The Supreme Court of Victoria is the highest court in the Australian state of Victoria. Founded in 1852, it is a superior court of common law and equity, with unlimited and inherent jurisdiction within the state.
The Supreme Court comprises two divisions: the Trial Division, which oversees its original jurisdiction, and the Court of Appeal, which deals with its appellate jurisdiction, and is frequently referred to as a court in its own right. Although the Supreme Court is theoretically vested with unlimited jurisdiction, it generally only hears, at trial, criminal cases in instances of murder, manslaughter or treason, and civil cases where the statement of claim is in excess of the Magistrates' Court limit of 100,000.ThecourthearsappealsfromtheCountyCourt,aswellaslimitedappealsfromtheMagistrates′Court.DecisionsoftheSupremeCourtareappealabletotheHighCourtofAustralia.ThebuildingitselfisontheVictorianHeritageRegister.TheSupremeCourthastwodivisions−theTrialDivisionandtheCourtofAppeal.TheTrialDivisionsitswithonejudge,andusuallyactsasacourtoforiginaljurisdictionforseriouscriminalmatterssuchasmurder,attemptedmurder,corporateoffencesandcertainconspiracycharges,andcivilmatterswhichareconsideredtoinvolvegreatercomplexityoramountsofmoneymorethanwouldbeappropriatetohavedeterminedintheMagistrates′Court(whoseciviljurisdictionallimitis100,000) or County Court (whose jurisdiction has since the beginning of 2007 been unlimited as to amount). The Trial Division also acts as an appeal court from the Magistrates' Court on questions of law, and appeals from the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal on points of law, except against an order of the President or Vice-President of the Tribunal. It also hears federal indictable offences such as treason.
The Commercial Court is a sub-division of the Trial Division, composed of specialist judges to deal with commercial disputes.