The authority of a court to hear and decide cases Jurisdiction is determined by the geographic location of the court and the subject matter of the case
The legal authority a court or administrative agency has over a particular case, usually defined by geographical area
(From Latin jurisdictio: "administration of the law ") The authority or power of a court or tribunal to hear a particular case or dispute
In relation to the Congress, the term jurisdiction refers to a committee, subcommittee, or agency´s authority over a piece of legislation or law Jurisdiction is a boundary line defining where one entitie´s authority or control ends and another´s begins For instance, Title 1 of H R 1858 deals with telecommunications issues and so the Committee on Commerce and the Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Trade and Consumer Protection have authority Title 2 of H R 1858 deals with securities market information and so the Committee on Commerce and the Subcommittee on Finance and Hazardous Materials have authority Occasionally multiple Committees and Subcommittees will have authority over the many different parts of proposed legislation
A jurisdiction is a state or other area in which a particular court and system of laws has authority. the right to use an official power to make legal decisions, or the area where this right exists jurisdiction over somebody/something (jurisdictio, from jus ( JUST) + dictio ). Authority of a court to hear and determine cases. This authority is constitutionally based. Examples of judicial jurisdiction are: appellate jurisdiction, in which a superior court has power to correct legal errors made in a lower court; concurrent jurisdiction, in which a suit might be brought to any of two or more courts; and federal jurisdiction. A court may also have authority to operate within a certain territory. Summary jurisdiction, in which a magistrate or judge has power to conduct proceedings resulting in a conviction without jury trial, is limited in the U.S. to petty offenses
The legal authority of a court to hear a case or conduct other proceedings; power of the court over persons involved in a case and the subject matter of the case
(1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases
The right and power to apply the law; the territorial range of legal authority or control
The statutory authority a court exercises; also a word used to describe the geographic or subject matter area over which a court has power
Jurisdiction is the power that a court of law or an official has to carry out legal judgments or to enforce laws. The British police have no jurisdiction over foreign bank accounts. = authority
The legal power, right, or authority of a particular court to hear and determine causes, to try criminals, or to execute justice; judicial authority over a cause or class of causes; as, certain suits or actions, or the cognizance of certain crimes, are within the jurisdiction of a particular court, that is, within the limits of its authority or commission
The authority designating the limits and bounds of the legal right by which a judge exercises his authority to make lawful decisions The power or right to act Jurisdiction refers both to authority over the subject matter, or type of case; and over the person or thing
The authority, capacity, power or right of a court to hear and decide a legal matter
Refers to a court's authority to judge over a situation usually acquired in one of three ways: over acts committed in a defined territory (eg the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of Australia is limited to acts committed or originating in Australia), over certain types of cases (the jurisdiction of a bankruptcy court is limited to bankruptcy cases), or over certain persons (a military court has jurisdiction limited to actions of enlisted personnel)
Turkish - Turkish
Definition of yargı alanı in Turkish Turkish dictionary