£5 per fortnight I think
Magistrate's Court - TV series - ended in 1969.
Magistrate's Court - TV series - was created in 1963.
Your Honor, or Madam Magistrate.
The duration of Magistrate's Court - TV series - is 1800.0 seconds.
A Magistrate's Court is lower on the scale of judicial hierarchy than a Court of General Sessions.
Yes, the title used to address a magistrate in court is "Your Honor."
If the jail or court house is setup to accept debit cards then bail can be paid with one. It is an acceptable form of payment but the accepting party has to have a way to accept the card as payment.
It depends on the country and what kind of magistrate. In the US, a magistrate can refer to two different things. They can be a civil magistrate. For small claims court, the civil magistrate acts as the "judge." In civil court, the civil magistrate files the case for the judge, if I'm not mistaken. For criminal court, the magistrate is the one whom charges are filed with. What happens next depends on the type of crime. If it is a misdemeanor, the magistrate passes control to a prosecutor (often an assistant district attorney). If it is a felony, the magistrate passes control to the grand jury. The magistrate also decides the bail and custody arrangements until a judge decides otherwise.
magistrate court
In Magistrate Court the sentence is generally handed down immediately. You can then appeal. Unlike appeals for convictions in a District Court (or Superior or Supreme Court depending on the state's terminology) where you can only appeal on issues of law, appeals from Magistrate Court are "trial de novo" (meaning new trial)--this is because they are not "courts of record" (there is no stenographer taking everything down) . These appeals are heard at the next level of court, such as a County Court at Law (depending on the state). You will have to post a bond. In Texas the minimum appeal bond is $300 even if the fine was only $50.
Magistrate court. Supreme court. Crown court County court. The list goes on...
THE SUPREME COURT, LOCAL COURT, HIGH COURT AND MAGISTRATE COURT. These are not in order