Supreme Court of South Australia
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The Supreme Court of South Australia is the superior court for the Australian State of South Australia. It has unlimited jurisdiction within the state in civil matters, and hears the most serious criminal matters. The Supreme Court is the highest South Australian court in the Australian court hierarchy. It is presently constituted of a Chief Justice and 12 other judges (justices).
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[edit] History
The creation of a Supreme Court was unique in the case of South Australia. In South Australia the notion of a Supreme Court formed part of Edward Wakefield's theory of colonization, in contrast to the other Australian colonies, which established their courts long after the settlement of the colony.
The court was established by Letters Patent on January 2, 1837, five days after the colony was founded. It was endowed with all the common law and probate jurisdiction of the courts of Westminster. The first sessions were not held until May of that year, presided over by Sir John Jeffcott, the first judge of the court. (The title of Chief Justice was not officially introduced until the coming into force of Act No 31 of 1855-1856.)
After Sir John Jeffcott's death in December 1837, Henry Jickling was appointed as an acting judge. Although appointed as a caretaker judge, Jickling was responsible for two important issues: he codifed the testamentary causes jurisdiction of the court and admitted the first practitioners of the Supreme Court in March 1838.
Justice Jeffcott's replacement on the Court was Charles Cooper. Reports of ill health prompted Governor Young to ask for the appointment of a second judge, as a result Justice Crawford was appointed. Justice Crawford was the first justice to wear a wig in court. Crawford died after only two years on the bench.
Crawford was replaced by Justice Boothby. Boothby was a controversial judge who did not believe in the power of the colonial parliaments to enact laws. He arguably started the first constitutional crisis in Australian history when he ruled that the South Australian Constitution of 1856 was invalid, causing the Imperial Parliament to pass the Colonial Laws Validity Act 1865. Boothby was removed as a justice of the Supreme Court in July 1867. He appealed to the Privy Council in England but he died before his appeal could be heard.
During Boothby's time on the Court, the first Queen's Counsels were appointed and the first circuit sittings of the Court took place in country South Australia.
[edit] Jurisdiction
The Supreme Court execises both original and appellate jurisdiction in civil and criminal matters. The Supreme Court is a court of both law and equity. Although it has unlimited jurisdiction in civil matters, generally the civil trials heard in the Supreme Court are those involving complex legal or factual issues or large sums of money. The Supreme Court also has exclusive jurisdiction in probate (Wills & Estates), meaning that it is the only South Australian court which can hear such matters. In criminal matters, generally only the most serious crimes are tried in the Supreme Court (for example Murder, Treason, Attempted Murder and Manslaughter) although the Court occasionally hears trials for less serious offences. Trials for Murder and Treason may not be heard in any other court in South Australia. When exercising its original jurisdiction, the Court is usually constituted of a single judge.
The Supreme Court hears appeals from the Magistrates Court of South Australia in both civil and criminal matters, and also from decisions of Supreme Court Masters and various other tribunals. In such cases, the Court ordinarily is constituted of a single judge. The Court sits as a Full Court (usually constituted by a bench of three judges) when it hears appeals from the decisions of a single judge of the Supreme Court or District Court, or from certain other tribunals. Some of these appeals lie as of right, while others require leave (permission) from either the court appealed from or the Supreme Court. When the Supreme Court sits as a Full Court in criminal matters (other than those originating in the Magistrates Court and Youth Court), it is commonly referred to as the "Court of Criminal Appeal".
Unlike the Supreme Courts of some other States, the Supreme Court of South Australia is not divided into separate trial and appeal divisions. From time to time, all judges of the court sit in civil and criminal trials and as members of the Full Court and Court of Criminal Appeal. There is a division of the Court known as the Land and Valuation Court, which has jurisdiction over matters arising under particular State statutes dealing with planning and development law. Judges are assigned to this division by proclamation. In addition, particular judges may be designated to sit in the probate jurisdiction or assigned case management functions in respect of long and complex trials.
The proceedings of the Supreme Court of South Australia are normally heard in Adelaide. In civil cases the Court normally sits in the old Supreme Court building, while criminal matters are generally heard in the Sir Samuel Way Building. (The two buildings are located across the road from each other, on the corner of Gouger Street and Victoria Square.) The Court is empowered to sit in any place, including outside the State. The Court, constituted by a single judge, regularly travels on circuit to the rural centres of Mt Gambier and Port Augusta.
Subject to statutory exceptions, an appeal is available by special leave to the High Court of Australia from all decisions of the Supreme Court of South Australia by virtue of s 73 of the Australian Constitution. Ordinarily, appeals are taken to the High Court only from decisions of the Full Court or Court of Criminal Appeal.
[edit] Current Justices of the Supreme Court
(Date of appointment appears in brackets.)
[edit] Chief Justice
The Honourable John Jeremy Doyle AC (4 May 1995)
[edit] Justices
The Honourable John William Perry (3 March 1988)
The Honourable Kevin Patrick Duggan AM RFD (1 December 1988)
The Honourable Bruce Malcolm Debelle (11 October 1990)
The Honourable Margaret Jean Nyland AM (15 October 1993)
The Honourable David John Bleby (2 April 1997)
The Honourable Thomas Andrew Gray (26 April 2000)
The Honourable John Robert Sulan (3 April 2003)
The Honourable Ann Marie Vanstone (21 August 2003)
The Honourable Timothy Russell Anderson (27 November 2003)
The Honourable Richard Conway White (6 May 2004)
The Honourable Robyn Ann Layton (14 February 2005)
The Honourable Michael David (6 July 2006)
[edit] Masters
His Honour Judge Robert Martin Lunn
His Honour Judge Brian Withers
[edit] Former Justices of the Supreme Court
(Dates of tenure appear in brackets.)
Sir John William Jeffcott (27 May 1836 - 12 December 1837)
Sir Charles Cooper (July 1838 / March 1839 - 20 November 1861; CJ 1 July 1856 - 20 November 1861)
Dr George John Crawford (27 June 1850 - 24 September 1852)
Benjamin Boothby (25 February 1853 - 29 July 1867) (removed from office)
Edward Castres Gwynne (26 February 1859 - 28 February 1881)
Sir Richard Davies Hanson (CJ 20 November 1861 - 4 March 1876)
William Alfred Wearing (8 August 1867 - 25 February 1875)
Randolph Isham Stow (15 March 1875 - 17 September 1878)
Sir Samuel James Way PC Bart (CJ 18 March 1876 - 8 January 1916)
Sir James Penn Boucaut (25 September 1878 - 24 February 1905)
Richard Bullock Andrews (9 March 1881 - 26 June 1884)
Sir William Henry Bundey (2 July 1884 - 30 November 1903)
Sir John Hannah Gordon (2 December 1903 - 23 December 1923)
Robert Homburg (24 February 1905 - 23 March 1912)
Sir George John Robert Murray (2 April 1913 - 18 February 1942; CJ 20 January 1916 - 18 February 1942)
Alexander Buchanan (20 January 1916 - 6 January 1921)
Thomas Slaney Poole (25 September 1919 - 2 May 1927)
Sir Herbert Angus Parsons KBE (6 January 1921 - 16 June 1945)
Sir John Mellis Napier (28 February 1924 - 28 February 1967; CJ 25 February 1942 - 28 February 1967)
Frederick William Richards (23 March 1927 - 6 December 1945)
Arthur William Piper (16 June 1927 - 19 February 1936)
Edward Erskine Cleland (5 March 1936 - 1 July 1943)
Sir Herbert Mayo (30 March 1942 - 30 June 1966)
Sir Geoffrey Sandford Reed (15 July 1943 - 14 March 1962)
Sir George Coutts Ligertwood (12 July 1945 - 14 October 1958)
Sir Charles Lempriere Abbott (2 May 1946 - 30 October 1959)
Dudley Bruce Ross (20 November 1952 - 21 May 1963)
Francis Ernest Piper CBE (15 October 1958 - 27 September 1959)
James Francis Brazel (16 November 1959 - 23 August 1961)
Sir Reginald Roderick St Clair Chamberlain (16 November 1959 - 16 June 1971)
Vivian Rhodes Millhouse (26 October 1961 - 24 October 1963)
John Leo Travers (14 May 1962 - 19 October 1969)
David Stirling Hogarth (12 July 1962 - 14 September 1979)
Charles Hart Bright (24 October 1963 - 15 December 1978)
Dame Roma Flinders Mitchell AC DBE DVO (23 September 1965 - 1 October 1983)
George Henry Walters AO (1 July 1966 - 1 September 1984)
Dr John Jefferson Bray AC (CJ 28 February 1967 - 28 November 1978)
Dr Howard Edgar Zelling AO CBE (23 October 1969 - 13 August 1986)
William Andrew Noye Wells AO (21 May 1970 - 8 June 1984)
Alexander Keith Sangster (24 June 1971 - 1 March 1984)
Samuel Joshua Jacobs AO (17 May 1973 - 4 December 1990)
Leonard James King AC (20 June 1975 - 28 April 1995; CJ 30 October 1978 - 28 April 1995)
James Michael White AO (15 June 1978 - 2 February 1993)
Christopher John Legoe (29 June 1978 - 22 April 1994)
Brian Rothwell Cox (21 December 1978 - 5 February 1999)
Robert Finey Mohr ED (21 December 1978 - 28 July 1995)
Roderick Grant Matheson AM (9 August 1979 - 4 August 1998)
Donald Carter Williams (23 March 1980 - 24 September 1982)
Derek Willoughby Bollen (4 March 1982 - 27 March 1997)
Robin Rhodes Millhouse (7 July 1982 - 8 December 1999)
Elliott Frank Johnston AO (28 June 1983 - 26 February 1988)
Graham Clifton Prior (1 March 1984 - 5 July 2004)
Leslie Trevor Olsson AO MBE RFD ED (28 June 1984 - 30 July 2001)
Maurice Francis O'Loughlin (30 August 1984 - 31 July 1989)
John William von Doussa (14 August 1986 - 30 November 1988)
Edward Picton Mullighan (7 September 1989 - 2 December 2004)
Bruce Thomas Lander (November 1994 - 13 July 2003)
Horton Clement Williams (12 September 1995 - 17 April 2003)
David Frank Wicks (13 August 1998 - 22 August 2003)
Brian Ross Martin (23 February 1999 - 27 January 2004)
Anthony James Besanko (18 October 2001 - 31 March 2006)
[edit] References
- The Supreme Court. Courts Administration Authority, South Australia. Retrieved on 30 May 2005.
- The History of the Supreme Court. Courts Administration Authority, South Australia. Retrieved on 19 April 2006.
- Supreme Court Act 1935 (SA)
[edit] External links
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