Courts Service

The Courts Service is a statutory corporation which provides administration and support services to the Courts of the Republic of Ireland. It was established in 1999 by the Courts Service Act 1998.[2] Its head office is at Phoenix House, Smithfield, Dublin.

Courts Service
An tSéirbhís Chúirteanna
Logo of the Courts Service
Agency overview
FormedNovember 1999
JurisdictionIreland
HeadquartersPhoenix House, 15 - 24 Phoenix Street North, Smithfield, Dublin 7, Ireland
53.346871°N 6.277765°W / 53.346871; -6.277765
Employees1,025[1]
Annual budget€133 million (2017)
Agency executives
Websitecourts.ie

Functions

The Courts Service Act 1998 assigns the Courts Service the following functions:

  • managing the courts,
  • providing support services for the judges,
  • providing information on the courts system to the public,
  • providing, managing and maintaining court buildings, and
  • providing facilities for users of the courts.[3]

The Court Service has no function in relation to the actual administration of justice. Judges themselves are directly employed by the state and not by the Courts Service.[4]

Corporate structure

The day-to-day management of the Courts Service is conducted by its Chief Executive who is appointed by the Board of the Courts Service. The Board of the Courts Service is made up of the following:[5]

  • the presidents of the Supreme Court, the Court of Appeal, the High Court, the Circuit Court and the District Court (or judges of those courts nominated by their presidents),
  • members of each of these five courts elected by their ordinary members,
  • the Chief Executive of the Courts service and a representative of its staff elected by them,
  • a practicing barrister and a practicing solicitor nominated by the Chairman of the Bar Council and the President of the Law Society of Ireland respectively,
  • a civil servant from the Department of Justice nominated by the Minister for Justice,
  • a person nominated by the Irish Congress of Trade Unions,
  • a person nominated by the Minister to represent the consumers of court services, and
  • a person nominated by the Minister for relevant knowledge and experience in commerce, finance or administration.
gollark: Specifically, you aren't allowed to run GeForce cards in a datacentre.
gollark: It's in the EULA for something or other, so probably yes.
gollark: Bad for consumers, but clever.
gollark: It's a clever market segmentation thing. Cryptocurrency people pay more *and* the GPUs don't end up on the secondary market for gamers to buy later.
gollark: You can't really do that.

See also

References

  1. "Courts Service Annual Report 2017" (PDF). Courts Service. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  2. Section 4 of the Courts Service Act 1998.
  3. Section 5 of the Courts Service Act 1998.
  4. "The Courts Service". Association of Judges of Ireland. Archived from the original on 9 December 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  5. Section 11 of the Courts Service Act 1998 as amended by Section 57 of the Court of Appeal Act 2014.
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