New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal

Highest state criminal court in New South Wales, Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal, part of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, is the highest court for criminal matters and has appellate jurisdiction in the Australian State of New South Wales.[1]

Jurisdiction New South Wales
LocationSix locations in Sydney CBD
Composition methodVice-regal appointment upon Premier's nomination, following advice of the Attorney General and Cabinet
Authorised byParliament of New South Wales via the:
Quick facts Jurisdiction, Location ...
New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal
Interactive map of New South Wales Court of Criminal Appeal
Jurisdiction New South Wales
LocationSix locations in Sydney CBD
Composition methodVice-regal appointment upon Premier's nomination, following advice of the Attorney General and Cabinet
Authorised byParliament of New South Wales via the:
Appeals toHigh Court of Australia
Appeals from
Judge term lengthmandatory retirement by age of 72
Websitesupremecourt.justice.nsw.gov.au
Chief Justice of New South Wales
CurrentlyJustice Andrew Bell
Since7 March 2022 (2022-03-07)
President of the Court of Appeal
CurrentlyJustice Julie Ward
Since7 March 2022 (2022-03-07)
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Jurisdiction

The Court hears appeals from people who were convicted or pleaded guilty and were sentenced by a Supreme or District court judge. The Court also hears appeals lodged by the Crown regarding the adequacy of a sentence. Decisions made by the Land and Environment Court, the Industrial Court or the Drug Court in criminal jurisdiction may also be brought for appeal. The Court of Criminal Appeal may also grant leave to appeal in matters involving questions of fact or mixed questions of fact and law. It may also grant leave to appeal in cases where the severity or adequacy of the sentence is challenged.[1]

If a petitioner is not satisfied with the decision made by the Court of Criminal Appeal, application may be made to the High Court of Australia for special leave to appeal the decision before the High Court.

Composition

Three judges usually form the panel for appeals, although five judges can be used for significant legal issues. The Chief Justice has ultimate discretion in determining the number of judges to sit on the Bench, and the selection of individual judges for each case. A unanimous decision is not needed as the majority view will prevail. The presiding judge is usually one of the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal, a Judge of Appeal or the Chief Judge at Common Law. Typically each bench comprises at least two judges of the Common Law Division.[2]:6 Single judges hear sentence appeals from the Drug Court.[2]:15

The Judges who may typically be the presiding judge are listed below:

More information Name, Title ...
NameTitleTerm beganTime in officeNotes
Andrew BellChief Justice7 March 20224 years, 81 days[3]
Julie WardPresident, Court of Appeal7 March 20224 years, 81 days[4]
Mark Leeming Judge of Appeal3 June 201312 years, 358 days [5]
Anthony Payne30 March 201610 years, 58 days
Anna Mitchelmore28 March 20224 years, 60 days
Jeremy Kirk 21 April 2022 4 years, 36 days
Christine Adamson 3 February 2023 3 years, 113 days
Kristina Stern 8 June 2023 2 years, 353 days
Richard McHugh 20 August 2024 1 year, 280 days
Michael Ball 4 November 2024 1 year, 204 days
Stephen Free 12 May 2025 1 year, 15 days
Ian HarrisonChief Judge at Common Law
9 November 20232 years, 199 days[6]
David HammerschlagChief Judge in Equity 17 March 20224 years, 71 days [7]
John Griffiths Acting Judge of Appeal 10 April 2022 4 years, 47 days
Derek PriceActing Judge of Appeal1 June 20241 year, 360 days
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Caseload

In 2018, the Court heard 407 new cases, which included 265 appeals against severity of sentence, 108 appeals against conviction, 19 appeals against interlocutory judgments and 1 case returned from the High Court for re-hearing. Appeals against convictions were approximately 27 per cent in 2018 and, in recent years[when?] have shown a trend towards increasing complexity, impacting on Court time and resources.[2]:25

See also

References

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