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Jurisdiction (from the
Latin
ius, iuris meaning "law" and
dicere meaning "to
speak") is the practical
authority granted
to a formally constituted
legal body or to a
political leader to deal with and
make pronouncements on legal matters and, by implication, to
administer
justice within a defined area of
responsibility.
Alternatively, jurisdiction is the authority given to a legal body
or to a political leader to adjudicate and enforce legal matters.
The term is also used to denote the geographical area or
subject-matter to which such authority applies.
Jurisdiction draws its substance from
public international law,
conflict of laws,
constitutional law and the powers of the
executive and
legislative branches of
government to allocate resources to best serve
the needs of its native
society.
Types
There are three main types of judicial jurisdiction: personal
(
personam), territorial (
locum), and subject
matter (
subjectam):
- Personal jurisdiction is an authority over a
person, regardless of their location.
- Territorial jurisdiction is an authority
confined to a bounded space, including all those present therein,
and events which occur there.
- Subject Matter jurisdiction is an authority
over the subject of the legal questions involved in the case.
For jurisdiction to be complete, a court must have a concurrence of
subject matter jurisdiction with either personal or territorial
jurisdiction. The territorial jurisdiction is critical on the
principle that courts enforce laws which are territorial in their
authority. Briefly, it is "an area of land that is governed by an
entity who can hold those residing therein accountable for
following specific laws."
Courts may also have jurisdiction that is
exclusive, or
concurrent
(shared). Where a court has exclusive jurisdiction over a territory
or a subject matter, it is the only court that is authorized to
address that matter. Where a court has concurrent or shared
jurisdiction, more than one court can adjudicate the matter. Where
a concurrent jurisdiction exists in a civil case, a party may
attempt to engage in
forum shopping,
by bringing the case to a court which it presumes would rule in its
favor.
International dimension
International laws and treaties provide agreements which
nations agree to be bound to.
Political issue
Supranational organizations provide
mechanisms whereby disputes between states may be resolved through
arbitration or
mediation. When a
country
is recognized as
de jure, it is an
acknowledgment by the other
de jure nations that the
country has
sovereignty and the right to
exist.
However, it is often at the discretion of each state whether to
co-operate or participate. If a state does agree to participate in
activities of the supranational bodies and accept decisions, the
state is giving up its sovereign authority and thereby allocating
power to these bodies.
Insofar as these bodies or nominated individuals may resolve
disputes in a judicial or quasi-judicial fashion, or promote
treaty obligations in the nature of laws, the
power ceded to these bodies cumulatively represents its own
jurisdiction. But no matter how powerful each body may appear to
be, the extent to which any of the
judgment may be enforced, or proposed
treaties and conventions may become or remain effective within the
territorial boundaries of each nation is a political matter under
the sovereign control of the relevant representative government(s)
which, in a democratic context, will have electorates to
satisfy.
International and municipal jurisdiction
The fact that international organizations, courts and tribunals
have been created raises the difficult question of how to
co-ordinate their activities with those of national courts. If the
two sets of bodies do not have
concurrent jurisdiction
but, as in the case of the
International Criminal Court
(ICC), the relationship is expressly based on the principle of
complementarity, i.e. the international court is
subsidiary or complementary to national courts, the difficulty is
avoided.
But if the jurisdiction claimed is
concurrent, or as in the case of International Criminal Tribunal for the
former Yugoslavia
(ICTY), the international tribunal is to prevail
over national courts, the problems are more difficult to resolve
politically.
The idea
of universal jurisdiction is
fundamental to the operation of global organizations such as the
United Nations and the International
Court of Justice
(ICJ), which jointly assert the benefit of
maintaining legal entities with jurisdiction over a wide range of
matters of significance to states (the ICJ should not be confused
with the ICC and this version of "universal jurisdiction" is not
the same as that enacted in the War Crimes Law which is an
assertion of extraterritorial jurisdiction that will fail to gain
implementation in any other state under the standard provisions of
public policy). Under
Article 34 Statute of the ICJ
[2292] only states may be parties in cases
before the Court and, under Article 36, the jurisdiction comprises
all cases which the parties refer to it and all matters specially
provided for in the Charter of the United Nations or in treaties
and conventions in force. But, to invoke the jurisdiction in any
given case, all the parties have to accept the prospective judgment
as binding. This reduces the risk of wasting the Court's
time.
Despite the safeguards built into the constitutions of most of
these organizations, courts and tribunals, the concept of universal
jurisdiction is controversial among those states which prefer
unilateral to multilateral solutions through the use of executive
or military authority, sometimes described as
realpolitik-based diplomacy.
Within other international contexts, there are
intergovernmental organizations
such as the
World Trade
Organization (WTO) that have socially and economically
significant dispute resolution functions but, again, even though
their jurisdiction may be invoked to hear the cases, the power to
enforce their decisions is at the will of the states affected, save
that the WTO is permitted to allow retaliatory action by successful
states against those states found to be in breach of
international trade law. At a
regional level, groups of states can create political and legal
bodies with sometimes complicated patchworks of overlapping
provisions detailing the jurisdictional relationships between the
member states and providing for some degree of
harmonization between their national
legislative and judicial functions, for example, the
European Union and
African Union both have the potential to
become federated states although the political barriers to such
unification in the face of entrenched
nationalism will be very difficult to overcome.
Each such group may form transnational institutions with declared
legislative or judicial powers. For example, in Europe, the
European Court of Justice
has been given jurisdiction as the ultimate appellate court to the
member states on issues of European law. This jurisdiction is
entrenched and its authority could only be denied by a member state
if that member State asserts its sovereignty and withdraws from the
union.
International and municipal law
The standard treaties and conventions leave the issue of
implementation to each state, i.e. there is no general rule in
international law that treaties have
direct effect in municipal law, but some
states, by virtue of their membership of supranational bodies,
allow the direct incorporation of rights or enact
legislation to honor their international
commitments. Hence,
citizens in those states
can invoke the jurisdiction of local courts to enforce rights
granted under international law wherever there is incorporation. If
there is no direct effect or legislation, there are two theories to
justify the courts incorporating international into municipal law:
- This theory characterizes international and municipal law as a
single legal system with municipal law subordinate to international
law. Hence, in the Netherlands
, all treaties and the orders of international
organizations are effective without any action being required to
convert international into municipal law. This has an
interesting consequence because treaties that limit or extend the
powers of the Dutch government are automatically considered a part
of their constitutional law, for example, the
European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights. In states adopting this
theory, the local courts automatically accept jurisdiction to
adjudicate on lawsuits relying on
international law principles.
- This theory regards international and municipal law as separate
systems so that the municipal courts can only apply international
law either when it has been incorporated into municipal law or when
the courts incorporate international law on their own motion.
In the
United
Kingdom
, for example, a treaty is not effective until it
has been incorporated at which time it becomes enforceable in the
courts by any private citizen, where appropriate, even against the
UK Government. Otherwise the courts have a discretion to
apply international law where it does not conflict with statute or the common law.
The constitutional principle of parliamentary supremacy permits the
legislature to enact any law inconsistent with any international
treaty obligations even though the government is a signatory to
those treaties.
- In the
United
States
, the Supremacy
Clause of the United
States Constitution makes all treaties that have been ratified
under the authority of the United States and customary
international law, …the "Supreme Law of the Land" (U.S.
Const.art. VI Cl. 2) and, as such, the law of the land is binding
on the federal government as well as on state and local
governments. According to the Supreme Court of
the United States
, the treaty power authorizes Congress to legislate under the
Necessary and Proper
Clause in areas beyond those specifically conferred on Congress
(Missouri v.
Holland, 252 U.S. 416
(1920)).
The jurisdiction between and within states
This now concerns
states in the
technical legal sense of the word and the relationships both
between courts in different states, and between courts within the
same state. The usual legal doctrine under which questions of
jurisdiction are decided is termed
forum non conveniens.
Supranational
At a supranational level, countries have adopted a range of treaty
and convention obligations to relate the right of individual
litigants to invoke the jurisdiction of state courts and to enforce
the judgments obtained. For example, the
member states of the
EEC signed the
Brussels Convention in 1968 and, subject to
amendments as new states joined, it represents the default law for
all twenty-seven Member States of what is now termed the
European Union on the relationships between
the courts in the different countries. In addition, the
Lugano Convention (1988) binds the European
Union and the
European
Free Trade Association.
In effect from 1 March, 2002, all the member states of the EU
except Denmark accepted
Council
Regulation 44/2001, which makes major changes to the Brussels
Convention and is
directly effective
in the member states. In some legal areas, at least, the reciprocal
enforcement of foreign
judgments is now more straightforward. At a state level, the
traditional rules still determine jurisdiction over persons who are
not
domiciled or habitually resident
in the European Union or the Lugano area.
To deal with the issue of
forum
shopping, states are urged to adopt more positive rules on
conflict of laws. The
Hague
Conference and other international bodies have made
recommendations on jurisdictional matters, but
litigants with the encouragement of
lawyers on a
contingent
fee continue to shop for forums.
Many nations are subdivided into states and
provinces (i.e. a
subnational "state") in a
federation (as can be found in
Australia,
Brazil,
India,
Mexico and the
United
States) and these subunits will exercise
jurisdiction
through the court systems as defined by the executives and
legislatures.
When the jurisdictions of governmental entities overlap, one
another—for example, between a state and the federation to which it
belongs—their jurisdiction is shared or concurrent
jurisdiction.
Otherwise, one government entity will have exclusive jurisdiction
over the shared area. When jurisdiction is concurrent, one
governmental entity may have supreme jurisdiction over the other
entity if their laws conflict. If the executive or legislative
powers within the jurisdiction are not restricted or restricted
only by a number of limited restrictions, these government branches
have plenary power such as a national
policing power.Otherwise, an
enabling act grants only limited or enumerated
powers.
The problem of forum shopping also applies as between federal and
state courts.
State level
Within each state, it is for the government to determine the
allocation of jurisdiction:
- There must be physical distribution of courts and tribunals
throughout the territory which should be divided into convenient
functional divisions to provide an effective service to the local
communities. Hence, it may be convenient for there to be an
extensive network of smaller local courts having a criminal law jurisdiction so that neighborhoods
can have a disposition system administered by those familiar with
their locality and its needs (see criminal jurisdiction). Whereas more
specialized civil and
commercial courts need only be
located in larger towns and major cities where there is a demand
for the particular specialisms consistent with the economic costs
of providing the facilities and personnel to staff them. Each court
system lays down detailed rules for determining who may invoke the
jurisdiction in each of the various divisions. In addition to the
possibility that the plaintiff has a local
domicile, nationality or habitual residence, these conditions may
vary from minimum residence requirements for those more transiently
present, that business has been conducted within the territory or
that there is some other real connection between the plaintiff and/or the cause of action and the state
in which the lawsuit has been filed.
- The government may decide that individuals within the executive
should have the power to make judicial or quasi-judicial decisions,
and the extent to which the exercise of this jurisdiction should be
subject to review by the courts. This has constitutional
implications in that many states operate on the basis of the
separation of powers which
requires that each branch of government operates as a check on the
potential abuse of power by the others. Within the formalized
judicial structure, jurisdiction may also be granted to individuals
for the provision of specialized functions (e.g. the role of
special referees or those
individuals of prestige commissioned to conduct inquiries into
specific situations with the power to compel testimony). In
parallel to the courts system, other tribunals and quasi-judicial bodies may also have a
form of jurisdiction, e.g. for arbitration, mediation, etc within a
broad framework of alternative dispute
resolution. Under normal circumstances, the supervisory
function of the courts will be built into the constitutive process
for each tribunal or body, or the courts will allow their
jurisdiction to be invoked, e.g. by way of remedies such as
certiorari, to ensure that justice is
seen to be done. However, some well-established bodies such as the
Beth Din represent more interesting
challenges. Such religious or culturally-based courts often have
significant power within the relevant communities yet, in an
increasingly multi-ethnic, multi-cultural world, the secular or
culturally-different majority in each state cannot be seen to be
too quick to interfere and impose its standards without appearing
to engage in unequal treatment and discrimination (see the secular response to
the get as an example).
U.S.
The primary distinctions between areas of jurisdiction are codified
at a national level. As a
common law
system, jurisdiction is conceptually divided between jurisdiction
over the
subject
matter of a case and jurisdiction over the
person
of the
litigants. (See
personal jurisdiction.)
Sometimes a court may exercise jurisdiction over property located
within the perimeter of its powers without regard to personal
jurisdiction over the litigants; this is called
jurisdiction in rem.
A court whose subject-matter jurisdiction is limited to certain
types of controversies (for example, suits in
admiralty or suits where the monetary amount
sought is less than a specified sum) is sometimes referred to as a
court of special jurisdiction or
court of limited
jurisdiction.
A court whose subject-matter is not limited to certain types of
controversy is referred to as a
court of general
jurisdiction. In the
U.S. states,
each state has courts of general jurisdiction; most states also
have some courts of limited jurisdiction. Federal courts (those
operated by the
federal government)
are courts of limited jurisdiction.
Federal jurisdiction is divided into
federal question
jurisdiction and
diversity
jurisdiction. The
United States district courts
may hear only cases arising under federal law and treaties, cases
involving ambassadors, admiralty cases, controversies between
states or between a state and citizens of another state, lawsuits
involving citizens of different states, and against foreign states
and citizens.
Certain
courts, particularly the United States Supreme Court
and most state
supreme courts, have discretionary jurisdiction,
meaning that they can choose which cases to hear from among all the
cases presented on appeal. Such courts generally only choose
to hear cases that would settle important and controversial points
of law. Though these courts have discretion to deny cases they
otherwise could adjudicate, no court has the discretion to hear a
case that falls outside of its subject-matter jurisdiction.
It is also necessary to distinguish between
original jurisdiction and
appellate jurisdiction. A court of
original jurisdiction has the power to hear cases as they are first
initiated by a
plaintiff, while a court of
appellate jurisdiction may only hear an action after the court of
original jurisdiction (or a lower appellate court) has heard the
matter. For example, in
United States federal courts,
the United States district courts have original jurisdiction over a
number of different matters (as mentioned above), and the
United States court of
appeals have appellate jurisdiction over matters appealed from
the district courts. The U.S. Supreme Court, in turn, has appellate
jurisdiction (of a discretionary nature) over the Courts of
Appeals, as well as the state supreme courts, by means of
writ of certiorari.
However, in a special class of cases, the U.S. Supreme Court has
the power to exercise original jurisdiction. Under , the Supreme
court has original and exclusive jurisdiction over controversies
between two or more states, and original (but non-exclusive)
jurisdiction over cases involving officials of foreign states,
controversies between the
federal government
and a state, actions by a state against the citizens of another
state or foreign country.
The word "jurisdiction" is also used, especially in informal
writing, to refer to a
state or political subdivision
generally, or to its government, rather than to its legal
authority.
Franchise jurisdiction
In the history of English common law, a jurisdiction could be held
as a form of property (or more precisely an
incorporeal hereditament) called a
franchise. Traditional franchise
jurisdictions of various powers were held by
municipal corporations,
religious houses,
guilds, early
universities,
Welsh Marches, and
Counties Palatine.
Types of franchise
courts included Courts Baron, Courts Leet, merchant courts, and the Stannary Courts which dealt
with disputes involving the tin miners of Cornwall
. The
original
royal charters of the
American colonies included broad
grants of franchise jurisdiction along with other governmental
powers to
corporations or individuals,
as did the charters for many other colonial companies such as the
British East India
Company and
British
South Africa Company. Analogous jurisdiction existed in
medieval times on the European Continent. Over the course of the
19th and 20th centuries, franchise jurisdictions were largely
eliminated. Several formerly important franchise courts were not
officially abolished until
Courts Act of
1971.
See also
Footnotes
- See also, e.g., "Metro's $11 Billion To-Do List," in The
Washington
Post: "Local jurisdictions are also facing shortfalls, and
much will depend on the economy and political decisions at the
local, state and federal levels"; "Teacher pension pinch," in The
Baltimore
Sun: "Large, affluent jurisdictions have scores of
high-salaried teachers with correspondingly higher pension
costs."
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