No it's a criminal case. JP's can hear criminal cases that are punishable by fine only. JP's don't even have to be attorneys so it's not like you can judge much by their rulings. I would bet money there were no lawyers there either. I've noticed that when someone lawyers up their case gets transferred to the county court when it's going to be a real trial.cb1000rider wrote:I'm not so sure... I sat in on JP court a few years ago and we had a number of these come through. I remember one of them distinctly.. Without going into details it was one officer vs one defendant (no one else around, no evidence, vastly different accounts) - I remember thinking "someone is lying a lot" - JP slapped a "guilty" on it, 100% based on officer testimony... I could understand that in a civil case, but not in a criminal one. Hopefully that standard wasn't the rule. Good news is that it was Class-C.EEllis wrote: Well yes and no. You can beat the charge pretty easily unless you are a total mess. But you can't beat the ride.
Maybe results in front of a real judge would have been different, but it was pretty eye opening for me. Then again, I've seen some JPs do some things that really made me question stuff, especially in small jurisdictions.
Talking about JP court. One day I went in to a courthouse to do some vehicle reg thing and on the way out was waylaid by a deputy constable asking if I had a DL. Well sure I did so I said yes and asked why. He said follow me your going to be a juror and I was stuck at the courthouse for hours in the JP court.