal courts and state courts are independent of each other. The federal courts are authorized by Article III, Section 2, of the Constitution to hear controversies that especially affect federal interests. Sometimes the existence of two parallel court systems in every state creates a strain and raises important issues concerning Federalism, the relationship between the states and the United States. For some of these questions, the Supreme Court of the United States makes the final determination that is binding on everyone.

Most courts have a multilevel structure. A few states have a two-tiered system, but the federal government and most states use a three-tiered model. All litigants have an opportunity to argue their cases before a trial-level court, and subsequently they may be able to pursue the matter further up through two levels of appeals courts.

In the federal court system the trial-level court is the district court. Each state contains at least one district court, and most of these courts have more than one judge available to try cases. Litigants may file an appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals that has jurisdiction over that district if they are unhappy with the lower court's decision, and the decision is the type that may be appealed. The United States is divided into 13 judicial circuits, and one court of appeals sits in each of twelve geographical circuits. The Court of Appeals for the Federal District sits in the thirteenth district to hear cases formerly entertained in the Court of Claims and the Court of Customs and Patents Appeals, which were abolished by the enactment of the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1982 (28 U.S.C.A. § 1 note). Each court of appeals has four or more judges who sit either as panels of three or as a whole to review the decisions of district courts and to review or enforce the orders of many federal. administrative agencies. If a court sits as a whole, it is called an en banc court. Litigants who lose a cause in a court of appeals may be able to carry the appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The First Virtual State Court

U.S. courts have adopted various new technologies that can assist in the administration of justice, but the state of Michigan took the most radical step in 2002 when it authorized the creation of the first fully functioning cybercourt in the country. This virtual court, once fully operational, would allow attorneys to file court appearances, briefs, and other court documents online. Specially trained district and circuit judges would serve three-year assignments on this court.

The cybercourt in its first incarnation is to be limited in jurisdiction to business disputes with an amount in controversy exceeding $25,000. The court would not use juries, as it was designed to assist businesses that need quick resolutions of disputes, such as those involving trade secrets. Critics have pointed out that the system would not allow judges to examine evidence physically or even to view evidence with any certainty, given the limitations in viewing screen resolution in many video or real-time communications. In addition, critics contend that many business disputes involve issues of federal law and diversity jurisdiction, thereby denying this court the opportunity to hear many cases.

The Michigan Supreme Court proposed new rules to govern the operation of the cybercourt. These rules addressed: the filing of pleadings and other documents via the Internet; the prevention of tampering with electronic documents; how testimony would be given via the Internet, videoconferencing, or interactive video; how serving notice on parties to a lawsuit via E-Mail will work; and how court proceedings will be made accessible to the public.

The Michigan cybercourt was supposed to be operational by late 2002 but by mid-2003 it was still on the drawing board. In June 2003 the state legislature debated whether to provide $2 million to establish it in three locations.

Further readings

Issenberg, Doug. 2001. "See You in Cybercourt?" Internet World (April 1).

"Michigan Bill Will Create Cybercourt." 2002. Associated Press (January 9). Available online at <www.ap.org/> (accessed September 1, 2003).

"Michigan House Battles Over Cybercourt Funding." Michigan Technology News. Available online at <www.mitechnews.com/registry/technews/breakingnews.htm> (accessed July 1, 2003).

"Michigan Wants to Speed Business Dispute Resolution with Cybercourt." 2001. Associated Press (February 23). Available online at <www.ap.org/> (accessed September 1, 2003).

Stephens, Gene. 2001. "Trial Run for Virtual Court." Futurist (November-December).

"Website of the Week." 2002. National Law Journal (February 11).

"Wired Future for Courtrooms." 2001. Associated Press (March 1). Available online at <www.ap.org/> (accessed September 1, 2003).

Cross-references

Courtroom Television Network; Internet.

Cases in state courts may also proceed from the trial-level court up through appeals in an appellate court and then to a state supreme court. Different systems assign different functions to the state supreme court, which is usually the court of last resort, but this is not the case in every state. When an issue based on the federal Constitution, a treaty, or a federal statute is involved, the U.S. Supreme Court may agree to hear an appeal from the state supreme court.The organization of a court and its personnel is determined by the law that created that court and by the court's own rules. Generally, the papers for each lawsuit must be filed with the clerk of the court. The clerk and his or her staff organize all of the records for the judges assigned to the court. Each judge may have a law secretary or law clerk, or there may be several clerks who perform legal research and assist in the drafting of decisions, orders, and memoranda. Court officers, court attendants, or bailiffs are available to give information and to maintain order and peace around the courthouse. Interpreters may be kept on call to translate for witnesses and parties who do not speak English well. A county sheriff or federal marshal has the responsibility for enforcement of various judicial orders. Probation officers are usually civilian employees who assist the court by administering the probation system for criminal offenders and supervise court-ordered custody or payments of money, especially Child Support. A court stenographer, or court reporter creates a written record of proceedings word for word.

Attorneys are called officers of the court because they have a dual responsibility to protect the integrity of the legal system and pursue their clients' claims. An attorney who has been admitted to the bar in one state is entitled to practice in the courts of that state but that does not entitle him or her to practice in the courts of another state, in a federal court, or in the Supreme Court. In order to do so, he or she must qualify and be sworn in separately.

A term is the time during which a court is authorized to hear cases, and a session is one of those periods in a term when a judge is actually hearing cases. A regular term is one called for by law, and a special term may be called by a judge or other official when the circumstances warrant it. A jury may hear a case during the jury term while a motion for relief may be made to the court during the motion term. A general term sometimes means the time that all of the judges of a court sit together, or en banc, but occasionally it refers to a single judge's hearing all of the cases on a particular subject.

Laws or court rules fix the particular terms or sessions when a court is open for judicial business. If none is fixed, a court is open at all times. Any judicial action taken by a judge of the court is not invalid in such circumstances because of the time when it was taken, but it does not necessarily mean that the courthouse doors are unlocked 24 hours a day.

Rules of Civil Procedure and of Criminal Procedure regulate practice in the courts. The rules spell out rights and the manner of proceeding in regard to a court's jurisdiction and venue, the commencement of an action, parties, motions, subpoenas, pretrial discovery, juries, evidence, the order of a trial, provisional remedies, judgments, and appeals.

court

n. any official tribunal (court) presided over by a judge or judges in which legal issues and claims are heard and determined. In the United States there are essentially two systems: Federal courts and state courts. The basic Federal court system has jurisdiction over cases involving Federal statutes, constitutional questions, actions between citizens of different states, and certain other types of cases. Its trial courts are District Courts in one or more districts per state, over which there are District Courts of Appeal (usually three-judge panels) to hear appeals from judgments of the District Courts within the "circuit." There are 10 geographic circuits throughout the nation. Appeals on constitutional questions and other significant cases are heard by the Supreme Court, but only if that court agrees to hear the case. There are also special Federal courts such as bankruptcy and tax courts with appeals directed to the District Courts.

Each state has local trial courts, which include courts for misdemeanors (non-penitentiary crimes), smaller demand civil actions (called municipal, city, justice or some other designation), and then courts, usually set up in each county, (variously called Superior, District, County, Common Pleas courts) to hear felonies (crimes punished by state prison terms), estates, divorces, and major lawsuits. The highest state court is called the State Supreme Court, except in New York and Maryland, which call them Court of Appeals. Some 29 states have intermediate appeals courts which hear appeals from trial courts which will result in final decisions unless the state supreme court chooses to consider the matter. Trial courts for felonies and significant civil matters go by such names as district courts, county courts, superior courts, courts of common pleas, circuit courts, among other designations. Below them to handle lesser matters and criminal misdemeanors are municipal, city, police and justice courts. Some states have speciality courts such as family, surrogate, and domestic relations.Small claims courts are an adjunct of the lowest courts handling lesser disputes (although California's limit is $5,000) with no representation by attorneys, and short and somewhat informal trials conducted by judges, commissioners or lawyers.

The great number of law cases and lawyers' procedural maneuvers has clogged courts' calendars and has induced many states or local courts to set up mediation, arbitration, mandatory settlement conferences and other formats to encourage settlement or early judgments without the cost and wait of full court trials.

court

1 an authority having power to adjudicate in civil, criminal, military, or ecclesiastical matters; the judge or judges having such authority. 2 the regular sitting of a judicial authority. 3 the room or building in which a judicial authority sits, hence court room, or court building or court house.

COURT, practice. A court is an incorporeal political being, which requires for its existence, the presence of the judges, or a competent number of them, and a clerk or prothonotary, at the time during which, and at the place where it is by law authorized to be held; and the performance of some public act, indicative of a design to perform the functions of a court.
2. In another sense, the judges, clerk, or prothonotary, counsellors and ministerial officers, are said to constitute the court.
3. According to Lord, Coke, a court is a place where justice is judicially administered. Co. Litt. 58, a.
4. The judges, when duly convened, are also called the court. Vide 6 Vin. Ab. 484; Wheat. Dig. 127; Merl. Rep. h.t.; 3 Com. Dig. 300; 8 Id. 386; Dane's Ab. Index, h.t.; Bouv. Inst. Index, h.t.
5. It sometimes happens that the judges composing a court are equally divided on questions discussed before them. It has been decided, that when such is the case on an appeal or writ of error, the judgment or decree is affirmed. 10 Wheat. 66; 11 Id. 59. If it occurs on a motion in arrest of judgment, a judgment is to be entered on the verdict. 2 Dall. Rep. 388. If on a motion for a new trial, the motion is rejected. 6 Wheat. 542. If on a motion to enter judgment on a verdict, the judgment is entered. 6 Binn. 100. In England, if the house of lords be equally divided on a writ of error, the judgment of the court below is affirmed. 1 Arch. Pr. 235. So in Cam. Scacc. 1 Arch. Pr. 240. But in error coram nobis, no judgment can be given if the judges are equally divided, except by consent. 1 Arch. Pr. 246. When the judges are equally divided on the admission of testimony, it cannot be received. But see 3 Yeates, 171. Also, 2 Bin. 173; 3 Bin. 113 4 Bin. 157; 1 Johns. Rep. 118 4 Wash. C. C. Rep. 332, 3. See Division of Opinion.
6. Courts are of various kinds. When considered as to their powers, they are of record and not of record; Bac. Ab. Courts, D; when compared. to each other, they are supreme, superior, and inferior, Id.; when examined as to their original jurisdiction, they are civil or criminal; when viewed as to their territorial jurisdiction, they are central or local; when divided as to their object, they are courts of law, courts of equity, courts martial, admiralty courts, and ecclesiastical courts. They are also courts of original jurisdiction, courts of error, and courts of appeal. Vide Open Court.
7. Courts of record cannot be deprived of their jurisdiction except by express negative words. 9 Serg. & R. 298; 3 Yeates, 479 2 Burr. 1042 1 Wm. Bl. Rep. 285. And such a court is the court of common pleas in Pennsylvania. 6 Serg. & R. 246.
8. Courts of equity are not, in general, courts of record. Their decrees touch the person, not lands. or goods. 3 Caines, 36. Yet, as to personalty, their decrees are equal to a judgment; 2. Madd. Chan. 355; 2 Salk., 507; 1 Ver. 214; 3 Caines, 35; and have preference according to priority. 3 P. Wms. 401 n.; Cas. Temp. Talb. 217; 4 Bro. P. C. 287; 4 Johns. Chan. Cas. 638. They are also conclusive between the parties. 6 Wheat. 109. Assumpsit will lie on a decree of a foreign court of chancery for a sum certain; 1 Campb. Rep. 253, per Lord Kenyon; but not for a sum not ascertained. 3 Caines, 37, (n.) In Pennsylvania, an action at law will lie on a decree of a court of chancery, but the pleas nil debet and nul tiel record cannot be pleaded in such an action. 9 Serg. & R. 258.

COURT, INSTANCE. One of the branches of the English admiralty is called an instance court. Vide Instance Court.

COURT, PRIZE. One of the branches of the English admiralty, is called a prize court. Vide Prize Court.

COURT, SUPREME. Supreme court is the name of a court having jurisdiction over all other courts Vide Courts of the United States.

court


court

An organ of government belonging to the judicial department and charged with resolving disputes among parties.Courts generally have jurisdictional requirements providing that only certain disputes among described parties for certain amounts of money may be heard.If you file your grievance in the wrong court, you may be prejudiced when the case is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction and the time period during which to file in the proper court has expired.

See CT
See CT

court


Related to court: royal court, court records
  • all
  • noun
  • verb

Synonyms for court

noun law court

Synonyms

  • law court
  • bar
  • bench
  • tribunal
  • court of justice
  • seat of judgment

noun playing area

Synonyms

  • playing area
  • park
  • ground
  • field
  • ring
  • arena
  • circus
  • enclosure
  • rink

noun palace

Synonyms

  • palace
  • hall
  • castle
  • manor

noun royal household

Synonyms

  • royal household
  • train
  • suite
  • attendants
  • entourage
  • retinue
  • cortege

verb cultivate

Synonyms

  • cultivate
  • seek
  • flatter
  • solicit
  • pander to
  • curry favour with
  • fawn upon

verb invite

Synonyms

  • invite
  • seek
  • attract
  • prompt
  • provoke
  • bring about
  • incite

verb woo

Synonyms

  • woo
  • go (out) with
  • go steady with
  • date
  • chase
  • pursue
  • take out
  • make love to
  • run after
  • walk out with
  • keep company with
  • pay court to
  • set your cap at
  • pay your addresses to

Synonyms for court

noun an area partially or entirely enclosed by walls or buildings

Synonyms

  • atrium
  • close
  • courtyard
  • enclosure
  • quad
  • quadrangle
  • yard

noun a judicial assembly

Synonyms

  • bar
  • tribunal

verb to behave so as to bring on (danger, for example)

Synonyms

  • invite
  • provoke
  • tempt

verb to attempt to gain the affection of

Synonyms

  • pursue
  • spark
  • woo
  • romance

Synonyms for court

noun an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial business

Synonyms

  • judicature
  • tribunal

Related Words

  • court of justice
  • court of law
  • lawcourt
  • court
  • assembly
  • International Court of Justice
  • World Court
  • Bench
  • appeals court
  • appellate court
  • court of appeals
  • assizes
  • court of assize
  • court of assize and nisi prius
  • chancery
  • court of chancery
  • consistory
  • criminal court
  • divorce court
  • court of domestic relations
  • domestic relations court
  • family court
  • federal court
  • F.I.S.C.
  • Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
  • inferior court
  • lower court
  • Inquisition
  • juvenile court
  • kangaroo court
  • military court
  • moot court
  • police court
  • probate court
  • quarter sessions
  • Rota
  • Star Chamber
  • superior court
  • high court
  • state supreme court
  • supreme court
  • traffic court
  • trial court
  • jury

noun a room in which a lawcourt sits

Synonyms

  • courtroom

Related Words

  • bar
  • bench
  • courthouse
  • jury box
  • room
  • witness box
  • witness stand
  • law
  • jurisprudence

noun the sovereign and his advisers who are the governing power of a state

Synonyms

  • royal court

Related Words

  • authorities
  • government
  • regime
  • Court of Saint James's
  • Porte
  • Sublime Porte

noun a specially marked horizontal area within which a game is played

Related Words

  • badminton court
  • basketball court
  • handball court
  • piste
  • squash court
  • tennis court
  • volleyball court
  • athletic field
  • playing area
  • playing field
  • field

noun Australian woman tennis player who won many major championships (born in 1947)

Synonyms

  • Margaret Court

noun the family and retinue of a sovereign or prince

Synonyms

  • royal court

Related Words

  • entourage
  • retinue
  • cortege
  • suite

noun a hotel for motorists

Synonyms

  • motor hotel
  • motor inn
  • motor lodge
  • tourist court

Related Words

  • hotel
  • motel

noun a tribunal that is presided over by a magistrate or by one or more judges who administer justice according to the laws

Synonyms

  • court of justice
  • court of law
  • lawcourt

Related Words

  • court
  • judicature
  • tribunal

noun the residence of a sovereign or nobleman

Related Words

  • residence

noun an area wholly or partly surrounded by walls or buildings

Synonyms

  • courtyard

Related Words

  • area
  • atrium
  • bailey
  • building
  • edifice
  • cloister
  • food court
  • forecourt
  • parvis

noun respectful deference

Synonyms

  • homage

Related Words

  • deference
  • respect

verb make amorous advances towards

Synonyms

  • romance
  • solicit
  • woo

Related Words

  • act
  • move
  • chase after
  • chase
  • display

verb seek someone's favor

Synonyms

  • woo

verb engage in social activities leading to marriage

Related Words

  • act
  • move
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更新时间:2024/11/11 22:22:30