Dictionary Definition
assize
Noun
1 the regulation of weights and measures of
articles offered for sale
2 an ancient writ issued by a court of assize to
the sheriff for the recovery of property
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Extensive Definition
The Courts of Assize, or Assizes, is the name of
criminal
courts in several countries. In France, Belgium and
Italy the
court is still in use. The Assizes is the highest court. The word
assize refers to the sittings or sessions (Old French
assises) of the judges, known as "justices of assize".
Belgium
The Assize Court in Belgium (Hof van Assisen in Dutch, Cour d'Assises in French) is very similar to this institution in France, described hereunder. These courts seat in each of the ten provinces and in the judicial arrondissement of Brussels.The presiding judge is to be a judge at a
court of appeal and is assisted by two judges of courts of first
instance. The jury invariably consists of twelve members, who
are balloted out of the citizens having the right to vote at
elections and aged between thirty and sixty, and they must be able
to read and write. Only the jury decides upon the facts, and with
the judges the penalty is determined. There is no appeal for the
verdicts, apart from one before the
Court of Cassation.
Mainly handling murder cases, it is the only
court constitutionally authorized to judge delicts regarding the freedom
of the press – though few practical cases have been considered
to envolve an infliction on that freedom and thus nearly all
incidents were tried by lower courts.
France
In France and other countries working along the same system, Assize Courts (Cour d'Assises) use juries to judge the most serious crimes, such as murder or rape. It is chaired by a senior judge called the president of the court.In France, the assize court has 9 jurors plus 3
professional judges on first instance, and 12 jurors plus 3
professional judges on appeal. List of possible jurors are drawn at
random from the electoral
rolls, but the prosecution and the defense can refuse some
jurors (without having to bring any justification). For certain
crimes (large-scale drug trafficking, terrorism, or other severe
attempts on the security of the state), the court consists of 5
professional judges.
Italy
In Italy the Corte d'Assise is composed of two
professional judges, Giudici Togati, and six popular judges,
Giudici Popolari. The court has jurisdiction to judge the most
serious crimes, such as terrorism, manslaughter and attempts to
recreate a Fascist
Party. Penalties imposed by the court can include life
sentences.
In the Court of Assizes and Court of Assizes of
Appeal (Corte d'Assise e nella Corte d'Assise d'Appello) the
judicial panel consists only of the stipendiary and popular judges.
There is no jury. The Court ohas jurisdiction to try crimes
carrying a maximum penalty of 24 years in prison or life
imprisonment, and other major crimes.
England and Wales
The Courts of Assize, or Assizes, were periodic criminal courts held around England and Wales until 1972, when together with the Quarter Sessions they were abolished by the Courts Act 1971 and replaced by a single permanent Crown Court. The Assizes heard the most serious cases, which were committed to it by the Quarter Sessions (local county courts held four times a year), while the more minor offences were dealt with summarily by Justices of the Peace in petty sessions (also known as Magistrates' Courts).The word assize refers to the sittings or
sessions (Old French
assises) of the judges, known as "justices of assize", who were
judges of the Queen's
Bench Division of the
High Court of Justice who travelled across the seven circuits
of England and Wales on commissions of "oyer and
terminer", setting up court and summoning juries at the various
Assize Towns.
History
Justices of the Court of King's Bench
travelled around the country on five commissions: of assize, of
nisi prius, of oyer and terminer, and of gaol delivery. By the
Assize
of Clarendon of 1166, King
Henry II established trial by jury by a grand assize of sixteen
men in land disputes, and provided for itinerant justices to set up
county courts. Prior to
Magna
Carta in 1215, writs of assize
had to be tried at Westminster or
await trial at the septennial circuit of justices of
eyre, but the great charter provided that land disputes should
be tried by annual assizes.
An Act passed in the reign of King
Edward I provided that writs summoning juries to Westminster
were to appoint a time and place for hearing the causes with the
county of origin. Thus they were known as writs of nisi prius
(Latin
"unless before"): the jury would hear the case at Westminster
unless the king's justices had assembled a court in the county to
deal with the case beforehand. The commission of oyer and terminer,
was a general commission to hear and decide cases, while the
commission of gaol delivery required the justices to try all
prisoners held in the gaols (jails).
Few substantial changes occurred until the
nineteenth century. From the 1830s onwards,
Wales and the
palatine
county of Chester,
previously served by Court
of Grand Session, were merged into the circuit system. The
commissions for London and Middlesex were
replaced with a Central
Criminal Court, serving the whole metropolis, and county
courts were established around the country to hear many civil
cases previously covered by nisi prius.
The Judicature Act of 1873, which created
the
Supreme Court of Judicature, transferred the jurisdiction of
the commissions of assize (land disputes, etc.) to the
High Court of Justice, and established District Registries of
the High Court across the country, further diminishing the civil
jurisdiction of the assizes.
In 1956 Crown Courts were
set up in Liverpool and
Manchester,
replacing the Assizes and Quarter Sessions. This was extended
nationwide in 1972 following the
recommendations of a royal
commission.
Republic of Ireland
In the Republic
of Ireland the Assizes, modelled on the English system, were
replaced in the early years of the Irish Free
State by the
Circuit Court system in accordance with the
Courts of Justice Act, 1924. As in England, they heard
only serious cases and were arranged by the counties
of Ireland.
See also
- Courts of England and Wales
- Assize of Clarendon - for details of the founding of the Assize Courts
- Assize of Northampton
- Assizes of Jerusalem
References
External links
- A history of the Assizes
- Records of Assizes: full-text editions of some records of assizes, mostly for medieval London. Part of British History Online.
assize in French: Cour d'assises
assize in Korean: 어사이즈