A Legal Analysis of the Appellee Court’s Jurisdiction Limitation to the Subject Matter of the Initial Ruling
Subject Areas : حقوق مدنیSeyyedeh Roghayeh Karimi 1 , Fatemeh Mahdavi 2 *
1 - Student of Master’s Degree in Private Law, Department of Law, Ahrar Institute of Higher Education, Rasht, Iran..
2 - Assistant Professor of Jurisprudence and Fundamentals of Islamic Law, Department of Theology, Jurisprudence and Fundamentals of Islamic Law, Faculty of Humanities, Qaemshahr Branch, Islamic Azad University, Qaemshahr, Iran.
Keywords: Appeal, Court of Appeal, First-Instance Ruling, Scope of Jurisdiction, Judicial Security, Stability of Judgments, Procedural Law,
Abstract :
“The appellate institution constitutes a fundamental pillar for ensuring due process and rectifying potential errors of lower courts within contemporary legal systems. Defining the scope and boundaries of the appellate court’s jurisdiction, and examining the extent of its adherence to—or independence from—the subject matter of the initial ruling, represents one of the most significant theoretical and practical challenges in the judicial process. The central problem of this research is whether the appellate court’s jurisdiction is strictly confined to the scope of the appeal and the contents of the first-instance judgment, or if it can engage in an independent substantive and formal evaluation of the case within the framework of procedural laws. Adopting a descriptive-analytical method and relying on Iranian civil and criminal procedural regulations, unified judicial precedents, legal doctrines, and comparative examples from foreign legal systems, this article analyzes this question. The findings indicate that while the first-instance ruling serves as the starting point and the primary framework for appellate proceedings, it does not impose an absolute restriction on the appellate authority. Nevertheless, the exercise of independent powers by this authority must remain within the limits of the law and respect principles such as judicial security, the predictability of judgments, and the stability of proceedings.”
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