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Text C. Courts in England and Wales




Text A. CRIMINAL COURTS

КОНТРОЛЬНАЯ РАБОТА №1

 

Вариант №6

 

Выполните следующие задания:

1. Образуйте форму множественного числа следующих существительных: a court, an office, a justice, a judge, a penalty, a committee, a life, a thief.

2. Поставьте все личные местоимения в объектном падеже и напишите соответствующие им формы притяжательных местоимений.

3. Образуйте степени сравнения следующих прилагательных: high, low, serious, good, important, narrow, wide, rich.

4. Прочтите и переведите тексты. Абзацы 1, 2 текста В переведите письменно.

 

 

There are two main kinds of courts, and two kinds of judicial officers to correspond with them. Courts of first instance are presided over by magistrates, who are normally Justices of the Peace (JPs); higher courts (crown courts) by judges, or in some cases, senior barristers specially appointed to perform judicial functions for part of their time.

 

Text B. MAGISTRATES’ COURTS

 

1. Every person charged with an offence is summoned to appear be­fore a local magistrates` court, which may impose a fine up to a gen­eral limit of £2,000 or twelve months imprisonment, though for some specified offences the laws prescribe maximum penalties below these limits. With 98 per cent of cases the magistrates on the bench decide on guilt or innocence, and if necessary what penalty to impose. With more serious cases the magistrates can decide only to send them for trial in a crown court. A person accused before a magistrates` court may demand to be sent for trial before a crown court in some of the more serious cases with which in general the magistrates could have dealt themselves.

2. A magistrates’ court normally consists of three Justices of the Peace (occasionally, two or four or more). The JPs are ordinary but worthy citizens who have been appointed to their positions by the Lord Chan­cellor on the advice of local appointing committees. JPs have no for­mal qualifications; they are chosen merely for their good reputation, often with the support of political parties or approved voluntary bod­ies. Once appointed, they are expected to attend courses of instruction about their work. There are 28,000 JPs in England; each of them works in the court on about 30-50 days a year.

1. Criminal offences may be grouped into three categories. Offences friable only on indictment – the very serious offences such as murder, manslaughter, rape and robbery – are tried only by the Crown Court presided over by a judge sitting with a jury. Summary offences – the least serious offences and the vast majority of criminal cases – are tried by unpaid lay magistrates sitting without a jury. A third category of offences (such as theft, burglary, or malicious woundings) are known as either way offences and can be tried either by magistrates or by the Crown Court depending on the circumstances of each case and the wishes of the defendant.

2. In addition to dealing with summary offences and the either way offences which are entrusted to them, the magistrates’ courts commit cases to the Crown Court either for trial or for sentence. Committals for trial are either of indictable offences or of either way offences, which it has been determined, will be tried in the Crown Court. Com­mittals for sentence occur when the defendant in an either way case has been tried summarily but the court has decided to commit him or her to the Crown Court for sentence.

3. Magistrates must as a rule sit in open court to which the public and the media are admitted. A court normally consists of three lay magis­trates – known as justices of the peace – advised on points of law and procedures by a legally qualified clerk or a qualified assistant. Magistrates are appointed by the Lord Chancellor, except in Lanca­shire, Greater Manchester and Merseyside where appointments are made by the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. There are nearly 28,000 lay magistrates.

 




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