SHERIFF COURT


'Sheriff courts' provide the local court service in Scotland, with each court serving a sheriff court district within a sheriffdom.
Sheriff courts deal with a myriad of legal procedures which include:

Solemn and Summary Criminal cases

★ Large and Small estates upon a death

Fine payments

Civil actions under Ordinary, Summary Cause and Small Claim Procedures

Adoption Cases

Bankruptcy Actions

Contents
Functions and operation
Staffing
Organisation
Relationship to other courts
See also
External links

Functions and operation


The legal cases which are heard within the Courts are dealt with by a Sheriff. A Sheriff is a Judge who is usually assigned to work in a specific Court although some work as 'floating Sheriffs' who may work anywhere in Scotland. There are about a hundred and forty full-time Sheriffs in the various Courts and a number of part-time Sheriffs. They are appointed by a Judicial Appointments Board. Until recently there were also 'temporary sheriffs' who were appointed by the executive year by year and only sat for particular days by invitation; this class of sheriff was abolished as being inconsistent with judicial independence following the decision of the High Court of Justiciary in Starrs v Ruxton 2000 JC 208.

Staffing


The Courts are staffed by civil servants who are employed by the Scottish Court Service which is an executive agency of the Scottish Executive. The Scottish Court Service publishes an online map, lists of Sheriffs, and the rules of the court under different procedures.

Organisation


There are six Sheriffdoms in Scotland, each with a Sheriff Principal. Within each sheriffdom are sheriff court districts, each with a court presided over by one or more sheriffs. The most senior civil servant in each Court is the Sheriff Clerk and he/she is charged directly with the management of the Court. The Sherriffdoms are Glasgow and Strathkelvin, Grampian, Highland and Islands, Lothian and Borders, North Strathclyde, South Strathclyde, Dumfries and Galloway, and Tayside, Central and Fife. [1]
There are currently 49 Sheriff Courts in Scotland. [2] Some, in rural areas of Scotland, are small due to the sparse population. Courts such as those in the cities of Edinburgh and Glasgow have a large number of staff and can in one day deal with hundreds of cases. Glasgow Sheriff Court, for example, is the busiest Court in Europe.
Sheriffdom District
Glasgow and Strathkelvin Glasgow and Strathkelvin
Grampian, Highlands and Islands Aberdeen
Banff
Dingwall
Dornoch
Elgin
Fort William
Inverness
Kirkwall
Lerwick
Lochmaddy
Peterhead
Portree
Stonehaven
Stornoway
Tain
Wick
Lothian and Borders Duns
Edinburgh
Haddington
Jedburgh
Linlithgow
Peebles
Selkirk
North Strathclyde Campbeltown
Dumbarton
Dunoon
Greenock
Kilmarnock
Oban
Paisley
Rothesay
South Strathclyde, Dumfries and Galloway Airdrie
Ayr
Dumfries
Hamilton
Kirkcudbright
Lanark
Stranraer
Tayside, Central and Fife Alloa
Arbroath
Cupar
Dundee
Dunfermline
Falkirk
Forfar
Kirkcaldy
Perth
Stirling

Relationship to other courts


Sheriff Courts are above local District Courts who deal with very minor offences and below the Supreme Courts (High Court of Justiciary and Court of Session) who deal with the most serious such as Murder.
Any final decision of a Sheriff may be appealed. There is a right of appeal in civil cases to the Sheriff Principal, and in most cases onwards to the Court of Session. Criminal decisions are appealed to the High Court of Justiciary.
So far as civil procedure is concerned, there are different sets of rules for small claims (payment of up to £750); summary causes (mostly eviction actions); and ordinary causes (the rest). These are all published online, and direct links to them are on this page.

See also



Courts of Scotland

Scots law

External links



Scottish Court Service

Scottish Executive

MiniTrial Information for Schools on Scottish Justice

Faculty of Advocates

Law Society of Scotland

Jurisdiction of Scottish courts

Scottish Legal Aid Board

Judicial Appointments Board

Judicial Appointments Board description of post of Sheriff

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