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Whenever there is a dispute between business entities, the case is taken for trial by the courts of arbitration (business or economic courts in fact). The system of these courts is on two levels topped by the High Court of Arbitration. There are eighty-two courts of arbitration with some two-thousand judges handling about three hundred thousand disputes annually. But if a party to a civil case is a private citizen, not involved in business activities, the dispute has to be handled by a court of general jurisdiction.
Throughout Russia there are about fourteen thousand judges in some two thousand five hundred courts of general jurisdiction on various levels. The vast majority of litigation in Russia is heard by these regular courts. In 1993 these courts handled, for instance, one million eight hundred thousand civil cases.
The major link in the regular court system is the people's court. It serves each city district or rural
district. Apart from the arbitration court system, there are no courts of special jurisdiction in Russia
like those handling domestic relations or probate disputes. As trial courts of general jurisdiction, the
people's district courts handle over ninety percent of all civil and criminal cas es. Only a limited
category of cases involving the most serious crimes fails directly under the original jurisdiction of the
next level of courts--the oblast (region, province) courts. Cases are tried by one of several methods:
a case can be tried by a presiding, professional judge and two lay judges called "people 's
assessors," or by a panel of three professional judges, or by a single judge . In 1993 Russia started
to experiment with jury trials (panels of twelve juror s). A jury trial is only available in serious
crimes--those where jurisdiction originates in the oblast courts.
Decisions of the lower trial courts can be appealed through intermediate courts up to the Supreme
Court of Russia. It should also be noted that all higher courts have discretionary trial jurisdiction.
Direct appeal to a higher court (in the Russian legal system the appellate procedure is called "cassational review") is not the only way for a party to complain against a trial court decision. Law provides the right of citizens to appeal to higher courts even when the time limits prescribed for cassational review have expired. This right can be exercised not only by a person duly convicted an deserving the sentence, but by anyone who wants to proceed on behalf of such person. Acting upon this appeal the chairperson of a higher court or the procurat or of the corresponding level exercise their supervisory powers and bring their own complaint (called "protest") against the lower court's decision.
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