A. The Court of Appeal
B. The High Court
C. The Country Court
D. None of these
Related Mcqs:
- “Really I think that the poorest he that is in England bath a life, as the greatest he, and therefore truly, sir, I think it is clear that every man that is to live under a government ought first by his own consent to put himself under the government, and I do think that the poorest ram in England is not at all bound in a strict sense to the Government that he bath not had a voice to put himself under”. The statement argues for
A. Rule according to the consent of the governed
B. Rule of the poor
C. Expropriation of the rich
D. Distribution of wealth equally to all - In 1905 Allama Iqbal went to England for higher education. In which institution of England he got education?
A. Oxford University (London)
B. Trinity College Cambridge
C. Cambridge University
D. Lincoln Inn - The highest court of Appeal in the U.K. Is:___________?
A. The House of Lords
B. The House of Commons
C. The Cabinet
D. The Ministry - The Court of Criminal Appeal consists of the Lord Chief Justice and about:
A. Two Judges
B. Three Judges
C. Five Judges
D. Seven Judges - The Court of Appeal is headed by:___________?
A. Master of the Rolls
B. Lord Chancellor
C. Lord Chief Justice
D. Stipendiary Magistrate - Appeals from the Court of Appeal go to:______________?
A. The High Court
B. The Crown Court
C. The House of Lords
D. The County Court - The highest court of Appeal in the U.K. Is:______________?
A. The House of Lords
B. The House of Commons
C. The Cabinet
D. The Ministry - In the case of Constituent Assembly’s dissolution the Federal Court set the judgment of the Sind Court aside on the technical ground that the Act by virtue of which the Sind Court issued the verdict was ‘not yet a law’ because it had not received the assent of:
A. Federal Court
B. Prime Minister
C. Governor-General
D. Law Minister - The Final Court in all civil and criminal cases for the UK is:__________?
A. High Court
B. Country Court
C. Court of the Justice of the Peace
D. House of Lords - Types of courts in England are:____________?
A. Two
B. Three
C. Four
D. Five