Subject-matter jurisdiction is the authority
of a court to hear cases of a particular
type or cases relating to a specific
subject
matter.
Subject-matter jurisdiction must be
distinguished
from personal jurisdiction, which is
the
power of a court to render a judgment
against
a particular defendant, and territorial
jurisdiction,
which is the power of the court to
render
a judgment concerning events that have
occurred
within a well-defined territory. Unlike
personal
or territorial jurisdiction, lack of
subject-matter
jurisdiction cannot be waived. A judgment
from a court that did not have subject-matter
jurisdiction is forever a nullity.
To decide a case, a court must have
a combination
of subject and either personal or territorial
jurisdiction.
Subject-matter jurisdiction, personal
or
territorial jurisdiction, and adequate
notice
are the three most fundamental constitutional
requirements for a valid judgment.
© 2008 StanTheMan, Inc. |
|