Taylor on criminal appeals (2nd Ed.)

Coordinator: Taylor Paul

Language: English
Cover of the book Taylor on criminal appeals

Subject for Taylor on criminal appeals

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800 p. · 17.8x24.7 cm · Hardback
This new edition of Taylor on Appeals provides a detailed examination of the law and practice relating to criminal appeals. Written by a team of barristers with unparalleled experience of appellate practice, this book offers thoughtful coverage of all kinds of criminal appeals, ranging from magistrates appeals to the Crown Court up to the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division), the Supreme Court, and the Privy Council. The first edition (published in 2001) was quoted in judgments of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division), House of Lords, Privy Council, and High Court of Australia.
1. Appeals and Review of Magistrates and certain Crown Court decisions: Choosing the Appropriate Procedure. 2. Appeals from the Magistrates Court to the Crown Court. 3. Appeals to the Divisional Court by Way of Case Stated. 4. Judicial Review of the Decisions of Magistrates Courts and the Crown Court: Grounds, Remedies and Procedure. 5. Appeals to the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division): General issues. 6. The Procedure in Appeals to the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division). 7. Interlocutory Appeals. 8. Prosecution of Interlocutory Appeals: Acquittal Agreements and Evidential Rulings under the Criminal Justice Act 2003. 9. Grounds of Appeal Against Conviction following Trial on Indictment. 10. Grounds of Appeal Against Sentence. 11. Powers of the Court of Appeal Criminal Divison). 12. The Criminal Cases Review Commission. 13. References to the Court of Appeal by the Attorney-General. 14. The Royal Prerogative of Mercy. 15. Appeal to the Supreme Court. 16. Funding for Criminal Appeals and Applications to the Criminal Cases Review Commission. 17. The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council. Appendices.
Paul Taylor is a barrister at Doughty Street Chambers. He has a leading appellate practice, and has appeared regularly before the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division), the House of Lords, and the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (in capital cases from the Caribbean). He also has extensive experience of drafting submissions to the Criminal Cases Review Commission, and representations in relation to the judicial setting of tariffs in murder cases under the Criminal Justice Act 2003. He provides regular commentaries for Butterworths Human Rights Direct and lectures on appellate matters.