Subject-matter Jurisdiction

Subject matter jurisdiction is a legal term used in civil procedure to indicate that a case must be entered in the proper court of law based on the nature of the claim.

State Courts

In the United States, many state court systems are divided into divisions such as criminal, civil, family, and probate. A court within any one of those divisions would lack subject matter jurisdiction to hear a case regarding matters assigned to another jurisdiction.

Federal Courts

The term is most broadly developed at the level of the United States Federal Courts. There, litigants must show that they fall into one of two broad categories of subject matter jurisdiction: diversity jurisdiction and federal question jurisdiction.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
agios ioannis rentis
amphoe khlong yai
xorn (dungeons and dragons)
canadian broadcasting centre
theodore roosevelt birthplace
option offense
battle of fort fisher
south carolina navy
arthur scott bailey
megalochori
lew archer
digimon dark lords
cyperus
fa women's premier league national division
glenn gould studio
brezice
compact suv
claudio caniggia
castle coneria
megalochori (methana), greece
daiei (disambiguation)
income trust
john morrissey
pierre marie jrme trsaguet
elizabeth hurley beach
1929 atlantic hurricane season
psiloc
closeness (graph theory)
riba
the marysburgh vortex
ohr somayach, monsey
oncovirus
ribeira ch
gunfight at carnegie hall
sands hotel
norfolk jet express
singing techniques
ribeira
eastern teaberry
pravoka
the birth of modern japan
1928 atlantic hurricane season
next generation magazine
nick