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In 2015, Tennessee's Supreme Court created a pilot Business Court. [8] The Davidson County Chancery Court Part III was designated to serve as the Business Court. [9] [10] Chancellor Ellen Hobbs Lyle [11] was the first Business Court judge and sat on the business court into 2019. [12] In 2017, Davidson County Circuit Court Judge Joe Binkley [13 ...
Courts of Tennessee include: State courts of Tennessee. Tennessee Supreme Court [1] Tennessee Court of Appeals (3 grand divisions) [2] Tennessee Court of Criminal Appeals (3 grand divisions) [3] Tennessee Circuit Courts (32 judicial districts) [4] Tennessee Chancery and Probate Courts (32 judicial districts) [4] Tennessee Criminal Courts (32 ...
The Court of Chancery was a court of equity in England and Wales. Court of Chancery or Chancery Court may also refer to: Chancery Court of York, an ecclesiastical court in England; Chancery Division of the High Court of Justice, present-day court in England and Wales; Delaware Court of Chancery; Mississippi Chancery Courts, part of the Courts ...
A court of equity, also known as an equity court or chancery court, is a court authorized to apply principles of equity rather than principles of law to cases brought before it. These courts originated from petitions to the Lord Chancellor of England and primarily heard claims for relief other than damages, such as specific performance and ...
This list includes Judges of the Tennessee Superior Court (1796–1809) and Judges of the Tennessee Court of Errors and Appeals (1810-1835). [1] These high courts were created before the 1835 Tennessee constitution, which established the Supreme Court and made the Judiciary an independent branch of government. [2]
This page was last edited on 8 November 2011, at 18:29 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Henry Richard Gibson (December 24, 1837 – May 25, 1938) was an American attorney and politician who represented Tennessee's 2nd district in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1895 to 1905. He also served as a state chancery court judge, and was a delegate to Tennessee's 1870 constitutional convention.
The second non-Democrat to carry Houston County was George Wallace of the American Independent Party during the 1968 presidential election, following which Houston County became one of only six Wallace counties to vote for George McGovern against Richard Nixon's 3,000-plus-county landslide of 1972. [a]