Mississippi county courts
The Mississippi county courts have exclusive jurisdiction over eminent domain proceedings and juvenile matters in Mississippi. The state has 20 county courts and 29 county court judges. The following counties contain a county court:
- Adams, Bolivar, Coahoma, DeSoto, Forrest, Harrison, Hinds, Jackson, Jones, Lamar, Lauderdale, Lee, LeFlore, Lowndes, Madison, Pike, Rankin, Warren, Washington and Yazoo.[1]
Jurisdiction
In counties which have a county court, a county court judge also serves as the youth court judge. County courts share jurisdiction with Mississippi's circuit and chancery courts in some civil matters. The jurisdictional limit of county courts is up to $200,000. County courts may handle non-capital felony cases transferred from circuit court. County court judges may issue search warrants, set bond and preside over preliminary hearings. County courts have concurrent jurisdiction with justice courts in all matters, civil and criminal.
Courts
Selection
County court judge | |
---|---|
Selection: | Nonpartisan election |
Term: | Four-year term |
Re-election method: | Contested election |
Qualifications: | 5 years practicing attorney; 5 years state citizen; minimum age of 26[2][3] |
See also
External links
Footnotes
Federal courts:
Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: Northern District of Mississippi, Southern District of Mississippi • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: Northern District of Mississippi, Southern District of Mississippi
State courts:
Mississippi Supreme Court • Mississippi Court of Appeals • Mississippi circuit courts • Mississippi Chancery Court • Mississippi county courts • Mississippi justice courts • Mississippi youth courts • Mississippi Municipal Courts
State resources:
Courts in Mississippi • Mississippi judicial elections • Judicial selection in Mississippi