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UK Law Reference

Court Hierarchy of England & Wales

The courts of England & Wales are arranged in a hierarchy. Higher courts hear appeals from lower courts, and their decisions are binding on courts below them under the doctrine of precedent (stare decisis). The system distinguishes between criminal courts (shown in red) and civil courts (shown in blue). Tribunals (shown in green) form a separate but parallel structure.

Criminal jurisdiction
Civil jurisdiction
Tribunals
Both civil & criminal

1Supreme Court

Supreme Court of the United Kingdom

The final court of appeal for all civil cases across the UK and criminal cases from England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Hears cases of the greatest public or constitutional importance.

Jurisdiction: Civil: UK-wide · Criminal: England, Wales & NI

Judges: 12 Justices of the Supreme Court (hear cases in panels of 5, 7, 9, or 11)

2Senior Courts of England & Wales

Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)

Hears appeals against conviction and sentence from the Crown Court. Permission to appeal is usually required.

Jurisdiction: Criminal appeals from the Crown Court

Judges: Lord Chief Justice, Heads of Division, Lords/Lady Justices of Appeal

Court of Appeal (Civil Division)

Hears appeals from the High Court, County Court, and certain tribunals. Permission to appeal is required.

Jurisdiction: Civil appeals

Judges: Master of the Rolls, Lords/Lady Justices of Appeal

3High Court of Justice

Queen's/King's Bench Division

Handles complex civil claims (contract, tort, personal injury over £100k), judicial review (Administrative Court), commercial disputes, and admiralty cases.

Jurisdiction: Civil claims, judicial review, commercial, admiralty

Judges: High Court Judges (Puisne Judges), Deputy High Court Judges

Chancery Division

Deals with equity, trusts, land disputes, probate (contested), company law, insolvency, intellectual property, and revenue cases.

Jurisdiction: Equity, trusts, property, company, IP, insolvency

Judges: Chancellor of the High Court, High Court Judges

Family Division

Handles complex family cases including divorce finances, international child abduction, forced marriage protection, and inherent jurisdiction cases involving children.

Jurisdiction: Family law — complex and international cases

Judges: President of the Family Division, High Court Judges

4Crown Court & County Court

Crown Court

Tries serious criminal offences (indictable and either-way offences committed for trial). Also hears appeals from the Magistrates' Court. Jury trials.

Jurisdiction: Serious criminal cases, appeals from Magistrates' Court

Judges: High Court Judges, Circuit Judges, Recorders · Jury of 12

County Court

Handles most civil disputes: contract, tort (under £100k), landlord & tenant, family, insolvency, and small claims (under £10k).

Jurisdiction: Civil claims, family, small claims, possession

Judges: Circuit Judges, District Judges

Family Court

Handles most family cases: divorce, children proceedings, domestic abuse orders, adoption, and financial remedies.

Jurisdiction: Family law — most cases at first instance

Judges: District Judges, Circuit Judges, High Court Judges

5Magistrates' Court & Tribunals

Magistrates' Court

Handles summary criminal offences and the early stages of all criminal cases. Also deals with some civil matters (licensing, council tax). No jury.

Jurisdiction: Summary offences, bail, committal, licensing

Judges: Lay Magistrates (Justices of the Peace) or District Judges (Magistrates' Courts)

First-tier Tribunal

Hears appeals in specialist areas: immigration, social security, tax, property, mental health, SEND, and employment (Employment Tribunal).

Jurisdiction: Administrative justice — immigration, tax, benefits, employment, property

Judges: Tribunal Judges, specialist panel members

Upper Tribunal

Hears appeals on points of law from the First-tier Tribunal. Has judicial review jurisdiction in some areas. Its decisions are binding on the First-tier Tribunal.

Jurisdiction: Appeals on law from First-tier Tribunal, some judicial review

Judges: Upper Tribunal Judges

Key Principles

Doctrine of Precedent (Stare Decisis)

Lower courts are bound by the decisions of higher courts. The Supreme Court's decisions bind all courts below. The Court of Appeal is generally bound by its own previous decisions (subject to the exceptions in Young v Bristol Aeroplane Co [1944]).

Appeals Route — Criminal

Magistrates' Court → Crown Court (rehearing) or High Court (case stated on law) → Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) → Supreme Court. The prosecution may refer unduly lenient sentences to the Court of Appeal.

Appeals Route — Civil

County Court → High Court or Court of Appeal (Civil Division) → Supreme Court. Permission to appeal is required at each level. Appeals are generally limited to questions of law, not findings of fact.

Tribunal System

First-tier Tribunal → Upper Tribunal → Court of Appeal → Supreme Court. Tribunals handle specialist areas of administrative justice including immigration, tax, employment, social security, mental health, and property.