Court of Appeal | Judicial Review & Appeal Process | Britannica (original) (raw)

Court of Appeal, in England and Wales, part of the Senior Courts of England and Wales and the highest court below the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom, which assumed the judicial functions of the House of Lords in 2009. The Court of Appeal is based in London in the Royal Courts of Justice. The court consists of a number of lord and lady justices of appeal, the lord chief justice, the master of the rolls, the heads of the three divisions of the High Court (Chancery, Family, and Queen’s Bench), and several other ex officio members who serve on a part-time basis. Three members of the court typically decide a case, though some decisions may be rendered by only two justices.

The Court of Appeal comprises two divisions: the Civil Division, presided over by the master of the rolls, and the Criminal Division, headed by the lord chief justice. Both divisions hear appeals from the High Court and, through it, from lower courts and several other smaller tribunals. In civil appeals, the Court of Appeal proceeds by a method called “rehearing.” Under this method, the court typically does not recall witnesses or hear evidence but reviews the case from the record made at trial and from the judge’s notes.

The Criminal Division decides appeals from the Crown Court and from courts-martial. Within the Criminal Division, courts are constituted by the lord chief justice, lord and lady justices, and usually two High Court judges. Leave to appeal is required. The Court of Appeal typically does not receive fresh evidence, but it has the discretion to do so if necessary or expedient in the interests of justice. The court may uphold or reverse a lower court’s decision, but it may not grant a more severe sentence than originally imposed, except in cases specifically referred to it by the attorney general in which the trial judge appears to have been unduly lenient. The Criminal Division also acts as an advisory body on points of law for the attorney general.

In most cases, decisions of the Court of Appeal can be appealed to the Supreme Court with leave from either body. When leave to appeal is not sought or granted, decisions of the Court of Appeal are final.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Brian Duignan.