The provincial trial court does not, but the superior provincial court might.
Provincial trial court, superior provincial court, provincial court of appeal
The Canadian Judicial System operates on a hierarchy of courts and laws. All statutes an regulations that Provinces and Cities pass must be in accordance with the Constitution. Similarly, decisions that are made in higher courts cannot be contradicted by lower courts. Decisions made in provincial courts are not binding on other Provinces, but are influential. Provincial Court < Provincial Superior Court < Provincial Court of Appeal < Federal Court < Federal Court of Appeal < Supreme Court of Canada
Judges at the provincial level are appointed by the premiere
A grand jury is a group of people that are selected and sworn in by a court. A traverse jury is a trial jury selected to serve on a court case in civil or criminal court.
The Ministry of the Attorney General in Ontario oversees provincial courts, which includes the Ontario Court of Justice and the Superior Court of Justice.
The Supreme Court does not use a jury. The Supreme Court is involved in interpretations of the US constitution. A jury would not help.
The Provincial Court of British Columbia was created in 1971. It is a lower court that handles a wide range of criminal, family, youth, small claims, and traffic matters.
My honor ?
Jury trials are available at all levels of the court EXCEPT Appeals Court and Supreme Court levels.
The court will have a form and you can get it from the jury commissioner. They will suspend the the original date to a later court jury summons.
No.
Any court if you choose a bench trial instead of a trial by jury.,