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Supreme Court of Liberia

Highest court in Liberia

Supreme Court of Liberia

Summary

Highest court in Liberia

FieldValue
court_nameSupreme Court of Liberia
imageCoat of arms of Liberia.svg
imagesize150px
established1839
jurisdictionLiberia
locationMonrovia
typePresidential nomination with Senate confirmation
authorityConstitution of Liberia
terms70 years of age
positions5
chiefjudgetitleChief Justice of Liberia
chiefjudgenameSie-A-Nyene Yuoh
termstart27 September 2022

The Supreme Court of Liberia is the highest judicial body in Liberia. The court consists of the Chief Justice of Liberia, who is also the top judiciary official,

Article III of the Constitution of Liberia stipulates judiciary as one of the three branches of government that ought to be equal and coordinated based on the principle of checks and balances. The court was originally authorized by the 1839 Constitution of the American Colonization Society signed on 5 January 1839, while subsequent constitutions continued to authorize a supreme court, with the 1984 Constitution as the most recent version. The powers and structure of the court are determined by Article VII of the 1984 constitution. The Supreme Court is granted original jurisdiction over constitutional questions, cases in which the country is a party, and cases where ministers or ambassadors are involved by the Constitution.

The Supreme Court, as in other democratic countries, is found to be the weakest among the three arms of democracy. Trial by ordeal is prohibited by the court, but it is still practiced commonly in modern times to adjudge cases.

Jurisdiction and structure

Chief Justice Zacharia B. Roberts along with his associates
Chief Justices of Liberia
Chief Justice of Liberia
Samuel Benedict
John Day
Boston J. Drayton
Edward J. Roye
Cyrus Louis Parsons
Zachariah B. Roberts
James Archibald Toliver
James Jenkins Dossen
Frederick E. R. Johnson
Louis Arthur Grimes
Martin Nemle Russell
Eugene Himie Shannon
Dash Wilson
James A. A. Pierre
Emmanuel M. Gbalazeh
James N. Nagbe
Chea Cheapoo
Emmanuel M. Gbalazeh
James Henrique Pearson
James Garretson Bull
Her Honor Frances Johnson Morris
Her Honor Gloria Musu-Scott
Henry Reed Cooper
Johnnie N. Lewis
Francis Korkpor
Sie-A-Nyene Yuoh

Article III of the Constitution of Liberia stipulates that the judiciary is one of the three branches of government that ought to be equal and coordinated based on the principle of checks and balances. The court was originally authorized by the 1839 Constitution of the American Colonization Society signed on 5 January 1839. Subsequent constitutions continued to authorize a supreme court, with the 1984 Constitution as the most recent version. Powers and structure of the court are determined by Article VII of the 1984 constitution. The Supreme Court is granted original jurisdiction over constitutional questions, cases in which the country is a party, and for cases where ministers or ambassadors are involved by the Constitution of Liberia. The court has appellate jurisdiction over other matters, with the next lowest court being the 15 Circuit Courts.

Eligibility of Justices

The Chief Justice and Associate Justices of the Supreme Court of Liberia must be citizens of the country for the past ten years previous to their appointments, must be 30 years of age, counselors at law licensed to practice in the Supreme Court Bar, and engaged in the active practice of law for at least seven years prior to their appointment.

There are four Associate Justices in the supreme court and they are ranked based on their order of superiority. Any three members of the five can form a quorum and when agreement is not arrived by the quorum in any case, the President of Liberia appoints an ad-hoc judge from the circuit judges based on seniority. There are five special seats of honor in the Supreme Court chambers and the center seat is reserved for the Chief Justice. The two seats immediately adjacent to the Chief Justice are occupied by Associate judges next in rank and the corner most seats on either side for the lower ranked Associates. The seat of the judges are conferred during the appointment ceremony and the chair would remain vacant in the event of death or such extraneous situation until a new judge is appointed.

The current Associate judges of the Supreme Court are Sie-A-Nyene Yuoh, Kabineh Ja'neh, Jamesetta Howard Wolokollie and Philip A. Z. Banks, III.

History

Chief Justice during 1910

In 1864 one of the most controversial legal battles was fought between two presidents, Joseph Jenkins Roberts, President of Liberia during 1848–55 against Stephen Allen Benson, another president of the country during 1856–63 over charges of land speculation. Roberts won in the lower court on account of his powers, the Supreme Court overturned the decision.

In August 2007, the Supreme Court allowed proceedings against Gyude Bryant, who was an interim President and allegedly stole $1.3 million (~$ in ) of government property. The Court noted he was not immune to prosecution as a head of the state as he was not elected by the people and was not abiding by the laws of the nation.

Criticism

The Supreme Court, as in other democratic countries, is found to be the weakest among the three arms of democracy. Some experts quote the language in the habeas corpus that implies the judiciary is powerless against both legislature and executive.

In 2005, Liberia acceded to the Second Optional Protocol on the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, committing to cease capital punishment. The move was welcomed by United Nations. An amendment was made to the Penal Code in 2008, which indicates "in the event of death occurs during the commission of a crime of armed robbery, terrorism or hijacking, the accused under Section 14.54, 15.32 and 15.33 of the Act shall be sentenced to death by hanging or life imprisonment without possibility of parole". Many human rights activists and organizations see this as the reintroduction of the death penalty. The Chairman of the Law Reform clarified that the accession was during the interim government and could not be deemed valid.

Notes

References

References

  1. and four [[associate justice]]s, who are nominated by the [[President of Liberia. President]] and confirmed by the [[Senate of Liberia. Senate]]. The justices hold court at the [[Temple of Justice (Liberia). Temple of Justice]] on Capitol Hill in [[Monrovia]].The NEWS. "Liberia; Transforming the Judiciary", ''Africa News'', 16 March 2006.
  2. (2016). "Chief Justices of Liberia". Supreme Court of Liberia.
  3. "Chief Justice, Associate Justice of Supreme Court of Liberia Commissioned; President Sirleaf Encourages Them to Accelerate Judicial Reforms". Republic of Liberia.
  4. (4 April 2013). "President Sirleaf Nominates Associate Justice Francis S. Korkpor as Chief Justice, Cllr. Sie-A-Yeaneh Youh as Associate Justice, of Supreme Court of Liberia". Republic of Liberia.
  5. [[#Kaydor. Kaydor, Jr. 2014]]. p. 1
  6. (2007). "Constitution of 1839". Archive of Traditional Music at Indiana University.
  7. (2007). "1984 Liberian Constitution". Archive of Traditional Music at Indiana University.
  8. Jallah, David A. B. [http://www.ialsnet.org/meetings/enriching/JallahDavid.pdf “Notes, Presented by Professor and Dean of the Louis Arthur Grimes School of Law, University of Liberia, David A. B. Jallah to the International Association of Law Schools Conference Learning From Each Other: Enriching the Law School Curriculum in an Interrelated World Held at Soochow University Kenneth Wang School of Law, Suzhou, China, October 17–19, 2007.”] {{Webarchive. link. (14 September 2013 International Association of Law Schools. Retrieved on 1 September 2008.)
  9. Judicial Service, Governmental Service and Teaching of Law) citation: Judiciary Law – Title 17 – Liberian Code of Laws Revised 2.4
  10. (2016). "Brief over Liberian Judiciary". Supreme Court of Liberia.
  11. Burrowes, Carl Patrick. (2004). "Power and Press Freedom in Liberia, 1830–1970: The Impact of Globalization and Civil Society on Media-government Relations". Africa World Press.
  12. Sherman, Frank. (2010). "Liberia: The Land, Its People, History and Culture". New Africa Press.
  13. Hodgkinson, Peter. (2016). "Capital Punishment: New Perspectives". Routledge.
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