Summary offences are dealt with by a magistrate in the Magistrates' Court. They include less serious offences, and can be punishable by shorter prison sentences and smaller fines. Accused must not necessarily be in person for the trial. Jury trials or preliminary inquiries are not held.
Indictable offences are more serious. They can be heard in a higher court (the County Court or Supreme Court) by a judge and jury. Accused must necessarily be in person for the trial. Preliminary inquires are held.
Yes
Committing perjury is an indictable offense rather than a summary offense. A person who commits perjury is always in the position to be indicted when involved in a court case.
Some very minor charges are only charged as a summary offense and the most serious only can be indictable. Many charges fall in between this spectrum and can be charged either way. All hybrid offenses are considered indictable until the crown attorney decides how they want to prosecute you.
In Canada, a hybrid offence is considered an indictable offence. For instance, there is no obligation to have your fingerprint taken if you are charge with a summary offence, but your fingerprint will be taken if your are charge with an hybrid offence, even if the prosecutor opted for summary conviction.
The difference between abstract and summary is that an abstract is a short from of a summary.
In Canada, the statute of limitations for assault varies depending on whether it is considered a summary conviction or an indictable offense. For summary conviction offenses, the limitation period is generally six months from the date of the incident. For indictable offenses, there is no statute of limitations, allowing prosecution to occur at any time. However, specific circumstances may affect these time frames, so it's essential to consult legal resources or professionals for particular cases.
Offences (under British law) that can be tried at either a Magistrate's Court or a Crown Court. This means that that it involves the sort of 'mid-range' crimes, i.e. somewhere in between indictable offences and summary offences - theft, assault with non-severe consequences.Source: Martin: The English Legal System.www.theenglishlegalsystem.co.uk
Possibly. In many(all?) states there are two separate chargeable offenses: Driving under the Influence, more commonly known as DUI, and Driving While Impaired or DWI. The wording of the statutes covering both, as to exactly what it is that you may be under the influence of, or impaired by, is left intentionally vague to cover ANYTHING that may cause you to not be in a "normal" frame of mind and body while operating a motor vehicle.
After being arrested the officer in charge of the lock up or station may release people charged with a summary offenses. Or they can charge you with indictable offense, the accused must be brought before the judge in 24 hours for bail hearing.
It means it's classified as a summary offense.
Interquartile range.
Range.