judicature

NOUN
  1. the system of law courts that administer justice and constitute the judicial branch of government
  2. the position of judge
  3. an assembly (including one or more judges) to conduct judicial business
  4. the act of meting out justice according to the law
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How To Use judicature In A Sentence

  • The Attorney-General seems to take the view that it is part of his role to undermine the structure of the federal judicature which he has erected through these courts.
  • The third argument against the allowableness of Christians going to law, is that strict command that lies upon them to forgive injuries, and consequently not to prosecute them in courts of judicature, forasmuch as these two seem utterly inconsistent. Sermons Preached Upon Several Occasions. Vol. VII.
  • The professional course test reform of the criminal judicature specialty is an important constituent in the penology subject construction.
  • Secondly, after the Judicature Acts 1873-1875 it was possible for some negligence cases to be assigned to the Chancery Division of the High Court; such cases would be heard without a jury.
  • At one time the Freemen of York exerted a commanding influence in commerce, government and the judicature of the city.
  • Criminal jurisprudence is a science of criminal legislation and criminal judicature, it include two parts.
  • Administrative penalty a granted to administrative organs , and criminal jurisdiction is the major form of judicature.
  • Memoir by the Honorable Sir John Peter Grant, Kt. of the reasons which induced him to resign his commission of one of His Majesty's puisne justices of the Supreme Court of Judicature, Bombay by John Peter Grant OpEdNews - Quicklink: Judge won't inquire into CIA tapes case
  • If there be a twofold judicature appointed for the same person, for the same crime, is it not because one crime may in divers respects fall under several considerations? and must not these considerations be preserved immixed, that the formal reason of proceeding in one court may not be of any weight in the other? The Sermons of John Owen
  • It is all part and parcel, it seems, of the slow pace of the hearing of proceedings in the federal judicature of this country.
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