Supreme Court
The Supreme Court has a criminal and civil division. It hears appeals from all lower courts and tribunals but also has its own jurisdiction. It hears the more complex and high-value civil claims and more serious criminal cases.
The Supreme Court is made up of nine judges including the Chief Justice. The Master of the Supreme Court and the Registrar can both hear cases too. Judges hear cases by themselves but sit with a jury of nine for trials of murder and treason.
Physical address
Palais De Justice
Ile Du Port, Mahe, Seychelles,
PO Box 57, Victoria
Visit website
https://www.judiciary.sc/court-structure/supreme-court/
Supreme Court - 2024 January
10 documents
Title | Date |
---|---|
January 2024 | |
The Republic v Valabhji & Ors (CO 4 of 2022) [2024] SCSC 8 (31 January 2024) | 31 January 2024 | Rep vs Agathine (MC 2 of 2023) [2024] SCSC 7 (26 January 2024) | 26 January 2024 | The Republic v Ansel Larue (CR 68 of 2021) [2024] SCSC 6 (26 January 2024) | 26 January 2024 | Liu v Aux Cayes Fintech Co. Ltd (MA 406 of 2023) [2024] SCSC 5 (22 January 2024) | 22 January 2024 | Lablache & Anor v Vital (MA 322 of 2023) [2024] SCSC 4 (19 January 2024) | 19 January 2024 | R v Francoise & Anor (CR 93/2019) [2024] SCSC 10 (19 January 2024) | 19 January 2024 | Udwadia v Udwadia (MA 252/2023 (Arising in DV 100/2021)) [2024] SCSC 9 (17 January 2024) | 17 January 2024 | R v GB (CR 51 of 2020) [2024] SCSC 2 (15 January 2024) | 15 January 2024 | R v Valabhji & Ors (CO 4 of 2022) [2024] SCSC 3 (15 January 2024) | 15 January 2024 | The Government of Seychelles v Dugasse & Anor (MC 85 of 2023) [2024] SCSC 1 (11 January 2024) | 11 January 2024 |