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  1. 669.3 Where a court composed of a judge and a jury, a judge or a provincial court judge is conducting a trial and the judge or provincial court judge is appointed to another court, he or she continues to have jurisdiction in respect of the trial until its completion.

  2. Judges must render a fair decision when there is a conflict between two parties. Their decisions are made on the basis of the facts and evidence presented to them, decisions previously rendered by other Canadian courts, and according to the law applicable to the situation.

    • How The Courts Are Organized
    • What Do The Federal Courts do?
    • Provincial and Territorial Level Courts
    • Administrative Boards and Tribunals

    The federal and provincial and territorial governments are all responsible for the judicial system in Canada. Only the federal government can appoint and pay judges of the superior, or upper-level, courts in the provinces. Parliament can also establish a general court of appeal and other courts. It has created the Supreme Court of Canada, the Feder...

    The Supreme Court of Canadais Canada's final court of appeal. Its nine judges represent the four major regions of the country. Three of them must be from Quebec, to adequately represent the civil law system. The Supreme Court has two main functions. 1. It hears appeals from decisions of the appeal courts in all the provinces and territories, as wel...

    The court system is roughly the same across Canada. Except for Nunavut, each province has three levels: provincial and territorial, or lower, courts; superior courts; and appeal courts. The Nunavut Court of Justicehas a single-level trial court.

    There are other kinds of disputes that do not need to be dealt with in the courts. Different kinds of administrative tribunals and boards deal with disputes over the interpretation and application of laws and regulations, such as entitlement to employment insurance or disability benefits, refugee claims, and human rights. Administrative tribunals a...

  3. Nov 16, 2020 · The Courts of Justice Act sets out the expectations for how each of these parties must treat one another. For example, the Act prescribes the level of formality with which litigants must address court officers.

  4. The Chief Justice of the Ontario Court of Justice (or another Ontario Court of Justice judge selected by the Chief Justice of the Ontario Court) shall chair all other meetings and hearings of the Judicial Council. Chairs are entitled to vote and can cast a second deciding vote in the case of a tie. What is open to the public?

  5. Sep 1, 2021 · If the appeal court allows the appeal, it can: reverse or change the judge’s decision, or order a new trial or hearing. Otherwise the decision stands. The person who appeals must show that the judge's interpretation of the law or the facts affected the result.

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  7. Once appointed, a judge is eligible to serve on the bench until retirement (age 75 for federally appointed judges, age 70 in some provincial/territorial jurisdictions). Judges can be removed by a joint address of Parliament or a provincial legislature, only after an independent and impartial investigation shows that there is good reason (see ...

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