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Mississippi 11th Chancery District: Difference between revisions

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[[File:Mississippi-Chancery-11-01.png|right|175px|thumb|Mississippi 11th Chancery District]]


The '''Mississippi 11th Chancery District''' is one of 20 [[Mississippi Chancery Court|chancery court districts]] in [[Mississippi]]. The court has jurisdiction over equity disputes, sanity hearings, wills, adoptions, custody disputes, divorces, guardianships, and hears all cases in which a state law or set of state laws are constitutionally challenged.<ref>[http://courts.ms.gov/aboutcourts/chancerycourt_about.html ''State of Mississippi Judiciary,'' "Chancery Court: About the Court," accessed May 13, 2014]</ref>  The 11th District serves [[Holmes County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Holmes]], [[Leake County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Leake]], [[Madison County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Madison]] and [[Yazoo County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Yazoo]] counties.<ref name=list/>
{{Local scope archive|Type=Court}}


==Judges==
The '''Mississippi 11th Chancery District Court''' resides in [[Mississippi]]. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...
*[[Cynthia L. Brewer]]
*[[Robert G. Clark III]]
*[[James Walker (Mississippi)|James Walker]]<ref name=list>[http://www.mssc.state.ms.us/trialcourts/chancerycourt/chanjud.pdf ''State of Mississippi Judiciary'', "Chancery Judges & Support Staff," accessed May 13, 2014]</ref>


==Former judges==
* [[#Jurisdiction|Jurisdiction]]
* [[Janace Harvey Goree]]
* [[#Selection method|Selection method]]


==See also==
==Jurisdiction==
*[[Mississippi Chancery Court]]
{{Local judicial jurisdiction|Court Name=Mississippi Chancery Court}}
*[[Holmes County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Holmes County, Mississippi]]
*[[Leake County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Leake County, Mississippi]]
*[[Madison County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Madison County, Mississippi]]
*[[Yazoo County, Mississippi (Judicial)|Yazoo County, Mississippi]]


==External links==
==Selection method==
* [http://www.mssc.state.ms.us/trialcourts/chancerycourt/chanjud.pdf ''State of Mississippi Judiciary'', "Chancery Judges & Support Staff," accessed May 13, 2014]
::''See also: [[Judicial selection in the states]]''
 
{{Local judicial selection|Court Name=Mississippi Chancery Court}}
 
===Judicial elections in Mississippi===
 
{{Mississippi courts}}
 
=Elections=
::''See also: [[Mississippi judicial elections]]''
::''See also: [[Mississippi judicial elections]]''
{{State judicial election types|State=Mississippi}}
{{Mississippi local judicial election rules}}


{{Court page elections list
==See also==
|State=Mississippi
{{Seealsolocalcourts|State=Mississippi}}
|Year1=2017
|Year2=2016
|Year3=2014
|Year4=2012
|Year5=2010
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==Selection method==
==External links==
{{Local judicial selection|Court Name=Mississippi Chancery Court}}
{{Google}}
==Election rules==
*[https://courts.ms.gov/ Mississippi courts]
{{Mississippi local judicial election rules}}
{{FancyTabs}}


<headertabs/>
==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[category:Mississippi chancery courts]]
{{Mississippi courts}}<br>
[[category:Holmes County, Mississippi]]
{{Mississippi}}
[[category:Leake County, Mississippi]]
 
[[category:Madison County, Mississippi]]
[[Category:Local courts outside coverage scope]]
[[category:Yazoo County, Mississippi]]
[[Category:Mississippi]]

Latest revision as of 17:32, 29 May 2025

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The Mississippi 11th Chancery District Court resides in Mississippi. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...

Jurisdiction

This court holds the following jurisdiction:[1]

Trial courts include two general jurisdiction courts and three limited jurisdiction courts. The general jurisdiction courts include the Chancery Courts and the Circuit Courts. Courts of limited jurisdiction include the County Courts, the Justice Courts and the Municipal Courts. ...

Chancery Courts have jurisdiction over disputes in matters involving equity; domestic matters including adoptions, custody disputes and divorces; guardianships; sanity hearings; wills; and challenges to constitutionality of state laws. Land records are filed in Chancery Court.

Chancery Courts have jurisdiction over juvenile matters in counties which have no County Court. The chancellor may appoint a lawyer in private practice to sit as a youth court referee to hear juvenile matters such as delinquency, abuse and neglect.

Trials are typically heard by a chancellor without a jury, although state law allows parties to request a jury in Chancery Court.

There are 20 Chancery Court districts and 52 Chancery Court judges. The number of chancery judges per district ranges from one to four. Chancery Court judges are selected in non-partisan elections to serve four-year terms.[2]

Selection method

See also: Judicial selection in the states
See also: Nonpartisan election

Judges of the Mississippi Chancery Court are each elected to four-year terms. The elections for this court are nonpartisan contested elections. To serve on this court, a judge must be at least 26 years old and have been a district (and state) resident for five years and have five years of experience as an attorney.[3]

Judicial elections in Mississippi

See also: Mississippi judicial elections

Mississippi is one of 12 states that uses nonpartisan elections to select judges and does not use retention elections for subsequent terms. To read more about how states use judicial elections to select judges across the country, click here.

Primary election

Mississippi does not hold primary elections for judicial candidates.[4]

General election

Qualified judicial candidates, including those running unopposed, appear on the general election ballot. There is no indication of party affiliation. When two or more candidates are competing for a seat, they are listed in alphabetical order.[4]

The winner of the general election is determined by majority vote. If no candidate receives a majority (over 50 percent) of the total vote, the top two candidates advance to a runoff election that takes place three weeks later.[4]

See also



External links

Footnotes