Magistrates (also known as
justices of the peace) are trained volunteers appointed from the local community, who generally sit in threes in order to give judgment in
magistrates' courts and
youth courts. The chair is addressed as "Sir" or "Madam" or the bench is addressed as "Your Worships". ==Judicial salaries== There are eight pay points for judges in the United Kingdom (including England and Wales). The following is a simplified list of annual judicial salaries from 1 April 2024, showing only the most widely-held grades and some of the best known specific appointments. A complete list of all the posts at each pay point can be found on the website of the Ministry of Justice. • Group 1:
Lord Chief Justice, £312,510 • Group 1.1:
Master of the Rolls, £279,051 • Group 2: Heads of the
High Court divisions, £269,530 • Group 3:
Lord Justices of Appeal, £256,304 • Group 4:
High Court judges and certain others, £225,092 • Group 5: Numerous specialist appointments, including senior
circuit judges and Judge Advocate General, £180,522 • Group 5.1: Chief Insolvency and Companies Court Judge, Chief Chancery Master, Senior King's Bench Master and certain others, £173,856 • Group 5.2: High Court Insolvency and Companies Court Judges, High Court Masters,
circuit judges and certain others, £167,167 • Group 6: Vice-Judge Advocate General and certain others, £157,380 • Group 7: District judges of the County Court and magistrates' courts, employment judges, judges of the First Tier Tribunal and several other appointments, £134,105 • Group 8: Salaried (Regional) Medical Members, Social Entitlement Chamber, £106,563 Judges also have a pension scheme, the 1993 and earlier versions of which were once considered to be one of the most generous in the British public sector. The administrative body of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom is classified as a
non-ministerial department. The Supreme Court is independent of the government of the UK, of Parliament, and of the court services of England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. It takes appeals from the Appeals Courts of England and Wales and of Northern Ireland, and Scotland's High Court of Justiciary (civil cases only). The President of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom is paid at Group 1.1, while the Deputy President and the other ten members of the Supreme Court are paid at Group 2. ==See also==