Gulating Court of Appeal explained

Court Name:Gulating Court of Appeal
Native Name:Gulating lagmannsrett
Imagesize2:200px
Established:1 Jan 1890
Jurisdiction:Rogaland, Vestland
Location:Gulatings plass 1,
Bergen, Norway
Coordinates:60.392°N 5.3274°W
Type:Court of Appeal
Appealsto:Supreme Court of Norway
Appealsfrom:District courts
Positions:33
Chiefjudgetitle:Chief Judge (Norwegian: Førstelagmann)
Chiefjudgename:Magni Elsheim

The Gulating Court of Appeal (Norwegian: Gulating lagmannsrett) is one of six courts of appeal in the Kingdom of Norway. The Court is located in the city of Bergen. The court has jurisdiction over the counties of Vestland and Rogaland plus Sirdal Municipality in Agder county. These areas constitute the Gulating judicial district (Norwegian: Gulating lagdømme). This court can rule on both civil and criminal cases that are appealed from one of its subordinate district courts. Court decisions can be, to a limited extent, appealed to the Supreme Court of Norway.[1] There are 33 permanent judges seated on this court. The chief judicial officer of the court (Norwegian: førstelagmann) is currently Magni Elsheim (as of 2016). The court is administered by the Norwegian National Courts Administration.[2]

Location

The Court has its seat at Norwegian: Gulatings plass 1 in the city of Bergen, the largest city in Western Norway. The courthouse is located next to the Bergen city hall (Norwegian: Bergen rådhus). Additionally, the Court permanently sits in the city of Stavanger at the Stavanger Court House. The Court may also sit in other places within its jurisdiction as needed.[3]

Jurisdiction

This court accepts appeals from all of the district courts from its geographic jurisdiction. This court is divided into judicial regions (Norwegian: lagsogn) and there is one or more district courts (Norwegian: tingrett) that belongs to each of these regions.[4]

Judicial Regions District courts
Haugaland og Sunnhordland District Court
Sør-Rogaland District Court
Hordaland District Court
Sogn og Fjordane District Court

History

The court has its historical roots originating with the Gulating, one of the first Norwegian legislative assemblies or Þing, which was established before the year 900. This old assembly remained in operation until 1797 when the courts were changed. A new court law went into effect on 1 January 1890 which re-established the Gulating Court of Appeal which included all of Bergen, Søndre Bergenhus, Nordre Bergenhus, and Romsdalen counties. In 1892, some courts were consolidated and this court gained all of the county of Stavanger. On 1 January 1907, all of Trøndelag was added to the court as well, and at that time, the name of the court was changed to Gula- og Frostating Court of Appeal. On 1 July 1936, the northern part of the jurisdiction (Trøndelag and Møre og Romsdal) was separated to become the new Frostating Court of Appeal and the southern part continued as the Gulating Court of Appeal (using the old name again).[5] [6]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Appellant Courts in Norway . Domstolene i Norge . PDF.
  2. Encyclopedia: Gulating lagmannsrett . . . 2019-09-29 . 2016-12-27 . Gisle . Jon . no.
  3. Web site: Om Gulating lagmannsrett . Gulating lagmannsrett . no . 2022-02-22.
  4. Web site: 2021-04-26 . Forskrift om inndelingen av rettskretser og lagdømmer . 2022-02-22 . Lovdata.no . no.
  5. Web site: Lagmannsretten-1890-1936 . 2022-02-22 . Domstol.no . no.
  6. Web site: 2021-03-21 . Gulating lagmannsrett . 2022-02-22 . Arkivverket Statsarkiv i Bergen . no.