Description. This act provides for the constitution and operation of the Court of King's Bench of Alberta, and the appointment of the officers and employees that the business of the Court requires, including case management counsel. It also provides for the appointment and jurisdiction of Applications Judges.
King's Bench is one of three divisional courts in the United Kingdom's High Court that serves both as a court of original and appellate jurisdiction. King's Bench (called Queen or King's bench depending on who is reigning) covers a wide range of cases from contracts and torts and more specific areas of law.
In Alberta, provincial court judges are more specialized than King's Bench judges because they generally work in only one of the three main areas of court: adult criminal, family and youth criminal, and civil law (there is also traffic court, which is heard by Justices of the Peace), while King's Bench judges require ...
In Alberta, the Court system includes three levels of Court: Provincial Court of Alberta. The Alberta Court of Queen's Bench. The Alberta Court of Appeal.
How the bail system works. When a person is arrested, they are entitled to a bail hearing within 24 hours of their arrest, regardless of what they have been charged with. The bail hearing determines if they can be released from custody until their trial date.
The Court of Justice handles the vast majority of criminal and regulatory offences in Alberta and also hears Civil cases up to $100,000, Family, Youth and Traffic cases.
Bail is when a person charged with a criminal offence is released from custody while awaiting their trial. An individual can be released with or without conditions that they must follow during their release. Not everyone who is charged with a crime receives bail.
Reforms to the bail system Specifically, the amendments: create a reverse onus (meaning that the onus shifts to the accused person to convince the court that they should be released, rather than detained, while awaiting their trial) to target serious repeat violent offending involving weapons.
If an accused person is not released by police, the accused must be brought before the court for a bail hearing. The court (judge or justice of the peace) decides, based on the evidence and submissions of the parties, whether to detain or release the accused, with or without conditions.