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Tennessee is divided into 31
judicial districts. DeKalb
County is in the 13th Judicial
District which is made up of 7
counties,
Clay, Cumberland, DeKalb,
Overton, Pickett, Putnam and
White.
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General
Sessions Judge
Juvenile Court Judge Judge Bratten H. Cook II
Term: 8 years [2006]
Lower Court, has jurisdiction in misdemeanor criminal cases and small
claims civil cases. May determine probable cause to send felony cases
before a grand jury.
Has exclusive jurisdiction over all juvenile matters. [Read
More] |
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Criminal
Court Part I
Judge Leon Burns
Term: 8 Years
Jurisdiction over felony criminal cases and misdemeanor appeals. [Read
More] |
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Criminal
Court Part II
Judge David Patterson
Term: 8 Years
Jurisdiction over
felony criminal cases and misdemeanor appeals.
[Read
More] |
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Circuit
Court Part I
Judge John J. Maddux Jr.
Term: 8 Years
Court of general jurisdiction; civil, criminal and appeals from City,
Juvenile, Municipal and General Sessions Courts.
[Read
More] |
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Circuit
Court Part II
Judge John A. Turnbull
Term: 8 Years
Court of general jurisdiction; civil, criminal and appeals from City,
Juvenile, Municipal and General Sessions Courts.
[Read
More] |
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Chancery
Court
Judge Ronald Thurman
Term: 8 Years
Court of Equity; the Chancellors may, by law and tradition modify the
application of strict legal rules and adapt relief to the circumstances of
individual cases. |
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District
Attorney General
Mr. William H. Gibson
Term: 8 years
Chief prosecuting attorney for the State of Tennessee. |
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The Information below is
from the County Technical
Assistance Service (CTAS)
publication
Tennessee County Government
Handbook. A full
copy of the publication may
be downloaded
in Adobe Acrobat by clicking
here:
Tennessee County
Government Handbook
|
General Sessions
and Other Inferior Courts
General
Sessions Court:
General sessions court judges must be 30 years old, a
Tennessee resident for five years, a resident of the
county for one year, and licensed to practice law in
Tennessee. T.C.A. §§ 16-15-201, 5005, TENN. CONST., art.
VI, § 4. A judge is elected to an eight-year-term.
T.C.A. § 16-15-202. A non-attorney may serve as a
general sessions judge only in very limited situations.
T.C.A. § 16-15-5005. A county legislative body may not
establish and fund additional part-time general sessions
judges. The code simply allows private acts that would
establish part-time
general sessions judges in class 1, 2 or 3 counties. Op.
Tenn. Att’y Gen. 93-52 (August 9,1993). The circuit
clerk acts as a general sessions clerk, unless a
separate clerk is created by a private act. T.C.A. §
16-15-301.
Salaries are set by general law according to population
class, which differs from the population class set forth
for county officials. Judges in certain classes may
receive additional compensation for additional
jurisdiction. However, no general sessions judge shall
receive a salary greater than that of a circuit judge.
T.C.A. § 16-15-5003. While annual salary adjustments are
built into the law, the general salary structure for
judges may not be altered during their term. TENN.
CONST., art. VI, § 7. A new term will begin on September
1, 2006.
Since the start of the current term of office on
September 1, 1998, general sessions judges have received
the same annual salary adjustment as state court judges
in accordance with T.C.A. § 8-23-103, which provides for
an increase that is equal to the increase in the
consumer price index up to 5 percent. The increase shall
not exceed 5percent unless the consumer price index goes
up in excess of 10 percent in which case the judge will
get a 5 percent salary increase plus a 1 percent
increase for each percent or fraction of a percent over
10 percent that the consumer price index increases.
Private acts may provide greater salaries, supplements
and adjustments than those provided by general law, so
long as the private act is effective prior to the
beginning of the judge's term. Beginning with the new
term on September 1, 2006, general sessions judges in
counties of the first class (population over 49,000)
will receive a base salary equal to97.5 percent of the
salary paid to a circuit court judge. T.C.A. §
16-15-5003. In no event may a general sessions judge be
paid a salary in excess of that of a circuit court
judge. T.C.A. § 16-15-5003(j).
Jurisdiction of General
Sessions Court:
The court has all of the
jurisdiction, coextensive with the county, formerly
exercised by justices of the peace in civil and criminal
cases. T.C.A. § 16-15-501. General sessions courts have
original jurisdiction in (1) civil cases up to $15,000
(in Shelby County the amount is $25,000), (2) forcible
entry and detainer actions, and (3) actions to recover
personal property, where an alternative money judgment
not to exceed $25,000 may be awarded. Attorney’s fees,
court costs and discretionary costs are not included in
the calculation of whether a judgment entered by the
general sessions court exceeds these monetary
jurisdictional limits. T.C.A. §§ 16-15-501, 29-30-102.
General sessions judges may issue restraining orders and
enforce the penalty provisions for violating
these orders. T.C.A. § 16-15-501. The court has
jurisdiction to try misdemeanor cases and may issue
sentences within the limits provided by law for the
particular offense. T.C.A. § 40-1-109. Pursuant to
T.C.A. § 40-11-204, general sessions judges also hear
petitions for relief on forfeited recognizances.
In many counties, the general sessions court may have,
by private or public act, other subject matter
jurisdiction, including probate, domestic relations, and
workers' compensation. See T.C.A. §§ 16-15-401, 40-6-214
(arrest warrants), 27-8-105(certiorari), 17-2-209
(divorce interchange), 17-2-208 (interchange), and
private acts relative to jurisdiction in the various
counties.
Civil cases, originating in general sessions court and
appealed to a higher court, shall not be dismissed for
informalities, but shall be tried on the merits of the
case. The higher court shall allow all amendments in the
form of the action, the parties in the case, or the
statement of the cause of action when necessary to reach
the merits. The trial, including damages awarded, is de
novo. T.C.A. § 16-15-729.
Juvenile Courts:
The general sessions court,
except those with a special juvenile court established
by private act, has juvenile court jurisdiction. T.C.A.
§ 37-1-203. Every court having juvenile jurisdiction
must have a sign in a conspicuous place identifying it
as “Juvenile Court.” T.C.A. § 37-1-206. The general
sessions court when acting as juvenile court has the
title and style of “Juvenile Court of ____________
County.” T.C.A.§ 37-1-204. However, the legislature did
not intend to make the juvenile court a general sessions
court. The intent was to transfer juvenile court
jurisdiction to the general sessions court and to make
the general sessions court a juvenile court when the
subject matter before the court was within the
jurisdiction conferred upon juvenile courts. State ex
rel. Winberry v. Brooks, 670 S.W.2d 631 (Tenn. Ct. App.
1984). Only general sessions judges who are licensed to
practice law in Tennessee may order commitment of a
juvenile to the Department of Correction. T.C.A. §
37-1-203. If the judge is not licensed to practice in
Tennessee, a lawyer-referee is appointed to handle such
matters. T.C.A. § 37-1-107. The juvenile court has
concurrent jurisdiction with the circuit and chancery
court of proceedings arising from the 1980 Hague
Convention on the Civil Aspects of International Child
Abduction. T.C.A. § 37-1-104.
Pursuant to T.C.A. § 37-1-702,
juvenile judges are authorized to establish a teen court
program. The teen court is given the authority to
conduct proceedings, receive evidence, hear testimony
related to the dispositional stage and recommend
disposition of the case. For any particular case, the
teen court consists of five teen members chosen from a
panel of 12 or more teenagers appointed by the juvenile
court judge.
General Sessions and
Juvenile Court Interchange:
Under T.C.A. § 16-15-209, general sessions and juvenile
judges may interchange with each other. The substituting
judge need not be a resident of the same county, but
must otherwise possess the same qualifications of the
absent judge. Under amendments to T.C.A. § 16-15-209 in
the same public act, general sessions and juvenile
judges who must be absent from court may seek a special
judge. The judge must first attempt to interchange
within the county, then with a current, former, or
retired judge, then apply to the Administrative Office
of the Courts for assistance, and finally, after
exhausting these options, may appoint a lawyer from a
list of qualified attorneys to serve as judge subject to
certain limitations.
Probate Courts:
Chancery court has exclusive jurisdiction to probate
wills and administer estates, unless provided otherwise
by private act. T.C.A. § 16-16-201. The clerk and master
exercises probate jurisdiction, unless otherwise
provided.
Special Courts:
Occasionally, public or private
acts create courts to exercise particular jurisdiction
in a county. Some counties have chosen through private
acts to have separate special jurisdiction courts. As
noted above, probate jurisdiction is in chancery court
unless it is placed in another court by a special act.
Similarly, general sessions court has juvenile
jurisdiction, unless it is placed in another court by
private act. Some counties have combined specialized
jurisdictions to create new court titles. The clerk of
these courts is designated in the private acts creating
these courts. The judge's salary is determined according
to the special legislation. Cases from these special
inferior courts may be appealed to the circuit court for
a de novo trial.
Judicial Commissioners:
In most counties (and all under
200,000 population) the legislative body may elect one
or more people to serve as judicial commissioners whose
duties include, but are not limited to:
1. Issuing arrest and search warrants upon a finding of
probable cause;
2. Issuing mittimus following compliance with lawful
procedures;
3. Appointing attorneys for indigent defendants; and
4. Setting and approving bonds and the release on
recognizance of defendants.
A judicial commissioner elected
by the county legislative body is considered a county
officer and serves a fixed term set by the county
legislative body, but the term may not be longer than
four years. Judicial commissioners are compensated from
the county's general fund in an amount determined by the
legislative body. All fees collected by judicial
commissioners must be paid to the county general fund.
T.C.A. § 40-1-111. No search warrant, arrest warrant or
mittimus may be issued by an official whose compensation
is contingent in any manner upon the issuance or non
issuance of such warrants or mittimus. T.C.A. §
40-5-106.
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The Information below is
from the County Technical
Assistance Service (CTAS)
publication
Tennessee County Government
Handbook. A full
copy of the publication may
be downloaded
in Adobe Acrobat by clicking
here:
Tennessee County
Government Handbook
|
Trial Courts - Circuit and
Criminal
Organization:
The state trial courts were
divided into 31 judicial districts in 1984. T.C.A.§
16-2-506. Circuit and chancery courts exist within each
district, and some districts have separate criminal
courts. Each judicial district selects a presiding judge
who assigns cases to reduce delays, distributes the
workload equitably, and promotes the orderly and
efficient administration of justice in the district.
T.C.A. § 16-2-509. The judges of each district must
promulgate uniform rules of practice for that district.
T.C.A.§16-2-511. The administrative director of the
courts maintains a list of the local
rules. T.C.A. § 16-2-511.
The 1984 redistricting bill
abolished the “terms of court.” The minutes of all
courts remain open continuously. T.C.A. § 16-2-510.
Court is held within each judicial district at times set
by the judges of that district and within each county in
the district as needed to dispose of the court's
business. T.C.A. § 16-2-510.
Circuit and chancery court
judges are elected for an eight-year term by the voters
of the district or circuit to which they are assigned.
TENN. CONST., art. VI, § 4. A judge must be30 years old,
a Tennessee resident for five years, a resident of the
circuit or district for one year, TENN. CONST., art. VI,
§ 4, licensed to practice law in Tennessee, and eligible
under the general standards to hold public office.
T.C.A. §§ 17-1-106, 8-18-101.
To facilitate the handling of
cases, any judge or chancellor may exercise by
interchange, appointment, or designation the
jurisdiction of any trial court other than that to which
he was elected or appointed. T.C.A. § 16-2-502.
Legislation passed in 1997provided that any judge
sitting by interchange has the same immunity as the
judge he or she is replacing and that the state or
county must provide the same defense, if necessary, for
the substituting judge. T.C.A. § 16-1-114.
Court Clerks:
The circuit court clerk, acting
as the principal administrative aide to the circuit
court, provides assistance in the areas of courtroom
administration and records management, docket
maintenance, revenue management, maintenance of court
minutes, official communication and various other
court-associated duties. T.C.A. Title18, Chapters 1, 2
and 4. The clerk is elected for a four-year term. T.C.A.
§18-4-101. There is one circuit court clerk in each
county.
Likewise, the clerk and master,
acting as the principal administrative aide to the
chancery court, provides assistance in the areas of
courtroom administration and records management, docket
maintenance, revenue management, maintenance of court
minutes, official communication and various other
court-associated duties. T.C.A., Title 18, Chapters 1, 2
and 5. The clerk is appointed
by the chancellor for a six-year term. T.C.A. §
18-5-101.
In most counties, the circuit
court clerk performs the duties of the criminal court
clerk. However, a separate criminal court clerk's office
is located in Davidson, Hamilton, Knox, and Shelby
counties. For more information about court clerks, see
Chapter 3 of this
handbook.
Jurisdiction of Circuit
Court:
The General Assembly may
establish circuit courts, and may increase or diminish
the jurisdiction. TENN. CONST., art. VI, §§ 1, 8. The
court has general jurisdiction in all cases where
jurisdiction is not conferred on another tribunal.
T.C.A. § 16-10-101. The court may hear and determine
suits of an equitable nature, if there is no objection,
or may transfer such cases to the chancery court. If the
circuit court chooses to hear an equity case, it must
determine the case upon equity principles and may
exercise equitable powers. T.C.A. § 16-10-111.
The circuit court has exclusive
original jurisdiction in the following cases:
1. Correction of mistakes in deeds of conveyance of land
or registration thereof. T.C.A. § 66-5-107;
2. Applications to restore
citizenship by persons who have been rendered infamous
by judgments of any court in the state. T.C.A. §§
16-10-104,40-29-101;
3. All matters relating to the seizure and destruction
of intoxicating liquor if the circuit court has
jurisdiction in a particular county over offenses
against the state liquor laws. T.C.A. § 57-9-105;
4. Eminent domain cases and
in rem eminent domain cases brought by the county,
state, or United States. T.C.A. §§ 29-16-104, 29-17-601;
5. Motions to impose a $500
forfeiture upon the county trustee for certain breaches
of duty, and to impose liability on the trustee and the
trustee's surety for breach of duty. T.C.A. § 8-11-106
through 8-11-108;
6. Writs of mandamus to enforce
the performance of any duty made incumbent by law upon
the county. T.C.A. § 5-1-107;
7. Suits to condemn land for
the failure to pay taxes where personal property does
not satisfy the distress warrant and where the sheriff
has levied upon the real estate. T.C.A. §§ 67-4-110(c),
67-4-215(c);
8. Motions to proceed against
any tax collector or other officer of the state who
fails to collect taxes, who fails to pay over taxes
received by him, or who commits any act of neglect,
misprision, misfeasance, or malfeasance in office.
T.C.A. §§ 67-1-1602(b), 67-1-1623(a); and
9. Petitions by the circuit
court clerk, and the sheriff in counties without a
separate criminal court, requesting authority to hire
deputies or assistants. T.C.A. § 8-20-101.
Unless otherwise provided, the
circuit court has appellate jurisdiction of all actions
of any nature instituted before any inferior
jurisdiction, whether brought by appeal, certiorari, or
in any other manner prescribed by law. T.C.A. §
16-10-112. An appeal may be taken to the circuit court
from the judgment of the general sessions court, city
judge, recorder or other officer of a municipality.
T.C.A. §§ 27-5-101, 27-5-108,6-21-508. In 1996 Public
Chapter 777, the legislature amended Title 4, Chapter
21, to allow the circuit court to share jurisdiction
with the chancery court over human rights actions. In
1997 the legislature also amended T.C.A. § 37-1-159 to
give the circuit court appellate jurisdiction over
unruly child proceedings and dependent and neglect
proceedings heard in the juvenile court. In these cases,
the circuit court shall try the case de novo.
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The Information below is
from the County Technical
Assistance Service (CTAS)
publication
Tennessee County Government
Handbook. A full
copy of the publication may
be downloaded
in Adobe Acrobat by clicking
here:
Tennessee County
Government Handbook
|
Trial Courts - Chancery
Organization:
The state trial courts were
divided into 31 judicial districts in 1984. T.C.A.§
16-2-506. Circuit and chancery courts exist within each
district, and some districts have separate criminal
courts. Each judicial district selects a presiding judge
who assigns cases to reduce delays, distributes the
workload equitably, and promotes the orderly and
efficient administration of justice in the district.
T.C.A. § 16-2-509. The judges of each district must
promulgate uniform rules of practice for that district.
T.C.A.§16-2-511. The administrative director of the
courts maintains a list of the local rules. T.C.A. §
16-2-511.
The 1984 redistricting bill
abolished the “terms of court.” The minutes of all
courts remain open continuously. T.C.A. § 16-2-510.
Court is held within each judicial district at times set
by the judges of that district and within each county in
the district as needed to dispose of the court's
business. T.C.A. § 16-2-510.
Circuit and chancery court
judges are elected for an eight-year term by the voters
of the district or circuit to which they are assigned.
TENN. CONST., art. VI, § 4. A judge must be30 years old,
a Tennessee resident for five years, a resident of the
circuit or district for one year, TENN. CONST., art. VI,
§ 4, licensed to practice law in Tennessee, and eligible
under the general standards to hold public office.
T.C.A. §§ 17-1-106, 8-18-101.
To facilitate the handling of
cases, any judge or chancellor may exercise by
interchange, appointment, or designation the
jurisdiction of any trial court other than that to which
he was elected or appointed. T.C.A. § 16-2-502.
Legislation passed in 1997provided that any judge
sitting by interchange has the same immunity as the
judge he or she is replacing and that the state or
county must provide the same defense, if necessary, for
the substituting judge. T.C.A. § 16-1-114.
Court Clerks:
The circuit court clerk, acting
as the principal administrative aide to the circuit
court, provides assistance in the areas of courtroom
administration and records management, docket
maintenance, revenue management, maintenance of court
minutes, official communication and various other
court-associated duties. T.C.A. Title18, Chapters 1, 2
and 4. The clerk is elected for a four-year term. T.C.A.
§18-4-101. There is one circuit court clerk in each
county.
Likewise, the clerk and master,
acting as the principal administrative aide to the
chancery court, provides assistance in the areas of
courtroom administration and records management, docket
maintenance, revenue management, maintenance of court
minutes, official communication and various other
court-associated duties. T.C.A., Title 18, Chapters 1, 2
and 5. The clerk is appointed by the chancellor for a
six-year term. T.C.A. § 18-5-101.
In most counties, the circuit
court clerk performs the duties of the criminal court
clerk. However, a separate criminal court clerk's office
is located in Davidson, Hamilton, Knox, and Shelby
counties. For more information about court clerks, see
Chapter 3 of this handbook.
Jurisdiction
of Chancery Court:
The General
Assembly determines the chancery court's jurisdiction,
and may increase, decrease, or alter its jurisdiction.
TENN. CONST., art. VI, § 8. Chancery courts “shall have
all the powers, privileges, and jurisdiction properly
and rightfully incident to a court of equity.” T.C.A. §
16-11-101. This inherent jurisdiction is original and
exclusive in cases of an equitable nature, where the
debt or demand exceeds $50, unless otherwise provided.
It lacks jurisdiction in cases where the debt or demand
is less than $50, unless otherwise specifically
provided. T.C.A. §16-11-103. Although this
inherent jurisdiction is exclusive, if no objection to
jurisdiction is made, a circuit court may hear and
determine such suits or may transfer the suit to
chancery court. T.C.A. §
16-10-111.
Chancery courts exercise
inherent jurisdiction, where the debt or demand exceeds
$50,in the following cases:
1. All actions resulting from
accidents and mistakes;
2. All actions resulting from frauds, actual and
constructive;
3. All actions resulting from trusts, express,
constructive and resulting;
4. All actions for the specific performance of
contracts;
5. All actions for the reformation, re-execution,
rescission and surrender of written instruments;
6. All actions for an accounting, and for surcharging
and falsifying accounts;
7. All actions between partners, and to wind up an
insolvent partnership;
8. All actions for the administration and marshaling of
assets;
9. All actions for subrogation and substitution;
10. All actions for the enforcement of liens created by
mortgages, deeds of trust, sales of land on credit, or
other equitable consideration;
11. All actions against minors in reference to their
estates, not cognizable at law;
12. All actions by wards against guardians, executors,
administrators and others, where an accounting or
surcharging or falsifying an account is necessary;
13. All actions for an apportionment and contribution;
14. All actions for the marshaling of securities;
15. All actions for relief against forfeitures and
penalties;
16. All actions for the redemption of land or other
property;
17. All actions to have absolute deeds or bills of sale
declared to be mortgages;
18. All actions for the construction and enforcement of
wills and trusts;
19. All actions to obtain a set-off against a judgment
in favor of a non-resident or insolvent;
20. All actions for the discovery and perpetuation of
testimony;
21. All actions to compel claimants to interplead;22.All
actions for equitable attachments and receivers;
23. All actions where a ne exeat republica is
sought;
24. All actions where an
injunction is a substantial part of the relief sought;
25. All actions to remove clouds and quiet titles;
26. All actions for the establishment and execution of
charities;
27. All actions for a new trial after a judgment at law;
28. All actions to have void judgments so declared, and
to avoid voidable judgments;
29. All actions to execute decrees and to impeach
decrees and judgments;
30. All actions to prevent the doing of an illegal or
inequitable act to the injury of plaintiff's property
rights, or interests, quia timet;
31. All actions for the exoneration or protection of
sureties; and
32. All other actions where the
defendant has done, or is doing, or is threatening to
do, some inequitable act to the injury of the plaintiff,
and there is no adequate remedy in any other court.
Gibson's Suits in Chancery (7th ed. Inman 1988), § 3.
Jurisdiction has been increased
to encompass specific actions, including:
1. To aid judgment creditors to subject a debtor's
property that cannot be reached by execution to the
satisfaction of the judgment. T.C.A. §16-11-104;
2. To decide all disputes between the state and
corporations, their stockholders or creditors. T.C.A. §
16-11-105;
3. To aid creditors of a corporation, without obtaining
a judgment at law, to attach the property of a
corporation, and subject the same, by sale or otherwise,
to the satisfaction of their debts, when
the corporate franchises are not used, or have been
granted to others. T.C.A. § 29-12-107;
4. To decide all boundary line disputes. T.C.A. §
16-11-106(a);
5. To enforce foreign judgments against the property of
a nonresident debtor when the judgment creditor has
exhausted his legal remedies. T.C.A. §26-6-103 et seq.;
6. To approve the sale of property of a minor or
disabled person. T.C.A. §34-11-116);
7. To compel the distribution of estates where there are
difficulties, complexities, or conflicting claims.
T.C.A. § 30-2-710; and8.To remove the disability of a
minor. T.C.A. § 29-31-101.
Concurrent Jurisdiction of Circuit and Chancery
Courts:
Chancery court has concurrent
jurisdiction with circuit court to hear “all civil cases
of action, triable in circuit court, except for
unliquidated damages for injuries to person or
character, and except for unliquidated damages for
injuries to property not resulting from a breach of oral
or written contract.” T.C.A. § 16-11-102.
Jurisdiction of Criminal Courts:
The circuit courts have
“exclusive original jurisdiction of all crimes and
misdemeanors, either at common law or by statute, unless
otherwise expressly provided by statute.” T.C.A. §
16-10-102. The criminal and circuit courts have
“original jurisdiction of all criminal matters not
exclusively conferred by law on some other tribunal.”
T.C.A. § 40-1-108.
In addition to their original
jurisdiction over felonies and misdemeanors, criminal
courts have exclusive jurisdiction over special
crime-related matters and non-criminal matters,
including all matters relating to the seizure and
destruction of intoxicating liquors when an offense
against a state liquor law has been committed. T.C.A. §
57-9-105. Criminal court judges possess magistrate
powers and may issue warrants for the arrest of a person
charged with a public offense. T.C.A. §§ 40-5-101,
40-5-102.
Unless otherwise provided, the
circuit courts have appellate jurisdiction in all
criminal cases and actions originally tried in inferior
courts “whether brought by appeal, certiorari, or in any
other manner prescribed by law.” T.C.A. § 16-10-112.
Criminal courts have authority to grant extraordinary
relief in appeals from courts of inferior jurisdiction.
Franks v. State, 565 S.W.2d 36 (Tenn. Crim. App. 1977).
Criminal courts have appellate
jurisdiction in post-conviction proceedings. A prisoner
in custody under a state sentence may petition for
post-conviction relief in the court where the conviction
occurred within one year after an appeal is taken to the
highest state appellate court. T.C.A. § 40-30-202. The
presiding judge will assign a judge to hear the
petition. However, if a presiding judge is unable to
assign a judge, the chief justice of the Supreme Court
will assign the judge. A competency of counsel issue may
be heard by a judge other than the original judge.
T.C.A. § 40-30-205.
Criminal courts were also
granted appellate jurisdiction over delinquency
proceedings in the juvenile court by amendments to
T.C.A. § 39-1-159 passed in 1997. These appeals are
tried de novo by the criminal court.
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