It has unlimited
jurisdiction within the state in
civil matters and hears the most serious
criminal matters. It is around the middle of the
Australian court hierarchy. The Supreme Court consists of a Trial Division (also known as Original Jurisdiction) and an Appeal Division (or Appellate Jurisdiction). When sitting in its appellate jurisdiction in civil matters it is the "Full Court"; for criminal matters it is the "Tasmanian Court of Criminal Appeal". Appeals from the Appeal Division of the Court are to the High Court of Australia. It was previously possible to appeal decisions of the Court of Appeal or the Court of Criminal Appeal (both parts of the Appeal Division) to the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in London, but this ceased in 1986 when the
Parliament of Australia passed the
Australia Act 1986, which terminated all such appeals to the Privy Council from Australian courts, except for those cases pending at that time. Civil matters involving consent orders, or for disputes involving less than $50,000, are dealt with by the
Magistrates Court except in exceptional circumstances. The Court receives appeals from Magistrate Courts in
Tasmania in both criminal and civil matters. Committal proceedings, which are used in criminal matters to establish whether there is sufficient evidence against an accused person to warrant the time and expense of a trial, were abolished in Tasmania in 2000 with the amendment of the
Justices Act 1959 (Tas). The
Justices Act 1959 now provides that where there has been a plea of not guilty by an accused, there must be an order committing them for trial in the Supreme Court. Unlike some other Australian states, Tasmania does not have an intermediate court division between the Supreme Court and the Magistrates Courts (such as a "District Court" or a "County Court"). ==Composition==