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Unjust Enrichment and Countervailing Obligations

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The Law of the Manor
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Enquiries of Local Authorities
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 Keith Pugsley, Ken Miles


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The Irish Court of Appeal: The First Decade of an Intermediate Appellate Court

Edited by: Marc Coen, Noel McGrath

ISBN13: 9781509978908
To be Published: December 2025
Publisher: Hart Publishing
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £95.00



This book examines intermediate appellate courts by using the Irish Court of Appeal as a case study.

The operation and contribution of intermediate appellate courts are often overlooked in legal scholarship, which tends to focus on apex courts, most frequently national supreme courts. However, intermediate appellate courts perform a series of vital functions, including error prevention and the development of doctrine, and ensuring that apex courts are free to concentrate on issues of exceptional public importance. The significance of intermediate appellate courts has increased in recent decades in tandem with an increase in the volume and complexity of litigation in many countries.

The Irish Court of Appeal was established in 2014 and this enables a number of dimensions of non-apex courts to be examined, including the rationales for, and challenges of, inserting such a court into an existing and well-established legal system. Institutional aspects of the court such as the appointment and promotion of its judges, its rules on dissent, and its experience of appellants in person are analysed. In addition, its contribution to substantive law over the first 10 years of its operation is evaluated. Interviews with judges who have served on the Court enrich the book’s account of its operation and development. In addition, comparative perspectives from Northern Ireland, England and Wales, Scotland and the Netherlands enhance the analysis of an integral part of many legal systems.

Subjects:
Irish Law